What Key work inspired you the most to do better in life?

Little Busters!

I donā€™t know if I was like this before, or just after reading LB!, but LB! strengthened it anyway. My need to be independent and strong. Since Iā€™m gray-romantic, marriage and children do not attract me. However, I decided that after I complete 18 years old Iā€™m going to move out and live by myself. I see the sad fate of many people that keep relying on their parents their whole lives, they get depressed and donā€™t go anywhere. LB! taught my I can rely on people I love when I need, but there will be a time I have to face difficulties by myself, and Iā€™ve gotta be prepared for when that time comes. This is why Iā€™ll try my best to become a mature and strong adult, even if that is not an easy task.

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Yet again, Iā€™m going to have to go with Little Busters. Not even just in terms of Keyā€™s works either, I genuinely canā€™t think of a single other game, anime, movie, etc. that had quite the same lasting impact on me that Little Busters did. I donā€™t even know where to begin listing all the things Iā€™ve learned from it since I first read the VN 4 years ago. It has so many great views on friendship, loss, and reaching out for help from the people who care about you, all of which have impacted the way I live my own life.

Komariā€™s route in particular had the biggest impact on me, as I know Iā€™ve said here before. I think all the routes have SOMETHING valuable in them, but in terms of stories that really INSPIRED me, Komari is on top. I think thereā€™s a lot to be learned from her about being true to your own emotions, and the value of not lying to yourself just to make yourself feel better. Whenever Iā€™m feeling down, I remind myself of that, that itā€™s okay not to be happy ALL the time. Eventually whatever is bothering you will pass, and you can find something new to smile about. But nothing will change if you ignore your problems, as I know I used to do a lot more often than I do now.

And then thereā€™s her happiness spiral, of course, which I definitely try to live by. It really is true, isnā€™t it, thereā€™s happiness to be found in making others happy? Itā€™s such a simple concept, but Little Busters really put it into words, I guess, and I think itā€™s a great perspective to have when dealing with other people.

Also, to this day the VN itself serves as a sort of comfort object for me. If Iā€™m feeling lonely, or upset, or scared about anything, Iā€™ll go back and replay bits of either the common or Komari routes, and it never fails to cheer me up. Iā€™m really a very introverted person, and I have a lot of trouble making friends with people outside of the internet, so thereā€™s something really nice about having that group of characters that I can consider friends. The Little Busters have the sort of bond that, someday, Iā€™d like to have even a fraction of with other people. Theyā€™re living the high school days I WISH I had had.

So yeah, as moving as things like CLANNAD or Air or Planetarian all were, none of them resonated with me in quite the same personal way that Little Busters did.

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[quote=ā€œSuikaShoujo, post:9, topic:2508, full:trueā€] Iā€™m really a very introverted person, and I have a lot of trouble making friends with people outside of the internet, so thereā€™s something really nice about having that group of characters that I can consider friends. The Little Busters have the sort of bond that, someday, Iā€™d like to have even a fraction of with other people. Theyā€™re living the high school days I WISH I had had.

[/quote]

Same here. This is exactly how I feel about the Little Busters, the only difference is that Iā€™m still in high school and maybe I can achieve that (but itā€™s very unlikely, since I canā€™t help getting irritated at teenagers, cuz Oregairu reasons)

I forgot to mention that on my post, but thatā€™s also one of my life goals: having people like Little Busters, a group of real friends that accept me for what I am and with whom I can feel comfortable around. Theyā€™re all very different, and thatā€™s a rare thing IRL, as most people tend to be friends just with people similar to them. It shows how friendship has no boundaries and that those differences actually complete each other to create something bigger. In that sense, LB! is also very inspiring.

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For my case, it would have to be CLANNAD. I could relate to the main character because I was also afraid of change in my life. The environment I was living in, making friends, as well as making decisions for my future. My high school life back then was all about getting through school with good grades, getting into a community college, and going to work. I didnā€™t have time to make lasting friendships and I went through life just existing. CLANNAD had taught me how important family really is and I have been doing the complete opposite of treating my family like they were shadows to me and I felt really bad about myself and I was afraid to decide how to become closer to them because we donā€™t talk that much, if only a little. I recall when in the VN where Nagisa had mentioned that change is necessary for us to move on with ourselves and Tomoya added that you need to find new different things in life. It helped me to see that I have to find other things to do that I could shed some new light on my personality and to think of others instead of selfishly think about myself and drowning in my self-pity.

