[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/arpeggiob_637.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:The ships of the Fleet of Fog. Front row (left to right): Super Battleship Yamato, I-401 Iona, Heavy Cruiser Takao; Back row (left to right): Fast Battleships Haruna, Kongou, and Kirishima.]]

->''"Dreifach ist der Schritt der Zeit:''
->''Zögernd kommt die Zukunft hergezogen,''
->''Pfeilschnell ist das Jetzt entflogen,''
->''Ewig still steht die Vergangenheit."''
-->-- '''Motto of I-401''', by Friedrich Schiller in ''Sprüche des Konfuzius''[[note]]Threefold is the time's pace: the future comes not in haste, the present is gone arrow fast, eternally still remains the past. From Friedrich Schiller's "Sayings of Confucius"[[/note]]

''Arpeggio of Blue Steel'' (''Aoki Hagane no Arpeggio'') is a manga by Ark Performance, centering on humanity having been pushed back from global warming raising the sea level, and their conflict with the Fleet of Fog, archaic-looking WWII-era ships who have been using GameBreaker weapons and armor to ensure that humans can't set keel or pontoon into the world's oceans without risking getting blown to smithereens. The world's navies banded together 17 years before the opening chapters of the manga and were [[CurbStompBattle utterly annihilated.]]

Since then, Japan's fortunes have gone downhill in a huge way: Japan relied on importing and exporting for both raw materials and income for its economy; without either, the nation's industry has fallen quite far. In this rather bleak future is one shining ray of hope: Blue Steel, [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits a bunch of ragtag misfits]] led by their captain, one Gunzou Chihaya. Having somehow acquired a Fog ship of their own, the Fog submarine ''I-401'', only Chihaya and his crew can actually claim Fleet of Fog kills in battle.

However, the ''I-401'' and her crew have more enemies than just the Fleet of Fog: The Japanese government are very keen on getting their hands on what initially was their ship. Bureaucrats look at ''I-401'' and drool. However, what nobody realized is that ''I-401'', like many ships now in the Fleet of Fog, [[SpaceshipGirl has a mind of her own, and a body to fit]].

The manga has been serialized in ''Young King OURS'' magazine since September 2009, and has at least twenty-four volumes compiled so far. Meanwhile, a spinoff titled ''Salty Road'', which focuses on [[BreakoutCharacter Heavy Cruiser]] [[EnsembleDarkhorse Takao]] during her infiltration of Yokusuka, as well as her interactions with the people living in the city, began serialization on October 2014.

An anime series sublined ''Ars Nova'' was aired during the Fall 2013 season. Two movies have since been announced for it, both of which draw major plot points from the manga: the first one, titled ''Ars Nova DC'' and released last January 2015, is three parts [[RecapEpisode Recap Movie]] and one part continuation, and details the events leading to the delivery of the Vibration Warhead to the United States Navy as well as the circumstances that force Gunzou and his companions to flee the Americas... right into the path of Battleship Hiei and her escorts. The second movie, entitled ''Ars Nova Cadenza'', is a straight sequel, where Gunzou and co. try to deal with Musashi and Gunzou's seemingly traitorous father Shouzou, as well as Supreme Battleship Yamato.

The anime is streaming on [[http://www.crunchyroll.com/arpeggio-of-blue-steel Crunchyroll]]. Viewers living in the following areas may watch it legally there: North America, UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Netherlands, Scandinavia, South Africa, Central America, South America, Caribbean, Turkey, Italy, Austria, Germany, Lichtenstein, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Belgium, Poland, Denmark, Czech Republic, Hungary, and Romania. Creator/DiscotekMedia will also release it on Blu-Ray and DVD as part of a sub-license deal with Crunchyroll

Compare to ''VideoGame/KanColle'', another series (with [[Anime/KanColle its own anime adaptation]], to boot) that also features female personifications of World War 2 ships. The two franchises have collaborated on an in-game event for December 2013, which features characters from the ''Ars Nova'' anime assisting the girls from Kancolle against Kongou and Maya. See also ''VideoGame/AzurLane'', the same basic concept applied to a ShootEmUp mobile game (and an [[Anime/AzurLane anime adaptation]] of its own).

In September 2014, during the 2014 Tokyo Game Show, Wargaming.net announced a collaboration project between this series and their latest creation, VideoGame/WorldOfWarships.[[note]]Source [[http://www.4gamer.net/games/138/G013889/20140918152/ here]].[[/note]] The event went live January 1st 2016 allowing players to earn select Fleet of Fog ships though a series of related challenges. Some of these made a return during a 2020 event.
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[[folder:Tropes shared between media]]

* AIIsACrapshoot: Somewhat inverted: Before getting [[AnthropomorphicPersonification 'Mental Models']], the Fleet of Fog ships were pretty straightforward about their goals and how they went about achieving them. Now that they have them, however, they're finding that alongside having the point of view of humans, they're also starting to pick up quirks like humans too...
* AllThereInTheManual: Much about the information about the world setting, as well as the history of the world of Arpeggio (including an actual timeline) prior to the attack of the Fog Fleet en masse can be only found in supplementary material included in the tankoubon compilations of the manga. Among these include Humanity's first encounter with the Fog Fleet (through Bismarck) ''during the First World War'', as well as hints as to ''why'' the Fog ships themselves seem to only have ''half'' of the instructions given by the Admiralty Code (the answer: because it was not reactivated in the proper way).
* AlternateHistory: The series takes place in a setting where global warming has already melted enough of the ice caps to flood the world's coastlines, necessitating a massed relocation of urban populations before the Fleet of Fog begin their global blockade. Prior to this, the development of high-mobility, supercavitating torpedoes starting in 2012 has revolutionized naval warfare, necessitating a complete rethink of ship design and combat doctrine.
* AppliedPhlebotinum: The Fog Fleet is made of nanomaterial which can be formed into anything from hull plating to laser cannons as well as Mental Models.
* ArmorPiercingAttack: Corrosive Torpedoes are able to penetrate Klein Fields.
* ArtisticLicenseShips: Not on the part of the production, but on the part of the ''translators'' for the CR English stream. Likely to go unnoticed for people not familiar with the actual Imperial Japanese Navy ships featured, but for those watchers who ''are'', the experience is jarring. See how Nagara was called a battleship (she isn't; Nagara is a light cruiser), or Hyuuga being called a "fast battleship" (the historical ship wasn't) despite the actual term used in-series being ''dai senkan'', literally great battleship or dreadnought.
* AuthorAppeal: Want badass battleships and gorgeous women? The battleships ''are'' the gorgeous women!
* BarrierWarrior: When separated from their ships, Mental Models fight through manipulation of their Klein Fields, for example slamming enemies away with a high-speed BeehiveBarrier.
* BeehiveBarrier: The 'Klein Field' shielding used by the Fleet of Fog tends to take this form when blocking fire. Oddly enough a similar effect is seen when using the WaveMotionGun on the ''I-401''.
* BigDamnHeroes:
** The first chapter opens with one of these crossed with a GunshipRescue, having Iona atop the ''I-401'' rising up from the water and crushing a concrete pier to save her captain and his charge, terrify the living daylights out of some gangsters, and cause some property damage to boot!
** Iona does this for Haruna, Kirishima, and Makie in episode 6 of the anime, after Haruna pleads for someone, anyone, to save them from the soldiers attacking them. While Haruna could have easily killed them all, she took great pains to avoid killing them for Makie's sake.
* BlackBox: Most of the Fleet of Fog technology is described as this. Even though they had I-401 in their possession, neither the Japanese government nor its crew actually know how its specific components work. One example is the Corrosive Torpedo, which they have a very limited amount of and have no means of reproducing.
* BlandNameProduct: Jenga? Or Genius?
