Girls und Panzer/YMMV

"Shiho: That's absolute heresy. If you're my daughter, you'll show her the one true way to fight."
 * Abusive Parents: Shiho never raises a hand against her daughters, but her parenting has left Miho with PTSD from a high-school sport (over an incident where she should have felt pride for rescuing her teammates from possibly dying) and socially isolated. This could be chalked up to disastrously poor communication and misunderstanding, but then she says this to Maho in anticipation of the match between Oarai and Kuromorimine (after Maho defends Miho's methods of bringing her team together, as opposed to the ruthless Nishizumi style):


 * Awesome Music: Much of the soundtrack is composed of military and national songs, which are all awesome.
 * St. Gloriana: The British Grenadiers
 * Saunders: The US Field Artillery March, ''The Battle Hymn of the Republic
 * Pravda: Katyusha, Polyushko-polye
 * Kuromorimine: Panzerlied
 * Chihatan: Yuki no Shingun
 * In The Movie, when the other schools band together to help Oarai against the University Combined Team, a stirring medley of all of the school's themes plays.
 * Oarai's theme is not derived from any particular nation, but it's still good. Panzer Vor!
 * Most Wonderful Sound: The "thwap!" of a surrender flag. (Unless it belongs to a friendly tank, of course.)
 * Subbing Versus Dubbing: The English dub is generally good, but the songs with lyrics did not make the transition well. Katyusha (Ep 8) got completely replaced by an instrumental arrangement of Korobeiniki, and the "Anglerfish Dance" and Yuki no Shingun (Ep 9) were translated and sung in English, which gets a little stilted.
 * On the other side, some of the subtitles get a little odd. In the second OVA ("Survival War!"), "Itadakimasu" is subtitled as "Rub-a-dub-dub, thanks for the grub!" -- which is a classic "camp grace", but not exactly in-character for the girls.  Later, during the spam sketch, "Urusai!" is translated as "It's annoying!"  This might be the literal meaning, but the colloquial translation ("Shut up!") would fit the Monty Python theme better.