Another Japanese twin-engine, and it's from the same brand (Tachikawa had really interesting ones to be honest.)
Intended for long-range communications and transport with the rest of its allies, the Ki-77 had a maximum range of 18,000km, allowing it to fly from Tokyo to Washington D.C, New York City, Berlin, and London if the aircraft wasn't forced down due of enemy action or oil cooling issues (despite having the same Nakajima Sakae engine as the Mitsubishi A6M Zero.)
Only two were built; one went missing over the Indian Ocean trying to fly from Singapore to Hvardiiske in the Crimean Peninsula (presumberly shot down by British aircraft), and one was captured by Americans authorities at the end of the war, tested in Alameda, California, and scrapped afterwards.