* BreakoutCharacter: Heavy Cruiser Takao is literally the most popular character. She's taken over the fandom so much that she's become the face of most advertisement, and she's on the anime's title splash for Crunchyroll. Even [[WordOfGod Ark Performance]] was surprised at her popularity, and in a magazine interview revealed that they had ''much'' different plans for her, but had to change their minds as a result. She's also been given her own spinoff in '''Salty Road''', which tells about her experiences infiltrating human society as "Aoki Takao", a student at the elite National Maritime Institute.
* BringHelpBack: The I-401 is setting out to America for this purpose.
* CannotSpitItOut: In Chapter 21, after much preparation, Takao confronts Gunzou, intending to ask him to become her captain... and [[{{Tsundere}} instead]] demands the vibration warhead and data.
* CastOfSnowflakes: There's great variety in cast members, both in body types and facial features. This extends to background characters as well, making recurring ones easy to spot.
* CatchPhrase: Haruna has "Entry tagged. Categorized. Recorded." while ''Ars Nova'''s Maya has "It's a carnival!"
* ClassRepresentative: Hiei. We kid you not. She's organized her whole cruiser squadron as a student council, with uniforms to match.
* CombiningMecha: Fleet of Fog warships are capable of doing this. Takao linked up with I-501 in order to improve her anti-submarine capability, while Kirishima and Haruma combined both of their Super-Heavy Cannons into a single massive WaveMotionGun.
** In omake chapter 129.5 Kirishima, after watching too much {{Toku}}, talks Haruna into making an actual 200m tall mecha by combining their hulls.
* CoolShip: This whole manga is an ode to cool ships of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, rebuilt with incredibly advanced capabilities. The Japanese-built ''Hakugei III'' deserves special mention for being the one human ship capable of facing the Fleet of Fog and surviving. Thanks to its modular construction it can be quickly refitted for very different abilities, like the LightningBruiser Assault Mode and the stealthy, long-range Cruiser Mode.
* CrapsackWorld: The current situation is strangling Japan to death economically (see Easy Logistics), and Europe is in the midst of a major war. One way or another, every nation on Earth is feeling the effects of the blockade.
* CozyCatastrophe: However, there are a few countries that are managing all right despite the global blockade, either because they're large enough to be self-sufficient or have neighbors with land borders they can trade with.
* CreepyChild:
** Iona has occasional shades of this. [[spoiler:This effect is amplified with the mental models of 400 and 402.]] Completely averted with Iona and Takao's mini versions, who are moe incarnate.
** Invoked with Musashi, especially in chapter 48.
* CurbStompBattle:
** Humanity suffers an only recently broken string of these from their early encounters with the Fog ships to the present.
** I-401 delivers one to a fleet of over 20 Fog ships in episode 11.
* {{Cyborg}}: Extensively used by the Northern Japanese government as special forces troops. They pull a GunshipRescue of Makie after the Central Japanese army troops finally start overwhelming Haruna.
* DecoyConvoy: [[spoiler:Iona]] takes the vibration torpedo plans from the government, but secretly transfers them to [[spoiler:the ''Hakugei III'']] while at sea, before going off to openly fight the Fleet of Fog. There are two reasons for this. First, the open battles have a chance of loosening the blockade on Japan while diverting attention from the real convoy, and second, [[spoiler:having the first human-made anti-Fog weapon be delivered by a human-made and crewed submarine would be a far greater boost to world morale than having a rogue Fog submarine do the job.]]
* DefeatEqualsFriendship: More like [[BestHerToBedHer Defeat Equals Crush]]:
** Hyuga defects to Gunzou's force after being defeated, thanks to her fixation on "Iona-sama".
** Takao develops a StalkerWithACrush attitude towards Gunzou after he spares her after her defeat, making her later joining Blue Steel inevitable. It's also the source of most of her comedy and popularity with fans.
** Ashigara and Haguro are dragooned into joining Iona's crew after losing their ships [[spoiler: and saving Iori's life]]. They part on relatively good terms later.
** The ''Ars Nova'' anime adds Haruna and Kirishima to the list of allies after Iona and Gunzou help save them from soldiers attempting to kill Makie. ''Cadenza'' adds ''Kongou'' for the GrandFinale.
* DeflectorShields: Fog warships of destroyer scale and larger have "Wave-Motion Armor" that is nearly impossible to penetrate without Corrosive Torpedoes or ''lots'' of firepower. Notably, small torpedo boats and aircraft are too small to be equipped with the armor, but Mental Models can generate personal shields just fine.
* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: The ''Hakugei III'' [[spoiler:becomes the first human made ship to sink not only one, but TWO Fleet of Fog battleships. Granted, they used stolen Fleet of Fog tech, but it was still a very big deal]].
* {{Eagleland}}: The remnants of United States Forces Japan. Though they've long been isolated from their homeland, it's pretty clear that they retain their American traits; even their character designs (or at least Cruz's) are distinct from the Japanese cast members. Initially presented as Boorish with their own agendas, they've since shifted into Beautiful (or at least Mixed Flavor with a positive bias) territory, being otherwise trustworthy and indirectly supportive of Blue Steel and Kamikage against Kita's faction of the Japanese government. One would expect this to be a result of leftover loyalty to America, but according to their commander, they're loyal to Japan and now consider it their home country[[note]]Many of the American soldiers ended up marrying Japanese nationals and starting families after they were stranded[[/note]]. In that regard, their motives are still questionable, but one has to admit this is a switch from usual depictions of Americans.
* EasyLogistics: Averted.
** The Fleet of Fog's interdiction of sea and air transport routes has crippled Japan's economy, being an island nation reliant on trade (a repeat of what happened in UsefulNotes/WW2). Nations across the globe have been similarly affected; only a handful of nations that are completely self-sufficient or have trade routes over land have weathered the blockade.
** To keep Zordan's midget sub force constantly supplied (they can only carry two torpedoes each), he has to drag around an automated Type XIV ''Milchkuh''[[note]]Milk Cow[[/note]] U-boat for reloading and nanomaterial revitalization. This turns out to be the one major flaw in his strategy, as later on [[spoiler:the ''I-401'' snipes the ''Milchkuh'' with an enhanced WaveMotionGun, thereby depriving the ''U-2501'' of its main ammunition and fuel source and forcing it to prematurely withdraw.]]
** A major part of the story centers around the fact that even though I-401 has corrosion torpedoes that can damage Fleet of Fog warships, she doesn't have the capacity to replace the ones fired, and is running out. Also, the Japanese government has developed their own torpedo that can theoretically let humanity go back on the offensive, but they don't have the industrial capacity to build them in large quantities, so they need I-401 to take the last remaining prototype and a copy of the plans to America, which has large numbers of factories that can be retooled for such a purpose.
* ElaborateUndergroundBase: The Japanese Navy operates at least one heavily fortified, underground drydock built to protect what's left of the Japanese fleet from the Fog. Blue Steel maintained one on Iwo Jima, managed (and ''greatly'' expanded on) by Hyuuga, later abandoned after it was compromised.
* EnemyCivilWar: The Fog Fleet isn't as unified an entity as it was a decade before, as the creation of Mental Models has given rise to individual personalities among its ships... and they don't always agree with each other. Depending on who you ask, there are as many as ''six'' different factions in the Fog Fleet alone, all with different aims and at times working at cross-purposes: of particular note, the Scarlet Fleet under ''Musashi'' and Shouzou Chihaya seek to weld the Fog with human crews, ostensibly to fulfill the Admiralty Code's unfinished orders; they are directly opposed by a faction under ''Hood'', who aims to stop Shouzou's ambition as he was usurping the Admiralty Code's authority.
* EnergyWeapon: Standard weapons of the Fleet of Fog. Any gun seen on a Fog ship will shoot these rather than shells. Often abused as BeamSpam.
* EvolvingCredits: Each episode of the anime features brief clips of that episode's contents during the opening credits. Additionally, Kirishima's teddy bear shows up when she's shown onscreen during the opening after she gains control of it. The compilation volumes for the manga have their own version: each volume adds another character to the group shot on the back cover, usually someone introduced in that volume.
