
Most Popular Gundam Design Gets The Metal Robot Damashii Toy Treatment
If you know anything about the Metal Robot Damashii toyline, it's a spin-off from the mainline Robot Damashii branding, and you guessed it, features toys with lots of diecast in their construction.
Moreover, this spin-off line tends to do lesser-known designs or non-animated variants, such as the Re-GZ Custom or the Gundam Hazel, with both of those toys being also entirely excellent.
This is because the sculpt and detailing on these toys is surprisingly high-end despite being quite compact. Personally, I love Metal Robot Damashii toys over their bigger and more expensive brethren, and have quite a few of them already.
The smaller size also means you can collect more of them and still have an impressive amount of articulation for all the cool poses you want them to do.
In this instance, what makes the choice of the Nu Gundam notable is that this is a mainline Gundam design penned by the very talented Yutaka Izubuchi and one that was voted the most popular amongst Japanese fans in a 2018 poll hosted by NHK.
The toy itself also looks superb (shown above), and the diecast elements are almost all internal, increasing the overall joint strength compared to a regular Robot Damashii release.
For the Nu Gundam, this is important, as the fin funnel configuration is equipped on the left side of the mobile suit. Often resulting in model kits and toys of this design getting a bit lopsided due to the weight distribution.
Available in January of next year, this will also be a general release and therefore more readily available to import from places like HobbyLink Japan.
The price point is also not too bad, coming in at 22,000 yen (or around $148 at the current exchange rate).
In any case, this is a classic and much-loved Gundam design, and this toy looks to do a genuine tribute to that.
Follow me on X, Facebook and YouTube. I also manage Mecha Damashii and am currently featured in the Giant Robots exhibition currently touring Japan.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Digital Trends
2 hours ago
- Digital Trends
Pokémon Gen 10 needs to be a reboot
2026 will mark the 30th anniversary of the Pokémon franchise, which is a sentence that makes me woefully uncomfortable with my age. Personal insecurities aside, most of the Pokémon community believes this is the perfect year to announce the 10th generation mainline title for the Switch 2. Gen 9, Scarlet and Violet, will have been out for four years by then, and it would give this year's Pokémon Legends: Z-A a little time to breathe. I've never been a big fan of the annualization of Pokémon games, but that's a topic for another day. I grew up as a diehard Pokémon fan starting with the GBA titles, but slowly fell off the series over time. Part of that was age, sure, but when I realized there was another monster-catching RPG coming this year that had me feeling all those old sensations of excitement and wonder again, I knew it wasn't just nostalgia. As a thought experiment, I wondered what Pokémon Gen 10 could do to get me excited for this once beloved series again. The answer was a simple one. Pokémon needs to be rebooted. Back to basics All of the major modern problems with Pokémon can be attributed to bloat. I don't blame Pokémon for ending up in the situation it finds itself in — it is a victim of its own success at the end of the day. After the original generation, we all loved the fact that the next games not only had a new roster of monsters to catch, but all our old favorites were back. Pokémon is a game about building bonds and becoming attached to your little creatures, so it would be antithetical to the game's themes to force us to sever our bonds with each game. But 30 years later, the benefits of that system are now heavily outweighed by the drawbacks. Recommended Videos When I say Pokémon needs a reboot, I'm mainly talking about the roster. As of Gen 9, there are over 1,000 Pokémon. If Gen 10 introduces about as many as each gen tends to, I wouldn't be surprised if we have 10 times the number of Pokémon we started with. GameFreak has already faced backlash for failing to include all previous Pokémon (or allow them to be transferred) since Sun and Moon, and while newer hardware and the ability to add more as DLC have offered some reprieve, the issue has only gotten worse with time. We all remember the 'Dexit' controversy when Sword and Shield came out, right? A lot of this comes down to the team wanting to push the games further. Transitioning off of handhelds opened up a world of possibilities that GameFreak wanted to take advantage of, but the baggage of the series weighed it down. I won't handwave all of the Switch-era Pokémon games' technical issues on there simply being too many Pokémon, but I would be surprised if it wasn't at least a big contributing factor. What I do feel more comfortable claiming is that Pokémon models and animations did suffer due to the sheer volume the team had to work on. Gen 10 is the perfect excuse to make a clean break. Cut all the existing Pokémon out and introduce a new, fresh roster of 100-200 Pokémon max. Maybe Pikachu can get a cameo or something, but if one legacy 'mon gets featured, it just opens a can of worms for everyone else to complain why their favorites can't show up too. Put all the love and care into a new, tight lineup rather than going for quantity. They could even streamline the type system which has gotten a bit bloated as well. Pokémon should be constantly innovating (round of applause for resisting the urge to say evolving). I would lose my mind if you told me there was an open world Pokémon game when I was 7. Granted, I would also freak out if you told me there were over 1,000 Pokémon, but we've seen how that monkey's paw finger has curled. The current state of the series' technical performance is embarrassing enough, but the games themselves are losing some of that magic. I want to be excited and surprised by what I will find in the tall grass again. I want to feel like I'm really on an adventure with a bunch of new friends I've named and built a bond with. Legends came close to giving me that feeling, but recognizing every Pokémon and fighting against technical issues kept it from being as revolutionary as it could've been. Gen 10 has a lot of pressure on it just by the nature of its number and the fact that it likely will come out on the 30th anniversary year of the franchise. That's on top of the expectations a mainline Pokémon game has to contend with after Scarlet and Violet did major damage to the series' reputation (though admittedly not reflected in the sales). A radical change like a reboot is a gamble, but it also feels like the perfect excuse to shed the weight of the past and focus on a new future for Pokémon.


