
Color Coded for Your Convenience: The earlier Japanese Vocaloids had one dominant color associated with them with the influx of new Vocaloids and more companies bringing in more varied character designers, this concept has been mostly abandoned.Due to SEGA partially owning them, Miku and Luka have appeared in Phantasy Star Online 2 as guest stars in the lobby concert.Miku's first anime appearance was one of these in Sayonara, Zetsubou-sensei, as one of the people auditioning to be Meru's voice.And Your Reward Is Clothes: The "modules" you can obtain in the Project Diva games.Other than that, there are the adaptations of the various song projects made using Vocaloid.

Adaptation Expansion: Hatsune Mix is a closer-to-home example.For tropes on song, fanon, and other fan works, go here. For character-related tropes for each voicebank, go here. Note: The following is only for tropes related to official Vocaloid materials. The producers CosMo, Deco 27, and Mothy have their own pages, as does the band Supercell and the music-video-making software Miku Miku Dance. Of course, there are also adaptations of the works related to Vocaloid, such as the manga Hatsune Mix and the OVA adaptation of the song Black★Rock Shooter and the multimedia franchise that is Kagerou Project. In The New Tens, Vocaloid has taken major steps in the entertainment industries, with live concerts (done with projections, in the style Gorillaz and the 2012 2Pac concert), video game crossovers, collectible figure lines, and even race car sponsors. The UTAU software also helped bringing many fanmades into life. Fanmade characters also exist, with some even gaining recognition from the higher-ups. The voicebanks in particular have become popular due to their more or less blank state with little (if any) official background, fans have gotten into creating their own personalities and interpretation of them. There are currently 70+ different Vocaloid voicebanks, with the engine itself having had multiple overhauls over the years to increase end product quality. Using a Vocaloid sounds simple enough, as the user simply has to type lyrics and adjust the melody of the song they're creating however, fine-tuning is necessary to reach better, more natural-sounding results. The program is separated into two parts the editor, which is used to process any voicebank chosen by the user through their input, and the various voicebanks, each with their own unique voice traits for different user taste or purpose. Vocaloid (a portmanteau of "vocal" and "android") is a series of music synthesizing programs created by YAMAHA Corporation. Not pictured: More than three quarters of the cast.
