Bishop Steiner, on 31 July 2016 - 06:31 PM, said:
Personally still think the quintessential Gundam itself it's one of the least inspired mecha designs in anime
From an in-universe perspective, the RX-78 was still a test bed unit - a high-performance test bed, but a test bed nonetheless - for the Federation's entire MS program: it's supposed to be a relatively-bare-bones, no-frills unit that serves as the prototype for other, more purpose-built (and, usually, more feature-rich) designs (the Full Armor Gundam from
Thunderbolt, the nuke-toting GP-02A from
Stardust Memory, the variable-form Zeta from
Zeta Gundam, the high-performance NT-1 from
War in the Pocket, the cheap mass-production GMs, and so on).
From a real-world perspective, it would have been far easier to animate something relatively simple like the RX-78 in 1979, than something like the
Endless Waltz version of Wing Zero with the same techniques & technology (which is part of why the
Gundam Wing TV series used simplified designs, while
Endless Waltz & the
Gundam Wing manga used the more-complex original designs).
Also, "inspired" ("of extraordinary quality, as if arising from some external creative impulse"; "outstanding or brilliant in a way or to a degree suggestive of divine inspiration") is really a nebulous criterion for judging something, yes?
- Would you say that the basic ATM-09-ST Scopedog is an "inspired" design? What of the Gears, from Heavy Gear?
- Is the Getter-1, the primary form of the first popular combining mecha, an "inspired" design, or an "uninspired" one? What about Getter-2 and Getter-3? What about Shin Getter 1/2/3?
- Is the basic AV-98 Ingram an "inspired" design?
Edited by Strum Wealh, 31 July 2016 - 08:02 PM.