Hopefully everything will run in Japanese mode now. Selecting that option changed some of the GUI text into Japanese and some of it into gibberish (That gibberish means I may not have downloaded Rin using my Applocale Routine, like I should have.) But the important part was that the many options for my. If you find AppLocale too cumbersome to use, then go to Regional and Language Options, head to the Advanced tab, and select Japanese in the dropdown box at the top. After some clicking around, I discovered the JAPANESE MODE setting under the Help Menu. Refer to here for all your AppLocale needs: Congratulations, you can display 日本語 text now! Now you'll need to either set your computer to Japanese non-Unicode mode or set up AppLocale - refer to the next section for that. Open up "Regional and Language Options." Head to the Languages tab, check "Install files for East Asian languages" and click apply refer to the picture here.
Now that you have one of the two, go to your Control Panel.
JAPANESE APPLOCALE GIBBERISH WINDOWS
What I'm hoping somone out there can answer is what I can do to tell windows to treat my app as though it were a non-unicode program (which it is) that is running as though the user chose to use. It will require either a copy of the Windows CD or a copy of the \i386\ directory from it - if you're on a laptop, you probably have the latter in either C:\ or C:\Windows\. if the thread sets the locale to 0x0411 (Japanese), GUI elements that are runtime generated are gibberish, such as the app's title, tool tips, etc. Installing Japanese language packs is very easy. sorry about the potato quality :/ couldn't get a better quality from them. Please use it if you intend to play Touhou games. Nippon absolutely love Japan, just a little bit from my trip over there. XP is the only OS that all of the Touhou games will run flawlessly on. If you are running Vista, downgrade, for the love of god. UPDATE: The new WineLocale 0. I will try to provide support and answer questions in the thread, but if you somehow type something wrong and send your OS spiraling into /dev/null, dont blame me. If you are using an older Windows, upgrade, for the love of god. The system I tested it on was 32-bit Ubuntu Feisty 7.04. Note: This assumes that you are running Windows XP. Because people somehow expect to be able to run Japanese programs on non-Japanese Windows.