
Birth
Upbringing
Absence of a brain.
I accepted McGillis’s invitation.
>>4
The only place I clearly lost is where I got on that guy.
I made a mistake in choosing my job.
Screenwriter
In the thumbnail, it briefly looks like Yamada Denki.
Came under the yakuza.
The brake role has died.
Biscuit
Head
Suddenly sprouted mobile armor.
>>12
The place where the thing from the War of the Curse was buried is designated as Teiwaz’s mining base and was entrusted to the Tekkadan, but when I contacted McGillis saying I found something dangerous, we ended up going to see it together, and it activated because that idiot Iok approached it without listening to my warning, so it wasn’t even a rush.
If we’re talking about that, then it’s also about Furaurōsu, who was with the Mobile Armor.
>>29
Why is there just one mobile armor buried in such a specific place in the first place?
>>40
Isn’t that a positive point of Iron Blood where there are no contradictions, allowing for expansion?
In a nutshell, it boils down to having succeeded too quickly on a large scale.
I don’t like how players like Maggillis and Iok are able to do as they please despite being absolutely unable to win in terms of power.
There’s no way we can win against an army that manages not just the world, but even the entire solar system, so we had to find a compromise somewhere.
It didn’t stop.
I died.
I died, but I didn’t lose.
Maybe
The reason we ended up confronting Arianrod ultimately stems from Makki and Iok, so we need to do something about them.
To put it more bluntly, it’s bad that Iok was used conveniently in a negative way.
In a peaceful era, it would have only resulted in being disposable through shadowy side jobs.
At the point when it was said that the White Tiger Brigade was the model…
Regardless of the process and details, it was probably determined from the beginning that the Iron Flower Corps would be annihilated in this work.
The Tekkadan didn’t have any of that “we can’t forgive Galalhorn!” or “opposition to noble politics!” stuff.
I can’t believe Kudelia settled down as an ordinary career woman without any remarkable achievements…
Because the kids who only know how to rise with force have somewhat gained success experiences.
If Lord Iok hadn’t stepped on the MA, it would have been better.
It was a closed circle that oddly didn’t grow much and looked down on adults.
>>25
It’s understandable to rebel against adults.
Aren’t you looking down on me, or rather, not trusting me?
Well, it’s a world where there are only a handful of decent adults, enough to count on one hand.
There were hardly any proper adults nearby except for the accounting staff…
What is Iok-sama…?
Kuze’s older brother was really bad at handling himself within the organization.
But if I don’t meet Kuse’s older brother, I’m already out at that point, which is a dead end.
It would have been good if I could have stagnated while living a decent life as a yakuza’s underling.
Lord Iok really missed his timing to die.
Unable to find a resolution due to where I was born and raised.
You probably decided from the beginning that choosing a means to suddenly become big would lead to ruin.
It didn’t really become interesting.
Seriously, Biscuit died.
It’s fine to lose, but it ended up being something like “It would have been better if the Tekka Dan weren’t there.”
>>37
It’s different from the Iron-Blood I saw…
>>39
I don’t think anyone solved the fact that the reactivation of human trafficking and incomplete nanomachine surgery happened because of their excessive activity in one term, not even GH.
Iok’s actions are mostly coming to destroy the Tekkadan without regard to his own will, which is a problem.
The role was for Naze to take the reins of the Tekkadan.
In the first place, since Najee is a favorite of the boss, it ended up creating a misunderstanding among the other executives of Teiwaz that Najee was secretly manipulating things behind the scenes, using the new group called the Tekkadan as a cover to gain power unjustly.
The show is over, and all the spin-offs have been canceled, so there’s no way to expand on it, right!?
>>44
You’re probably doing retrofitting all the time.
Look at the whole Gundam.
It is tough that many of the failures are external factors that the Tekkadan side has no control over.
The partner I teamed up with was great.
I didn’t think my partner would go on a rampage.
While having deep insight and careful consideration, follow me! I never thought that Makki would only be focused on the overwhelming power of Bael.
It would be problematic if an evil organization that utilizes kids as their assets succeeds.
>>48
When looking at the entire Gundam series, doesn’t it quite resonate with many organizations…?
>>53
It is harder to find a group that won’t be affected.
I may have died, but I didn’t lose.
>>49
Rido, who inherits Olga’s ideology, is still fighting because he continues to carry out terrorism against Gjallarhorn.
The will of “don’t stop” continues to be passed down.
>>57
Ideas at the level of a fucking political offender.
In the second season, the Tekkadan had sufficient backing and didn’t really have any reason to push themselves unnecessarily, so in the end, it all boils down to making the wrong choice in jobs.
Well, it’s because I couldn’t stop at a moderate point.
I was told not to stop, so I can’t help it.
There were only foolish children who couldn’t even think of the idea of “taking off the jacket.”
