Mobile Suit Gundam Wing
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing | |
File:Gundamw.jpg | |
Genre | Mecha, Action, Science Fiction |
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Anime | |
Directed by | Masashi Ikeda |
Studio | Sunrise |
Anime | |
Gundam Wing: Operation Meteor | |
Directed by | Masashi Ikeda |
Studio | Sunrise |
OVA/Movie | |
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Mobile Suit Gundam Wing, known in Japan as New Mobile Report Gundam W1 (also known as 新機動戦記ガンダムW shin kidō senki gandamu uingu in Japanese), is a televised anime series, which ran for forty-nine episodes beginning in 1995. Initially directed by Masashi Ikeda and written by Katsuyuki Sumizawa (Ronin Warriors), the series was loosely based on the original 1979 Gundam series, Mobile Suit Gundam, created by Yoshiyuki Tomino and Hajime Yatate. Death Scyth r000lz
Gundam Wing is one of the alternate universe Gundam series, taking place in the After Colony timeline. Man has colonized space (with major colonies at each of the five Sun-Earth Lagrange points), and, down on the earth, the nations have united as the Unified Earth Sphere Alliance. Unfortunately, the Alliance rules the colonies with an iron fist. The colonies wanted peaceful resolution to the situation, and this movement was headed by Heero Yuy, but when he is assassinated in the year After Colony 175, the colonies turned to other means.
The year is After Colony 195, and Operation Meteor has been put into affect. Five young boys have been chosen and trained by the scientists, sent to Earth in extremely advanced Mobile Suits known as "Gundams" because they are constructed from astonishingly durable Gundanium alloy. Gundam Wing centers on these five.
The naming scheme for the series is based on a numerical system. Each character's name is typically derived from the word for a number in various languages ("Heero" means "one", "Duo" means "two", etc). It is based largely on the French counting system. (Quatre, Treize, Une, etc.) Also, naming of OZ mobile suits were based on the Zodiac (with the exception of the Tragos mobile suit, whose name is derived from Capricorn rather than simply stated as such) as exemplified by Leo, Aries, Cancer, etc.
Due to the popularity of the series, two OVAs, compiling various scenes from the series along with a few minutes of new footage, were released in 1996 as Gundam Wing: Operation Meteor I and II. A brand new, three-volume OVA series, Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz was made in 1997 as a sequel to the TV series and closes out the After Colony saga. A year later, 1998, a movie version of the OVA series was made, with new footage and a different ending (Last Impression).
Manga sidestories have also been produced. A prequel detailing the events leading up to the launch of the Gundams to Earth, is Episode Zero. Several sequel manga, occurring between Gundam Wing and Endless Waltz have been written, titled, Gundam Wing: Blind Target, Gundam Wing: Ground Zero,and Battlefield of Pacifists. A coincident storyline is presented in Last Outpost (G-Unit). The Gundam Wing, Battlefield of Pacifists, and Endless Waltz manga series are published in English by TOKYOPOP, while Blind Target, Ground Zero, and Episode Zero are published by Viz Communications.
Gundam Wing had a run on Cartoon Network's Toonami where it was broadcasted as an edited version in the daytime and an uncut version at night. (ex: blood is edited and the word 'kill' is replaced by the word destroy). Also Duo's nickname the God of Death was edited to the Great Destroyer (which also included altering two episode titles).
In 1996, a fighting game called Gundam Wing: Endless Duel was released for the Super Famicom in Japan. The game was never released in the United States or Europe, but enjoys widespread popularity thanks to the emulation of older video games.
1 The translation New Mobile Report Gundam W is used by the R2 DVD releases in Japan, and thus is used extensively by the English-language fanbase in order to differentiate it from the Universal Century Gundam series. While the use of the term "report" in the title is not necessarily incorrect, it does not convey the full meaning of the original-language terminology. The Japanese word senki (戦記) has a specific meaning of "military history." Some official translations in the past have used the translation New Mobile War Chronicle Gundam Wing as well, and some of the official art uses The New Mobile History Gundam Wing, and at least one Japanese book has used Mobile Suit Gundam Wing.
