Occultic;Nine


Occultic;Nine is a Japanese light novel series written by Chiyomaru Shikura, and is a part of the Science Adventure franchise. It was later adapted into a visual novel and published by Mages in November 2017. The light novel series is licensed in English by J-Novel Club. A manga, illustrated by Ganjii, was serialized in Kodansha's good! Afternoon from October 2015 to May 2017. An anime television series adaptation by A-1 Pictures aired between October and December 2016.

Plot

Yuta Gamon, a second-year high school student at Seimei High who refers to himself as the “NEET God,” operates an occult aggregation blog called “Kirikiri Basara,” through which he attempts to generate income via affiliate links while personally dismissing paranormal claims as fraudulent. On February 24, he visits Seimei University to interview Professor Isayuki Hashigami, a physicist whose research into electromagnetic soul theory had generated both media attention and criticism from the mainstream scientific community. Hashigami's work proposed that human consciousness and memory function as electromagnetic data patterns—a theory dismissed by skeptics as pseudoscience but which carried implications regarding the existence of the soul.
Upon arrival, Yuta discovers Hashigami's murdered body. The professor had been tortured prior to death, with his scalp removed and evidence of violent struggle present throughout the laboratory. Written on the floor in the victim's blood is the word “CODE.” While Yuta remains at the scene, a female voice emanates from his late father's antique “Skysensor” radio, instructing him to remove a gold tooth from Hashigami's jaw and leave the premises. Yuta complies, securing a key piece of evidence. Shortly afterward, Sarai Hashigami, the professor's son, arrives and finds Yuta standing over the body with blood on his hands, leading him to suspect Yuta's involvement in the murder.
The murder serves as the catalyst for the convergence of nine individuals in the Kichijoji district, each connected to the unfolding events through different circumstances. Yuta receives ongoing guidance from “Zonko,” his name for the voice communicating through his Skysensor—a vintage radio inherited from his deceased father, Koresuke Gamon, who had operated a small FM radio station called FM-KCZ in Kichijoji before dying from illness seven years earlier. Ryoka “Ryo-tas” Narusawa, Yuta's friend, demonstrates an unexplained ability to perceive supernatural phenomena and carries a toy gun called the “Poyagun.” Sarai Hashigami, a university student who shares the rationalist worldview of his father's critics, initially suspects Yuta but eventually becomes his ally after discovering his father's hidden research notes and an encoded list of names concealed in the professor's study. Miyuu Aikawa, a high school fortune-teller with a television following, had contacted Sarai several days before the murder during a trance state, urging him to visit his father immediately; her clairvoyant abilities prove accurate. Toko Sumikaze, an editor at the occult magazine Mumuu, receives Hashigami's research manuscript via a woman who claims to be his mother despite that woman having died years prior; her subsequent investigation reveals connections between her editor-in-chief, Kouhei Izumi, and a secretive religious organization. Ririka Nishizono, a reclusive doujin manga author, produces BL works containing occult themes that appear to predict actual events; her recent publication, At the Bottom of Dark Water, depicts scenes resembling both Hashigami's murder and a mass drowning, despite having been published months before either event occurred. Aria Kurenaino, who operates a curse-casting business, discovers that she was unknowingly involved in Hashigami's murder after a client commissioned a curse using the professor's hair, which had been delivered to her as a scalp prior to the killing. She is accompanied by Kiryu Kusakabe, a young man with an eyepatch whom she refers to as her “devil”; Kusakabe bears a resemblance to her deceased brother Takaharu and claims to have died and returned multiple times—he is an astral projection practitioner who gained these abilities following accidental exposure to a scandium isotope in an industrial accident. Shun Moritsuka, a 26-year-old detective with a childlike appearance and demeanor, has been investigating occult occurrences throughout Kichijoji and identifies Ririka's manga as containing warnings about an approaching disaster.
The investigation shifts following the “256 Incident,” in which 256 people are found drowned in Inokashira Park's lake on the night of February 25. The Musashino Police Department closes the case without pursuing criminal charges, despite the circumstances of 256 simultaneous drownings. Public speculation attributes the deaths to various causes including mass hypnosis, while official sources discourage further investigation.
Through collaborative effort, Yuta, Sarai, and the other individuals decode a list contained within Hashigami's research, which consists of 256 names matching the drowning victims exactly. The list represents Hashigami's attempt to document evidence of a conspiracy conducted by the Society of the Eight Gods of Fortune, a religious organization functioning as a front for the Musashino Medical Group, a medical corporation with connections to Japanese political figures.
The MMG has been conducting experiments combining physics research with occult practices, utilizing suppressed research attributed to Nikola Tesla. Their methods involve scandium, a rare-earth element administered via microscopic injections that passes through the blood-brain barrier and integrates with the corpus callosum permanently. Once present in the body, scandium causes subjects to respond to specific electromagnetic frequencies, enabling the MMG to influence their thoughts and behavior through transmitted signals. Additionally, when an individual with scandium implantation dies, the element enables the capture and preservation of their electromagnetic consciousness as an astral body. The MMG's objective is the “New World System,” a technological framework intended to provide immortality as a commercial product, marketed to wealthy clients who would receive continued existence as electromagnetic consciousness. The 256 victims constituted the first generation of test subjects, induced to commit suicide through electromagnetic signals transmitted from “Odd Eye,” a large antenna array located at an abandoned air force base near Kichijoji. The mass death represented a successful demonstration that the system could capture and maintain multiple souls simultaneously.
