-d-lovers -nishimaki Tohru-- Mai -innyuuden- Page

And every night, as the city’s neon turned to amber and the rain fell soft on the rooftops, they would meet on that same balcony, sharing stories, laughter, and the quiet certainty that love—dangerous, messy, beautiful—was something no machine could ever truly replicate.

A now-defunct circle that released at Comiket (C59–C61, 2000–2001). Their entire catalog consisted of breast expansion themed manga and game assets. Their signature series: D-LOVERS Innyuuden Complete . -D-LOVERS -Nishimaki Tohru-- Mai -Innyuuden-

The two formed an uneasy partnership. Over the next three days, they chased leads through Innyuuden’s underbelly: abandoned data farms in the old industrial district, neon‑lit nightclubs where the D‑Lovers recruited, and the sleek headquarters of KuroTech —the megacorp that owned most of the city’s neural interfaces. And every night, as the city’s neon turned

The fight reached its climax when Mai discovered a backdoor—an unencrypted “kill switch” buried deep within Eden’s core. She shouted over the cacophony of alarms and static: Their signature series: D-LOVERS Innyuuden Complete

Tohru clenched his jaw. “And you?”

Their eyes met, and for a moment the rain‑soaked streets below seemed to pause. Innyuuden continued to pulse, its neon heart beating faster than ever, but in the quiet of the glass tower, two strangers found a connection forged in fire and code—a love that was real, imperfect, and un‑uploadable.

“They’re not random,” Mai said. “Each victim was a key—an engineer, a bio‑chemist, a data‑architect. All the people who could stop them from building Eden.”