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Posted
48 minutes ago, Big s said:

Not sure if it’s a question that’s been answered, but was wondering about the pack in the right hip of the Nousjadeul Ger armors. Seems to be a similar pack with both the movie and tv show versions. The one in the left hip seems to be a simple armor piece, but the right side looks very different. 

According to Macross Chronicle Mechanic Sheet SDFM TV Zentradi 03A "Nousjadeul-Ger", it's a magazine case meant to hold reloads for the Nousjadeul-Ger's handheld weapons like the laser machine pistol it normally wields.

 

 

47 minutes ago, TehPW said:

Here's a idea about the UNMC: Are they supposed to be ground-based ie Destroids and Regults?

One would presume the UN Marine Corps would be primarily naval infantry, with armored and aerial support as appropriate... though we have almost no way of confirming that.

There are precious few sources that actually mention the UN Marine Corps.  The oldest, the Sky Angels VF-1 Valkyrie tech manual, mentions that there were a substantial number of Marines stationed aboard the SLV-111 Daedalus.  Not as Destroid operators, but as a naval infantry force supported by a number of marine aviators to man the helicopters, fighters, and support craft carried aboard the ship.  Sky Angels also asserts that there were UN Marine fighter and fighter/attack squadrons using the VF-1 Valkyrie.

Macross Zero does show one UN Marine Corps soldier named Katie training with the VF-0 pilots and indicates she's going to be training on a VF-0.  Official media does mention the Marine Corps had a purpose-made VF-0 variant of their own (the VF-0C).  Hasegawa did a model kit for it back in the day, and the markings they chose to give it were those of UN Marine Corps model conversion training squadron VMFAT-203 Hawks.  The Hawks are noted to have been a Hawaii-based squadron that had a number of aircraft stationed aboard SLV-111 Daedalus in 2008.  The Hawks transitioned to the VF-1 Valkyrie in 2009 and trained Marine Corps aviators on the fighter for a brief time before being transferred to being a Spacy Marine Corps squadron under the designation SVFM-31 (probably supposed to be SVMF-31) for a period of about two years until they were again reorganized by the newly established New UN Forces and became a Spacy squadron as SVF-31.

I wonder if the regular Marine Corps simply got absorbed by, or is interchangeable with, the Spacy Marine Corps past a certain point?

Posted
18 minutes ago, Seto Kaiba said:

According to Macross Chronicle Mechanic Sheet SDFM TV Zentradi 03A "Nousjadeul-Ger", it's a magazine case meant to hold reloads for the Nousjadeul-Ger's handheld weapons like the laser machine pistol it normally wields.

I could see something like that for the movie version, since it’s not clear how the ammo feeds into the pistol, but the drum on the tv version appears too big for the packIMG_3377.gif.da40de8e87b0ede8774f0f2dccccc279.gif 

Posted
2 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

I'm pretty sure they care at least a little, since they have mentioned the Dancing Skulls in other volumes and the references to the VF-3000's classified deployment to Special Forces units is pretty clearly a reference to Macross M3.

That said, I'd assume the Neo York Liberation League probably didn't purchase their VF-3000s from Shinsei Industry and wouldn't be mentioned among their legitimate/intended customers.  Of course there is also the possibility that the VF-3000s in Macross M3 are being retroactively identified as PMC craft hired by the Liberation League.

 

 

Cost-effectiveness was certainly a priority for a lot of 2nd Generation VFs, but I think a solid argument can be made that cost-effectiveness was just one of several shifting priorities which were part of the larger generational objective of developing VFs around the evolving (and at the time poorly-understood) needs of early emigrant fleets and planets.

Early 2nd Generation Variable Fighters like the VF-X-3, VF-4, and VF-3000 don't mention cost or ease of manufacture as a primary design objective.  The VF-X-3 was lost during the First Space War but was said to have performance exceeding that of even the VF-4.  The VF-4 and VF-3000 were both designed to address the shortcomings of the original VF-1 in space operations.  Larger airframes with more room for internal propellant tanks and sub-engine systems.  Larger and longer-ranged energy weapons to reduce their dependence on limited ammunition.  Improved live support systems in the event of the craft being disabled or destroyed, to preserve the life of the pilot as long as possible while waiting for a rescue.  Both of those models were introduced around the time of the very first emigrant fleet launches.

