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#Super Dimension Fortress Macross II
nakamorijuan · 1 year
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超時空要塞マクロスII -LOVERS AGAIN- 第1話 「コンタクト」
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fostersffff · 4 months
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For anyone who may be interested, the crowdfunding/pre-order campaign for AnimEigo's release of Macross II is up and running, which is the kick-off for Big West's announcement from a few years ago that most of Macross would be making its way West.
They're also gauging interest for a UHD version of Macross II, which would be a separate campaign, but one for which they would be doing a new transfer, which is pretty great! The campaign has a little form for that, if you're interested.
And if by some chance you've got a ton of money, you can even get a painting from Haruhiko Mikimoto!
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cantsayidont · 5 months
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July 1988. An art book for a show that never quite came to be, ROBOTECH ART 3 is also the official account of how the planned sequel to ROBOTECH fell apart. if you've heard of ROBOTECH, you're almost certainly aware that it was an amalgamation of three similar but unrelated Tatsunoko anime series, tied together with a new storyline by American producer Carl Macek as a multigenerational saga with enough episodes for American TV syndication. The dilemma this presented (other than for aggrieved weebs insisting that the new storyline was a bastardization of the presumptively superior original series) was that characters from the different generations couldn't really interact, and some important plot elements could only be presented through exposition. ROBOTECH II: THE SENTINELS was to be a 65-episode original series that would chronicle how the survivors of the first generation (adapted from the popular SUPER DIMENSION FORTRESS MACROSS) set out to make peace with the Robotech Masters of Tirol (the villains of the second generation, adapted from SUPER DIMENSION CAVALRY SOUTHERN CROSS) and ended up embroiled in a war with the Invid, the villains of the third generation (adapted from GENESIS CLIMBER MOSPEADA), who eventually conquered the Earth. This was to lead up to the finale of the original series, which would be the starting point for a subsequent series.
For various reasons chronicled at length in the book, the project collapsed after only a handful of episodes were completed. (The surviving footage was later released on home video.) Macek's story outlines were then adapted in several similar but distinct ways in a series of prose novels by "Jack McKinney" (a pseudonym for the writing team of Brian Daley and James Luceno), in the Palladium roleplaying game, and later in American comic books by John and Jason Waltrip. There was also a fanon take that mostly rejected all of the other versions as incompatible with the actual scripts and footage of the original show, which eventually led Harmony Gold, the American production company, to retroactively declare the entire project apocryphal. Harmony Gold then hired the Waltrip brothers to create a five-issue comic book prelude to its truly dire 2007 direct-to-video animated sequel, ROBOTECH: THE SHADOW CHRONICLES, which is heavily reliant on the events of the SENTINELS storyline without being entirely compatible with any previous version of it, and is frustratingly unsatisfying to anyone who actually liked any of them. (Nobody won, in other words.)
THE SENTINELS is often derided for no particularly good reason. The basic storyline has its clunky aspects (in addition to the continuity issues the RRG contingent identified), but so do the original Japanese shows, and the Japanese MACROSS franchise has subsequently gone a lot of weird places that tend to undercut the claim that ROBOTECH is categorically inferior. Both have their flaws, but ROBOTECH and THE SENTINELS are hardly without merit. (The dismal SHADOW CHRONICLES is another matter …)
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animenostalgia · 2 months
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News - Justin Sevakis' production company, MediaOCD, has acquired anime label AnimEigo! According to their press release:
"AnimEigo's home video releases will continue to be available at retailers through MVD Entertainment Group, who will also continue distributing AnimEigo's digital releases. AnimEigo's current and future limited-edition crowdfunded releases will remain under the AnimEigo brand.
AnimEigo's digital storefront will continue to operate under new management, migrating to the MediaOCD website "in the coming months."