* EvilTowerOfOminousness: The primary antagonists are the Japanese Fleet of Fog, meaning that the best way to know when the protagonists are in serious trouble is when a capital ship's colossal [[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pagoda_mast pagoda mast]] is looming on the horizon.
* FoodAsBribe: At the governmental level. Some ships in the Fleet purchase the cooperation of some government officials with ten thousand tons of seafood - which, given that Japan can't produce enough food to feed itself and has been cut off from imports for seventeen years, is a major, life-saving boon.
* {{Foreshadowing}}: The Japanese Army hopes to regain control of Iona by [[spoiler: eliminating her crew]] in Chapter 31. Lt. Cruz Herder was in a position to do the very same thing in Chapter 2.
* FourIsDeath: The fire had to hit ''Facility '''No. 4''''' and cause a lot of fatalities, of all places.
* GameBreaker:
** In-universe, the weapons, armor, and shielding of the Fleet of Fog fall right into this trope. Humanity's combined fleets couldn't put a dent in them 17 years ago.
** Before the Fog showed up, it was the introduction of practical supercavitating torpedoes. Torpedoes capable of going more than 300 knots rendered conventional naval design and tactics obsolete almost overnight. Ironically, in the real world, supercavitating torpedoes aren't yet game-breakers, as their high speed is achieved at the expense of target tracking ability (the Shkval is an unguided torp) and range - 13km for the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VA-111_Shkval VA-11 Shkval]], vs 38km for the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ADCAP ADCAP]].
* GenderBlenderName:
** ''Takao'', ''Kongou'', ''Musashi'', etc. are not normally used as girls' first names, as the characters are named after historical ships which are themselves named after locations across Japan.
** The RealLife battleship ''Bismarck'' had always been explicitly referred to as a 'he' by its commander Capt. Ernst Lindemann and the Kriegsmarine. It still has twin girls as Mental Models.
** HandWaved also in that the Mental Models explain this has to do with the fact that humanity almost always treat ships as feminine, and using female pronouns when referring to them.
* GodzillaThreshold: Humanity has reached such a desperate point that they're willing to try anything in an attempt to fight off the Fog ships. Japan in particular has evidently suspended some human rights in order to relocate or just abandon certain parts of its population and later engineered select ArtificialHumans to handle such decisions in the future.
* GravityMaster: Given the feats displayed by Haruna without the assistance of her ship, all Fog mental Models are probably this as standard. It also combines with BarrierWarrior and VoluntaryShapeshifting.
* {{Hammerspace}}: Played with on the Fog Fleet ships. It's, for the most part, averted, and justified in that while they look like WWII-era ships, that is merely on the outside. With no need to concern themselves with crews, the ships can devote more space to armament, munitions, and power supply.[[note]]This is shown in flashback scenes when ''I-401'' Iona first awoke to become Gunzou's ship, the bridge and engine room were much more sparse than it is during the series proper[[/note]] Other aspects of the ships' armament are explained as the ships using [[{{Nanomachines}} Nanomaterials]] to alter themselves or their armaments on the fly[[note]]The main batteries can convert between a solid shell mode for classic-style cannon bombardment, and a high energy laser/beam by popping open the barrel and turret armor. Use of Gravity Canon modes, often shows the ship popping open to create a WaveMotionTuningFork with the hull. Though Iona's an exception, as her's is basically a giant turbine stored in the bow of the ship.[[/note]] That said, their solid munitions play this straight, with the surface ships simply popping open more missile tubes as needed. Ammunition storage is only mentioned when needed for drama for the most part.
* HumanityIsInfectious: More or less the main Aesop of the series. Whether a Fog vessel decides to aid the Blue Steel crew or antagonize them, they will inevitably GrowBeyondTheirProgramming and no longer follow the Admiralty Code's directives - unless they flat out refuse to understand, in which case they wouldn't develop a personality to begin with, and so can be fought without much sympathy.
* HumansAreSpecial mixed with [[MagnificentBastard Bastards]]: [[spoiler:Yamato]] is keenly aware the only reason the Fleet of Fog is dominating the world's oceans is because of their GameBreaker technology and the moment humanity catches up, which ''will'' eventually happen, human tactics and strategy will mean the Fleet of Fog is ''screwed.''
* ImagineSpot: In chapter 9 of the manga, Takao reads a children's book about sea captains. The result is... Interesting.
* ImpactSilhouette: Makie first meets Haruna after the latter has blown a human-shaped hole through a warehouse wall.
* InterserviceRivalry:
** Due to the nature of the conflict with the Fleet of Fog, the Japanese Army has largely been ignored in favor of the Navy, much to their chagrin. This is the primary motivating factor why they've aligned with Kita, since they're desperate to win some recognition. At one point, a firefight nearly breaks out between [=Navy SEALs=] and Army soldiers.
** Even the Fog have this, as certain ships of the Oriental and European[[note]]i.e. Pacific and Atlantic[[/note]] fleets hold subtle but distinct animosity toward each other. The best example of this is shown in recent chapters, [[spoiler:where ''I-402'', seemingly on orders from ''Yamato'', actively supported both ''Takao'' and ''I-401'' in fighting ''U-2501''. And before that, there were assorted scenes of Oriental ships not being keen on ''U-2501'''s presence in the Pacific, nor Shouzou Chihaya holding command of the European Fleet in general.]]
** Even within the Japanese government. [[spoiler:When the Japanese government learns Haruna is spotted at Makie Osakabe's home, Central Prime Minister Mitsumine gives the Army the green light to assassinate Makie to prevent the Vibration Torpedo's plans being revealed to the Fleet of Fog. However, Makie is the Northern Prime Minister Makoto Osakabe's younger sister, and he sends cyborg commandos to help Haruna and rescue Makie.]] Not to mention a considerable number of disputes as to what to do with Blue Steel and Iona.
* IronicEcho: Gunzou uses one in his dinner conversation with Ryokan Kita.
* IsThisWhatAngerFeelsLike: A recurring theme as the Mental Models gain experience, especially those who have faced [[spoiler: and lost to]] humans.
* LaserSight: Averted. The snipers are using infrared beams that are invisible to the human eye. This makes a lot more sense than optical lasers.
* MacGuffin: The series actually has two: The vibration torpedo which must be smuggled to the United States to be mass-produced, and the "Admiralty Code" that the Fleet of Fog is looking for.
** LivingMacGuffin: Given how the Admiralty Code has been depicted as having a Mental Model of its own (a young woman wearing an old-style Apollo astronaut's rig), it could be seen as this as well. [[spoiler:She reveals her name as Gretel Hexe Andvari, who implies that she is not a Mental Model but something else.]]
* MacrossMissileMassacre:
** One of the tactics used by Takao, who puts up an impressive volume of fire for a mere heavy cruiser. She's later on the receiving end when approaching Iwo Jima.
** Ships of the Fleet of Fog only ''look'' like they're from UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. Being made of nanomaterials means they can reconfigure portions of themselves to carry and launch truly absurd numbers of missiles and torpedoes. It's actually quite rare that a Fog ship launches any ''less'' than two dozen missiles or torpedoes at a time.
* MuggingTheMonster: A Mental Model without her battleship. [[spoiler:An entire army division sent to capture her.]] What could possibly go wrong? [[spoiler: The mental model on itself was not quite capable to defeat the army on it own, but attacking a child who is now the battleship's friend meant someone who DOES have a ship WILL open fire.]]
* {{Nanomachines}}: Also commonly referred to as "nanomaterial", the Fleet of Fog is made entirely of the stuff and it's the source of all the GameBreaker technology they use. Where it all comes from is one of the many mysteries surrounding the Fog, but samples were found in seawater as early as the 1920s according to the [[AllThereInTheManual supplementary material]].
