VNDB Founder Yorhel Dies as Moderators Move to Preserve a Core Visual Novel Archive
Original: The VNDB.org (Visual Novel Database) has lost its founder and soul Yorhel, who has passed away on 17 March 2026. View original →
VNDB lost its founder
The gaming community is reacting to the death of Yoran "Yorhel" Heling, the creator of VNDB. Moderators announced on the official site that Heling passed away on March 17, 2026. The linked thread on vndb.org described him as the site's "founder and soul," wording that explains why the story resonated far beyond the visual novel niche.
VNDB is not just another fan wiki. Reporting around the announcement notes that Heling started the database in 2007 after struggling to find enough information about Ever 17: The Out of Infinity. Over time, the project became one of the deepest archives in games for the visual novel space, tracking staff credits, voice cast, characters, game length, availability, rankings, and tie-in works.
Why the site matters
That scale is why the preservation angle matters so much. Visual novels are still niche in some western markets, but they are historically important across Japanese PC gaming, console storytelling, and modern indie development. Games such as Ace Attorney, Doki Doki Literature Club, and Danganronpa helped push the format into mainstream discussion, and VNDB has been one of the main reference points tying that history together.
The remaining moderation team says it is already working on ways to preserve the site, even though it is not ready to share details. That is both reassuring and worrying. Reassuring, because the moderators clearly understand what is at stake. Worrying, because a community database built over nearly two decades can be fragile when so much knowledge and operational control sits with a single founder.
Signal from r/Games
The linked r/Games post reached 2,087 points and 87 comments at crawl time. That level of engagement shows this is not being treated as a small genre-community notice. Players broadly understand that when a long-running archive loses its founder, the risk is not only emotional. It is historical.
Why this matters
Gaming preservation is often discussed in terms of ROMs, storefront shutdowns, and source code leaks. But databases matter too. If VNDB were ever to disappear or degrade, the industry would lose a major index of people, releases, credits, and context that is hard to reconstruct after the fact. Yorhel's death is a personal loss for the VNDB community, and it is also a reminder that some of gaming's most valuable infrastructure still depends on a handful of dedicated individuals.
Source: VNDB moderator thread · Reddit discussion
Related Articles
Spike Chunsoft moved Danganronpa 2x2 from 2026 to early 2027 at Anime Expo 2026, while detailing the new Slayhem alternate scenario at roughly 35 hours.
A 2-day-old r/pcgaming post shared Bloodwoven, a PC survival shooter from Blood West’s director, with Steam wishlisting open but no release date or price yet.
A July 14 r/Games post shared Bungie’s reorganization layoff notice; the thread also cited reporting that most of the Destiny team and some Marathon staff were affected.