Those 2nd Generation designs that entered development or service after Humanity started to discover habitable planets are the ones that, surely not coincidentally, are described with statements like "inexpensive" and "easily manufactured on developing emigrant planets".  Once emigrant fleets started actually finding habitable worlds that they could start colonizing right away, suddenly the need wasn't just for big Valkyries with high operational endurance in space.  Now they also needed something light and inexpensive that they could use for planetside service.  Something they could manufacture on the cheap without jeopardizing their development plans for the planet's surface.  So from there, we get a bevy of low-cost, low-complexity solutions like the VF-5, VF-6, VF-7, VF-5000, and finally VF-9 that all served as supplements to the VF-4.  

Both Macross Chronicle and Master File generally agree that the thing that did the most damage to the VF-3000's prospects was the fact that it was essentially Stonewell Bellcom (later Shinsei Industry) competing against itself unnecessarily.  The company already had a largely complete next-generation main Variable Fighter program focusing on improved space performance under active testing with the New UN Forces... the VF-4 Lightning III.  If Master File is correct the VF-3000 may have served as an important test that the newly formed Shinsei Industry was up to the job of continuing VF development and manufacture for the New UN Forces (the VF-4 having been mostly a prewar program), but the final product was still basically redundant as a competitor to a design the New UN Forces had already decided to adopt.  

 

 

Based on what's said in the Macross 30: Voices Across the Galaxy novelization, the events of Macross the Ride straight-up created a market for replicas of those old model VFs.  Not only are there other cases of replicas being built, there's supposedly a direct causal relationship between the two.

In Macross 30's novel version, Leon mentions in passing that the VF-0 Phoenix in SMS's possession - the one Leon gets stuck with in the game version's tutorial - is a replica which was produced commercially to capitalize on the popularity of a particular Vanquish League racer's replica VF-0 from two years prior.  The only VF-0 that competed in the league in 2058 was Hakuna Aoba's VF-0改 "Sieg"/"Zeke", so apparently his participation made enough of a stir that someone (Shinsei?) decided to produce replica VF-0s with modern parts (from the VF-1C and VF-5000) for the civilian market. 

It wouldn't be at all surprising if Magdalena Zielonaska's SV-52γ, which participated in the league for far longer than Hakuna Aoba's VF-0改 did, created a similar stir and demand for a commercially-available replica machine.  Replica SV-51s are found on Uroboros in 2060, and someone has to be making them and selling them to civilians.  It wouldn't be all that surprising if they were already commercially available before 2060 and the manufacturer was engaged with the film's production as a product placement or something.

 

 

As far as we know, yeah... the 2059 film Bird Human was the first time the recently-declassified events of the Mayan Island incident were dramatized.

I'd assume the films Master File is referring to here are dramatizations of other incidents previously mentioned in Master File or possibly other sources like Macross the First.  They don't specify, though.  There are at least two other major engagements mentioned... the attack on Grand Cannon III in Africa and the ill-fated plan to attack the UN Forces HQ at Grand Cannon I in Alaska that was almost literally foiled before it could get off the ground.

Incidentally, I'm told the remark about the one time the VF-3000 played the role of the SV-51 by being painted black is almost certainly meant to be a reference to Top Gun, which used US Navy F-5E's painted black as the fictional "MiG-28".  

 

 

Very dubious indeed.  Epsilon Foundation absolutely has access to the Sv-303 since they make the bloody things, but regular enemies?  In Macross Delta: Absolute Live!!!!!! they're presented as a production (or production-intent) unmanned fighter that outclasses even the 5.5th Generation VF-31 Siegfried and Sv-262 Draken III.

Even Xaos's VF-31AX Kairos Plus - which Master File asserts are a hasty and incomplete conversion of the VF-31 Siegfried into a experimental/developmental 6th Generation test machine - were only barely able to keep up with them one-on-one.  Max's 6th Generation YF-29 was the only machine that really outclassed them... which probably owes at least as much to Max's own over-the-top specs as it does the YF-29's. 😆

 

 

Eh... I mean, that was kind of already explicitly the case going the other way from the YF-29's introduction in Macross Frontier: the Wings of Goodbye.

