''(Moved out of main topic.)''
//Mecha in a fantasy setting dates as far back as ''Aura Fighter Dunbine'', apparently -- {{Ungvichian}}\\
//Indeed. As a point of information, btw, the "official" English title is ''AuraBattlerDunbine''. -- LooneyToons
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DrDedman: Don't think "Doc" Smith had much to do with Mecha (though there was a "Lensman" anime). The sci-fi root of clasic giant robot shows is more likely Heinlen's 1950's juvenile SF (particularily "Between Planets" and "Have Space Suit, Will Travel", with some tech from "Starship Troopers"), Mazinger and GiantRobo especially. (Eva is a deconstruction of this original pattern, with a father who is arguably crazy, rather than merely distant).
DarkSasami: This is a general plea for some mecha-fan to split off the "transforming" aspect into its own trope. Between ''{{Voltron}}'', ''SonicX'''s vehicles that transform into other vehicles, and actual ''{{Transformers}}'', this topic is way too lumped, which led to someone pointing "Transforming HumongousMecha" at {{Shapeshifter}}, which is something else entirely.
(And I'm supposed to be working on documenting installation instructions for a new product launch, so I've had it up to here with writing for today.)
BluetoothThePirate: OK, how about this. I split SuperRobot and RealRobot off as their own genre pages, and changed HumongousMecha to an AnimeTrope, since that's how it's treated in most of the places it's linked on the wiki. (That seems to be the most useful way to categorize it.) There still needs to be some work on splitting up the examples, and I'd like to create pages for TransformingMecha and CombiningMecha (since a lot of them are not neccessarily robots, per se).
(Later) It still needs a lot of clean up, but I made some headway.
{{Ununnilium}}: Very well-done!
DarkSasami: BtP, you rock.
SusanDavis: *cheer* *wave rising sun fans*
{{Gus}} I moved HM down on the index page, as it is not currently serving as index. Or if it is, I missed it.
DarkSasami: It is...sort of. Check out the bottom of the page, in invisible text. I have to imagine that there's a better way to handle this...
{{Gus}} Ah, now I see. I wonder if the leaf-kiddies were in a "caption" it would be more obvious that it is an index. I'm pretty sure the trail-maker would pick up on the boxed text. I'll give that a shot. // later: Nah, I'll have to beef up the parser for captions so it will allow line returns. It will be a while before that bubbles up the stack. In the meanwhile, I'll undo the move.
// still later: OK, there we go. You can view the page edit to see the new markup.
{{Nerem}} I have to note that Combining and Transforming Mobile Suits have been in Gundam since the original show. The Impulse is even specifically based off of the Victory Gundam from Victory. And the original Gundam could combine with various G-Units to become G-Sky and such.
: Along those lines, the article currently says that Transforming mecha were retconned out of the original series and are only (relatively) recently returned in SEED... despite the existence of the likes of Zeta and Double Zeta Gundam in post-0079 UC, Gundam Airmaster in GX, Epyon in GW, and so forth... I don't even remember any Transforming mecha IN the original series to have retconned out, although to be fair I haven't seen the whole thing. The G-Armour as mentioned in the above paragraph is the only thing I can think of that comes close, and that's Combining.
...on that note, the G-Falcon could combine with some of the main units in ''Gundam X'', so even counting the removal of the G-Armour, SEED Destiny isn't where they first came back.
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DonQuigleone: added a note saying that pilots have a high probability of FallingIntoTheCockpit, this section should be expanded and more added on Pilots (perhaps that they also have a high tendency towards Angst? And that most pilots are below the age of 25(even 20)
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[[strike: {{Cassius335}}: Nice choice of pic, EC. Any chance you could trim the sides a bit?]]
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lee4hmz: Deleted. I apparently don't understand this trope at all. :P
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ShayGuy: Where's [[http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/1180869842985.jpg that picture]] from, and is there a list of the mecha in it? (And are there any in there more recent than Gunbuster?)
TheGunheart: I can't name them all (though I do recognize a good 75+% of them), but [=MagiKing=] is in there on the right, and that was from the 2005 SuperSentai, [=MagiRanger=]. The rest seem to have debuted at the end of the 80's at latest, though.
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TBeholder: Ah, those "justifying" wipes. I told ye, we must have ComplainingAboutComplainsYouDontLike as a separate trope... :)
TheGunheart: It really doesn't add anything to the page other than a misunderstanding of the SquareCubeLaw, and seems to forget that TropesAreNotBad. In sections like FasterThanLightTravel, it's presented in an interesting way. Here, feels more like the science equivalent of StopHavingFunGuys.
