
Many years have passed since Naota and Haruhara Haruko shared their adventure together. Meanwhile, the war between the two entities known as Medical Mechanica and Fraternity rages across the galaxy. Enter Hidomi, a young teenaged girl who believes there is nothing amazing to expect from her average life, until one day when a new teacher named Haruko arrives at her school. Soon enough, Medical Mechanica is attacking her town and Hidomi discovers a secret within her that could save everyone, a secret that only Haruko can unlock.
But why did Haruko return to Earth?
What happened to her Rickenbacker 4001 she left with Naota?
And where did the human-type robot ‘Canti’ go?
(Source: Adult Swim)
Many years have passed since Naota and Haruhara Haruko shared their adventure together. Meanwhile, the war between the two entities known as Medical Mechanica and Fraternity rages across the galaxy. Enter Hidomi, a young teenaged girl who believes there is nothing amazing to expect from her average life, until one day when a new teacher named Haruko arrives at her school. Soon enough, Medical Mechanica is attacking her town and Hidomi discovers a secret within her that could save everyone, a secret that only Haruko can unlock.
But why did Haruko return to Earth?
What happened to her Rickenbacker 4001 she left with Naota?
And where did the human-type robot ‘Canti’ go?
(Source: Adult Swim)
A sequel inspired by its predecessor, but ultimately went its own way
A tale as old as time returns for round 2: a teenager, a guitar, a robot, a romance.
FLCL Progressive is the journey of a troubled teenager towards finding her identity.
Some ways Progressive, some ways taking a step backwards, FLCL Progressive is a decent enough show, though no Classic.
FLCL Progressive proceeds to have none of the charm or nuance as the original.
In essence, FLCL 2 is your typical underwhelming sequel.
FLCL: Regressive or you should have used 808s not Stratocasters