Kimi no Na Iowa: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 12:
{{tropelist}}
* [[A-Team Firing]]: Normal weapons have difficulty hitting abyssals if not equipped with hypertech either of their own or to take targeting data from shipgirls. How much is due to the simple reality of conventional antiship weapons not being made to hit human-sized targets and how much is due to exotic factors is debated in-universe.
* [[Actor Allusion]]: In Chapter 31, one of the hints as to the abyssal supreme commander's true identity is that her voice is described as "like a stony river". {{spoiler|In Japanese, "stone river" is literally translated as Ishikawa... as in Yui Ishikawa, the Japanese voice actress of ''[[Azur Lane]]'''s Enterprise.}}
* [[Adaptational Badass]]: Shipgirls have, beyond the physical superhumanity inherent to their being warships, [[Teleport Spam]], full spellcasting, and [[More Dakka]] for cruiser-and-above units. They fight abyssal encounters that are larger than in canon, to say nothing of Demons that now {{spoiler|can Step, have [[Anti-Magic]], destroyers with barrages and cruisers with [[Beehive Barrier]]s,}} or the leadership {{spoiler|who as [[Evil Counterpart]]s have the same supernal magic.}}
* [[Aerith and Bob]]: Most Natural Borns retain their original names, which are normal-for-their-culture ones like Alice or Ayaka. This is contrasted against the Summoned/Manifested who use their ship names rather than bothering to adopt human ones, and many of said names are things not normally used as names.
Line 69 ⟶ 70:
** Legacy: For Ayaka it is the problem of living up to the example of her bloodline and (believed to be) far more capable mother. Historical baggage also affects others, as all shipgirls are moulded by the accomplishments, experiences and failings of their past lives, and so too are the abyssals driven by the need to deal with their own unfinished business.
* [[Chekhov's Gun]]: In Chapter Eight, Uileag is mentioned to be holding something tightly enough as to hurt. It's later revealed to be {{spoiler|a ring}}.
* [[Chest of Medals]]: In Chapter 39, {{spoiler|Uileag says that he drove himself into nigh-suicidal heroics that got him enough in the way of awards to wear as armor.}}
* [[Code Emergency]]:
** In Chapter Five, the spectre of a Case Jötunn - hostile magic user - comes up but doesn't come to pass. This [[Chekhov's Gun]] doesn't get fired until Chapter 32.
Line 117 ⟶ 119:
* [[Four Is Death]]:
** [[Doom Magnet]] William D Porter, whose outrageously bad luck causes harm to those around her, has the callsign Uatu One-Four. Later, {{spoiler|Ayaka is [[Cast from Hit Points|Casting from Hit Points]] in her attempt to save everyone during the retreat from Southeast Asia and runs out after the 256th - 4^4 - rescue,}} and she is once again to blame.
** Inverted in Chapter 32, where it is on the fourth attempt that the [[Sole Survivor]] aircrew of a critically-damaged bomber manages to eject.
** In Chapter 33, it is on the fourth attack of each combo that {{spoiler|Northampton}} manages to get through Naganami's defences.
** The first shipgirl to sink is {{spoiler|Takanami, callsign Riptide}} Four.
Line 171 ⟶ 174:
* [[No Conservation of Energy]]: Shipgirls may be [[Big Eater]]s, but they don't need to eat the hundreds to thousands of men's worth of food that their ship selves' crews would have needed in order to function properly.
* [[Non-Fatal Explosions]]: In Chapter One, {{spoiler|Uileag gets caught in an abyssal bombing that briefly knocks him out, but he is still able-bodied enough after he regains consciousness that he can lead multiple rescue expeditions. It takes a second bombing, which has him [[Blown Across the Room]], to inflict internal injuries that lead to a month-long coma.}} One Corpsman remarks on his luck.
* [[Normal Fish in a Tiny Pond]]: This is used to put the abyssal threat into perspective and illustrate why the shipgirls are needed. By naval standards, a PT boat is no match for a "true" warship, being reliant on ambush tactics and numbers to prevail. Compared to humans, an abyssal PT Imp mounts heavy weapons that will tear a tree in two, never mind a man, will resist anything less, ishas wrappedthe upsize inand agility of an [[Enfant Terrible]]-sized package with the speed and agility of a car, and is still deployed in numbers more like infantry than ships. The second-weakest abyssal type, destroyers, all carry multiple artillery cannons and need direct hits from equivalent weapons to sink, and things only get worse for the [[Puny Earthlings]] from there. The same applies to the shipgirls opposing them; it is said in-universe that even a destroyer would easily overpower any wannabe sexual predator no matter what fancy grappling tricks might be employed, and an old battleship like Yamashiro can still pull a train or plow unstoppably through a crowd.
* [[The Oathbreaker]]: {{spoiler|The abyssals consider themselves this. Halsey made a promise that they couldn'tfailed to fulfil the last time, and now they're going to set things right, whatever it takes.}}
* [[Offscreen Moment of Awesome]]:
** The fall and later retaking of Pearl Harbor take place at some point in between Chapters One and Three. The readers get naught but brief comments as to what happened during these two vital battles.