Episode guide
- The Shooting Star She Saw
- The Gundam Deathscythe
- Five Gundams Confirmed
- The Victorian Nightmare
- Relena's Secret
- Party Night
- Scenario For Bloodshed
- The Treize Assassination
- Portrait Of A Ruined Country
- Heero, Distracted By Defeat
- The Whereabouts Of Happiness
- Bewildered Warriors
- Catherine's Tears
- The Order To Destroy 01
- To The Battleground Antarctica
- The Sorrowful Battle
- Betrayed By Home, Far Away
- Tallgeese Destroyed
- Assault On Barge
- The Lunar Base Infiltration
- Grief Stricken Quatre
- The Fight For Independence
- Duo, God Of Death Once Again (Edited on Toonami as: Duo, The Great Destroyer Once Again)
- The Gundam They Called Zero
- Quatre VS Heero
- The Eternal Flame Of The Shooting Stars
- The Locus Of Victory And Defeat
- Passing Destinies
- The Heroine Of The Battlefield
- The Reunion With Relena
- The Glass Kingdom
- The God Of Death Meets Zero (Edited on Toonami as: The Great Destroyer Meets Zero)
- The Lonely Battlefield
- And Its Name Is Epyon
- The Return Of Wufei
- The Fall Of Sanc Kingdom
- Zero VS Epyon
- The Birth Of Queen Relena
- Trowa's Return To The Battlefield
- A New Leader
- Crossfire At Barge
- Battleship Libra
- Target: Earth
- Go Forth, Gundam Team
- Signs Of The Final Battle
- Milliardo's Decision
- Collision In Space
- Takeoff Into Confusion
- The Final Victor
Openings, Endings and Insert Songs
Openings:
- Just Communication by Two-Mix (ep. 1-40) (YTV Broadcast: 1-49)
- Rhythm Emotion by Two-Mix (ep. 41-49)
- Gundam Wings "أجنحة كاندم" (Arabic) [All episodes]
Ending:
- It's Just Love by Rumi Oishi (ep. 1-49)
- Just Communication (Instrumental Version) by Kou Ootani (Toonami Broadcast, ep. 1-49)
Insert Songs:
Gundam Wing in Super Robot Wars
Due to its popularity, Gundam Wing is frequently featured in the Super Robot Wars series of video games by Banpresto. The series' first appearance was in 1996's Shin Super Robot Wars, though its presence was limited to Heero, Relena and Zechs as well as Wing, Tallgeese and the Leo. Its more notable appearances include 1999's Super Robot Wars 64, which was actually set in After Colony 195 and featured practically every machine from the series (except the Leo), including ones which have never appeared in the series since, such as Peacemillion, Libra, and Rashid's Maganac. Furthermore, it is actually possible for the player to join OZ and later, the Romefeller Foundation. Another notable appearance was 2000's Super Robot Wars Alpha, which mostly followed the series' plot faithfully but had some noteworthy deviations (OZ working heavily with Zeta Gundam's Titans, Milliardo allying with Paptimus Scirocco, Vayeate and Mercurius being mass produced instead of the Virgo series, Dorothy piloting Epyon after Milliardo's defection). The game's sequel Super Robot Wars Alpha Gaiden featured Endless Waltz's plot with equal fidelity (instead of sending the Gundams into the Sun, the pilots hide them on the Moon). Even though its plot was finished at that point, the Wing cast was retained throughout the rest of the Super Robot Wars Alpha timeline and received heavy ties with Daimos (Relena helping with the Earth-Barm negotiations) as well as other Gundam series, with Zeta's Kamille Bidan and Four Murasame joining Preventer and the Gundam pilots helping fight ZAFT and the stolen GAT series Gundams from Gundam Seed.
See also
- Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz
- After Colony Timeline
- After Colony Nations and Factions
- After Colony Mobile Units
- After Colony Technology
- After Colony list of characters
External links
- Official Mobile Suit Gundam Wing website
- mahq.net - detailed Mobile Suit information
- Gundam Plus - information, image gallery
- Gundam Wing Fanworks