* NavalBlockade: The entire world is under one, as very few ships can survive against a Fleet of Fog warship on the open sea. This has caused some nations that had previously been dependent on food imports coming in by sea to slowly starve. At one point, a Fleet of Fog faction takes advantage of this by bribing the Japanese government with 10,000 tons of fresh seafood.
* NecessaryDrawback: A Mental Model can do most of the work that a crew would all by itself, which is why the I-401 is able to function with a crew roughly 5% of the size of her RL counterpart. But on the other side of the equation, maintaining a Mental Model takes up a great deal of processing power, especially for a small ship like a submarine. The U-2501 has significantly greater performance than the I-401 does, specifically because her captain put a full crew on the ship and prohibited the ship from creating a Mental Model.
* NeverFoundTheBody: Light Cruiser Nagara was sunk in Chapter 1, sixty-plus chapters later the Fog is ''still'' trying to find out where her core went.
* NighInvulnerable: Fleet of Fog ships are almost impossible to damage because they [[NoSell suck the energy of incoming attacks]] into a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klein_bottle "Klein Field"]]. The Klein Field can be collapsed if it's pumped full of enough energy, but that takes an incredible amount, and the ships can release energy from the bottle at will. Even without the Klein Field, nanomaterial armor is ''very'' hard to crack short of corrosive torpedoes.
* NobodyCanDie: Despite all the sinking Fog vessels, none of the Mental Models has actually died - they just lose the ability to create their ship form until resupplied with sufficient nanomaterial. At worst, their core has been stuck underwater until some other Mental Model retrieved it.
* NoodleIncident:
** Everybody talks about how the I-401 and its crew sunk the Hyuuga, but we've never actually seen the battle nor have we been given an accurate summary of events.
** The fire at Facility No.4 of the naval academy Gunzo went to. The only thing sure is that Kotono is [[NeverFoundTheBody supposed to have died there.]] Whatever happened there is important enough that by the end of act 1 ''3'' groups of Mental Models joined the Academy in an attempt to discover what exactly happened while at the same time interfering with the other groups' efforts to do the same. Chapter 100 gives a brief rundown on how the Fire happened and Chapter 116 reveals what started the fire.
* OddlySmallOrganization: Thanks to Iona handling most of the ship's operations mentally, the I-401 can run with a crew of six people, ''including'' Iona.
* OhCrap:
** Lawrence, Makie's butler, has this reaction [[spoiler:when he learns that the friend Makie brought home is Haruna's mental model]].
** Iona has data on all the ships belonging to the Oriental Fleet, of which she is a former member. Her admission that she has ''no'' data about U-2501 provokes one of these from her crew.
* {{Ojou}}:
** Yamato gives off this vibe, what with her dress and acting like a YamatoNadeshiko.
** As does [[spoiler:Kotono Amaha, who is effectively Yamato's human twin and may or may not still be alive.]]
** Kongou also has shades of this, which is accentuated in the anime.
* OntologicalMystery: Where did the Fog come from, why do they take on the forms of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII warships, and why were they ordered to blockade the seas in the first place? They don't know either. ''If'' the missing "Admiralty Code" can be found, answers ''might'' be forthcoming, but the Fleet of Fog is already starting to fracture on the issue of if they even want to know.
* OrcusOnHisThrone: The Fleet of Fog is shown to be perfectly capable of wiping out literally every coastal city on the planet (which basically means all of Japan). However, they're mostly content with just sitting back and maintaining the global blockade. Revealed by Yamato later on to be one of the orders given to the Fog Fleet by the Admiralty Code. Many among the Fog are now wondering ''why'' this is so.
* OutsideGenreFoe: The Fleet of Fog in a nutshell. ''Nobody'' saw them coming and it's taken nearly twenty years to come up with anything close to countering them. Given the nature of their nanomachine construction, they specifically count as a TechnologicallyAdvancedFoe.
* PaintingTheFourthWall : In chapter 18 Haruna gives Makie a full-body scan. Highlights include her brain, hands, hair, and SpeechBubbles.
* PhlebotinumAnalogy: The explanation of how the Klein Field works [[spoiler:as First Mate Sou was doing right before he was kidnapped]].
* ThePiratesWhoDontDoAnything: Because aircraft are too small to mount Klein Fields or other GameBreaker tech, air defense is the one area where humanity can actually defeat the Fleet of Fog. As a result, aircraft carriers (or Assault and Suppression Vessels as they are called by the Fog) like Zuikaku have lost most or all of their planes and are stuck being ''really bored''. Zuikaku herself passes the time by fishing and cooking what she catches.
** This is averted when [[spoiler:Shinano debuts the Assault and Suppression Vessel's new capabilities. She demonstrates the ability to create a powerful Klien Field using the flight deck, induce massive tidal changes via underwater gravitational buoys to prevent ships from maneuvering and lasers that are reflected off hovering mirrors to strike enemy ships from multiple angles.]]
* PreemptiveShutUp: Used by Captain Komaki after when, in a panic, he tried to ask out Maruri -- who is half of his age -- on a "date" in front of his crew.
* PrettyInMink: Musashi, in her guise as a Russian Snow Girl.
* PrettyLittleHeadshots: Completely averted. Objects, humans, [[spoiler: human decoys made of nanomaterial]] hit with high-velocity bullets practically [[PinkMist ''explode'' into pink mist]].
* PuttingOnTheReich: Zordan dresses in the traditional style of a U-boat captain, i.e. BadassLongcoat and CommissarCap. When not wearing those items, he wears a jacket that's fashioned off the flag of Denmark.
* RealityIsUnrealistic:
** One of the more common human weapons is a rocket-propelled torpedo. Such weapons have been in service since 1998.
** ''Hakugei III'' uses a rocket engine to achieve supercavitation. This is [[http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Northrop_Grumman_Team_Selected_To_Evaluate_Supercavitation_Based_Underwater_Naval_Transport_999.html currently under research]] by [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DARPA DARPA]].
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure:
** Both Kamikage and the Prime Minister are willing to help the I-401 in any way they can, especially when a large portion of the Japanese government is out to try and thwart their plans. [[spoiler:Not that it stops Kamikage from making deals with the Fleet of Fog but even that is for helping Japan than any turncoat agenda.]]
** Makoto Osakabe, the Prime Minister of Hokkaido, is perfectly willing to let Haruna, Kirishima, and Maya be, though he does admit that he will eventually have to put on a token amount of resistance to save face once they are ready to leave port.
* TheReveal: [[spoiler:Yamato's]] Mental Models are the spitting image of [[spoiler:Kotono Amaha, one of Gunzou Chihaya's supposedly dead ChildhoodFriends and likely love interest]]. Made all the more effective by introducing [[spoiler: Yamato]] first and leaving [[spoiler: Kotono's]] appearance vague until the reveal in Chapter 23.
** Chapter 116 finally sheds some light on the matter. [[spoiler:Yamato explains to the three Japanese Prime Ministers that she started the Facility No. 4 fire when she went to retrieve Kotono Amaha to turn her into the Fog's superordinate system in the 100-year absence of the Admiralty Code. She created her own Mental Model based on Kotono's physical appearance to better communicate her intent to Kotono before disseminating the Mental Model program to the rest of the Fog (which might explain why all the Mental Models are depicted as female). Kotono herself willingly went along with Yamato and has aided the Fog since. Why she was chosen and whether or not she is still human remain to be seen.]]
* RightHandVersusLeftHand:
** On one side in the Japanese government is Assistant Secretary Ryuujirou Kamikage who wants to use the I-401 to transport their most successful man-made weapon that is capable of destroying a Fleet of Fog ship to the United States, so it can be mass produces, and has the support of the Japanese Navy and the local US forces. On the other side is the powerful Tycoon and top candidate for Prime Minister Ryoukan Kita, who wants the I-401 returned back to the Japanese Government so they can reverse engineer it and make their own Fleet of Fog ships, and who has strong contacts within the Japanese Army.
