The main series is composed of three separate games within the land of 'Jipang' (a fictional
feudal Japan using the name given by Italian merchant
Marco Polo), each follows a descendant of the 'Fire Clan' and supporting cast in battles against a range of often comical villains. The stories of the games, though primarily of 'fantasy' fare, are inspired by and a parody of misconceptions about Japanese culture by Western societies. The first game
Tengai Makyō: Ziria (1989), released for the
PC Engine CD-ROM² system, was notable as the first RPG released on
CD-ROM and the first in the genre to feature animated
cut scenes and
voice acting. The plot and characters were inspired by the Japanese folk tale
Jiraiya Goketsu Monogatari (with the protagonist's name deliberately misspelled, per the fantastic theme). The music for the game was also composed by the
Academy Award winning musician
Ryuichi Sakamoto. The game was previewed in the November 1990 issue of
Computer Gaming World. The writer Roe R. Adams (also a co-developer for the
Wizardry games) described it as "a truly gigantic game" that "seems to be about the size of 2 or 3
Ultimas put together." He suggested that, if "
NEC can handle the mammoth translating job,
Ziria could be the
game hit of 1991" unless, "of course,
Nintendo counters with
Zelda III or
Dragon Warrior III, and
Sega with
Phantasy Star III." The sequel
Tengai Makyō II: Manjimaru (1992) was reportedly the
most expensive game ever made up until that time; the game's lead programmer Hiromasa Iwasaki later revealed the development budget was about ( at the time, or adjusted for inflation), making it possibly the first
AAA game production on CD-ROM. The music was composed by
Joe Hisaishi, known for composing soundtracks to
Studio Ghibli's
anime films such as
Castle in the Sky (1986),
Princess Mononoke (1997) and
Spirited Away (2001). There were plans to release
Tengai Makyō II in
North America, but due to the
TurboGrafx-16's failure in that market, no
Tengai Makyō games would be released there up until
Far East of Eden: Kabuki Klash (1995). ==Creators==