Ray's life is suddenly disrupted by the arrival of a package from his grandfather Lloyd the metallic ball seen earlier, along with its schematics and a letter instructing him to guard it. While he usually lives alone with his mother, his friend Emma and her brother Thomas have recently been sent over to stay until their mother returns from a business trip. Three years later, back in England, Edward's son, Ray Steam, is an avid young inventor who works at a textile mill in Manchester as a maintenance boy, often working on a personal steam-powered monowheel at home. An experiment in Russian Alaska goes terribly wrong, with Edward being engulfed in freezing gases, but results in the creation of a strange spherical apparatus. They believe the water can be harnessed as an ultimate power source for steam engines (the main industrial engine of the time). In 1863, where an alternate nineteenth century Europe has made tremendous strides in steam-powered technologies, scientist Lloyd Steam and his son Edward have succeeded, after a lengthy expedition, in discovering a pure mineral water. (January 2016) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message) Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise. * ''Anime/NadiaTheSecretOfBlueWater'' is potentially the best known example in anime, being loosely inspired by ] ''"20,000 Leagues Under the Sea"''.This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed.
#Steamboy anime city full#
* The animated adaptations of the ''VideoGame/SakuraTaisen'' franchise are full of steam powered mechs, beautiful young girls, and cherry blossoms fighting against hordes of mechanized demons. * ''Anime/PrincessPrincipal'': With Creator/HGWells Cavorite anti-gravity tech, pollution-filled London filled with factories, dickensian poverty, and suave spy action, This is a Steampunk for TheNewTens.
#Steamboy anime city series#
These include the short story collection ''Manga/WingsOfVendemiaire'' and his currently-running series ''Manga/FutagoNoTeikoku''. * A number of works by Creator/MohiroKitoh are steampunk, though with a ].
![steamboy anime city steamboy anime city](http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-TqrFxU2M3SQ/UvPQs_aM59I/AAAAAAAAiV8/YHFDhO1406Y/s1600/eva+(3).jpg)
* ''Manga/TheCaseStudyOfVanitas'' is a steampunk vampire fantasy set in nineteenth-century Paris. His episodes revolve around his attempts to steal the hero's RobotBuddy ''Goriki''. ]'s motivation is collecting at least one of each kind of steam-powered robot. Steam-powered cars, robots, etc, set against the backdrop of a city constantly fogged up with villains using the dense clouds of steam as cover for their nefarious deeds. They have steam ships, 19th century weapons, and British Navy-esque uniforms to counteract the more primitive pirates with their punga fruit abilities. * In ''Manga/OnePiece'' the Revolutionary Army seem to have a general Steampunk theme. * A majority of ''Anime/ErgoProxy'' is set around a wind machine called the 400 Rabbits. The samurai have CharlesAtlasSuperpower abilities that put them roughly on par with Jedi and it all evens out. * ''Anime/SamuraiSeven'' is a FeudalFuture where giant steam-powered robots, spaceships (!), and SchizoTech devices exist despite the majority of people living like Medieval peasants. In the Victorian Era! And the chief of the Science Division creates enormous robots on a seemingly daily basis. * Although the tech is not the main focus of the series, ''Manga/DGrayMan'' happens to have a relatively good Science Division where everyone there operates by multiple flat screen television and massive steel plants. %%* ''Anime/TransformersCybertron'' gives us ], a clockpunk example. Everything fom the setting (1889 France), characters and costume designs, to oceanic travel aboard ] submarines, and ZeppelinsFromAnotherWorld, adheres to a 'Golden Age' aesthetic. * ''Anime/NadiaTheSecretOfBlueWater'' is potentially the best known example in anime, being loosely inspired by Creator/JulesVerne's ''"20,000 Leagues Under the Sea"''.