Husband and wife Robert Woodhead and Natsumi Ueki, who own and operate AnimEigo, will support MediaOCD during the transition process, with Woodhead saying that AnimEigo will help MediaOCD founder Justin Sevakis with the transition "over the next few years." In addition, Woodhead and Ueki will continue to manage current and future Kickstarter projects, ensuring all promised goods are delivered, and providing support for previous Kickstarter-funded releases for the forseeable future, including the recently ended Kickstarter campaign for The Super Dimension Fortress Macross II: Lovers, Again. Woodhead and Ueki plan to "slowly ease into retirement." "
AnimEigo was the first anime distributor in North America to acquire and release anime subtitled and uncut by anime fans, for anime fans, in 1988. Their first ever release was Metal Skin Panic MADOX 01, which was released in 1989.
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usagirotten · 11 months
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AnimEigo to Launch Kickstarter Campaign for Macross II Anime Release
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AnimEigo's Robert Woodhead announced at the Animazement event last week that AnimEigo will launch a Kickstarter campaign for the release of the Super Dimensional Fortress Macross II original video anime film this summer. The company will reveal more details at its panel at the Otakon event, which runs from July 28-30. #Macross2 Kickstarter is coming later this summer. Details at @Otakon panel. We announced this at @animazement but somehow I "spaced" on tweeting about it. If you have interesting ideas for stretch goals, tweet away! — Robert Woodhead (@AnimEigo) June 5, 2023 Biggest announced in July 2022 that AnimEigo would be releasing the anime on Blu-ray discs. At the time, Woodhead revealed on Twitter that his release of Macross II would be a high-definition transfer and not a resolution bump. The six-episode anime premiered in 1992. The story is set eight decades after Space War I and follows a civilian news reporter who meets a mysterious singer from a previously unknown alien race. Studio Nue began the Macross franchise in 1982 with The Super Dimension Fortress Macross, a television anime series featuring the themes of a love triangle, music, and transforming fighter jets. Studio Nue worked with advertising agency Bigwest and anime studio Tatsunoko Production as production partners. The franchise spawned three other television series (Macross 7, Macross Frontier, and Macross Delta), several theatrical films (beginning with The Super Dimension Fortress Macross: Do You Remember Love?), and several video series (including Macross II, Macross Plus, Macross Dynamite 7 and Macross Zero). Macross Delta aired from April to September 2016, after a trailer for the first episode in 2015. The latest animated work in the Macross franchise, the feature film Gekijōban Macross Delta: Zettai LIVE!!!!!!, opened in Japan in October 2021 along with the short film “Gekijō Tanpen Macross Frontier Toki no Meikyū” (Macross Frontier Film Short: Labyrinth of Time). Sunrise is releasing a new Macross animation project. via Anime Networks Read the full article
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ghibliadventures · 1 year
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🉑What is the history of Anime and what’s the start of its popularity?🉑
👺What is the origin of anime and when did it become popular? The oldest confirmed films, which date to 1917, can be used to date the origins of anime to the early 20th century. The "fathers" of anime, Oten Shimokawa, Jun'ichi Kouchi, and Seitaro Kitayama, were among the first group of animators working in the late 1910s. During World War II, propaganda films were made, such as Momotar: Umi no Shinpei (1945), the first animated feature film, and Momotar: no Umiwashi (1943). During the 1970s, anime developed further, severing its ties to its Western roots.
👺In the 1980s, anime production in Japan saw a surge thanks to the success of series like Gundam, Macross, Dragon Ball, and other works in the cyberpunk, space opera, and actual robot genres. Additionally popular worldwide were the remakes of the Super Dimension Fortress Macross and the Space Battleship Yamato, Star Blazers and Robotech, respectively. The anime movie Akira smashed production cost records and went on to become a big blockbuster all over the world in 1988. The most costly anime film was Steamboy, which was later produced in 2004 by the same individuals. Spirited Away shared first place at the 2002 Berlin Film Festival and won the 2003 Academy Award for Best Animated Feature while Innocence: Ghost in the Shell showed at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival.
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teragames · 9 months
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Lanzarán la OVA de Macross en Blue-Ray
El próximo verano lanzarán en Blue-Ray la OVA de "The Super Dimension Fortress Macross II: Lovers, Again" (@macrossD) después de que lancen la campaña de @Kickstarter el próximo mes.