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Iā€™d say Rewrite has been responsible for the majority of my creative inspirations. There were a lot of different things going on in Rewrite that just seemed so interesting to me. Rewrite isnā€™t really my favorite work though, and itā€™s not the work that left the biggest impact on me. To me, however, it was probably the most inspiring, creatively. (It was my first Key VN too, iirc. That might have something to do with it. Will just have to see whenever the Rewrite bookclub happens.)

I say itā€™s ā€œcreatively inspiring to meā€ because itā€™s probably had the biggest influence in my writing approach out of all the Key VNs. Shizuruā€™s route and Moon are definitely the most responsible for that too. (I found Shizuruā€™s route to be just so romantically beautiful, and I found Moon to be so philosophically beautiful. Though Iā€™m fairly sure Iā€™ve already talked about those before.)

Now if weā€™re talking about something that was just ā€œlife inspiring,ā€ or something like that, then the answer would probably be Angel Beats! (donate your organs after death; though Iā€™ve always done that). Though I donā€™t really regard AB! that highly, I do think that the message I took away from it is worthwhile: You can make your life meaningful, even in the worst of situations. The approach here felt very different from most other Key works. (And since I watched it before reading LB! it was the most influential in that regard. Had the order been reversed, Iā€™d probably my take away from LB! wouldā€™ve been more influential in that regard.)

To be clear though, neither of those are my favorite Key works. (Kanon is definitely top-tier for me, but a discussion here would be too tangential; just felt it was worth mentioning.)

Also, I think itā€™s worth mentioning that Charlotte has a lot of potential as far as inspiration goes, since it basically emphasizes what you can do yourself if you really put effort into it. (Though I feel they messed up a bit in their execution of certain things, but alas.)


Seems most people prefer Clannad or LB! though. >.>

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Thereā€™s only like 12 people who commented thoughā€¦ But I think itā€™s due to 2 very important factors

  1. CLANNAD is really the anime that introduces people to Key. Yes, there are some individuals who were introduced from Kanon or Air or even later Key works, but CLANNAD is definitely one of the most influential to how big the community is. So of course, the majority would say CLANNAD.

  2. The theme of LB is Friendship and Adolescence. While it takes the Friendship theme to the heart, more than the Adolescence theme. CLANNAD focused on both the Family-Theme and Friendship-Theme, which would reach out to more people, since the Adolescence theme is something that not a lot of people like to wander off into, thinking about it, if that makes sense.

But at the end of the day, we all love Key so it doesnā€™t matter which one influences us the most :slight_smile: Youā€™re more likely to love CLANNAD if you have family issues or value your family a lot. Youā€™re more likely to love LB if you value your time and your friends a lot. Youā€™re more likely to love Rewrite if you value our Earthā€™s environmental problems more. Youā€™re more likely going to value Angel Beats! if you value life itself the most.

Though this might not apply to all. Key is very ā€œstrange.ā€
You can have zero family-problems but love CLANNAD a lot. You could have no friends and love LB a lot. You could care less about the world but love Rewrite a lot. You donā€™t have to value life, but can love Angel Beats! a lot. Key has something that reaches a wider variety of people. And those people can either like it, or not like it, for their own personal reason.

An example of this would be if someone loved CLANNAD a lot for their family-theme messages. The majority would love CLANNAD because they might have family issues. But there could also be people who love CLANNAD because theyā€™re realizing how thankful they should be that they have a great family, compared to some of CLANNADā€™s families.

Another example would be if someone loved LB. The majority would love it for its friendship-theme meanings and relate to it so much because they have their own group of friends. While there would also be people who might not have as much friends, or maybe no friends, that love LB because they might have hope that if a group of misfits (The LB members) found each other, then they might have hope that theyā€™ll find friends someday.

Key brings us influential stories to a lot of people. Itā€™s the way you look at it though, that determines who you want to be. Letā€™s all just take a minute to thank Key for their wonderful influential stories that help us, and continue to make us happy, with beautiful messages. I know that for sure, CLANNAD and LB actually did save some peopleā€™s lives (in real life). It was the way they took in the stories. Thank you Key for blessing us with your beautiful stores.

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Asking me which Key work inspired me the most is like asking who my best friend is. Itā€™s extremely difficult, if not impossible, to decide because each has touched my heart in some form or another. Iā€™m a man of technicalities rather than feeling, so crying or laughing has nothing to do with what my favorite Key work is or which inspired me the most. Almost all of the Key works Iā€™ve read/watched are almost equally inspirational, and helped shape my life into what it is today.

