Nobita And The Steel Troops 2 _top_ May 2026
However, Winged Angels adds a layer of intimacy. The bond between Nobita and Pippo feels more tactile. The new animation (by Shin-Ei Animation) is stunning—fluid, bright, and expressive. When Pippo smiles, you feel it. When he cries (and yes, he cries), it’s devastating. In the 1986 film, the antagonist was a machine logic: "To save humanity, we must enslave it." Cold, efficient, terrifying.
Have you seen both versions? Which one broke you more? Let me know in the comments below. nobita and the steel troops 2
So, when Nobita and the Steel Troops 2 (officially Doraemon: Nobita's New Steel Troops: ~Winged Angels~ ) dropped in 2011, fans were skeptical. A remake? Why mess with perfection? However, Winged Angels adds a layer of intimacy
But if you want to cry your eyes out and believe in the kindness of robots (and humanity), watch Nobita and the Steel Troops 2 (Winged Angels) . When Pippo smiles, you feel it
Winged Angels flips the script. Without spoiling the ending, the film introduces a time paradox that makes the sacrifice feel more personal. I won’t lie—I’m a 30-year-old man, and I had to pause the movie because I was crying so hard. It’s not sad; it’s bittersweet in a way only Doraemon can pull off. The original dragged a bit in the middle with war sequences. This version is tighter. It cuts some of the militia subplots and focuses on Nobita's loneliness. The message remains powerful: Technology isn't evil; the lack of empathy is. The Verdict If you want the gritty, heavy metal, cold-war anxiety of the 80s, watch the 1986 original. It’s a classic.
If you grew up in the 90s or early 2000s, the name "Pippo" (or "Riruru" depending on your dub) probably triggers a specific kind of childhood melancholy. The original Nobita and the Steel Troops (1986) is often hailed as a masterpiece of the Doraemon franchise—a dark, philosophical war drama disguised as a kids' cartoon.
But unlike lazy remakes that just update the animation, this one changes the plot significantly. The original was a cold war allegory about machines forgetting their humanity. Winged Angels shifts the focus to emotion and family . The villain isn't just a rogue supercomputer; there’s a tragic human element this time that feels surprisingly relevant in the age of AI. The heart of the story remains the same: Nobita finds a giant robot foot, builds the rest of the body from a sphere, and names the robot "Pippo" (Zanda Claus in some versions). The robot is amnesiac, gentle, and childlike.