TBeholder: Dunno about "good" and "bad", but things like CPRCleanPrettyReliable and whole HollywoodTactics - HollywoodScience- ... line are blatantly ''illiterate''. And they ''don't'' somehow become more literate depending on anyone's tastes or "feels". SquareCubeLaw is merely top of the pile, there's more and worse. As to FasterThanLightTravel, of course it's not "pretty realistic", as most other SF tropes, but at least does not clashes with established things, like basics of geometry (or common sense); at worst with GRT alone (and even then there's Alcubierre's).
TheGunherat: Did you just call me illiterate because I think having two paragraphs of borderline "This Trope Sucks Because It's Not Realistic" wasn't needed? Hell, if you want to invoke the SquareCubeLaw, then why is so much praise lavished on the SpiderTank concept, where the spindly legs in all likelihood wouldn't be able to support a heavily armored torso and weapons? And really, why is it needed? We don't have a long dissertation on the biological impossibility or impracticality of EyeBeams. If someone wants to put down a footnote or better integrate the reality into the article, I'm fine with that.
TBeholder: No, i called ye ComplainingAboutComplainsYouDontLike. Illiterate is the one who writes in things like all-terrain humanoid vehicles with serious face. Unless TheyJustDontCare or [[FollowTheLeader want to minimize creativity]], of course.\\
And again, there's huge difference between "It's Not Realistic" and "it's plain silly". ''{{Elite}}''-style FTL is "not realistic", interplanetary travel on toy balloon is "silly". ;) Difference is: whether it requires to add new laws or to demolish all the old ones to build something bizarre from scratch.\\
As to SpiderTank, it's simple: if sum of legs loaded at once (i.e. all minus at least 2) is equal to ''one'' "humanoid" leg, spider vehicle of the same weight is not worse; "spider" having legs equal to ''both'' humanoid's legs would have about 2x load-bearing redundancy (can move without ''half'' of legs). Now add lower centre of gravity, lesser overloading due to smoother gait, lesser radius of leg (more rigid carcass). More resistance to damage if the margin of strength is enough to support with one less leg -- with two legs, damage impairs more: damaged leg's structure will not distribute load properly, ''and'' if there's only two it's enough to get ''one'' out of order to stop walking. For spider this bonus goes directly into terrain crossing capacity.\\
That's just walking -- the sheer madness of having ''battle'' vehicle standing upright and flat is far worse.\\
TheGunheart: SO, now you're saying that giant robots in general are silly? I have to ask, what series have you even seen?
TBeholder: 1) don't know about giant ''robots'', i discussed armored humanoid vehicles. Which is both silly concept and as creative as development in the opening quote in PublicDomainArtifact article. 2) it's obviously and absolutely irrelevant.
TheGunheart: Then why don't you go [[http://www.mechaps.com/ here]] and tell them what they're doing is silly. :)
TBeholder: Why ''would'' i? I'm not interested in what they do inside their sandbox at all. Only that ''they'' (or ''someone'' else) won't erase everything they doesn't like without any reasons other than they don't like it in the one where ''i'' play. :] Also, quick peek allowed me to notice they ''don't'' claim acting model they make can be usable war machine, so i don't see why this would be silly in first place.
TheGunheart: Several posts by staff members on their forum (including the founder) state they eventually do plan to create potential military models. But really, if you feel so strongly about it, why not just add it back? Though I fail to see why you care so much; you seem to have no interest in the genre whatsoever. And it's more than simply "not liking it"; it was a fairly bitter tangent followed by justifying edits and the article flows much better without it.
TBeholder: Because i'm annoyed when someone comes, takes out half of CPRCleanPrettyReliable and says only "but it's so cute!" for an "argument", that's all. Also, for "[[MohsScaleOfScienceFictionHardness hard-fi vs. soft-fi]]" fans it's as pure and ancient FlameBait as Space Fighters, if ye didn't noticed this yet. ;] Of course, it would be ''better'' to have something like "SpaceDoesNotWorkThatWay" for all mind-boggling MilitaryMashupMachine cases lumped together (they have a lot of common qualities), but it's not here yet.\\
Also, you'll laugh but it was me who added ''Power Dolls'' example.
TheGunheart: Seeing how obsessed the Power Dolls example was with spider tanks and apparent disdain for the genre, I don't find it strange at all. And if it's FlameBait, then why even bring it up? Why not just go and add all the biological impossibilities of EyeBeams to the article, too?