That being said, looking back as far as the moment I picked up the CLANNAD anime, I donā€™t think Iā€™ve ever been more inspired by a Key game/anime as I have with AIR. Yes, I think AIR is more inspirational than Little Busters, which Iā€™m sure was everyone elseā€™s choice on this thread. Why do I think so? Because I found it more relatable and, for lack of a better term, inspired than any other Key game. My experience with the Bookclub only made this more prevalent.

AIR is a reflection of what I used to be, what I am, and what I may become, all in one story. I knew that there was some sort of purpose set out for me but I only had a vague idea of what it was. I felt held back by physical and spiritual chains, and it took a while to realize just how much I needed friends. I never knew the true weight of self-sufficience until the responsibility was thrust upon me, and I broke down under the pressure. Only after did I realize how much I neglected what was truly important, and fought my way to gain the trust of a few friends. There were mistakes made, but Iā€™m glad my efforts led me here, where new friends just keep coming. :stuck_out_tongue:

In addition, all of the routes touch on the relationship between mother and child, and in hindsight I canā€™t think of any greater person on this Earth than my own mother. Sheā€™s always there to cheer me on when I feel accomplished, and to pick me up when I feel like a failure. But she is also human, getting frustrated when things donā€™t go her way, or sad when someone close to her is lost. AIRā€™s characters and scenarios made me look back upon my past and wonder what exactly I did to cause my mother much joy or grief.

Finally, AIR is probably the only VNs that improved my outlook on life on a spiritual level. Perhaps it wasnā€™t the intention of the creators, but I donā€™t think the religious parallels in AIR werenā€™t thrown in there for nothing. Iā€™m a big fan of redemptive stories, mainly because Iā€™m on an eternally redemptive state for the aforementioned neglect. AIR in particular felt inspired by Christian morals and ideals, although the lore leans more on Buddhism and Shinto beliefs. I wonā€™t go into detail as to how or why, but I definitely felt like some degree of truth lies in these stories.

I love every Key VN I read, and I feel the next few VNs from them will be just as great. However, there is something about classic Key that feels magical, ethereal even. Their stories arenā€™t perfect, but they have a subtlety to them that makes them feel emotionally powerful. I love Little Busters and I canā€™t wait for Harmonia, but if it werenā€™t for AIR, I feel that it would have taken a little longer to find my footing in life. :relieved:

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Iā€™m absolutely loving the discussion on this topic, everyone. I always love hearing stories about how Key works have touched people on a personal level, and reading all of your stories have just warmed my heart and reminded me as to why I appreciate Key so much.

However, the reason why I probably love hearing these stories is because I donā€™t have many to share on my own to begin with. A lot of the messages promoted by Key works are for dealing with problems or personal issues that I donā€™t have; or have already gotten over myself. While I still do have personal issues, they are of a different caliber than what Key stories attempt to inspire people over. As such, the messages of works like CLANNAD, Little Busters, and Rewrite, while all very powerful, simply canā€™t relate to me all that much.

However, if there is any one message from a Key work that I have, or at least am trying to, put to heart, it is that of AIR. I believe the final message of AIR is that of searching for oneā€™s own happiness, without being brought down by the pressures of society, and it comes to me as I read it during a time that I am trying to chase my dreams, all while wondering whether it is worth it due to the sacrifices I have to make. And it reminds me, even as I type it, that yes, it is worth it, lest I let my regrets live on for 1000 more summers, not knowing where it could have taken me.

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Yeah, I definitely agree with you on all those points. (Including me drawing a conclusion from a small sample set, heheh. ^^; (ā€œThereā€™s only like 12 people who commented thoughā€))

[quote=ā€œTotoro_Futaki, post:13, topic:2508ā€]
CLANNAD is really the anime that introduces people to Key
[/quote]Iā€™m probably an exception but I was first introduced to Key through the Angel Beats! anime. I thought ā€œOh, Iā€™m actually crying? Jeez, Iā€™ve never actually cried watching something before.ā€ Then when I looked through recommendations I saw Clannad and After Story listed a lot, which is what really introduced me to Key.

The family themes are certainly really strong and well done in Clannad, IMO.

[quote=ā€œTotoro_Futaki, post:13, topic:2508ā€]
But at the end of the day, we all love Key so it doesnā€™t matter which one influences us the most
[/quote]Haha, yup. This. ^_^

[quote=ā€œEisenKoubu, post:14, topic:2508ā€]
Itā€™s extremely difficult, if not impossible, to decide because each has touched my heart in some form or another.
[/quote]Definitely. I was weighing each of them and tried to figure out which ones best fit with the topicā€™s question. (In the end I picked two and mentioned a few extras.) I really shouldā€™ve pointed out AIR as well. Alsoā€¦

[quote=ā€œEisenKoubu, post:14, topic:2508ā€]
AIR is a reflection of what I used to be, what I am, and what I may become, all in one story
[/quote]Thatā€™s a really good way to put it. AIR definitely earns high marks from me for similar reasons.

