Promise Mascot Agency begins by placing you in an environment that hardly resembles a typical town. Here, an exiled yakuza fixer is forced into an unexpected role—running a mascot agency in a town seemingly cursed from within. The setting is full of offbeat humor and a sense of foreboding decay.
You meet characters that seem pulled from a surreal canvas, where even the smallest encounter sparks laughter and unexpected reflection. The story creates a picture of a man thrust into odd circumstances, balancing personal redemption with the everyday absurdities of managing a failing business.
The game mixes different forms of play that rarely appear together. Your role quickly shifts from handling delicate administrative duties to taking control of a vehicle that sometimes acts more like a boat. Meanwhile, short, fast-paced challenges disrupt the calm, requiring you to think quickly during mascot emergencies. This surprising combination of meticulous management and wild,...
You meet characters that seem pulled from a surreal canvas, where even the smallest encounter sparks laughter and unexpected reflection. The story creates a picture of a man thrust into odd circumstances, balancing personal redemption with the everyday absurdities of managing a failing business.
The game mixes different forms of play that rarely appear together. Your role quickly shifts from handling delicate administrative duties to taking control of a vehicle that sometimes acts more like a boat. Meanwhile, short, fast-paced challenges disrupt the calm, requiring you to think quickly during mascot emergencies. This surprising combination of meticulous management and wild,...
- 4/10/2025
- by Zhi Ho
- Gazettely
Around 1976, Toei Studios showed the money to two of its star directors, Kinji Fukasaku and Sadao Nakajima, to direct their own versions of vehicular mayhem action features, both starring one of their key leading men Tsunehiko Watase. Nakajima’s effort was released in May, 1976 in the form of the stylish “A Savage Beast Goes Mad”, but it was Fukasaku’s output that came earlier, with “Violent Panic: The Big Crash” hitting theatres in February, 1976.
Bank robbers Yamanaka Takashi and Seki Mitsuo have been plaguing Japan, doing smash-and-grab jobs in banks across the country. The young and rebellious Midorikawa Michi, who Takashi has a soft spot for, keeps throwing a spanner in his plans but Takashi is determined to pull one last big job and retire to Brazil with the loot. The two robbers finalise on Kobe as that job, but when Mitsuo is killed while fleeing from the scene after...
Bank robbers Yamanaka Takashi and Seki Mitsuo have been plaguing Japan, doing smash-and-grab jobs in banks across the country. The young and rebellious Midorikawa Michi, who Takashi has a soft spot for, keeps throwing a spanner in his plans but Takashi is determined to pull one last big job and retire to Brazil with the loot. The two robbers finalise on Kobe as that job, but when Mitsuo is killed while fleeing from the scene after...
- 9/26/2024
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
Justin Sebik was expelled from Big Brother Season 2 for threatening to kill a co-star with a knife. Justin faced legal trouble after the show, being arrested for allegedly assaulting his girlfriend. Justin is now a family man and has moved on from his reality TV past, although little is known about his current activities.
Justin Sebik from Big Brother has improved his life in the last two decades. The New Jersey native was in his mid-20s when he featured in the popular reality competition series. He joined season 2 with other popular names such as Krista Stegall, Nicole Schaffrich, Hardy Ames-Hill, Mike “Boogie” Malin, and many more. Big Brother 2 was full of controversies and drama like the previous season. It featured a single-story house with multiple bedrooms, significantly bigger than season 1. The show aired from July to September 2001 on CBS.
Initially, Justin seemed like a decent addition to the...
Justin Sebik from Big Brother has improved his life in the last two decades. The New Jersey native was in his mid-20s when he featured in the popular reality competition series. He joined season 2 with other popular names such as Krista Stegall, Nicole Schaffrich, Hardy Ames-Hill, Mike “Boogie” Malin, and many more. Big Brother 2 was full of controversies and drama like the previous season. It featured a single-story house with multiple bedrooms, significantly bigger than season 1. The show aired from July to September 2001 on CBS.
Initially, Justin seemed like a decent addition to the...
- 12/24/2023
- by Neha Nathani
- ScreenRant
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