
In an era where songs about starting off on a stolen bike are said to be “not relatable,” why does it become “Fly out into the cosmos” when a high school girl takes off on a stolen Gundam?
Because it’s an anime.
It’s a bad Gundam that intruded from the outside.
Because there is no sense of guilt.
Are the sentences before and after connected?
>>4
It feels like something from a net meme origin.
>>4
It’s ridiculous to start talking about writing when you just grab random internet material.
What I’m trying to say is being understood, so apart from those who can’t read the room and stop the conversation, everyone else is passing the baton of dialogue.
>>34
If I’ve lost my mind, I apologize.
I’m sorry.
>>40
Do you realize that you’re saying something really terrible even though you’re apologizing?
>>114
Chuckle…
You can ride on public roads with a bike that you can buy if you work hard.
I can’t buy it, as it doesn’t even exist, flying out into the depths of space.
The one with romance is the latter.
Gundam + cool pilot → Gundam is cool.
Bike + uncool driver → The bike is uncool.
It’s important to study the national language to be able to say interesting things.
Because it’s not personal assets.
>>8
I think it’s quite significant that we’re up against the establishment and the wealthy.
>>8
Motorcycles make you think vividly about the victim, don’t they?
A country yankee and a girl are different, right?
Doesn’t it look like Yamazaki is a singer on drugs?
Why does everyone get excited when Tom Cruise takes off in a stolen F-14?
Delinquent girl
Delinquent girl Machu is determined. Crash! Zikman, Zikamax with the Bakibō… See, use your hips! You have quite a good build. Yes… It’s called ‘Zikaxe Axis Axe!’ Graaax, jigo jigo ji! The axis axe is awesome! This will be used to compete in the delinquent world’s number one tournament, ‘Kuran Battle!’
Aren’t there a lot of guys who steal Gundams?
What the heck is this motorcycle!?
Non-regular crew members have appeared in most series.
I always think I should lock it in MS.
Especially Z
How many times have you guys stolen MS from the hangar during prisoner escapes?
>>18
It’s universal design…
>>20
I’ve heard that there are also fighter jets without keys.
Because it can’t respond to emergencies.
>>20
It shouldn’t be something that anyone can easily use, MS.
>>18
If you do that, the number of times you’ll lose the key and be unable to deploy will increase.
>>22
In case of an emergency, you can destroy the keyhole and insert a flathead screwdriver to turn it on.
>>18
It’s not a movie, so there’s no way it would be stolen with soldiers wandering around.
Hey, who is riding!?
>>18
My MS is being taken from me by a real human being.
Chronocler is kicked out from the cockpit…
The key was stolen along with it.
Sometimes I come across theories like “characters who shoplift are not accepted by the audience.”
A character who steals around a billion yen would generally be accepted, right?
>>21
If you kill a lot, is it the hero theory…
>>21
Certainly, Lupin is a popular protagonist, but…
>>21
The story is that crimes that feel close to us, like those with a “safe” labeled past of having killed people in connection with an image, are not acceptable.
This is quite bad if it’s a relative of the main character or a well-known good person who commits murder.
It’s interesting that when you pickpocket the protagonist, it often leads to becoming an ally or being saved instead.
So this is the G-Con!
There’s probably no one who can empathize with Machu after watching that work.
>>26
Young people who feel a sense of stagnation in their daily lives…
Isn’t the problem that Z can easily infiltrate both enemy and ally lines from there…?
In that sense, Zeke Axe is trapped within the bounds of anime.
To put it honestly, I can only say that it’s because it depicts the setup for a story that will lead to an adventure beyond the universe, allowing readers to empathize with the characters.
When you think about it calmly, Amuro, Camille, and Judau have all been stealing.
Well, if for example Quacks had bought an important MS with the flames of Exabe-kun’s nails, I think the feeling of disgust would have been stronger.
>>38
Exabe-kun is more worried about whether Zeknova will wake up than about being stolen…
If Yoshinori Ozaki stole a bike to fight a giant enemy, no one would complain.
>>41
Mospeda, Wingman, and Wappa are great, aren’t they?
If there’s a scene where Exabe-kun loves Zeek-Ax, eats meals in the cockpit, and talks to Zeek-Ax, it’s hard to believe he would just jump out, so whether it’s personal property or not is important.
Start riding on a stolen white motorcycle.
I start riding the bike I bought.
If the spirit of a biker makes it happen, it will be accepted in Zanskar.
Is it really turning into something like “go out and jump”?
Isn’t this going to become a big issue later on?
Bikes are competing with each other and bothering the neighboring residents.
The protagonist, feeling angry, started fighting against the other bike after stealing one side.
I personally think it’s okay.
I think that even if someone is a biker, if they can’t obey stop signs or markings and underestimate safety margins, it doesn’t matter how good their bike is—they look really lame.
In the first place, just because the lyrics are like that, it doesn’t mean that Yutaka Ozaki actually stole a bike…
>>53
I can’t remember whether the story about me using my brother’s bike without permission is true or something I made up later.
In the first place, were people empathizing with someone who started running away on a stolen motorcycle back in the day?
