There are a few final comments that I'd like to make, which weren't appropriate to place at the beginning of the report.

First of all, I'd like to thank miss Eirin Yagokoro and the other residents of the manor Eientei for their hospitality over the past six weeks. Without it, Maribel and I would have had a much rougher time adjusting to a strange land.

I would like to thank mister Rinnosuke Morichika for his assistance in finding and setting up one of the few operational computers in Gensokyo, without which this report would have taken much, much longer.

We're not yet sure when we'll be coming back to Kyoto, or as our hosts refer to the area beyond the border in aggregate, 'the outside world.' Adjusting to life in Gensokyo is taking time. We've only traveled beyond the bamboo forest twice, so there's still practically an entire world we haven't seen. There is that youkai similar to Maribel, who we still need to track down and talk to. Honestly, we could spend a lifetime exploring the mysteries of this place. At the end, we'd probably be the foremost supernatural experts in the world, and we still wouldn't be done.

I don't think that's what we're going to do, though.

I think I understand now, why grandma Sumireko felt the need to keep exploring new planes even after discovering Gensokyo. This universe is full of mysteries, and not all of the answers are here, either. There are hidden planes where the gods live. There are hells and heavens and little pocket worlds where the tanuki go to make their schemes, I'm told. There are civilizations in the far corner of the dream realm, where no waking soul has ever traveled. There's even the outside world, the only place I know of where you can watch videos of somebody else's cats from two continents away. I hope that in time, Maribel and I will see all of them.

— signed by club president Renko Usami, 18/11/2069. Witnessed by club vice president Maribel Hearn.