|
The Core Landers in G Gundam attached to the back of the unit, forming the unit's rear/main thrusters for the most part, if I recall. Not quite as fast/simple as the Turn A's Core Fighter sytem, but certainly a drat sight less complex than needing to split the entire unit in two. I believe the Crossbone units do the same thing with their Core Fighters too.
|
# ? Nov 3, 2022 03:12 |
|
|
# ? May 27, 2024 03:55 |
|
tsob posted:The Core Landers in G Gundam attached to the back of the unit, forming the unit's rear/main thrusters for the most part, if I recall. Not quite as fast/simple as the Turn A's Core Fighter sytem, but certainly a drat sight less complex than needing to split the entire unit in two. I believe the Crossbone units do the same thing with their Core Fighters too. So does the G-Self IIRC.
|
# ? Nov 3, 2022 03:44 |
I liked how all the gadessa type suits had core fighters that were just the backpack dumping out and loving off with both the GN drive and the cockpit
|
|
# ? Nov 3, 2022 04:05 |
|
Remember in old SRWs when Gundams got shot down you'd be in the core fighter?
|
# ? Nov 3, 2022 05:09 |
|
MonsieurChoc posted:Remember in old SRWs when Gundams got shot down you'd be in the core fighter? Not just Gundams, SRW Alpha let you use all sorts of little core bits. Mazinger Z's Pilder, the seperated Get Machines, the individual Combattler and Voltes pieces, Dancougars components... Even the flying car Banjou rides that turns into the cockpit of Daitarn 3! And there was one goofy stage where you were forced to use all of them during an atmospheric reentry that was a hoot. And to make sure you didn't have any trouble you also had all your VF-1s during that mission so it was a total cakewalk
|
# ? Nov 3, 2022 08:38 |
|
Gaius Marius posted:G-Bull owns so hard. I always kept my msia in that form
|
# ? Nov 3, 2022 12:10 |
|
War and Pieces posted:An escape jetpack is surprisingly practical for Gundam Not in Victory. At least not when given a bazooka and swimwear as your equipment anyway.
|
# ? Nov 3, 2022 12:18 |
|
what is this from
|
# ? Nov 3, 2022 15:28 |
|
ninjewtsu posted:what is this from "Gundam Sousei" or "The Men Who Made Gundam", a manga telling a highly fictionalized version of the original show's production that wildly over dramatizes everything, but does have some basis in the show's actual production from what I vaguely recall having not read it in years. Checking it again, it's only 24 issues of roughly 15 pages a chapter going off the first few chapters, so it's not even a huge investment. It's fun though. Exhibit B: tsob fucked around with this message at 15:50 on Nov 3, 2022 |
# ? Nov 3, 2022 15:40 |
|
An important video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imbPV6CJFhk
|
# ? Nov 3, 2022 16:33 |
|
finished Turn A, wow Lauren really is VolCel
|
# ? Nov 3, 2022 17:07 |
|
https://twitter.com/icedoll456/status/1588226254540447744 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CSReVVSLfik
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 02:24 |
|
Gripweed posted:Urdr Hunt has a new Gundam with the Gun Hammer from Monster Hunter It also has the Falk crest, so that's an interesting bit of trivia. We might finally be seeing another Seven Star Gundam after years of only seeing Gaelio's. It's kind of funny that Rustal has a Gundam, looking back. Just the main antagonist in a Gundam series owning a Gundam but not bothering to try to get it out of storage and figure out how to get it running again in favor of just spamming orbital artillery. (Also, yeah. Gundam Sousei is good. It's been officially released in English as The Men who Created Gundam.)
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 03:35 |
|
War and Pieces posted:finished Turn A, wow Lauren really is VolCel Nah, he's with Diana now.
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 03:41 |
chiasaur11 posted:It also has the Falk crest, so that's an interesting bit of trivia. We might finally be seeing another Seven Star Gundam after years of only seeing Gaelio's. I mean, I get that. It probably takes a lot of time to get out of his chair and go all the way down to the loading bay and get into his other chair and pilot the robot. It's a lot easier to just yell at people to fire and make things you don't like disappear.
|
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 03:43 |
|
Nuebot posted:I mean, I get that. It probably takes a lot of time to get out of his chair and go all the way down to the loading bay and get into his other chair and pilot the robot. It's a lot easier to just yell at people to fire and make things you don't like disappear. I kind of assume that Rustal can't pilot worth crap. I mean, he probably went through training in his younger days, but being descended from an ace pilot doesn't mean you are an ace pilot, and running around on the frontlines when you're bad at it is how you get Iok.