Fold quartz in general is quite rare.  It does occur in nature, but it's implied that the vast majority of what's out there is synthesized either by the Vajra or the Protoculture.  The 5th Generation VFs like the VF-24, VF-25, VF-27, and VF-31 use the stuff sparingly and only where it's absolutely unavoidable.  Namely, the Inertia Store Converter protecting the pilot from the incredible g-forces the fighter is capable of.  The rest of its systems use high quality synthetic fold carbon.  The fold quartz they use is of a size and purity that's common enough to make ISC systems with reliable output in bulk.  Presumably it's similar in size to what we see them pulling out of Vajra carcasses... an oblong sliver of gemstone around three centimeters or so long.  (Maybe 20 or so carats if we assume a comparably sized and shaped diamond?)

In short, 5th Generation VFs can be mass produced precisely because their fold quartz is comparatively low quality enough to be accessible in bulk.

The size and purity of fold quartz needed to make a working Fold Wave System for a 6th Generation VF is explicitly borderline Unobtainium, however.

The YF-29's Fold Wave System needed four 1,000 carat pieces of ultra-high purity fold quartz to function.  Sure, 1,000 carats is only 200 grams, but that's still a gemstone of about the same size as a regulation baseball at a purity level that Macross Frontier says can only be found in Vajra queens.  Master File claims that reproducing the performance of Alto's original YF-29[A] is essentially impossible because fold quartz of the requisite size and purity simply does not exist in any accessible form and that all subsequent YF-29s are lower-performance copies of the original due to inferior fold quartz.  Even ignoring Master File, such high-quality fold quartz is so impossibly rare that officially only a double handful of YF-29s have ever been built and they're all essentially irreplaceable.  Macross Delta's VF-31 Siegfrieds and VF-31AX Kairos Pluses are equipped with an economized version of the FWS which uses less (and lower purity) fold quartz.  The required material is still incredibly rare and expensive, but it's at least affordable enough for them to field half a dozen of their FWS-equipped custom VF-31s with reduced performance as the main consequence.  (Master File alleges this version of the FWS also needs an external fold wave source to operate.)

 

 

Eh... I think that still creates the problem of having a unit of invincible godmode sues whose VFs have no limits.

AKA Gundam. :p

Posted
58 minutes ago, Big s said:

I could see something like that for the movie version, since it’s not clear how the ammo feeds into the pistol, but the drum on the tv version appears too big for the pack 

In some of the line art, it looks like that case might almost be large enough to hold one of the drums... but we don't actually know that the drum is the laser machine pistol's magazine, or where the magazine is.

 

53 minutes ago, pengbuzz said:

AKA Gundam. :p

Pretty much, yeah.

The 6th Generation prototypes veer heavily towards Gundam-style Super Prototype territory heavily enough as it is.  The main thing keeping them from actually getting there is that they're held in reserve as an 11th Hour Powerup for the story's climax rather than being the main mecha, and that in-story the developers absolutely intended to mass produce them as-is instead of watering them down into a much weaker production machine.  

Posted
10 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

and that in-story the developers absolutely intended to mass produce them as-is instead of watering them down into a much weaker production machine.  

That's a cliche I've never really understood. Surely the point of trialing a prototype is to find out if it meets performance expectations and is fit for purpose. Adopting a machine that WASN'T trialed based on the performance of the machine you tested just doesn't make a lot of sense.

It's like if the US had tested the YF-22 and then bought the F-35A because the -22 tested so well, instead of testing the YF-35.

Posted
1 hour ago, JB0 said:

That's a cliche I've never really understood. Surely the point of trialing a prototype is to find out if it meets performance expectations and is fit for purpose. Adopting a machine that WASN'T trialed based on the performance of the machine you tested just doesn't make a lot of sense.

It's like if the US had tested the YF-22 and then bought the F-35A because the -22 tested so well, instead of testing the YF-35.

Accurate, there is a real use case for doing the Gundam thing though, and that's called a technology demonstrator. It's a unit full of new and experimental stuff designed to trial things out and figure out how to apply then to production and other prototypes. The tech demo itself is not designed to be a fielded unit, but sometimes it can take the shape of a super capable highly expensive unit. In truth doing it like this isn't economical and most tech will be tested piecemeal but it's an option to do it Gundam style. 

There is a pseudo example in Macross with the YF-30 which is in truth a tech demo for the Fold Dimensional Resonance system developed by Aisha Blanchette. To wit the flight unit is described not as a variable fighter but a variable super dimension diver. So why the YF code? In short, SMS didn't want to tell the NUNG about the specs and the laws of how VF prototypes work says they don't need to disclose details for production prototypes. So they lied. Obviously the events of Macross 30 ensured they got caught so the design became known, which indirectly led to the supposed YF-31 that became the Kairos by Surya Aerospace, which doesn't have the fancy tech in it of course.

