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Azur Lane was very popular in its home country, contributing to most of Bilibili's 2018 Q1 revenue along with the Chinese release of Fate/Grand Order. [ 85 ] [ 86 ] In Japan, the game enjoyed an overwhelming surge in popularity after its release, [ 7 ] despite initial accusations by fans of Kantai Collection that it was a clone.
The ship was armored with a 127 mm (5 in) side belt, and 35 mm (1 in) armored deck; the bridge was armored with 10 to 16 mm (0.39 to 0.63 in) armored plates. [ 2 ] Takao ’s main battery was ten 20 cm/50 3rd Year Type naval guns , the heaviest armament of any heavy cruiser in the world at the time, mounted in five twin turrets. [ 2 ]
Azur Lane: Slow Ahead! (アズールレーン びそくぜんしんっ!, Azūru Rēn Bisoku Zenshin!) is a Japanese yonkoma comic series written and illustrated by Hori. It is based on the Chinese side-scrolling shoot 'em up video game Azur Lane by Shanghai Manjuu and Xiamen Yongshi.
Azur Lane, a shoot 'em up game also utilizing the concept of warship moe anthropomorphization, mainly featuring anthropomorphized American, British, Japanese and German warships of World War II; Girls' Frontline, a strategy role-playing game centred upon moe anthropomorphizations of firearms
The problem with this was that the old plan intended all of the ships of the eight-eight fleet to be under eight years old; by the time these new ships were completed, Fusō and the first two Kongō ships would be past their replacement age. [7] The plan was approved in 1917, along with funding for two battlecruisers which became the Amagi class.
Among the keywords you can find in Connecticut law include "silly string," "balloons" and "arcade games." All these topics are involved in some of the state's strangest laws.
The propulsion machinery was protected by a waterline armor belt 60 millimeters (2.4 in) thick with 20 millimeters (0.8 in) transverse bulkheads at fore and aft of the machinery and a middle deck of the same thickness. The ships' magazines were enclosed in armored boxes with 55-millimeter (2.2 in) sides, 20-millimeter tops and 20- or 25 ...
In the lead-up to the Pacific War the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) attempted to build a large number of fleet carriers. For them to be built quickly, the design for these ships was based on the aircraft carrier Hiryū rather than the newer and more sophisticated Taihō or the Shōkaku class. [11]