The coolest example I can think of is probabally Last Exile. Steampunk is an interesting sub-genre.
GREAT series, with, sadly, a typical inexplicable anime ending.
The coolest example I can think of is probabally Last Exile. Steampunk is an interesting sub-genre.
The second series to premiere on UPN (after Star Trek: Voyager) was a short-lived steampunk series called Legend. It was created and produced by Michael Piller and starred Richard Dean Anderson and John de Lancie.
Steampunk is already on the way out in geek circles. Once it hit mainstream it was doomed.
You are posting on a website dedicated to a television show that forty years ago barely managed to hang on to a three year run before being cancelled due to poor ratings.Steampunk is already on the way out in geek circles. Once it hit mainstream it was doomed.
Another fun one to check out: The Secret Adventures Of Jules Verne (intro)
My favorite (if not especially helpful) definition came from a friend, who said that, "steam punk is what happens when goths discover the color brown."
Ah, well my idea came when I thought "Well, what if there was a Steampunk Revolution (like a Proto-Industrial Revolution) in the Middle Ages? How would it work out with the Feudal System still in power and such?"
But, thank you.
Personally, I tend to think of HG Wells and Verne as the [grand]fathers of Steampunk.How do novels like H.G. Wells's Time Machine not count as steampunk? Is super-science + Victorian sensibilities and fashion limited to the late 19th century onward or something? Or is it only steampunk if you reference those works?
Meh. I guess it's like the people who don't consider stories like Beowulf as fantasy, too. So silly.
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