
Voice
Airframe
What did Ginganam ultimately want to achieve…?
>>3
Invasion of Earth with Moonrace.
>>3
War
I got bored of the exercises and wanted to do some real combat.
I wanted to unleash my racing instincts, didn’t I?
Rather, what did Poo want to do…?
>>7
The woman who was flowed to Major Phil.
Even though they are the head of a samurai family, losing to an amateur in a sword fight…
>>8
Swords are not meant to be clashed together with such brute force…
>>10
Uhm…
>>8
It’s Roland who’s being pushed.
In the original work, this guy is quite clever.
The impression is quite different.
>>9
Finally feeling the familiar tension from the game in the final battle.
If there were just one word of appreciation… that implication is nice.
>>11
I can understand the feelings of the great general who governs martial arts.
But I can’t take this guy to Earth…
Doesn’t that make it seem like Diana didn’t like it and betrayed us?
>>13
It’s definitely complicated.
In one way or another, the commander also considers Diana-sama to be the idol of the Moon Race.
>>13
It is indeed so, aaaaaaaah!
Roland is also experienced…
Have you ever fought with a sword?
I thought I was drawn to the Turn X’s performance and went on a rampage, but is it something else…?
>>17
It’s definitely strange even before getting the Turn X…
In the sword duel, if Roland’s sword hadn’t been laid down, Ginga Nam would have won if it had continued like that.
>>18
It seems there are quite a few people here who misunderstand and think they lost by being stabbed like that since it didn’t show up on the screen.
That means you’ve been absorbed by that nanomachine and can’t move, right?
The excitement over all-range attacks and Shining Finger is characteristic of Gundam fans.
Isn’t about 40% of it being consumed by Turn X’s personality?
>>23
“Will I be sealed away once again? This Gimm Ginganam!!!”
>>23
That’s just a complete delusion of a fan without any setting.
A war fool pretending to be quite the mastermind.
Unlike my subordinates who are really war-obsessed, I think about a lot of things.
Even though the blade is broken, they’re still engaging in a tsubazeriai (a sword-locking struggle).
Aren’t you scared?
Upon closer inspection, it’s clear that Turn A has some fast and somewhat unclear effects where missiles were fired and cut away.
Lady Diana was already at her limit, wanting to die on Earth or remembering her old boyfriend…
It seems to be being eroded by something like a psycho-monitor.
My excitement is so high that I might be saying things that don’t make sense, which can be interpreted in either way.
The mention of being crazed by Turn X and so on… is part of the final development.
From the beginning, it has been said all along that Ginga Nam would betray.
This guy might be an expert in MS battles, but he has probably never fought with a sword.
Harry’s motivations are easy to understand.
Although they were clever, whether it was because they were getting into the groove or due to the influence of Turn X, they are increasingly becoming the public image of the leader.
Well, isn’t it also nice that Lady Diana descends to Earth swiftly without any words of appreciation?
>>39
Even if you say that
“Thank you for your continued support, Ginganam… I will be going to the Diana Counter on Earth.”
Even so, it is what it is…
>>48
I entrusted the protection of the moon to you, just saying…
…What was Koren?
I don’t really understand why he suddenly became a monk or helped in the end…
>>40
I was a complete mess after being thawed from my frozen sentence, but I remember my dark history education properly.
>>40
Someone who has been in frozen hibernation even longer than Lady Diana.
The fate of Lady Diana left on the moon.
If anything, I think Roland has much more practical experience with mobile suits.
>>41
I’ve been doing something extraordinary, trying to fight while suppressing the performance of my beard and also trying to keep myself and those around me from dying as much as possible.
I understand that if the Diana Counter creates a citizen army and takes it along as a guard unit, it would seriously tarnish their reputation.
>>42
Common people should just stay on the moon!!
Do you really like Diana that much!!
It’s understandable since Lady Diana is getting older.
In the story of Turn A, it feels like they are working too hard to consider what would have happened if Harry Ord hadn’t been there.
The character development meant to serve as the final boss to wrap up the story has failed, which is something the bald guy is also pointing out.
>>49
Huh? I thought it was a story where the character design was perfect but the character was only there to wrap up the story, so I’m sorry about that.
I don’t really understand Moonrace, but how long can they live by hibernating?
>>50
By hibernation device
Lady Diana has been alive for about a thousand years, but those who use cheap devices die quickly.
>>50
I’m sure Lady Diana is over a thousand years old, and that’s why she’s reaching her limits.
Among the Moon Race, especially considering the good environment for cryogenic sleep of Lady Diana, I think it depends on the position, but isn’t it around 300 to 500 years…?
