Welcome to Nostalgia Pilots! In this episode, Hugh, Jason and Jurd discuss Gundam Wing Episode Ten: “Heero, Distracted by Defeat!”
Click HERE to listen!
In which Treize and Zechs finally get some time alone together, Lady Une has a murder-boner for the whole world, and Duo suplexes a train.
Plus, Doctor J still leads with the claw, and Trowa doesn’t have a phone, but if you must call him, ring the circus.
Oh, and Heero blew himself up, but I’m sure he’s fine.
Want to watch along with the Nostalgia Pilots? You can watch Gundam Wing episodes for free online via Crunchy Roll!
Podcast: Nostalgia Pilots 10: Lady Une’s Murder Superbowl
December 14, 2017
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Podcast: Nostalia Pilots 09: Zechs & Treize Go To White Castle
December 7, 2017
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This week on Nostalgia Pilots, Jason, Jurd, and Hugh watch episode nine of Mobile Suit Gundam Wing, “Portrait of a Ruined Country!”
Click HERE to listen!
In which Zechs isn’t brave enough to experience terminal g-forces, Duo and Heero have a friendly game of basketball at picturesque Military Base Island, and Qatre hears the soul of outer space.
Plus, Treize’s master plan may still have a few holes in it, and Jason explains some sinister moe.
Thanks for listening!
Hugh Likes Video Games: Gundam Wing Endless Duel
September 1, 2017
Hugh Likes Video Games, Review anime, Fighting Games, Gundam Wing, HLV, Hugh Likes Video Games, Nostalgia Pilots, Super Nintendo Leave a comment
HLV-Gundam Wing Endless Duel
Bandai
Super Famicom

Invariably, Nostalgia Pilots’ deep dive into the series lead me back to the ephemera and tie-ins to Gundam Wing, including the Super Famicom fighting game. Bandai hasn’t had the best track record with Gundam games, but Gundam Wing Endless Duel turned out to be pretty great.
A late 16-bit era fighting game in the vein of Street Fighter II, “Gundam Wing Endless Duel” never made it to America. This is almost certainly because the anime it is based on wouldn’t be localized for another three years after it was released. But it’s also a shame, because it’s a great 2-player fighter, with tight controls, gorgeous pixel graphics, and a merciless difficulty curve.
Roughly following the plot of the show, the game features nine characters, plus a hidden playable boss. Each giant robot has a pair of light and heavy attacks, can rocket boost into the air, and fires machine guns from a distance. They also have a fuel meter, and all special and super attacks drain the gauge. Successfully blocking attacks or landing hits refills the gauge, but it doesn’t fill back up between rounds. This prevents a player from just leaning on special attacks for victory and provides some nice game balance.
The personality and capabilities of each pilot and robot are well displayed. Wing and Wing Zero have giant guns, their signature beam sabres, and can even transform into their jet modes to ram the enemy. Deathscythe is fast and excels at close-combat, Qatre has access to his army of bodyguards, etc. The stages are all pulled right from the show. Each one is incredibly detailed and downright beautiful. Heero fights inside a colony, Zechs’ stage is an Antarctic ice sheet, and Wu-Fei fights in the wilderness he spends most of the first half of the show moping in.
“Gundam Wing Endless Duel” looks and feels just right, but it isn’t a walk in the park. The computer A I is brutal and merciless. The challenge is further amped up by the fact that unlike other tournament fighters, players can hit their opponent when they’re down.
If you’re a serious fighting game player, and you need something to tide you over until the next big thing comes out, I recommend taking a look for this overlooked gem.
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Podcast: Nostalgia Pilots 6
August 24, 2017
Nostalgia Pilots, Podcast anime, FanCast, Gundam Wing, hugh, Jason Banks, Jurd, Nostalgia Pilots Leave a comment
Episode 6: Those Kids Have to Die
This week, Hugh, Jason, and Jurd watch episode six of Gundam Wing: Party Night!
Join us as Heero goes to great length to avoid a school dance, Relena has a non-conventional grieving process, and Lady Une is barely holding it together with all this insubordination about her orders to murder civilian children.
Plus: Wu-Fei takes up puppetry, Trowa has an Allen Iverson moment, and Duo does literally nothing this episode.
And, Jason tells everyone how he really feels about Eureka Seven.
Podcast: CCRC19: Voltron
February 11, 2017
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Watch along with Hugh, Opopinax, and Jurd as they watch the first episode of Dreamworks’ “Voltron: Legendary Defender!” It’s lion-robot-tastic!
Click HERE to listen to the commentary!
“Voltron: Legendary Defender” is available on Netflix Streaming in the US and Canada!
This podcast was originally posted at Skinner.FM on February 9, 2017.
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Podcast: CCRC18: Naruto S1E1
January 21, 2017
Podcast anime, CCR, Commentary Track, hugh, JRD, Naruto, Opopinax, Orange is the best color for stealth, The Swing of Loneliness Leave a comment
Join Opopinax, JRD, and Hugh as they take a quick jump in the Chronotheater to the heady days of 2002 with a commentary for the first episode of the original Naruto anime.
Click HERE to listen along.
Naruto is available to stream from Netflix, Crunchy Roll, Hulu, and Viz.com!
This podcast was originally posted at Skinner.FM on January 19, 2017.
Podcast: CCRC9-Fist of the North Star(2015)
July 18, 2016
Podcast anime, CCR, Commentary Track, Fist of the North Star, hugh, JRD, Opopinax, Rich The T T Leave a comment
Watch along with the full compliment of chrononauts as we comment on the first episode of the new “Fist of the North Star.” Times may change, but you’re still already dead.
Click HERE to listen!
And Click HERE to watch the show on Youtube!
This podcast was originally posted at Skinner.FM on July 18, 2016.
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Hugh Likes Anime: MS Gundam: Iron-Blooded Orphans
April 26, 2016
Hugh Likes Anime, Uncategorized anime, Gundam, HLA, Hugh Likes Anime, Mecha, review, War never changes Leave a comment
Mobile Suit Gundam: Iron-Blooded Orphans
Bandai/Sunrise
Streamed via Crunchy Roll