The group's examination of the complete victim list reveals that their own names appear among the 256: Yuta Gamon, Sarai Hashigami, Miyuu Aikawa, Toko Sumikaze, Ririka Nishizono, and Shun Moritsuka are all listed as deceased.
Yuta initially rejects this conclusion, noting that he can breathe, his heart functions, and he can interact with objects and other people. However, evidence accumulates. The individuals he has encountered since the incident, such as Saeko Kitaya, are also among the victims. Living people pass through them without recognition. Their phones connect only to each other. The café owner and other ordinary individuals have been absent from their interactions. The group determines that they are dead, existing as astral bodies—electromagnetic constructs containing their memories and personalities, sustained by the Odd Eye transmission. They drowned in Inokashira Lake on February 25, and their subsequent experiences have occurred in a ghost state.
One finding provides a potential solution: the astral plane operates under significant temporal dissonance, with approximately one day of ghost experience corresponding to one minute of physical world time. The group's post-death investigation, which has subjectively lasted weeks, has occurred within minutes in real time. Their physical bodies remain in the lake, still within the medical window for possible resuscitation.
As the group prepares to oppose the MMG, the connections between their resources and two paternal legacies become apparent: those of Nikola Tesla and Koresuke Gamon. Yuta learns that his father's Skysensor had been modified beyond its original function. Koresuke, who had indirect connections to the Society through his radio counseling work that eventually evolved into the religious corporation known as the Hachifukushin Circle, had installed internal Tesla coils capable of generating high frequencies through resonance. This modification enables the Skysensor to receive astral transmissions and to channel substantial electromagnetic energy as a transmitter.
The identity of Zonko is also revealed. The voice guiding Yuta is Aveline Tesla, the illegitimate daughter of Nikola Tesla. Aveline died during the Great Tokyo Air Raid of 1943, but her astral form persisted and eventually came to inhabit Ryoka Narusawa, whose family—the Narusawa medical clan—has historical connections to the Tesla legacy. Ryoka functions as Aveline's vessel; her outwardly frivolous personality conceals a spirit guide possessing detailed knowledge of Tesla's technology and the MMG's misuse of it. Aveline can communicate through the Skysensor as “Zonko” or speak directly using Ryoka's body.
Ryoka's toy, the Poyagun, is identified as a miniaturized Wardenclyffe Gun—a portable version of Tesla's tower designed to interact with powerful electromagnetic frequencies. It serves as the focusing mechanism through which Odd Eye can be destroyed. However, the Poyagun's capabilities are restricted by a “boot key,” which is not a physical object but a frequency pattern that Professor Hashigami encoded and concealed within his gold tooth to prevent the MMG from obtaining it.
Yuta's role is explained by his possession of a rare biological characteristic termed an “Orphan Receptor,” which allows him to receive, store, and discharge electrical charges at levels exceeding normal human capacity. His vocalizations can generate electromagnetic waves, and when directed appropriately, he can produce substantial energy bursts. This characteristic makes him the sole individual capable of operating the Skysensor-Poyagun combination with sufficient output to overload Odd Eye.
With the MMG's plan approaching completion and limited time remaining before their physical bodies expire, the group attacks the Odd Eye facility. The operation requires four components functioning together: the modified Skysensor, Yuta's Orphan Receptor capabilities, the Wardenclyffe Gun, and the boot key. The boot key presents the final difficulty, as it cannot be activated physically but requires “mutual recognition”—a moment of shared belief and emotional connection sufficient to manifest its function. During the confrontation, as Yuta directs energy through the combined devices, the ghost of his father Koresuke appears through the Skysensor. Seven years after his death from illness, Koresuke's spirit manifests due to his son's emotional state and the deteriorating boundaries between planes. Father and son achieve mutual recognition, activating the boot key and enabling the Wardenclyffe Gun's full capability.
Yuta directs a large electromagnetic surge through the devices, causing the Odd Eye antenna to overload and fail. The resulting disruption terminates the broadcast maintaining the artificial spirit world, and the 256 captured souls return to their physical locations—their bodies in Inokashira Lake. Due to temporal dissonance, approximately nine minutes have elapsed in the physical world since the mass drowning. The group members regain consciousness in their submerged bodies while resuscitation remains possible. They surface and are recovered by emergency responders. The conspiracy is disrupted and the victims survive.
The outcome includes a significant loss. Yuta, having exhausted his astral energy powering the device and sustaining the connection until the others could return, does not revive. His body remains in the lake, his soul lacking the energy necessary to complete the return. Following these events, Yuta's ghost remains in the spirit realm, where he reunites with his father. The two observe the friends whose survival Yuta enabled—the former skeptic having sacrificed himself to demonstrate the reality of the phenomena he once dismissed.