CNN
10 hours ago
- CNN
As tsunami waves swept the Pacific, some in Asia saw signs of a manga prophecy come true
Earthquakes Japan Asia FacebookTweetLink As powerful waves surged across the vast Pacific on Wednesday, people around the world remained glued to their phones, tracking the tsunami's fast progress. But in China, more than a million people were searching for an unusual term: 'Prophecy.' That's because, for some, the natural disaster had seemingly been foretold four years earlier, in a Japanese manga comic book. Published by manga artist Ryo Tatsuki in 1999, 'The Future I Saw' warned of a major disaster in March 2011, a date which turned out to coincide with the cataclysmic quake that struck Japan's northern Tohoku region that month. Her 'complete version' released in 2021 claimed that the next big earthquake would hit in July 2025 sparking a flurry of viral internet memes and debates across much of Asia in recent months as that date neared. In China, a search term related to Tatsuki's so-called 'prophecy' gained more than 1.1 million views on the video app Douyin in the immediate aftermath of Wednesday's Pacific tsunami. 'Will Ryo Tatsuki's prediction of a major disaster in July come true?' ran the headline of a Wednesday article in a Hong Kong newspaper. The manga has had an avid following since its publication in 2021. But it became a cultural phenomenon throughout much of Asia earlier this year as fans anticipated the coming of the author's apparent prediction, spooking travelers so much that many even canceled summer trips to Japan. Among tourists, some are relieved and ready to return after Wednesday's events caused minimal damage. But others remain on edge, resolved to stay away for now. 'I'm getting goosebumps!' wrote one Japanese user on X following the massive 8.8 quake. Chinese traveler Andrea Wang, 25, had canceled an April trip to Japan, saying the manga made her 'concerned about the risk to my life.' Though the tsunami has now passed, she still doesn't plan to travel to Japan for the rest of 2025, she told CNN on Friday. It is impossible to accurately project in advance when an earthquake might strike, and seismologists have strongly cautioned against believing the rising number of so-called predictions. Even Tatsuki herself urged people not to be 'overly swayed' by her dreams, in an interview with Japanese media in May. But the prevalence of the debate proves the manga's tight grip on the popular imagination – amplified by both soothsayers across Asia and social media – especially in seismically active Japan, where the constant threat of an earthquake or tsunami looms large in the popular imagination. Many still bear the scars of the 2011 Tohoku disaster, when an earthquake triggered devastating tsunami waves that caused the Fukushima nuclear meltdown. The disaster left more than 22,000 dead or missing – and has since become embedded in the national psyche, with Japanese toddlers doing earthquake drills from the time they can walk, and the government regularly warning of an impending, once-in-a-century earthquake. Tatsuki's manga depicts a cartoon version of herself gleaning visions from her slumbers, some of which turn out to bear close resemblance to real-life events. Some fans believe she predicted the deaths of Princess Diana and Freddie Mercury, though skeptics say her visions are too vague to be taken seriously. It was the 2011 quake that boosted belief in Tatsuki's supposed prescience. Her 1999 manga 'The Future I Saw' has the words 'massive disaster in March, 2011' on the cover – leading many to believe that she predicted the 9.0 magnitude earthquake more than a decade before it hit Tohoku. In her 2021 follow-up, Tatsuki warned that an earthquake in the Philippine Sea on July 5 this year would cause tsunami waves three times as tall as those from the Tohoku earthquake – leading many to fear disaster sometime last month. In the end, Wednesday's quake struck thousands of kilometers from the predicted epicenter, and the highest waves recorded in Japan measured only 4.3 feet – far below the 30-foot waves seen in 2011. But many travelers, like Wang, decided not to take the chance and canceled their trips to Japan in the last few months, pointing to similar warnings from psychics in Japan and Hong Kong. CN Yuen, managing director of Hong Kong-based travel agency WWPKG, said the number of bookings for Japan tours fell about 70% in June and July, compared with the same time last year. Oscar Chu, a 36-year-old traveler from Hong Kong, also decided not to go earlier this summer, despite usually visiting Japan multiple times a year. 