>>65
The lower class has quite a tough game of chance.
>>68
Even if I don’t wake up or if I do, I might end up with bruises on my face.
>>117
If you were really in a hurry, you should have just sent in the military and suppressed them quickly.
Diana’s approach is quite half-hearted.
>>126
Response to Ginganam
I think it was possible to return peacefully while displaying military might.
So originally, Ghingham was unnecessary.
Someone shot it off, but…
>>51
Well, in any case, it’s impossible for things to remain calm since Agrippa will throw in some kindling.
Poe is riding on a super weapon called Wodum.
It’s wrong to fire a mega particle cannon at something like an airplane…
At the same time that I don’t understand what Koren was.
I have no idea what Agrippa sent Coleen to do.
If the final boss isn’t completely insane and challenging the whole world, there won’t be a reconciliation between the moon and the Earth for a happy ending.
I think there are many depictions where the GINGA-NAM wins with the performance of the Turn X.
Harry and Po’s I-field barrier containment has been hit, and they’ve also taken a hit from Fran’s cannon.
By the way, Roland usually acts pretty effeminate, doesn’t he?
Is he really a protagonist who doesn’t want to fight, a non-killing type…?
>>57
Those who declare they will fight, whether they are Earthlings or Moonrace, are the ones who go to war.
>>57
There’s no character who wants to fight as the protagonist of Gundam.
Roland doesn’t like killing, but if necessary, he’s mentally prepared to do it from the start.
Why aren’t these idiots obeying Lady Diana! Roland is moving like that.
“Non-killing doesn’t mean to never kill no matter what.”
There is a scene where an ordinary person reunites with a young mother.
It seems that technology has developed to a certain extent.
Is the mastermind Agrippa or the commander-in-chief?
Lady Diana also wakes up once every 100 years for 1 to 2 years to rule, but because her body is worn out after 1000 years, she hasn’t really lived long despite being preserved.
No matter how you think about it, it’s clear that the boss was hastily introduced to wrap up the story, but the character was just too good.
>>70
As a result, Diana and Philpo were both careless, I’m sorry.
This resulted in Diana gaining depth.
>>115
I was forgiven… 😭
It’s someone who wants to get along with the Earth and the Moon.
When Ginga Nam appears, it’s interesting, and hearing their lines gives me energy!
>>72
Towards the end, it feels like this guy only speaks lines that I’ve heard before, right?
Did Mr. Nguyen not become the final boss?
>>73
In the novel, I’m riding a black doll.
I found it! …Lost Mountain!!
I get the impression that you are more skilled in intrigue and politics.
That aside, my frustration completely exploded in the final stages.
The idea that killing this person would solve the political problem is inherently an impossible way of thinking, isn’t it? Turn A.
>>77
When you defeat this guy, it will resolve things smoothly, right? Ginga Nam had that kind of intensity.
In reality, the Moon and the Earth were able to become a single entity against Ginga-namu.
It seems that Agrippa has been interfering since the story about Wilgame’s spaceship.
Even though it ends beautifully compared to other Gundam series, no one mentions that nothing has been resolved…?
>>79
It’s been that way since the first generation.
>>79
At the beginning of the story, the Moonrace has already lost its motivation.
The situation was that if I didn’t return to Earth now, I would have no choice but to perish as it was.
I’m glad that interactions with Earth have begun in the final episode.
Also, the Earth’s regeneration has finished.
>>79
The Gundam series, or rather Tomino’s works, are mostly about that kind of story, you know?
The enemy presents solutions to the current situation that involve sacrifices, while the protagonists tend to be on the side of the system.
The general’s thoughts are still understandable, and I can empathize to some extent.
Pou is more like thoughtless or careless.
>>80
I forgive you because Lady Diana allowed it…
“Kid Koyasu’s throat becomes hoarse as he thinks, ‘I must respond to the director’s manly spirit!'”
>>81
In later Tomino works, Koyasu-kun becomes overly extreme and ends up suffocating.
Speaking of Lost Mountain, why did the Suicide Squad insist on continuing the fight even after the order to cease combat was issued?
Not just Roland, but the lunar engineers confirmed it was a nuclear bomb, so it’s dangerous. They warned to evacuate quickly, right?
>>86
I only recognized it as some incredible bomb.
So I’m treating it carelessly and experiencing a massive failure.
>>99
I proposed to the young lady, so I want to show her a good side of me.
I died in an explosion.
The reason you have been able to protect your fighting power is probably because you had the pride of protecting Lady Diana, right!?
