Neon Genesis Evangelion

The work that redefined mecha and rattled a generation, as much a study of the psyche as of the genre itself.

Synopsis
The Anime Lad

Tokyo-3 faces attacks from enormous beings called Angels, and the organization NERV has built Evangelions as humanity's defense. Shinji Ikari arrives to meet his father, who runs the operation. He is instead asked to pilot one. The machinery is imposing, but no adult has prepared an adequate consent form. The action begins with fear rather than heroic readiness.

Super Eyepatch Fox

Angels attack fortified Tokyo-3. NERV answers with giant Evangelions that only selected teenagers can pilot. Shinji arrives to see his father and receives an immediate combat assignment instead. The city becomes a weapon while the cockpit turns fear into something physical inside the pilot alone.

Gigguku

The alarms start as Tokyo-3 rearranges itself. Shinji is shown the machine he is somehow expected to pilot RIGHT NOW. Evangelion makes the scale overwhelming without shrinking his panic. That is the hook. The giant battle matters, but so does every silence in the command room and every adult who cannot say what this child needs to hear. It is mecha spectacle with exposed emotional wiring!

Father's Basement

Years of imitation can make its imagery look familiar before the show earns context for it. The opening still lands because it refuses the easy fantasy of instant heroism. Shinji is summoned by his father, who commands NERV. He is shown an Evangelion and ordered into battle against an Angel. His sensible fear gives the mechanical spectacle weight without treating a child pilot as normal.

Part 1

E1–9 · 5.0

Part 2

E10–24 · 5.0

Tap a bar to crack open its episode · a chapter band to warp to it · ✓ marks you’ve made it that far · ▶ blasts the theme.