I like how it's just a t-34 with crab legs it's like the Soviets saw the concept of Labor design and thought no we don't need to do that we just put legs on tank that works well enough
@@coatofarms4439 honesty, in this case, I'd say the mech would be more effective. To tall and complex to be an effective conventional vehicle, whilst not having the theoretical advantages of a mech.
@@coatofarms4439 ehh, depends, I say that combat would definitely go towards the armour, but for policing duties, I say that the patlabours are ideal. Either way, that Russian labour is very silly.
The vacuum tubes are actualy a VERY clever reference As this entire episode is a reference to real-life Soviet soldier escape into Japan on a stolen MiG-25, primitive vacuum tubes are the reference to MiG-25's primitive electronic lamps used instead of semiconductors. Due to lamps being used it could fly on greater heights without being afraid of semiconductors melting.
@@APFSDS-DU They are not, genius. They are a sidegrade - only a complete idiot can say truck is more advanced than car, they are similar things with different applications and work environments, is a knife more ""advanced"" than a fork?
It's not better, it's worse He just yells "Japs nyet ura" Same as If American in a Russian movie yelled "Burger Colorado Deer" but with different subtitles What's interesting is that in Live Action Russians were actually speaking perfect correct Russian.
Ghosts in a haunted abandoned city block, Tokyo underground cavern prehistoric dragon-esque, albino sewer alligator... yeah, it sure makes that strange Hiromi-like kaiju from The Early Days OVA feel tame in comparison.
you know, I'm still pleasantly surprised that this show barely has strobe or flashing lights, except for the gunshots obviously. Even in the movies, and it's something that's EXTREMELY common in 80's-90'smech anime, it really sucks when you have to put away a show just because of photosensitive epilepsy... especially a lot of brilliant mech shows and movies just because a director thought it was a cool choice.
Up into the 80s, the Soviets used a lot of primitive electronics in their military hardware, on the principle it'd be easier to swap out vacuum tubes after an EMP blew them all out.
Pretty common, actually. The MiG-25 Foxbat interceptor was one of the fastest aircraft ever built, and its avionics used primarily vacuum tubes. Mainly, this was because tubes resist extreme temperatures better than transistors and microcircuits, which made them easier to maintain, especially at remote Soviet airfields in the dead of winter. As a side effect, they are much less sensitive to feedback and EMP, which means they are less susceptible to being damaged by electronic countermeasures or the conditions of a nuclear battlefield. It's worth noting that when it was designed, the Foxbat's avionics were considered very sophisticated in their capabilities. Also, its radar was absurdly powerful; it was designed to brute force its way through jamming.
On an important sidenote, gotta thank MandaloreGaming for reviving personal interest on Patlabor: The TV Series (also, The New Files follow-up and the alternate continuity The Early Days OVA+Movies 1 and 2) by using 4:44-5:02 for his SHOGO review. Same with K-On!, even if he used that show as a negative example of why he doesn't get anime. And amusingly, both the Patlabor and K-On! eps featured in his review are actually their respective ninth eps.
Fairly realistic, actually. The Soviet MiG-25 Foxbat interceptor, one of the fastest aircraft ever built, used vacuum tubes in much of its avionics. This was a deliberate design choice; vacuum tubes are much more resistant to extreme temperatures, meaning they were easier to maintain at remote Soviet airfields in the dead of winter. As a side-effect, they also resisted feedback and EMP better than transistors and microcircuits, which meant they weren't as badly effected by electronic countermeasures, and were more likely to survive on a nuclear battlefield. In point of fact, the MiG-25's radar and targeting systems were actually quite sophisticated in their capabilities, despite the "primitive" components. The radar especially was absurdly powerful; it was basically meant to brute force its way through jamming. The portrayal here is more likely inspired by an event in 1976, however, when Soviet pilot Viktor Belenko landed his MiG-25P at an airfield in Hokkaido, Japan. Belenko defected to the United States, and his plane was subsequently disassembled and analyzed before being returned to the USSR. The fact that the avionics used vacuum tubes in their design became known to the public soon after, and cue the jokes about backward Soviet technology.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese Anime Television Series.
