Mecha: Difference between revisions

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* Large. Size of a 20 story building. Think Eva Units from Neon Genesis Evangelion, Jaegers from Pacific Rim or Reaver Titans.
* Large. Size of a 20 story building. Think Eva Units from Neon Genesis Evangelion, Jaegers from Pacific Rim or Reaver Titans.
* Huge. There isn't really any comparison here... A mountain, perhaps? [[Titan|The largest Titans]] fit the bill nicely. Also pretty much anything from Supreme Commander and Total Annihilation could fit.
* Huge. There isn't really any comparison here... A mountain, perhaps? [[Titan|The largest Titans]] fit the bill nicely. Also pretty much anything from Supreme Commander and Total Annihilation could fit.
* XBOX HUEG. Anything larger than Huge would go here. From moon-sized to the size where you can toss planets and and even galaxies with ease. Examples includes Unicron from the Transformers, Mata-Nui from the Bionicles, and the titular Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann.
* XBOX HUEG. Anything larger than Huge would go here. From moon-sized to the size where you can toss planets and and even galaxies with ease. Examples includes Unicron from the Transformers, Mata-Nui from Bionicle, and the titular Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann.


Then there are various sub-types:
Then there are various sub-types:

Revision as of 17:25, 26 March 2014

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Not to be confused with Macha.

Mecha are typically GIANT ROBOTS normally operated by bags of flesh. Thought to have originated in Greek myth with Talos, but it's the Japanese that revitalized the concept. They needed something to fight off Godzilla and company.

They come in two types: Real Robot and Super Robot. Where "Real" involves mechs which are ostensibly realistic in operation, (see Battletech, Mechwarrior) "Super" are built to kick reason to the curb and do the impossible. The super type predates the real type by about 10 years or so, first popularized by Go Nagai's manga, Mazinger Z in the early '70s, whereas the Real variety has its roots in the now-prolific Gundam franchise, which started at the dawn of the '80s.

This topic can be further discussed at /m/.

Usually seen in the following sizes:

  • Power Armour. This fits over the body of the pilot. Size dependent on the species of whoever's wearing it.
  • Small. About the size of a car or SUV. Appleseed presents these nicely. Warmachine warjacks usually scale into about this size.
  • Medium. About the size of a tank or jet fighter. See generic Gundam or Macross mechs. Also see Dreadnoughts and Full Metal Panic. Warmachine warjacks can be this big.
  • Large. Size of a 20 story building. Think Eva Units from Neon Genesis Evangelion, Jaegers from Pacific Rim or Reaver Titans.
  • Huge. There isn't really any comparison here... A mountain, perhaps? The largest Titans fit the bill nicely. Also pretty much anything from Supreme Commander and Total Annihilation could fit.
  • XBOX HUEG. Anything larger than Huge would go here. From moon-sized to the size where you can toss planets and and even galaxies with ease. Examples includes Unicron from the Transformers, Mata-Nui from Bionicle, and the titular Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann.

Then there are various sub-types:

  • Mechanized. Typical giant robot made from metal.
  • Flesh. They are usually called "bio mecha" and are made of fleshy bits. See Eureka 7, Escaflowne and Neon Genesis Evangelion. Not Tyranid Bio-titans, however, due to lack of pilots.
  • Will powered. Mechs powered by raw fighting or other such fiery emotion. Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann is the go-to example. Sometimes present in Code Geass. Could theoretically fit the bill for Eldar Titans and Wraithlords, and on the same note Warjacks. This type is more often implied than directly stated. More likely to be of the super variety.
  • Combiners. These mechs are composed of various other mechs. See Power Rangers and Voltron. See ALSO GaoGaiGar. Also more likely to be of the super variety.
  • Transformers. Mechs that have two or more forms they can switch between. See Macross and (durr) Transformers for examples. Can be of either the super variety or the real variety.

Mecha Games

Mecha in tabletop games are usually implemented as vehicles with fluff about arms and legs. A reskin of Steve Jackson's Ogre describes it as a giant robot, but the rules are no different than when it was a giant tank. Some games have the fluff baked-in so strongly it's hard to think of their mecha as mere tanks-with-arms.

  • Battletech by FASA (now by Catalyst Game Labs) , the ur-example of tabletop giant robot wargaming.
  • Robotech RPG by Palladium Books. Famous for introducing the idea of MDC, hit-points used only by mecha that are different from the SDC hit-points used by people, and having handguns(!) that could switch between SDC/MDC.
  • Mechaton by Vincent Baker. Build unwieldy monstrosities out of LEGO blocks, pit them against each other.
  • Heavy Gear by Dreampod-9. They're supposed to be exosuits, but might as well be midget-mecha.