** At one point, an Army company under Kita's influence seizes the I-401's dock and arrests the crew; the Navy [=SEALs=] came ''very'' close to starting a firefight and rescuing the crew by force before both sides were ordered to stand down.
** In another instance, Japanese Army troops tried to assassinate Makie to prevent her and the vibration torpedo plans from falling into the Fleet of Fog. However, Makie is the younger sister of Hokkaido's Prime Minister Makoto Osakabe who sent cyborg commandoes to extract her.
* RobotMaid:
** Several run the Osakabe mansion and are realistic enough that they aren't revealed as such for several chapters.
** Saori Chihaya's maid is another robot who's [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots personality has apparently broadened considerably]] since Takao started hanging out with her.
** Battlecruiser Repulse's Mental Model is an English maid. She takes the maid persona so far that she actually repairs her battle damage by ''sweeping'' it with brooms.
** Vampire's Mental Model follows the same theme as her flagship, except in a child-sized short skirt version. This is coupled with some appropriate vampire themes, namely CuteLittleFangs and a bat-shaped pendent on her uniform collar. Overall she looks like something out of a Creator/TimBurton movie.
* RotatingProtagonist: The character focus switches so much that it's hard to seriously believe that Gunzou and the crew of Iona are the heroes here. Several Fog ships have shown more obvious character development.
* RubberFace: Iona to Iori. Iori to Kyosuke, [[ButtMonkey poor guy]].
* SceneryPorn: Ark Performance shows what drawing ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundam Gundam]]'' manga for years does for skill at drawing mecha and landscapes. Higher resolution versions of the manga are recommended to see just how much detail they put into everything.
* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney: Invoked by Makie when a cab driver attempts to protest the apparent little girl trying to catch his cab by herself. His reaction to her SPECIAL GOLD CASH CARD is priceless.
* ShoutOut: All of the Fleet of Fog ships are replicas of real-life WWII era warships, all part of the OntologicalMystery surrounding their origin.
* ShowWithinAShow: [[MagicalGirl Hisonic Miku-chan]], an anime popular with Makie Osakabe, Kyouhei, and Iona.
* SingleMindedTwins: Some of the more powerful fast battleships (that is to say, Yamato, Nagato, Mutsu, and Bismarck), are shown to have ''two'' mental models. In most cases, this trope applies to those ships.
** {{Averted}} with Yamato, whose personality seems split between her usual mental model and [[spoiler:Kotono Amaha]].
** Also {{Averted}} with Yamato's sister ship, Musashi, for whom we have only seen one of her mental models for as-yet unclear reasons.[[note]]Though there are some slight implications that [[spoiler:the version of Shouzou Chihaya we see commanding Musashi may be her other mental model]].[[/note]]
* SpaceshipGirl: Fleet of Fog ships of heavy cruiser class and up (including the I-400 class submarines) can have a "Mental Model", which represents the AI controlling the ship. Unusually for this trope, Mental Models weren't intended to interact with a crew, but rather to help the ships to develop more [[WeakButSkilled human-like tactics and strategies]] through the imitation of human limitations and perspectives. The largest battleships with greater computation capabilities (i.e. Yamato, Nagato, Bismarck) have two Mental Models, but only the former display distinct personalities between her two Mental Models while the latter two ships do not. Iona and Takao can also create [[FunSize miniature versions of themselves]] who have some measure of autonomy and can be used for shipboard tasks (or just be adorable).
** The actual Union Core that houses the Mental Model for each ship is actually quite small: Kirishima survives her destruction by throwing her own core to Haruna; Makie is able to pocket it later quite easily. Cores devoid of nanomaterials to interface with are completely helpless: Kirishima spent some time in Haruna and Makie's pockets; Haguro's core was swallowed by a shark until salvaged by Ashigara.
* SpiderTank: The Japanese army has a four-legged type called a "Rock Crab". They'd probably be quite formidable if they weren't fighting a ''[[MamaBear very angry]]'' Haruna [[spoiler: and Chihaya, and [[{{Macross Missile Massacre}} Iona]] as well]].
* StalkerWithACrush: Takao is pretty quickly turning into this for [[spoiler:Gunzou]].
* SuperweaponSurprise: The Flagship-class equipment that the Fog store in Low-Earth Orbit. Other than opening up questions on Fog space-based facilities, their origins are a mystery even to the Fog.
* TeleportersAndTransporters: The Flagship-class equipment used by Kongou allows her to instantly transport subordinate vessels to her location through the use of the quantum communications network. The absurd power requirements to do so are acknowledged, as the system only teleports the ships' core (about the size of an apple) and then rebuilds their whole body via a 3-D printer floating dock supplied with nanomaterial stocks. Meanwhile, the ship bodies left behind are broken down for salvage by the remaining Fog vessels.
* TransformingMecha: The Fog Fleet ships are all replicas of WWII warships, but only on the outside--[[spoiler:under that facade are the advanced weaponry that they can rearrange on the fly]].
* TronLines: Fog ships tend to be covered in glowing patterns like tattoos. These patterns are replicated on their Mental Models when using their more exotic abilities.
* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: The first battles with the Fleet of Fog are in 2038. The Great Naval Battle which almost entirely wiped out the world's navies happens the year after. The actual series begins in 2056.
* {{Unobtainium}}: Thanatonium [[spoiler:used for Fog Fleet corrosive torpedo/missile warheads]].
* UnskilledButStrong: The fleet of Fog is a good example of this. Their GameBreaker technology is the source of their victory over humanity -- if humans had it, they would have won through superior tactics. Mental Models were created to try and catch up and they are very fast learners. Fog ships have used increasingly more creative and effective tactics as the series has progressed, but often have easily-exploited flaws or counters (this comes to bite Takao and Kongou in the ass in their respective engagements with Gunzou).
* VillainousRescue: Haruna and Kirishima's attack on Yokosuka provides a very convenient excuse for Gunzou to escape from Ryokan Kita's attempts to steal I-401 away from him.
* WalkDontSwim: The Mental Models of the Fog ships are fully capable of walking on the bottom of the ocean if they want to.
** Zuikaku quite regularly walks on the seafloor to get between her ship and the shore.
** When Ashigara goes to look for a sunken ship, she takes a stroll in the depths.
* WaveMotionGun: While the Fleet of Fog, on the whole, has dramatically superior armaments and shielding to the human fleets, Heavy Cruisers and larger have access to Super-Heavy Cannons that are exactly this. Battleship-class vessels come equipped with 'Super Gravity Cannons', which despite the name fill the trope nicely since the weapon tends to ''bend space around it and its firing path''.
* WhamEpisode: Quite a few happen over the course of the story, often leaving more questions than answers.
** The first act of the story concludes with a load of this. [[spoiler:Kongou has been sunk by I-401 using torpedo bombers and ''Hakugei III'' can finally head to America. But 2nd Fleet has been reorganized under Hyuuga, who had been captured by Yukikaze alongside Hiei's core, taken to Yamato and given a rebuilt hull, and 1st Fleet under Nagato remains a concern to the vibration torpedo delivery mission. Gunzou was injured and subsequently went missing during the battle and was later revealed to be captured by the Fog and placed in their secret SpaceElevator facility to recover, a facility that is overseen by Choukai, Takao's younger sister and the first Heavy Cruiser that he and Iona sank. Finally, major events have been happening in Japan while the fight was underway, particularly at the Maritime Academy with multiple Mental Models trying to unravel or hide the Facility No. 4 Incident, including Yamato herself, with her other identity Kotono Amaha saying that she hoped Gunzou would reprimand her for what she would do next, hinting that they would meet each other in future.]]
