Chinese Version of Vocaloid Costumes Design

Hatsune Miku generated more than ten billion yen in revenue since the anime and characters introduced five years ago for the first time. Design of the Vocaloid Costumes gives birth to the flourishing progress of the contemporary market. Different revenue streams for the Hatsune Miku franchise include the voice software itself, video game titles, manga adaptations, public performances, live online broadcasts, songs featured in karaoke chain stores, CDs, DVDs of performances, collaborations with the Sapporo Snow Festival, and miscellaneous merchandise. What kinds of Vocaloid outfit meet your ideal satisfaction when you pay attention to the Hatsune Miku?

Recently, Vocaloid China just released the final images of their five Characters – Mo Qingxian, Zhiyu Moke, Luo Tianyi, Yuezheng Ling and Yuezheng Longya (from left to right). Their images are based on illustrations selected from VCP (Vocaloid China Project), an illustration contest for their Chinese Vocaloid characters in new Vocaloid Costumes, and the official illustractor of Vocaloid China – ideolo has re-created the illustrations to make the five characters more perfect. There is any lovely and hot cosplay clothing you intend to portray? Maybe this is Asian style and it’s not like the hit game Kingdom Hearts Costumes, or cool FullMetal Alchemist Cosplay as westerners and Americans taste.

I tried to find out the illustrators of the original characters then I visited Vocaloid China Open Space. To my surprise, I saw some outstanding character designs with Vocaloid Costumes which I thought they were much better than the five original characters chosen by the official. Is there anything wrong with my aesthetic standard? But I don’t think so, how do you guys think?

Anyway, the Chinese version of Hatsune Miku really meets my satisfaction. So far, Sega has released four video games featuring Hatsune Miku, and the video games have shipped a total of more than 1 million copies. In addition, the Vocaloid Costumes commercial project for the Toyota Corolla and the Google Chrome commercial featuring Hatsune Miku also contributed to the franchise’s rising popularity and additional revenue. The song used for the Google Chrome commercial, “‘Tell Your World,” was released as a single on March 14 and sold 33,000 copies its first week to rank at #4 on Oricon’s album rankings chart.

Source from: http://www.cosplayerclub.com/blog.html/Chinese-Version-of-Vocaloid-Costumes-Design/

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