Shiro Maekawa

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Shiro Maekawa on Twitter:

For the scenario of Sonic the Hedgehog, the writer of Fam, the Silver Wing Ms. Kiyoko Yoshimura helped write it, but above all, I thought I was so done for Amy’s line: “When a girl … falls in love, the world will get bigger!” This is the line I can’t write, I think.

[Original English line: Love changes everything. It feels like every little moment in your life is huge!]

Shiro Maekawa on Twitter:

I became “( ゜Д゜) Ha!” after listening to Maaya Sakamoto’s Bokutachi ga Koi o Suru Riyuu (The Reason We Fall in Love). This song has the emotions and the covered parts of Elise in Sonic the Hedgehog! Especially this part:

Doko made mo doko made mo
(Anywhere, anywhere)

Chikadukeba tooku naru kimi ni koi o shita
(If I got close, I’d have fallen in love with you, who’d get further)

Sore dake de sora wa hiroku fukaku natte iku
(With just that, the sky will go on getting broader and deeper)

Shiro Maekawa on Twitter:

Finished the rescue until Knuckles for the time being! A Sonic title which I didn’t work on is super fun! But as usual, 2D games don’t fit his character, do they~?

Shiro Maekawa on Twitter:

Sonic’s Nendoroid…? I wonder if they would also make Shadow’s…. But Tails’s will be the first, won’t it? I’m sure of it. (^_^)

Shiro Maekawa on Twitter:

When it shows her picking the flower to Sonic there, what I think is: “My contradiction is somehow…!” That’s why she is a spoilt kiddy in the end because it shows the strawflower as well during the last boss, isn’t she? I wonder if Sonic offering her the strawflower at last means eternity ≠ immortality in the end.

Shiro Maekawa on Twitter:

For the action of acquiring the flower that represents eternity, that means it contains the intention of wanting to obtain eternity, and the ambivalent meaning of erasing and not obtaining it.

Shiro Maekawa on Twitter:

I think that there is contradiction in the action of picking the flower. It’s the contradiction of the feeling of wanting to make the flower’s beauty her own, and of completely making the flower’s life end there.