
New Mobile Report Gundam Wing Sunrise/Sunrise Production
In the beginning, Hiro is really emotionally unstable and acts suspiciously.
And then there’s some flashy action where they do a flying kick like in Dragon Ball, or hide after spinning around for no reason, making it hard to tell if it has any meaning or not.
The area around the school where Hiiro is is too suspicious…
Even though they are a labor soldier, they stand out too much… putting that aside, suddenly bursting into laughter makes me feel uneasy just watching.
I can understand transferring schools because I was seen by Lilina, but coming to kill me is pushing it.
Why do they act in such a conspicuous way at school and get all that attention while their operations are also seen by numerous unspecified people…?
Maybe I was having fun on Earth for the first time, but the occasional mysterious high laughter that interrupts is scary.
In the early stage, Hiiro is trying too hard to die.
This person’s existence is indeed a valid impression.
In Super Robot Wars, Heero is a quiet protagonist who is faithful to his missions and thinks things through carefully.
Trois is a creepy guy who I can’t figure out what he’s thinking, but I think that’s just how he is.
When you actually see it, it’s the opposite… he just talks normally with low energy.
Yes, this is it.
Tomorrow is my birthday, so of course you’ll come, right?
Trowa becomes silent when he’s with Heero, but he talks normally when he’s with other people.
Severely injured and confined to the hospital in Oz.
Come help the duo.
Jumping down from a high place.
Hey! What are you doing! You’re seriously going to die!
In the end, I take a defensive stance and don’t die.
I…
I understand the flow of wanting to die but being attached to life and what you want to do, but it’s just too surreal and absurd.
In the Gundam universe, there’s a general image of being destroyed in an explosion when shot down, so I feel uncomfortable with the expression that Zexis was shot down by the Leo, but I wonder what else I could compare it to.
Did you grapple with it and cause it to crash?
Hiiro is… the little prince?
The character Lilina in the first episode is also a completely different character, so it’s even.
He is a kind child…
Gokai is quite intellectual too, isn’t he…?
In things like Super Robot Wars, it’s become like a brainless musclehead of justice.
I think the momentum of the first quarter is amazing.
The first episode is overloaded with developments, featuring a coup in OZ, self-detonation, and a full-speed run.
In reality, the early Heero is in a very precarious and pitiful mental state.
I feel like I might be on the verge of a mental breakdown.
Even if the director fled or there were some problems, I could still understand if I knew the circumstances, but why does it quickly shift away from the school elements right after the initial school setting?
This is Duo Maxwell.
Nice to meet you…
I was set up and ended up killing my pacifist grandpa from Oz.
I want to go on a journey to ask for forgiveness from my grandchildren and the grandmother of the bereaved family.
I forgive you… getting a letter is really a nice story…
In episode 2, I thought I could destroy it with a torpedo, but it turned out I couldn’t after all.
“This is the end of everything. Mission complete…” ← Quote from Episode 2
Trez is doing something villainous, but whenever he appears, he has this ennui-filled, elegant face that seems to ponder, “Why does this pointless battle continue…?”
The Gundam pilots act freely in various places without coordinating with each other.
If you don’t look closely, you seriously have no idea what you’re doing…
Since the five protagonists act in their own ways, there are many instances of temporary collaboration that occur naturally.
It had a unique charm that produced its own interest.
It’s problematic and critical that the propulsion system suffers damage during the first attack in episode one.
Why did you go for a body slam in bird mode instead of firing the Buster in that situation, Heero?
The light air of the expression in that high laughter scene.
Well, it’s a kind of operation that feels like going on a suicide mission almost alone, so it’s understandable to feel unstable since I don’t even know if my comrades are around.
It’s a mess, but it’s interesting! Episode 1.
What the hell, this guy is interesting—I think it’s totally right to get hooked on him.
The characters in this anime look and sound good, but they are all eccentric and weird, aren’t they?
Honestly, a terrorist who is mentally unstable and goes on a suicide attack.
It’s impressive how high the level of understanding is for the times.
In the first place, the plan to go pick a fight with the world using only five Gundams is just too absurd.
Seeing Lirina’s face and immediately pressing the self-destruct button on the normal suit makes me wonder if that’s really okay…
The ambulance they stole in episode 1 would stand out a lot, yet they’re still riding it in episode 2, and it’s too funny that their classmates saw them driving it.
Decent people are only around those connected to General Noventa; everyone else is problematic.
I feel like Hiiro has finally started to talk a bit after the two-part compilation ended.
Other than that, the only scene where Heero was talking for a long time that I can think of is when I thought it was a monologue, but it turned out to be a speech.
I recently saw it, but I’m not sure if my sensitivity is dulling or if it’s really the case that most characters seem to be sources of trolling, harassment, and confusion…
Like Cloud from FF7, the character has become established after the main story ended.
Lina often gets treated as a crazy person, but considering the events at the beginning and that she is madly in love with Heero from the start, it can be understood.
At the very beginning, I honestly planned to carry out a suicide attack and die right away, so there are various justifications for that.
It feels like once I can do slapstick comedy with a duo, things have started to stabilize.
