Searching For- Rei Kitajima In-all Categoriesmo... (2027)

No filters. No date ranges. Just the raw, unfiltered web.

I found one thread from 2009—a Japanese text board about retro PC-98 games. A user named “Kita_Rei” posted a walkthrough for a dungeon crawler no one has heard of. The account was never used again.

This is the saddest theory. Perhaps I have the name wrong. Or perhaps Rei Kitajima was a secondary character in a visual novel, a background artist for a single OVA episode, or a beta tester for a forgotten piece of hardware. Their footprint is real, but it is contextual —impossible to find without the context I lack. What “All Categories” Revealed (The Silver) Despite the frustration, searching in All Categories taught me one valuable lesson: absence is also data.

Today, I went down that rabbit hole. The query was simple: — with the scope set to “All Categories.” Searching for- Rei Kitajima in-All CategoriesMo...

But I haven’t given up.

But when they barely exist in Forums and Blogs? That suggests they were a participant, not a performer.

In creative circles (doujinshi, indie game dev, underground music), a single name sometimes masks a rotating group of collaborators. “Rei Kitajima” could be a project name, not a person. Searching “All Categories” fails because the signal is scattered across different mediums: a song on Niconico, a texture pack for a 2007 RPG Maker game, a recipe on a long-dead food blog. No filters

But with Rei Kitajima? Crickets.

When a person doesn’t exist in Shopping, they aren’t selling merch. When they don’t exist in News, they haven’t done anything newsworthy. When they don’t exist in Videos, they aren’t a creator.

Here is what I found (and what I didn’t). Usually, when you search for a person in “All Categories,” you expect a split second of algorithmic certainty. Wikipedia. Instagram. LinkedIn. A news article. A sports statistic. I found one thread from 2009—a Japanese text

If you know a Rei Kitajima—a photographer, a programmer, a poet, a player of obscure rhythm games from 2006—send them this post. Tell them someone is looking.

Was that them? Maybe. Maybe not. The internet is not a library. It is a landfill with occasional treasures. Searching for “Rei Kitajima in All Categories” is a reminder that most digital lives are not archived—they are simply abandoned.

Rei Kitajima may have been an active user in the late 90s or early 2000s—back when handles were pseudonyms and “All Categories” meant a GeoCities page or a Usenet post. Everything they created has since been buried under layers of link rot and server shutdowns.

And if you are Rei Kitajima: Your signal is faint, but it isn’t gone. The search continues.

There is a unique kind of digital archaeology that happens when you stumble upon a name that feels important but yields nothing but static.