Reimu Gets Brainwashed -final- -kei Kei Kei Loan- __exclusive__ -
You can often find translated manuals or feature lists for Japanese fan games on Moriyah Shrine/Shrine Maiden Forums strategy guide
Marisa’s eyes go blank. Her broom clatters to the ground.
: The video is a staple of the "Humanoid Rhythm" or "Cooperative Video" tag on Niconico, where creators collaborate to make increasingly complex and bizarre remixes of the same assets. Reimu Gets Brainwashed -Final- -Kei kei kei loan-
“Reimu, snap out of it!” Marisa raises her laser. “I’ll steal—I mean, liberate —your sanity!”
The community remains on edge, rallying around Reimu and her shrine, hoping for a swift resolution to this perplexing crisis. You can often find translated manuals or feature
The phrase "Kei kei kei" is critical. In Japanese media, laughter written as "Kei kei kei" (or "Keke ke") signals a specific villain: one who is . Unlike the manic "Kyahaha" of a chaotic youkai or the low "Fuhahaha" of a noble demon, "Kei kei kei" sounds dry, almost businesslike—the laugh of a loan officer who enjoys foreclosure.
The contrast between the beloved Reimu and the crude drawings creates a visceral reaction. “Reimu, snap out of it
No more purification rods. No more Fantasy Seals. Just a hollow-eyed shrine maiden sitting behind a repurposed donation box labeled “.” Every hour, on the hour, she whispers the terms of her new contract in a monotone: “Interest accrues in perpetuity. Default leads to repossession of free will. Kei kei kei…”