** [[spoiler:After all the teasing and hints, Chapter 116 finally reveals what started the Facility No. 4 Fire. It was ''Yamato herself'' who accidentally set fire to the Facility when she went to retrieve Kotono Amaha to be the Fog's new superordinate program, ostensibly to replace the Admiralty Code. As for where the Mental Models come from, it was Yamato's attempt to communicate with Kotono by copying her physical appearance, a process that was disseminated to the rest of the Fog which allowed their AIs to eventually become self-aware. For her part, Kotono willingly went along with Yamato, implying that she survived the fire, and has been helping the Fog for the past two years. Meanwhile, Yamato and Kotono had been working to revive the casualties of the Fire as a token of goodwill to Japan. The chapter ends with Makoto demanding to know if Kotono is still human and the Admiralty Code (named Gretel Hexe Andvari) making contact with the Izumo household in Japan.]]
** [[spoiler:Chapter 121 brings us several revelations. Gretel's visit to the Izumo household reveals that Gunzou's mother is Izumo's descendant and, by extension, Gunzou himself. Meanwhile, in the Straits of Gibraltar, Bismarck and a girl called Lord Archer reveal that the former was something else before being a battleship while the latter is about 100 years old and the UK's best-kept secret, was related to Gretel and she would somehow rectify Kotono's sin of giving individuality and humanity to the Fog AIs. Finally, Gretel appears before everyone within Facility No. 4 declaring that she will deliver her verdict upon the entire world as the Admiralty Code. The subsequent chapter reveals that she wants humans and the Fog to war with each other.]]
* WhatMeasureIsANonHuman: Gunzou's acceptance of Iona and other Mental Models as people form the core of his main strategy for dealing with the Fleet of Fog as a whole: if a Mental Model allows a Fog ship to think like a human, they can be ''negotiated with''. His bluffing Takao into surrendering was a trial run of his theory. Ultimately he hopes humanity and the Fog can reach a negotiated cease-fire (using the Vibration Torpedo as a bargaining chip so humanity can negotiate from a position of relative parity), a concept which is starting to spread.
* YouAreNumberSix: ''I-401'' is the ship's proper designation, though her mental model is called Iona by her friends/crew. [[spoiler:Later on, we meet her sister ships I-400 and I-402, who look exactly like her, though dressed differently.]] Also there's I-501, who was spotting for Takao, and U-2501 who's from the Atlantic Fleet.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes unique to Ars Nova]]

* AdaptationalVillainy:
** Assistant Secretary Kamikage is ''far'' more ruthless in Ars Nova, personally ordering the assassination of Makie just to prevent the Fog from getting the secrets of the torpedo she created. [[spoiler:Later it is revealed it was part of Kamikage's plan to have the I-401 crew to rescue and bring Makie with them.]]
** Maya was never shown to have fought human-aligned forces in the manga (instead playing chaperone to both Haruna and Kirishima), however the anime has her join Kongou against her sister ship Takao and her allies in the Blue Fleet.
** As the left and right hands of Yamato, I-400 and I-402 were never in opposition to Iona, and since they were loyal to Yamato, didn't even pay lip service to the Admiralty Code. In Ars Nova however, they seem to be unthinking drones ''loyal to'' the Admiralty Code, even more than Kongou... to the point that they [[spoiler:attack Iona just as she escapes Kongou, detain Kongou due to her hate making her deviate from Admiralty Code, reveal Maya to be a fake Mental Model...]].
* AdaptedOut: The fate so far of Kotono Amaha, Lawrence, the ''Hakugei III'' and her crew, the mini Mental Models...
* AllCGICartoon: Of course.
* AmbiguousSituation: TheStinger of the second movie. [[spoiler:After laying flowers at his parents' grave, Gunzou turns around to face the camera and welcomes someone back. Who exactly he is talking to is never shown, though a Not Quite Dead Iona seems likely.]]
* BatmanGambit: When escaping from Iwo Jima, Kongou becomes obsessed with killing Gunzou, believing that he's the reason why several of the Fog ships formerly allied with her have done a HeelFaceTurn. While Iona attempts to escape through a carefully plotted route along an minefield, Kongou suffers massive damage pursuing Iona and Gunzou, while barely paying any attention to Takao's ship. [[spoiler:After a successful hack by Hyuuga, she manages to divert Kongou's second attack from hitting Iona, and only then does Takao tell her former boss that the vibration torpedo was actually aboard her ship, and Iona was actually a decoy. Unfortunately however, Iona is attacked by I-400 and I-402 shortly after they escape from Kongou.]]
* BeachEpisode: Part of the 7th and 8th episode.
* {{BFS}}: Kongou uses one on Iona in episodes 8 and 12.
* BigDamnHeroes:
** In the second movie, as Gunzou and co. try to cross the Bering Strait, they get surrounded by Hiei, the Myoukou sisters and a lot of mook Nagara-class. [[spoiler:Then Hyuuga and Takao, Haruna, Kirishima and Makie and lastly Kongou all show up to stall Hiei so Gunzou can get past.]]
%%** Iona, of all people.
* BodyHorror: By Fleet of Fog standard, anyway. [[spoiler:Kongou devours a huge number of Fog ships to become [[ThatsNoMoon something that can't be called a ship]], a serious transgression against Admiralty Code. Ironically, this is due to her obsession to destroy Iona which she sees as a stray]].
* BroadStrokes: The anime isn't really following the manga faithfully, to say the least.
* BrokenRecord: [[spoiler:Maya spouts off repeated lines after TheReveal in episode 10.]]
* BroughtDownToNormal: In the second movie, [[spoiler:after encountering Musashi in Vladivostok, Iona's Klein Field and weapons are locked out. This gets reversed shortly before the final battle.]]
* CainAndAbel: The second movie reveals that [[spoiler:Musashi had sunk Yamato some time ago.]]
* CelShading: The anime takes a mild degree of this in its CG, especially for the human characters.
* ChekhovsClassroom:
** In episode 4, as Haruna and Kirishima deliver a CurbStompBattle to some human ships, the former overhears one man over the radio talking about not wanting to die and to be saved. She logs that definition in for future reference. In a bit of {{Irony}}, when I-401 delivers a CurbStompBattle to both of them at the end of the episode, right before she's hit, Haruna also mentions not wanting to die much in the same way the unnamed sailor she heard earlier.
** In episode 7, Hyuuga tells Takao that humans will sometimes perform a HeroicSacrifice for the greater good, rather than think only about themselves. So when Takao searches for and finds Iona's core inside of Gunzou's escape pod in episode 10, she sacrifices her nanomaterials in order to allow Iona to reconstruct herself and allow Gunzou to survive.
* CompositeCharacter:
** The most apparent instances so far are Yamato's lines and role being given to Kongou, and [[spoiler:Kamikage takes the role of the perpetrator of the attack on Osakabe household instead of Kita (though in the manga Kita wasn't the one who initiated it, he only takes the blame)]].
** Makie also gains her older brother Makoto's dependency on special medications to be able to digest the food she eats. Lastly, while this is dubious (as her full capabilities has yet to be disclosed), Iona in ''Ars Nova'' also gained the 'overdrive mode' employed by Hakugei in the manga.
** The ''Ars Nova DC'' movie gives Hiei U-2501's Mirror Ring system, and sets up Musashi to take Kongou's place in the Student Council battle from the manga.
* ConservationOfNinjutsu: In episode 11, Gunzou is able to wipe out well over 20 Fog ships with one sweeping attack. Contrast that to the earlier battles where the humans on I-401 often had trouble against just one or two Fog ships.
* CooldownHug: [[spoiler:Iona gives one to a crying Kongou in episode 12 after the former manages to breach the barriers put up by the latter.]]
* CrapsackWorld: Humanity is even worse off in the anime than the source material: in the manga radio communications still work and some satellites remain in orbit to relay messages around the globe, America can even send sporadic aid via rocket; in ''Ars Nova'' the Fleet of Fog's grip is even tighter and is jamming all communications as well. Gunzou and crew are embarking on their trans-Pacific journey without being sure America is even waiting for them.
