Hey I'm new to this subreddit. I figured I would join because Zoids: chaotic century is in my top 10 list of favorite anime, out of like 600, so I like it alot. I used to wake up early on weekdays so I could watch Chaotic Century on Cartoon Network before I had to go to school. The other day I was at a used book store which sells a lot of used Manga and Anime and I was super lucky that day because I found the zoids volume 1 DVD for $20, considering I've seen it sell for a lot more. While I have rewatched the show since I was younger, that was probably still a decade ago and I don't think I've ever watched Guardian Force all the way so I'm looking forward to rewatching this series.

Now about my questions. I was wondering how much the zoids TV series was changed so that it could be on TV. I heard it kind of got the 4kids treatment were they censored a bunch of stuff or cut out scenes? I did see a spanish(not Japanese) clip from the beginning where they showed Fiona getting out of the pod and she was naked. It makes me wonder what else got cut, and because the show is targeted towards kids we never got a subtitled uncensored DVD release right?


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I don't really mind this stuff being cut from the television show but I was also wondering about the manga that Viz published. I collect another old manga that viz worked on and as far as I can tell nothing was censored but at the same time, that manga is definitely for mature audiences, so I was wondering about zoids which was targeted towards kids in the states. Did the manga get censored for us release and if that is the case, can I find translated scans that weren't doctored?

I also wanted to know the basic differences between the anime and the manga. What would be really cool is if I can watch zoids (in its kid friendly form) and then I could jump over to the manga and find out it's darker, so that's kind of what I'm asking about.

Not that my love for zoids is ever very far away from me. One of the things I have learned about the stories I enjoy is that, no matter where I go or what makes me set them aside, my favorite characters in fiction will reassert their importance to me when I least expect them to do so. They also seem to like doing this to me when I need them most.

I know that zoids do not exist. I have known this for years. But there is still something that I can sense in the air sometimes that makes me feel as eager as I only did when I watched or thought about Zoids. The trailer for Field of Rebellion not only intensified that childish wish, it made me hope for a film based on at least the zoids themselves, if not on Chaotic Century.

For this reason, I have decided to inaugurate a series of Spotlight! posts that will focus on the characters from Zoids. I do not want these great characters who still visit me when I need their encouragement to be destroyed as the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, the Transformers, and other childhood friends have been. No amount of CGI zoids or fantastic storytelling would save a film that abused these characters, and this is something I wish to make perfectly clear to anyone who may be considering creating a film based on Zoids: Chaotic Century.

It is the characters, the zoids, the plot, and the themes of the series that make Zoids: Chaotic Century such a magnificent story worthy of the best efforts of those who paint pictures on the silver screen. There are four main plot points in Chaotic Century that MUST be present in any film based on the show. These are:

The way Chaotic Century keeps us on our toes is by having the characters point out the wonder of these things. Time and time again, characters remark on the beauty and splendor of the zoids, reminding us of how special these creatures are. The appreciation that the ordinary village folk in the series show for the countryside they live in reminds us that these vistas are available to us wherever we live. We simply have to actually look out the window and see them as they are. The sacrifices the characters make for each other, the little gestures of friendship and romance sprinkled throughout each episode, call on us to realize how valuable our own friends and families are to us.

That was the tag line for advertisements featuring toys from two anime series I loved and watched regularly when they were on television. The first of these was Zoids: New Century Zero, the sequel to Zoids: Chaotic Century. Somehow Zero played in the U.S. ahead of Century; I have no idea how that happened. But the fact is that both series made me I fall in love with zoids.

Above all, however, the zoids themselves still galvanize this author. It wears thin every now and then, of course, like having the same dinner or desert every night for a month would. But when I come back to Zoids: Chaotic Century after a hiatus, watching the zoids and their pilots do battle still thrills me. Naturally, I know how every fight will end. I know what the next move of each contestant will be, along with who will win and who will lose. There are no more surprises for me as a viewer when I return to Zi through this individual portal. ff782bc1db

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