Not gonna lie, I wouldn't mind the Mighty Mo getting into KC, mainly to see how they handle the part of her service history that inspired the following:
Things Involving Shipgirls That are No Longer Allowed, Rule 1344: If Missouri wants to give dead Abyssal ships proper burials at sea, ceremony and all, that is her business. Don't bother trying to stop her.
Oddly enough, it's actually helping the war effort. We have no clue why, but keep it up.
Not gonna lie, I wouldn't mind the Mighty Mo getting into KC, mainly to see how they handle the part of her service history that inspired the following:
Things Involving Shipgirls That are No Longer Allowed, Rule 1344: If Missouri wants to give dead Abyssal ships proper burials at sea, ceremony and all, that is her business. Don't bother trying to stop her.
Oddly enough, it's actually helping the war effort. We have no clue why, but keep it up.
Alanis, killed by a battleship named Missouri
Wait... aren't Abyssals basically shipgirls corrupted by negative emotions? 🤔
Not gonna lie, I wouldn't mind the Mighty Mo getting into KC, mainly to see how they handle the part of her service history that inspired the following:
Things Involving Shipgirls That are No Longer Allowed, Rule 1344: If Missouri wants to give dead Abyssal ships proper burials at sea, ceremony and all, that is her business. Don't bother trying to stop her.
Oddly enough, it's actually helping the war effort. We have no clue why, but keep it up.
Alanis, killed by a battleship named Missouri
Missouri has a lot of mixed messages within her. On the one hand, yes, she did give the kamikaze pilot who hit her a burial at sea with full honors, and the museum makes a big deal about that today.
On the other, she's literally in Pearl Harbor, in the same berth that USS Oklahoma occupied that day, as an explicit statement of putting the places where the war started and ended right beside each other. The museum is so into the whole ceremony that they call the Captain's Veranda "the Surrender Deck" and end every guided tour there, with very little discussion of Mo's service in the 80s and even less of the 50s.
Missouri has a lot of mixed messages within her. On the one hand, yes, she did give the kamikaze pilot who hit her a burial at sea with full honors, and the museum makes a big deal about that today.
On the other, she's literally in Pearl Harbor, in the same berth that USS Oklahoma occupied that day, as an explicit statement of putting the places where the war started and ended right beside each other. The museum is so into the whole ceremony that they call the Captain's Veranda "the Surrender Deck" and end every guided tour there, with very little discussion of Mo's service in the 80s and even less of the 50s.
So, a lot of mixed messaging all around.
Sort of like Gundam's approach to an anti-war message?