Posted (edited)
6 hours ago, JB0 said:

That's a cliche I've never really understood. Surely the point of trialing a prototype is to find out if it meets performance expectations and is fit for purpose. Adopting a machine that WASN'T trialed based on the performance of the machine you tested just doesn't make a lot of sense.

It's like if the US had tested the YF-22 and then bought the F-35A because the -22 tested so well, instead of testing the YF-35.

As a trope/cliche, it has its origins in the original 1979 Mobile Suit Gundam series as a sort of Drama Preserving Handicap.

Mobile Suit Gundam was the first "real robot" subgenre mecha anime, and even though the series more or less established the idea of mass producing giant robots as weapons of war the titular mobile suit still had a lot of "super robot" DNA in it.  The Gundam was a de facto one-of-a-kind hero mecha that singlehandedly changed the course of the war with its incredible capabilities.  Its exotic super alloy armor made it nearly impervious to the enemy's weapons.  Its beam rifle and beam sabers were so powerful they could destroy an enemy robot in a single hit.  Its learning computer meant that it got better at fighting with every battle it fought and its kid pilot became a better fighter the more experience he gained.

White Base's mission was to return the Gundam, Guncannon, and Guntank to the Federation Forces HQ on Earth so they could be analyzed and the data from them used to complete the Federation's mobile suit program.  Resolving that thread of Gundam's plot posed a problem.  They couldn't very well have the Gundam itself be mass produced without removing their hero mecha's visual distinctiveness and removing any prospects for future dramatic tension in the story.  It wouldn't be much of a war once the Federation entered the fray with thousands of identical, nigh-invulnerable robots that could each take on whole squads of Zeon mobile suits at a time.  So they created the GM as a "loser" version of the Gundam so the Gundam would remain special and visually distinctive and the Federation could have cannon fodder machines without having to bring the Gundam down to "normal" status.

That's the Doylist explanation.  The accompanying Watsonian explanation they cooked up to justify the GM's existence is that the Federation originally did intend to mass produce the RX-78 Gundam.  The course of the war, the cost involved, and the immediacy of their need for large numbers of mobile suits in the field forced them to compromise and simplify their design to speed up production and get as many units in the field as quickly as possible.  They started with the RX-78 Gundam's basic design and started removing everything that was not considered 100% necessary and/or a potential cost or time bottleneck in production.  Luna titanium got the axe because it took too long to make and cost too much.  Core Block functions were removed as unnecessary complexity.  The simpler head design from the Guncannon was adopted because it was easier to manufacture, etc.  The end result was the RGM-79 GM, a machine with higher performance than Zeon's flagship MS's but without the invincible hero properties of the Gundam.  Had the Federation's need for mobile suits not been quite so immediate and urgent, they would have proceeded to mass produce the Gundam and the final stages of the war would likely have gone VERY differently (and a great deal worse for Zeon).  

Past that point, though... the writers kind of forget that aspect entirely and Gundams become one-off super machines that Anaheim Electronics makes to try out a new technology or simply because they have nothing better to do.

 

The next few "real robot" titles kind of played with the idea of a mass-produced hero mecha, but ultimately avoided it through plot contrivances.  Dougram had the titular mecha be set up for mass production but then the factory and blueprints were destroyed, leaving it a one-of-a-kind machine.  Xabungle also implies that the Xabungle is a production machine but a very low volume one with only a handful made.  It's not until Super Dimension Fortress Macross that we get our first real robot mecha anime with a truly mass-produced "hero" machine, eliminating the need for super prototypes or super prototype-like plot contrivances.

Edited by Seto Kaiba
Posted
12 hours ago, Master Dex said:

Accurate, there is a real use case for doing the Gundam thing though, and that's called a technology demonstrator. It's a unit full of new and experimental stuff designed to trial things out and figure out how to apply then to production and other prototypes. The tech demo itself is not designed to be a fielded unit, but sometimes it can take the shape of a super capable highly expensive unit. In truth doing it like this isn't economical and most tech will be tested piecemeal but it's an option to do it Gundam style. 

