Oily muscle celebration game Chō Aniki: Bakuretsu Rantou Hen gets fan translation

Nice muscle, big brother.

Chō Aniki: Bakuretsu Rantou Hen Header

Well, slather me in oil and send me down a hill. A Chō Aniki has finally received a fan translation. This one is for the Super Famicom’s Chō Aniki: Bakuretsu Rantou Hen, which the team of muscle fanatics has translated to Chō Aniki: Buff Battle Ballad.

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If you’re not already savvy, the Chō Aniki series is a collection of wonderful kusoge (crap games). Each game is a ridiculous celebration of absurd body-building physique and normally comes packed with bizarre homoeroticism. The first game was released on the PC-Engine Super CD-ROM² System in 1992. A typical Chō Aniki is a horizontal scrolling shoot-’em-up, but the series has long dabbled with other genres. Chō Aniki: Bakuretsu Rantou Hen is a 1995 Super Famicom fighting game.

Chō Aniki: Bakuretsu Rantou Hen Fight
Image via Romhacking.net

The series hasn’t been strictly exclusive to Japan. Cho Aniki Zero was released over here on PSP. Meanwhile, the PlayStation version of Chō Aniki: Kyuukyoku Muteki Ginga Saikyou Otoko was ported to PS3 and PSP via the PSOne Classic lineup, but they were provided as-is. That is to say, they were not translated. However, they weren’t especially difficult to figure out for Anglophones.

For that matter, Chō Aniki: Bakuretsu Rantou Hen wasn’t impossible to play for those who don’t know Japanese. However, it is nice to see it finally get a full translation, even if it’s not official. Considering how notorious the whole series is, it’s very surprising to me that this is the first time the series has seen a fan translation. Yet, that statement was made on the mod’s page, so I fact-checked it and found it to be true. Weird.

The Chō Aniki: Buff Battle Ballad comes to us from modders Pennywise, Ryusui, and FlashPV. The patch can be found right over here.

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Zoey Handley
Staff Writer - Zoey is a gaming gadabout. She got her start blogging with the community in 2018 and hit the front page soon after. Normally found exploring indie experiments and retro libraries, she does her best to remain chronically uncool.
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