Mobile Fighter G Gundam - Tumblr Posts
Ok but consider the Sekiha Love Love Tenkyoken but it’s Yang and Blake
Okay, so I’m currently watching Gurren Lagann and I have actually been thinking of what anime I should watch once I’m done with it.
Not gonna lie,this is exactly how i imagined they would interact.
“This hand of mine glows with an awesome power! Its burning grip tells me to defeat you! Take this! MY LOVE, MY ANGER, AND ALL MY SORROW!”
“SHINING FINGER!”
How to get into Gundam
Because fuck it, I was gonna do one of these sooner or later anyway.
So you want to know what this Gundam thing’s about, maybe you like the mecha design, maybe you caught part of an episode one time and want to catch up, or maybe you saw a nice piece of Chamuro fanart and want to go to the source.
But there’s so many shows and timelines that it can be quite daunting on first look, so this guide is intended to give a rough overview.
I would however like to stress two four things beforehand however:
This guide is not intended as “The One True Way” or anything. There’s no harm it coming into it a different way, and these are only my own opinions.
There’s nothing stopping you from just watching one show and leaving it there. You don’t have to watch every single show going, even I’ve only seen most of these, not all. Gundam typically has variations on similar themes - it’s very nice watching multiple shows because they complement one another, but it’s not necessarily required.
I am very much an insider looking out here, so let me know if there’s any details I’ve missed.
I’m not gonna recommend these on a “if you like X, then watch Y basis”, mostly because I don’t personally find genre recommendations helpful, so I’d recommend picking based on promotional material (vibes, if you will).
I’ll be using this chart, supplied by the excellent@l-crimson-l, to illustrate everything.
Gundam as a whole can principally be divided into three sections: Universal Century (or UC), the Alternate Universes (AU’s) and the Build Series.
The AU’s are below the light blue line, near the bottom of the Chart, the Build Series is within the bright green line at the top-right corner of the chart and UC is the big line in the middle. We’ll talk about each of them individually.
The AU’s
The Alternate Universes were conceived as a way to get away from the continuity-heavy nature of Universal Century and provide an easy jumping-on point for new fans. The AU’s are standalone and require no prior knowledge, and are thus an excellent place to start. Honestly, I’d recommend quickly searching some promotional materials (like posters) and just going with the one you find most appealing based on that. They are (in production order):
Mobile Fighter G Gundam (1994)
New Mobile Report Gundam Wing (1995)
After War Gundam X (1996)
Turn A Gundam (1999)
Mobile Suit Gundam SEED (2002)
Mobile Suit Gundam 00 (2007)
Mobile Suit Gundam AGE (2011)
Gundam: Reconguista in G (2014)
Mobile Suit Gundam: Iron Blooded Orphans (2015)
Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch From Mercury (2022)
There’s side series and movies and other things besides, but these are the mainline shows, if you will. I have specific notes on a few of them:
Witch From Mercury - It’s of a shorter length than is usual for mainline shows, so consequently it’s a much smaller time investment than the others.
Mobile Fighter G Gundam - While undeniably rad as hell, I would recommend watching another AU first. G Gundam differs from its stablemates in a few key areas, and I find it helps to have a contrast to fully appreciate those differences.
Gundam AGE - is probably the only one I wouldn’t recommend. I didn’t like the art style and the technical explanations just got on my nerves, so I stopped watching.
Turn A and G-Reconguista are technically part of UC as well, but it’s not really crucial information so don’t feel like you have to watch UC first (I’m only including this detail for completionism).
I’ve found all the AU’s I’ve seen to be pretty good, so I’d say that which one you start with really just comes down to personal taste.
The Build Series
Is just kind of doing its own thing. The Build series is basically Buy Our Toys: the series. It’s got a far lighter tone, and I’ve had cause to compare it to pokemon prior. It’s also chock full of references and in-jokes to the other series.
Build Fighters and Build Fighters Try are the ones I’d recommend - they’ve got actual stakes and the fight scenes are really good.
Build Divers and Build Divers Re:rise I can’t recommend - I just find Build Divers aggressively boring. Build Divers Re:Rise is just okay - neither standout good or particularly bad. Its main flaw is that it’s a sequel to Build Divers.
The OVA’s are pretty much bad across the board - I’d particularly recommend avoiding Gundam Build Metaverse.
Universal Century
Universal Century is the big main timeline of Gundam, and is the timeline the original Mobile Suit Gundam from 1979 takes place in. There’s a tendency among certain fans to place UC as the one-above-all of Gundam, but I wouldn’t really go that far. It’s all pretty good, but I wouldnt really say one timeline is better than another (save personal preference, anyway).
Because UC is so big, it can be subdivided a couple times. The primary division is “Mainline” UC versus everything else. Basically there’s four-five shows in Universal Century from which everything else flows. As long as you know roughly what happens in these shows, then you can watch basically anything else in UC and have a good idea of what’s going on. These are (in order):
Mobile Suit Gundam (1979) - sometimes called Mobile Suit Gundam 0079.
Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam (1985)
Mobile Suit Gundam ZZ (1986)
Mobile Suit Gundam: Char’s Counterattack (1988)
With Mobile Suit Gundam Unicorn (2010) as a nominal fifth (honestly I feel like you could argue either way).
The rest of the shows are:
Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket (1989 Three-Episode OVA)
Mobile Suit Gundam F91 (1991 Movie)
Mobile Suit Gundam 0083: Stardust Memory (1991 Thirteen-episode OVA)
Mobile Suit Victory Gundam (1993)
Mobile Suit Gundam: The 08th MS Team (1999 Twelve-episode OVA)
G-Saviour (2000 Live Action Movie) - nobody ever talks about or acknowledges this one, it’s just here for completionism.