I don’t know what will bring about a resolution, but Lady Diana’s wish has come true.
Originally, Agrippa was supposed to be the final boss, not Ginganam.
The reality of frozen sleep is a completely incomprehensible system that I can’t imagine at all.
I understand that Diana is in a hurry, but if she doesn’t follow the proper procedure before getting off…
It was hard to say who was wrong, so I needed an enemy that I could comfortably hit.
In Turn A, there’s a moment that bothers me where they mistakenly refer to piloting mobile suits as “driving” instead of “controlling.”
>>98
It’s not a slip of the tongue, is it?
For people of that era, both were indistinguishable.
>>98
In the beginning, it’s all about driving.
They are saying they are operating a mobile suit.
Because I didn’t have any knowledge about mobile suits yet, and it felt like a culture that was just an extension of cars.
>>104
I love the vibe of Zabungle in that area.
…No, weren’t you warned about the nuclear warheads!?
>>101
I don’t know what that core is like.
>>101
What exactly is kakudantou?
Rolan is genetically weak and at a level where it’s uncertain if he can be frozen, and since his family was made up of strangers, he probably applied to be part of the Earth colonization advance team as a long shot.
Phrase-making machine
The Earth and the Moon have become a bit friendlier, haven’t they?
That’s fine.
Every Gundam has calmed the current turmoil, so the talk is that everyone should just do their best from here on out.
If Lady Diana wants to die on Earth so much, she could have prepared a body double and quietly settled down alone like Roland to spend her remaining days.
>>108
There’s no such freedom.
What is that moment right before Sueson gets killed, like (ah, there was such a guy…)?
Roland is also a driver, so he is driving the white doll.
It’s a story where, despite saying it’s a nuclear situation, both the Earth and the Moon continue fighting, leading to a huge explosion.
I think the word “driving” suits the use when it’s about activities like washing or transporting cows, which are closely tied to human endeavors.
That’s just… so sad for Socie-san, isn’t it?…!
The most shocking thing for me in Turn A was
The reason Diana and Kiel resembled each other was truly just a coincidence.
Isn’t there something like… a descendant that Lady Diana gave birth to, or some ancient genetics from even before that…?
>>121
Perhaps a story without such convoluted connections is better.
Has the Ginga Nam anti-thread been asleep until now since the Reiwa era began?
It means it’s a super bomb, right!? We definitely can’t let the enemy have it!
Actually, there’s also a story that involves long-lost siblings or a connection by fate.
The story of a commotion beginning from a chance resemblance has been a classic since ancient times.
An old man who seems to be taken over by a machine.
It is a distortion that should not exist, such as dawn in the middle of the night.
Diana’s lines are great, aren’t they?
The final clash is most important for the contrast between Ginganamu, who would not let go of his broken sword, and Roland, who let go of his own sword.
That’s exactly because of that hysterical woman that the war started.
If it weren’t for that guy, the war wouldn’t have happened in the first place.
>>135
Agrippa: “Well, they just keep sending troublemakers anyway.”
“I was planning to prevent the queen from returning to the moon…”
It’s not just Pou; the Diana Counter is a citizen army, so it’s made up of mostly amateurs, and it’s understandable that they might panic.
Oh, if I had brought a proper warrior with me…
If Diana returns properly, I suppose I can reluctantly return the Turn X… I had at least that much reasoning.
There, the young heir’s one-point advice was effective…
The heir was made to dress as a girl in his childhood and was violated by his grandfather.
It’s clearly written in the setting material, but I thought it was a setting that definitely wouldn’t appear in the main story…
“If you wear a skirt yourself, lol”
I think Miss Lily, who drops a huge bomb at the very end, is the final boss.
>>138
That’s irony directed at the young heir chasing after men’s butts.
>>138
I don’t know if you knew or not.
“Since Roland is a man, instead of forcing him to become a woman, you should become a woman yourself. Well, I will remain a woman and take this territory, though!” That’s what it’s about.
As for the boss, there’s Ginga-Namu, but the real nuisance is Agrippa, isn’t it?
If that person had been cooperative, there wouldn’t have been any need to land on Earth so forcefully.
>>139
I understand that they can only oppose the return-to-Earth operation from their position, but they are actively making the situation worse.
>>143
Everyone who agreed to return to Earth after the war caused by the queen’s death on Earth.
It was a scheme to prevent us from returning to the moon.
Well, the cutest one is Laura, though.
Koren Nander!? Why is such a heavy criminal here!?
They’ve also sent in Tetes, who is targeting Diana for assassination.
I thought Miss Riri was just a spoiled rich girl.
