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Top Gun
Joined: 28 Sep 2007
Posts: 4655
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 2:16 pm
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Man, 4 out of the 6 of these are in my short-list for most entertaining sci-fi franchises in anime. There was a good 10-15 years in the history of the medium where sci-fi almost felt like the go-to genre for anime series, and so many of my favorites hail from that era. I feel like we don't see nearly as much of them anymore, which is a damn shame.
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belvadeer
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 2:17 pm
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Explaining instant or hyperdrive space travel has always been fascinating in science fiction, and attempting to understand how each process works is definitely a treat for science buffs. I don't imagine I'll live long enough to see us possibly master some form of high speed movement through the cosmos, but it's nice to think about. That said, happy to see Outlaw Star and Macross Frontier on the list.
Last edited by belvadeer on Sun Nov 04, 2018 2:19 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Blanchimont
Joined: 25 Feb 2012
Posts: 3486
Location: Finland
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 2:19 pm
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The survey link is wrong. Drop the 'share' from the end and it'll work.
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ultimatehaki
Joined: 27 Oct 2012
Posts: 1090
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 2:22 pm
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Survey link not working
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gaptoothsailor
Joined: 22 Jan 2015
Posts: 100
Location: New York
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 3:15 pm
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I voted for ACT-AGE, Astra Lost In Space, and Straighten Up! (Sesuji wo Pin! to), because the latter two have reached their conclusions and were pretty satisfying. I could see them adapted into a two cour and three cour series, respectively. ACT-AGE has survived long enough that I think there is a chance it can keep going enough to get an anime adaptation on its own if it keeps up the pace.
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timber
Joined: 12 Dec 2014
Posts: 135
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 4:35 pm
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Unrelated to anime, but David Weber's "Honor Harrington" series of has the most interesting consequences of a form of space travel I have seen. The ships generates bands/wedges of highly compressed/directional gravity fields above and below the ship which push the ship in space or one of the hyperspace "bands" (upper bands are faster but more difficult to navigate). Hyperspace is influenced by mass and you cannot transit between hyperspace bands/normal space while being near starts or planets.
The generators can be reconfigured to form sails to navigate corridors of hypergravity streams or wormholes.
Military wise, the neat trick is that the generated gravity wedges are so dense that they are impenetrable but the physics impose that they must remain separated so you cannot form a perfect protection bubble and the best you can do is to generate weaker sidewalls that do not interfere with the main gravity fields. Of the wedges impenetrability works both ways so lasers and missile launchers can only shoot from the sides too. This all reminiscent of old galleons battles with complex manoeuvrers to gain the best shooting position or to trick your enemy.
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Marzan
Joined: 29 Mar 2009
Posts: 518
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 5:01 pm
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Top Gun wrote: | Man, 4 out of the 6 of these are in my short-list for most entertaining sci-fi franchises in anime. There was a good 10-15 years in the history of the medium where sci-fi almost felt like the go-to genre for anime series, and so many of my favorites hail from that era. I feel like we don't see nearly as much of them anymore, which is a damn shame. |
Agree, but to be fair, I think its a specific kind of sci-fi, that which the story is space based, that has lost its popularity. Other kinds of sci-fi are doing well.
Crest/Banner of the Stars has one of the most well crafted narrative universes in anime. Science, language, society, its all fleshed out and described in detail
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Zin5ki
Joined: 06 Jan 2008
Posts: 6680
Location: London, UK
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 5:06 pm
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The plane-space phenomenon in Crest of the Stars perhaps exemplifies the limit a writer can take a speculative device before it becomes distracting. The battles themselves remained the focus when they occurred, rather than the strange technologies that facilitated them. (For the sake of contrast, Noein's otherworldliness was too ingrained and overarching for my liking. Such was my inability to suspend my disbelief that I simply had to stop watching.)
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Barciad
Joined: 11 May 2004
Posts: 131
Location: St Andrews
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 5:21 pm
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Top Gun wrote: | Man, 4 out of the 6 of these are in my short-list for most entertaining sci-fi franchises in anime. There was a good 10-15 years in the history of the medium where sci-fi almost felt like the go-to genre for anime series, and so many of my favorites hail from that era. I feel like we don't see nearly as much of them anymore, which is a damn shame. |
Quite. It seemed like we all took that good, intelligent Science-Fiction for granted. And now it's gone.
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MarshalBanana
Joined: 31 Aug 2014
Posts: 5423
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 5:28 pm
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Outlaw Star is the only Anime from childhood that I still rewatch.
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WatcherZer
Joined: 29 Dec 2016
Posts: 282
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 6:31 pm
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Your missing a doozy, FLCL and their concept of hyperspace of consciousness allowing objects to pass from the head of one higher intelligence being to another.
Crest/Banner of the stars is a favourite for providing a rational explanation for why conflict takes place in two dimensional space and the great concept of what occurs when they meet with torpedoes projecting their own subspace bubbles which merge with that of the target vessels when they collide.
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Top Gun
Joined: 28 Sep 2007
Posts: 4655
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 8:18 pm
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Marzan wrote: | Agree, but to be fair, I think its a specific kind of sci-fi, that which the story is space based, that has lost its popularity. Other kinds of sci-fi are doing well.
Crest/Banner of the Stars has one of the most well crafted narrative universes in anime. Science, language, society, its all fleshed out and described in detail |
You make a good point here. I don't know if there are equivalent terms in sci-fi, but fantasy has the dichotomy between high fantasy (your traditional Lord of the Rings/Game of Thrones sword-and-sorcery) and low fantasy (more like Harry Potter), with urban fantasy being a subset of the latter. Even in recent years I can think of examples of "low sci-fi," things along the lines of Steins;Gate, and cyberpunk has always had a presence as everyone does their own takes on Ghost in the Shell, but that sort of high-concept sci-fi set in space has all but vanished. Or if it's still there, it barely makes a splash. I can't help but dream of a world where we were getting a half-dozen series about spaceships and interplanetary politics and faster-than-light travel and wave motion guns and all of that awesome crunchy stuff per year.
And I fully agree about Crest/Banner. Finally watching the anime last year was a real treat, and I only wish more of it had been adapted. I think the author's slated to come out with another novel relatively soon, right?
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Banjo
Joined: 13 Dec 2010
Posts: 786
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 10:40 pm
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Uchūsen Sagittarius is one of the best space adventure anime, sadly the character designs makes it unpopular.
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mewpudding101
Industry Insider
Joined: 07 Apr 2009
Posts: 2209
Location: Tokyo, Japan
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 11:22 pm
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Your survey link is broken.
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CatSword
Joined: 01 Jul 2014
Posts: 1489
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Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2018 11:30 pm
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I voted for 20th Century Boys, Astra Lost in Space, and My Hero Academia: Vigilantes. Unfortunately, only one of those is realistic for ever getting an anime adaptation.
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