Type in a song number or phrase to search for a song. You can search using transliteration into western characters, or using language-specific characters. You can use the * character as a wildcard eg har*heral, or . to represent a single character eg je.us. Click the dropdown to see the many advanced filters available.
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Welcome to Worship Leader. On each page there will be a short help message appearing at the bottom of your screen. To see the full help, touch the message. To turn these messages off, go to the settings page.
Below, you can choose the language you would like to use the app in.
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You don't have any sets yet, choose a song and click 'Add Song to Set' to make one
Here you can see a list of any worship sets that you have created. These help you to click forwards and backwards between songs. You can create these by clicking 'Add to Set' when viewing a song.
Here are all the songs in your worship set. You can reorder them by dragging on the reorder icon next to each song, or remove them by clicking the cross icon.
This contrast is key. The horror doesn't come from gore, but from degradation : the moment Nobu’s pristine white uniform is torn against a filthy cave wall. Sengoku Gakidou is unapologetically extreme, earning it an 18+ rating with explicit content warnings for non-consensual situations, body horror, and psychological breaking. Major Western distributors have refused to localize it; it remains a Japan-only physical release (price: ¥8,800).
For connoisseurs of the bizarre and the bold, this goblin’s lair is a disturbing, unforgettable journey into the dark dark side of the Sengoku era. goblin no suana sengoku gakidou
The goblin lair, however, is a masterpiece of : muddy browns, damp stone textures, and a claustrophobic, fish-eye lens perspective. The goblins themselves are deliberately ugly—stooped, leering, with too-long arms—a stark visual rejection of the handsome, relatable anti-hero. This contrast is key
4/5 (for the niche it targets) Warning: Contains extreme adult content. Not suitable for minors or those sensitive to depictions of coercion. Source: One-up Co., Ltd. (2024). Goblin no Suana: Sengoku Gakidou – Official Guidebook. Getchu.com sales data, October-November 2024. Major Western distributors have refused to localize it;
In the sprawling, often bewildering world of Japanese adult visual novels (eroge), genre fusion is the lifeblood of creativity. Yet, every so often, a title emerges with a premise so audacious that it demands a closer look. Goblin no Suana: Sengoku Gakidou (lit. Goblin's Den: Warring States Academy ), developed by the studio (known for the Suana series), is precisely such a game. It’s a chaotic cocktail of ruthless Sengoku-era realpolitik, classic dungeon-crawling predation, and the hormonal frenzy of a modern high school.
This feature explores how the game weaponizes the goblin—a low-tier fantasy monster—against the romanticized giants of Japanese history, creating a darkly satirical power fantasy. The setup is pure visual novel absurdism. A mysterious, reality-bending event—the "Great Merge"—tears a hole between worlds. Instead of a traditional isekai hero, a horde of cunning, virulent goblins from a fantasy realm is transported to an alternate 16th-century Japan. Their target? Not a royal palace, but the prestigious Sengoku Gakidou , a military academy where the reincarnated or descendant clones of famous warlords—Oda Nobunaga, Takeda Shingen, Uesugi Kenshin, Date Masamune—train in strategy and combat.
By [Staff Writer]
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This contrast is key. The horror doesn't come from gore, but from degradation : the moment Nobu’s pristine white uniform is torn against a filthy cave wall. Sengoku Gakidou is unapologetically extreme, earning it an 18+ rating with explicit content warnings for non-consensual situations, body horror, and psychological breaking. Major Western distributors have refused to localize it; it remains a Japan-only physical release (price: ¥8,800).
For connoisseurs of the bizarre and the bold, this goblin’s lair is a disturbing, unforgettable journey into the dark dark side of the Sengoku era.
The goblin lair, however, is a masterpiece of : muddy browns, damp stone textures, and a claustrophobic, fish-eye lens perspective. The goblins themselves are deliberately ugly—stooped, leering, with too-long arms—a stark visual rejection of the handsome, relatable anti-hero.
4/5 (for the niche it targets) Warning: Contains extreme adult content. Not suitable for minors or those sensitive to depictions of coercion. Source: One-up Co., Ltd. (2024). Goblin no Suana: Sengoku Gakidou – Official Guidebook. Getchu.com sales data, October-November 2024.
In the sprawling, often bewildering world of Japanese adult visual novels (eroge), genre fusion is the lifeblood of creativity. Yet, every so often, a title emerges with a premise so audacious that it demands a closer look. Goblin no Suana: Sengoku Gakidou (lit. Goblin's Den: Warring States Academy ), developed by the studio (known for the Suana series), is precisely such a game. It’s a chaotic cocktail of ruthless Sengoku-era realpolitik, classic dungeon-crawling predation, and the hormonal frenzy of a modern high school.
This feature explores how the game weaponizes the goblin—a low-tier fantasy monster—against the romanticized giants of Japanese history, creating a darkly satirical power fantasy. The setup is pure visual novel absurdism. A mysterious, reality-bending event—the "Great Merge"—tears a hole between worlds. Instead of a traditional isekai hero, a horde of cunning, virulent goblins from a fantasy realm is transported to an alternate 16th-century Japan. Their target? Not a royal palace, but the prestigious Sengoku Gakidou , a military academy where the reincarnated or descendant clones of famous warlords—Oda Nobunaga, Takeda Shingen, Uesugi Kenshin, Date Masamune—train in strategy and combat.
By [Staff Writer]
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