V Flower

V Flower (ブイフラワ) is a Vocaloid voicebank produced by Gynoid Co., Ltd. The mascot is known as "Flower (フラワ)".

V Flower
Developer(s)Yamaha Corporation
Gynoid Co., Ltd.
Initial releaseMay 9, 2014 (2014-05-09)
Stable release
V4 Flower / July 16, 2015 (2015-07-16)
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows
macOS
Available inJapanese
TypeVocal Synthesizer Application
LicenseProprietary
WebsiteHomepage
Twitter

Development

V Flower is a Japanese female vocal with a powerful, androgynous voice designed to specialize in rock music. Her vocal allows for the reserved female tone needed for slow rock songs yet have the heavy sound needed for faster and more upbeat rock. She debuted in HoneyWorks' song "Inokori Sensei," which was uploaded on April 17, 2014.[1]

The download version of the voicebank was released on May 9 and for physical release in the summer of 2014. A physical release was later confirmed to be for the 16th of July, 2014.[2]

Additional Software

On July 16, 2015, Gynoid Co., Ltd. released a Vocaloid 4 update to V Flower called "V4 Flower". The update contained improvements to the overall vocal plus access to the new "growl" ability. Early sales of V4 Flower occurred at Vom@s 32.

Characteristics

On her official website, Flower is described as a 'kuudere'.

Flower's V4 design was originally used by the artist, Miwasiba, in July 2014. The appearance was originally done as fanart by the artist and was a "shota" version of Flower.[3] The official flower Twitter account noted that the new Vocaloid 4 design was the "short haired" version of Flower, while the original Vocaloid 3 version was the "long haired" version of the same character.[4] The official Twitter account said that the design was to reflect how Flower herself is now "perfect flower", having both a "pistil" (long haired version) and "stamen" (short haired version).[5] Due to confusion caused by the comment, with responses thinking Flower was intersex, it was noted by the account that Flower has a "pistil" (female reproductive organ). The Twitter account also noted the change of hairstyle did not change her nature.[6] The illustrator also confirmed Flower is still a girl on the Vocaloid Facebook page and reference sheets, despite adopting a "shota" design.[7][8]

See also

References

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