For YMMV tropes pertaining to the Capcom video game adaptation, known as ''U.N. Squadron'' in export markets, go [[YMMV/UNSquadron here]].
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* AlternativeCharacterInterpretation:
** In the manga and OVA, are the mercenaries tormented souls who became soldiers of fortune to escape their tragic pasts? Or are they hypocrites who are using their {{dark and troubled past}}s as cheap excuses to engage in warfare they ''know'' is immoral? Or was entering the Asran foreign legion more exciting that just getting therapy for their traumas?
** Is Shin a {{reluctant warrior}} with a heartbreaking backstory, or a {{jerkass}} who [[spoiler: abandoned his girlfriend and threw away his moral compass in the end?]]
** Is Ryoko a beautiful example of {{undying loyalty}} and love, an immature idealist who is {{loving a shadow}}, or a disturbed young woman with a pathological obsession with her absentee boyfriend?
** Is Taeko supporting Ryoko, or enabling her unhealthy behavior?
** Is Saki a patriot who is defending his beloved homeland from Abdael's predation, or an angry son who would sacrifice his people to lash out at his father? Is he an elitist who refuses to relinquish his power, or a realist who understands why his backwards country is not yet ready for democracy?
** Is Mickey naturally cheerful and charming, or [[StepfordSmiler is his friendliness a mask]] meant to hide his war trauma, cynicism, and regret?
* SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic: The OVA has a fantastic soundtrack, but [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vItH-gCV_Q "Good Bye Lonely Blue"]] really stands out. Being sung by MIQ is the icing on the cake. Plus, there's the ''epic'' intro song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SowhxMT3dzE "How Far to Paradise"]] by Derek Jackson.
** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBIrvgc15dk "Kanashimi no Destiny,"]] the ending theme for the first OVA. Words can't describe it.
** The finale to the OVA also gives us the melancholy [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESw_Rln9UyM Asphalt Wilderness]] and its TriumphantReprise [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CjSmF86XAes Trigger of Sorrow]] (although in context it's actually more of a DarkReprise).
** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XCckyEYkAB0 Sand of Illusion]].
** The anime's OP [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mV-RpV-HI7g Mission (FUGA).]]
** The anime's ED [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OhqmHK5YqA8 Senjo no Dance]]. (TV Version) [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_SOSfH5hEc Here's the English version]].
** Although most of the changed trance music in ''Area 88'''s release in English sucked, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mi2o4D_4K-s this music piece]] rocked. Although no one knows the name of this music piece and are still looking for the name of the music piece and/or the artist/s who created it.
* BigLippedAlligatorMoment:
** The debut of Saki's [[BodyguardBabes private soldiers]] in the manga, who vanish after the land carrier story arc.
** The first OVA's otherwise melodramatic [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBIrvgc15dk ending theme]] turns into what a commenter describes as "Indian circus music" at the end.
* DesignatedHero: The Area 88 mercenaries, who engage in war for pay. Despite being the protagonists, they're deliberately shown to be morally grey or even evil (i.e., [[SociopathicSoldier Nguyen]]).
* DoNotDoThisCoolThing: The lesson of the manga and OVA is that {{war is hell}} because it devastates countries and reduces soldiers to broken men. The problem is, the mercenaries look ''great'' as they're waging aerial battles.
* EsotericHappyEnding: At the end of the manga, [[spoiler:Soria, Rishar, and King Zak]] are left to transition Asran from a monarchy to a modern republic. While Asran's civil war is over and the people are jubilant, Asran's future is far from secure. First, the country's infrastructure and finances have been devastated by years of war. Second, the civil war has probably left Asran's people with deep resentments. Finally, the whole mess has been inherited by a [[spoiler:a {{wide eyed idealist}}, and an amnesiac who spent the previous two decades in cryogenic suspension]]. Suddenly, Asran's future doesn't look so bright ... Also at the end of the manga, [[spoiler:Ryoko reunites with Shin. Shin suffers from [[EasyAmnesia amnesia]] due to head trauma and does not remember his experiences at Area 88. On the surface, this appears to be a [[RelationshipResetButton happy romantic reunion]], until you realize that Ryoko will need to explain to Shin why he's in Asran and why years of his memory are missing. To boot, Shin will undoubtedly suffer from ''unconscious'' war trauma, even if he can't consciously recall his time at Area 88. Finally, Shin broke Ryoko's heart several times throughout the manga, suggesting that he has cold tendencies. In short, Ryoko has chosen to marry a deeply traumatized, amnesiac jerk, raising questions about what their life together will be life.]] Although considering [[spoiler:Ryoko's personality, Shin's not exactly getting a good deal either...]]
