Series Included
- Banpresto Originals
- Shin Getter Robo (Manga version, piloted by Ryoma Nagare, Hayato Jin, and Benkei Kuruma)
- Mazinkaiser
- Mazinkaiser: Fight to the Death! The Great General of Darkness
- Mobile Suit Gundam SEED
- Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Astray (debut)
- Mobile Suit Gundam SEED X Astray (debut)
- Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz
- Martian Successor Nadesico
- Martian Successor Nadesico: The Motion Picture – Prince of Darkness
- The King of Braves GaoGaiGar
- The King of Braves GaoGaiGar Final
- Full Metal Panic!
- Full Metal Panic? Fumoffu
- Full Metal Panic! The Second Raid (debut)
- Tekkaman Blade
- Tekkaman Blade II (debut)
- Detonator Orgun (debut)
- Beast King GoLion (debut)
W marks the first Super Robot Wars game (aside from the Original Generation sub-series) to feature no machines from any series produced before 1980. The only characters from a pre-1980s series to appear are the Getter team, piloting the Shin Getter as they did in the 1990s manga. This game also marks the second Super Robot Wars title not to feature any Universal Century Gundam series, the first of which being Super Robot Wars Judgement. It is also the first in the franchise which features no series produced by veteran anime director Yoshiyuki Tomino It is also the only game in the series in which every series included has been licensed, in whole or in part, in North America.
Read more about this topic: Super Robot Wars W
Famous quotes containing the words series and/or included:
“A sophistical rhetorician, inebriated with the exuberance of his own verbosity, and gifted with an egotistical imagination that can at all times command an interminable and inconsistent series of arguments to malign an opponent and to glorify himself.”
—Benjamin Disraeli (18041881)
“The developments in the North were those loosely embraced in the term modernization and included urbanization, industrialization, and mechanization. While those changes went forward apace, the antebellum South changed comparatively little, clinging to its rural, agricultural, labor-intensive economy and its traditional folk culture.”
—C. Vann Woodward (b. 1908)