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Seto Kaiba

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  1. That, I think, was the idea... Isamu may have saved Earth from Sharon Apple, but he still caused a crapload of damage and broke a ton of regulations along the way. In the final analysis, he... Stole a next-generation prototype fighter from the New Edwards Test Flight Center Stole a fold booster from the New Edwards Test Flight Center Caused significant damage to the Shinsei Industry Project Super Nova hangar at New Edwards when he blew up the hangar doors Racked up quite a bill in terms of the munitions expended in the Eden NUNS's attempt to intercept him and the munitions he himself stole Destroyed several orbital weapons platforms in the Earth Defense Network Caused significant damage to a number of buildings on Earth Caused significant damage to the flying bridge of the SDF-1 Macross Caused an enormous scandal and panic when the YF-19 was demonstrated to be independently capable of penetrating the most secure NUNS defense net in the galaxy, that prompted the New UN Government to issue severe arms export restrictions on 4th Generation VFs (angering Shinsei and General Galaxy) Indirectly caused the total loss of the Sharon Apple system and AIF-X-9 Ghost prototype Indirectly caused the total loss of the YF-21 No.2 prototype and its pilot, Specialist Guld Goa Bowman Needless to say, the New UN Forces brass were NOT happy with Mr. Dyson... but were hard-pressed to punish him overtly for it since Col. Millard Johnson took responsibility for the entire incident and he had "saved the day". Chaining him to a desk under the auspices of a promotion was a way to punish him in a way that would make him sit up and take notice while dressing it up as a reward for a job well done. Arguably, yes... The New UN Government has arms export restrictions on the weapons that can be sold to, or locally built under license by, the emigrant fleets and colony planets. As a result, some of their versions of New UN Forces hardware are what are called "Monkey Models": export variants with inferior capabilities. The first example explicitly acknowledged as such is the VF-19P from Macross Dynamite 7, but the term has been used more commonly since Macross the Ride, which introduced the Macross Frontier fleet's VF-19 monkey model VF-19EF Caliburn. Yeah. The Protodeviln are energy beings inhabiting a line of prototype sentient biological superweapons... like autonomous early versions of the Birdhuman from Macross Zero. (The Evil-series bioweapons that were possessed were partially modeled on Zentradi.) They don't normally possess living beings... the seven energy beings who became the Protodeviln were accidentally drawn into the Evil-series bodies during a power test on a new form of dimensional energy conversion biotechnological reactor intended to power the Evil-series. They were, essentially victims of the Protoculture's weapons programs. Not that we know? They went for the energy that was most similar to their normal food... the mental/emotional energy (spiritia) in the minds of living beings. Ironically, Macross 7 showed that they actually learned a fair bit from their original panicky attempt to keep themselves alive by rampaging across the galaxy. Gepernich's goal was sustainable spiritia farming so they wouldn't need to attack huge swaths of the galaxy. Don't. Seriously. Macross the Ride, elsewise known as "Macross R", is a light novel that was serialized in twelve issues of Dengeki Hobby magazine in 2011. The magazine also featured custom model kits for the various VFs in the story. For all practical intents and purposes, Macross the Ride is a prequel-slash-side story to Macross Frontier. It's set in the Macross Frontier fleet a year before the events of the series (in 2058), and the plot revolves around two things: a VF air racing league called Vanquish that is a very popular sport throughout the New UN Government's sphere of influence, and an attempt by a remnant of the Earth-supremacist group Latence (the baddies in Macross VF-X2) called FASCES to hijack one of the venues. None of which I am aware. I would presume that, in typical Japanese fashion, he resigned from his post. That's what Jan said. The VF-19E was an intermediate variant between the VF-19C and VF-19F... the record is sketchy on whether the VF-19E was a VF-19 1st Mass Production-type like the VF-19A or 2nd Mass Production-type like the VF-19F and VF-19S. The only Macross title to directly feature a VF-19E is Macross 30, which showed it as a 1st Mass Production-type, though the -EF in the Macross the Ride light novel appears to be a 2nd Mass Production-type. The VF-19EF Caliburn was a customized, locally-built derivative of the VF-19E the Macross Frontier fleet built in limited quantities for its local special forces and SMS. It restored the canards and expanded the main wing, but had a number of built-in limiters on its performance. A popular theory is that Dr. Neumann has a bit of a stress disorder because of Isamu. I dunno. Probably sharing his emotions with the Vajra Queen and all. Or maybe... he likes big bugs and he cannot lie? (I'll show myself out.)