* HarsherInHindsight:
** In the manga, Farina's land carrier deploys drones against enemy aircraft, much to the confusion of Area 88's pilots. Decades later, drones play important and deadly roles in war.
** Civil war in a north African country? In which a family of autocrats deploys foreign mercenaries against opponents who want to oust them? The plot of ''Area 88'' bears a resemblance to the 2011 civil strife in Libya, down to alleged use of [[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-18321748 mercenaries]].
** In issue 163, in which Toudou shouts "Allah is on our side!" while brandishing a scimitar in jest, is bound to make people in the post-9/11 world cringe.
** Saki's female bodyguards were a lighthearted nod to Gaddafi's [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazonian_Guard Amazonian Guard.]] The arrangement seems a lot less sexy now that members of the real-life Amazonian Guard have accused Gaddafi and his sons of [[http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blogpost/post/gaddafis-female-bodyguards-say-they-were-raped-abused-by-the-libyan-leader/2011/08/29/gIQA8TOKnJ_blog.html sexually assaulting them.]]
** Saki's plan to use nuclear weapons in Asran's civil war is unsettling to readers in the modern era, when nuclear weapons in the hands of dubious states (North Korea, Iran, etc.) has caused the world much consternation.
* HeartwarmingInHindsight: The great [[{{Creator/ChikaoOhtsuka}} Chikao Ohtsuka]] voices [[BloodKnight Nguyen]] in the 1986 OVA. Shin's last words to him were how killing defenseless enemies "isn't worth the cost of ammo." Over two decades later, and we have [[spoiler:[[{{VideoGame/MetalGearSolid4GunsOfThePatriots}} Big Boss disarming Solid Snake and denouncing war altogether.]]]]
* HilariousInHindsight: In later manga that did not make it stateside, Mickey once put on an American colonial-era costume. Tea Party supporters would wear the same kind of costumes over two decades later.
* HollywoodPudgy: Greg is referred to as fat in the manga. He's stocky (but nowhere near obese) compared to the rest of the rail-thin cast.
* HoYay:
** In the TV series, Mickey can be seen reading ''Playgirl'' magazine. In the OVA, he and Shin wind up playing tourist while on special assignment and end up in a place that mostly attracts couples. In all versions, he is at Area 88 because he could not adjust to civilian life after his return from Vietnam and had to break off an engagement. [[HelloSailor Did we mention that he was in the Navy?]]
** Ho Yay between Shin and Mickey is even more pronounced in the manga. When Shin wakes up in the infirmary of Farina's land carrier and believes that Mickey has been shot down, he sheds enraged tears. When the two men are reunited in a holding cell aboard the carrier, the first thing they do is clasp each other's hands. Finally, when the two escape from the land carrier using stolen jets, they land in the Asran desert. Since Shin's feet were broken in a prior jet crash, Mickey offers to carry him, but Shin politely declines. [[TheNotLoveInterest They just don't write romance like that anymore...]]
** Mickey and Rishar's first encounter in the manga also brimmed with ho yay. When Rishar first enters the infirmary, Mickey is shirtless and lying in bed. Later, the two engage in conversation while Mickey is getting dressed. At several points, Rishar gazes at Mickey almost ''affectionately''.
** Mario comes off as a little flirty when he meets Hoover for the first time.
* {{Narm}}: Shin's enraged howl in the first OVA movie.
--> '''Shin:''' "''WHYYYYYYYYYYY?''"
--> (''Japanese'') "''NAZE-KAAAAAAAA?''"
--> (''ADV dub'') ''[[SayMyName "KANZAKIIIIIIII!"]]''
* NotSoCrazyAnymore: The manga treated the use of armed drones in combat as alarming and strange. In the 21st century, drones are now an accepted part of warfare.
* StrangledByTheRedString: Shin and Ryoko in the manga. In Ryoko's flashback, she falls madly in love with Shin with little explanation as to what attracted them to each other. She also comes across as obsessive over Shin throughout the manga.
