DMM Games released the first introductory promotional video for its upcoming Blue Reflection Sun game on Friday. The game will be available this winter on Android and IOS devices, as well as on the PC through the DMM Game Player Platform and will be free-to-play with in-app purchases.

Gust's Blue Reflection: Second Light just recently launched in the West through Steam in November on Playstation 4, Nintendo Switch, and PC. The West received Blue Reflection: Second Light only one month after the game was released in Japan for the PS4 and Switch. On Steam, this game is available to purchase for $59.99 USD.

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This second game came years after the first. The original Blue Light launched in North America and Europe via Steam in September 2017, six months after it was available in Japan. Overall, the first game did well in sales, but many RPG fans have preferred Second Light to the original game. In Second Light, there are three school-age girls who have lost their memories after being transported to another world, only remembering their names. The game features "gorgeous translucent designs" by Mel Kishida and is based on a theme of human identity and bonding.

However, Blue Reflection Sun will be different from its predecessor. The story revolves around ash that first began falling onto the world a year and a half prior. The ash isn't just falling though. People have discovered that it is a harmful substance that invades the human body. Even though the newest Blue Reflection has a very different storyline, the youthful characters remain. It will be interesting to see how well the RPG game transfers onto mobile phones since it was only released for gaming consoles in its previous versions.

Blue Reflection has had a good run over the past five years as a game, but it has also had a short stint as an anime. Blue Reflection Ray, the TV anime based on Blue Reflection: Second Light, premiered in April 2021 for two cours. Funimation streamed the anime as it appeared in Japan, but the staff of the show canceled the series' Blu-ray release in Japan for "various reasons".

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