Yoshiyuki Tomino
Author of Awakening
About the Author
Series
Works by Yoshiyuki Tomino
Aura Battler Dunbine [Blu-ray] 3 copies
Hathaway's Flash - Volume 3 2 copies
Hathaway's Flash - Volume 2 2 copies
Hathaway's Flash - Volume 1 2 copies
Volume 2 - Amuro Ray 1 copy
Volume 3 - Cyber Newtype 1 copy
Volume 1 - Kamille Bidan 1 copy
Volume 5 - A Place to Return 1 copy
Gaia Gear - Volume 3 1 copy
Gaia Gear - Volume 2 1 copy
Gaia Gear - Volume 1 1 copy
機動戦士ガンダム 逆襲のシャア 1 copy
The Wings of Rean - Vol. 2 1 copy
The Wings of Rean - Vol. 1 1 copy
Associated Works
Mobile Suit Gundam: THE ORIGIN, Volume 1: Activation (2005) — Original Story — 180 copies, 5 reviews
Mobile Suit Gundam: THE ORIGIN, Volume 5: Char & Sayla (2014) — Original Story — 101 copies, 3 reviews
Mobile Suit Gundam: THE ORIGIN, Volume 7: Battle of Loum (2014) — Original Story — 81 copies, 3 reviews
Mobile Suit Gundam: THE ORIGIN, Volume 8: Operation Odessa (2014) — Original Story — 79 copies, 3 reviews
Mobile Suit Gundam: The ORIGIN, Volume 12: Encounters (2015) — Original Story — 71 copies, 2 reviews
Mobile Suit Gundam: The ORIGIN, Volume 11: A Cosmic Glow (2015) — Original Story — 68 copies, 2 reviews
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 1 (2011) — Original Concept — 47 copies, 1 review
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 2 (1998) — Original Concept — 34 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 3 (2012) — Original Concept — 27 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 4 (2013) — Original Concept — 25 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 5 (2018) — Original Concept — 22 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 6 (2018) — Original Concept — 20 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam: Char's Counterattack, Volume 1: Beltorchika's Children (2023) — Original Story — 20 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 7 (2018) — Original Concept — 18 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 8 (2018) — Original Concept — 18 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 9 (2018) — Original Concept — 18 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 10 (2019) — Original Concept — 18 copies
MOBILE SUIT GUNDAM THE ORIGIN MSD Cucuruz Doan's Island 1 (Mobile Suit Gundam Cucuruz Doan's Island) (2024) — Original Concept — 17 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 12 (2019) — Original Concept — 17 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 11 (2019) — Original Concept — 17 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 13 (2019) — Original Concept — 15 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz: Glory of the Losers, Volume 14 (2019) — Original Concept — 14 copies
MOBILE SUIT GUNDAM THE ORIGIN MSD Cucuruz Doan's Island 2 (Mobile Suit Gundam Cucuruz Doan's Island) (2024) — Original Concept — 14 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam: Char's Counterattack, Volume 3: Beltorchika's Children (2024) — Original Story — 10 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing #3: Heero Versus Zechs: A Hot Battle on Antarctica (2000) — Story — 4 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing #10: Prelude to the Final Battle — Story — 2 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing #5: Wings of Sorrow — Story — 2 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing #11: Space Rocks — Story — 2 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing #9: The Fall of the Sanc Kingdom — Story — 2 copies
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing #12: The Boys Fly Away to the Future — Story — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Tomino, Yoshiyuki
- Legal name
- 富野 由悠季
Tomino Yoshiyuki - Other names
- 富野 喜幸
- Birthdate
- 1941-11-05
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Nihon University (Art)
- Occupations
- director
screenwriter
lyricist - Organizations
- Sunrise, Inc.
- Short biography
- Yoshiyuki Tomino is the creator of Mobile Suit Gundam, Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam, and Space Runaway Ideon.
- Nationality
- Japan
- Birthplace
- Odawara, Kanagawa, Japan
- Associated Place (for map)
- Kanagawa, Japan
Members
Reviews
48 Status updates....
It starts at page 21 and it goes till page 516.
The misogyny train in this fine literature is fully booked and not stopping till it reaches the other station.
WOOOO WOOOOOO
Women are only around as literal sex objects, towards the end it even describes an alarm voice as "attractive female" IT'S JUST A VOICE and finally the last sentence is of a naked woman.
Let's not mention that Lala Sune and Kusko Al die for manpain and Amuro is the one that sends them to their grave show more because he can't get a handle on his anger. Then the relationship with Char is just them pretty much hating each other because Amuro killed them.
