Corrector Yui: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Defrosting Ice Queen]]: Ai, in the end.
* [[Defrosting Ice Queen]]: Ai, in the end.
* [[Dojikko]]: Yui, Freeze in the second season.
* [[Dojikko]]: Yui, Freeze in the second season.
* [[Eleventh Hour Superpower]]: The Tie Suit.
* [[Eleventh-Hour Superpower]]: The Tie Suit.
* [[Enemy Mine]]: Yui and War Wolf have to team up at least ''thrice'' in the first season to either save their skins or other people.
* [[Enemy Mine]]: Yui and War Wolf have to team up at least ''thrice'' in the first season to either save their skins or other people.
* [[Enigmatic Minion]]: War Wolf.
* [[Enigmatic Minion]]: War Wolf.
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* [[Shrinking Violet]]: Haruna start as one, slowly gets better...
* [[Shrinking Violet]]: Haruna start as one, slowly gets better...
* [[Silk Hiding Steel]]: Haruna, Anti, Rescue in a more child-like way.
* [[Silk Hiding Steel]]: Haruna, Anti, Rescue in a more child-like way.
* [[Super Hero Speciation]]: In the anime and the Okamoto manga, the Corrector Program to Elemental Suit ratio was 2:1, although the powers varied [for example, Yui could get the wind suit from Anti and see the future, or she could get the same suit from Control and stop time]. In the Asamiya manga, though, every program got their own suit.
* [[Super-Hero Speciation]]: In the anime and the Okamoto manga, the Corrector Program to Elemental Suit ratio was 2:1, although the powers varied [for example, Yui could get the wind suit from Anti and see the future, or she could get the same suit from Control and stop time]. In the Asamiya manga, though, every program got their own suit.
* [[The Snark Knight]]: Ai Shinozaki, sometimes.
* [[The Snark Knight]]: Ai Shinozaki, sometimes.
* [[Taken for Granite]]: {{spoiler|Yui and Freeze}}, among others, in an episode of the anime's second season. That triggers {{spoiler|Haruna}}'s return.
* [[Taken for Granite]]: {{spoiler|Yui and Freeze}}, among others, in an episode of the anime's second season. That triggers {{spoiler|Haruna}}'s return.

Revision as of 10:53, 26 January 2014

Your Virtual Magical Girl is here!

  "You'll go into the recycle bin and be empty-empty-emptied!"

After Kia Asamiya created Steam Detectives for his son, he looked yet again into an unfamiliar genre, this time for his daughter, who was a fan of Magical Girls. He came up with a story that brought the typical wand-waving, miniskirt-wearing junior high girl Twenty Minutes Into the Future by making her a regular girl in the real world and a magical girl online.

Fourteen-year-old Yui Kasuga is perky, creative, daydreamy... and at a complete disadvantage for someone that lives twenty years in the future: she's so computer-illiterate that she thinks "delete" is a snack food. Luckily for her, her best friend Haruna Kisaragi is a famous computer expert, taught by her father and her uncle. However, Haruna ain't stupid and Yui has to do her own homework, even though the rest of her friends are off to a virtual theme park. Yui puts the homework disk into her computer and manages to screw up so badly that a virtual creature hidden inside it is awakened by just the right key combination. Thinking he's stumbled upon a super-genius, the creature, IR, commands Yui to load her consciousness onto the "Com-Net" (internet) and become a virtual magical girl.

Yui immediately jumps at the chance to fight viruses and wear cute outfits (not to mention, one of the first people threatened by the Big Bad is her father), but as she finds out, there's more to the story than this. Eight sentient programs, of which IR is one, have been created by one Professor Inukai, who is comatose after another program named Grosser rebelled against him and overrode his car. Grosser is after these programs, which uphold the very existence of Com-Net (and, since Everything Is Online, the real world too); presumably, he wants to corrupt everything for some unknown goal. Yui is commissioned to gather all eight and combine their powers with her own to delete Grosser.

Yui might turn to cliche once in a while, but in other respects, it's very different. The title character actually wants to be a magical girl, and has dreamed about it and written like stories for a long time. She has a few basic powers with her Fairy Elemental Suit, but each Corrector Program can grant her a different Elemental Suit with different powers, varying the battle tactics. And though the plot might seem straightforward, never fear: Grosser and his Corruptor Programs aren't simple Card Carrying Villains, Inukai's not such a saint himself, the Correctors have their own personalities and quirks, and both Yui and Haruna might not be what they think they are either.

The original manga was commissioned to a mangaka named Keiko Okamoto which adapted the two seasons in a 9-volume manga series of two parts (5 for the first, 4 for the second). Asamiya later wrote his own version.

Tropes used in Corrector Yui include: