CROSS†CHANNEL

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
(Redirected from Cross Channel)
The characters, clockwise from the top: Youko, Kiri, Miki, Misato, Touko. Not shown: ability to function in society.

A Visual Novel created by Flying Shine in 2003. CROSS†CHANNEL is an H-game for PC with a clean version available for PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable called CROSS†CHANNEL ~To all people~, and a newer version with added CGs and scenarios for the Xbox 360 called CROSS†CHANNEL ~In memory of all people~. A translation for both the clean and H version is available from Amaterasu Translations.

Self proclaimed "Love Aristocrat" Taichi Kurosu attends a school called Gunjou Institute with his fellow members of the Broadcasting Club. Gunjou is a place for people who, based on an adaption exam, have an abnormally high adaptation coefficient. This means that the government has deemed them unlikely to be able to adapt into society. Taichi himself has an adaptation coefficient of over 80, which is thought to be impossible.

After a slow falling out between members, Taichi attempts to bring the fractured Broadcasting Club back together by getting them to go on a camping trip together. This trip serves to only fracture the relationships between members even more, ending up a disaster. But as the members make their way back to town, they discover that every living thing has somehow disappeared from the world, leaving only them behind. Taichi tries to convince the others to help rebuild the broadcasting antenna so as to contact other survivors.

Strangely enough, the characters were the basis for the highly popular flash game NANACA†CRASH!!

Tropes used in CROSS†CHANNEL include:
  • All Men Are Perverts: The few male characters we do see are rather perverted to some degree.
  • All There in the Manual : The bonus scenario Tower of Friends, which (sort of) answers some of the most puzzling questions of the main game via a quick Mind Screw full of Nightmare Fuel.
  • Amnesiac Dissonance: Yutaka.
  • Angrish : Touko will lapse into this if Taichi pushes her too far. You can partially blame it on her lisp.
  • Announcer Chatter : Shows up to explain Touko's katana as well as Taichi's Karade (Not Karate).
  • Arc Words: "Friendship desires..." "Nothing."
  • Art Shift: When Tomoki punches Taichi in the face, there's a brief picture of the scene being shown in The Powerpuff Girls style.
  • Awful Truth: Taichi finally breaks Youko down by reminding her of what happened back at the mansion. The awful part wasn't that they killed 14 people, it was that Youko didn't kill a single one.
  • Axes At School: Kiri has the crossbow she pulls out of her Hyperspace Arsenal. Unfortunately, there's nobody else but the cast in the whole city.
  • Batman Gambit
  • Bittersweet Ending : Everyone but Taichi escapes the loop, and he's repaired his relationships with all of them and helped fix at least some of their problems. Unfortunately, he himself is stuck in the repeating world, where he rebuilds the antenna every week and broadcasts. It's implied that he may be able to get out, but it's unlikely he will due to a lack of desire to do so.
  • Bleached Underpants : The Updated Rereleases of this game are all clean versions. NANACA†CRASH!! could also be a possibility.
    • If you compare the old and new trailers, you can see that they even edited out the Panty Shots.
  • Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick: Somewhat literally when Taichi explains what's in his handmade popsicles. Misato is not pleased. [1]

Misato: "What were the ingredients in these?"
Taichi: "Lemon and sugar and egg whites and-"
Taichi: "......my two hundred million cute little wonderful lives."

Taichi: Are you eating something delicious? This is the Gunjou Institute Broadcasting Club.
[Touko] spat out something delicious.