THen their is Sayla Mass/Artesia Deikun that really doesn't do much here but act as just a sexual outlet for Amuro who seems to love her but only so he can shove his dick in her. She's humiliated on several occasions and called a bungler and finally at the end she pees herself twice because..... because wimmin or something. The text even goes on to describe how strong she is or something but she's the only one doing it and no man does.
Finally at the end she swims naked into an ocean... for no real reason.
Sayla isn't the only one to escape unharmed. Frau Bow has kids dumped onto her and then is pointedly forgotten.
Mirai is also constantly torn down by the creepy author gaze.
I see that I posted at page 188 about "He wanted her" and then again on page 245 again that "he wanted her" AND AGAIN ON PAGE 414Those are some creepy ass words. Even in Romance it's kind of like. "Can you not treat people like possessions, especially women?"
I bet I even forgot some instances of "he wanted her". No she never wants him either.
So what about the mecha and stuff. Mostly massive info dumps with a tiny bit of action going on. There really wasn't a lot to dig into character wise unless it's Amuro being a shitstain or Char being a shitstain or any of the other men being shitstains. So many shitstains this book needs some professional carpet cleaning.
If you like Gundam 0079 it's best to just.. not read this book. Not only does it kill off the main character for... super telepathy message???? but it's plain shit to the other characters. show less
It starts at page 21 and it goes till page 516.
The misogyny train in this fine literature is fully booked and not stopping till it reaches the other station.
WOOOO WOOOOOO
Women are only around as literal sex objects, towards the end it even describes an alarm voice as "attractive female" IT'S JUST A VOICE and finally the last sentence is of a naked woman.
Let's not mention that Lala Sune and Kusko Al die for manpain and Amuro is the one that sends them to their grave show more because he can't get a handle on his anger. Then the relationship with Char is just them pretty much hating each other because Amuro killed them.
THen their is Sayla Mass/Artesia Deikun that really doesn't do much here but act as just a sexual outlet for Amuro who seems to love her but only so he can shove his dick in her. She's humiliated on several occasions and called a bungler and finally at the end she pees herself twice because..... because wimmin or something. The text even goes on to describe how strong she is or something but she's the only one doing it and no man does.
Finally at the end she swims naked into an ocean... for no real reason.
Sayla isn't the only one to escape unharmed. Frau Bow has kids dumped onto her and then is pointedly forgotten.
Mirai is also constantly torn down by the creepy author gaze.
I see that I posted at page 188 about "He wanted her" and then again on page 245 again that "he wanted her" AND AGAIN ON PAGE 414Those are some creepy ass words. Even in Romance it's kind of like. "Can you not treat people like possessions, especially women?"
I bet I even forgot some instances of "he wanted her". No she never wants him either.
So what about the mecha and stuff. Mostly massive info dumps with a tiny bit of action going on. There really wasn't a lot to dig into character wise unless it's Amuro being a shitstain or Char being a shitstain or any of the other men being shitstains. So many shitstains this book needs some professional carpet cleaning.
If you like Gundam 0079 it's best to just.. not read this book. Not only does it kill off the main character for... super telepathy message???? but it's plain shit to the other characters. show less
The first part of the massive Gundam franchise to be officially released in English was a trilogy of novels by Yoshiyuki Tomino that were initially published in Japan between 1979 and 1981. The novels are a reimagining of the original 1979 anime series Mobile Suit Gundam which was directed and primarily developed by Tomino. Based on the trilogy's 1987 edition, the novels were originally translated by Frederik L. Schodt and published by Del Rey between 1990 and 1991. They subsequently went show more out of print but were released again by Stone Bridge Press in 2004 in an omnibus edition with a revised translation. The omnibus, too, went out of print only a few years later. It wasn't until 2012 that the license was able to be re-secured, but Mobile Suit Gundam: Awakening, Escalation, Confrontation is once again available in a newly redesigned omnibus. It also includes some of the concept design sketches form the original anime series as illustrations.
In Universal Century 0079, the colonists of Side 3 rebelled against the Earth Federation, establishing the Principality of Zeon. During the ensuing war, half of the solar system's human population was annihilated before the two sides of the conflict could reach a temporary ceasefire. In less than a year, the relative peace came to an end. The fighting began again as the Federation and Zeon forces were caught up in an arms race. Each side continued developing more and more advanced and powerful weapon systems and mobile suits. Combined with the emergence of Newtypes--humans with astounding powers of intuition and expanded consciousness--the conflict quickly escalated. No one is entirely sure what the Newtype phenomenon means for the future of the human race or what dangers those with Newtype potential will present, but both militaries are resolved to harness their abilities in order to gain an advantage in the war.