* TooBleakStoppedCaring: The manga induces this in some readers. Much of the story takes place in Asran, a North African kingdom experiencing an unending civil war in which neither side gains a long-term advantage. Amoral arms dealers are happy to take advantage of the conflict. Many of Area 88's pilots are [[LegionOfLostSouls lost souls]] who have abandoned any hope of living a normal life (or, living to see next week). Shin never seems to make any headway in his attempt to earn enough money to break his mercenary contract, leaving him frustrated and melancholy. Shin's time at Area 88 leaves him so traumatized and maladjusted that [[spoiler:when he receives not one but two opportunities to resume a normal life, he returns to a life of combat both times.]] By the time the manga reaches its {{bittersweet ending}}, the audience likely has ending fatigue.
* TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodCharacter: Hoover was a promising character who received ample development, only to die off-screen early in the manga. Shintani may have realized this afterwards, since Hoover appears posthumously in Carlisle's flashback and Shin's dreams.
* UnintentionallyUnsympathetic:
** In the manga and OVA, Shin is intended to be sympathetic because his dreams were crushed after he was tricked into becoming a mercenary. However, he's not a particularly heroic or moral character. His self-absorption, {{wangst}}, and failure to contact Ryoko during his deployment make him unsympathetic in some fans' eyes. In the TV anime, he's so emotionally flat and withdrawn that it's difficult to sympathize with him.
** Mickey, a traumatized Vietnam veteran who struggled to adapt to civilian life, is intended to be sympathetic as well. However, he comes across as amoral, self-pitying, and self-absorbed, abandoning a fortunate life and the people who loved him. Instead of getting therapy, he chooses to fight in a bloody civil war that is tearing Asran apart. His anger issues and overbearing personality in the TV anime make him even less sympathetic.
* ValuesDissonance: The manga and OVA have ''not'' aged well due to the racism and sexism therein.
** In the manga and OVA, the mostly white mercenaries at Area 88 react poorly to the arrival of three African pilots, who are quickly revealed to be villains. When the three African "enforcers" corner Shin one night with the intent of killing him, all of the other (mostly white) mercenaries drive them off. A 1979 Japanese audience may not have blinked at those scenes, but to most modern viewers, the scenes are ''horribly'' racist.[[note]]This was not lost on Eclipse Comics' 1987 English adaptation of the Area 88 manga. They were concerned that for the majority of the manga's run the only Black characters to appear were villains. Kim would not yet appear during the American run of the series. In a letters page, the editor admits that they had considered redrawing the Enforcers to look more Caucasian, but ultimately decided against such whitewashing.[[/note]]
** There are also other examples of political incorrectness that come across as racism today. Mick exhibits a bad example when his first words upon meeting Shin was "Hi, are you the Jap pilot?" and to comment about how Japanese have "all sorts of weird names". Mario is called a "wop" at one point and Mario responds to Shin's reprimand about being more careful by saying "I know, I know. Don't lecture me, Jap!". Saki is also looked down upon by some due to his Arabic Muslim heritage, a sad precursor to modern day anti-Muslim sentiments in both western countries and East Asian ones.
** The manga and OVA do not address the uncomfortable racial implications of a mercenary corps of mostly white, European and North American men killing brown people in northern Africa.
** Readers may have found Shin and Mickey's behavior toward Saki's private soldiers to be amusing in 1979. In modern times, especially after the sexual harassment scandals of 2017, it's ''creepy as hell.''
* ValuesResonance: On the other hand, the general message of the manga and OVA, that war ''utterly breaks'' people and leaves them as horrifically scarred wrecks, resonates '''pretty hard''' in light of UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror.
* WhyWouldAnyoneTakeHimBack: [[spoiler:Ryoko and Shin reunite at the end of the manga, after Shin has broken Ryoko's heart several times. Shin has amnesia from head trauma and does not remember Area 88 or [[RelationshipResetButton his previous treatment of Ryoko.]]]]
* WriterCopOut: The "War is Hell" message is undermined by the ending (which didn't make it to the states) [[spoiler: Shin is shot down in his final battle, gets amnesia and forgets everything about Area 88. He and Ryoko get married and live happily ever after. Amen]]. The manga was still in production when the OVA series was produced, so the OVA writers were free to come up with an ending of their own or leave it open ended for more sequels. They managed to do both somehow. This is why many consider the original OVA series ending superior in every way. [[spoiler:It heavily suggests a BolivianArmyEnding.]]

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