Tsukihime A Piece Of Blue Glass Moon [UPDATED]

The subtitle itself is poetic: "A piece of blue glass moon" refers to the fragile, beautiful, and artificial nature of the reality the characters inhabit. It suggests something precious that can shatter at any moment—perfectly mirroring the game’s tone. The premise remains faithful to the original but is delivered with vastly more detail and nuance.

Years later, Shiki returns to the wealthy Tohno household after the death of his estranged father. He reunites with his younger sister, Akiha, and the maid twins, Hisui and Kohaku. However, a strange condition called "anemia" causes him to black out frequently. Tsukihime A piece of blue glass moon

Furthermore, Tsukihime shares a multiverse with Fate/stay night and Kara no Kyoukai (The Garden of Sinners). Fans will spot references to Aoko Aozaki (a major character in Mahoutsukai no Yoru ) and concepts that will later appear in Fate/Grand Order . | Feature | Original Tsukihime (2000) | Tsukihime: A piece of blue glass moon | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Content | Near Side + Far Side (All 5 routes) | Near Side only (Arcueid + Ciel) | | Length | ~50 hours | ~60-70 hours (for two routes) | | Visuals | Low-res, amateur art | High-definition, modern cinema-quality | | Voice Acting | None | Full Japanese voice cast | | Music | MIDI-based soundtrack | Full orchestral + electronic score | | H-scenes | Present (notorious) | Removed entirely (replaced with graphic violence) | | Availability | Fan-translation only (abandonware) | Official English on Switch/PS4/PS5 | The subtitle itself is poetic: "A piece of