  2. The energy beings that became known as the Protodeviln are from fold space... shooting off nukes at random into fold space is not likely to achieve any meaningful results, and they're basically harmless in their own realm anyway. The only reason they had to become predatory when they were trapped in the Evil-series bio-weapons was because the abundant energy they feed on in fold space doesn't exist in normal space. Let's never speak of this again... those novels are SO ABHORRENTLY BAD that even most Robotech fans refuse to defend them, and Harmony Gold publicly admits they're garbage. Imagine how bad something Robotech-branded would have to be for Harmony Gold to admit it was a terrible mistake... There is an artbook that has a picture of him greeting Sheryl upon returning... I'll see if I can find it for you. If Macross Delta is any indication, it's the usual mishmash of both... but between Macross the Ride and Macross Delta it seems to favor the TV series version over the movie. Berger Stone's historical presentation on "music as a weapon" shows the TV version's ending of the Vajra conflict but also shows Alto's YF-29. AFAIK, no data is available that would indicate what Sheryl, Ranka, and Alto were doing after the events of Macross Frontier, except in not-official-setting works like Variable Fighter Master File. Millard takes the blame for Isamu's little stunt in Macross Plus's climax, and Isamu is "rewarded" with a career trajectory towards a desk job in the New UN Forces because the brass can't openly punish him for saving the day even though he stole the YF-19-2 and intended to commit what amounted to a terrorist act out of sheer pigheaded stupidity. c.2057 he was a reservist who was summoned in to the New Edwards Test Flight Center to participate in the evaluation of the federal New UN Forces' latest prototype, the YF-24 Evolution. After the federal New UN Forces decided to adopt the YF-24 as its next main fighter (VF-24), Isamu seems to have taken his retirement at the rank of Major and joined Strategic Military Services to escape his impending consignment to a full-time desk job. The info is a brief blurb in Macross Chronicle focused not on him, but on the YF-24 program itself. The Mechanic Sheet for his fighter in Sayonara no Tsubasa, the VF-19EF/A "Isamu Special", indicates that he tried to illegally buy a VF-19 for his own personal use and was foiled by Dr. Jan Neumann of Shinsei Industry, who instead fobbed him off with a modded VF-19EF Caliburn (Macross Frontier's VF-19E monkey model specification) under the pretense of it being a service life extension test program in order to keep Isamu from doing anything stupid/illegal.
  3. You say he did it for no reason, but you gave the reason... to be more intimidating. Palpatine did the exact same thing in Empire Strikes Back, appearing as a giant hologram to Darth Vader. You have to admit they both kind of needed the help. Palpatine was an old man in a hooded robe whose face looked like a scrotum. Snoke was a deformed cripple who wore a gold glitter bathrobe everywhere. Neither was particularly intimidating in the flesh without knowing first-hand how powerful they were.
  4. Well spotted. A +1 from me to you.
  5. So... I decided to give Ulysses: Jeanne d'Arc and the Alchemist Knight a go over lunch today. The original light novel is by the same author (Mikage Kasuga) who did The Ambition of Oda Nobuna, so it being full of gender-flipped historical domain characters was practically a given. This time it's in the Hundred Years War instead of the Sengoku Period. All in all, it didn't really leave much of an impression. The first episode was so scattered that it didn't really tell a coherent story.
  6. That, and so the audience is forced to let go of the original trio... neatly preventing other writers from dragging them back over and over again like the old Star Wars EU did to the original trilogy cast and doing what Robotech continues to do to its Macross holdover characters. Kawamori has always maintained that Hikaru, Misa, and Minmay sailed off into the proverbial sunset and their story is over. This postcard is him drawing a double underline and six exclamation marks on the word "over".
