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Giant Robo (ジャイアントロボ, Jaianto Robo) is a Japanese manga series by Mitsuteru Yokoyama. The manga, which was first published in 1967, spawned a live-action tokusatsu television series of the same name , as well as a series of original video animations called Giant Robo: The Day the Earth Stood Still .
The Giant Robo video game (SLPM-62526) was released for PlayStation 2 on November 3, 2004 by D3 Publisher. Set in The Day the Earth Stood Still continuity, the player leads Daisaku Kusama and Giant Robo on a quest to defeat the BF Group. As Daisaku, the player can pick up items and power-ups on the battlefield; as Giant Robo, the player does ...
Giant Robo: The Day the Earth Stood Still: Giant Robo: OVA: 1992: Mobile Suit Gundam 0083: The Afterglow of Zeon: Gundam: Film: Compilation 1992–93: Matchless Raijin-Oh: Eldran series: OVA: 1992–93: D-1 Devastator — OVA: 1993–94: The Brave Express Might Gaine: Brave series: TV series: 1993: Moldiver — OVA: 1993–94: Nekketsu Saikyō ...
Giant Robo: The Day the Earth Stood Still (with Mari Mizuta, 1992–1993) Getter Robo Armageddon: Try to Remember (with Hisashi Matsumoto, 2001) Seven of Seven (with Azusa Kunihiro, 2001–2002) Giant Robo: The Day the Earth Burned (with Yasunari Toda, 2006–2011) Chōkyū! Kidō Butōden G Gundam (with Kazuhiko Shimamoto, 2010–2011)
Giant Robo (ジャイアントロボ, Jaianto Robo), also known as Johnny Sokko and His Flying Robot in the United States, [1] is a manga and tokusatsu series created by Mitsuteru Yokoyama. It is similar to Yokoyama's Tetsujin 28-go (known as Gigantor in the U.S.), but Giant Robo has more elements of fantasy.
Super Giant Robot Brothers is an animated adventure ... two giant robot brothers must defend the Earth from an evil intergalactic empire that is sending kaiju to ...
Tetsujin 28-gō (Japanese: 鉄人28号, Hepburn: Tetsujin Nijūhachi-gō, lit."Iron Man No. 28"), known as simply Tetsujin 28 in international releases, is a 1956 manga written and illustrated by Mitsuteru Yokoyama, who also created Giant Robo.
Subgenres of tokusatsu include kaiju such as the Godzilla and Gamera series; superhero such as the Kamen Rider and Metal Hero series; Kyodai Hero like Ultraman, and Denkou Choujin Gridman; and mecha like Giant Robo and Super Robot Red Baron. Some tokusatsu television programs combine several of these subgenres, for example, the Super Sentai series.