If only the Soviet Union had survived longer in the era of Anime! Maybe they would've made some Soviet Mecha series ;) We need more socialist Mecha Anime!
When he makes TV shows, they're goofy and non-serious. See Patlabor TV and urusei yatsura for examples. When he makes movies, they're deadly serious and as artistic as possible. Very strange.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese Anime Television Series.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese Anime Television Series.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese Action/Comedy/Police/Drama Anime Television Series.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese Action/Comedy/Police/Drama Anime Television Series.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese Action/Comedy/Police/Drama Anime Television Series.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese Action/Comedy/Police/Drama Anime Television Series.
"It's a military vehicle in transit. I'm sure it's not loaded with live rounds."
*Soviet Labor annihilates a car with a very live round*
Soviet Labor: my very alive round politely disagrees.
"In Soviet Russia, round is live, target is not."
I like how it's just a t-34 with crab legs it's like the Soviets saw the concept of Labor design and thought no we don't need to do that we just put legs on tank that works well enough
it would probably be more efficient and cheap then mechs anyway.
@@coatofarms4439 honesty, in this case, I'd say the mech would be more effective. To tall and complex to be an effective conventional vehicle, whilst not having the theoretical advantages of a mech.
@@memeboy8207 It would be better if it was like power armor in Fallout.
@@coatofarms4439 ehh, depends, I say that combat would definitely go towards the armour, but for policing duties, I say that the patlabours are ideal. Either way, that Russian labour is very silly.
Typical soviet engineering
Japanese Mech: great Humanoid design.
Soviet Mech: T 34 with legs
Yeah lol
well, maybe Japanese should have defeated Germans with gundams first then lol
This killed me xD
of course
kinda looks like teh auto guns on legs from the tunnel scene
Not perfect, the easiest way to destroy a humanoid robot is its crotch and leg hinges
The vacuum tubes are actualy a VERY clever reference
As this entire episode is a reference to real-life Soviet soldier escape into Japan on a stolen MiG-25, primitive vacuum tubes are the reference to MiG-25's primitive electronic lamps used instead of semiconductors. Due to lamps being used it could fly on greater heights without being afraid of semiconductors melting.
Also, the use of vacuum tubes is probably why it withstanded the EMP pulse from the baton
The inferior electronics of the Mig 25 was Wéstern Propaganda. In Reality The Mig 25 was ahead of his Rivals in avionics like the Radar Smerch A
Rodrigo Nuñez Vacuum tubes are objectively more primitive than semiconductors.
@Grease this
@@APFSDS-DU They are not, genius. They are a sidegrade - only a complete idiot can say truck is more advanced than car, they are similar things with different applications and work environments, is a knife more ""advanced"" than a fork?
1:12
Soviet Labor: Disembarks
Background Music: SPROIOIOIOIOIOIONGGGGG
..."A98 is useless against a military Labor..."
The military Labor's gun couldn't even shoot through the wooden crates that the A98 is hiding behind.
As someone who speaks russian I laughed hard from Soviet dude attempts to speak russian.
I presume, if Japlish in anime is bad enough, this is much worse?
"Ya pushki net UGRAAAH"
@@isgodreal1337 YAPOSHKI, NIYET! URAAAAAH!
Damn, i don’t even speak Russian and even I could tell the sentence was bullshit
he spoke Soviet NOT Russia
I like how they actually made the Soviet guy speak Russian instead of Japanese with Russian accent which many other anime series does.
+SMGJohn Though I have to admit, it sounds just as bad as engrish.
+Jovan Mitrić
True it sounds a bit cliché and the accent is not perfect but hey its better than hilarious Japanese with Russian accent.
Lussian?
It's not better, it's worse
He just yells "Japs nyet ura"
Same as If American in a Russian movie yelled "Burger Colorado Deer" but with different subtitles
What's interesting is that in Live Action Russians were actually speaking perfect correct Russian.
@@sorokabeloboka8818 Japonsky nyet ura.
They should've instead had him say "Vodka lada vodka lada cyka bylat"
Like Layzner, where there's people on Mars in 1996 and the Cold War is still ongoing. I love it.
I forgot how bonkers this show was. I love it
Best ever!