  7. I dunno... from what I've heard, most of the Star Wars EU was pure and unrepentant garbage. I don't think things have necessarily improved with Disney at the helm. Gonna hazard a guess and say it's probably something to do with emotional control and "practice makes perfect", since not being in control of your emotions is a path to the dark side. Nonsense, you heard the man... he is one with the Force, and the Force is with him. He might've been blind, but the man was rolling nothing but 20's on his spot checks.
  8. @Sailor Arashi hit on most of the answer, but there's a point that was missed. The Adventurers Guild in Goblin Slayer doesn't work like the ones in Overlord, Konosuba, etc., where guild officials were the ones who determined what an acceptable rate was, would decline to publish requests from those who couldn't pay, and policed the adventurers to make sure people didn't take quests that they had no chance of completing. In Goblin Slayer, the guild is mostly just a freelancer registry that tries to corral the riffraff, categorize them, tag them so the bodies can be identified if a quest goes wrong, and point them in the direction of work. They don't have the authority to stop a woefully underprepared party from taking a quest that's way over their skill level, nor do they have any real way to objectively measure someone's competency. The light novel doesn't beat around the bush about it, and straight-up compares the guild to a temp agency rather than the labor union-like guilds of other stories.
  9. Oh I hope not... if the Walkure fanboys want wrist exercise they can just buy the f***ing h-doujinshi. I'd like to see something of actual substance.
  10. It was a postcard that you could send away for if you bought the PS1 Macross: Do You Remember Love? video game. @sketchley has a translation of it posted here. Its canonicity, inasmuch as Kawamori cares about such notions, is dubious. No new info about Megaroad-01 has been released, apart from some updates/corrections to its tech specs in Macross Chronicle. Its fate remains a mystery.
  11. She's not the sort of "hidden depths" person you'd expect to launch an interstellar communications startup and shepherd it until it became a interstellar conglomerate megacorporation. What you see is pretty much what you get with Minmay.
  12. "Capture" is a VERY strong word for what happened there... He tracked Han Solo to Cloud City literally by following the Millennium Falcon at a distance, which isn't really a great feat of skill or cunning. He didn't actually do anything on Cloud City except grumble a bit, and received Han Solo almost literally gift-wrapped for transport to Jabba the Hutt. Vader did literally the heavy lifting for him. Oh, undoubtably... that's the reason they felt compelled to give her a cape and a shiny chromed armor paintjob. The goal was to be the new faceless, intimidating badass because that worked SO well for Boba Fett even though he accomplished the square root of bugger all in the actual movies before being accidentally killed by a blind man waving a stick. Unfortunately they succeeded a little too much, and also gave Phasma Boba Fett's all-bark-and-no-bite onscreen performance as a humiliating failure who betrays all of the First Order to save her own skin and gets tossed in the garbage, comes back to get beaten up by a mook and a beepy soccer ball before falling down a bottomless pit. Rumor has it Phasma took dance lessons, but only ever learned the steps to the Masochism Tango. It seems unlikely... from what I've seen and read, Star Wars fans seem to have rather cynically spotted her for the Boba Fett ripoff she is and in conjunction with her appalling onscreen performance given her an unofficial designation as the new trilogy's chew toy.
  13. Officially? No. The only time that I'm aware of the show's staff commenting on the matter was a piece in Newtype around the time the Macross Delta series ended, in which they indicated they never decided on an identity for Lady M and were content to leave it ambiguous for the time being. One of the fansub groups - I think it was [Deadfish] - caused a stir and an enduring fallacy by asserting in a translator's note that it was Lynn Minmay even though in-series dialog basically makes it impossible for any pre-existing character to be Lady M.
  14. Seems a safe bet they figured it out eventually... they had fold singers and weaponized them in their war with the Protodeviln, and even built a massive mind control system around the fold receptor mechanism that works similarly to the V-type bacterium. They had to have sussed it out at some point.
  15. It's indicated that the ancient Protoculture revered the Vajra, and there are some fairly strong indications that the Protoculture may have based a fair amount of their military technology on Vajra anatomy.
