Thursday, October 15, 2015

Japan 07: Gundam Front



The most fascinating thing about the Gundam Front Experience located on the sixth floor of the Diver City Plaza at Odaiba in Tokyo is not the innovative Dome-G animated movie presentation; it's not the life-sized Strike Freedom Gundam torso or the battle-scarred Core Fighter GFT, and it's not the Character Photo spots that allow you to be photographed with characters from any of the Gundam series.

No, it's none of those things.  The most fascinating thing about the Gundam Front Experience is the exhibition that showcases the unbelievable amount of Gundam-related merchandise that has been produced over the last 36 years.

Photo by Karli
The display is located just outside of the paid area of the exhibition, and features the literally thousands of models and toys inspired by the various Gundam movies and television shows.


The range of items is staggering - it's easy to imagine a dedicated collector standing in this room for hours, alternately salivating and brooding as they examine the glass-fronted cases showing model after model after model.


However, to be fair, the paid area offers some unique experiences as well.  The Dome-G video presentation gives the audience an impressive 360-degree ants-eye view of life-sized battlesuit combat on a 16 meter wide hemispherical screen.  The illusion is epic in scale, dizzying and fast-paced, with two short videos in steady rotation.


Leaving the dome, guests enter the Experience Field, which features a life-sized torso of a ZGMF-X20A Strike Freedom Gundam, a full-sized recreation of a battered Core Fighter, and a scale model of the A Baoa Qu space fortress from the final episode of the original series.  Given that the original fortress is 13.5 kilometers tall, I think that the decision to go with a scale version was a prudent one.  There's also a pair of character photo-ops where you can be photographed with a character chosen from a full range of the Gundam programs.



The Experience also includes an area which explains the process by which the models are manufactured, and offers workshops in model building.  And, of course, if you're going to show people all those models, how they're made, and how to put them together, it seems only reasonable to offer the opportunity to buy some of them...


Merchandising aside, I enjoyed the Gundam Front Experience, although I admit to finding it a bit limited in terms of its scale - which is an odd thing to say about an exhibition dedicated to giant battlesuits.  However, I realize that it's intended for a more earnest fan of the series and its models than myself, and I can appreciate that for someone who was a serious follower, the Gundam Front Experience would be more than worth the price of admission.

And, for myself, I can now add "battlesuit pilot" to my list of geek achievements.


- Sid

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