
There were better soldiers in the Federation than I expected.
There were worse soldiers in Zeon than I thought.
The person with hemorrhoids in the image was worse than I imagined.
Plasma piercing through right in front of me.
Arise, citizens!!!
Even such a bad guy is really sweet to his little sister.
Stop joking around.
I feel that a good soldier of the Federation has a death flag.
The tactics of Zeon are more cowardly than I expected.
Don’t say that to people with hemorrhoids.
Thinking about how Miharu was earning a living by licking the boots of those who made us orphans is quite harsh.
“Don’t go saying things like ‘Such a child…’ you Zeon aliens.”
The caretaker at Jaburo is nice, isn’t he?
I didn’t think they would come to kill at that timing, to be honest…
The amount I hit my dad with a solar ray is definitely crossing the line, isn’t it?
It’s like a personification of a hawkish stance.
Giren is a character who completely lives up to expectations, except for the way he dies.
Well, as someone who has gone so far as to drop a colony, I don’t need a king who would meekly go out and seek peace at this point.
(…If I win like this, won’t I eventually get killed?)
You’re choosing your words carefully with Kicilia, but it wasn’t a situation where such subtlety and wordplay would work.
The WB squad has the performance of the wooden horse and the old man, but isn’t their fighting power always on the edge?
I understand that the causality is reversed, but I thought the person in the thread talks too much in a stereotypical way…
The Zabi family is mostly cornered by the Zion side.
The older brother who is seriously obsessed with and misusing Zionism is really dangerous.
Giren is an agitator, so his words are strong, which makes sense that they would become formulaic…
The first speech is quite matter-of-fact.
Who are the bad soldiers of Zeon? I can only think of M.
Char
After defeating the Federation, what does Gihren want to do next?
The balance of economic power has already tilted towards space, so war is really pointless…
Well, the fact that Kishiria witnessed the light of a person’s heart is probably acting as a stopper…
I want to learn how to change Twining’s saddle after this.
The timing is amazing.
If I said I didn’t think that far during the first generation, then that’s all there is to it.
The flow of the Zabi family’s dictatorship after Daikun’s mysterious death is just like a Pythagorean switch.
It depends on how serious Gihren’s eugenics ideology is, but if it’s about increasing the population in space, he would likely focus more on increasing Newtypes.
Everything started with Gillen.
Giren was the one who truly thought about the future of the Earth Sphere.
There aren’t really any privileged classes on Earth, as one might say…
This is true for the sequel as well.
What would it take to enthusiastically support a dubious family like the Zabi clan?
The thread image evokes the Rubiconian Death Worm.
To live, we need something to rely on.
A colony floating in space is particularly confined.
After the death of Dykun, has Degin become a dictator like the relationship between Lenin and Stalin?
Since I’ve been entrusted with it, it’s fine for now until I succeed Mr. Daikun.
Monarchy? The republic citizens have allowed me to reign once it is introduced.
As demonstrated by France in reality, the masses cannot go against the flow.
Deggin and Gihren had strong practical abilities, and it can be said that the distrust of the Space Noids towards the Federation was deeply rooted to that extent.
Will the Space Noids be free from hemorrhoids and gain an advantage over the Earth Noids?
I feel that the population of people with hemorrhoids might actually increase due to the inability to exercise properly in spaceships and the increase in office workers due to automation.
Degin, who was supposed to have shown magic that was almost like a scam,
He’s already just a limp old man in the main story…
It seems that proper gravity blocks are loaded onto battleships, but I don’t think ordinary citizens are connected to things like that.