I haven't seen the original 1979 Mobile Suit Gundam anime series in its entirety, but I do know that the novels are a darker, more mature, and more detailed take on the story. The ending of the trilogy is significantly different from that of the anime, as well. My first real introduction to the Gundam franchise was actually through Yoshikazu Yasuhiko's manga series Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin, which is also a retelling of the original anime. If I am to be completely honest, I much greatly prefer the manga over the novels. However, simply by the nature of the medium, the novels allow Tomino to explore the world of Mobile Suit Gundam in greater depth than either the anime or the manga; some of the specifics about the characters and their motivations can be found nowhere else. But this can also be a drawback--at times, Mobile Suit Gundam: Awakening, Escalation, Confrontation reads more like an insider's guide to the Gundam universe rather than a set of novels.
I like the story of Mobile Suit Gundam as well as its setting. Unfortunately, I wasn't nearly as fond of the novels' execution. There was an annoying preoccupation with who was or wasn't, or who could or could not possibly be a Newtype. Though frequently debated, the characters never reach a solid conclusion and constantly change their opinions on the matter. This is somewhat understandable since the Newtype phenomenon is a new step in human evolution that has yet to be strictly identified or defined, but it's particularly frustrating when the author doesn't seem to have a firm grasp of the concept, either. I do like the Newtype theory, though, and it is a very important part of Mobile Suit Gundam. I also like that the novels show both sides of the conflict between Zeon and the Federation from multiple perspectives. Mobile Suit Gundam is an ambitious war tale with a fairly large cast of interesting characters. But in the end, I have a feeling that the novels will appeal most to readers who are already fans of the franchise.
Experiments in Manga show less
In Universal Century 0079, the colonists of Side 3 rebelled against the Earth Federation, establishing the Principality of Zeon. During the ensuing war, half of the solar system's human population was annihilated before the two sides of the conflict could reach a temporary ceasefire. In less than a year, the relative peace came to an end. The fighting began again as the Federation and Zeon forces were caught up in an arms race. Each side continued developing more and more advanced and powerful weapon systems and mobile suits. Combined with the emergence of Newtypes--humans with astounding powers of intuition and expanded consciousness--the conflict quickly escalated. No one is entirely sure what the Newtype phenomenon means for the future of the human race or what dangers those with Newtype potential will present, but both militaries are resolved to harness their abilities in order to gain an advantage in the war.
I haven't seen the original 1979 Mobile Suit Gundam anime series in its entirety, but I do know that the novels are a darker, more mature, and more detailed take on the story. The ending of the trilogy is significantly different from that of the anime, as well. My first real introduction to the Gundam franchise was actually through Yoshikazu Yasuhiko's manga series Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin, which is also a retelling of the original anime. If I am to be completely honest, I much greatly prefer the manga over the novels. However, simply by the nature of the medium, the novels allow Tomino to explore the world of Mobile Suit Gundam in greater depth than either the anime or the manga; some of the specifics about the characters and their motivations can be found nowhere else. But this can also be a drawback--at times, Mobile Suit Gundam: Awakening, Escalation, Confrontation reads more like an insider's guide to the Gundam universe rather than a set of novels.
I like the story of Mobile Suit Gundam as well as its setting. Unfortunately, I wasn't nearly as fond of the novels' execution. There was an annoying preoccupation with who was or wasn't, or who could or could not possibly be a Newtype. Though frequently debated, the characters never reach a solid conclusion and constantly change their opinions on the matter. This is somewhat understandable since the Newtype phenomenon is a new step in human evolution that has yet to be strictly identified or defined, but it's particularly frustrating when the author doesn't seem to have a firm grasp of the concept, either. I do like the Newtype theory, though, and it is a very important part of Mobile Suit Gundam. I also like that the novels show both sides of the conflict between Zeon and the Federation from multiple perspectives. Mobile Suit Gundam is an ambitious war tale with a fairly large cast of interesting characters. But in the end, I have a feeling that the novels will appeal most to readers who are already fans of the franchise.
Experiments in Manga show less
Not sure if this volume really deserves a 4 or if it was just so much better than the first two volumes that I want to adjust the rating accordingly. Regardless, the story is finally coming together for me with one volume to go.
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- Also by
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