[quote=ā€œPepe, post:15, topic:2508ā€]
As such, the messages of works like CLANNAD, Little Busters, and Rewrite, while all very powerful, simply canā€™t relate to me all that much.
[/quote]Mostly the same here, but I feel they can still be related to in the sense of a virtuous reminder, of sorts. (Thatā€™s how I took AB! for example.)

[quote=ā€œPepe, post:15, topic:2508ā€]
I believe the final message of AIR is that of searching for oneā€™s own happiness, without being brought down by the pressures of society
[/quote]I think I may have mentioned it in the bookclub, but I really like that takeaway. Definitely this, man.

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Definitely. Itā€™s hard to pinpoint what is ā€œthe most inspiringā€ out of all the works from Key. Each has their shining factor which makes their title what it is. I chose Little Busters! more so on the fact of how much it shaped my character and outlook on people.

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Iā€™ve never thought of Airā€™s message as that wayā€¦ But thank you for sharing. Iā€™m kinda chasing my dreams at the moment, so giving me that insight really helped :slight_smile: Time to re-watch Air TV :smiley:

That message is actually very relatable to me at the moment. The dreams I have would mean that I have to give up my private life and move away for 2-10 years working hard everyday, with the possibility of getting dropped by the people there.

And letā€™s not forget about newer Key works, like Charlotte, which (though was executed bad), had great messages. I think that the fact about how people with abilities will be captured by scientist if they ever got caught (stated by Tomori every time the student council went and found some ability user who was using his/her ability recklessly), showed us humanity. It showed us that there are people in the world who donā€™t care for you, but just want to use you for what you have. I think Charlotte is something that inspires me to be someone who is NOT like those scientist. It inspires me realize how I should be thankful for things, like having a normal life at the moment.

Time to read the VN, more like it! The TV series doesnā€™t portray this message very well, if at all, and reading the VN is what made me realize it and want to put it to heart, more than anything

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I thought Charlotte was pretty good. Although in the end, it did not meet up to my expectations ( for example how yusa and joujirou disappear for much of the series and suddenly come back around the end which bothered me a bit) (and a lot of missed potential with the capturing of gifted individuals). After a few episodes in, the series made me look back at myself and others how we too have ā€œquirksā€ within our character just like our friends from Charlotte.

It felt like as though I less than average compared to many around me. There are many times I catch myself looking up to others and constantly think as if they are better than me in every aspect. But slowly I learned that no one can be the best, no one is perfect out there. Charlotte came around and it became that catalyst to make me believe that people use what they have as their forte and capitalize on that.

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Rewrite.
After it is too hard to find a decent anime to watch.

Or i can say, that problem bothers me after every Key work.

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The 28th of November 2014. The first time I read planetarian. I remember that afternoon as finding planetarian by chance whilst lazily browsing the Steam store I would have skipped past it if the thumbnail wasnā€™t so pretty and the VisualArts:Key tag hadnā€™t caught my eye, by this time I had watched Clannad and read Kanon so I was surprised by the setting of planetarian. Of course I immediately bought it without prior research because of the Key tag, and I truly felt like I was stepping on unknown and hollow ground.

The next four hours were easily the most immersive I had ever experienced. I had phased out of reality almost the whole way through the story, I absolutely could not put the story down until it was done and once I came out the other side and finished being a sobbing mess drenched in tears, I felt reformed with new-found values and views. Today it remains my utmost favorite piece I have read and because of it, I discovered Kazamatsuri and continued on to be informed of other works by Key.

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Definitely Clannad. It wasnā€™t my first Key work (that was Angel Beats), and itā€™s not my favorite either, but the anime adaptation was the first Key work I experienced that actually sort of changed my perspective on things, so it wins out over Little Busters!.

I donā€™t really want to get too much into it, but Clannad made me more deeply value some of the closer relationships Iā€™ve had with other people, and also caused me to reevaluate some of the rockier ones. I guess it just gave me a more positive and refreshed outlook on interactions with other people. I kinda wish I had watched it during my edgelord phase of high school, but itā€™s a tad too late for that now.

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A bit late to the party (how did I not see this topic?!), but I had to pitch in. Was just about to make a similar topic before the Search bar helped me out :smiley:

Iā€™ll be upfront and preface this: the majority of the inspiration and emotion comes from something outside of Key that this work happened to link up with. Of course, in a sense, thatā€™s true for all our answers; I just mention it because itā€™s not actually an explicit theme of the work (though you can argue for implicit). It comes to bear more clearly once Catholic first principles are applied. So Iā€™m not sure anyone else will have the same experience haha.