TBeholder: Because there aren't any: to show that all EyeBeams are biologically impossible, we must have all those beams' properties first, and they tend to be DisintegratorRay and suchlike. To say that clay golems are mechanically impossible, we must have animation's properties, not only clay. If it's a form of AppliedPhlebotinum, the only issue possible is whether MagicAIsMagicA. But when it's about a ''mechanism'' and genre is not WorldOfChaos but ''sci''-fi, issue of LikeRealityUnlessNoted raises. The difference is ''adding'' [[MinovskyParticle physics extension]] vs. ''retconning away'' basics like consequences of Pythagoras' theorem. That's the ''whole'' point of "hard vs. soft" conflict. Also, the question about more silly things like CPRCleanPrettyReliable stands.
TheGunheart: So you're saying you hate giant robots because you have a very generalized concept of the genre. I'm sorry, but your grammar makes it hard to tell what you're trying to say most of the time. As best as I can tell you seem to be under the impression that most series don't use AppliedPhlebotinum or [[MinovskyParticle physics extensions]] and ignore the laws of physics without any explanation and thus the concept should be limited to comedy.
TBeholder: No, you're saying i hate giant robots. :] I just say humanoid vehicle is a weird idea which quickly goes beyond weird if it's ''very'' humanoid or supposed to have combat use. HumongousMecha have all the qualities of PhlebotinumDuJour, aggravated by the fact that all the basic mechanics needed to drop it was known "a little" longer than x-rays or nanotubes (even for Homer ''walking'' Trojan Horse would be too much). The reference to "concept of the genre" is irrelevant, because the problem is LikeRealityUnlessNoted in the very basic area. As to the AppliedPhlebotinum and physics extensions, of course there are tons of justifications -- ''because they are needed'': obvious questions are closer than a [[FridgeLogic fridge]]. If a wheelbarrow with Penrose triangles for wheels belongs to Cthulhu or White Rabbit, it belong there. If it suddenly appears in FilmNoir in Paris, TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture or even AlternateHistory, "LikeRealityUnlessNoted" is active and there are questions, so either it will be somehow justified (it turns out to be FilmNoir about Cthulhu Cult) or it makes comedy gag or [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment BLAM]]. As simple as this.
TheGunheart: So you're saying giant robots should be kept out of sci-fi and only be featured in comedies?
TBeholder: I'm saying that ignoring obvious problems in such cases as this, CPRCleanPrettyReliable or SuckOutThePoison (version for squeamish) and suchlike is ultimately pointless in itself. And that wiping any references to the same problems isn't too far from "la-la-la now i don't hear". Just like with LamarckWasRight and [[ScienceMarchesOn other long-dead theories]] -- [[EpilepticTrees with some effort]] anything can be justified (those same theories were), but without a justification some funny looks are called for. Choices are BLAM, justification or ignorance of the issue's existence. ''That's why justifications exist at all''. Slapstick and other variants of WorldOfChaos are naturally immune, as there ''anything'' is ok.
TheGunheart: The one problem is that CPRCleanPrettyReliable and SuckOutThePoison are already about why those tropes don't work in real life. As is the case with other tropes like BlownAcrossTheRoon. This is about a sci-fi vehicle/genre, which at this point does not exist. And it should be noted that according to the engineers at MechaPS linked to above, the problem with the hexapod is that it does not scale well and would be too slow to be useful, but I don't see you mentioning that anywhere.
Plus, by your logic, hard SF series like {{Patlabor}} and GunBuster are apparently full blown comedies.
TBeholder: to say HM "at this point does not exist" [but could!] is the same as to say "poison that can be sucked out Hollywood way 'at this point' don't exist". Both cases are precluded from ever being efficient by much the same issues. As to brandishing trumps, i'll only note that one doesn't need to be a professor of Mathematics to detect Penrose triangle wheels' clash with an Euclidean geometry as we know it. The concepts that interfere with HM are about as basic and about as old. As to specific works, again: ''authors'' themselves made up all sorts of {{Minovsky Particle}}s specifically because ''they'' know justification is needed. Doubt-free things are normally (barring TechnologyPorn) just used as a matter of fact, no one bothers to justify them. As to less bizzare geometries, they have ''common'' problems, being limited by values, not by principles. Like an interplanetary travel or [[MagneticWeapons mass-drivers]] -- concepts 'sort of' works already, but are stunted by requirements.\\
> Plus, by your logic, hard SF series like {{Patlabor}} and GunBuster are apparently full blown comedies.\\
I have no idea how you got to this specific conclusion -- and, by extension, what you mean under "my logic" in general. You did [[InternetColdReader telepathed]] a wrong head, it seems. =)
TheGunheart: I'm not going to argue the third folder any further, but the problem with that logic is that SuckOutTheVenom assumes all poison works the exact same way. In Hollywood land, sucking out the venom is apparently a basic first aid technique that's as old as time itself, so it's far too late for there to be an out like "we haven't found one yet".