Gundam almost never actually does that, though.  The RX-78 was intended to be an actual prototype, but most of those that came after weren't even technology demonstrators.  They were simply showy ace custom units that were in no way intended to refined into something practical, like the Double Zeta, the Nu, or the Unicorn.

One of the few exceptions there is the RX-178 Gundam Mk.II from Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam, which was an actual production model that never got mass produced due to the Titans huffily cancelling their order after three of the four trial production units ended up in the AEUG's hands.  The one infamous actually-mass-produced Gundam being the Victory from the series by the same name.

 

12 hours ago, Master Dex said:

There is a pseudo example in Macross with the YF-30 which is in truth a tech demo for the Fold Dimensional Resonance system developed by Aisha Blanchette. To wit the flight unit is described not as a variable fighter but a variable super dimension diver. So why the YF code? In short, SMS didn't want to tell the NUNG about the specs and the laws of how VF prototypes work says they don't need to disclose details for production prototypes. So they lied. Obviously the events of Macross 30 ensured they got caught so the design became known, which indirectly led to the supposed YF-31 that became the Kairos by Surya Aerospace, which doesn't have the fancy tech in it of course.

In both the game version and novel version of Macross 30: Voices Across the Galaxy, Aisha does imply that she (and by extension, SMS and the Shinsei Industry dev team) planned to take the YF-30 design into further development towards a production concept.  (Aisha fairly gushes about how the container system's going to revolutionize Valkyrie design.)

It's not so much that they didn't have a choice after the events of Macross 30, it's that they were always planning to market the YF-30's innovations not tied to Richard Bilra's personal obsession.  The novel version mentions that various SMS branches have been collaborating with the defense industry in a way the military no longer can in order to get their foot in the door of that lucrative market for themselves.  

Posted
9 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

Gundam almost never actually does that, though.  The RX-78 was intended to be an actual prototype, but most of those that came after weren't even technology demonstrators.  They were simply showy ace custom units that were in no way intended to refined into something practical, like the Double Zeta, the Nu, or the Unicorn.

One of the few exceptions there is the RX-178 Gundam Mk.II from Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam, which was an actual production model that never got mass produced due to the Titans huffily cancelling their order after three of the four trial production units ended up in the AEUG's hands.  The one infamous actually-mass-produced Gundam being the Victory from the series by the same name.

I want really commenting on anything Gundam has done, I've watched two full Gundam series and neither of them are even UC lol. I just latched on to how Gundam does super prototypes to bring up what that sounds like in reality.

Posted
2 hours ago, Master Dex said:

I want really commenting on anything Gundam has done, I've watched two full Gundam series and neither of them are even UC lol. I just latched on to how Gundam does super prototypes to bring up what that sounds like in reality.

Topic aside, you should definitely give more of Gundam a whirl... some of mecha anime's greatest classics are in there.  The original, Zeta, and Char's Counterattack for sure.  

WRT Gundam and the Super Prototypes trope, the original series may have more or less defined the trope but ironically almost no Gundam series actually USES it.  The majority of Gundams in Gundam are basically bespoke ace custom machines rather than prototypes (super or otherwise) for any future machine or technology demonstrators.

Spoiler

The only ones I can think of offhand that are actually treated as technology demonstrators or prototypes are all from relatively early works... the original RX-78 (the prototype for the initial Federation mobile suit), the GP series units from Stardust Memory RX-178 from Zeta (prototypes for the movable frame and all-sky monitor), the Zeta (prototype transformable MS), Xi Gundam (prototype MS-scale Minovsky flight system), and the F91 (small scale MS and next generation fusion reactor prototype, or the "yes, I have lost my will to live and will happily sit directly in front of a hair trigger thermonuclear bomb" prototype).

 

Macross thankfully treats its prototypes in a more realistic manner.  The final prototype is usually identical to the initial mass production type, and the early prototypes for any given design are usually hacked-together and lower performance than the final model.

(There is that weird corner case that is Macross Plus, though the performance difference there is more because two incredibly talented pilots turned unstable systems unsuitable for production into a sort of Disability Superpower.)

Posted
3 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

Topic aside, you should definitely give more of Gundam a whirl... some of mecha anime's greatest classics are in there.  The original, Zeta, and Char's Counterattack for sure.  

It's rough being a ZZ fan out here. 