I had various abilities, being able to negotiate and having education, piled up a lot.
>>146
In the Fukui version of the novel, it is immensely loved by the people.
It is said that the origin of the name “Bojarnon” goes that far…
You all share the same guilt, so dying is quite a reasonable argument from Midgard.
Moon, oh shining sphere!
In the final stage, it’s like Lady Lili is in the position of the Supreme Commander on the Earth side.
Still, I head to the front line at a gallop.
Lady Lili has also gone to the moon and awakened after experiencing various things.
In the opposite direction of Lord Nguyen.
Tetesu’s voice acting was amazing too.
In the story, the Moonrace, which has continuously secluded itself on the Moon, doesn’t really have any portrayal of being on the decline as a species, so it feels strongly like Diana is acting out of her personal ego.
In reality, there is quite a bit of ego involved too.
>>155
There are lines regarding the confrontation with Agrippa, though.
There is no depiction.
If we let Ginganam and the others save face and accompany us, that organization will definitely cause some problems.
The Let squad faded out quite messily, didn’t they…
Even in a situation where I can’t afford to be distracted by things like rescue…
Bruno and Jacob are still surviving, huh…
>>158
But actually, there was a scenario where one side was killed by Turn X.
In the final turn, there is a scene where a puppet show defeats X, causing someone to cry alone…
The indigenous people are quick to fight, Agrippa provokes them, and Diana messes up the counter.
>>159
Phil is also like that, Milan, aren’t you supposed to be a loyal subject?
Taking Pou along resulted in quite a terrible situation, but I think if I had taken the thread image, it would have turned out even worse.
>>161
That guy causes trouble intentionally, not by accident like Suesson.
Poh looks like my subordinate, and watching him makes my stomach hurt.
>>162
Don’t cry…
>>164
Crybaby Anonymous…
>>164
I’m not crying!!
Agrippa is entirely to blame.
>>167
Isn’t that what Diana is all about?
Gingaman! It’s me! It’s Toshia!
Shall we start the Earth return operation while Lady Diana’s mind is clear?
It was a watershed moment where we either remained secluded on the moon and perished as we were.
Thank you for making it easier to use thanks to your maintenance.
>>171
I really like this part.
>>171
Did you make it easier to use!?
>>171
The range and power of the abdominal beam cannon used casually after this is simple, but it’s intense.
In games, the image of him as a rough and tough character is emphasized, but in the main story, you could say that Ginginamu acts cleverly, or less charitably, quite cunningly.
Diana is to blame, right? It’s actually true.
But I didn’t want to make Diana the villain, so that’s how this final boss was created.
Even if the scheme to have Diana die on Agrippa succeeds, I think Gin’gamun, whose love-hate feelings for Diana have become about 70% love, will just end up killing her.
From the perspective of Earthlings, it’s really bothersome that the beings from the moon suddenly started a war among themselves and then began fighting on the ground.
It wasn’t enough to just bury the core…
The performance of Turn X seems too high, but the pilot’s ability seems lower than Harry’s.
>>181
First of all, Harry is the strongest.
>>181
Harry is ridiculously strong.
>>181
There’s no one stronger than Harry.
Well, it’s the Israel issue, after all, as the original source.
It’s hard to say which one is correct.
>>182
We used to live there, but because of certain circumstances, we had no choice but to leave.
I want to go home, but there are so many people living there. What should I do?
Well, unlike Israel, a third party hasn’t guaranteed the land, so I think it’s better.
I thought Koren was just a crazy person, but I’m surprised at how strong they are.
>>183
It’s a battlefield with many air players and beginners, so it ends up like that.
Despite starting to complain about wanting to hear a woman’s name on the battlefield, if Diana had brought us to Earth from the beginning, then! The boomerang pierces sharply.
The intense character of the commander combined with the Turn X in the last two episodes leaves a strong impression.
Ginn Gin’ganam, who just puts on airs but is bad at fighting!
Meribelle’s lines hit home.
>>190
Even Merry Bell, despite the grand introduction, isn’t really that…
It’s a ridiculous move to say, “This land originally belonged to us,” after fleeing to the moon once and then trying to make it easier for the people on the ground to live there.
>>192
There is a proper contract too! One that’s about 1000 years old!
The Mahiro Brigade would have definitely been able to suppress the militia from the very beginning if they had been brought in, but I don’t really want to think about what would happen afterward.
The last swap is being done by the protagonist’s side, so it looks good… If it were done by the enemy side, I think there would be a lot of complaints.
Isn’t the strongest pilot in the story Harry, followed by Loran or something like that?