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 03:44 |
|
MonsieurChoc posted:Nah, he's with Diana now. You look at those two and tell me they are loving.
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 03:49 |
|
Waffleman_ posted:You look at those two and tell me they are loving. Loran is heavily into the kind of courtly love where you pine after someone but never actually get anything done.
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 03:54 |
|
wdarkk posted:Loran is heavily into the kind of courtly love where you pine after someone but never actually get anything done. So is Dianna if you take even a cursory glance at her relationship with Will Game. They're both just shy romanticists, so something will happen; it'll just take a while. Probably. That, or the heat death of the
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 03:58 |
|
Waffleman_ posted:You look at those two and tell me they are loving. They're Tomino characters, Waffleman. That is not a group known for reluctance to bone down. Even off-screen characters were horny enough to more than double the population of the Earth Sphere between UC 0080 and UC 0096.
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 03:59 |
|
I mean, the ending sequence goes out of its way to show they sleep in separate beds. Definitely feels like Lorain's capable of romantic attraction (see also, frenching Sochie and then leaving), but doesn't consider it as important as his other obligations (see also, frenching Sochie and then leaving).
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 04:06 |
|
Turn A was still under the Hays Code. They had to do that
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 04:10 |
|
Darth Walrus posted:I mean, the ending sequence goes out of its way to show they sleep in separate beds. Definitely feels like Lorain's capable of romantic attraction (see also, frenching Sochie and then leaving), but doesn't consider it as important as his other obligations (see also, frenching Sochie and then leaving). What other obligations? He and Dianna are engaged, if not married going off the ring she's wearing, and all we see him doing is basic domestic stuff. Fishing, cooking, eating etc.
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 04:12 |
|
don't a lot of irl married couples have separate beds in the same room that they can push together and whatnot? maybe lorans just a blanket hog if they sleep in the same bed
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 04:29 |
|
Booky posted:don't a lot of irl married couples have separate beds in the same room that they can push together and whatnot? maybe lorans just a blanket hog if they sleep in the same bed They sleep in different rooms.
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 04:49 |
|
a blanket gravity well
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 06:05 |
|
Could be a moon thing If you sleep in the same room with someone you might overload the carbon scrubber a bit and feel like poo poo in the morning
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 15:25 |
|
tsob posted:What other obligations? He and Dianna are engaged, if not married going off the ring she's wearing, and all we see him doing is basic domestic stuff. Fishing, cooking, eating etc. She's wearing a ring, but I don't recall him wearing one.
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 16:14 |
|
Booky posted:don't a lot of irl married couples have separate beds in the same room that they can push together and whatnot? maybe lorans just a blanket hog if they sleep in the same bed It's not uncommon in Japan for married couples to not only have separate beds, but to sleep in different rooms. It's not exactly common from what I gather, but it's not uncommon either so far as I can tell. It's an odd enough phenomena in Japan compared to basically everywhere else in the world that a college professor in Chiba University wrote a book on it called "A Place Where You Can Be Yourself: A Deeper Look Into Houses and Families As Seen In Territorial Studies" Kobayashi Hideki posted:When the author researched the way that couples slept in a Tokyo apartment building, it appears that a total of 26% slept separately. Furthermore, when limited to those couples over 60, the figure rises to 40%. For those still living with their children, “sleeping separately” levels at around 28%; however, when it comes to households where a child is now independent and lives separately to their parents, the the number of married couples who sleep separately is more than half, at 53%. Separately in this case being separate rooms, not just separate beds. At least, so far as I can tell going off how different articles discuss the book. I didn't see any number for how many couples were surveyed, but this is the one source most articles I've seen on the subject from Googling a few times eventually come back to. There are a number of reasons that I've seen cited for the trend, starting with the reason I saw quoted from him on an article that there is a tradition of