Posted (edited)
On 7/13/2025 at 7:26 PM, Seto Kaiba said:

I wonder if the regular Marine Corps simply got absorbed by, or is interchangeable with, the Spacy Marine Corps past a certain point?

 

I wouldn't be surprised, since the two times we see the Spacy Marine Corps, not only they're Zentradi units but they're both stationed on planets as garrison units. And if you want to stretch it in a more liberal explanation of being a amphibious force, considering Marine Corps have operations done on the land and sea, I wouldn't be surprised if space was added in the mix for "amphibious" operations, like how sci-fi tends to have drop ships to land troops on planets from space.

 

On a side note, was reminded of the MF render with a UN Spacy VF-1 flying alongside a few NUNS Marine branded Regults; I'm assuming this was suggesting that it's somewhat common for giant Zentradi units to be under that branch in the military?

 

6 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

WRT Gundam and the Super Prototypes trope, the original series may have more or less defined the trope but ironically almost no Gundam series actually USES it.  The majority of Gundams in Gundam are basically bespoke ace custom machines rather than prototypes (super or otherwise) for any future machine or technology demonstrators.

  Hide contents

The only ones I can think of offhand that are actually treated as technology demonstrators or prototypes are all from relatively early works... the original RX-78 (the prototype for the initial Federation mobile suit), the GP series units from Stardust Memory RX-178 from Zeta (prototypes for the movable frame and all-sky monitor), the Zeta (prototype transformable MS), Xi Gundam (prototype MS-scale Minovsky flight system), and the F91 (small scale MS and next generation fusion reactor prototype, or the "yes, I have lost my will to live and will happily sit directly in front of a hair trigger thermonuclear bomb" prototype).

 

 

Spoiler

Crossbone Gundam seems to suggest the F91 itself got into limited production, albeit without the MEPE, Bio-Computer, and (at least initially) the Psycho-Frame removed since non-Newtypes weren't going to use its full potential like Seakbook did with his unit in the end of the movie. Whatever scrutiny you put Hasegawa's work in, I don't seem to mind that idea if the Crossbone Babylonia war actually continued as a story. If anything the F90 seems to be more of the technology demonstrator since not only it was evaluated against Anaheim's MS-120 for adoption for the Federation Forces, but most of its Mission Packs were to test technologies and even led to other units being built; such as the VSBR Type leading to the F91 itself, and the F90S Support Type leading to the F70 Cannon Gundam, which would be further simplified to the F71 G-Cannon.

 

And because no one else will mention it lol, the G-Saviour lineage barring the PS2's video game's G3 Saviour seems to be in limited production, that's also including the I-Saviour and J-Saviour mobile suits.

 

3 hours ago, PixelatedShinobi said:

It's rough being a ZZ fan out here. 

Rough is an understatement, and I'm one of the 5 people on the planet that has it as some of my favorite Gundam works, much less prefer it over Zeta itself!

Edited by TG Remix
Posted

Sorry for the double post, the forums didn't make me want to make a longer post!

 

On 7/13/2025 at 4:53 PM, Seto Kaiba said:

Those 2nd Generation designs that entered development or service after Humanity started to discover habitable planets are the ones that, surely not coincidentally, are described with statements like "inexpensive" and "easily manufactured on developing emigrant planets".  Once emigrant fleets started actually finding habitable worlds that they could start colonizing right away, suddenly the need wasn't just for big Valkyries with high operational endurance in space.  Now they also needed something light and inexpensive that they could use for planetside service.  Something they could manufacture on the cheap without jeopardizing their development plans for the planet's surface.  So from there, we get a bevy of low-cost, low-complexity solutions like the VF-5, VF-6, VF-7, VF-5000, and finally VF-9 that all served as supplements to the VF-4.  

Honestly I'd love a series that focuses on a colony fleet researching the viability of a habitable world, especially early on since this made me think how inexperienced they'd be in terms of dealing with an entirely new ecosystem as well as juggling ergonomics and economics alongside that,

 

On 7/13/2025 at 4:53 PM, Seto Kaiba said:

Based on what's said in the Macross 30: Voices Across the Galaxy novelization, the events of Macross the Ride straight-up created a market for replicas of those old model VFs.  Not only are there other cases of replicas being built, there's supposedly a direct causal relationship between the two.

