Galactic Whirlwind Sasuraiger

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Galactic Whirlwind Sasuraiger
Sasuraiger.jpg
Japanese promotional art for the 1983 anime Sasuraiger
銀河疾風サスライガー
(Ginga Shippū Sasuraigā)
GenreMecha
Anime television series
Directed byTakao Yotsuji
Written byYu Yamamoto
Music byJoe Hisaishi
StudioKokusai Eiga-sha
Original networkTV Tokyo
Original run April 5, 1983 January 31, 1984
Episodes43
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Galactic Whirlwind Sasuraiger (銀河疾風サスライガー, Ginga Shippū Sasuraigā) is a mecha anime series that aired from 1983 to 1984 in Japan. There were 43 episodes aired. Other loosely translated names include Galactic Gale Sasuraiger, Galaxy Whirlwind Sasuraiger and Wonder Six. It is the sequel to Galactic Gale Baxingar and the final entry of the J9 Series.

The original concept was adopted from the novel Around the World in Eighty Days.

The anime was available in Indonesia in the form of VHS and Betamax with the title "Wonder Six". The name referenced the six characters who were on the adventure.

Plot Summary[]

It is the year 2911 and the solar system is made up of 50 planets. I.C Blues, a gambler, makes a bet with the boss of a criminal syndicate known as Bloody God that it is possible to navigate the entire solar system in one year. Helping out Blues is the J9-III team, made up of Rock, Beat, and Birdy, who have purchased a super robot capable of transforming into a train from the space merchant D.D Richman. This robot is Sasuraiger.

As Blues and the JJ9 team start the challenge, it soon becomes evident that the Bloody Syndicate will do anything to ensure the JJ9 team loses the bet.

Staff[]

  • Creator
    Yuu Yamamoto
  • Director
    Takao Yotsuji
  • Additional Directors
    Jouhei Matsuura
    Hideki Takayama
  • Character Design
    Kazuo Komatsubara
  • Mecha Design
    Hiroshi Ohnishi

Characters[]

Name Nickname Voiced by Description
Blues Carl Bernstein IC Blues Kazuyuki Sogabe The leader of the JJ9 team controlling Sasuraiger.
Rock Anlock Nukiuchi Rock Kaneto Shiozawa A marksman who was recruited by Blues to control Sasuraiger's weapons. Because of typos done by Animator Japan, the character name was occasionally written as "Lock".
Beat MacKenzie Otoboke Beat Katsuji Mori A lover of racing, he was assigned to be the pilot and occasionally doubled as a mechanic.
Birdy Shaw Moody Birdy Yōko Asagami The daughter of the famous novelist Vincent Shaw.
Jimmy Kenjo Yoku Shioya The technician.
Suzy Chang Masako Miura Suzy helped in the kitchen, though she and Jimmy were a teenage couple who joined Sasuraiger to look for a planet that permitted under-age marriage.
D. D. Richman Jōji Yanami Being the original owner of Sasuraiger, he hoped Blues and his friends would make money for him.
Inspector Organ Kan Tokumaru The police officer that relentlessly pursued the team, suspecting them to be bank robbers.

Robots[]

  • Sasuraiger/J9-III go
  • Eadle BG-9
  • Souzer EM-3
  • Stikk EP1-4
  • Badran VIC5

Merchandise[]

The toy was originally called Batrain when released by Takatoku in Japan. The Batrain stickers on the model could be removed to reveal Sasuraiger stickers underneath. The Sasuraiger toy was released under the name Fast Track in the Convertors toy line in the U.S.

Video games[]

The robots have been featured in Super Robot Wars GC along with Braiger and Baxingar. However, unlike its predecessors, none of the enemies from the anime appear in the game.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""