the mother sleeping alongside the infant, and that this is linked to why there is no sense of reluctance to going back to sleeping separately in old age. I'd presume he means in a separate room to not disturb a working spouse or something. However, I've seen other articles noting that because so many men working white collar jobs frequently work unpredictable over time hours, and that even many women are now in a similar situation that the hours a couple has off together can vary greatly, so having one specific room both people sleep in can be a burden, with one waking the other as they come and go when the other person desperately needs that sleep. And on a somewhat downer note that because divorce rates are lower in Japan, married couples who have decided they are done but don't want to get a divorce just default to separating out their lives. It kind of links back to the ring thing in the Turn A finale. Dianna is wearing a ring on the right finger of the right hand to be either an engagement ring or a wedding ring, but Loran has none at all. A lot of people took this to mean it was Will Game's ring, even though Will Game not only never gives her a ring, but he specifically notes that he won't even ask for her hand in marriage until he returns successful. Which he never does, and Dianna is forced to return to the Moon to go into cryostasis before his fate can be confirmed. She never has a ring in the flashbacks, and isn't given a ring during those episodes. The epilogue is the first appearance of the ring. However, Japanese men often don't wear their wedding rings. It's more common for them to do so nowadays, but even 20 years ago when Turn A was being made it was less common and men traditionally didn't wear them for a few reasons, from the fact men often worked blue collar jobs where jewelry would be a hazard and so just never wore it (rather than taking it on and off frequently as would be more common in some places) to it being easier to cheat if you didn't have a ring to hide in the first place. They do get a ring when marrying; they just didn't wear it historically a lot of the time. Tomino was nearly 60 by the time he was working on Turn A, so it's not remotely surprising he'd have a more traditional view of things in a relationship like how couples co-habit and rings and because it's outside many non-Japanese viewers context, it's just automatically interpreted differently. Personally though, I just think it makes more sense with their personalities that Dianna and Loran would be somewhat reticent with each other, even in their privates lives; especially if they're only engaged and not actually married yet. If you look at Dianna's relationship with Will Game, where she very explicitly did view him romantically, and they did want to marry, she is still very formal with Will. She almost always (possibly even always, I'd have to check) calls him Will-san, rather than using just his name; same as with Loran for the most part. The only thing we see them do that is explicitly romantic is to carve a love heart with their initials into a tree. They're mostly quite formal with each other in the flashbacks we see. They're just rather formal people, on the whole. A societal thing that is less in place by the time the show takes place on Earth, I guess. Ultimately, Tomino did say that he viewed Loran and Dianna romantically, but he didn't want it to be a major thing. Which is probably why they have several rather romantic scenes during the show, some pictured in the tweet below along with Tomino's views on the matter, but the finale didn't actually focus on them as a romantic couple and instead just as a couple however audiences wanted to interpret it. https://twitter.com/feezy_feez/status/1370175810913505280 I doubt he'd mind if people wanted to view their relationship as one built out of respect instead of romance and that Loran was volcel or whatever, even if it wasn't how he personally viewed things. He is, perhaps, less consoling on Loran's relationship with Sochie though. https://twitter.com/feezy_feez/status/1370192823358693377 A lot of games and even some of the manga made out of Turn A went with Loran and Sochie as a couple or at least desiring each other, but honestly, I've no idea why personally; yeah, they kissed, but Loran never showed any feelings for her up to that point, and Sochie herself points out a few times that Loran seems to have feelings for Dianna and/or Kihel. More than that, despite Loran being one of the most emotionally mature and emotive protagonists in the franchise, he has no reaction to that kiss. Sochie is crying, and he just solemnly kisses her, turns around and walks away without a look back or any apparent emotional reaction to doing so. He just does not seem into Sochie romantically at all, so I've always found it a bit weird that so many fans ship them when all the emotion in that relationship seems to be unrequited longing on her end. I kind of hate the implications of "he's just taking care of Dianna until she dies, and he'll return to Sochie