El fundador de AnimEigo, Robert Woodhead, anunció en el panel de Otakon de su compañía el sábado que planea enviar su edición en Blu-ray Disc de The Super Dimension Fortress Macross II: Lovers, Again original video anime (OVA) el próximo verano. Además, AnimEigo lanzará la campaña de Kickstarter para comprar el lanzamiento limitado a finales de agosto. La vista previa pública de la campaña…
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ljaesch · 9 months
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AnimEigo to Launch a Kickstarter for a Blu-ray Release of The Super Dimension Fortress Macross II: Lovers, Again in August 2023
AnimEigo founder Robert Woodhead announced at his company’s Otakon 2023 panel that it plans to ship its Blu-ray Disc edition of The Super Dimension Fortress Macross II: Lovers, Again original video anime (OVA) in Summer 2024. In addition, AnimEigo will launch the Kickstarter campaign to buy the limited release at the end of August 2023. The public preview of the campaign is “coming soon.” The…
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slightlybiased · 5 years
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Haruhiko Mikimoto Illustrations (x)
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nakamorijuan · 4 months
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超時空要塞マクロスII -LOVERS AGAIN- 第6話 「シング・アロング」
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fostersffff · 2 years
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Big West actually had an entire panel at Anime Expo, where they made the announcement about Macross Frontier and Macross Delta, but it turns out they also announced:
Macross Plus coming to Blu-ray, courtesy of Anime Limited (interestingly, this is a European distributor, but they’re also handling North American distribution in what I think is a first for them)
AnimEigo will be handling the release of The Super Dimension Fortress Macross II
Conspicuously absent from this slate of announcements is a release for Macross 7 and Macross Zero, but some people have pointed out that it’s entirely likely that- considering Big West is cutting deals with every major (and some minor) anime distributors for these releases rather than giving it all to just one- they’ll eventually be announced by Discotek and Sentai Filmworks.
Which then leaves Funimation/Crunchyroll holding just Robotech, which is maybe the funniest possible outcome for this whole thing.
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8zu · 6 years
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yui1107 · 6 years
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(JST 19:00 May 14 , 2018 update) : VF-8F AirForceLogan , the cockpit rayout  development,  and plus image about Test Pilot of Northrop Grumman “Aurora Sterling” to VF-8F and NAVY’s VF-8N.
Aurora Sterling (The New art ) on Deviant art . https://yui1107.deviantart.com/art/Aurora-Sterling-The-New-art-744899986
Max and Miriya ’s second daughter ,  Aurora Sterling .  Now she is test pilot at working on Northrop Grumman. Original little girl’s days art by Tomonori Kogawa .
Now I drawing new art which she became a woman. She warned Dana in “the illusion of Dana” of Episode 60 of Robotech Masters.   By drawing Aurora’s half-figure art, the viewer will understand that this artwork is not a real world’s imitation, but a fictional aircraft of the Robotech universe that branched to another future.
Drawing only pure aircraft design art does not mean designing aircraft of Robotech: Masters era. Readers will think that it is simply a fictional aircraft and an aircraft that made F - 35A a twin engine.
Due to the fact that Robotech universe was destroyed on the SDF - 1 or the Earth on A. D.1999, we diverged from our real world and chose a totally different future. Although there is no F - 35 in this universe, I anticipate that Logan was commissioned as an aircraft equivalent to Real World ’s F - 35 with similar necessity and different science and technology.
In order to prove that Logan was developed as an alternative aircraft of the F - 35 as a result of choosing another future in the Robotech universe instead of mere imitation of a real world aircraft, the half-figure art of a person serving Northrop Grumman test pilot I drew. Aurora Sterling, she warned Dana in “the illusion of Dana” of Robotech Masters Episode 60 . She is also the second daughter of Max and Miriya.
