Talk:Galaxy Angel II

Latest comment: 15 years ago by 83.114.7.109 in topic Rune/Lune Angel

Kahlua...

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There's a bit of fan speculation that Kahlua is evil, as if you take her out of the equation, all the Angels are named for desserts and the villains are named after alcoholic beverages. Now that the game is out, could someone confirm or deny this once and for all?

Sana Jisushi 11:51, 29 June 2006 (Central)

I can, actually. Pure speculation, really. Kahlua was the apprentice of Dist Dita, the first main villain in Galaxy Angel II. I'm not sure on all the details, but Kahlua's best friend died in a fire, and the trauma wound up creating Tequila. The end result of this was that the vast majority of Kahlua's magical power wound up going to Tequila, and Kahlua lived mostly without any real magic whatsoever. Shortly after the creation of Mimolette (Kahlua's pet floating cat-head thing), Tequila and Dist Dita had a falling out of sorts, and Kahlua/Tequila wound up joining the Rune Angels.
In Episode 5, Dist Dita manages to catch Kahlua after a fire, and places a curse of sorts on her - it weakens her under normal circumstances, but the full extent of the curse isn't shown until her Episode 9 - four episodes after Dist Dita died. The curse was in fact designed to work with her magical power, essentially making Tequila psychotic and out to kill her first love (Kazuya, of course). Ultimately, Kahlua and Tequila wound up breaking the curse while her and Kazuya were burning up in an atmosphere - Kazuya wound up needing medical attention for it, as the Brave Heart isn't exactly designed for atmospheric entry.

Wakuseino 04:11, 2 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Yo, that's wrong. Kahlua was not Diita's apprentice: the two were rivals fighting to become one of the Twelve (the twelve most accomplished magic users on Majick). Kahlua (or, rather, Tequila, as Kahlua has a self-imposed mental block on her magical powers) defeated Diita in the finals of the tournament, and Diita resents it greatly -- she cannot abide losing to a girl born and raised on an agricultural planet, especially since she's a native of Majick herself. That is why Diita turned evil.
Also, both Kahlua and Tequila have the same power -- they're the same person, after all. Kahlua has a subconscious mental block that prevents her from using those powers, because she had once used them to save her best friend (named Mimoret -- her familiar is named after this girl) from a raging fire but, in the process, scared her friend away for good (Mimoret mark I thought Kahlua too scary to hang around).
If you can't read the dialogue, don't make stuff up -- you're misleading people here with your wild guessing.

Kamatari 23:13, 1 August 2006 (UTC)Reply

Fair enough, fair enough. I acknowledge that I messed up on the details of Kahlua, and apologize for it. I also acknowledge it to be based on what little Japanese I could catch - for example, I was fairly sure I picked up "die" during Tequila's description of the mental block, and pieced things together from that. Apologies again... I spent most of the game trying to figure out Dist Dita's relationship with Kahlua, to be honest, and went with what made the most sense to my brain. Obviously, I missed a possibility, and again, I apologize.
I originally planned to include a "from my understanding" in that original post, but I apparently forgot to include it in the end, and as it was guessing, I specifically avoided placing it within the article.

Wakuseino 15:27, 2 August 2006 (UTC)Reply

Ah, and as an afterthought, I'd like to contend with you on the spelling of the planet Magiic's name, which was spelled as Magiic according to the briefing session prior to the assault on Celdar. Why am I contending about such a meaningless issue? I'm trying to cut back on the variants of spelling names before things get completely out of control. I've seen around three different ways of spelling it now, and not a single one of them matches what the game put it down as.

Wakuseino 15:49, 2 August 2006 (UTC)Reply

Nano-Nano Power?

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Ok, I'm just wondering: Do we have any verification that it works via equipping one before the battle? My current running assumption was along the lines of "Repair Wave is her normal special technique, and the "Needle Flay Sheet" (Not sure on the name, actual spelling in Katakana is ニードルフレシット) was for when they were combined.

On a related note, I noticed that when the trailers showed the special techniques, the ships in question were all in the "combined" form (If you pay attention earlier on, it shows the normal form, then shows the ship "speed transforming" into what appears to be the combined form). Think this should be noted?

Wakuseino 07:51, 13 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

For the record, I figured out the details now. All the Emblem Frames have a flight mode and an attack mode. When they aren't targetting any enemies/their target isn't close by, they go into flight mode so that they can move faster. When about to go into battle, they switch to attack mode.
As for the topic of Nano-Nano's power, If you use the special technique while operating the cannons, it automatically uses Needle Flay Sheet. Otherwise, you select which special technique to use from the menu.

Wakuseino 04:16, 2 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Opening parodies

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It didn't seem worth adding to the article, but it seems that the opening to the show has been heavily parodied by fan artists, I've seen various crossovers such as this Black Lagoon one. --Theredstarswl 06:54, 21 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

Rune/Lune Angel

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Is there any official spelling for the 『ルーンエンジェル』 to be 'Rune Angel'? Wouldn't it rather be 'Lune' since it's French for 'Moon' and the 『ルーンエンジェル』 are the successors of the Moon Angels? Also, it's not as if no French word was ever used in GA (Millefeuille, Framboise, Blancmange,...) OTOH, 'Rune Angel' doesn't make any sense.

83.114.7.109 (talk) 20:09, 15 December 2008 (UTC)Reply