Iron Leaguer's about giant robot sports, Rideback's robot-motorcycle racing. Patlabor's about beat cops with giant robots but there might be too much fighting there for you. Planetes is /m/ but doesn't have giant robots, it's all about space garbageman but war and terrorism crops up a lot in the second half.
>ReBoot
It is honorary /m/ (software) so you may want to watch it if you don't mind a show full of references to western media. >Phantom 2040
Suffers from that 90's environmentalism but it isn't as preachy as other shows and the futuristic setting is great. The episodes are on YT although I don't think you'll find a better image quality than that. >Neo Ranga.
Sure, there's fighting, but the main focus of the show is trying to do Slice of Life after everything goes upside down when a stone giant appears from the sea and sits by an old house. It's something else and worth a watch.
>Binomes are basically little robots >Hack and Slash and their fusion in the PS1 game >Mike the TV >Phong >That French Mac computer guy >Some sprites like the imax robot guide girl and kid Enzo befriends in that run down system >Megabyte, who can take his legs off and attach to a mecha chair >So Hex might count too, and Kilobyte and Gigabyte definitely do >Exoskeleton suits inspired by Aliens >a giant fricking super robot they had to kill nullzilla in a toku/super robo parody episode >the ytv robot in Canada >all the military vehicles might count if you count mecha as more than just humanoid mechs >The Saucy Mare (pirate ship) especially when it went to their equivalent of space and got remodeled for web travel >When Bob fuses with his sentient power tool thing it sort of means he's in mech suit like a toku hero now
Oh and the Surfer guy is actually his surfboard so it kind of counts?
I fricking love reboot...
It is, but I've seen some people dismiss it for not being proper robots stomping around, much like Digimon.
Also, don't forget: >Key tools like Glitch being commanded by voice and having a personality, much like protagonists from old mecha shows issuing orders through a watch. >That episode where the user tries to boot two games at once and there's dinosaurs spliced with tanks and jet fighters. >The Web riders using carcasses from creatures as armor, looking like Tokusatsu MotW. >A ton of references to Star Trek and Star Wars. >The first episode booting up a game of space fighters. >Megabyte turned into a truck in one game. >Garry Chalk and Scott McNeil (Slash and Hack respectively, plus more characters) doing voicework in Beast Wars.
Planetes.
Patlabor
Patlabor does not focus on it but there's still plenty of mecha fights
Iron Leaguer's about giant robot sports, Rideback's robot-motorcycle racing. Patlabor's about beat cops with giant robots but there might be too much fighting there for you. Planetes is /m/ but doesn't have giant robots, it's all about space garbageman but war and terrorism crops up a lot in the second half.
Yeah.
Robotics;Notes is about making a robot.
IGPX: Immortal Grand Prix
Isn't the Turn A Gundam supposed to be the strongest Mobile Suit as it apparently wiped them all out?
Uh, anon?
Medabots
Heybot
>ReBoot
It is honorary /m/ (software) so you may want to watch it if you don't mind a show full of references to western media.
>Phantom 2040
Suffers from that 90's environmentalism but it isn't as preachy as other shows and the futuristic setting is great. The episodes are on YT although I don't think you'll find a better image quality than that.
>Neo Ranga.
Sure, there's fighting, but the main focus of the show is trying to do Slice of Life after everything goes upside down when a stone giant appears from the sea and sits by an old house. It's something else and worth a watch.
There's actually a lot of mecha in ReBoot.
>Binomes are basically little robots
>Hack and Slash and their fusion in the PS1 game
>Mike the TV
>Phong
>That French Mac computer guy
>Some sprites like the imax robot guide girl and kid Enzo befriends in that run down system
>Megabyte, who can take his legs off and attach to a mecha chair
>So Hex might count too, and Kilobyte and Gigabyte definitely do
>Exoskeleton suits inspired by Aliens
>a giant fricking super robot they had to kill nullzilla in a toku/super robo parody episode
>the ytv robot in Canada
>all the military vehicles might count if you count mecha as more than just humanoid mechs
>The Saucy Mare (pirate ship) especially when it went to their equivalent of space and got remodeled for web travel
>When Bob fuses with his sentient power tool thing it sort of means he's in mech suit like a toku hero now
Oh and the Surfer guy is actually his surfboard so it kind of counts?
I fricking love reboot...
It is, but I've seen some people dismiss it for not being proper robots stomping around, much like Digimon.
Also, don't forget:
>Key tools like Glitch being commanded by voice and having a personality, much like protagonists from old mecha shows issuing orders through a watch.
>That episode where the user tries to boot two games at once and there's dinosaurs spliced with tanks and jet fighters.
>The Web riders using carcasses from creatures as armor, looking like Tokusatsu MotW.
>A ton of references to Star Trek and Star Wars.
>The first episode booting up a game of space fighters.
>Megabyte turned into a truck in one game.
>Garry Chalk and Scott McNeil (Slash and Hack respectively, plus more characters) doing voicework in Beast Wars.
90s environmentalism is based and we should have listened
>gundamgay
>moronic
every time
Cubix
Basquash! is about playing basketball.
Classroom Crisis
basquatch
Does Machine Robo Rescue count?
Steam Detective?
Gargantia, sorta.
Transformers Rescue Bots
SD Gundam
Full Metal Panic Fumuffu?