TVTropes Now available in the app store!
Open

Follow TV Tropes

Idolmaster: Xenoglossia

Go To

Idolmaster: Xenoglossia (Anime)
The classic story of Giant Robot Meets Girl.
In 2007, Sunrise adapted popular video game The iDOLM@STER into an anime. This being Sunrise, they didn't exactly take the expected path, deciding to transplant the characters into an Elseworld Super Robot Genre series.

In the world of Xenoglossia, the moon was destroyed over a century ago by an event known as "Lost Artemis". Because of this, fragments of the moon occasionally fall to Earth and must be destroyed before they can cause serious damage. While most countries use missiles to deal with these "Drops", Japan is bound by the Three Non-Nuclear Principles and must instead resort to empathetic Humongous Mecha codenamed "iDOLs".

Haruka Amami is an aspiring Idol Singer who moves to Tokyo following a successful audition, only to end up Falling into the Cockpit of one of these iDOLs. She then discovers that the audition was a front for a secret task force called Mondenkind, who were searching for compatible iDOL pilots: an iDOL-Master, if you will.

While it may seem like your standard mecha series at first, it's intertwined with drama from the relationships between the pilots and the mecha.

Has been licensed by Sentai Filmworks in July 2012, marking The iDOLM@STER franchise's first official US release.

For the second anime adaptation of THE iDOLM@STER, which is faithful to the original source, see here.


This series provides examples of:

