Hathaway Noa — Complete Guide | Bright’s Son and the Path of Rebellion

Hathaway Noa — Complete Guide | Bright’s Son and the Path of Rebellion

At thirteen years old, a boy watched the girl he loved die on the battlefield. That trauma never healed — it festered for twelve years, and ultimately transformed him into a terrorist.

Hathaway Noa. The eldest son of Earth Federation hero Bright Noa, yet the leader of the anti-Federation organization “Mafty Navue Erin,” systematically assassinating corrupt government officials. His end came by firing squad — carried out before the eyes of his own father. This is the most devastating parent-child story in the entire Universal Century.

The 2021 film Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway grossed over 2.23 billion yen at the Japanese box office, making it one of the most successful Gundam films ever. The second installment, The Witch of Circe, released on January 30, 2026, surpassed its predecessor in just 29 days with 2.24 billion yen in revenue. Hathaway — the protagonist standing on the razor’s edge between justice and madness — has become one of the most compelling Gundam characters of the modern era.

This guide covers everything about Hathaway Noa: from his childhood trauma in Char’s Counterattack, to his rebellion as Mafty, his devastating battles in the Xi Gundam, and his execution.


Table of Contents

  1. Profile
  2. Personality — Torn Between Justice and Contradiction
  3. Life Story — From Boy to Rebel
  4. Childhood: The One Year War and the Gryps War
  5. Char’s Counterattack: A 13-Year-Old on the Battlefield
  6. Hathaway’s Flash: The Birth of Mafty
  7. The End: Execution Before Bright’s Eyes
  8. Memorable Quotes
  9. Appearances & Timeline
  10. Mobile Suits
  11. Relationships — The People Around Hathaway
  12. Voice Actor: Kensho Ono
  13. Cultural Impact — Symbol of UC 100
  14. Related Articles
  15. Sources & References

1. Profile {#profile}

Category Details
Full Name Hathaway Noa
Alias Mafty Navue Erin
Born Universal Century 0080
Died Universal Century 0105 (age 25)
Origin Earth (relocated frequently due to father’s military postings)
Height 180cm
Father Bright Noa (Earth Federation Forces Colonel)
Mother Mirai Noa (née Yashima)
Sister Cheimin Noa
Affiliation Mafty Navue Erin (Leader)
Cover Identity Botanical observer trainee
Mobile Suits RX-105 Xi Gundam, Messer Commander Type, others
Voice Actor Kensho Ono (films) / Nozomu Sasaki (Char’s Counterattack)
Newtype Ability Present (unstable)

Hathaway Noa is often called the most tragic protagonist in the entire Gundam franchise. Born as the son of a hero, scarred by battlefield trauma, turned terrorist, and ultimately executed — his life embodies the brutal realism that defines the Universal Century.

While most Gundam protagonists ultimately protect something or someone, Hathaway is the only protagonist who definitively loses and is put to death. This unprecedented narrative structure was the essence of the “adult Gundam” that original creator Yoshiyuki Tomino envisioned when he wrote the novel in 1989.


2. Personality — Torn Between Justice and Contradiction {#personality}

A Broken Sense of Justice

Director Shuko Murase reportedly told voice actor Kensho Ono during the recording sessions for Hathaway’s Flash: “Hathaway is a broken person.”

This description captures Hathaway’s character with remarkable precision. He genuinely possesses a strong sense of justice — he cannot ignore the destruction of Earth’s environment or the corruption of the Federation government, where privileged elites exploit the planet for personal gain. But his sense of justice has been warped by the trauma he experienced at thirteen: the death of Quess Paraya and his own killing of Chan Agi.

Hathaway’s justice is not built on logic. It is an attempt to mask the helplessness and guilt he felt as a boy with the grand cause of “setting the world right.” This is why contradiction follows his every action. He wants to save people yet carries out terrorism. He condemns violence yet relies upon it.

The Shadow of His Father, Bright

Bright Noa has been a soldier of the Earth Federation since the One Year War — the embodiment of a man who works within the system. For Hathaway, his father was someone to respect, yet simultaneously a symbol of “an adult who can only follow orders within the establishment.”

Hathaway’s rebellion as Mafty against the Federation was not merely a political act — it was also an act of defiance against his father. Where Bright chose to change the system from within, Hathaway chose to destroy it from without. This father-son contrast runs as a constant undercurrent throughout Hathaway’s Flash.

Emotion vs. Ideology

Hathaway is a thinker. Mafty’s operations are calculated, and targets are limited to Federation government officials. It is not indiscriminate terrorism but a theoretically grounded campaign of “purging” corrupt power holders.

Yet beneath that cold calculation, Hathaway is constantly swayed by emotion. When he meets the enigmatic young woman Gigi Andalucia, he sees the shadow of the Quess he lost. His mind tells him he must remain the leader of a terrorist organization, but as a man, he cannot help being drawn to Gigi. This internal tearing is what gives Hathaway his extraordinary depth as a character.


3. Life Story — From Boy to Rebel {#life-story}

Childhood: A Child in Wartime {#childhood}

Born in UC 0080, Hathaway was the eldest son of Bright Noa, a captain who fought on the front lines of every major conflict in the Universal Century. Together with his mother Mirai Noa (née Yashima) and younger sister Cheimin, Hathaway moved from place to place as his father was reassigned.

In UC 0087, during the Gryps War, seven-year-old Hathaway was aboard the civilian vessel Coral Oriental with his mother and sister when they were taken hostage by the Titans due to their connection to Bright. Even as a young child, Hathaway was exposed to the terror of war simply because his father was a soldier.

Char’s Counterattack: A 13-Year-Old on the Battlefield {#cca}

UC 0093. Char Aznable’s attempt to drop the asteroid Axis onto Earth — the Second Neo Zeon War. Thirteen-year-old Hathaway found himself caught up in this historic battle.

Aboard the Londo Bell ship Ra Cailum, Hathaway encountered two people who would shape his destiny. One was the legendary pilot Amuro Ray. The other was Quess Paraya, a girl who would defect to Neo Zeon.

Hathaway fell in love with Quess. But Quess, drawn to Char who acknowledged her Newtype abilities, left for Neo Zeon and took the controls of the massive mobile armor Alpha Azieru.

In the final battle, Hathaway sortied in a Jegan to try to convince Quess to come back. But Quess would not leave the Alpha Azieru. Chan Agi’s Re-GZ fired a grenade that struck the Alpha Azieru directly, killing Quess.

In that instant, Hathaway snapped. He shot down the Re-GZ and killed Chan Agi — Amuro’s lover. A thirteen-year-old boy had murdered the woman the greatest pilot of the age loved.

“You shouldn’t have done that! It’s because adults don’t understand things like that, that they can destroy the Earth without a second thought!”

This line symbolizes the moment Hathaway lost faith in the adult world. Quess’s death, Chan’s murder, and the Axis Shock — the events of this single night planted the seed that would grow into Mafty twelve years later.

Hathaway’s Flash: The Birth of Mafty {#hathaway-flash}

UC 0105. Hathaway, now twenty-five, was officially stationed on Earth as a “botanical observer trainee.” His permission to stay on Earth was largely thanks to his father Bright’s reputation. He studied under Professor Amada Mansan.

But in secret, Hathaway was operating as the leader of the anti-Federation organization “Mafty Navue Erin.” He had been recruited through an elderly man known as “Quack Salver” who visited Professor Mansan, and ultimately took command of the entire organization.

Mafty’s doctrine was clear: not indiscriminate terrorism, but the targeted assassination of corrupt Federation ministers and officials. By eliminating the privileged elites who perpetuated environmental destruction and systemic corruption, Hathaway aimed to force structural change upon the Federation government itself.

The Fateful Shuttle — Meeting on the Haunzen

The story begins with Hathaway boarding the Earth-bound shuttle Haunzen. When the shuttle is hijacked by impostors claiming to be Mafty, the ensuing chaos introduces Hathaway to two people who will define the rest of his life.

One is Gigi Andalucia, an enigmatic and beautiful young woman. The other is Colonel Kenneth Sleg of the Earth Federation Forces. A terrorist leader, the military officer hunting that terrorist, and a girl caught between them — this extraordinary triangle forms the beating heart of Hathaway’s Flash.

The Xi Gundam and Battle

Mafty’s trump card was the cutting-edge mobile suit secretly commissioned from Anaheim Electronics: the RX-105 Xi Gundam. Equipped with an internal Minovsky Flight Unit enabling independent atmospheric flight, the Xi Gundam represented the pinnacle of UC 0105 technology — a monstrous weapon of unmatched capability.

Before acquiring the Xi Gundam, Hathaway piloted a commander-type Messer (Me02R-Fc Messer Type-F01). Unlike the standard red-painted Messers, Hathaway’s unit featured a distinctive rose and purple two-tone color scheme marking it as the leader’s personal machine.

With the Xi Gundam in hand, Hathaway engaged in fierce aerial battles against the Penelope piloted by Kenneth’s Circe Unit. Two enormous mobile suits equipped with Minovsky Flight systems clashing in the atmosphere — these combat sequences are among the most striking in Universal Century history.

The End: Execution Before Bright’s Eyes {#ending}

In the original novel, Hathaway’s story reaches a devastating conclusion.

When his identity as the leader of Mafty is exposed, Hathaway is captured by the Earth Federation Forces. Colonel Kenneth Sleg, despite having felt something akin to friendship for Hathaway, fulfills his duty as a soldier.

Hathaway is tried and sentenced to death by firing squad. The person who arrived at the execution site was his father, Bright Noa. Bright tried to save his son but arrived too late. Hathaway was executed before his father’s eyes.

“I’ve said everything I needed to say as Mafty. I believe that someday, the healthy spirit of humanity will protect this Earth. Until that day comes, Mafty will continue to purge the mistakes that people make.”

These final words reveal that Hathaway chose to die not as an individual but as “Mafty” — a concept. Even if Hathaway Noa the person perished, the ideology of Mafty would endure. That was his final gamble.

In the entire Gundam franchise, Hathaway is the only protagonist who clearly loses and is executed. This shocking conclusion brutally confronts the viewer with the “limits of idealism” and “the inevitable destination of cycles of violence” that Tomino depicted in his novel.


4. Memorable Quotes {#quotes}

Hathaway’s dialogue weaves together the cries of a thirteen-year-old boy and the resolve of a twenty-five-year-old rebel. Here are key lines from both Char’s Counterattack and Hathaway’s Flash that illuminate his character.

From Char’s Counterattack (UC 0093 / Age 13)

“You shouldn’t have done that! It’s because adults don’t understand things like that, that they can destroy the Earth without a second thought!”

Hathaway’s anguished scream after losing Quess and killing Chan. A thirteen-year-old boy absorbing the full weight of the absurdity of adult warfare. “You shouldn’t have done that” is directed at Chan, but also at himself. He could not forgive Chan for killing Quess, yet he could not forgive himself for killing Chan either. This double self-denial became the origin point of Mafty twelve years later.

“But that guy — the first time he got in a mobile suit, he flew it properly and took out a Zaku from the Zeon army!”

Hathaway speaking about Amuro Ray with boyish admiration. For Hathaway, Amuro was “a different kind of hero from his father” — the embodiment of the Newtype concept.

From Hathaway’s Flash (UC 0105 / Age 25)

“I’ll take their place. I’ll change things — I’ll show them.”

A single line that crystallizes Hathaway’s resolve as Mafty. The dual meaning of “taking someone’s place” and “changing things” reveals his willingness to sacrifice his own identity for a cause greater than himself.

“As long as exceptions to the rules exist, people will commit corruption.”

A line that succinctly captures the structural rot of the Federation government. This shows that Hathaway is not merely an emotional terrorist but someone who understands the systemic nature of the problem. The “loopholes” in the legal system are the root of corruption — and no amount of individual goodwill can fix a broken system.

“Then tell me — tell me how to destroy a system this deeply entrenched.”

A cry for alternatives to violence. Hathaway chose violence as his method, but he does not believe it is the best option. The plea “if there’s another way, tell me” reveals the depth of his inner conflict.

“When you’re bracing yourself for death, that’s exactly when it doesn’t come.”

A line that encapsulates Hathaway’s philosophy of life and death. Living as a terrorist in constant proximity to death, this reflects how he has learned to cope with fear — though beneath the apparent acceptance lies a fragile need to reassure himself.


5. Appearances & Timeline {#timeline}

Here is a chronological overview of Hathaway Noa’s appearances across the Gundam franchise.

Universal Century Title Hathaway’s Age Role
UC 0087 Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam 7 Minor role (appears as Bright’s son)
UC 0088 Mobile Suit Gundam ZZ 8 Minor role
UC 0093 Mobile Suit Gundam: Char’s Counterattack 13 Major supporting character
UC 0105 Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway (Novel, 3 volumes) 25 Protagonist
UC 0105 Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway (Film Part 1) 25 Protagonist
UC 0105 Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway: The Witch of Circe (Film Part 2) 25 Protagonist
UC 0105 Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway (Film Part 3 — TBA) 25 Protagonist

Hathaway’s story is concentrated within the relatively short span of UC 0093 to 0105. Yet the transformation that occurs in those twelve years is staggering: from a thirteen-year-old boy to a twenty-five-year-old terrorist; from a child who admired Amuro to the man who killed Amuro’s lover; from a son who made his father proud to a rebel executed before his father’s eyes.

The original novel was written by Yoshiyuki Tomino and published in three volumes by Kadokawa Sneaker Bunko between 1989 and 1990. The film adaptation’s first part premiered in 2021, and the second part, The Witch of Circe, was released on January 30, 2026. As of March 2026, the release date for the third and final part has not been announced.

While there are some differences between the novel and the film adaptation in terms of settings and story details, the core characterization of Hathaway and the broad trajectory of his fate remain consistent.


6. Mobile Suits {#mobile-suits}

Jegan (RGM-89 / Char’s Counterattack)

The first mobile suit Hathaway piloted alone, during the events of Char’s Counterattack. It was a mass-production unit aboard a Londo Bell vessel, and thirteen-year-old Hathaway’s decision to leap into the cockpit without authorization was an act of pure recklessness. He sortied to try to convince Quess to leave the Alpha Azieru, but this unauthorized launch ultimately led to the tragedy of Chan Agi’s death.

Nu Gundam Co-Piloting (RX-93 / Char’s Counterattack)

While not strictly a “piloted” mobile suit, Hathaway rode aboard Amuro Ray’s Nu Gundam during the battle. Experiencing firsthand the power of a Newtype pilot in the legendary Nu Gundam must have been a formative moment — one that showed him both the potential of Newtype abilities and the reality of what it means to fight in a mobile suit.

Messer Commander Type (Me02R-Fc Messer Type-F01 / Hathaway’s Flash)

Hathaway’s mobile suit before receiving the Xi Gundam. This was a commander variant of Mafty’s standard Messer, distinguished from the regular red-painted units by its rose and purple two-tone color scheme — marking it as the leader’s personal machine.

The Messer, developed by Anaheim Electronics, is a mid-size mobile suit that, while lacking a Minovsky Flight Unit, possesses excellent mobility and firepower. Hathaway used this machine to survive the early engagements against Kenneth’s Circe Unit.

RX-105 Xi Gundam (Hathaway’s Flash)

Hathaway’s final mobile suit, and arguably the co-star of Hathaway’s Flash itself.

Category Specifications
Model Number RX-105
Overall Height Approximately 26m+
Developer Anaheim Electronics
Special Equipment Minovsky Flight Unit (internally mounted)
Armament Beam rifle, beam sabers, shield, funnel missiles
Key Feature Independent atmospheric flight, speeds exceeding Mach 2

The Xi Gundam’s defining feature is its internally integrated Minovsky Flight Unit. While previous mobile suits had employed Minovsky Craft systems, the Xi and its rival Penelope were the only two mobile suits in UC 0105 capable of free flight within Earth’s atmosphere.

During high-speed flight, the Xi Gundam projects a beam barrier ahead of itself to reduce atmospheric resistance, enabling speeds in excess of Mach 2. That a machine standing over 26 meters tall can achieve such velocity is thanks to the conversion of Minovsky particle repulsion into thrust.

Additionally, the head unit houses a psycommu block that amplifies the pilot’s brainwaves. Combined with funnel missiles, this enables all-range attacks impossible for conventional mobile suits.

It was the Xi Gundam’s overwhelming combat capability that allowed Mafty — despite being a small, outnumbered force — to fight the Earth Federation Forces on roughly equal terms.


7. Relationships — The People Around Hathaway {#relationships}

Bright Noa (Father)

A “living legend” of the Federation Forces who participated in every major conflict from the One Year War through the Second Neo Zeon War. For Hathaway, his father was a source of pride but also a symbol of “someone who can only fight within the system.”

Bright tried to change things from within. Hathaway tried to destroy things from without. Father and son expressed the same anger through fundamentally different methods. The cruelest irony of all is that Bright was forced to witness his son’s execution. The story of Bright Noa — who had served as a ship captain since the very beginning of Mobile Suit Gundam — sustains its deepest wound through the death of his child.

Amuro Ray

For Hathaway, Amuro was the legendary pilot who “flew a mobile suit properly the very first time and took down a Zeon Zaku.” During his time aboard the Ra Cailum, Hathaway witnessed Amuro’s presence up close.

Riding aboard the Nu Gundam may have stirred the possibility of Newtype awakening within Hathaway. But at the same time, Hathaway committed the irreversible act of killing Chan Agi — Amuro’s lover. Since Amuro went missing (effectively killed in action) during the Axis Shock, Hathaway permanently lost the one person he might have sought forgiveness from.

Quess Paraya

Hathaway’s first love and the girl who defined the course of his life. The daughter of government official Adenauer Paraya, Quess possessed Newtype potential. Hathaway fell for her, but Quess chose Char — the one who recognized her Newtype abilities — and joined Neo Zeon.

Quess’s death in the final battle became the greatest turning point in Hathaway’s life. The helplessness of “not being able to protect the one he loved” flows beneath everything he does as Mafty twelve years later. When Hathaway is drawn to Gigi Andalucia, it is because he senses in her the same “sharp sensitivity” that Quess possessed.

Chan Agi

Amuro Ray’s lover and a technical officer of Londo Bell. When Chan’s Re-GZ fired the grenade that struck the Alpha Azieru, Quess was killed. Hathaway, in a blind rage, shot down the Re-GZ and killed Chan.

This act, committed by a thirteen-year-old, branded Hathaway’s life with an indelible stain of guilt. Chan’s death remains one of the most shocking moments in Char’s Counterattack and serves as the origin point of the darkness within Hathaway’s character.

Gigi Andalucia

The heroine of Hathaway’s Flash. A beautiful young woman who keeps company with high-ranking Federation officials, possessed of sharp intuition and an uninhibited personality. Her chance meeting with Hathaway aboard the Haunzen draws her deeply into his life.

Gigi’s essence lies in her “sensitivity that responds to the world with her whole being.” For Hathaway — a man trying to change the world through theory — Gigi is his polar opposite. That is precisely why he is drawn to her, and precisely why she throws him off balance. Hathaway sees echoes of Quess in Gigi, yet he also recognizes that Gigi is an entirely different person.

The triangle of Hathaway, Gigi, and Kenneth is the engine that drives Hathaway’s Flash. A soldier, a terrorist, and a girl — three people who know each other’s secrets yet pretend not to, maintaining a tension unlike anything else in the Gundam franchise.

Kenneth Sleg

A colonel in the Earth Federation Forces and commander of the “Circe Unit” tasked with eliminating Mafty. Hathaway’s greatest enemy, yet the person who understands him best.

Kenneth is not simply a soldier. He shares Hathaway’s anger at the world’s corruption but chose to fight from within the system. His contrast with Hathaway mirrors the contrast between Hathaway and his father Bright. The fact that Kenneth senses Hathaway’s true identity yet cannot help feeling something like friendship makes this one of the story’s most poignant elements.

Kenneth desires Gigi as his “goddess of victory,” but Gigi’s heart consistently turns toward Hathaway — a source of frustration that adds complex emotional texture to the narrative.

Lane Aim

A pilot of the Circe Unit and the operator of the Penelope. Lane serves as Hathaway’s rival, engaging the Xi Gundam in fierce combat. A young, highly capable soldier, Lane is driven by an intense determination to bring down the pilot of the Xi Gundam — Mafty’s leader.


8. Voice Actor: Kensho Ono {#voice-actor}

Film Version: Kensho Ono

Category Details
Date of Birth October 5, 1989
Birthplace Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan
Agency Animo Produce
Notable Roles Harry Potter (Japanese dub), Tetsuya Kuroko (Kuroko’s Basketball), Giorno Giovanna (JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure)
Awards 16th Seiyu Awards — Best Lead Actor (2022)

Kensho Ono first rose to fame in 2001 when, as a sixth grader, he was cast as the Japanese dub voice of Harry Potter in the Harry Potter film series — a role he would carry for ten years. He subsequently established himself as a prolific anime voice actor, portraying characters including Tetsuya Kuroko in Kuroko’s Basketball, Giorno Giovanna in JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure: Golden Wind, Floch Forster in Attack on Titan, Ryunosuke Akutagawa in Bungo Stray Dogs, and Riku Nanase in IDOLiSH7.

