Super Robot Wars L is the third entry in the ever-so popular Super Robot Wars series on the Nintendo DS, preceded by Super Robot Wars W and Super Robot Wars K. It was released on November 25, 2010. According to Word Of God, the "L" stands for "Link".L's lineup was under some scrutiny following its announcement: the debut appearance of Rebuild of Evangelion raises questions on how exactly its story can stir L's plot, especially when "1.0: You Are (Not) Alone" and "2.0: You Can (Not) Advance" is only half of the Rebuild saga. The reappearance of certain series from Super Robot Wars Judgment, W, and K (specifically Wing, SEED, SEED Destiny, Gaiking, Jeeg, Mazinkaiser, Godannar, Combattler V And Voltes V) have elicited many "expect loads of recycled sprites and pilot cut-in" responses, although it turned out many of those units had their animations updated to some degree. L also modified the controversial partner system of K, making it more like traditional SRW squad mechanics.Rumour has it that Masami Obari of Dangaioh and Gravion fame had a hand in L's entry selection, which would explain why Iczer and Dancougar Nova made it in as debuts. Given Obari was busy putting up the final directing touches for the October 2010 release of the Animated Adaptation of Super Robot Wars Original Generation 2, this might not be such a coincidence.Series included are (Debut series in bold):
L's back-story involves Earthlings heading to colonize space, but the journey's been tough for the past one hundred years: atomic war, strife against the Jama Kingdom and the lack of resources on Earth due to the space colonies seizing most of it. Around 15 years ago, the Second Impact occured, to which forces such as the Darius Empire, the Katou Organization and the Dancougar appeared. As a result, nations began increasing their military strength and indirectly affected those living in space.5 years ago, humanity waged a long war with the Mimetic Beasts and although victory was achieved, tensions mounted following a terrorist incident that destroyed a space colony 3 years earlier. 2 years before L's story, humans on Earth and space colonists waged a deadly one-year war that lead to the Earth nations winning, but left their countries severely weakened from the fallout. Seeing a chance, Dr. Hell's Mechanical Beast army attacks, leading to an uneasy Earth/space colony truce to fight against them. With Dr. Hell and his Mycene allies defeated, peace returns to the Earth. Soon afterward, Darius mounts their full-scale assault and the seal preventing the Jama Kingdom from returning is broken. Now, visitors from beyond the Earth Sphere come into contact with humanity and a new battle begins.
This leads to the one time where Combattler and Voltes are not friends (or at least know of each other's work) in the entire franchise. It also leads to some people in the game confusing the two robots for each other, which has happened in real life..
Anticlimax Boss: Big Gold. She's a Fragile Speedster, but unlike some enemies, your characters DO have the means to easily bypass that (Strike Spirit Command). Cue Big Gold being taken down with about four strong attacks, whereas other bosses take twice as much
Ascended Extra - Rebecca from Gaiking was a one-shot character in the anime, but in L she's somehow the subpilot of the Daichi Maryuu. Sadly, Kane still pilots the Tenkuu Maryuu all alone, but at least comes with Super Move Portrait Attack this time
BGM Override - In grand Macross tradition, the finale for Macross Frontier's plot will select a Macross tune to play at the beginning of every turn that overrides all other BGMs that other characters might have.
Cutting Off the Branches - Since Rebuild of Evangelion isn't complete yet, it's plot ends with Kaworu telling SEELE that this "distorted" world isn't theirs, so the defeated 8th Angel is the last one.
Dual Wielding - Straybird's Pheasant Cutter, in addition to many other units: Shoulder Slicers, Iczer-3 and Atros' twin light sabers, Linebarrel's two swords, Verdant's quad wield, Tsubaki-Hime's dual wielding chainsaws
Duel Boss - The last showdown with Iczer-2. You get a Game Over if anyone but Iczer-1 attacks her, which alongside her strong stats, make her That One Boss.
Expy - The Rushbird's attacks are exactly like Zeorymer, as well as Alice being an Expy of Miku, aka Robot Girl capable of channeling interdimensional energy into said mecha. The only main difference here is Nagumo isn't a humongous bastard like Masato.
Dr Graife, the scientist who designed Rushbird, also has some character design similarities to Doc Brown.
Fix Fic - Again like Z and K, SEED Destiny gets a much better treatment in L: for starters, the deaths of Shinn's family gets re-written. Also, the Archangel does not interfere with the Minerva's battles and Athrun does not defect. To top it off, during Operation Angel Down, due to the Archangel lending a hand against Iczer One's enemies, Captain Talia Gladys assists in faking the sinking of the Archangel. See We Could Have Avoided All This below for more.
Which is somewhat hilarious, seeing as how Bandai is Banpresto's parent company, meaning the rewrites likely were approved by the same people who released the original series.
In addition, Michael, Ken, Atros and Soubi all can be saved from their canon deaths. Interestingly enough, you can also save Stella and Rey, but to keep Stella, you have to go along on a route split. Otherwise, she still lives, but gets Demoted to Extra and is no longer playable.
However, Michael's case is interesting in that it takes into account the "Max Kills" cheat code that often gets made for these games. As rescuing Michael is a classic "X character must get Y kills on stage Z" secret, using the "Max Kills" cheat actually backfires because Michael's kill count does not increase, even if he kills the number of enemies needed to prevent his death.