  • Action Girl: There's quite a few of these, but Azusa of all people takes the cake, being the one that doesn't need a giant robot to kick ass.
  • Adaptational Badass: Haruka, Iori, Makoto, Chihaya and Yukiho go from normal girls and idols to pilots of giant robots. Azusa is now an Action Girl, even on foot.
  • Adaptational Curves: Chihaya (From 72cm to 87cm), Yukiho (80 to 88, making her the bustiest member of the show's cast) and Yayoi (From 72 to 87, going hand in hand with her being two years older than her game counterpart).
  • Adaptation Dye-Job: A few of the girls had their hair or eye color changed from the games. Yukiho's hair is a darker tone, while the opposite is true for Ritsuko. Yayoi's hair is more reddish than orange, while Iori's hair is black instead of brown. Chihaya's eye color went from brown to red, the same color as Azusa's.
  • Adaptational Slimness: Azusa was downsized from 91cm gamewise to a more modest 86 cm.
  • Adaptational Villainy: Needless to say, none of the girls were "villains" in the original work. Here, Chihaya is one of the main antagonists through the series, Yukiho is revealed to be The Mole working for her, and Makoto pulls a Face–Heel Turn halfway through the plot (though she goes back to the heroes at the end).
  • Age Lift: Some characters had their ages changed here than in the source material, such as Chihaya being aged up from 16 to 17, or Azusa being aged down from 21 to 20.
  • All Just a Dream: Discussed. In the last episode, one of the characters jokes that the Earth was actually destroyed more than a century ago and they're living in a dream. Obviously, no one is amused.
  • Angsty Surviving Twin: Ami, when Haruka first meets her. She gets better with Haruka's help, and later finds out her sister wasn't dead after all.
  • Badass Adorable: Makoto retains this quality from her game incarnation. Haruka gains a bit of this quality as well and Iori steps up to it later on. Yukiho is also revealed to be one.
  • Badass in a Nice Suit: Joseph Shingetsu, as revealed during the retaking of Mondenkind Japan by the iDOL Team, wherein he uses Good Old Fisticuffs to take out soldiers wearing body armor and helmets... with his bare freakin' hands.
  • Becoming the Mask: Subverted. Yukiho notes this is happening to her and fights back against the trope. And wins, as she completely goes through with her duties as The Mole, and it isn't until after everything's completely over with that she (presumably) goes back to being friends with Haruka and the others.
  • Beach Episode: Episode 8, where the girls get to rest at the beach and even bring the robots with them.
  • Between My Legs: Iori in episode 3.
  • Board to Death: The Grand Lodge Cats council get smashed by an Epimetheus in the penultimate episode.
  • Bond Creatures: The iDOLs. Their developing bonds with the girls is central to the plot.
  • Bridge Bunnies: In a slight twist to the formula, here they are a gender-mixed crew with two girls (Naze and Suzushiro) and one boy (Naraba).
  • Cerebus Syndrome: The second half of the series is a lot darker than the first, as the bad guys take more serious actions and the heroes start suffering losses. It's also when the dark past of a few characters is explored.
  • Clingy Jealous Girl: Chihaya, Imber's old pilot, wants to be "one" with him. In later episodes, she goes full on Yandere
  • Connected All Along:
    • Yukiho Hagiwara turns out to actually be Chihaya Kisaragi's friend, and also a spy for Turiavita sent to help steal Imber.
    • R.I.F.F.A was created from Azusa Miura's egg cells, basically making Azusa her mother.
  • The Dandy: Joseph Shingetsu, director of Mondenkind Japan's iDOL team. Even when he has to beat the bad guys with his own hands, he won't stop looking good and elegant.
  • Darker and Edgier: The natural result of going from a story about a bunch of girls trying to become stars to a story about a bunch of girls putting their lives on the line to save the world.
  • Death from Above: There is the ever-present threat of falling space rocks.
  • Detonation Moon: The moon was destroyed 108 years before the start of the story, causing chunks of it to fall towards Earth frequently.
  • Elseworld: This anime is an original story that has no relationship with the main The iDOLM@STER universe besides sharing the same main cast.
  • Empathic Weapon: The iDOLs themselves sync with a pilot (or two, in the case of Nebula), and their performance depends on how "compatible" they are with each other. However, the pilot has to maintain a relationship with the mecha. Should the pilot treat the iDOL irresponsibly, the iDOL will drop in performance, its trust in the pilot diminished. The iDOLs are even capable of rejecting an irresponsible or untrustworthy pilot. We are later shown that the iDoLs are even capable of acting on their own, from small movements to punching another mech in the face to even an old debt.
  • Enfant Terrible: R.I.F.F.A., especially with the reveal that there's a whole army of her late in the series and that they seem to love smashing people's heads in with axes.
  • Evil Is Petty: The reason why Karasu is The Man Behind the Man for Turiavita and is responsible for no small amount of misery during the show's run? The Grand Lodge Cats kicked his father out of the group some time before the series began, thus denying Karasu himself the chance to become a member.
  • Face–Heel Turn: Makoto undergoes one following rejection by Nebula halfway through the series' run when she believes that Azusa doesn't care about her.
  • Falling into the Cockpit: Haruka Amami falls into an iDOL's open cockpit after being tossed high into the air by the same iDOL. Later we find that Haruka had passed a blind test on her aptitude as a potential iDOL Master, however, even the ones who set up the test were surprised that the iDOL had a seemingly arbitrary attraction to Haruka, when it had not even responded to a trained and experienced Master.
  • Floating Continent: In the final arc of the series, the island where Turiavita's mansion and Elaborate Underground Base are located starts floating when Chihaya tries to merge herself with Imber. It's later destroyed by the orbiting Kill Sat.