* CreativeSterility: The Fog have a bad case of this. Probably an EnforcedTrope via the Admiralty Code. They are WWII-era battleships because they are and look female because most ships are considered feminine. Averting this is considered a very bad thing, though Mental Models were an attempt to alleviate this in the case of tactics.
%%* CreditsGag[=/=]EvolvingCredits: Not always, but the 7th episode has them.
* CurbStompBattle:
** Episode 11 opens with ''[[MidSeasonUpgrade Ars Nova]]'' versus twenty-plus Nagara-class cruisers. The battle lasted probably a minute at best.
** Episode 12 opens with another curbstomp[[spoiler:, this time by Kongou wiping out the American Fogship forces]].
* DeadAllAlong:
** In the movies, Gunzou and co. try to reach the main Fog fleet to [[spoiler:negotiate with Yamato. It turns out that Yamato was sunk by Musashi a long time ago.]]
** This also applies to [[spoiler:Shouzou, who was fatally wounded by his comrades for trying to negotiate with the Fog. The Shouzou seen by Musashi's side is an imitation made out of nanomaterial that has no will of his own.]]
* DeathByAdaptation: [[spoiler:Maya, as it turned out, never was alive to begin with by Mental Model standards, and I-400 and I-402 are sunk in battle with Ars Nova I-401. To a lesser extent, this happened to Saori and Shouzou Chihaya (except not really, except really really) as they died in the Facility No.4 fire. The second movie has Yamato sunk by Musashi in the backstory. Iona also sacrifices her sense of self to manifest Yamato's leftover memories for the final battle.]]
* DeathOfPersonality: In the second movie, [[spoiler:Iona learns that she's a backup for Yamato and fears that Yamato's mind will overwhelm her own. Kongou reassures her that even if she loses her own identity, she will live on in her heart and memories.]]
* DespairEventHorizon: [[spoiler:Kongou is driven to one after TheReveal that she was seen as increasingly unstable, and especially that Maya was a spy for I-400 and I-402. After she manages to free herself, she combines with Maya's ship, and fires on her own allies in her zeal to kill Iona and Gunzou.]]
* DevourTheDragon: [[spoiler:What Kongou does to Maya]].
* DoItYourselfThemeTune: The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrwoPgYNoUY ending]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2HaHwhIb70 themes]] and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0yGTW30zo0 some other songs for the anime]] are performed by Trident, an idol-type seiyuu unit created for the show, consisting of Creator/MaiFuchigami (Iona), Creator/ManamiNumakura (Takao), and Hibiku Yamamura (Haruna).
* EarnYourHappyEnding: [[spoiler:In episode 12, knowing they would lose in a face to face battle with Kongou, Iona instead suggests sending her core directly onto Kongou's ship, where she could attempt to connect directly. While risky, Gunzou doesn't have any other options, and Kongou doesn't make it easy for Iona either once the latter reaches the former's ship.]]
* EleventhHourSuperpower: In the second movie, [[spoiler:Iona absorbs the nanomaterial from Yamato's wreck and takes on the latter's form and abilities in time for the final battle against Musashi.]]
* EyelidPullTaunt: Hyuuga does this to Kongou (by popping up little digital faces in Kongou's HUD) in episode 9 after successfully hacking her to cause her attack on Iona to miss.
* FacelessGoons: The Japanese Army troops who assault the Osakabe mansion.
* FashionableAsymmetry: Kirishima's outfit in the anime, taken from what she wore on one of the compilation volume covers. She never wore it in the actual manga, and had something far more conservative on instead.
* FingerInABarrel: Not exactly a finger, but when the combined Super Gravity Cannon of Haruna and Kirishima is just about to fire, Gunzou and his crew manage to slip a singular torpedo through the Klein Field opening needed to fire it, straight into the singularity. The resulting blast annihilates both ships.
* FusionDance: While some of the combinations the Fog ships can do amounts to CombiningMecha, Takao merges completely with the I-401 (while retaining her core and processing power), and Kongou merges with Maya and eight Nagara-class cruisers to form a [[spoiler:[[Franchise/StarWars Death Star]]-like zeppelin.]]
* GeckoEnding: The final episode of Ars Nova amounts to this. Not only was the Vibration Torpedo, its blueprints, and its ''creator'' delivered safely to the United States, everyone is presumed to live their lives peacefully from that point on, with even Takao's Mental Model restored. Even Kongou seems to be at peace with herself. '''None of this happens in the manga.'''
* TheGlomp: [[spoiler:Takao does this to Gunzou after Hyuuga restores her mental model in episode 12. Her impact knocks him to the ground.]]
* GratuitousEnglish: The opening title has both English and Japanese lyrics, and the English words are easily understandable to a native speaker.
* GratuitousFrench: Episode three takes us to a high-class eatery in Yokosuka dubbed "''Cest ''[sic]'' un restaurant sur une colline''" (literally "this is a restaurant on a hill").
* HappyEndingOverride: The final act of the first Ars Nova movie. [[spoiler:After the Americans successfully use a vibration warhead to destroy a Fog warship, Iona's crew use a device to disable the rest, in the hope of preventing mankind from wiping the Fog out. As one might expect, this makes them wanted criminals. They, along with Takao, Haruna, Makie, and Kirishima, have to leave the relative safety of the US West Coast... which just drops them straight into an encounter with Hiei and her escorts. And things go FromBadToWorse from there.]]
* HeroicSacrifice:
** [[spoiler:Takao uses her own nanomaterials to repair a heavily damaged and sunk Iona]] in [[WhamEpisode episode 10]], [[spoiler:but this comes at the cost of losing her ship and mental model; her core, however, remains very much intact. This is after she realizes Iona holds a greater place in Gunzou's heart than she ever would, but nevertheless proceeds to save both.]]
** In the second movie, [[spoiler:Iona decides that the only way to win against Musashi is to embrace Yamato's memories and personality, even though it almost certainly means Death Of Personality for herself.]]
* HeroicSecondWind: [[spoiler:Iona gains one after hearing Gunzou, and finding a newfound determination to save Kongou, despite being beaten badly and subdued at the time.]]
* IKnowYoureInThereSomewhereFight: [[spoiler:Iona uses this against Kongou in episode 12. Kongou attempts to fight this, but Iona finally breaches the barriers to reach out to her core.]]
* ImprovisedPlatform: Klein Fields can be manipulated to be used like this.
* {{Irony}}: Kongou's obsession with terminating Iona and her zeal for upholding the Admiralty Code... is considered to be in violation of the Admiralty Code.
* KilledOffForReal: The fate for some characters in the adaptation, specifically [[spoiler:''both'' Gunzou's parents. Except not really on the part of Gunzou's father. Except really really, as the second movie reveals]].
* LampshadeHanging: In the first movie, when Hiei starts lecturing Gunzou and co. in her self-styled student council president persona, Kyouhei says that the Fog have started speaking gibberish. The Myouko sisters also point out the oddness of wearing school uniforms.
* LaserSight: In episode 2, Iona surfaces the weapons-hot submarine outside the balcony, and laser pointers mark everyone who could contest their leave from an unproductive talks over dinner with Yokosuka army.
* LateArrivalSpoiler: The first movie openly lays out [[spoiler:Makie's true nature]], rather than building up to TheReveal as in the anime.
* LeftHanging: The second movie ends without explaining [[spoiler:exactly what the Admiralty Code is.]]
* LockedInAFreezer: [[spoiler:The plot for Episode 10. Gunzou and Iona are stuck on the ocean floor in a broken ship, the life support system gets progressively worse, and there's even frost at one point.]]
* MidSeasonUpgrade: [[spoiler:I-401 merges with Takao in episode 10. Kongou merges with Maya, turning herself into a ''Death Star''.]]
* {{Mooks}}: The poor, poor, Nagara-class ships seemed to be given this treatment in Ars Nova, especially in episode 11, where 22 of them are obliterated in one pass by the Ars Nova.