Also, I find it funny that in the face of engineers who are currently working a humanoid vehicle and have even gone into detail on their own forum as to why, from an engineering standpoint, an insectile design is far more inefficient than a biped model, you simply hold on to your apparent common knowledge without providing any sources to back them up.
And I was referring to the fact that you seem dead set to claim that any work that doesn't fully explain the existence of giant robots is somehow a comedy series. Then again, your poor grammar, plus your tendency to go off on tangents about alien geometries makes it difficult to tell what you're saying half the time. ;)
TBeholder: Well, most poisons that can end up in a wound ''are'' much the same for this purpose. And "uh, let's make... big iron man" is just as ancient, check those examples. As to that engineering show -- good luck to them, but as they don't plan to get this thing shooted at by a real autocannon or something, it's just a high-tech cosplay and is as much of "real concept proof" as a LED lightsaber. The only really working vehicles with legs so far are walking excavators (that has wheels) and things like Timberjack. As to "sources", the issue is far too simple to start praying to Aristotle, just looking at a walking sequences of known gaits (including accelerations involved) and the real forms able to walk is enough. Hint: insects generally don't run upright, humans aren't covered in exoskeletons, and no one runs, jumps and dances in a knight's full armor (even though it mostly relies on its wearer's joints, not hard joints with less DOF)--do you really need any sources for this?--and there are painfully obvious reasons why. And obviously painful reasons why in the ranged combat humans still able to walk upright frequently opt not to (yes, sacrificing mobility) and why no one made a combat vehicle with height greater than length (save one-way trip siege towers). What a special sacred knowledge do you want if this isn't enough?
As to being "dead set to claim that any work that doesn't fully explain the existence of giant robots is somehow a comedy series", it's an idea, for which, i would indeed require some quot... err... "sources". ;) As to the Cthulhunometries -- even leaving SquareCubeLaw alone, both slanted plates and differential armoring are related to the Euclidean geometry. Conversely, to have a plate that at normal incidence wouldn't be effectively thinner than at grazing incidence ''and'' have equal chances to be hit by the same gun from different sides at once (shrapnel is stopped by ''armor'', right?) [[DoingInTheScientist Doing In Euclide]] is almost required...
TheGunheart: Yeah, you really do like hearing yourself talk, don't you. You're just repeating stuff I already know. Explore the [[http://www.mechaps.com/cgi-bin/board/ikonboard.cgi MechaPS]] forums for a while.
TBeholder: No, i don't use voice input. I just was ''that'' curious to see what way you'll choose to jump out of [[strike:theological]] civilized discussion if surrounded in arguments. As to what you know, ''i''[='=]m not a [[InternetColdReader telepath]] and as such has no way to know this if you actively hide it. I explored abovementioned forum and found that you (if the same nick is the same character) didn't got an engineering joke and then chose to praise admins via bemoaning some vague "horrible people" who supposedly don't estimate them properly.\\
Want to continue ''ad hominem''? Being arthropoda anyway, i have nothing against this. ;D
TheGunheart: Yes, that's me. And what engineering joke? You also apparently didn't get very far: there have been quite a few threads over the years telling them that they're project is apparently doomed if they don't go with some brilliant revelation they just thought of. And the admins you speak of happen to be the project coordinator and the communications engineer. You are aware what that's a forum for, right?
TBeholder: "DontExplainTheJoke", but he plainly told ye that if they'll make ''this'' they can make something else ''from'' it and not vice versa. The related point is that they do it at all and has to do it so long, basically, ''for a challenge''--i.e. ''because'' even on not-so-humongous scale and without any useful load it's obviously hard to make this scheme work at all. As opposed to making a motorized cart moving, which of course would be no feat at all. While normally engineers do the exactly opposite: choose the ''most'' efficient variant available to solve some existing problem, not the ''least'' efficient specifically because it's a big problem in itself. [[SoYeah So the very existence of your example... yeah.]]
{{Ryusui}}: The trope description is already long enough as it is. I've deleted your natter and I'm probably going to go back and trim it down further. Seriously, it doesn't matter what kind of hangups you have about HumongousMecha, you do ''not'' have a LicenseToWhine. Oh, and TheGunheart? Don't feed the troll. Fix the trope first, ask questions later.