Circle Eden Bleach Mayuri 56 Games Exclusive Here

In late 2011, just months after the exclusive was shipped, Shueisha and Studio Pierrot issued a sweeping cease & desist against Circle Eden. Unlike typical fan works, Circle Eden had charged money (the subscription fee) for access to copyrighted characters. The circle disbanded overnight. Their entire web presence—forums, download links, even fan wikis—was scrubbed. The "56 Games Exclusive" became a ghost.

To understand the item, we must first dissect its name. Each component holds a key to its identity.

If you are playing a Bleach video game (like Bleach: Brave Souls or the Blade of Fate series) and are looking for an unlockable.

General Guide to Unlocking Mayuri in Popular Games:

1. Bleach: Brave Souls (Mobile)

2. Bleach: Soul Resurrección (PS3)

3. Bleach: The Blade of Fate / Dark Souls (DS)


A tamagotchi-style simulator, but creepy. You raise a larval Nemu clone. The twist: it only evolves if you ignore it for exactly 48 real-world hours. If you check on it too often, it melts.

To give you the precise guide you need, please clarify one of the following: circle eden bleach mayuri 56 games exclusive

If you can provide the name of the game or the specific media type, I can provide a step-by-step walkthrough.


Here is the jaw-dropping part. This is not one game. It is a curated compilation of 56 distinct playable games. The keyword "Exclusive" suggests that this collection was never sold publicly. Instead, according to archived blog posts from 2010, the "56 Games Exclusive" was a limited-run DVD-ROM given only to members of Circle Eden’s Patreon-like subscription service (a precursor to modern crowdfunding) at the "Gold Tier" level. Estimates put the total number of existing copies at fewer than 200 worldwide.

Score: 2.5 / 5 modified souls

Pros:

Cons:

Final thought: If you find this “Circle Eden” disc at a flea market for under ¥2000, buy it for the shock value. But don’t expect Bleach: Soul Resurrección. You’re paying for Mayuri’s ego in executable form—and honestly, he’d love that you wasted your time reviewing it.


Would I recommend it? Only if you want to understand how Mayuri spends his free time. (Hint: badly coded Flash games.)