1906: Waifu Wednesday

There’s a sort of tradition among anime and game fans on Twitter — well, game fans who are into the Japanese end of the spectrum, anyway — called Waifu Wednesday, which is often used as a simple excuse to post lots of pictures of anime girls the posters in question find attractive, but sometimes also used as a means of celebrating a favourite character for more than just their physical appearance. Perhaps their story arc resonated with the person who posted it. Perhaps they simply liked them as a person. Perhaps they represented an ideal they wanted to aspire to. Whatever the reasons, Waifu Wednesday is a thing, and, well, why not here too?

Nepgear-mk2For today’s Waifu Wednesday, then, I think I want to talk about Nepgear, pictured to the right.

Nepgear, as those of you paying attention to my deviant, disgraceful taste in video games will already know, is the protagonist of Hyperdimension Neptunia mk2 (and its recent remake Hyperdimension Neptunia Re;Birth2) and the sister of series protagonist Neptune. Specifically, she’s Neptune’s younger sister; in the series’ tradition, she is the personification of a specific game platform, in this case the Sega Game Gear to Neptune’s… well, Sega Neptune.

Nepgear isn’t the only younger sister character to make an appearance in the series. Sony PlayStation personification Noire — who you better believe will be the subject of a future post like this, because she’s one of my favourite characters in the series aside from Nepgear here — has a younger sister called Uni, who represents Sony’s handhelds the PSP and Vita. Nintendo Wii personification Blanc, meanwhile, has two younger twin sisters called Rom and Ram, who between them represent the two screens of Nintendo’s handhelds the DS and 3DS.

The fact that these characters are personifications of well-known brands and platforms is one of the most well-known things about the Hyperdimension Neptunia series, but it’s also one of the least important things about them; it makes up little more than their concept and, in some cases, influences aspects of their design or basic personality type.

The reason I like Nepgear so much is because I can see a certain amount of myself in her. Obviously I’m not a young, pretty, skinny girl — I’m pretty much the exact opposite of her in that regard — but I find her personality and the way she goes about her business to be eminently relatable. Why? She’s awkward, she’s nerdy, she’s lacking in self-confidence and often finds herself the butt of jokes: these are all traits I became aware of in myself when I was younger, and which persist to this day.

It’s not just about “negative” traits, though. Although often doubting her own abilities, for example, Nepgear is someone who will try her very best and follow through on a plan when she makes it, even if things don’t go entirely as envisioned. She tries hard to do the right thing in all situations — though doesn’t always succeed — and makes an effort to bring people together and ensure they are getting along with one another. Obviously she then goes on to fight giant robots and evil goddesses and whatnot, which are parts of my life that haven’t happened as yet, but, without wanting to sound too arrogant, for the most part she represents some of the aspects of myself that I actually quite like.

Nepgear-full_form-transform_formAside from the relatable aspects, Nepgear is just an altogether pleasingly wholesome character; she’s cute, sure, and in her transformed “Purple Sister” form (left) she ups the sexy quotient considerably, but she has never been a character that attempts to take advantage of either her cute or sexy aspects.

Instead, well, I’ve already used the word wholesome above, but it really is the best way to describe her. She’s someone who is very pleasant to spend time in the virtual company of, and she’s just plain nice. The kind of person who would always have tea and cake for you if you stopped by; the kind of person who remembers your birthday; the kind of person who does random acts of kindness without any expectation of reward — and who often doesn’t receive any kind of reward for her hard work.

In many ways, poor old Nepgear is one of the most “normal” people in the entirety of Hyperdimension Neptunia, and she suffers a bit for it. There’s a running gag in the games that followed her starring role in mk2 where she’s paranoid about everyone thinking that she’s “boring” and, when you compare her to the other characters in the series — particularly the pure, unbridled chaos that her sister Neptune tends to create in her wake — it’s perhaps easy to see why she worries.

But even if she goes unappreciated in her own dimension(s), certainly appreciate Nepgear, and thus it’s with pleasure that I give her the dubious honour of a Waifu Wednesday post on this little backwater blog.


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