I guess no one ever thought of the idea that being poor means taking off your clothes.
>>52
It’s one thing to infiltrate enemy territory, but in Crusé, the members have a sense of being like hometown heroes.
>>52
At that timing, the young man riding in a military vehicle entering and leaving the Admos Trading Company is almost certainly a member of the Tekkadan, so I don’t think it matters whether he has a jacket or not.
I think the Tekkadan should have pointed out more about how Hashmal moved because of Ioct.
The fact that Biscuit has died.
My brother Naze has died.
Teaming up with Mackie.
It was not good that no one died in the final match of the first season.
The reality line became quite optimistic over there, so the developments in the second season were nothing but stressful.
The organization known as the Tekkadan has most of its assets and personnel transferred to Kudelia’s trading company.
Everything except for military force has been beautifully laundered.
Since defeating MA, it’s been all downhill.
I suppose there aren’t really any people left who don’t understand that we aren’t living just to win a war.
>>63
Mika and Orga, who couldn’t understand, have died.
If one of us had said it was fine here, it might have been different.
>>70
Mikazuki only asks Orga where the destination is, and although Orga doesn’t know either, when he looks into Mikazuki’s eyes, he feels like he shouldn’t stop!
Honestly, these guys couldn’t stop until they died the moment the Brain’s Biscuit died.
The Iron-Blooded Orphans are delinquents who can’t cut cake…
The political power of Naze was too low.
There are reasons like the death of Biscuit and the lack of a brain, but I believe the fatal cause of defeat is Mackie.
If I hadn’t teamed up with that guy, there would still have been a chance.
Given the remaining members, it is a victory in a way that the world has changed and the family registers are separate now.
Except for the ride that is doing hitman work.
Once you get caught up in a political struggle, it’s over.
It’s not even on the level of teaming up with Makki.
In other words, it’s not good because the big breasts are dead.
You could say that losing to Masaharu has nothing to do with strength; it’s completely checkmate in a different way.
>>72
I do like the fact that, even though they were losing in politics and strategy, they almost turned the world upside down with just tactics.
To be honest, I think it’s much easier to understand that the newcomer loyal dog from that second season became a sharp knife and caused the organization to split apart.
Was there anything we would have struggled with if McGillis wasn’t in the first season?
>>74
I was guiding various things.
>>74
Providing supplies and holding them back.
The second season may seem pessimistic, but to be honest, it just involved a lot of judgment mistakes and careless deaths; in the grand scheme of the Tekkadan, it’s quite an optimistic outcome to say that thanks to Mikazuki’s connections, they ended up working for Kudelia.
>>75
It was a tragic development, but suddenly it became too convenient, which makes it even worse.
In the end, there are more survivors, so if you say winning is winning, isn’t it?
It seems that the remnants have smoothly infiltrated the political world and are doing well.
>>78
I don’t care if the members at the edge are alive, and it would have been better if more of them had died.
When I calmly thought about the flow of the story, I definitely thought I would miss it, but I thought I would hit it normally.
The dirty old men controlling the world are too powerful.
If we’re speaking meta, it’s already bad at the split-cool stage.
Because I’m trying to do something that’s unclear and has me stuck.
>>83
Even the relatively stable OO started to drag in the second half, and when it got into the second season, it really threw off the rhythm of Gundam.
It seems like there are remnants around here who have altered their IDs hiding, so it’s not a complete defeat.
>>85
Well, who will that win against?
Isn’t it a victory if you can live peacefully without being exploited as a child soldier?
>>85
If anything, even in a seemingly completely checkmated situation, thanks to the tunnel, there’s a prospect for escape! We can still go on! Including the point where it feels like we might just win, it makes me think that Orga is strong!
Even if someone suddenly talks about their experience with murder, isn’t everyone just killing people regularly?
>>86
That’s why the Dokaben scene makes even less sense to me.
It feels like I’m going to become weird if I just get a regular job.
To be honest, the members I have a particularly strong attachment to in the Iron-Blooded Orphans are mostly Orga and the pilot members.
Everything else is fine as long as a lot survived!
After that, the space mice are super strong!
Did it become a thing where we should increase the boy soldiers with more Alaya consciousness?
>>90
It was so strong that it was eradicated through legal reforms.
>>90
If we leave this alone at the beginning of the second season, the public safety will get worse, so let’s rescue the human debris and orphans! That’s the end.
>>95
It’s a win!
>>95
Well, it was worth the trouble just for this.
>>100
If the Tekkadan were worried about that, it would be one thing, but they aren’t particularly interested…
>>117
Even if they weren’t concerned about the state of the world, isn’t it enough if they could create a path for the remaining members to live?
>>117
Well, I wasn’t looking at the whole picture, but I think what the Tekkadan aims for is included in that.
I shouldn’t have to think about murder being a crime if I’m not living in an affluent area.
