kerala poorikal hot

INFORMATION

2025/12/04
The update patch ver. 1.3.0 for the Nintendo Switch version is now available.

[Main update contents]
・Added current events conversations for October 2022 to April 2025
・Added “Both (facing/opposite)” pantograph option for train customization
・Changed so options can be set from the title screen and early in the tutorial
*Please note that scenario additions are in Japanese only.

You can watch it on YouTube, with English subtitles!

Kerala Poorikal Hot -

Word spread, and the village gathered. Women lit oil lamps and prepared tamarind rice and bitter kola; men fetched coconut husks and bundles of dry grass, risky in the drought. Children ran between houses, carrying brass plates and mimicking the rhythm of chenda drums they had heard only during festivals.

End.

Years later, whenever clouds gathered heavy in the sky, they would recall the hot Poorikal — not as a single miracle, but as a testament: when a people stokes the flame of hope together, the heavens sometimes choose to answer.

On a humid monsoon evening in a small Kerala village, the courtyard of the ancestral tharavadu hummed with restlessness. The monsoon had failed that year; paddy fields lay cracked and brown, and talk in the teashops circled the same worry: the Poorikal, the yearly ritual to ask the gods for rain and harvest, was due — and this time the offerings had to be "hot."

Kerala Poorikal Hot -

A-Train: All Aboard Tourism is a business simulation game
in which you use the railroad to help towns develop.

In the world of A-Train,
people gather around stations, gradually developing the surrounding town.
As president of your very own railroad company,
you are free to build stations and lay train lines as you see fit.

What kind of railroad will you create? How will you develop the town?
All these choices and more are yours to make.

However, as company president,
your job is about more than just developing the transportation network.

It's important that you decorate your town by establishing subsidiaries
and advertise your company to increase your brand power.
The bigger your company grows,
the more freedom you will have to develop the town,
bringing it ever closer to your ideal. kerala poorikal hot

Kerala Poorikal Hot -

In each town, you will find a variety of tourist attractions,
from idyllic hot spring districts to ancient historical castles.

There are many tourists who would love to visit these locations at least once.
However, whether these locations ever reach their full potential
depends entirely on your skill.

If a destination is difficult to reach, it will receive few visitors,
regardless of how stunning its sights may be.
Use the railroad, bus lines, and even ferries to envision and enable enjoyable holidays.

Your success will surely be reflected in the number of tourists flocking to your town.

Kerala Poorikal Hot -

Any town you can envision is yours to create!

Do you want to see a highly developed metropolis?
Perhaps a quiet town, tucked away in the shadow of its beautiful tourist attractions?
How about a bustling city with a highly efficient transportation network?

You decide the town's future.
This story is yours, told with the help of your friends and associates.

Now, it's time to get started on tourism planning
and begin working towards your ideal city!

Word spread, and the village gathered. Women lit oil lamps and prepared tamarind rice and bitter kola; men fetched coconut husks and bundles of dry grass, risky in the drought. Children ran between houses, carrying brass plates and mimicking the rhythm of chenda drums they had heard only during festivals.

End.

Years later, whenever clouds gathered heavy in the sky, they would recall the hot Poorikal — not as a single miracle, but as a testament: when a people stokes the flame of hope together, the heavens sometimes choose to answer.

On a humid monsoon evening in a small Kerala village, the courtyard of the ancestral tharavadu hummed with restlessness. The monsoon had failed that year; paddy fields lay cracked and brown, and talk in the teashops circled the same worry: the Poorikal, the yearly ritual to ask the gods for rain and harvest, was due — and this time the offerings had to be "hot."