* MythologyGag: ''Salty Road'' hasn't been and probably won't be adapted, but the second movie gives a nod to it by having Takao put on the academy's uniform to infiltrate it and keep the uniform on for the rest of the film.
* NavalBlockade: What the Fog ships are doing to humanity. It's never made clear exactly what the motive for doing it is however, at least in the anime.
* NiceJobBreakingItHero:
** Iona attempts to draw Kongo into conversation, talking about fun as the Mental Models hang out on the beach. This causes Kongo to solidify her resolve to destroy them all.
--> '''Kongo:''' "We are weapons. Weapons have no need of fun."
** Also, her attempts to get Kongo to feel emotions and thus break away from the Admiralty Code backfire: Kongo remains determined to follow the Admiralty Code, despite the emotion she feels. What emotion is it? ''Hate.''
-->'''Kongo:''' Remember this... I hate you.
** This happens as part of the first movie's HappyEndingOverride. [[spoiler:After letting the Americans successfully destroy a Fog ship with the vibration warhead, Gunzou and co. activate a device that causes the AppliedPhlebotinum used in the vibration warheads to stop working... and find out after the fact that the rest of the Fog aren't the slightest bit deterred by the demonstration.]]
* NiceJobFixingItVillain: [[spoiler:Kongou curbstomping all those American Fogships sure helped the ''Ars Nova'' crew a lot in the end.]]
* NinjaPirateZombieRobot: [[spoiler:''Ars Nova'' is a Submarine Cruiser. The Kongou-Maya merge is... a little harder to define and strays to ThatsNoMoon territory.]]
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: Kongou towards Iona. She doesn't hold back at all in her attempts to kill the latter in episode 12.
* OhCrap: Iona gets this in Episode 9, when Kongo declares she hates her while pursuing her underwater.
* OminousLatinChanting: Mostly in [[https://soundcloud.com/diabolus-exnihilo/13-tempest this song]], but other background songs have shades of this trope.
* TheOnlyOneAllowedToDefeatYou: Kongou towards Iona, especially towards the end.
* PragmaticAdaptation: A whole lot of plot points are excised outright from the anime adaptation, likely due to the 12-episode constraint the show has to deal with. This includes but is not limited to: the survival and FaceHeelTurn of Gunzou's father, Gunzou's mother Saori and her later interaction with Takao, the destruction of Institute 4, ''everything'' related to Yamato, Lawrence and the Osakabe household... [[spoiler:The movies put Gunzou's father and Yamato back in. Sort of. It's complicated.]]
* ProperlyParanoid: Kongo in episode 8. Invited to a parley by Gunzou, she keeps her guard up, does not allow herself to form an emotional connection, doesn't eat or drink anything that's served to her, [[spoiler:and kept her Union Core on her foredeck and sent a decoy body to the parley, all to avoid being contaminated by Gunzou and Iona. Unfortunately for her, it didn't quite work.]]
* RedHerring: Partway through the second movie, [[spoiler:Takao helps Gunzou bring the unlock codes for the Vibration Torpedoes to Japan so that mankind can use them again. No human naval forces show up for subsequent battles, though the thumbdrive containing the codes is prominently shown in one of the ending scenes.]]
* RefusalOfTheCall: In the second movie, [[spoiler:Haruna and Kirishima are initially reluctant to come to Gunzou's aid when Hyuuga and Takao ask them for it, citing their need to protect Makie. Makie forces the issue by insisting on going along.]]
* ShoutOut:
** The music video for the opening song of ''Ars Nova'' has scenes shot in front of and aboard the JMSDF ship ''Kirishima''.
** In Episode 11, Kyouhei's reaction to seeing [[spoiler:Kongou]] is [[Franchise/StarWars "That's no battleship!"]]
* SparedByTheAdaptation: In the manga, the Osakabe mansion maids are robots who were killed fighting against the Japanese Army. In the anime, the maids are implied to be possibly human or mere domestic robots, and they surrender peacefully to the Army.
* StormOfBlades: Kongou uses this in conjunction with a {{BFS}} against Iona in episode 12.
* TalkingIsAFreeAction: Several of the Fog ships find time to talk to and have tea with each other, even while actively fighting or evading each other at the time, such as when Iona tries talking to Kongou while escaping her at Iwo Jima. {{Justified|Trope}} in that it takes place in what amounts to a chat room and they are AI constructs.
* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: Kongou sends 512 corrosive torpedos at I-401 in episode 12, while simultaneously using her WaveMotionGun on them. When Iona attempts to reach her ship, she also sends multiple torpedos to stop her, and uses a StormOfBlades after the former manages to make it to the ship.
* TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodSandwich:
** Gun-toting [[NoMrBondIExpectYouToDine army men gather the I-401 crew at a served dinner table]] for a talk with army higher-up in Episode 2. Crew members note luxury of the meal, yet only head of the table manages to sip some wine while arguing with Gunzou, before Yokosuka port gets attacked from the sea, prompting guests to leave.
** Haruna, Kirishima and Makie evacuate their seaside house in the ''Ars Nova DC'' compilation movie, leaving behind a note ("Don't seek us! bon apetit!") propped up against a large and delicious-looking sandwich for the troops sent to collect them.
* ThinkingUpPortals: In the second movie, [[spoiler:during the final battle with Musashi, Gunzou has the upgraded I-401 go through one of the portals in Musashi's Mirror Ring and emerge above Musashi.]]
* ThisIsADrill: In the second movie, [[spoiler:Hyuuga adds on a pair of giant drills to Takao's ship body. Takao is appropriately appalled.]]
* TitleDrop: Iona reveals early in episode 11 that the Takao-Iona fusion is indeed called ''Ars Nova''.
* ToWinWithoutFighting: Iona attempts this several times with Kongou, but fails each time...[[spoiler:until episode 12, when she successfully reaches Kongou, who was suffering from loneliness. She didn't want to kill her as she was forced to do with I-400 and I-402 earlier.]]
* TooDumbToLive: 400 and 402 shows shades of ArtificialStupidity towards the series' end. First, they detained Kongou ''aboard her own ship''. Second, they should be employing ambush tactics when going against ''Ars Nova''... instead, they attacked her head on ''knowing'' that ''Ars Nova'' has a whopping ''five'' cores on board.
* TrailersAlwaysLie: Contrary to the movie promotional material, Hiei and the Myouko sisters never appear onscreen at the same time, with the former's escorts being the light cruisers (and hence Mental Model-less) Natori and Yura.
* VillainousRescue: In episode 12, I-401 is getting close to the US, only to get confronted with the massive US Fog Fleet in front of her, and an overzealous Kongou with an upgraded ship/death star. [[spoiler:The latter then fires her WaveMotionGun, only to wipe out the entire Fog Fleet in front of Iona. Several of the characters wonder if Kongou deliberately missed, but when they ask, she states in a monotone voice that it's to avoid corrupting them the same way Iona seems to have corrupted her fleet.]]
* ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption: The attempted parley with Kongou only serves to convince Kongou to wipe Gunzou and his friends off the face of the planet. She continues to use this in her attempts to wipe them out, despite Iona's pleas and attempts to reach out.
* WhamEpisode:
** Episode 9 ends like this when [[spoiler:having barely escaped from Kongou, Iona and Gunzou are ambushed by I-400 and I-402 just when they were proverbially catching a breath.]]
** Episode 10 topped it by [[spoiler:Takao sacrificing herself to restore Iona back, revealing that Maya is a fake simulacrum made by I-400 and I-402, and detaining '''''Kongou''' of all people''.]]
* YouAreNotAlone: [[spoiler:Iona finally manages to reach Kongou, who up till this point had gone berserk and attempted to kill the former repeatedly. Once Iona manages to reach Kongou's core, she gives her a CooldownHug, and tells her she's not alone.]]

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