  • Genius Bruiser: Joseph Shingetsu is a man of intelligence and refined taste who enjoys brewing coffee and collecting laquerware... He's also a master of Good Old Fisticuffs, as revealed during the retaking of Mondenkind Japan.
  • Giant Robot Hands Save Lives: In this case, fully justified. It's not the hand itself that saves the falling girl, but the power of the robot to manipulate gravity with that hand.
  • Heel–Face Turn: Makoto returns to the fold during the assault on Turiavita in the penultimate episode, having sorted out her issues with Azusa right before the latter's death.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Nubilum makes his in episode 25, protecting Yukiho and Haruka from Vulturius. Imber and the other remaining iDOLs follow in the finale to save the world from Aulyn.
  • Honor Before Reason: In order to deal with the threat of falling rocks from the sky, every other country in the world had equipped themselves with tactical missiles. However, Japan, in order to honor the post-war agreement, decided not to use said missiles, and instead sends girls in giant robots to go up into orbit and punch the rocks into dust.
  • Hot-Blooded: This show's take on Iori. She is the pilot most eager to hop into the cockpit and display her skills.
  • Humongous Mecha: The iDOLs, and the knockoff Epimetheus units mass produced by Turiavita.
  • Idol Singer:
    • Sort of. Musical terminology is used in conjunction with the mecha to remind viewers of the roots of the series.
    • Yayoi is an idol before the series even starts (as well as Ami Futami, though she isn't introduced until later on in the series), and Haruka eventually becomes one due to trying to cheer Imber up and actually being scouted in the process. She still has this job at the end of the series.
  • Improbably Female Cast: Sure, iDOLs only accept girls as pilots, but this doesn't explain why Mondenkind Japan has only two named male characters across the entire organization, given the other jobs people can hold there are not gender-restricted.
  • In Name Only: The show has very, very little in common with the videogame it is based off of.
  • Kill Sat: Vulturius. It's a failsafe prepared by the Grand Lodge Cats council in order to eliminate all of the iDOLs before they can awaken Aulyn.
  • Killed Off for Real: Karasu and Lo-Wu in episode 24. Chihaya, Azusa, R.I.F.F.A. (all of them), The Omniscient Council of Vagueness and Nubilum in episode 25. Nebula, Hiems, Tempestas and Imber in the finale.
  • Locked Out of the Loop: Yayoi thinks Haruka is just going to school and doing club activities. Until the final episodes, where Haruka sends her a letter telling her the truth.
  • Love Martyr: Yukiho wants to do everything she can to make Chihaya happy, including helping her get Imber back. Yet, she is aware Chihaya doesn't love anyone except Imber, and so she will be thrown aside once she has fulfilled her role. Nonetheless, she chooses to keep fighting for Chihaya.
  • Mars Needs Women: Who says girls and alien giant mecha can't fall in love?
  • Meaningless Villain Victory: In the second-to-last episode, Chihaya, desperate to get Imber back, turns herself into energy and actually merges with Imber, which would pretty much guarantee that she won, except that Imber won't have it and fires her essence back out not long after, killing her as a result.
  • The Mole: Yukiho infiltrated Mondenkind on orders from Chihaya to help her get Imber back. Saku on the other hand is working for the Grand Lodge Cats to disrupt both Mondenkind Japan and Turiavita.
  • Not Quite Dead: Two-thirds of the way through, we find out that Mami was alive, held inside Tempestas the whole time.
  • Obstructive Bureaucrat: Hibiki Saku, an advisor from Mondenkind central command who generally acts weaselly and comes up with increasingly sneaky ways of trying to screw over the iDOL team. This is because he's actually a Hidden Agenda Villain working for the Grand Lodge Cats.
  • Older Than They Look: Because of the experiments made on their bodies, Chihaya and Azusa are actually 48 and 51 years old respectively despite looking very young.
  • One Dialogue, Two Conversations: Haruka discusses her new job with Yayoi, and her "classmate" who she spends a lot of time with. Yayoi, not knowing said classmate is actually a giant robot, is surprised when Haruka says that her boyfriend let her "ride him".
  • Polar Opposite Twins: The Futami twins, as revealed when Mami returns in the later half of the show. Ami is gentle and reserved while Mami is a Genki Girl.
  • Posthumous Character: Futami Mami, Ami's twin sister, although she turns out to be Not Quite Dead.
  • Puppet King: Teru Lo-Wu is nominally the head of Turiavita, and most of its members appear to be aligned with the group out of loyalty to her. However, she's actually catatonic for most of the series and Karasuma is the one pulling the strings.
  • Recycled with a Gimmick: An adaptation of a rhythm game/dating sim... with giant robots.
  • Related in the Adaptation: Azusa is completely unrelated to Chihaya in the games, but here, she's her older sister.
  • Theme Naming: The iDOLs are named after lunar maria.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Iori started the series as a Butt-Monkey. By the endgame she's made the Foe-Tossing Charge her personal specialty and kicks seven flavors of ass to the point where her former rival Makoto acknowledges her skills as an equal.
  • Tyke-Bomb: R.I.F.F.A., and all of her many, MANY clones.
  • Wife Husbandry: Azusa is revealed to have had a relationship of this sort with her adopted father, Kaien Lo-Wu.
  • Woman Scorned: Chihaya really didn't take Imber's rejection well.
  • Your Princess Is in Another Castle!: By the ending of the second-to-last episode, Turiavita is destroyed, their island is vaporized, and their attack on the city is over. However, since all five iDOLs cores were in the same area, Auryn appears where the moon once was and threatens the world, requiring the heroines to stop it in the final episode.

Top