In Macross 30's novel version, Leon mentions in passing that the VF-0 Phoenix in SMS's possession - the one Leon gets stuck with in the game version's tutorial - is a replica which was produced commercially to capitalize on the popularity of a particular Vanquish League racer's replica VF-0 from two years prior.  The only VF-0 that competed in the league in 2058 was Hakuna Aoba's VF-0改 "Sieg"/"Zeke", so apparently his participation made enough of a stir that someone (Shinsei?) decided to produce replica VF-0s with modern parts (from the VF-1C and VF-5000) for the civilian market. 

It wouldn't be at all surprising if Magdalena Zielonaska's SV-52γ, which participated in the league for far longer than Hakuna Aoba's VF-0改 did, created a similar stir and demand for a commercially-available replica machine.  Replica SV-51s are found on Uroboros in 2060, and someone has to be making them and selling them to civilians.  It wouldn't be all that surprising if they were already commercially available before 2060 and the manufacturer was engaged with the film's production as a product placement or something.

 

Wouldn't be surprised if The Ride's events sparked that interest, though considering the Frontier's movie novelization had Octos Bis under military usage and presumably those being replica units with advanced weapons on top, it almost seems like the "lost" technology from the Unification War period wasn't all that lost as believed. Though admittedly, a part of that is me wanting Sv-52-like units popping up in the universe in between the time between SW1 and The Ride.

 

On 7/13/2025 at 4:53 PM, Seto Kaiba said:

Fold quartz in general is quite rare.  It does occur in nature, but it's implied that the vast majority of what's out there is synthesized either by the Vajra or the Protoculture.  The 5th Generation VFs like the VF-24, VF-25, VF-27, and VF-31 use the stuff sparingly and only where it's absolutely unavoidable.  Namely, the Inertia Store Converter protecting the pilot from the incredible g-forces the fighter is capable of.  The rest of its systems use high quality synthetic fold carbon.  The fold quartz they use is of a size and purity that's common enough to make ISC systems with reliable output in bulk.  Presumably it's similar in size to what we see them pulling out of Vajra carcasses... an oblong sliver of gemstone around three centimeters or so long.  (Maybe 20 or so carats if we assume a comparably sized and shaped diamond?

Does kinda make me wonder, fold quartz are said to be a natural resource, and we get a whole conflict around that with the Windemeran War of Independence. Makes me think if about the detailing of fold quartz's discovery on other planets and asteroids circa around VF-X2's time; goodness forbid they're also home of autonomous governments who don't necessarily agree with the central government's ways (not just Windemere, since VF-X2's Vulcan and M3's Cristrania has existed at least a decade before Latence put pressure on governments who didn't side with Earth's policies.)

 

 

 

Posted
2 hours ago, PixelatedShinobi said:

It's rough being a ZZ fan out here. 

 

1 hour ago, TG Remix said:

Rough is an understatement, and I'm one of the 5 people on the planet that has it as some of my favorite Gundam works, much less prefer it over Zeta itself!

I love ZZ as well, although not more than zeta or the 90‘s Ova’s. Although Zeta is an odd one due to characters, ZZ is an odd one due to extreme tonal shift. I kinda think of ZZ as almost an equivalent of Macross 7 where once you get through a certain amount of bs episodes, it becomes really enjoyable for what it is

Posted
3 hours ago, PixelatedShinobi said:

It's rough being a ZZ fan out here. 

Can I get a blurry, out-of-focus picture of you to go with the photos of the other cryptids? 

(I joke, there are plenty of Gundam ZZ fans out there!  It's not my favorite, but it's a worthy installment in the UC and in some ways a breath of fresh air after Tomino's relentlessly grim ending to Zeta.  I picked those three in particular because they're usually held up as the most impactful... the OG series, the highest-rated series, and that one movie nobody ever stops referencing.)

 

 

2 hours ago, TG Remix said:

I wouldn't be surprised, since the two times we see the Spacy Marine Corps, not only they're Zentradi units but they're both stationed on planets as garrison units. And if you want to stretch it in a more liberal explanation of being a amphibious force, considering Marine Corps have operations done on the land and sea, I wouldn't be surprised if space was added in the mix for "amphibious" operations, like how sci-fi tends to have drop ships to land troops on planets from space.

Yeah, that's a pretty reasonable assumption IMO.  The NUNS Marines would probably be infantry stationed on the Spacy's warships as well as providing orbit-to-surface work.  Kind of the whole "space marine" gimmick anyway.