afterwards" too, a thing which seems to be a common view. I think one of the SRW games or a G Gen game even used that idea, from what I've seen people saying. No idea if that's true or not mind; I've just heard a game ending quoted as being a source for how they're a couple. I hate it not so much because of the whole "Dianna is dying" thing that is itself questionable, but because it implies a servant can't have a live in partner. Which we know isn't true even in universe, because the Heims had a married couple as their major servants (Jessica and Sam). It also implies that Dianna knows about Loran and Sochie's desire (she was there when they kissed after all; even if she pointedly looked away) and is enforcing a distance between them for no real reason, just so Loran can live with her; which just makes her seem like an awful person for no reason. I think it kind of shits on Sochie's character too though, honestly. Sochie starts the show as having her ritual to become an adult interrupted, so she never becomes an adult. She then retreats into mourning, refusing to even get out of bed until Miashei waves the possibility of revenge and spends the first half of the show being kind of racist towards even civilian Moonrace people who themselves disapprove of what's happening, while chasing the chance for revenge. She finally changes after Gavane dies, spending the rest of the show trying to end the fighting so nothing like a nuke will ever happen again. Her longing for Loran is presented as a childhood infatuation and even the ways she tries to make him pay attention to her are quite childish (forcing him to be around her by invoking the fact he's technically her family servant and going out with Gavane to make Loran jealous), her relationship with Gavane is her first foray into an actual relationship (even if the age gap is a bit weird), which she only realizes at the last moment before he dies and spends the rest of the show trying to make up for. The finale is her throwing away the symbol of Loran's childhood (his toy fish), and in doing so throwing away her own childhood after spending half a show trying to make peace with Gavane's death, and it's in that moment that she metaphorically becomes an adult rather than just because a ritual arbitrarily declared her one. Her then passively waiting for Loran to be ready for her because he views something else as not only more important but so important she literally cannot even be part of his life until it's done and/or going back to him at all really kind of ruins that for me, honestly. tsob fucked around with this message at 01:56 on Nov 5, 2022 |
# ? Nov 4, 2022 16:23 |
|
I fundamentally agree with this post and do think the sochie ship does rather feel weird in light of how the dynamic plays out
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 17:20 |
|
There's a thing that shows up sometimes in Japanese media, I don't know if it's exclusively Japanese but I've only seen it in Japanese stuff, the idea of giving characters privacy from the audience. It pops up in anime from time to time, where a kiss will be implied off screen, the Takashi Miike movie First Love does it at the end when it jumps forward in time to a static long distance shot of an apartment and you can just make out the guy and the girl leaving together. You're given just enough to know that they made it out and are doing OK and nothing more. I always thought the ending of Turn A was like that. They're together, they feel very strongly about each other, but the details or exact shape of their relationship aren't your business.
|
# ? Nov 4, 2022 17:56 |
|
The bigger thing with Turn A's ending is that a lot of people don't recognize Dianna and Loran as a couple at all, so whether they stayed together doesn't even factor into a lot of people's interpretation of the ending. It's a rather common view, if not the prevailing view of them that Loran is a chaste, knight protector and looks up to Dianna who sees him solely as a servant with nothing further desired or given on either end. Some people do think that perhaps Loran has romantic feelings for Dianna, but it's unrequited in their view and Loran puts duty ahead of personal feeling, dedicating himself to helping his Queen regardless of his feelings according to them. When people talk about the best romances in Gundam, you normally get people nominating Kamille and Fa, Domon and Rain, Garrod and Tifa, maybe even Heero and Relena or more secondary characters like Bright and Mirai. I don't think I've ever seen another person talk positively about Dianna and Loran as a couple in Gundam however, even though personally I would think it's one of the better depictions of a romance between equals within the franchise. It's never the focus, but I think you can see it building throughout the show. A lot is made of how Loran always stands up for Dianna throughout the show for instance, especially when suggesting that Loran views Dianna reverentially in a role as knight with no romance, but those arguments never acknowledge that the action