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Macross Dynamite 7 is an anime OVA set one year after the events in Macross 7. Released in 1997 in celebration of the Macross 15th anniversary, Macross Dynamite 7 was a four episode OVA that continued the Macross 7 series' story.
Macross FB 7: Ore no Uta o Kike! "Macross Dynamite 7 15th Anniversary" Adaptation of Macross 7 from the perspective of Macross Frontier characters. 2059 2013/02/28 — Video Game: Macross 30: Voices across the Galaxy "Macross 30th Anniversary" Video game sequel to Macross Frontier. 2060 2016/04 to 2016/09: 26: TV series: Macross Delta
Fire Bomber is a fictional rock band from the anime series Macross 7 (and related projects such as Macross 7 Trash, Macross 7 Encore, and Macross Dynamite 7).In real life, Fire Bomber's music was performed by Yoshiki Fukuyama (the singing voice and guitar of Basara), Chie Kajiura (the singing voice of Mylene), and occasionally by Tomo Sakurai (the acting spokesperson of Mylene).
(1984), and a number of sequels, including Macross Plus (1994), Macross 7 (1994), Macross Frontier (2007) and Macross Delta (2015). In North America, Super Dimension Fortress Macross was adapted into the first saga of the Robotech television series (1985–1986), called The Macross Saga, which spawned the Robotech franchise.
Macross: The Super Dimensional Fortress Macross [12] [37] Macross Dynamite 7 [38] [12] Magic User's Club; Magical Meow Meow Taruto; Magical Warfare; Magikano; Majime ni Fumajime Kaiketsu Zorori (まじめにふまじめ かいけつゾロリ)
Macross FB 7: Ore no Uta o Kike! ( Japanese : マクロスFB7 銀河流魂 オレノウタヲキケ! , Hepburn : Macross FB7: Listen to My Song! ) [ 1 ] is a 2012 Japanese anime film directed by Tetsurō Amino and set in the Macross universe.
Haruhiko Mikimoto (美樹本 晴彦, Mikimoto Haruhiko, born Haruhiko Satō (佐藤晴彦, Satō Haruhiko), August 28, 1959 in Tokyo, Japan) is a Japanese anime character designer, illustrator and manga artist.
Shoji Kawamori was born in Toyama, Japan in 1960. Later in his youth he attended Keio University in the late seventies and in the same years as Macross screenwriter Hiroshi Ōnogi and character designer Haruhiko Mikimoto, where they became friends and founded a Mobile Suit Gundam fan club called "Gunsight One", a name the group would use years later during the development of the fictional ...