  16. IMO, there's nothing really inconsistent there in The Force Awakens. Rey has been working salvage on spacecraft of every stripe from fighters all the way up to the largest capital ships for essentially her entire adult life and a fair chunk of her childhood. It's not unreasonable for her to have at least a basic grasp of how to fly the ships she's spent her entire life scrapping, and a good grasp of the underlying technology in order to identify what parts were the valuable ones. She gets around on an antigrav jetbike, IIRC, and that's not exactly a simple machine either. With respect to using the force, didn't Yoda pretty definitively establish that one of the most important factors to using the force was belief? Rey grew up hearing legends of Luke Skywalker and has been told by no less a person than Han frigging Solo that it was ALL TRUE. Luke was a grown up cynical man who hadn't grown up hearing stories of the amazing power of the force, so he had a lot to unlearn before he could unleash his full potential. Rey doesn't have that problem. She doesn't do anything complex, and it takes her several tries to get simple stuff right, but the fact that she went into it believing the force could do anything she's not working with the same limitations on her access to power that Luke was. As for the dueling... yeah, she beat Kylo Ren. A badly injured Kylo Ren who'd tanked a shot from Chewie's crossbow that previously had been knocking stormtroopers several feet backwards with every hit AND gotten several lightsaber wounds from Finn. An untrained amateur with implicit trust in the force beat a winded, wounded professional who was in the middle of bleeding out and catching hypothermia while also losing some power due to being conflicted about his alliegance to the dark side AND trying not to hurt her. It's not like she spanked him at the top of his game, Yeah, Phasma was a damp squib when you consider they put a ton of press focus on her for what turned out to be a glorified cameo appearnace... but I'm not convinced that trolling the fandom wasn't the whole point there.
  17. They have some... alluded to back in Macross Frontier, which mentioned that galactic law forbade an emigrant fleet to invade an inhabited planet. It's not quite the Prime Directive, but it's a start. Thus far they seem to be doing pretty good, with the Vajra being their only non-friendly first contact due to the extreme differences in communication methods. Things only went south on Windermere IV because the Kingdom of the Wind was impatient about the slow pace of its economic growth due to its relative isolation. Yeah, though they did have the Apollo Base colony and the space colony clusters, so presumably at least some of that sort made it through OK.
  18. Imagine my amusement when a little digging revealed I was spot on about Phasma... she was added because coverage of the first table read of The Force Awakens got a lot of feedback on social media about there being too many men/not enough women. In hindsight, it adds a new and cynically amusing dimension to Phasma's character. The audience demanded the writers add a new female character purely for representation's sake, so the movie's writers crowbarred her into a few scenes that totally subvert her alleged reputation as the badass action girl the fans clamored for, showed that she is so bad at her job that Starkiller Base is lost entirely because of her, and then literally threw her in the trash. Boba Fett was a background character who the fans blew out of all proportion because he looked cool... Phasma is the living embodiment of the writers saying "Don't tell me how to do my job". Fans clamored for her to not be killed off, so they brought her back in The Last Jedi to get beaten even worse. She manages a few intimidating lines and is promptly beaten by a droid and tossed down another hole by Finn after being beaten with a riot baton. What are the odds this is some kind of self-aware act of parody?
  19. Keith and Roid's little tête-à-tête on the Sigur Berrentzs's upper hull suggests the ancient Protoculture engineered the Windermereans with short lifespans intentionally. The "why" is never discussed, but it seems to be something neither of them is entirely happy with since Keith openly resents them for his people's short lifespans and Roid's assimilation plot is at least partly motivated by a desire to give his people longer lives. It may be related to their greater level of physical ability and the demonstrated link between the fold receptors in their runes that give their species a level of natural empathic talent and the greater base level of physical ability vs. other sub-Protoculture species. (It seems likely that the Protoculture tried to create a species with greater natural empathy that would be less inclined to violence and built the short lifespan into them to delay their development of advanced technology as long as possible in a bid to have them solve their internal disputes before leaving for the stars.) Roid's belief that the Windermereans were the chosen heirs of the ancient Protoculture seems to be mainly by two factors: That the Brisingr globular cluster, and Windermere IV in particular, are believed to have been the ancient Protoculture's last stronghold before succumbing to extinction. That the Protoculture left behind the Sigur Berrentzs as the key to the Delta Wave System along with some clues on how to locate, activate, and use it on Windermere IV (even though the core of the system was actually on Ragna).
