Simoun: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Industrialized Evil]]: Subverted.
* [[Industrialized Evil]]: Subverted.
* [[Innocuously Important Episode]]
* [[Innocuously Important Episode]]
* [[Insistent Terminology]]: "[[This Is Sparta|WE! ARE! NOT! AT! WAR!]] WE ARE ''PRAYING TO THE SKY!!!''"
* [[Insistent Terminology]]: "[[Punctuated! For! Emphasis!|WE! ARE! NOT! AT! WAR!]] WE ARE ''PRAYING TO THE SKY!!!''"
* [[Intergenerational Friendship]]: Possibly the ultimate example (and possibly [[Girls Love|more than a friendship]]): Yun is sixteen. {{spoiler|Onashia}} is a [[Time Abyss]].
* [[Intergenerational Friendship]]: Possibly the ultimate example (and possibly [[Girls Love|more than a friendship]]): Yun is sixteen. {{spoiler|Onashia}} is a [[Time Abyss]].
* [[It Gets Easier]]: Though the Sibyllae are originally very clear that they are priestesses, not soldiers, and that they are praying, not fighting, (See [[Insistent Terminology]] above), as the series progresses they stop "Offering prayers to Tempus Spatium" and begin "patrolling," and they stop "inscribing Ri Maajon" and begin "fighting." No one notices the transition as it happens, until one day it is pointed out that even the Sibyllae have begun to "fight." Needless to say, they do not take this realization well.
* [[It Gets Easier]]: Though the Sibyllae are originally very clear that they are priestesses, not soldiers, and that they are praying, not fighting, (See [[Insistent Terminology]] above), as the series progresses they stop "Offering prayers to Tempus Spatium" and begin "patrolling," and they stop "inscribing Ri Maajon" and begin "fighting." No one notices the transition as it happens, until one day it is pointed out that even the Sibyllae have begun to "fight." Needless to say, they do not take this realization well.

Revision as of 23:22, 16 January 2021

"I came here to fight."

In the world of Daikuuriku, everyone is born female, and chooses which sex they wish to become at age 17 with a trip to a magical spring. In this world, the peaceful theocracy of Simulacrum is guarded by magical flying machines called "Simoun", which can only be piloted by young girls who haven't chosen a sex yet. The Simoun can activate a magical power known as "Ri Maajon" (by inscribing enormous magical glyphs in the sky) that can destroy large numbers of enemy aircraft at once.

When the industrialized nation of Argentum decides that it needs to invade Simulacrum to acquire the secret of the Simoun, war breaks out, drawing the Simoun pilots into a lopsided battle. Because the war is raging, the Simoun pilots are granted an exemption from going to the spring for as long as they're willing to keep flying. One such pilot in particular vows to stay with her squadron until she becomes the ultimate Simoun pilot, and badgers her squadron-mates to do the same...

Simoun aired from April to September 2006 on Japanese TV, with an all-star (and all-female) voice acting cast, and two stage actresses portraying the series' romantic leads. Cited as the best anime series of 2006 by several bloggers, Simoun is known to some as an underrated and overlooked Anime series of high quality. The music alone is worth watching the series for, let alone the setting, plot, or characters... obvious fanservice like an all-female cast and powered lesbianism aside. The series has recently been licensed, and the (subtitled only) DVDs are available in North America.

A serial manga of this series has been released in Yuri Hime, with a slightly altered storyline.

Not to be confused with S1m0ne.

Tropes used in Simoun include: