Anime
Blue Comet ran for 38 episodes from October 3, 1985 to June 26, 1986.[1] Episode 25 is a recap clip-show and episode 38 is replaced by the 3rd OVA, subtitled The Last Act: Re-recording 2000 (LAST ACT 刻印2000), that remakes and expands on its events to conclude the show after it was canceled with only 2/3rd of the plot concluded. The first 2 OVAs, subtitled Act I: Eiji 1996 (ACT-1 エイジ1996) and Act II: Le Caine 1999 (ACT-2 ル・カイン1999), summarize episodes 1–24 (Act I) and 26–37 (Act II).
BC was known to have aired in Japan via AT-X,[4] BS12[5] and on the Bandai Channel.[6]
The anime had an OP and two ED songs. The OP was Melos no Yōni Lonely Way (Like Melos, Lonely Way), composed by Hideya Nakazaki and performed by Airmail from Nagasaki. The first ED song, which was for episodes 1-25, was Go-fun Dake no Wagamama (Just 5 Minutes of Selfishness), also composed by Hideya Nakazaki and performed by Seiko Tomizawa & Airmail from Nagasaki. The second ED song, which was for episodes 26-38, was La Rose Rouge (The Red Rose), composed by Tetsuji Hayashi and performed by Seiko Tomizawa.
Blue Comet's mech designs were done by Kunio Okawara.[7]
In the summer of 2001, Bandai Entertainment announced plans to release the series in North America.[8] However, as with Giant Gorg, the plan was scrapped.[9] The complete series concluded the damaged, blue-tinted video masters from Sunrise, and were unable to acquire replacements. Bandai's license to this and Giant Gorg expired in 2005. In 2023, Discotek Media planned to release the series and the three accompanying OVAs on Blu-Ray, with fixed masters from the Japanese Blu-Ray release.[10]
A Japanese Blu-Ray release was done on September 18, 2013 with the Blu-Ray Box and the Recollections 1996-2000 Blu-Ray Box version.[11]
Video games
This series was included in Super Robot Wars J for the Game Boy Advance[12] and Super Robot Wars GC for the GameCube. It was also featured in Shin Super Robot Wars (its debut) and Super Robot Wars 64 with a primary storyline role of all the Super Robot Wars it has appeared in. The anime also showed up in Super Robot Wars Operation Extend[13] and Super Robot Wars DD.[14]
The series also appears in the Another Century's Episode games,[15] with the Layzner & Zakarl being playable in the first game and also the Greimkaiser & Bloodykaiser make appearances as CPU-only units. The sequel, Another Century's Episode 2, follows the basic plot of the series but adapts it to the setting produced by the combined plots of the anime involved. For example, Eiji's first appearance is just after the resolution of Martian Successor Nadesico