>>54
When this song was made, the school was really chaotic due to violence on campus, it was like the situation in the TV drama School Wars…
The lyrics themselves aren’t about stealing bikes or anything like that; it’s not like “15-Year-Old Night.”
Gundam is a weapon, which means it is the military force of the power side.
The structure of a typical high school girl grabbing that and confronting an arrogant police force is precisely a juvenile anti-establishment heroic perspective against the tyranny of a corrupt judicial system in a time of poor public order.
The stolen bike is personal property, and the act of impulsively running off with it is also an impulsive youthful mistake, but it ultimately remains a personal issue between individuals, making it a completely different story in terms of theme.
The night of the 15th is, so to speak, an ending theme that captures the deadlock feeling of young people at that time.
I think “Plasma” is literally the opening that announces the beginning of the story.
Hehehe… As long as I have the G-Con in my hand, it’s impossible to activate Double X…
>>60
In terms of safety devices, the only ones with locks in the long history of Gundam are the X series and the Unicorn Unit 1.
The part where you’re doing a handstand at school might be an Ozaki-like behavior.
Is the G-Self not locked either?
Looking back now, SEED stole too much…
What do you mean, the only Gundam that wasn’t stolen was the main character’s mech?
Oh, Self-kun was here too.
Speaking of which, Impa and Dettany were also free and got stolen…
The G-Self is a miracle that has properly reached the owner with a key.
Gundam 00 also has authentication, but it is said that when Saron took the Throne, they were in cahoots.
Currently, tanks don’t have locks on them, so anyone can operate them normally once they get on.
According to the voices on the ground, it seems that personal authentication and keys are useless when it comes to emergency response.
Gundam → Amid the chaos, Amuro stole it.
Z Gundam → In the confusion, Camille stole the Mark II.
ZZ Gundam → Amid the confusion, stole everything from Z Gundam and more.
>>72
In the end, since it’s being used under the management of the Federation, isn’t it a bit off to say it was stolen?
There was an incident where a drunk person stole a fighter jet from the Self-Defense Forces and crashed it.
Isn’t it true that anyone can operate the MF?
I think there was a time when the kid tried to pilot the God Gundam, right?
>>74
That kid was on the verge of death, so it’s tough to say if anyone could move him.
It seems that emergency vehicles also generally leave the keys in, and ambulances are often stolen.
>>75
I saw it in Gundam Wing.
First, Amuro stole the Gundam and became a deserter.
>>77
I feel like there are super robots that attack if someone without the qualifications tries to touch them.
Gundam Aerial has an examination from my older sister.
X is essentially a strategic weapon, so it’s reasonable that it has a lock on it.
>>80
What was stolen was because it was compatible with the G-con for X and Double X.
It will not start without bypassing the triple security of physical keys, retinal patterns, and vocal cords.
The Asurada from Cyber Formula was amazing…
It’s unavoidable because it’s not interesting at all even if it’s depicted in an anime style.
Aren’t there more detailed startup procedures!?
Start the APU, and once the voltage is stable, start the coolant oil pressure fuel pump, check the pressure, and then ignite the main engine.
…After all, depicting it in video makes it redundant and not interesting!
>>82
No matter how hard you try, you can only get by with a “beep beep beep beep beep”.
>>82
I have the impression that there are various things being said before the launch.
>>89
The seed is particular about the launch sequence.
The fewer complicated procedures, operating conditions, and training required for weapons, the better.
Aren’t there any keys for MS?
To suddenly start killing police, to be honest, I thought that was questionable.
This guy… is going to move! That’s how Gundam starts.
It depends on whether you’re familiar with it or not.
The young kids nowadays don’t ride bikes.
>>90
Young people these days ride MS…
Despite just getting on casually, the White Doll keeps accompanying me all the time afterward.
Modern young people don’t even know real gravity…
“What’s wrong? Is there a dispute?”
Isn’t it called MechWarrior? It’s that thing where you wear a helmet and if you don’t move your head in a specific direction a certain number of times, you get an electric shock and die.
In the previous episode, Seira went out on her own in the Gundam and got scolded.
In the next story, Amuro stealing and escaping is something else.
Start masturbating with the stolen panties.
Without the owner knowing.
In the darkness of the night curtain.
I want to be comforted by someone.
In this thread I escaped into
I felt like I found my companions on the night of 35.
Until now, the only things that have clearly been stolen are Mark II and maybe XX.
Stolen, so I’ll steal it back in the next work SEED.
>>103
That’s why the war never ends.
It’s a fundamental point, but you don’t actually empathize with stealing Gundam, do you?
>>105
The only part I empathize with is where it starts to shine.
It’s not an anime.
Don’t shine.
Being stolen is a given.
I think if there were a lot of personal Gundams running around in this world, it would create a trend that stealing them is not good… but that’s not the case…
Unicorns that can properly give gifts before death and even put locks on them are fortunate.
It’s a situation where I was casually smoking a cigarette behind the school building, and suddenly got caught up in a gang conflict, so the premise is different.
Because I can vividly imagine the feeling when things like my bike or other belongings are stolen.
If mobile suits were as familiar as vinyl umbrellas…