  • Conflict Ball: Kiri has a death grip on one for the majority of the game. She does have a reason, but her actions are still not helping the situation everyone is in.
  • Deconstruction : Isn't it interesting how all these tsunderes, cuckoolanders, emotionless girls and whatnot are all living together in a community for those who cannot function properly in society?
    • Golden Ending: deconstructed as pointed out by Youko the hundreds or thousands of times Taichi has repeated the game has resulted in countless bad endings for Taichi and there IS no super happy ending out there. And ultimately she is proven right in the game's Bittersweet Ending, where everyone but Taichi gets sent back to the real world, Taichi remains in self-imposed exile, and its left questionable if a few people who he sends back will ever fully recover and become functional members of society (Touko & Youko in particular.)
  • Dartboard of Hate: Except replace "darts" with "crossbow" and "dartboard" with a doll of Taichi.
  • Despair Event Horizon: Taichi suffers some pretty major Sanity Slippage throughout the whole game, but he comes closest to this in Youko's route. After his realization, he finally decides to truly become The Atoner and return everyone to the original world.
  • Destructive Romance: Taichi and Touko used to be in this type of relationship. Taichi was basically using her as an experiment to see just how much he could break her while retaining his sanity, and Touko was so desperate for love and attention that she just decided not to care, so long as it wasn't with anyone else. And when he decided to break the relationship? Hoo boy...
    • Or at least that's how Taichi thinks of it in retrospect. At the time, it was an experiment to see if he could be a normal human being. It failed, and part of the reason why is that in a place like Gunjou he has no one normal to interact with. The basics still apply, though, as Touko becomes more and more obsessed when during her route the relationship is restarted.
  • Diabolus Ex Machina: Miki's route. Oh god, Miki's route. Even Youko dies in that one.
  • Downer Ending : Not to the game itself, but some routes end poorly. All of them except maybe Kiri and Miki's. And in Kiri's he comes really close to passing the Moral Event Horizon, and Miki's isn't much better.
  • Dysfunction Junction : It's important to remember that everyone in this has been deemed unlikely to be able to adapt to society. They ALL have something wrong with them. Except Sakuraba, who is only in the school because he requested to be transferred there after falling in love with Taichi.
  • Ear Cleaning: In Miki's route. Unfortunately, Miki is terrible with this.
  • Elevator School: Gunjou is one without the university.
  • Every One Remembers the Stripper: Or more specifically, everyone remembers the special edition vibrator.
  • Exactly What It Says on the Tin : Tower of Friends.
  • Four Loves: Considering the theme of the game, it appears often.
    • Storge: Kiri towards Yutaka, Tomoki and Misato, Nanaka towards Taichi, combined with Agape love. Sakuraba is also said to have a very good family, unlike Touko.
    • Phileos: The Broadcasting Club (and Tomoki), of course.
    • Eros: Pretty much all the girls you see towards Taichi. Including Sakuraba.
    • Agape: Nanaka towards Taichi, which Taichi later gives in turn to his friends.
  • Futureshadowing: Taichi always enters the girl's bathroom out of habit.
  • The Ghost: Mutsumi-san, Taichi's and formerly Youko's as well, caretaker.
  • Good People Have Good Sex: Played with. Most of Taichi's "encounters" are forceful, yet passionate, reflecting his somewhat skewed morality. However, during his second sex scene with Miki, the sex is shown to be incredibly awkward, yet it's probably the one where Taichi cared the most.
  • Gratuitous Foreign Language: Taichi mixes in quite a few languages in his speech, and once even emulated a Mexican accent.
  • Groundhog Day Loop
  • Guy-On-Guy Is Hot: This seems to be the opinion of most of the girls, especially when they hear about Taichi and Sakuraba's story.
  • Hollywood Personality Disorders: Almost everyone in Gunjou has some sort of "ultramarine", but not all of them are specified. A few may even have multiple.
  • Hyperspace Arsenal : Where Touko's Demon Harakiri Blade and Kiri's Buckmaster's Mark Point Crossbow come from. Also Lampshaded by Taichi.

Taichi: "That's just too weird! There's no way something so big could fit in your pocket!"

Tomoki: Lower classes, lower income!
Taichi: Earth debris!
Tomoki: Lone survivor of the stock market crash!
Taichi: D-d-d-don't talk about my stocks!