When the big shots at Sunrise, who are used to Gundam, held a preview screening of the first episode, the first half was steady, but it seems there was a stir during the final school segment…
I like Lady Lilina, who is spirited, competitive, and a bit of a tomboy, but also has a queenly demeanor.
The pace of episode 1 is amazing.
Lilina is a heroine who gets truly caught up in a whirlwind of events in the early stages.
Once I braced myself, it grew in a really amazing direction.
In the early stages, ordinary veteran officers are being taken down one after another.
It seems that Tomino got excited about saying “I will kill you” to Lirina or something like that.
After killing Noventa, I helped Duo out of goodwill.
This is Heero’s turning point.
Seeing Lilina asleep in the initial key visual being carried by Heero like a princess feels really out of place when watching the main story.
One could say that I was left with no choice but to live by my emotions after being suddenly pulled off the ladder.
The phrase “I’m going to kill you” is often treated like a catchphrase in other media, but I can’t help but think that’s not quite right.
I want to die, but when I hear voices like Lilina’s or Sally’s, I end up wanting to live after all.
Radian tried to assassinate Lilina by hiding a bomb in a hand mirror and left it in the room before leaving.
Lirina went to deliver something she forgot!
The startled Lady Anne instinctively threw it back into the room.
Due to collateral damage, Deputy Foreign Minister Dorian has died.
Couldn’t the whole process have been handled a little better…?
I understand that Lilina had to make sure her father left unharmed, but…
Looking at it now, the density of ups and downs feels like a tight roller coaster, and it makes me feel like I’m going crazy in episode 1.
I thought more of Hiro’s sad past would come up, but it only showed a little bit in Endless Waltz, and I still don’t understand what his childhood or family was like at all.
But I think it’s cool how Wing goes “Kyupeen!” while playing through the puberty arc in the first episode!
Since I started with G Gundam, I have a memory of feeling a sense of discomfort while sitting in the seat and moving the controls and console.
I learned later that G Gundam was the unusual one.
I made a strange post.
When will the coaching change take effect?
In Super Robot Wars Alpha, I rushed into the Tallgeese and got easily taken down, but looking at the main story, there was no way I could win at that point.
I feel like I saw somewhere that the cockpit was adjusted to the size of a child who is a Gundam pilot in the early stages.
I suddenly realized that it was nowhere to be found… Could it be a memory error?
It’s sad for Director Takamatsu, who gets mocked in Nadesico after doing Gundam X from here.
I was quite drawn to the coolness of Gundam and its characters, and I watched it a lot as a kid.
When I was a kid, I thought Gundam was so cool! The beams were so cool! I didn’t care about the little flaws in the story at all.
At the time of the broadcast, I wonder what they were referring to when they said it resembled W!
I feel like I was quite confused at the time because I couldn’t tell which faction was moving.
I was talking with some otaku and said that Sandrock has a weak presence compared to the others.
I don’t remember the details, but I have a vague memory of it dealing with a very big theme about war.
I think the designs of Deathscythe and Heavyarms expanded the boundaries of Gundam.
A solo assault from space to Earth and a uniquely diverse protagonist team.
The first episode was interesting, but at the time, I never imagined it would be the kind of interesting that doesn’t think ahead.
Honestly, the first episode was just interesting, but the rest was generally mediocre.
Hiiro and Setsuna are deeply intertwined in the crossover.
“Nice Gundam”
“Thank you, Gundam.”
I like doing it.
Placing the female heroine in the battlefield of politics while making the male characters fight on the battlefield.
I think W has a significant influence on the subsequent Gundam series.
The distinction between the Federation and OZ was difficult for children to understand since they used the same MS.
If it’s Hiiro, he would instantly understand the meaning and concept of “I am Gundam” when he hears it… It’s similar to that extent.
When I was a child, Maguanac left a stronger impression on me than Sandrock.
I like the part where Zero appears the most.
The prototype for making another Gundam is W, right?
G did not have a successor.
I laughed for the first time at my self-destruct show.
Since Lady Anne developed a split personality, I watched until the final episode while constantly questioning, “Is my interpretation correct…?”
I’m surprised that even Lady and Noin are in their teens, aside from Lirina-sama.
Even if you’re in your late 20s, you would still be considered quite young.
I found it most interesting that after becoming an adult, the political negotiation power of OZ felt overwhelmingly strong, especially right after going to space.
Strong…! The women are strong…!
My sister is the only decent woman in that anime.
Hilda suddenly appearing and being overly familiar with my duo would make any man think, “What is this woman…,” so it’s understandable that she was disliked back then.
Seeing Shenron, it makes me think that the G Dragon was indeed popular.
Sally, who appeared as a doctor, becomes a monster from around the middle.
It’s crazy as an operative, but I’m also dual-wielding Dober guns in Rio.
Lina probably had the potential, but leading up to the Sank Kingdom, it feels like she was pretty dependent on Heero.
OZ is too skilled at using force.
They managed to achieve a bloodless surrender by flaunting their military power…
However, things were going too smoothly, and I became lax.
At that time, I have a memory of being quite fed up with the number of banks, even as a child.
To be continued
It hurts like hell.
Dragon Hang has been inherited not only by Shenron but also by Vassago.