Searching For- Rei Kitajima In-all Categoriesmo... May 2026

In creative circles (doujinshi, indie game dev, underground music), a single name sometimes masks a rotating group of collaborators. “Rei Kitajima” could be a project name, not a person. Searching “All Categories” fails because the signal is scattered across different mediums: a song on Niconico, a texture pack for a 2007 RPG Maker game, a recipe on a long-dead food blog.

No filters. No date ranges. Just the raw, unfiltered web. Searching for- Rei Kitajima in-All CategoriesMo...

Rei Kitajima may have been an active user in the late 90s or early 2000s—back when handles were pseudonyms and “All Categories” meant a GeoCities page or a Usenet post. Everything they created has since been buried under layers of link rot and server shutdowns. In creative circles (doujinshi, indie game dev, underground

If you know a Rei Kitajima—a photographer, a programmer, a poet, a player of obscure rhythm games from 2006—send them this post. Tell them someone is looking. No filters

This is the saddest theory. Perhaps I have the name wrong. Or perhaps Rei Kitajima was a secondary character in a visual novel, a background artist for a single OVA episode, or a beta tester for a forgotten piece of hardware. Their footprint is real, but it is contextual —impossible to find without the context I lack. What “All Categories” Revealed (The Silver) Despite the frustration, searching in All Categories taught me one valuable lesson: absence is also data.

Today, I went down that rabbit hole. The query was simple: — with the scope set to “All Categories.”