'I wouldn't say I was 100% certain (about the prediction), but I wouldn't write off the possibility,' he told CNN on Friday. When July 5 passed with no incident, some of his friends booked flights to Japan the very next day, he said. He'll head there himself in a few weeks, having coincidentally bought tickets on Wednesday morning – just before receiving news of the tsunami. But he still plans to go; 'You can't avoid going for a lifetime,' he said. Not everybody is reassured, however. Some of Chu's friends, who love visiting Japan as much as he does, are taking precautions like avoiding coastal areas or skipping the beach. They're not the only ones wary of a 'big one' on the horizon. Wednesday's tsunami highlighted the vulnerability for millions living on coastlines all around the Pacific, where the seismically active 'Ring of Fire' has produced many of the world's strongest earthquake. Fears in Japan have been mounting since the government's recent warnings that a massive quake could hit the southern Nankai Trough within the next 30 years – though the science remains disputed. The Nankai Trough is a 700-kilometer-long (435-mile) subduction zone, where one tectonic plate slips beneath another. Along this fault, severe earthquakes have been recorded every 100 to 200 years, according to the Japanese government's Earthquake Research Committee. The last such quakes took place in 1944 and 1946, killing at least 2,500 people and destroying tens of thousands of homes. The Japanese government has repeatedly warned there is a 70-80% chance that Japan will be rocked by another Nankai Trough earthquake within 30 years – leading many scientists to questioning the accuracy of that probability. Regardless of the prediction's reliability, the nation is on high alert and kicks into gear whenever a quake hits. This highly-effective advanced warning system was on full display this week, when local authorities issued evacuations warnings, urging more than two million residents in high risk areas along the coastline to seek higher ground. skip past newsletter promotion When a magnitude 7.1 quake hit southern Japan last August, authorities were similarly quick to respond, slowing trains and warning of potential tsunamis – though in the end there was no major damage. Whether or not Wednesday's quake was the one envisioned in Tatsuki's manga, public vigilance against potential disaster will likely linger in Japan long after this week's waves recede. 'It is because of (Tatsuki's) warning that more people started to pay attention to earthquake risks in advance, improve disaster prevention awareness, and also prompted everyone to learn relevant knowledge and prepare emergency supplies,' a user wrote on the Chinese social media app Xiaohongshu, also known as RedNote. 'People's alertness has increased, which in itself is of great significance.' CNN's Soyon Nishioka and Chris Lau contributed to this report.


CNN
10 hours ago
- CNN
As tsunami waves swept the Pacific, some in Asia saw signs of a manga prophecy come true
Earthquakes Japan AsiaFacebookTweetLink Follow As powerful waves surged across the vast Pacific on Wednesday, people around the world remained glued to their phones, tracking the tsunami's fast progress. But in China, more than a million people were searching for an unusual term: 'Prophecy.' That's because, for some, the natural disaster had seemingly been foretold four years earlier, in a Japanese manga comic book. Published by manga artist Ryo Tatsuki in 1999, 'The Future I Saw' warned of a major disaster in March 2011, a date which turned out to coincide with the cataclysmic quake that struck Japan's northern Tohoku region that month. Her 'complete version' released in 2021 claimed that the next big earthquake would hit in July 2025 sparking a flurry of viral internet memes and debates across much of Asia in recent months as that date neared. In China, a search term related to Tatsuki's so-called 'prophecy' gained more than 1.1 million views on the video app Douyin in the immediate aftermath of Wednesday's Pacific tsunami. 'Will Ryo Tatsuki's prediction of a major disaster in July come true?' ran the headline of a Wednesday article in a Hong Kong newspaper. The manga has had an avid following since its publication in 2021. But it became a cultural phenomenon throughout much of Asia earlier this year as fans anticipated the coming of the author's apparent prediction, spooking travelers so much that many even canceled summer trips to Japan. Among tourists, some are relieved and ready to return after Wednesday's events caused minimal damage. But others remain on edge, resolved to stay away for now. 'I'm getting goosebumps!' wrote one Japanese user on X following the massive 8.8 quake. Chinese traveler Andrea Wang, 25, had canceled an April trip to Japan, saying the manga made her 'concerned about the risk to my life.' Though the tsunami has now passed, she still doesn't plan to travel to Japan for the rest of 2025, she told CNN on Friday. It is impossible to accurately project in advance when an earthquake might strike, and seismologists have strongly cautioned against believing the rising number of so-called predictions. Even Tatsuki herself urged people not to be 'overly swayed' by her dreams, in an interview with Japanese media in May. But the prevalence of the debate proves the manga's tight grip on the popular imagination – amplified by both soothsayers across Asia