Ghosts in a haunted abandoned city block, Tokyo underground cavern prehistoric dragon-esque, albino sewer alligator... yeah, it sure makes that strange Hiromi-like kaiju from The Early Days OVA feel tame in comparison.
@@michaelandreipalon359 You forgot TV series eps.4 ninja bigfoot-looking creature.🤣
3:22 best part, a 3m high hightech mech takes cover behind some wooden chests.
crates as big as a house
@@jakartagamer6188 made out of wood
@@maikbaumann1250 how is the wood can even hold itself together?
Ingram is actually 8 meters tall. :)
terraria fans:makes sense
The pause before the ship sinking always cracked me up, even 20 years after watching it.
Love how the bad guys disclose their plan out loud in the public area.
1:12
That was the *WRONG* sound effect for that shot.
XD
Hehehe 😂
bewowowowowowowo
those labors are based on the T-34-76 tank, cool one.
you know, I'm still pleasantly surprised that this show barely has strobe or flashing lights, except for the gunshots obviously. Even in the movies, and it's something that's EXTREMELY common in 80's-90'smech anime, it really sucks when you have to put away a show just because of photosensitive epilepsy... especially a lot of brilliant mech shows and movies just because a director thought it was a cool choice.
Heed my warning then: DONT WATCH GAOGAIGAR! As fun as the show is, it’s hard to watch because of that.
In Soviet Union, the workers make YOU labor!
1:13 That sound though.
patlabor is very underrated
Gundam is more underrated.
What kind of impressive Soviet magicks did they use to have a mech with vacuum tubes?
Up into the 80s, the Soviets used a lot of primitive electronics in their military hardware, on the principle it'd be easier to swap out vacuum tubes after an EMP blew them all out.
Pretty common, actually. The MiG-25 Foxbat interceptor was one of the fastest aircraft ever built, and its avionics used primarily vacuum tubes. Mainly, this was because tubes resist extreme temperatures better than transistors and microcircuits, which made them easier to maintain, especially at remote Soviet airfields in the dead of winter. As a side effect, they are much less sensitive to feedback and EMP, which means they are less susceptible to being damaged by electronic countermeasures or the conditions of a nuclear battlefield.
It's worth noting that when it was designed, the Foxbat's avionics were considered very sophisticated in their capabilities. Also, its radar was absurdly powerful; it was designed to brute force its way through jamming.
the fact he used the butt of the gun rather than shoot at that close range
When the second Red Labor comes out they play the "Game Over" music from the Patlabor in-universe game :D
2:42 "Японский, нет! Ура!" 😂
Япощки*
It feels like "C.C. RED ALERT " meets PATLABOR
Kirov reporting
and of course the lights and sirens show up on cue After the port is demolished
3:32 3:44 LOL SO ARE WE JUST GONNA IGNORE THIS SCENE
Oh, heck no!
Those Russian mechs are so derpy looking when they move
I want to thank you as i found your great channel through this video.
Thank you!
On an important sidenote, gotta thank MandaloreGaming for reviving personal interest on Patlabor: The TV Series (also, The New Files follow-up and the alternate continuity The Early Days OVA+Movies 1 and 2) by using 4:44-5:02 for his SHOGO review. Same with K-On!, even if he used that show as a negative example of why he doesn't get anime.
And amusingly, both the Patlabor and K-On! eps featured in his review are actually their respective ninth eps.
It looks like a quadrupedal Metal Slug.
Save her
Arrest him anyway
Yeah
Ah, good old SV2--stopping petty criminals and Soviet defectors alike!
Lol. They shot up everything but themselves. :p
I like how it scoots
Lol the Soviet mechs still using vaccum tubes
If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
It did give the Soviet labor resistance to the electromagnetic baton,.... still could move its turret afer being shocked.