In any case, be aware: Iā€™ll be speaking about religion and faith, as I canā€™t separate it from why I felt as I did. Youā€™ve been warned!


(most fitting BGM)

I was most affected and (re)inspired by the Angel Beats! anime.

First time: I binge watched it, finishing at 3 in the morning on a weekend at seminary. That should tell you my state of mind and stranger state of affairs. I remember seeing the first episode, hearing the ED, and being deeply moved. I had a sense I was going to encounter something incredible and awesome - emphasis on the awe.

As I watched, I enjoyed it; the humor was fun, and the story played out well.

Then came Episodes 10 and 12.

I cried.

But not because I was sad. It wasnā€™t sad the slightest bit to me.

You see, as I watched this from my seminarian view, this is the general outline I saw: these teens died tragic deaths with their lives incomplete somehow and ended up here. Theyā€™re searching for a meaning to their suffering - their lives. And, when they find it, coming to peace with their lives-

This is where my Catholic understanding parted from the story. In the actual story, they disappear and are reincarnated. At least, the reincarnation is hinted at with the final few moments.

Thatā€™s not what I believed; so, before seeing that final scene, I had been interpreting everything in a wholly different way.

Their disappearance was akin to them entering Heaven.

That probably doesnā€™t seem very emotionally moving to you, which is understandable. Heavenā€™s where you float around like angels and stuff. Itā€™s abstract happiness. Whatever; you donā€™t think about it much, and the mention of it isnā€™t a big deal.

However, I (and, hopefully, all the other priests/seminarians) have a different understanding of it. The very reason we wish to become priests is because we know the nature of Heaven, happiness, and God.

Love. Incredible, overwhelming, all-satisfying, unbelievable, shocking, absolute, almost terrifying Love. I do not joke when I say I have never known any pleasure, joy, emotion, or happiness greater than the love this heavenly, godly life entails.

It is a life of love - the purest happiness - which we long for every person to know and live, forever and ever, because of how supremely good it is.

So Angel Beats! changed, for me, from a story about reincarnation to a story of souls, after suffering painful lives and deaths, finding their way to the greatest, purest Love I know.

Itā€™s quite literally the End that weā€™re all striving for, and the most beautiful.

I cried, and I remembered why I wanted to give my life away.

Love.

So yeah; itā€™s not exactly what Maeda intended to write, judging from reincarnation being there, but Iā€™d like to think similar themes ran in the background (esp. with ā€œGoodbye Daysā€ being as it is).

Thatā€™s why Angel Beats! is my favorite, as well as the one that inspired me the most.

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Rewriteā€™s not on the poll, but that is hands down the one game that has made the biggest impact on me. Never again will I litter. God. I donā€™t want rainbow swamps to form and the apocalypse to comeā€¦ unless it comes in the form of a cute girl, of course.

REMEMBER KIDS. REDUCE, REUSE, RECYCLE

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While I personally dont think Clannad as the best of Key work anymore, itā€™s still one that inspired me the most :3

Clannad was somehow the only anime my family and I were able to watch together and equally enjoy, which is saying something a lot because we have completely different tastes. Anime had been mine and simply not theirs. Weā€™re not a chummy family which is ironic because we were raised as Christians and from what I have observed, Christians are supposed to be chummy people, especially to their blood relatives. Clannad did not exactly brought us together but it did for a while, which is something.

Iā€™m pretty sure many of the stories in Clannad touched us in various ways but perhaps Nagisaā€™s story struck me the strongest the most, or perhaps, the whole Furukawa family. Whenever I look back at the Furukawasā€™s story, I see my parents. My parents arenā€™t exactly talkative about their histories coz, like I said earlier, chummy is not in our vocabulary. Their accomplishments, I learn from their friends and their failures, I realize them only today.

Itā€™s cheesy, but I sort of learned how to value these little stories people share about them because of the Furukawas and wonder what my parents would have done if I were a more reliable person. I didnā€™t jumped into tears like Nagisa did, but more so, I learned to appreciate what my parents had done and follow my own dreams. Akioā€™s declaration at the end of Clannad still gives me goosebumps whenever I see it. We all need our own Akios and I guess he voiced out what my parents have always wanted to say for a very long time. I start to see the small acts they do to support me and I begin to realize that the smallest actions I make for them gives them joy.

I suppose I realized that my parents love me ahaha Things change once you start knowing that.

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