and social media – especially in seismically active Japan, where the constant threat of an earthquake or tsunami looms large in the popular imagination. Many still bear the scars of the 2011 Tohoku disaster, when an earthquake triggered devastating tsunami waves that caused the Fukushima nuclear meltdown. The disaster left more than 22,000 dead or missing – and has since become embedded in the national psyche, with Japanese toddlers doing earthquake drills from the time they can walk, and the government regularly warning of an impending, once-in-a-century earthquake. Tatsuki's manga depicts a cartoon version of herself gleaning visions from her slumbers, some of which turn out to bear close resemblance to real-life events. Some fans believe she predicted the deaths of Princess Diana and Freddie Mercury, though skeptics say her visions are too vague to be taken seriously. It was the 2011 quake that boosted belief in Tatsuki's supposed prescience. Her 1999 manga 'The Future I Saw' has the words 'massive disaster in March, 2011' on the cover – leading many to believe that she predicted the 9.0 magnitude earthquake more than a decade before it hit Tohoku. In her 2021 follow-up, Tatsuki warned that an earthquake in the Philippine Sea on July 5 this year would cause tsunami waves three times as tall as those from the Tohoku earthquake – leading many to fear disaster sometime last month. In the end, Wednesday's quake struck thousands of kilometers from the predicted epicenter, and the highest waves recorded in Japan measured only 4.3 feet – far below the 30-foot waves seen in 2011. But many travelers, like Wang, decided not to take the chance and canceled their trips to Japan in the last few months, pointing to similar warnings from psychics in Japan and Hong Kong. CN Yuen, managing director of Hong Kong-based travel agency WWPKG, said the number of bookings for Japan tours fell about 70% in June and July, compared with the same time last year. Oscar Chu, a 36-year-old traveler from Hong Kong, also decided not to go earlier this summer, despite usually visiting Japan multiple times a year. 'I wouldn't say I was 100% certain (about the prediction), but I wouldn't write off the possibility,' he told CNN on Friday. When July 5 passed with no incident, some of his friends booked flights to Japan the very next day, he said. He'll head there himself in a few weeks, having coincidentally bought tickets on Wednesday morning – just before receiving news of the tsunami. But he still plans to go; 'You can't avoid going for a lifetime,' he said. Not everybody is reassured, however. Some of Chu's friends, who love visiting Japan as much as he does, are taking precautions like avoiding coastal areas or skipping the beach. They're not the only ones wary of a 'big one' on the horizon. Wednesday's tsunami highlighted the vulnerability for millions living on coastlines all around the Pacific, where the seismically active 'Ring of Fire' has produced many of the world's strongest earthquake. Fears in Japan have been mounting since the government's recent warnings that a massive quake could hit the southern Nankai Trough within the next 30 years – though the science remains disputed. The Nankai Trough is a 700-kilometer-long (435-mile) subduction zone, where one tectonic plate slips beneath another. Along this fault, severe earthquakes have been recorded every 100 to 200 years, according to the Japanese government's Earthquake Research Committee. The last such quakes took place in 1944 and 1946, killing at least 2,500 people and destroying tens of thousands of homes. The Japanese government has repeatedly warned there is a 70-80% chance that Japan will be rocked by another Nankai Trough earthquake within 30 years – leading many scientists to questioning the accuracy of that probability. Regardless of the prediction's reliability, the nation is on high alert and kicks into gear whenever a quake hits. This highly-effective advanced warning system was on full display this week, when local authorities issued evacuations warnings, urging more than two million residents in high risk areas along the coastline to seek higher ground. skip past newsletter promotion When a magnitude 7.1 quake hit southern Japan last August, authorities were similarly quick to respond, slowing trains and warning of potential tsunamis – though in the end there was no major damage. Whether or not Wednesday's quake was the one envisioned in Tatsuki's manga, public vigilance against potential disaster will likely linger in Japan long after this week's waves recede. 'It is because of (Tatsuki's) warning that more people started to pay attention to earthquake risks in advance, improve disaster prevention awareness, and also prompted everyone to learn relevant knowledge and prepare emergency supplies,' a user wrote on the Chinese social media app Xiaohongshu, also known as RedNote. 'People's alertness has increased, which in itself is of great significance.' CNN's Soyon Nishioka and Chris Lau contributed to this report.