  20. I don't recall when the logo was unveiled offhand, but I remember when they first started teasing a new Macross series in the summer of '07 it was as "Macross 25". They announced the title at the 25th Anniversary Live in August of that year. It was either late October or November, IIRC, that we got our first real good look at the VF-25 and principal characters.
  21. If you're waiting for it to get less rapey, don't hold your breath... I'm two volumes into the light novel and that unsettling aspect of it most definitely is NOT going away.1 Moreover, goblin slaying is more or less all it's actually about, so at least it's exactly what it says on the tin. (Goblin Slayer is, for all practical intents and purposes, Medieval Batman by way of Doom Guy... and instead criminals, it's goblins that get his hackles up for reasons that'd make perfect sense even if he didn't have psychological problems beyond the dreams of psychoanalysts.) 1. TBH, I can completely understand why this series is accused of glorifying violence against women. Its author, Kumo Kagyu, seems to take sadistic delight in having Goblin Slayer's party find bands of adventurers made up primarily or entirely of women that meet terrible ends with monotonous, clockwork regularity. Apart from the man leading the party of three girls in the first chapter, the men seem to be mostly exempt from this.
  22. It's increasingly looking like a new series has been back-burnered or abandoned in favor of more of the Macross Delta "story". There have been a few... like the proposed live-action movie Macross: Final Outpost: Earth which was originally intended for a Christmas 1996 release, or a 3DCG series called Macross 3D that got as far as a promo video before ending up on indefinite hiatus in 2000.
  23. The only time that phenomenon is named is in the movie Macross Delta: Passionate Walkure, which refers to it as "crystalization". Crystalization is a normal symptom of aging in Windermereans. You could call it their species version of getting liver spots. It's not (directly) harmful to their health, but it is an overt sign of old age which starts to occur in their mid-twenties as they near the end of their natural lifespan of approximately 30 standard years. Windermereans who use/abuse their runes to enhance their abilities - like Freyja's rune boosting her fold songs or the Aerial Knights bullet time "Wind Riding" shenanigans - are essentially employing a "Cast from Life Force" buff at the cost of dramatically and permanently reducing their remaining life. The most extreme case would probably be what happened to Qasim Eber-hardt in Ep22 of Macross Delta's TV series. He was 23 years old, and overuse of his rune to "ride the wind" in a dogfight with Xaos forces burned up his remaining lifespan to the point that he died in his cockpit. Prince Heinz's overuse of his runes singing the Song of the Wind is another severe example. He abused his power so much to realize his father's goals that he's as infirm at age 9 as his father was at 33. Freyja, luckily, is only just starting to see the consequences of overusing her rune to boost her fold songs. She's 15 at the end of Macross Delta, what would normally be exactly halfway through the typical Windermerean's lifespan, and she's probably shortened her lifespan by at least a few years. You're thinking of the ending of the Passionate Walkure movie, IIRC... which showed both Heinz and Freyja's crystalization partially reversing itself.
  24. I've never understood his memetic badass status in Star Wars. I assume it comes from the Expanded Universe, since in the actual movies he growls out a few lines and the one time we actually see him fight he's almost instantly defeated by Luke and then again by Han, who accidentally knocks him into the mouth of a giant anus monster in the Tattooine desert. That isn't exactly inspiring... he's literally less effective in a fight than Jar-Jar Binks. They seem to go down when shot pretty much anywhere. One of the vague recollections I have of the Star Wars books I was exposed to as a kid was of a short story where that fact was acknowledged and explained. I think it might have been a cost thing? Like, armor that could repel kill shots was too expensive to mass produce on that scale so they went with stunproof? There was something in the story about wanting to equip the stormtroopers with a personal energy shield that was under development and their dickish treatment of the developer drove them to the Rebellion's side?
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