Matchless Raijin-Oh | |
絶対無敵ライジンオー (Zettai Muteki Raijin-Oh) | |
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Genre | Adventure, Mecha |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Toshifumi Kawase |
Written by | Hideki Sonoda |
Music by | Kohei Tanaka |
Studio | Sunrise |
Licensed by | |
Original network | TXN (TV Tokyo) |
Original run | April 3, 1991 – March 25, 1992 |
Episodes | 51 |
Original video animation | |
Raijin-Oh Final | |
Directed by | Toshifumi Kawase |
Written by | Hideki Sonoda |
Music by | Kohei Tanaka |
Studio | Sunrise |
Released | August 5, 1992 – February 24, 1993 |
Runtime | 30 minutes |
Episodes | 4 |
Matchless Raijin-Oh (絶対無敵ライジンオー, Zettai Muteki Raijin-Oh, lit. Absolutely Invincible Raijin-Oh) is a 51 episode Japanese anime television series, and the first generation Eldran franchise funded by Tomy and produced by Sunrise. It aired in Japan from April 3, 1991 to March 25, 1992 and later be succeeded by the second generation of the Eldran series Genki Bakuhatsu Ganbaruger. The story revolves around a group of elementary school children who are given command of a mecha named Raijin-Oh and their efforts to defend the Earth from the evil Jaaku (evil) Empire. There is also a four-episode OVA sequel in the Genki Bakuhatsu Ganbaruger saga.
Anime Midstream, Inc. announced in December, 2008, that it acquired the license for and planned to release the anime series Matchless Raijin-Oh in the U.S. sometime in 2009 as their first anime release. The company began selling the first volume of the series direct from their website, as well as several other online retailers as of late December 2009. The first volume contained episodes 1–5. The second volume, containing episodes 6–10, was released in September 2010, and translated the title beginning with this volume (and current printings of the first volume are now also marketed under that title). The third volume was released on July 12, 2011, containing episodes 11–15. Each volume contains English and Japanese audio, as well as special features such as music videos, clean openings/closings, voice bloopers, and the third volume contains an audio commentary with several of the English voice actors. Two more volumes were released on June 30, 2012 for volume four and July 1, 2013 for volume five.
The rest of the series was released as a five-disc boxset; the Season 2 Collection, released on September 30, 2014. However, this set is in Japanese with English subtitles only.