By drawing Aurora’s half-figure art, the viewer will understand that this artwork is not a real world’s imitation, but a fictional aircraft of the Robotech universe that branched to another
future.Max and Miriya ’s second dauter , Aurora Sterling .  Now she is test pilot at working on Northrop Grumman. Original little girl’s days art by Tomonori Kogawa .
Now I drawing new art which she became a woman.
She warned Dana in “the illusion of Dana” of Episode 60 of Robotech Masters. She is also the second daughter of Max and Miriya. By drawing Aurora’s half-figure art, the viewer will understand that this artwork is not a real world’s imitation, but a fictional aircraft of the Robotech universe that branched to another future.
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usagirotten · 11 months
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New Macross Animation Project to Be Produced by Sunrise
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The final day of the "SANKYO presents Walküre FINAL LIVE TOUR 2023" concerts ended on Sunday with an announcement that a new Macross animation project is launching from the anime studio Sunrise. The new Macross animation project comes days after the franchise had announced the concert finale for the franchise titled “‘”SANKYO presents Walküre FINAL LIVE TOUR 2023.” This concert was held across the cities of Tokyo, Osaka and Chiba in Japan. New MACROSS animation project is in preparation for launch! Studio: SUNRISEhttps://t.co/TuBHsQnnqJ#MACROSS — MACROSS (@MACROSS_BIGWEST) June 4, 2023 Studio Nue began the Macross franchise in 1982 with The Super Dimension Fortress Macross (pictured right), a television anime series featuring the themes of a love triangle, music, and transforming fighter planes. Studio Nue worked with the advertising agency Bigwest and the anime studio Tatsunoko Production as production partners. The franchise spawned three more television series (Macross 7. Macross Frontier, and Macross Delta), several theatrical films (starting with The Super Dimension Fortress Macross: Do You Remember Love?), and several video series (including Macross II, Macross Plus, Macross Dynamite 7, and Macross Zero). Macross Delta ran from April to September of 2016, after a preview of the first episode in 2015. The latest animated work in the Macross franchise, the Gekijōban Macross Delta: Zettai LIVE!!!!!! feature film, opened in Japan in October 2021 alongside the "Gekijō Tanpen Macross Frontier Toki no Meikyū" (Macross Frontier Film Short: Labyrinth of Time) film short. Read the full article
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Mecha part 2: An overview of Mecha's history
We can spend all day arguing about what the first mecha anime is, but the first Robot anime is none other than the arguably first anime itself, Astro Boy (1963). based on the 1952 manga of the same nameI. It’s successor the first giant robot anime Tetsujin 28-go/Gigantor has explicit anti-war themes while Astro Boy is a more fun and light hearted super hero story. Both were written after world war II. They reflect a nation trying to heal. Other titles of the 60s include 8-Man (1963) the first cyborg hero in anime/manga, and the much more famous (at least in the west) Cyborg 009 (1966). Of all these titles only one is a giant robot Tetsujin 28-go. Giant Robot anime like we know didn’t take off and become a thing till Mazinger Z in 1972 when a small explosion of meach titles happened going from the 60s modest 7 titles to approx 50 titles in the 70s. And before you start thinking it was all new ips there were many sequels and movies forecasting what was to come. Many of the titles that came out of this period of Mecha history are what we now refer to as Super Robot shows called such because of their super hero aesthetics and tone. Though I should point out the 70s is when we got super sentai esk shows like Zero Tester (1973).