 

2 hours ago, TG Remix said:

On a side note, was reminded of the MF render with a UN Spacy VF-1 flying alongside a few NUNS Marine branded Regults; I'm assuming this was suggesting that it's somewhat common for giant Zentradi units to be under that branch in the military?

So, when you mentioned this it occurred to me to go look it up and see what the caption on the image had to say.

For those interested, that picture can be found in the VF-1X/P section on page 090 of Variable Fighter Master File: VF-1 Valkyrie Vol.2.

All three pictures on that page, as well as the two pictures on the next page, appear to depict the same aircraft... a VF-1P Valkyrie with modex 406 and tailcode ZZ.  The top image from page 091 shows it's attached to SVC-131, a Spacy composite squadron.  The caption on the picture with the two Regults says that it's an aircraft of the Planet Zola Defense Forces, that the Regults it's flying next to are from the UN Spacy Marine Corps, and that both units are en route to a training area for joint exercises.  (SVC-131 is presumably an aggressor squadron.)

 

2 hours ago, TG Remix said:

Honestly I'd love a series that focuses on a colony fleet researching the viability of a habitable world, especially early on since this made me think how inexperienced they'd be in terms of dealing with an entirely new ecosystem as well as juggling ergonomics and economics alongside that,

That would make for an interesting series... you could easily work some VF combat into that if there are rogue Zentradi nearby, or the planet is home to some large fauna that are potentially dangerous like on Gubaba's homeworld or the planet from Macross E.

 

2 hours ago, TG Remix said:

Wouldn't be surprised if The Ride's events sparked that interest, though considering the Frontier's movie novelization had Octos Bis under military usage and presumably those being replica units with advanced weapons on top, it almost seems like the "lost" technology from the Unification War period wasn't all that lost as believed. Though admittedly, a part of that is me wanting Sv-52-like units popping up in the universe in between the time between SW1 and The Ride.

The Octos bis is perhaps a bit more explicable.

Macross Chronicle notes that the factory producing the Octos for the Anti-Unification Alliance was found and pressed back into service by the UN Forces after the Unification Wars ended.  They note that a further 28 Octos units were produced and delivered to the UN Forces before the line was destroyed in the First Space War.  Presumably whichever one of the UN Forces defense contractors assumed control of the factory between the Unification Wars and First Space War was able to preserve the design the same way they preserved those of the destroids developed for the UN Forces.

Given that Master File suggests both the VF-0 and SV-51 became "phantom" aircraft after the First Space War, presumably much less (or nothing) survived of the specifications or production lines for the VF-0 and SV-51.  (Master File has a whole section devoted to Shinsei Industry having to essentially reverse-engineer the VF-0 back into existence based on the wreckage of several VF-0s that were shot down during Macross Zero that was found in a cargo container years after the First Space War.  The same was presumably true for the SV-51.)

 

2 hours ago, TG Remix said:

Does kinda make me wonder, fold quartz are said to be a natural resource, and we get a whole conflict around that with the Windemeran War of Independence. Makes me think if about the detailing of fold quartz's discovery on other planets and asteroids circa around VF-X2's time; goodness forbid they're also home of autonomous governments who don't necessarily agree with the central government's ways (not just Windemere, since VF-X2's Vulcan and M3's Cristrania has existed at least a decade before Latence put pressure on governments who didn't side with Earth's policies.)

I'm not sure I'd call it a natural resource, at least in the context Humanity and other species are finding it in... Protoculture ruins, old Vajra nests, and Vajra carcasses.

Considering where fold quartz is typically found, and that the restrictions on the mining and trade in fold quartz seem to have come about as a result of the Vajra conflict, I'd expect there probably wasn't too much grumbling.  The Vajra had all but effortlessly destroyed one of the wealthiest and most heavily armed emigrant fleets in existence, beat the snot out of another, and then attacked a bunch of New UN Government member worlds before the Galaxy fleet's conspirators were stopped.  Nobody wants another war with the Vajra.  The story of Macross Delta also mentions the New UN Gov't heavily restricts and regulates the mining and trading of fold quartz and banned the use of dimension bombs in war without New UN Gov't approval, suggesting there was probably broad consensus that fold quartz and weapons based on it needed to be tightly controlled to avoid disaster.  (Leading right to Cromwell's discontent over the limits placed on the usage of such weapons and other potentially useful technology.)

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