>>104342> <Mature tranimes offer painfully unfunny awkward lewd moments > >Thought provoking stuff can be found on animes aimed at childrenThose two clips are from the exact same anime (should be plainly obvious as it's the same art style and the same character is present in both). And it's not aimed at children. It's a faithful adaption of a long series of epic science-fiction novels for adults. There's nothing childish whatsoever about Ginga Eiyuu Densetsu. And the scene from the first "tranime" as you called it (…the very same anime as the second webm in that post, that you called a "thought provoking anime" because there's a nigger in it…) is not supposed to be lewd in any way: he's watching a documentary about a period hundreds of years ago when society declined and degenerated in all sorts of ways. And that period is based after the Weimar era in Germany (pics related). Extremely bizarre you see that first webm and think "this scene is meant to be heckin lewd" when it's obvious it's only supposed to look disgusting, revolting, and highlight how low society had fallen. That period of societal degeneration was fixed overnight by this guy btw, Rudolf the Great. This scene is part of the same documentary featured in the webm you perceived to be from a "lewd tranime". Rudolf the Great is basically Hitler. Like Hitler (or rather the NSDAP) fixed Germany overnight, Rudolf completely saved human civilization. Note that the documentary that guy is watching was made by the side hostile to Rudolf the Great's Empire, by what's essentially GinEi's equivalent of the USA (a rebel faction who split off from the Empire because they wanted to escape Rudolf's Natsoc-like policies and cultural changes, so they could keep having their Democracy; to continue to prioritize personal freedom of the individual and his freedom to engage in degeneracy, over the mental & racial health of the people and its prosperity), so the documentary despite it telling some truth is also biased against Rudolf and later goes on to paint him a negative light more than a positive light (basically "Okay we acknowledge Rudolf saved us all and he was super good for society back then b-b-but six gorillion died because of him so he's BAD!". Meanwhile in the Empire even 500 years later Rudolf is still seen as the greatest hero of humanity and as the father of the whole Empire and there are laws against harming statues of him etc. By the way the Empire is expressly Germanic in nature. It's stated that the top men Rudolf chose to fill the roles in his government were all of Germanic blood. And over and over again the citizens of Empire are shown to be deeply religious, revering the Native European gods of Odin and Thor and so on and people talking about ending up Valhalla after they die. They never once speak the names of any jewish deities or even refer to them. In contrast to the rebels who come off as much more atheistic and just using "God" as a word, and likewise mentioning "hell" and "heaven" occasionally. The anime does not, btw, as some reading this might incorrectly assume, portray the Empire in a negative light. It doesn't tell you "this side is bad, this side is good". The characters in the Empire are just as much main characters and good guys as the ones on the rebel side and likewise there are badguys on both sides. But it's natural for the viewer, of course, to favor the Empire due to how the Democracy of the rebels is filled with corrupt politicians and bureaucracy and inefficiency and how their societal system in some ways is a failure and doesn't work; it's too much like what people are used to in real life. They also have niggers, not many, but they exist whereas the Empire is free from niggers. Unless the viewer is totally brainwashed into thinking Democracy is the greatest and most important thing ever and that any sort of "dictatorship" or Monarchy is always evil under any circumstances simply because it's not Democratic, then he's likely to favor the Empire.