is reciprocated and Dianna constantly stands up for Loran throughout the show. She draws a shotgun on Corin Nander when he's about to attack a falling Turn A using his Eagail shortly after meeting Loran for instance, and nearer the end of the show she is the one defending why Loran is happy and smiling after the Turn A is stolen, when Sochie starts getting suspicious of that activity and there's lots of examples in between. Dianna is the one who issues the show's prerequisite slap as another example, slapping Sochie when Sochie tries to force Loran to spend time with her because he's just a servant in Sochie's words. She also acknowledges that Loran "is chasing her skirt" to spend time with her and is the one to nominate Loran as captain of the Gallop ship that ends up ferrying the Turn A and Sochie's Kapool around for a while because she has faith in his ability as more examples of her view on Loran. Dianna is very protective of Loran throughout the show, always speaks positively about him, shows a deeper understanding of him and his motives than anyone else etc. The two of them also share a similar motive throughout the show, wanting to end the fighting so people can live in peace on Earth because they love doing so so much after spending time there too. The only other people to share that motive for close to as long are Kihel and Harry, who are (a) a couple themselves by show's end, and (b) an analogue of the same relationship Dianna and Loran have. In fact, while Dianna and Kihel are often noted as being essentially the same people, Harry and Loran are often presented in much the same light and Harry is even noted in show to have the same kind of knightly relationship to Dianna and Kihel as people push Loran as having. I don't know that I've ever seen someone say that they don't think Harry and Kihel are a couple though, even though again, they're basically a copy of Dianna and Loran and the same people will swear blind that Dianna and Loran are not in any kind of relationship. tsob fucked around with this message at 02:59 on Nov 6, 2022 |
# ? Nov 4, 2022 18:38 |
|
Waffleman_ posted:https://twitter.com/icedoll456/status/1588226254540447744 Well that's neat
|
# ? Nov 6, 2022 03:50 |
|
Watched the first episode of The Origin again this morning after the last G-Witch cuz I felt like it. That opening battle and the music is so loving good at emphasizing "The entire Earth Sphere is on fire." and how absolutely terrifying Mobile Suits are against conventional battle tactics. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r8PuKqUNTd0 There really isn't another Gundam show that has matched the scale of the One Year War. Granted Universal Century's OYW era is the most popular and actually gets a fair share of spinoffs unlike many of the AUs. Arc Hammer fucked around with this message at 18:58 on Nov 6, 2022 |
# ? Nov 6, 2022 18:52 |
|
It's really hard to match or surpass "the entirety of humanity is engaged in an apocalyptic war against itself", really. The only show that even attempted a conflict scale as large as the OYW was SEED, and that was mostly because SEED was effectively a reimagining of the OYW.
|
# ? Nov 6, 2022 19:11 |
|
Most of the other shows that do have apocalyptic wars in them treat them as the background. Calamity War, the Dark History, the 7th Space War. UC and SEED are really the ones that focus on the actual world ending event and not just the scars left by the war.
|
# ? Nov 6, 2022 19:21 |
|
I'm starting to dread hearing happy birthday in the new show.
|
# ? Nov 6, 2022 19:23 |
|
Even Wing is getting kinda hot by the time the White Fang arc starts, but even the Eve War feels small compared to what it was supposed to represent in show. And 0079's sequels didn't do a great job of making their conflicts feel grand either. Zeta gets a bit of a pass as it was largely a civil conflict between two arms of the Federation, with the majority of the Federation a neutral party. But ZZ less so, since Axis came with the explicit intent to conquer.
|
# ? Nov 6, 2022 19:25 |
|
Yeah, it's pretty hard to live up to what was essentially World War 3 on a scale 100 times as big
|
# ? Nov 6, 2022 19:29 |
|
|
# ? May 27, 2024 03:55 |
|
ZZ struggles from presenting its big war because it is so focused on Judau and the Gundam team to the detriment of any wider context. 0079 follows the White Base, sure, but it was always "the White Base's story during the war" rather than "the all encompassing encyclopdedia of the One Year War". 0079 and Zeta do a better job with scope because we get asides to other theaters, other players, and the wider world even as we're mainly focusing on one ship's vital role in shaping events. ZZ feels like the war doesn't really exist outside of what the main cast experiences. And I'm fine with the subsequent wars in UC not being gigantic. They're more like the cold war conflicts or the vicious wars during the decolonization of Africa. You don't need to stake the fate of the species on your war to have a brutal ordeal worth examining.
|
# ? Nov 6, 2022 19:31 |