Reimu Gets Brainwashed -Final- -Kei kei kei loan-
The subtitle "-Kei kei kei loan-" likely references a fictional or satirical predatory lending agency within the narrative. In many dark-comedy or mature doujin storylines, Reimu takes out an astronomical loan—often to buy food, repair the Hakurei Shrine, or purchase a coveted item.
“Boss,” chibi-Reimu squeaks. “We’ve foreclosed on the Scarlet Devil Mansion. Remilia tried to pay in ‘eternal life,’ but it bounced.” Reimu Gets Brainwashed -Final- -Kei kei kei loan-
The title perfectly synthesizes these long-running community jokes into a dark, dramatic conclusion. The Illusion of Control: Mind Manipulation in Gensokyo
Tears streamed down Reimu’s face. “Y-Yukari is a… a tax cheat…” “We’ve foreclosed on the Scarlet Devil Mansion
Reimu’s vacant eyes snapped open. She stood up, brushed off her shrine maiden outfit, and smiled a perfect, hollow smile.
The final nail was the brand. Keine produced a red rubber stamp that read and pressed it directly onto Reimu’s forehead, right over her bow. “Y-Yukari is a… a tax cheat…” Reimu’s vacant
Ultimately, whether treated as a dark cautionary tale or an extreme parody of Reimu's eternal financial struggles, these works showcase the endless versatility of the Touhou Project's character roster.
: Driven by her chronic lack of shrine donations, Reimu takes out a loan she cannot repay.
: It belongs to the Cookie☆ (Kuuki) genre—a niche community that repurposes voice acting from amateur Touhou dramas into surreal, often absurdist, or dark MAD (music/remix) videos.
At first, Reimu noticed no change. But as time passed, she began to act strangely. She would perform tasks without memory of planning them, and her personality began to shift. She became more aggressive and paranoid, often lashing out at her friends, Marisa and Sanae.