December 10, 2025

Pride, Prejudice & Plasma Cannons

Gundam is just the same as Jane Austen but happens to include giant mech suits

Internet splits: Pride & Prejudice with lasers or just soap opera in space

TLDR: A writer compares Gundam’s giant-robot war drama to Jane Austen’s social chess, saying both tackle duty versus desire. Commenters split between calling it “Pride & Prejudice with lasers,” demanding sharper satire, and joking about “janpla” model kits—showing classic themes still spark lively, meme-ready debate.

One blogger boldly declares Gundam is basically Jane Austen with giant robots, comparing drawing-room dilemmas to cockpit crises—duty versus desire, from Elizabeth Bennet’s marriage math to Char Aznable’s masked vendettas. Fans jumped in with sparkly reactions, but the room split fast.

The meme crown went to rilindo’s quip: “Where is my janpla model kits, then?” Inerte widened the lens, tossing in quirky parallels to Wes Anderson and Disney with this video. On the skeptic side, fellowniusmonk challenged the premise: Is Gundam actually as funny and culture-mocking as Austen? They even questioned calling Pride & Prejudice a romance at all. Then jerf dropped a meta-bomb: almost everything has a soap opera in it, suggesting Austen-versus-Gundam is really universal human drama in different outfits.

Meanwhile, ErroneousBosh escalated the copycat wars with: “Avatar is Pocahontas repainted. Fight me.” Cue fireworks. Supporters loved the tidy symmetry—privileged characters navigating systems bigger than them, whether tea parties or beam sabers. Skeptics demanded Austen-level wit, not just feelings-in-space.

In short: the blog’s vibe is Pride & Prejudice with lasers, but the comments turned it into a bigger battle over satire versus soap, originality versus remix, and whether “janpla” should absolutely be a thing. Fans aren’t done yet.

Key Points

  • The article argues Gundam and Jane Austen share themes of duty, social structures, and personal desire.
  • Austen’s novels depict strategic marriages within rigid class systems, balancing personal feelings with social obligations.
  • Gundam’s narratives, particularly in the Universal Century, show characters caught between personal relationships and military/political hierarchies.
  • Examples include Elizabeth Bennet’s refusal of Mr. Collins and Char Aznable’s motives channeled through institutional power with large-scale consequences.
  • Parallels extend to Emma Woodhouse and Suletta Mercury, highlighting how personal intentions intersect with institutional systems like matchmaking and corporate alliances.

Hottest takes

"Where is my janpla model kits, then?" — rilindo
"Is it as funny and does it 'make ridiculous' it's framing culture as much as Austen?" — fellowniusmonk
"Avatar is Pocahontas repainted. Fight me." — ErroneousBosh
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