Japanese engineer builds giant robot to realize 'Gundam' dream
SHINTO, Japan: Japanese engineer Masaaki Nagumo had always dreamed of suiting up as a robot from “Mobile Suit Gundam”, his favorite animation series growing up. Now he has made it a reality by creating a giant humanoid inspired by the science fiction franchise.
Developed at Sakakibara Kikai, a maker of farming machinery, LW-Mononofu is an 8.5-meter (28-feet) tall, two-legged robot weighing in at more than 7 tonnes. It contains a cockpit with monitors and levers for the pilot to control the robot’s arms and legs.
“I think this can be turned into a business opportunity,” Nagumo, 44, told Reuters, noting the popularity of the iconic series that has spawned movies, manga, video games and more.
Sakakibara Kikai has developed other robots and amusement machines alongside its main agriculture equipment business and rents them out for about 100,000 yen ($930) an hour, for kids’ birthday parties and other entertainment, he said.
The company has created robots as varied as the 3.4-metre tall Landwalker, the smaller Kid’s Walker Cyclops and the MechBoxer boxing machine - but the mighty Mononofu towers over them all and executes more complex movements.
It can move its fingers and turn its upper body, and walk forward and backward. It is no speedster, however, moving at less than 1 km per hour.
But what it lacks in pace, it makes up for with power: the bazooka-like air gun on its right arm shoots sponge balls at around 140 kph (87 miles per hour).
“As an anime-inspired robot that one can ride, I think this is the biggest in the world,” said Nagumo.
Mononofu, however, might be a bit too large: it is unable to leave the factory without being dismantled because it was built taller than the entrance.
-
Four alien species recovered from crashed UFOs, Ex-CIA researcher claims
-
NASA delays Moon landing as Artemis III shifts to orbit mission
-
Scientists reveal shocking early sighting of 3I/ATLAS comet
-
Asteroid 2026 JH2 to pass extremely close to Earth on May 18: Should we be concerned?
-
Meet the ‘last titan’: Giant new dinosaur identified from fossils in Thailand
-
Can we finally find aliens? Scientists reveal a surprising new ‘organizational’ approach
-
Study reveals how to tell real alien life from chemical fakes
-
Scientists find hidden third ancestral group in Japanese genomes
-
SpaceX ‘Space Junk’ is on a collision course with the Moon, scientists say
-
Do you know what happened on May 10, 1967? NASA's M2-F2 disaster explained
-
Why the Southern Ocean is melting: Antarctica’s sea ice resilience reaches a breaking point
-
Giant black holes are cosmic ‘Frankensteins’ built by mergers, new study reveals