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According to @ wiki this scene is uncredited Yoshifumi Kondou. I'm not quite sure about it myself. Any help in identifying it would be appreciated
@ wikiによると、このシーンはクレジットない近藤喜文さんです。自分でもよくわかりません。識別するための助けがあればありがたいです
Oh, let me add a small thing! I had to cut up the Tetsujin-28 art to fit the article's featured image, but if you want to enjoy it in all its glory, here it is:
Finally, while I noted the absence of Heidi and Yamato, it's as surprising to see the presence of 70's magical girl heroines, most notably Honey and Meg. That's where you see that lolicon fans weren't the same as SF/military otaku:
The card game also made me discover the central role of a relatively forgotten character, Angie, from 1977's "Angie Girl"
Even a quick look at doujin production from the time shows she was everywhere - see this 1979 issue of "Lolita" (edited by Azuma) and a 1981 Angie doujin
I mentioned age, and it also comes up when mentioning the 4 Gundam girls: Fraw Bow, Kikka, Icelina and Miharu. The fact that Sayla is missing is already pretty weird, but I'd like to focus on the other absent one: Hamon
More generally, Miyazaki and Miyazaki-related girls are very present. No big surprise, you have Lana and Monsley from Future Boy Conan, but also, more unexpectedly, 2 characters from Takahata's Nippon Animation series: Fioriena from Marco and Anne from Anne
The most important presence is, without much surprise, Clarisse from The Castle of Cagliostro, which makes up all of the aces
She was one of the major triggers of the lolicon boom, and this comes out very clearly in the great importance she has here
As for the cards themselves, they all contain a screenshot/traced image of a bishoujo character that otakus would have been fans of. A few random ones here, I'll comment on the selection of characters now