With science fiction credentials that date back just as far as “Star Wars,” the Mobile Suit Gundam franchise has gone through its ups and downs across every conceivable kind of media. From anime and manga, to literally hundreds of games, to more toys and models than even the most hard-core collector could hope to assume. These offerings have varied wildly in tone, from the shocking, gritty depictions of war in the original Mobile Suit Gundam, to the “Street Fighter”-Inspired G Gundam, to the downright kid-friendly SD Gundam.
As the 40th anniversary of the franchise approaches, Bandai’s latest offering, “Iron-Blooded Orphans,” may be the most shocking and adult iteration of the series to date. Nearly all of the Gundam series’ protagonists are in their teens or early twenties, but IBO certainly goes the farthest with a harrowing depiction of the child soldiers.
Set on a terraformed and colonized Mars, the series takes place about three hundred years after a catastrophic war that depleted Earth’s resources. When teenage heiress Kudelia Aina Bernstein begins calling for Martian independence, she becomes a target of Gjallarhorn, Earth’s theoretically independent peacekeeping force. She turns to paramilitary army CGS, and their unit of indentured child soldiers for protection. After reviving one of the long-lost Gundam Frames, the children stage an uprising and form their own company, agreeing to take Bernstein to Earth, the one place where her voice can produce results. As they travel, she begins to really learn how desperate the lives of these ‘human debris’ children really are, and grows close to Gundam Barbatos’ laconic pilot, Mika.
While Gundam has not shied away from serious issues before, this is probably the most consistantly dark and serious entry in the series, but it does an excellent job, for the most part, in addressing the themes of the show. The character and mech designs are well drawn, and the plot, for all its darkness, is engrossing. Season one recently finished and can be found streaming on the Crunchy Roll streaming service.
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Hugh Likes Anime: Food Wars
October 8, 2015
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Food Wars: Shokugeki no Soma
Studio: J. C. Staff
Streamed via Crunchyroll

When I was a teen, I was really into Iron Chef, a competitive Japanese cooking show which might be viewed as the forefather of most of the Food Network’s current lineup. “Food Wars: Shokugeki no Soma” is another descendant. An anime based on manga by Yuto Tsukuda and Shun Saeki, it follows the adventures of teenaged hero Yukihira Soma through Japan’s most prestigious and rigorous cooking school. Soma is the son of a competitive and mysterious diner owner, and he’s been cooking since he was a child. At first, he looks down the other students, who’ve ‘never served a customer before,’ but as the series goes along, he learns a lot about cooking through competing with them.
Shokugeki no Soma falls in line with many of the tropes associated with anime aimed at teenage boys. There are lots of nonsensical rivalries, training, and challenges to overcome while forthrightly contemplating philosophical points. And also plenty of fan service. These are certainly the first chef’s jackets that I’ve ever seen with cleavage. But even the fan service has its own goofy charm. The series is constantly searching for new ways to express culinary language visually. These range from a group of people eating a pork-roast so good their clothes explode to a panel of judges piloting a lobster rocket into space.
The first season of Food Wars: Shokugeki no Soma is currently streaming online at Crunchyroll, and is coming to DVD. While the show ends at a bit of a cliffhanger, and a second season has yet to be announced, this is an excellent series for foodies and anime fans alike. I’d like to give a hat tip to Jason Banks of the Talk Nerdy To Me podcast for the recommendation.
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Podcast: CCRC21: Gundam Wing
March 22, 2017
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Listen to me geek out at Jurd and Opopinax as we watch “Mobile Suit Gundam Wing, Episode 1: The Shooting Star She Saw.”
Click HERE to download the commentary track!
And HERE to watch along with us!
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This podcast was originally posted at Skinner.FM on March 21, 2017.