The role of Hathaway Noa in Hathaway’s Flash occupies a particularly significant place in Ono’s career. As evidenced by director Murase’s instruction that “Hathaway is a broken person,” the role demanded far more than voicing a conventional protagonist — it required embodying a character riddled with contradictions. Ono’s masterful performance earned him the Best Lead Actor award at the 16th Seiyu Awards in 2022.

Char’s Counterattack Version: Nozomu Sasaki

In Char’s Counterattack (1988), Hathaway was voiced by Nozomu Sasaki. Sasaki was renowned at the time for his skill with young male characters, and he captured both the purity and precariousness of thirteen-year-old Hathaway with precision. His anguished delivery of “You shouldn’t have done that!” remains one of the most iconic vocal performances in Gundam history.


9. Cultural Impact — Symbol of UC 100 {#cultural-impact}

The Film Trilogy’s Blockbuster Success

The first film, Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway, released in June 2021, grossed over 2.23 billion yen despite the COVID-19 pandemic, establishing itself as one of the highest-grossing Gundam films of all time.

The second installment, The Witch of Circe, released on January 30, 2026, surpassed its predecessor at an even faster pace. Within 29 days, it had earned 2.24 billion yen and attracted over 1.34 million viewers. Repeat viewings were widely reported, with many fans returning multiple times to unpack the film’s layered storytelling.

Audiences praised “the nuanced portrayal of the relationships between Hathaway, Gigi, and Kenneth,” calling the psychological warfare in their conversations “so dense that one viewing isn’t enough.” Others were “overwhelmed by the visuals, music, and narrative combined.” The film has become a cultural phenomenon reaching beyond traditional Gundam fandom to attract entirely new audiences.

Positioning as “Adult Gundam”

What sets Hathaway’s Flash apart is its fundamentally different tone from previous Gundam works. Rather than emphasizing spectacular battle sequences, the film prioritizes the “silences between lines of dialogue” and psychological depth, asking viewers to “read the emotions hidden behind the words.” This represents a new frontier for Gundam — not as a robot anime, but as political drama and psychological thriller.

Director Shuko Murase’s approach emphasizes realistic atmosphere and tension. Hiroyuki Sawano’s score is integral to establishing the film’s mood, and the theater-optimized sound design has been widely praised as creating “a Gundam that must be experienced in a cinema.”

The Symbol of UC’s Second Century

The Universal Century saga began with the One Year War (UC 0079) and has been built through Zeta, ZZ, Char’s Counterattack, and Unicorn. Hathaway’s Flash is set in UC 0105, making it the first major animated work to depict the UC 100s era.

Hathaway Noa represents the “next generation” that comes after the era of Amuro Ray and Char Aznable. In a world where Char’s Newtype idealism failed and Amuro’s faith in human potential vanished with him, Hathaway grapples with the question: “How does an ordinary person — neither a Newtype nor a hero — change the world?”

That his answer was terrorism is precisely the question the work poses to its audience. The most pointed expression of the “war and justice” theme that the Gundam franchise has explored for over four decades exists in Hathaway’s Flash and in the character of Hathaway Noa.

Impact on Gunpla and Merchandise

The Xi Gundam has been produced in multiple model kit lines, including HGUC and Robot Spirits (Ka Signature), all enjoying strong sales. The massive silhouette exceeding 26 meters in height and the deployable Minovsky Flight Unit gimmicks have been particularly well-received by Gunpla enthusiasts.

New merchandise has been launched in conjunction with the second film’s release, ensuring that Hathaway’s story extends beyond “watching the film” into a hands-on experience for fans worldwide.


Explore these articles to deepen your understanding of Hathaway Noa and his story.

  • Penelope — Mobile Suit Guide — The rival to Hathaway’s Xi Gundam and the other Minovsky Flight-equipped mobile suit. Full analysis of Lane Aim’s machine and its battles.

  • Hathaway’s Flash — Complete Guide — Comprehensive guide covering the film trilogy and original novel: plot, characters, mecha, and historical context.

  • Char’s Counterattack — Complete Guide — The film that changed Hathaway’s destiny forever. Full analysis of the final battle between Amuro and Char, and the truth behind the Axis Shock.

  • Char Aznable — Character Guide — The Red Comet who drew Quess to Neo Zeon and, in doing so, inadvertently set Hathaway on his path of destruction.

  • Xi Gundam — Mobile Suit Guide — Detailed specifications of Hathaway’s final mobile suit, Minovsky Flight technology explained, and head-to-head comparison with Penelope.


11. Sources & References {#sources}

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