Mobile Suit Gundam MS Igloo (2004-2009 Three OVA’s with three Episodes each)
Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin (2015 Six-Episode OVA, adapted from the Manga of the same name)
Mobile Suit Gundam Thunderbolt (2015 Eight-Episode Series, adapted from the Manga of the same name)
Mobile Suit Gundam: Twilight Axis (2017 episode, adapted from a light novel of the same name. Later rereleased as Gundam Twilight Axis Red Trace, with additional footage)
Mobile Suit Gundam Narrative (2018 sequel movie to Gundam Unicorn)
Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway (2021 ongoing movie series, very much adapted from the novel Hathaway’s Flash)
Most of the other series relate to events in the aforementioned “mainline” shows in some way, but a lot of the sidestories set during the One Year War require very little introduction (Thunderbolt, 0080 and 08th MS Team). Similarly, works set in “Late UC” (F91 and Victory Gundam) carry on from the other series thematically but don’t have any plot connections, so they can all be watched without any background knowledge of the rest of the Universal Century.
Compilation Movies
Just a quick note here - many of the Gundam series have compilation movies, where either a whole series or part of one are compressed down into a movie. While each movie compares differently, they usually boil down to this: Compilation Movies usually have worse pacing, but really nice animation.
One of the great things about Gundam is that different shows offer variations on themes, so seeing how different characters react to similar situations, or how different settings change their approaches can make it incredibly rewarding.
I haven’t seen enough of SD Gundam to make any sort of recommendations there, and Manga is something I might touch on another day.
EDIT: Oh hey also: You can watch a good chunk of these on YouTube, for free, officially. The Official Gundam.Info YouTube channel rotates the series shown on its channel periodically. I think it’s got F91 and SEED on there currently? But it’s had Wing, 00 and Witch From Mercury before. Also all of the Build Fighters series are there.
So yeah, that’s a thing.
Thank you kindly @gomez-alonzo-addams , I really couldn’t remember the stats for Victory.
I’m going to list the math for Mobile Fighter G Gundam Here, and I’ll briefly touch on how I defined the terms “Gundam” and “Gundam Pilot” above.
Gundam is: A pilotable, Mobile Suit bearing the name “Gundam” with additional bonuses for the following: twin-eye camera, V-fin (“horns”), face vents, tricolour colour scheme, one-off or limited-production unit.
Gundam Pilot is: An individual who can reasonably claim to have been the primary pilot for a Gundam. In the event of one Gundam being piloted by numerous people, pilots are either counted separately (so, multiple pilots for one Gundam) or assigned where most appropriate (IE Judau pilots both the Zeta and ZZ, but his “main” unit is the ZZ, so he counts as the ZZ’s pilot).
Neither of these are intended to hold up to much scrutiny, and I’m aware of several edge cases and mobile suits that don’t quite fit.
*Spoilers for Mobile Fighter G Gundam Follow*
The 50 Pilots of Mobile Fighter G Gundam, and their status as alive or dead, are listed in no particular order as follows;
(Most’ve them are Gundam Fighters, so I’ll note the ones that aren’t)
Domon Kasshu, Neo Japan - Alive
Rain Mikamura, Neo Japan - Alive
Ulube Ishikawa, Former Gundam Fighter for Neo Japan - Dead
Chibodee Crocket, Neo America - Alive
Argo Gulskii, Neo Russia - Alive
George De Sand, Neo France - Alive
Sai Saichi, Neo China - Alive
Schwartz Brüder, Neo Germany - Dead
Master Asia, Neo Hong Kong - Dead
Wong Yunfat, Prime Minister of Neo Hong Kong - Dead
Allenby Beardsley, Neo Sweden - Alive
Mirabeau - Would-be Gundam Fighter for Neo France - Alive
Other Schwartz Brüder, Neo Germany - Dead
Hans Holger, Neo Denmark - Alive
Chico Rodriguez, Neo Mexico - Alive
Kyral Mekirel, Neo Nepal - Alive
Andrew Graham, Neo Canada - Alive
Carlos Andalucia, Neo Spain - Alive
Gentle Chapman, Neo Britain - Dead
Rutger Verhoven, Neo Holland - Alive
Saette Gyuzelle, Neo Turkey - Alive
Dahal Muhammad, Neo Egypt - Dead
Other Neo Egypt Guy - Dead
Michelo Chariot, Neo Italy - Dead
Marcelot Chronos, Neo Greece - Dead
Chandra Seijima, Neo India - Dead
Romario Monini, Neo Portugal - Dead
Garla Garla, Neo Malaysia - Alive
Russets Daggats, Neo Singapore - Alive
Frank Gastro, Neo Cuba - Alive
Kill Harn, Neo Mongolia - Alive
Chelsea Walesa, Neo Poland - Alive
Eric the Viking, Neo Norway - Alive
Conta N’Doul, Neo Kenya - Alive
Max Burns - Shuffle Alliance Member - Dead
Alan Lee - Shuffle Alliance Member - Dead
Nassius Kircher - Shuffle Alliance Member - Dead
Tris Sergeyrev - Shuffle Alliance Member - Dead
That’s all 38 Gundam Pilots of Mobile Fighter G Gundam.
I truly do not understand where the idea that most Gundam protagonists die came from. I’ve even seen self-proclaimed fans warn newcomers that almost every Gundam protagonist dies, when that is patently not true!