Now, this is an anime I’d been planning to watch for several years, ever since I played Super Robot Wars J on the Game Boy Advance. I’ve always struggled with attention span when it comes to anime, so when I tried to get through this series in 2014, I didn’t manage to make it more than a few episodes. For posterity, my last entry about this series was made seven years ago.
Despite this, I found the characters and setting of Nadesico to be pretty charming, even filtered through a strategy RPG about crossover giant robot battles. As a result, I made sure to take advantage of the Nadesico squad in every game they appeared, despite always putting off watching the series. Every time I played a new SRW game, I’d think, “Hey, I should watch that series” but never did. Until recently, anyway.
My latest excuse for deciding to watch Nadesico is because, well, during this pandemic, I’ve had a lot more patience and time to watch lengthy anime series, as one might guess from the last few entries on this blog. Also, I’m planning on playing Super Robot Wars T soon, which features yet another appearance of Akito, albeit not the version from the main Nadesico series. I figured it might finally be time to dive in.
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Our hero. |
Despite not having watched the series in several years, the first few episodes felt quite familiar. Our protagonist, Akito, is a citizen of Mars at the series outset, although his home is abruptly attacked and presumably destroyed by aliens. These mysterious foes are known as Jovian Lizards and they hail from Jupiter, although we won’t learn much more about them until much later. It seems like Akito and his friends and family are done for, but he somehow ends up on Earth with no memory of how he got there. Despite being a trained mech pilot, the trauma Akito holds onto regarding his past results in him diving into cooking as his new passion. Ironically, this is precisely how Akito inadvertently ends up on the crew of the Mobile Battleship Nadesico, where his role as the cook will be short-lived.
You see, the captain of the Nadesico is the bubbly young woman, Yurika, who also used to live on Mars and remembers Akito from when they were children. Akito’s memories aren’t as fresh in his mind, though, and repeatedly finds himself fending off the captain’s romantic advances. Yurika is convinced she and Akito are soulmates because of their childhood friendship. She might be right. Even so, Akito isn’t willing to make that kind of commitment, especially once he gets suckered into being a member of the Nadesico’s contingent of mech pilots, which, in the beginning, consists of himself and Gai, an excitable man and self-professed #1 fan of in-universe anime, Gekiganger.
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Gai, the man himself. |
It’s worth noting that despite some tragic things happening right from the beginning, Nadesico’s tone is primarily comedic. Even so, I found myself not often knowing how to feel. I would ask questions like “is this supposed to be funny or serious?” For example, Akito’s backstory is quite sad, on paper, and so is what happens to an important crew member very early on. On the other hand, the anime briskly moves on and features light episodes about going to the beach and having singing competitions, all while a war with aliens rages on. Even this alien race is frequently played for comedy, while the anime humanizes their otherworldly customs and weaves their unusual origin into the worldbuilding of the Nadesico universe.
For me, Nadesico works best when it’s about the interaction between its characters. The overarching plot and mystery behind the aliens and the military conflict are not nearly as interesting. Although the dynamic between Akito, Yurika, and other crew members is framed more as a high school comedy than anything, it’s the part that I personally found most appealing. Like many anime protagonists, Akito finds himself in a position where he’s fending off romantic advances from all sides, whether it be Communications Officer Megumi, who stumbles her way into an unofficial girlfriend role very early on, Captain Yurika’s undying (and frequently unrequited) affections, or even ace pilot, Ryoko’s begrudging crush. It’s not clear why they’re so attracted to Akito, though, since he’s kind of an awkward dude. Sure, he’s great at piloting giant robots, but so is Akatsuki, who joins the crew a little later on. He’s even much more of a pretty boy! Even so, Akito seems to be the one the girls cling to.
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Megumi |
One important thing about Martian Successor Nadesico is that a good 90% of the crew is female, which is played almost entirely for comedy. There’s Ruri, for example, who is a pre-teen prodigy serving as the ship’s Science Officer. She’s basically a living encyclopedia of knowledge, perhaps because she spends a lot of time querying the ship’s built-in database of information. She’s also prone to dismissing the childish antics of other crew members as idiotic, which serves as something of a catchphrase for the character. And by “something of a catchphrase” I mean “most scenes involving Ruri end with her saying ‘baka’ in some context or another.
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Ruri |
There’s also the glamorous Minato, a former secretary who now serves as the Navigation Officer, Jun, Yurika’s right-hand man who absolutely has a crush on her and is a stickler for the rules, and the three female pilots who join a few episodes in. There’s the aforementioned tomboy, Ryoko, the eccentric Izumi, whose weird puns and jokes don’t translate that well into English, and Hikaru, whose interest in gadgets has her striking up an unlikely friendship with Uribatake, the engineer. One scene has Uribatake, who I read as being a man in his mid-30s, misunderstanding the friendship he has with Hikaru, who is basically a teenager. It was kind of creepy!
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Ryoko, Izumi, and Hikaru, right before Izumi makes a nonsensical joke. |
As much as I enjoy the characters and humor of Nadesico, I found getting through the series to be more of a slog than I expected. There are many filler episodes, only some of which are actually any fun, and the plot isn’t easy to get invested in. The weird tonal mismatch between the comedy and drama elements of the show also often left me cold. I almost would have preferred if the show was purely a comedy, because those elements were generally stronger, even though those parts didn’t always work.
Now, there’s also a Nadesico movie that I decided to watch, not out of any particular interest, but because elements from the movie are represented in some SRW games I’ve already played and SRW T, the one I plan to play soon. Akito now pilots a mysterious black mech and the tone has taken a sharp turn toward the serious. The plot is also highly confusing because much of the intervening story elements that take place between the main Nadesico series and Prince of Darkness were from a video game on Sega Saturn called Martian Successor Nadesico: The Blank of 3 Years. As such, it’s not clear at all why young Ruri is now the captain of the Nadesico, where her new crew members came from, and why Akito and Yurika are nowhere to be seen.
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This is still Akito, somehow. |
Even by the end of that movie, I was still confused about what had actually happened. Akito is absolutely not the character I remember, nor does he even have a lot of screen time in the movie. Many of the anime’s characters show up again, but with only an hour and a half of runtime, none of them really get the chance to stand out. In fact, much of the movie is concerned with Ruri and the new characters, Saburouta and Hari. Saburouta showed up briefly in the main series but never had an important part. Since the game is not available in English, we’re only left to wonder how this former enemy ended up on the Nadesico and, perhaps less importantly, dyed his hair blond and red.
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Saburouta |
Martian Successor Nadesico in Super Robot Wars
I used the following units in Super Robot Wars J and Super Robot Wars A Portable
Nadesico - Yurika
Aestivalis Akito - Akito
Aestivalis Ryoko - Ryoko
Aestivalis Izumi - Izumi
Aestivalis Hikaru - Hikaru
I used the following units in Super Robot Wars J only
Aestivalis Gai - Gai
I used the following units in Super Robot Wars V
Nadesico - Ruri
Black Sarena - Akito
Aestivalis Custom - Ryoko
Super Robot Wars J was my first introduction to Nadesico and a big part of why I was interested in the series is because of how versatile they became as part of my squad. I was particularly a big fan of how they could recharge their energy by staying in range of the Nadesico. None of the units packed a big punch on their own, but their combo attacks were quite powerful and usable repeatedly due to how easily I could restore their energy. They didn’t serve me quite as well in A Portable because that game is really hard. In SRW V, Akito’s new mech is a powerhouse, but none of the rest of the squad is around anymore. It’s harder for Ryoko to compete on her own, even if she can call out her comrades to assist with her single mech combo attack.
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