The next big moment was with not the gundam series ,which failed to take off, but it’s follow up movie in 1981 which sparked it’s popularity alongside it’s plastic model kits lovely referred to as gunpla. Highlighting a fact that was as true in the 70s as it is today, a mecha show lives and dies by merchandising. Well any who Gundam gave birth to are now referred to as Real robot titles inspired by the Military space opera trend of the mid-70s into the 80s. Real robot shows took awhile to gain their footing but now dominates the landscape of robot anime. The next title to touch on would be Super Dimension Fortress Macross which is notable for not only being the first in the macross franchise and highlighting the space opera influences in the genre but also for being the spark that started the idol genre. Talk about influence. Naturally we must move on from the 80s to the decade most of my readers (I have readers 0_0) would be familiar with Neon Genesis Evangelion the famous/infamous deconstruction of the genre in both it’s super and real robot forms. The early 2000’s gave us the ever popular Code Geass & Gurren Langen one being a smaller scale real robot and the other being a oh so rare Super Robot series but other than their popularity It’s hard to say what effect they have had maybe bring the scale of the conflits down from the galaxy spanning affairs to more global level ones?. This is not a slight on either title but pry just a part on a genre that has been around for 80 year and whose titles number over a thousand. That’s a lot and more just keep coming. Just in this oh so very young decade we have about 50 titles that have either already aired or are slated to start airing by the end of 2021. There is definitely plenty to enjoy for fans old or new.
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nosanime · 4 years
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Anime List from “History of Mecha: The 80s”
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As promised, here are two lists for you related to “History of Mecha Pt. 2: The 80s”.  The first list covers all of the anime we mentioned during the course of the panel and in the order in which they were mentioned.  The second, longer list below is the one which includes everything in the applicable decades that fit into our determinate factors for mecha anime that we ascribe to the purposes of the panel series. Do enjoy!
 Shows in the panel:
1. Mobile Suit Gundam [4-7-1979 – 1-26-1980]
2. Mobile Suit Gundam I [3-14-1981]
3. Mobile Suit Gundam II: Soldiers of Sorrow [7-11-1981]
4. Mobile Suit Gundam III: Encounters in Space [3-13-1982]
5. Invincible Robo Trider G7 [2-2-1980 – 1-31-1981]
6. GodMars [10-2-1981 – 12-24-1982]
7. Tetsujin-28 Gou [10-3-1980 – 9-25-1981]
8. Space Runaway Ideon [5-8-1980 – 1-30-1981]
9. Space Warrior Baldios [6-30-1980 – 1-25-1981]
10. Fang of the Sun Dougram [10-23-1981 – 3-25-1983]
11. Combat Mecha Xabungle [2-6-1982 – 1-29-1983]
12. Aura Battler Dunbine [2-5-1983 – 1-21-1984]
13. Armored Trooper Votoms [4-1-1983 – 3-23-1984]
14. Super Dimensional Fortress Macross [10-3-1982 – 6-26-1983]
15. Giant Gorg [4-5-1984 – 9-27-1984]
16. Dallos [12-21-1983 – 7-5-1984]
