The original story of
Tsukihime was based on one of
Kinoko Nasu's ideas for a novel. It featured Arcueid as a cold stereotypical vampire that is the complete opposite of her finished incarnation. The basis for Shiki was a middle-aged old, worn-down vampire who says to Arcueid upon her first approach "I have no interest in women I've already killed once." The tone of the story was the complete opposite and only the tagline of "a biting relationship between a murderer who can see death lines and a vampire" remained in the final version. Upon developing the story for
Tsukihime, they pictured Arcueid as a cool and princess-like "Noble Vampire", but thought that it overlapped with Akiha's "Lady" character. All of the heroines spoke politely to the main character, so they figured that the only character who could fit the role of someone who didn't speak politely would be Arcueid. They eventually came up with the idea of a "pure white" vampire that developed her character very differently from the original version. There was originally a planned Satsuki route for the original version, but it was later cut. Several trial versions of
Tsukihime were released before its full release. The first preview version of
Tsukihime was a free promotional version of which 300 copies (on 3½
floppy disks) were produced and distributed at
Comiket 56 in 1999. At the next Comiket 57 in late 1999, a demo, the , was sold for 100 yen, with only 50 being produced and sold, also distributed on 3½ floppy disks. At Comiket 58 in 2000,
Tsukihime Half Moon Edition was released. 300 copies were produced and sold for 1,000 yen each. This version contained Arcueid and Ciel's "Near Side of the Moon" storylines. The half moon edition came with bonuses including a coupon that would allow purchasers to claim the complete edition in the future. The complete edition of
Tsukihime was first released at Comiket 59 in December 2000. In February 2026, a fan and private collector known as Keripo reported that one of the 50 existing floppy disk copies of the 1999
Trial Edition, which they had purchased for their collection with the intention of displaying it publicly as part of a Type-Moon museum exhibit, had been destroyed by
United States Customs and Border Protection personnel while in transit to their home. Type-Moon released
Tsukihime Plus-Disc developed with NScripter engine in January 2001, a light-hearted addition to
Tsukihime that featured two short stories:
Alliance Of Illusionary Eyes and
Geccha. The first edition included wallpapers, the first four chapters of
The Garden of Sinners, an early demo version of
Tsukihime, a contemporary
Tsukihime demo, and two omakes featuring
Tsukihime characters. The second edition
Tsukihime Plus+Disc added two more stories:
Geccha 2 and ''Kinoko's Masterpiece Experimental Theater
. This version used the more capable KiriKiri engine. In April 2003, Type-Moon released , a three-disc set that included Tsukihime
, Tsukihime Plus+Disc
, Kagetsu Tohya
, a remixed soundtrack, a trial version of Melty Blood'' and other assorted multimedia. In December 2001, the doujin circle Inside-Cap released an officially licensed program for Windows
98/
Me/
2000/
XP, Rinkai Tsukihime, that allowed customers to convert their PC copy of
Tsukihime into a
Game Boy Advance rom; the program was distributed via
CD-ROM through retail and online shops.
Remake A remake of
Tsukihime was announced in 2008, with work commencing in 2012. Work was then suspended in 2013 due to Type Moon's work on
Fate/Grand Order, before resuming in 2017. The theme songs
Seimeisen and
Juvenile, as well as the ending themes
Lost and
Believer were written, composed and arranged by Kegani from Live Lab and performed by
Reona, and released on CD on September 1, 2021. The soundtrack was composed by
Hideyuki Fukasawa and Keita Haga, and was released as a set of eight CDs on November 24, 2021.
Tsukihime: The Other Side of Red Garden, containing the remake's equivalent of the "Far-side" part of the original, was teased in an unlockable secret trailer in
Tsukihime: A Piece of Blue Glass Moon. The remake modernizes the setting of
Tsukihime, having it take place in a large city in 2014 (as opposed to the suburban town in 1999 of the original), and also makes changes to the plot. The remake also adds new characters, voice acting, and new character designs. It also includes the Satsuki route. At Anime Expo 2023, it was announced that the
Tsukihime remake entries would get official localization outside Japan, starting from
A Piece of Blue Glass Moon on June 27, 2024. It is also confirmed in
Type-Moon Ace Vol. 15 that Windows version of the
Tsukihime remake entries will be included as well.
Sequel Kagetsu Tohya has teasers for a
Tsukihime 2, and writer Kinoko Nasu's short stories "talk." and "Prelude" from
Tsukihime material books
Plus Period published on October 22, 2004, and the Type-Moons
Character material published on August 20, 2006, are set before it. References to it have been mostly been made into jokes during recent interviews, and they have displayed no current plans to actually create the project. According to
Character material, the sequel would have been called
Tsukihime: The Dark Six and would have revolved, at least in part, around a ritual gathering of Dead Apostle ancestors. Arcueid's sister Altrouge would have had a possible role. ==Related media==