  • Kansai Regional Accent: Tomoki and Misato are hinted to be from Kansai. If so, then they pretty much avert The Idiot From Osaka, as they're pretty knowledgeable, and Tomoki is basically the Straight Man of the guys.
  • Kill'Em All : Endings for some routes and bad ends.
  • Leaning on the Fourth Wall : During the second to last week Youko points out that every one of the hundreds or maybe thousands of weeks preceding could be considered a Bad End. Taichi is not happy at the end of a single one, and he's also frequently dead. Along with the entire cast.
    • Earlier on, Taichi wonders to himself, "Am I some sort of Eroge hero or something?"
  • Limited Wardrobe: Actually pointed out when Taichi remarks on how Youko never bothers to change her dirty uniform. When he asks how Touko is able to keep wearing the same dress while keeping it clean, Youko mentions that it's because she has multiple copies of the same outfit.
  • Lonely Piano Piece: All over the soundtrack.
  • Machiavelli Was Wrong: In a rather unique way.
  • Madness Mantra: During Tower of Friends, sometimes some crosses appear in the text box, among other things.
    • Fridge Horror: If you look at Meaningful Name below, "korosu" (kill) sounds very similar to "Kurosu", which is a near homophone with "cross" in Japanese. More crosses appear as alternate Taichi's sanity slips. †††††††††
  • Malaproper: Taichi is really bad with this. His weird usage of Gratuitous English makes it even worse.
  • Meaningful Echo: "I'm sorry... that's all I can leave you with..." Unique in that the second time you hear it is actually the first.
  • Mohs Scale of Science Fiction Hardness : Very far on the "soft" end. The game could almost be categorized as Fantasy, if not for the fact that the mechanics of the Groundhog Day Loop are an important plot point and a quantum pseudoscience explanation is given for the phenomenon.
  • Multiple Endings : All of which are in a sense canon! However, Youko points out that not a single one has been a good ending to the week. At best he's managed to reconcile with one person, but either everyone dies with Misato and Touko, or he does it in a bad way with Kiri or everyone dies and it was in a bad way and then the reset hit with Miki. There's only one 'true' ending.
  • No Periods, Period: Averted twice: one in the beginning of the story with Touko, and another with Kiri in a rather Squick-worthy moment.
  • Panty Shot : At least one for almost every female character! Taichi likes pointing them out.
  • Plot Based Photograph Obfuscation: To conceal Youko not killing anyone at the Shinkawa mansion.
  • Punny Name: In the Updated Rerelease on the Xbox 360, Misato decides to call a dog "Poko-chin". Chinpoko is Japanese slang for a tiny penis...
  • Ripple-Effect-Proof Memory : Averted. Taichi can never remember what happened in a past week, but there is the spot safe from resets at the hokora. Notebooks are stored there. Near the end, Youko intends to abuse this to make Taichi forget his plan of sending everyone home, but he mentally breaks her down instead.
    • The hokora is also the only place where Taichi can send everyone back.
  • Romantic Two-Girl Friendship: Kiri and Miki.
  • Rule of Three: Used for laughs and drama at different points. The But Thou Must! segment uses this trope for comedy, while Nanaka's last words to Taichi are repeated thrice for an extra punch in the gut.
  • Sanity Slippage : Everyone, but it is most obvious with Taichi. Each arc shows you a more tragic and/or crazy Taichi than the last. It's especially bad in Kiri's route, which gets rather... unpleasant. It's the route that really introduces just how messed up Taichi is, so the writers pulled no punches in making the point. During the final route, you get to see a different version where Taichi uses the knowledge from the notebooks to avoid all the really disgusting scenes. While Taichi may or may not be trapped forever depending on how you look at it, he's at least sane at last.
  • Single-Issue Psychology : Largely Averted - though the concept of an "adaptation coefficient" is utterly laughable and several characters' "ultramarines" (i.e. the reason they were sent to Gunjou) are singled out, it's also implied that their "defining" neuroses are hardly their only ones, and what few issues are conquered during the course of the game don't magically turn them into well-adjusted people overnight.
  • Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism: Despite the rampant deconstruction of anime cliches and aversion of Single-Issue Psychology, the game ends in a largely idealistic manner.
  • The Power of Friendship: The game revolves around this. It's friendship that helps the Broadcasting Club live through their problems, even if they can't exactly get over them.
  • The Power of Love: As Taichi suffers a Heroic BSOD from being alone for so long, he draws upon the very first memory he has: his very own birth. That makes him realize that there was always at least one person in the world who would unconditionally love him, without ever asking anything in return: his mother, Nanaka.
  • There Are No Therapists: You know it's bad when there's an entire school dedicated to isolating all the crazy people.
  • Through His Stomach : Indirect version. Yuusa's mom tries to get on Taichi's good side by giving him really good food for lunch and lots of it.
  • Title Drop : When the Broadcasting Club decides on the name of their channel before their first broadcast.
  • Trailers Always Lie : As seen here
  • Trapped in Another World
  • Updated Rerelease: CROSS†CHANNEL ~To all people~ for the PlayStation 2 and PSP and CROSS†CHANNEL ~In memory of all people~ for the Xbox 360.
  • Utsuge: Especially in the final weeks.
  • Wham! Line: At least for Kiri: "Your Nii-san was a horrible, filthy rapist."
  • Xanatos Gambit: Youko nearly pulls off one in the final week, figuring out what Taichi is up to she aids him without question in sending everyone else back to the real world. Then when only the two of them remain she torches all the saved records from the hokora then captures and plans to kill his "saved" self and live forever in a perpetual loop with him as a phenomena, with his reset self none the wiser to what has happened and incapable of learning the truth. Only a brutal last minute Hannibal Lecture by Taichi allows him to turn the tables and force her to leave instead.
  • You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Largely averted, as everyone and their dog notices Taichi's pure white hair and remarks upon it as strange. It's also a kind of a plot point.
  1. He was joking, of course.