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  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
4 hours ago, Jeff J said:

Imagine going to a work holiday party, seeing someone's design portfolio, and featured is a Destroid Monster!

Well, that’s one entertaining designer.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

 Time Stamp 3:03 I hope the driver was not WATCHING an episode... but this is 'murica (..."It's our Damn Right to watch whatever the %$#^ we want to, whenever the *&^% we want to...") 😕

Posted
On 12/23/2024 at 2:29 PM, TehPW said:

 Time Stamp 3:03 I hope the driver was not WATCHING an episode... but this is 'murica (..."It's our Damn Right to watch whatever the %$#^ we want to, whenever the *&^% we want to...") 😕

LOL, and also in Florida.

Neat find!

Posted

Not directly Macross, but in the same product-verse

Got this book for Christmas

https://www.amazon.com/FryeWerk-2-0-Concept-Vehicle-Illustrations/dp/1624650759

image.png.331f0a50456a6e51763433c8259b3bb1.png

 

The book is incredible and I highly recommend it, but when I got to this picture below, my sub-conscious brain paused and went 'Woah...that is just another level of cool, wow. I was super-drawn to it, and was thinking this looks like a Takani picture'.

I then read the caption below it.  :)
image.png.bd74b536d93e443438bb8ccde13ac27a.png

 

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
2 hours ago, Jeff J said:

This admittedly is a big stretch, but here goes.

I never met a "Basara" out in the wild. Figured it was mostly a made-up name for Macross 7. Anyway, read this crazy news story this morning, and I guess at least a Basara exists.

https://sports.yahoo.com/foul-mouthed-philadelphia-fan-banned-230919642.html

It's not really a made-up name so much as a meaningful name.

In Japanese, "Basara" (婆娑羅) is an adjective meaning "being self-indulgent", "acting without restraint", or "behaving in a flashy manner".  The term goes back to late 14th century Japanese imperial court politics.  Basara Nekki's name was chosen deliberately to reflect the character's tendency to be an unrestrained, self-indulgent free spirit.

It's also, for unrelated reasons, a surname in Eastern Europe (Poland, Ukraine, Bosnia, Slovakia, etc.) that as far as I can find is etymologically indicative of a person's family being from Bessarabia (a region in Moldova).

Posted
6 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

In Japanese, "Basara" (婆娑羅) is an adjective meaning "being self-indulgent", "acting without restraint", or "behaving in a flashy manner".  The term goes back to late 14th century Japanese imperial court politics.  Basara Nekki's name was chosen deliberately to reflect the character's tendency to be an unrestrained, self-indulgent free spirit.

Huh.  I always understood it as coming from Basara Taishō*, one of the "12 Heavenly Generals" in East Asian/Japanese Buddhism.  As its significance would greatly deepen, perhaps it's both?

Incidentally, Basara Taishō's name in Sanskrit is Vajra.

 

* https://www.onmarkproductions.com/html/12-generals.shtml

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelve_Heavenly_Generals

Posted
46 minutes ago, sketchley said:

Huh.  I always understood it as coming from Basara Taishō*, one of the "12 Heavenly Generals" in East Asian/Japanese Buddhism.  As its significance would greatly deepen, perhaps it's both?

If memory serves, Sukehiro Tomita cited the adjective 婆娑羅 as the origin of his name In an interview conducted for Animage's Feb 1995 issue.

My frankly ancient print dictionary does not get into the etymology of the term properly, but the Wikipedia article I cross referenced for it does attempt to connect the two terms as an etymological origin.

Posted
3 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

If memory serves, Sukehiro Tomita cited the adjective 婆娑羅 as the origin of his name In an interview conducted for Animage's Feb 1995 issue.

My frankly ancient print dictionary does not get into the etymology of the term properly, but the Wikipedia article I cross referenced for it does attempt to connect the two terms as an etymological origin.

That's cool.

Up until now, I've envisioned it as Kawamori-san incorporating religious elements into Macross, when it most likely is producer Tomita chose an adjective that summed up the character.  That adjective may or may not having later influenced Kawamori-san when he was choosing the names for things in Macross Frontier.

For example, the Vajra tool*—the more likely source of the alien Vajra name—symbolizes indestructibility and irresistible force (a fitting summary of the race), and is arguably only coincidentally linked to the Basara name.  Their subsequent choice of Messiah and Lucifer as the VF names probably wasn't specifically to align with a naming theme (a la the famous pilot names in Delta), but ended up creating a de facto one.

 

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vajra

Posted
On 1/17/2025 at 3:03 AM, sketchley said:

That's cool.

Up until now, I've envisioned it as Kawamori-san incorporating religious elements into Macross, when it most likely is producer Tomita chose an adjective that summed up the character.  That adjective may or may not having later influenced Kawamori-san when he was choosing the names for things in Macross Frontier.

For example, the Vajra tool*—the more likely source of the alien Vajra name—symbolizes indestructibility and irresistible force (a fitting summary of the race), and is arguably only coincidentally linked to the Basara name.  Their subsequent choice of Messiah and Lucifer as the VF names probably wasn't specifically to align with a naming theme (a la the famous pilot names in Delta), but ended up creating a de facto one.

 

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vajra

And then there are the various Norse references in Delta.

Posted
40 minutes ago, Devil 505 said:

And then there are the various Norse references in Delta.

That's the continuation of a trend that started back in Macross 30: Voices Across the Galaxy.

Spoiler

Most of the placenames on Uroboros, the remote world where the game (and its novelization) is set, have names drawn from Norse mythology.  The Protoculture ruins are named with various epithets/titles of the god Odin, the cave systems dotting the landscape are named for various figures from Norse myth like heroes and monsters and magical beings, and at least a few of the cities are named for minor gods like the Norns.  The names of the frigate that is home base to the player character (Gefion), the rogue special forces unit that are the antagonists (Havamal), their base (Thrudheim) and the Protoculture ruins that are their objective (Gladsheim) are also named with Norse mythology references.  There's even a world tree (Yggdrasil) on the first area map.

The main exceptions are Vrlitwhai City (a landed Macross-class), the New UN Forces bases having predominantly Greek names, and the names of the two new Valkyries in the game being named for the Greek god of time and a knight from Arthurian legend.

 

Posted
3 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

That's the continuation of a trend that started back in Macross 30: Voices Across the Galaxy.

  Reveal hidden contents

Most of the placenames on Uroboros, the remote world where the game (and its novelization) is set, have names drawn from Norse mythology.  The Protoculture ruins are named with various epithets/titles of the god Odin, the cave systems dotting the landscape are named for various figures from Norse myth like heroes and monsters and magical beings, and at least a few of the cities are named for minor gods like the Norns.  The names of the frigate that is home base to the player character (Gefion), the rogue special forces unit that are the antagonists (Havamal), their base (Thrudheim) and the Protoculture ruins that are their objective (Gladsheim) are also named with Norse mythology references.  There's even a world tree (Yggdrasil) on the first area map.

The main exceptions are Vrlitwhai City (a landed Macross-class), the New UN Forces bases having predominantly Greek names, and the names of the two new Valkyries in the game being named for the Greek god of time and a knight from Arthurian legend.

 

That makes sense, especially considering that the YF-30 is the predecessor of the VF-31 Siegfried.

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