Game-Breaking Bug - Only one, but already quite infamous: the "Iczer Bug" makes you permanently lose Nagisa as Iczer Robo's co-pilot if you get a game over while Iczer-1 is combined
Heroic BSOD - Go gets hit with a mild one, but still maintains an active presence on the team as a pilot instructor and representative for LOTUS (the name of the heroes in this game), particularly during Operation Angel Down.
Something We Forgot: However, Duel Gundam AS' beam rifle is missing its grenade launcher attachment, for no explained reason.
This trope is played straight with a few characters: Hilde and Sally from Gundam Wing. After both having been absent in W, there were quite a few happy to see Hilde's black Taurus alongside Duo and Sally helping out behind scenes after having been out of action since Alpha 3.
Furthermore, Jack's rating for space-based terrain is B, while everyone else in his series has an A, clearly showing he's not made for space. Jack still kicks ass, of course.
Kamehame Hadouken - Rushbird's Light Blazer, albeit a one-handed variant.
Until you unlock Rushbird's Dimension Storm attack, which is a two-handed, considerably stronger, version of the above.
Lazy Artist - For the most part averted: yes, there are some recycled sprites/animations from J/W/K, but there are also just as many touched-up, altered or just plain re-animated attacks from returning series
For example, Zechs Merquise's cut-ins are all redone from W. Here, he's wearing his Preventers' jacket while in W, he was wearing his normal suit. In addition, he gains a brand new cut-in for the Tallgeese III's Heat Rod attack
Leeroy Jenkins - Kouichi is AI controlled on stage 37 and will recklessly charge right into the middle of the enemy formation, and needless to say you have to keep him alive. This rapidly turns into That One Level if he's underlevelled or Linebarrels hasn't been upgraded much.
Lethal Joke Character - Boss Borot; exceptionaly good list of Spirit Commands between the three pilots, attacks are stronger than they look and ALL his moves are morale debuffs
Lightning Bruiser - Iczer-1, high end Machina such as Linebarrel and Gaiking the Great
Soubi being a secret character is a nod to the original Linebarrels manga, where he eventually becomes the team's Sixth Ranger.
Only Six Faces - Character portraits of the Linebarrel and SEED Destiny characters. It isn't as bad as comparing Fafner and Destiny in K, but still fit this trope
All of the above series have character designs by Hisashi Hirai, who is infamous for the use of this trope.
Original Generation - Ichitaka, AL-3 Alice, Yuunagi and HL-0 Haruno for the characters, Rushbird and the Straybird for the mecha
Post Script Season - Endless Waltz, Mazinkaiser, Combattler V and Voltes V are all post-series in L
Pragmatic Adaptation - Macross Frontier's finale was originally accompanied by the "Nyan Nyan Service Medley", a 7-minute medley of various songs from all over the series. SRW L handles this simply by playing a different Frontier song each turn during said battle.
Robot Girl - AL-3 Alice and HL-0 Haruno, copilots for Ichitaka and Yuunagi, respectively. Also Iczers 1 through 3 and Atros. On the enemy side we have HL-1
Sealed Evil in a Duel/This Looks Like a Job for Aquaman - The Rushbird's most unique feature is absorbing the energy from beam attacks and the like, while getting a small EN boost in the process. In some cases, such as fighting the Angels, a viable tactic is to let the Rushbird attack and keep it busy while everyone else clears the map.
Do note this won't work if the attack is strong enough, as Laplace Barriers absorb attacks only to a certain damage threshold.
Set Swords to Stun: Unlike previous games, "killing" boss units won't show animation of it get destroyed. They simply escape afterwards for most of time, and explode only if it's actually destroyed in regards to deaths within the plots of the respective series. Unfortunately, this also means you rarely see dynamic kills on boss characters.
Sibling Rivalry - Ichitaka and Yuunagi are brothers, and fight several times during the course of the game. They eventually reconcile and join forces against the Big Bad
Super-Powered Robot Meter Maids - AL-3 Alice, who was originally intented to simply clean and maintain the house...until she reveals she can channel trans-dimensional energies to unlock Rushbird's strongest attack
Theme Tune Cameo - Happens frequently thanks to inclusion of Macross Frontier. To give an example, in one scenario, Ranka sings "Seikan Hikou" as your units battle rogue Zentradi the Federation. Too bad it ends when she gets abducted by the Vajra
Wakeup Call Boss: Sachiel, encountered in Scenario 11, is a noticeable cut above the boss units fought before that point. Powerful attacks it can spam easily, high HP and EN regeneration, and of course, the AT Field that will outright negate most of your attacks. To make matters worse, it'll also snipe away at your units as they fight the weaker enemies to build up morale, and there's really not much you can do about it until you've built up enough momentum to kill it.
We Could Have Avoided All This - An inversion's invoked with the SEED Destiny plot at Berlin: due to Kira Yamato helping Shinn save Stella Loussier, Shinn loses a very strong personal vendetta to keep hating Kira. This has repercussions later on during the Strike Freedom's debut, with Shinn saving the day when Kira is about to be killed by the original villains