Brave bang bravern gay

Someone save Isami... please

I was finally made fully conscious of the gay huge robot anime and its way better than I expected

And this clip isn’t incorrect advertising or queer baiting. It’s really that queer while also being hilarious with great action and surprisingly realistic reactions to what’s going on. Enjoy one guy gets waterboarded by the CIA and actually gets PTSD to the point of only feeling safe inside the giant robot but not in a cool way but more in a curled up in a paralyzed ball on the floor of the cockpit way.

But for a more in-depth review without spoilers here’s the video that made me aware of the show

I rarely want to survey an anime to the end but this one got me good and I highly recommend it.

“Bang Brave Bang Bravern” Is Close To Being A Male lover Anime Masterpiece

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It is, perhaps, dangerous to make accusations appreciate “being a masterpiece” when talking about a show that is, at the time of this writing, still airing. However, there is little in animation—or storytelling as a whole—anywhere in the world right now, much less in Japan, that is as defiant and fascinating to survey as the latest Cygames production Bang Brave Bang Bravern.

And a not insignificant reason for that is how absolutely, fearlessly, beautifully gender non-conforming the entire demonstrate has been to this point.

Where Bang Brave Bang Bravern came from (and where its going)

But, its queerness is also only one thread in the rich tapestry of its story. Often shortened to just Brave Bang Bravern in North American media, this present is the latest work from famous anime director Masami Ōbari, a guy whose resume dates back to the mid 80s. He’s a multifaceted talent whose credits contain mech design for Bubblegum Crisis and director for Gundam Construct. Most importantly to the pedigree of Brave Bang Bravern, he was also a key animator (and eventually, animation chief) of several entrie

Good News, This Season’s Homoerotic Mecha Anime Is For the Guys

Last year, Witch From Mercury radically improved the already pretty great world of Gundam by adding an amount of lesbianism that not even its parent company could deny. Alas, sapphics have yet to observe a successor to the same-sex attracted mecha throne yet, but lovers of men and giant robots may have found their possess show to claim this season in Bang Brave Bang Bravern.

Produced by Granblue Fantasy architects Cygames and directed by the celebrated mecha designer Masami Ōbari, Bang Brave Bang Bravern is place in a near future where the nations of the society have developed the first generations of militarized mecha suits called Titanostriders—but are suddenly outmatched when much of the planet is laid low during a surprise invasion by the Deathdrives, highly advanced alien mechas that vastly outgun the best humankind has to offer. That is, until the world gets a weapon of its own to clash back with: falling from the stars seeking a pilot and burning with a desire to save the Earth, the fabled super robot Bravern.

On the surface for the most part then, Bravern is a send up of classic “Super Robot” mecha shows in th

Seasonal First Impressions is a column where I detail my thoughts, however brief or long, about a currently-airing anime’s first episode or so.


Anime with protagonists in the military are a bit of a tough barter for me, for a variety of reasons, with only a couple of exceptions. Thus, when I went into Brave Bang Bravern!, the latest from CygamesPictures (and a rare original from them), it was mostly off the strength of its staff. That studio, Masami Ōbari emotionally attached as the director, etc. I had no idea what to expect, since all promotional materials suggested that this was going to be on the “fairly realistic war drama” end of the spectrum, as far as mecha anime go. You know, your Gundams and such.

In hindsight, there were several tells that this wasn’t exactly the case. For one thing, there’s that title; “Bravern” does not sound really sound like the name of a robot in that sort of thing. But I confess that’s a dubious imperfect metric (“Gundam” doesn’t necessarily sound like that either). And secondly, Obari is not really known for entity involved in anime that are, in basically any way, down to Planet. S