Unrealistic! ;) We all know Soviet Mecha would've been much more out together. The anti Sovietism coming from Japan is at least silly
Fairly realistic, actually. The Soviet MiG-25 Foxbat interceptor, one of the fastest aircraft ever built, used vacuum tubes in much of its avionics. This was a deliberate design choice; vacuum tubes are much more resistant to extreme temperatures, meaning they were easier to maintain at remote Soviet airfields in the dead of winter. As a side-effect, they also resisted feedback and EMP better than transistors and microcircuits, which meant they weren't as badly effected by electronic countermeasures, and were more likely to survive on a nuclear battlefield. In point of fact, the MiG-25's radar and targeting systems were actually quite sophisticated in their capabilities, despite the "primitive" components. The radar especially was absurdly powerful; it was basically meant to brute force its way through jamming.
The portrayal here is more likely inspired by an event in 1976, however, when Soviet pilot Viktor Belenko landed his MiG-25P at an airfield in Hokkaido, Japan. Belenko defected to the United States, and his plane was subsequently disassembled and analyzed before being returned to the USSR. The fact that the avionics used vacuum tubes in their design became known to the public soon after, and cue the jokes about backward Soviet technology.
@@autofox1744 Early American Mars probes used rope memory to completely neutralize the effect of magnetic fields, and it was, like, actual ropes.
I like and love this series a lot the pat labor and it will be the best of the best. 💯👍🙌
Could've left out the beginning with the green jacket dude.
Fight was hilarious.
3:49 derp eyes
why they put "LOL" sound when that doors open?
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese Anime Television Series.
hey OP its a soviet vs soviet mecha, the police girl berely did anything :P
That Vacuum TUBE!!
Have you ever just ran straight up to a guy and jump kicked him in the face?
And then kicked all of his friends.
02:23 ataru morobosi
Soviet mech: Blin machine
The most Russian name that ever Russia'd.
Crab tanks 🦀🦀
"YAPOLSKI! BLEGH!"
I uhhh.... think this may not be real russian.
Hey its better than the davai davai and nyet/da u normally hear.
That was one hell of punt
Oh shit it's the cops!!!
Last bit is actually funny
If only the Soviet Union had survived longer in the era of Anime! Maybe they would've made some Soviet Mecha series ;)
We need more socialist Mecha Anime!
5:33 I find this funny
Hope they release in Moderoid
military labor sure is different
What episode was this from?
Episode 9 of the TV series.
Is this really mamoru oshii? So very unlikely of his...humours.
I watched mostly serious ones.
When he makes TV shows, they're goofy and non-serious. See Patlabor TV and urusei yatsura for examples. When he makes movies, they're deadly serious and as artistic as possible. Very strange.
@@TalkernateHistory actually Urusei Yatsura has some very experimental episodes, e.g EP 84
5:34 Oh right I have gun
the Russian guys sounds like an old man
A politically outdated plot which is still fun to watch.
When it came it was still the Soviet Union you know...
those vacuum tube
These were just light tanks
Extra thicc armor
這是押井守對公安情報部門的一些“怨恨”😏😏😏😏😜
cool bro
It makes me remember Armored core
In Soviet Union, mech drives you.
BOING......
what anime is it
PATLABOR TV
2:42
There are Soviets in the 90’s?
This episode aired in 1989, but the show is set in 2013
@@TalkernateHistory I don't think the show is that far ahead. The second movie is set in 2002.
@@Glitcher2000 You're right, The Next Generation takes place in 2013, not the TV show. My mistake.
Until 1991
😮
ロシア語下手くそすぎるのがめっちゃ気になってしょうがないw
Siberiachi = I'm freezing. :-D
Funy storys..; )
HAHAHAHA😹
Mau Es Enggak,
Wot I don’t understand anime
JAIL KENNY 2021!!!!!!!
Should have said Cyka Blyat!!!!
Ivan Ivanov Ivanovsky
смешное =))
Japan Labor will be defeated by Soviet Labor. Soviet Labor works in GULAGS
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese Anime Television Series.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese Anime Television Series.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese
Action/Comedy/Police/Drama Anime Television Series.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese
Action/Comedy/Police/Drama Anime Television Series.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese
Action/Comedy/Police/Drama Anime Television Series.
Patlabor: The TV Series (1989 - 1990) Headgear/Emotion/TFC/Sunrise Japanese Original Airdate: (October 11, 1989 - September 29, 1990) Japanese
Action/Comedy/Police/Drama Anime Television Series.