Steins;Gate Gets First Full Orchestra Concert With Day-Night Setlist
The concert is the first time the series has been presented as a full orchestral event, with the day and night performances structured to follow the narrative divergence between Steins;Gate and Steins;Gate 0.
Key Facts
- The first full orchestra concert for the Steins;Gate series, 'Steins;Gate Symphony of Causal Melodies,' was held on May 31, 2026, at Chiba's Mori no Hall 21.
- The concert featured two performances: a daytime β Performance and a nighttime α Performance, each with a different setlist mirroring the game's world lines.
- The daytime show followed the common route into the world line of Steins;Gate 0, while the nighttime show diverged into the Steins;Gate finale and the SG world line.
- Conductor Kenichi Shimura led the Tokyo Nihonbashi Symphony Orchestra through arrangements of Takeshi Abo's compositions.
- Special guests Kanako Ito, Ayumu, and Asami Imai performed orchestral versions of their songs.
Reporting from 1 source: Inside.
On May 31, 2026, the first full orchestra concert for the Steins;Gate series, "Steins;Gate Symphony of Causal Melodies," was held at Chiba's Mori no Hall 21. The daytime β Performance and nighttime α Performance offered different setlists mirroring the game's world lines, with the Tokyo Nihonbashi Symphony Orchestra performing under conductor Kenichi Shimura.
The Steins;Gate series held its first full orchestra concert on May 31, 2026, at Chiba's Mori no Hall 21. Titled "Steins;Gate Symphony of Causal Melodies," the event featured two distinct performances: a daytime β Performance and a nighttime α Performance, each with a different setlist. The daytime show followed the common route into the world line of Steins;Gate 0, while the nighttime show diverged into the Steins;Gate finale and the SG world line. Conductor Kenichi Shimura led the Tokyo Nihonbashi Symphony Orchestra through arrangements of Takeshi Abo's compositions. Special guests Kanako Ito, Ayumu, and Asami Imai performed orchestral versions of their songs.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.