
Victor KV-2034 Go Goshogun Theme Song Go Goshogun Launch! ~ Beyond the Galaxy ~ Sung by: Ken Fujii 21 Century © Ashi Production ¥600 Bell Pro Certified Snow Records Japan
Space Number One (Space B)
>>1
Stop it! I won’t have anything left to talk about!
>>1
It’s the pilot that’s in Space B!
Economy Class Go Shogun
Red
Button
Do you know?
Look at the sky.
The bimler moves using energy.
The novel is surprising as the drawings suddenly change from Naniwa Ai to Yoshitaka Amano.
People are amusingly telling stories about how an enemy mech develops self-awareness and self-destructs out of guilt in Go Flasher.
I’m interested, but I’ve never seen it, and if I did, I feel like I’d just go “oh, I see…”
It’s nice that in the sequel, the characters from the previous work are in a terrible situation.
>>11
That’s not good! It’s definitely not good!!
I heard that there is no appearance of GoShogun in the movie.
>>13
Well, they go to space in the final episode, after all.
>>13
After that, the GoShogun broke in the end, so it can’t be helped.
Just because the lively banter of the characters is appealing, don’t just include the stage directions as they are in the original novel.
The novel version completely showcases all of Tsuyoshi Shudo’s bad points, and it’s amazing.
The main characters are too overshadowed, and all the characters are unhappy, leading to various downfalls.
I probably only watched the movie version a long time ago, but I have no recollection of it at all.
The film is an atmospheric movie.
It’s not boring, but I guess it’s fine if you don’t watch it.
The novelization is good, but…
It takes only the interesting parts of anime and turns them into a proper science fiction work.
Joining the three generals of the novel, or Bunduru’s half-brother, or Bunduru’s circular moon killing technique.
There are some ideas I want picked up in Super Robot Wars, but recently GoShogun has not appeared as a human form.
I think it’s not good that that brat called Kenta is in the main character position.
It’s hard to believe that it was once at a level of a semi-regular in Super Robot Wars, as for a robot anime, the content is quite twisted.
The lyrics of the opening theme were intentionally made to be nonsensical by Takeshi Shudo, according to Ai Naniwa.
>>24
I think it would be difficult to sing even as a song.
It’s very much like the technopop of that time, so it’s good in that sense.
>>24
I don’t want to write lyrics that make children yearn for battle.
I’ll make it into meaningless lyrics!
Eeeee…
It seems that there were aspects that made it easy to use as a Super Robot Wars without becoming too serious.
In the old Super Robot Wars, there wasn’t much emphasis on original material.
It’s useful in F’s Mahjong.
The novel continues even after it was done in the anime.
A theatrical animated version was made as an event that took place much later than that novel.
The novel version was supposed to eventually connect to the movie version… but it didn’t connect.
Go-Shogun or Accel World…
Although Fujii Ken from OP has an excellent voice quality and skills, it’s a waste that he mainly did covers and pachislot songs.
Remy’s ex-boyfriend is voiced by Hideuchi Ikeda, which makes me laugh a little.
It seems that not many people know that Kenta is the main character.
Ah, so the Animege Bunko really does stay in memory, huh?
You did well, didn’t you?
“The novelization of ‘His name is Gold’ was better than the anime itself.”
The enemy’s three generals have become too popular.
>>32
Aside from Bundoru, there wasn’t really any particular popularity.
Just because the screenwriter liked it.
He has a face that looks gay, but there are no gays.
Remy is the daughter of a prostitute, and her mother accidentally got pregnant.
Named appropriately from the Remy Martin brought by the customer.
…was that story in the anime?
Even at the first participation in EX, it already feels like a postscript, the demeanor is different.
I love that Remy’s mother was a prostitute and raised in a brothel, nurtured with plenty of love by other sex workers, all of whom she looks up to as mothers.
The three of Goshogun and the three generals.
The only one who can’t cook is Remy.
The protagonist looks like a preschooler but is now in middle school!
Leonardo Medici Bundle
Sugu ni katto naru
Yattera Kya Rena Gur!
Remy Shimada
Sanada something
Something in the Bronx.
In the anime, after Shingo, it seems like he slips in the bathroom and fractures his bone, which feels like a gag.
I was like, wow… in the sequel novel.
I love 35 Fusion God Neroth because it’s so ridiculous.
What happened to OVA afterwards?
In today’s world, it’s easy to understand.
Isn’t the Sengoku element about Sanada taking on the Tokugawa alongside Hojo, Kirigakure, and Shimada?
Was the setting of BIMLAR influenced by the trend of that kind of SF setting at the time?
>>47
It’s almost like 2001: A Space Odyssey.
It’s nice to see Kelnagool struggling with mental health due to being assigned to unfamiliar work in sales.