17. Megazone 23 [3-9-1985 – 12-22-1989]
18. Leda: The Fantastic Adventure of Yohko [3-1-1985]
19. Five Star Stories [3-11-1989]
20. Blue Comet SPT Layzner [10-3-1985 – 6-26-1986]
21. Super Bestial Machine God Dancougar [4-5-1985 – 12-27-1985]
22. Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam [3-2-1985 – 2-22-1986]
23. Mobile Suit Gundam ZZ [3-1-1986 – 1-31-1987]
24. Metal Armor Dragonar [2-7-1987 – 1-30-1988]
25. Mobile Suit Gundam: Char’s Counterattack [3-12-1988]
26. Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket [3-25-1989 – 8-25-1989]
27. Aim for the Top! Gunbuster [10-7-1988 – 7-7-1989]
28. Makyou Gaiden Le Deus [12-1-1987]
29. Metal Skin Panic MADOX-01 [12-15-1987]
30. Relic Armor Legaciam [11-28-1987]
31. Patlabor: The Mobile Police [4-25-1988 – 6-25-1989]
32. Patlabor: The Movie [7-15-1989]
33. Patlabor: The Mobile Police – The TV Series [10-11-1989 – 9-26-1990]
 All mecha shows:
 1. Invincible Robo Trider G7 [2-2-1980 – 1-31-1981]
2. Space Emperor God Sigma [3-19-1980 – 2-25-1981]
3. Space Runaway Ideon [5-8-1980 – 1-30-1981]
4. Space Warrior Baldios [6-30-1980 – 1-25-1981]
5. Tetsujin-28 Gou [10-3-1980 – 9-25-1981]
6. Saikyou Robot Daiouja [1-31-1981 – 1-30-1982]
7. Hyakujuu-Ou GoLion [3-4-1981 – 2-24-1982] {Voltron}
8. Mobile Suit Gundam I [3-14-1981]
9. Sengoku Majin Goushougun [7-3-1981 – 12-28-1981]
10. Mobile Suit Gundam II: Soldiers of Sorrow [7-11-1981]
11. GodMars [10-2-1981 – 12-24-1982]
12. Galactic Whirlwind Braiger [10-6-1981 – 6-30-1982]
13. Fang of the Sun Dougram [10-23-1981 – 3-25-1983]
14. Space Warrior Baldios [12-29-1981] {Film}
15. Combat Mecha Xabungle [2-6-1982 – 1-29-1983]
16. Gyakuten Ippatsuman [2-13-1982 – 3-26-1983]
17. Armored Fleet Dairugger XV [3-3-1982 – 3-23-1983]
18. Mobile Suit Gundam III: Encounters in Space [3-13-1982]
19. Sengoku Majin Goushougun [4-24-1982] {Film}
20. Makyou Densetsu Acrobunch [5-5-1982 – 12-24-1982]
21. Galactic Gale Baxingar [7-6-1982 – 3-29-1983]
22. Space Runaway Ideon: Be Invoked [7-10-1982]
23. Space Runaway Ideon: A Contact [7-10-1982]
24. Super Dimensional Fortress Macross [10-3-1982 – 6-26-1983]
25. Warrior of Love Rainbowman [10-10-1982 – 3-27-1983]
26. GodMars: The Movie [12-18-1982]
27. Akuu Daisakusen Srungle [1-21-1983 – 1-27-1984]
28. Aura Battler Dunbine [2-5-1983 – 1-21-1984]
29. Kousoku Denjin Albegus [3-30-1983 – 2-29-1984]
30. Armored Trooper Votoms [4-1-1983 – 3-23-1984]
31. Galactic Gale Sasuraiger [4-5-1983 – 1-31-1984]
32. Super Dimension Century Orguss [7-3-1983 – 4-8-1984]
33. Psychoarmor Govarian [7-6-1983 – 12-28-1983]
34. Xabungle Graffiti [7-9-1983]
35. Document Fang of the Sun Dougram [7-9-1983]
36. Genesis Climber Mospeada [10-2-1983 – 3-25-1984]
37. Special Powered Armor Troop Dorvack [10-7-1983 – 7-6-1984]
38. Ginga Hyouryuu Vifam [10-21-1983 – 9-21-1984]
39. Dallos [12-21-1983 – 7-5-1984]
40. Super High Speed Galvion [2-3-1984 – 4-29-1984]
41. Heavy Metal L-Gaim [2-4-1984 – 2-23-1985]
42. Video Warrior Laserion [3-4-1984 – 2-3-1985]
43. Giant Gorg [4-5-1984 – 9-27-1984]
44. God Mazinger [4-5-1984 – 10-23-1984]
45. Super Dimensional Calvary Southern Cross [4-15-1984 – 9-30-1984]
46. Super Dimensional Fortress Macross: Do You Remember Love? [7-7-1984]
47. Super Robot Galatt [10-5-1984 – 4-5-1985]
