It’s not quite in the vein of Iwasaki Taku and the other assorted artists that worked on the awesome game soundtracks, but still very good. The music by Nagaoka Seikou is quite fitting in its military nature as well. Considering the low budget, the CGI and animation are quite superb, giving each of the respective mecha their moment in the spotlight, and highlighting the individual differences between the major classes of BETA. And well, it’s a story that’s just absolutely stunning (as you can probably tell from Moomba and I’s overview of the games), and one I hope will be given justice in this animation.Īt this point, it’s hard to really predict where the series will go, but I do like most of what I’m seeing at the moment. It’s one where humans are fighting a losing battle against ruthless enemies, where people try to maintain whatever normalcy they can to keep themselves sane, and where the adults readily accept their deaths if it means their children will never have to see the battlefield. But in the end, it just goes to show just how dire the situation is in the Muv-Luv universe. Granted, the censoring limited the impact a bit and the death flags were there, but even I didn’t expect them to kill off the characters the way they did… with Izumi getting munched on like a midnight snack, Yamashiro getting ripped apart, the unit commander getting sniped down by lasers, and the Instructor sacrificing himself to try and protect the rookies. And regardless of the issues plaguing the beginning, they pretty much succeed in this aspect. I mean, if there are a bunch of places seemingly going about life normally, they couldn’t be much of a threat could they?īut you know what? It’s exactly what the creators wanted to do with the series-to lull you into a false sense of security, then blow you away in big gusts of BETA fury. But, with the amount of info-dump, constant shifting through the years, and the light-hearted school environment, it was pretty hard to gauge exactly how big of a threat the BETA were. Chronic shortage of baseload reserve capacity – Despite protests from renewables advocates, the state’s market- based grid system simply has not provided the necessary incentives for the construction of new baseload capacity for well over a decade now, a role that wind and solar are incapable of filling. |
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