Most of Mars is an area where the concept of police does not exist.
When Iok started to approach the MA that was sleeping.
Don’t come any closer! With that kind of tension, Macky must have been really panicking back there.
Because I’m a huge fan of Agnika, I was fully aware of the terror of MA.
>>97
It’s bad to do things that make it seem suspicious when the fleet commander secretly goes to Mars.
The director and the scriptwriter probably planned to have a total defeat ending from the very beginning, so everything was doomed from the moment the project was conceived.
>>98
Do you really have such a distorted impression after reading the responses above?
Even though the biscuit doesn’t change any decisions, it always comes up as a moderate option, so it is necessary for Olga’s mental state.
It was unsettling to see the maintenance man and the woman gradually becoming close.
>>103
I thought that doctor would normally be good with Olga, but she prefers that greasy old man…
It’s not a total annihilation ending, to begin with.
When a screenwriter from Hiroshima was proudly saying, “Yakuza conflicts and wars between countries are the same, right?”…
My Gundam losing is such a crappy anime 😢
It’s a title that has a lot of layers like that…
>>107
The things fans like and the things critics hate are the same, which is why they’re still fighting after 10 years.
The usual child started the usual story, and we dispersed.
What remains after losing the battle is extremely significant.
Mikazuki and Akihiro did not die in vain.
I quite like that resolution.
The way of carrying it is a bit rough, but that’s okay.
The history of murder might depict the differences in mindset between the early members and those who joined later, but in the end, it doesn’t expand beyond the question of “so what?”
>>111
Well, we both have our circumstances… that’s all it comes down to.
Speaking of the jacket and so on, doesn’t it seem too unnatural to not be recognized as part of the Tekkadan just because you’re not wearing it?
Whether that person is the leader of the Tekkadan or not, there’s no doubt they are a member of the group. That military vehicle that went to Kudelia at that timing is definitely not from Gjallarhorn.
>>114
Well, the black-clad ones are instructed to shoot anyone who gets close, as mentioned in the main story.
>>114
I’m currently on the wanted list.
It’s not that I’m saying you should take it off because you will no longer be automatically certified, right?
I thought Hash would survive… why did he die so abruptly…
>>116
If that guy had lived, he could have become a protagonist who overcame hardships. It’s such a pity.
Thanks to Maki’s rampage, GH was weakened by civil war and ultimately couldn’t focus on Mars, leading to independence, so in a broader sense, there was meaning in the fact that the Tekkadan helped with that.
Aside from the fact that they didn’t particularly seek that kind of thing.
Isn’t it a good outcome that this kind of organization, which has been leaving results, was considered bad for law enforcement organizations, leading to their dissolution and the improvement of law enforcement organizations, along with improvements on Mars?
>>123
If the person connected to the yakuza is at the top of the organization, there won’t be any improvements or changes.
>>123
That’s right.
I could have escaped a bit better, and I could have made my death look more stylish.
It would have been nice if I could have stopped at a good place, but it was impossible because everything was a mess due to the people around me.
I was stupid.
Script’s
Orga was also in favor of Mars getting better itself.
If I become the king of Mars, it would be convenient for Kudelia in various ways, right?
But it wasn’t something I wanted to achieve at the cost of partially destroying the organization.
>>128
You’re lying, you were aiming for the goal as the ultimate high, weren’t you?
It hurts that even my older brother was bad at politics.
There were certainly mistakes, but I feel like I was excessively killed off by the script due to its unreasonable nature.
>>130
I wonder what it is about that time when the MA arc started without the appearance of the second machine and beyond…
It’s funny that they have no sense of crisis or even awareness, despite being reported as terrorists who cooperated in the coup.
>>131
They felt like young soldiers who don’t know much about the world.
When it comes to reporting, it’s bad that Macky’s political skills were inferior to those of the meat uncle.
It is only after a significant mistake occurs regarding the impoverished that politics takes measures, and the Tekkadan is the first to make that mistake, so it is impossible to save them politically.
The government can only say that we should make sure the same thing doesn’t happen again in the future.
Kata DAKARA
In the first half of the second season, it felt like they were trying to make a living outside of war, but it was ruined by MA and Iok. That’s my vague impression.
It’s one thing for kids to be not very bright, but it’s really something else when even the adults who support them are not very bright!
The Tekkadan is set up to not listen to what adults in different circumstances say, so it would be the same even if the surrounding adults are wise.
Avoidance is a mentality of dependency.
I think there was also the option not to seek revenge after Rafta was killed.
In the future, I will probably be looked down upon to the point of dying within Teiwaz, but I can’t really tell which situation is better compared to the final episode.
The fact that there is an unavoidable landmine called Hashmal means it’s already checkmate.
The fun of episode 1 is off the charts.
It’s excessive to have a grand beginning and a lackluster ending.