Characters

;Yūta Gamon
;Ryouka Narusawa
;Sarai Hashigami
;Miyū Aikawa
;Tōko Sumikaze
;Aria Kurenaino
;Kiryū Kusakabe
;Ririka Nishizono
;Shun Moritsuka
;Asuna Kisaki

Media

Light novel

The light novels are written by Chiyomaru Shikura and illustrated by Pako. Overlap Bunko published the first volume in August 2014. The series was one of four titles originally offered by J-Novel Club, an online English light novel publisher, when the service first launched.
Three volumes have been released, and there was a planned fourth volume.

Video game

A video game adaptation of the novels was announced in March 2015. The game was developed by Mages and originally released for PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita and Xbox One on 9 November 2017; it had originally been planned for 28 September as a digital-only release, but was delayed due to the addition of a physical release following complaints by fans. The physical PlayStation 4 and PlayStation Vita versions were additionally made available in a limited edition that includes a drama CD and a 64-page materials collection. Shikura has said that he is considering releasing the game in the West.
A Nintendo Switch port was announced in September 2018. It was set to include additional story content set after the main story, which would have further connected the entry to the rest of Mages's Science Adventure series. The story content was also planned to be added to the previously released versions as a free update. However, following an extended period of no additional information, it was confirmed to be cancelled during a livestream in August 2022. Shikura also stated that, if they were to revisit Occultic;Nine one day, it would be with a remake similar to Robotics;Notes Elite.

Manga

A manga adaptation, illustrated by Ganjii, was serialized in Kodansha's seinen manga magazine good! Afternoon from 7 October 2015 to 6 May 2017. Kodansha collected its chapters in four tankōbon volumes, released from 7 April 2016 to 7 July 2017.

Anime

An anime television series adaptation was announced in 2016, with the cast from the game reprising their roles for the series. The anime was produced by A-1 Pictures and directed by Kyōhei Ishiguro with assistant director Miyuki Kuroki, with To-Jumpei Morita handling series composition, Tomoaki Takase designing the characters, and Masaru Yokoyama composing the music. The opening theme song, titled "Seisū 3 no Nijō", was performed by Kanako Itō, while the ending theme song, titled "Open your eyes", was performed by Asaka. Both theme songs were written by Shikura and were released on 26 October 2016. It premiered on 9 October 2016 on Tokyo MX, ABC, CBC, GTV, GYT and BS11. The series was released across six Blu-ray and DVD volumes containing two episodes each, totalling 12 episodes. Aniplex of America licensed the series for North America and released it dubbed in two Blu-ray sets on 26 September and 26 December 2017. The dub was also made available through Crunchyroll on 5 February 2018.