48. Panzer World Galient [10-5-1984 – 3-29-1985]
49. Sei Juushi Bismark [10-7-1984 – 9-29-1985]
50. Armored Trooper Votoms: Kachua Kara no Tayori [10-28-1984] {Film}
51. Ginga Hyouryuu Vifam: Atsumatta 13-nin [12-21-1984] {Film}
52. Ginga Hyouryuu Vifam: Kieta 12-nin [2-25-1985] {Film}
53. Leda: The Fantastic Adventure of Yohko [3-1-1985]
54. Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam [3-2-1985 – 2-22-1986]
55. Megazone 23 [3-9-1985 – 12-22-1989]
56. Super Dimension Century Orguss Memorial [3-28-1985 – 5-28-1985]
57. Super Bestial Machine God Dancougar [4-5-1985 – 12-27-1985]
58. Dallos Special [5-8-1985]
59. Armored Trooper Votoms: Vol. 1 Stories of the “A.T. VOTOMS” [6-21-1985]
60. Armored Trooper Votoms: Vol. 2 Highlights of the “A.T. VOTOMS” [7-20-1985]
61. Armored Trooper Votoms: The Last Red Shoulder [8-21-1985]
62. Genesis Climber Moespeda: Love, Live, Alive [9-1-1985]
63. Ginga Hyouryuu Vifam: Keito no Kioku – Namida no Dakkai Sakusen [9-25-1985]
64. Blue Comet SPT Layzner [10-3-1985 – 6-26-1986]
65. Ninja Senshi Tobikage [10-6-1985 – 7-27-1986]
66. Panzer World Galient OVA [1-26-1986 – 8-5-1986]
67. Armored Trooper Votoms Recaps [2-21-1986 – 2-20-1988]
68. Mobile Suit Gundam ZZ [3-1-1986 – 1-31-1987]
69. Super Bestial Machine God Dancougar: Requiem for Victims [4-21-1986]
70. Armored Trooper Votoms: Big Battle [7-5-1986]
71. Gall Force 1: Eternal Story [7-28-1986]
72. Blue Comet SPT Layzner [8-21-1986 – 10-21-1986]
73. Heavy Metal L-Gaim I: Pentagona Window + Lady Gyabure [11-5-1986]
74. Super Bestial Machine God Dancougar: Juusenk-tai Songs [1986]
75. Heavy Metal L-Gaim I: Farewell My Lovely + Pentagona Doors [1-10-1987]
76. Dougram vs Round-Facer [1-21-1987]
77. Metal Armor Dragonar [2-7-1987 – 1-30-1988]
78. Heavy Metal L-Gaim III: Full Metal Soldier [3-28-1987]
79. Super Bestial Machine God Dancougar: God Bless Dancougar [4-15-1987]
80. Super Dimensional Fortress Macross Flash Back 2012 [6-21-1987]
81. Dead Heat [8-7-1987]
82. Great Planet Evil-Destroyer Dangaioh [9-28-1987 – 7-25-1989]
83. Relic Armor Legaciam [11-28-1987]
84. Makyou Gaiden Le Deus [12-1-1987]
85. Metal Skin Panic MADOX-01 [12-15-1987]
86. O-Parts: Oman [1987]
87. Aura Battler Dunbine OVA [2-25-1988 – 8-25-1988]
88. Mobile Suit Gundam: Char’s Counterattack [3-12-1988]
89. Armored Trooper Votoms: Red Shoulder Document – Roots of Treachery [3-19-1988]
90. Patlabor: The Mobile Police [4-25-1988 – 6-25-1989]
91. GodMars: The Legend of 17 Years [6-5-1988]
92. Gunbuster [10-7-1988 – 7-7-1989]
93. Starship Troopers [10-25-1988 – 12-17-1988]
94. Armor Hunter Mellowlink [11-21-1988 – 4-28-1989]
95. Hades Project Zeorymer [11-26-1988 – 2-21-1990]
96. Five Star Stories [3-11-1989]
97. Rhea Gall Force [3-21-1989]
98. Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket [3-25-1989 – 8-25-1989]
99. Madou King Granzort [4-7-1989 – 3-2-1990]
100. Patlabor: The Movie [7-15-1989]
101. Ariel Visual [7-21-1989 – 8-21-1989]
102. Patlabor: The Mobile Police – The TV Series [10-11-1989 – 9-26-1990]
103. Super Bestial Machine God Dancougar: Blazing Epilogue [12-16-1898 – 5-25-1990]
104. Gall Force: Earth Chapter [12-25-1989 – 12-1-1990]
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