MEGA MAN: FULLY CHARGED
(Cartoon Network, August 5, 2018-May 23, 2019 US
Family Chrgd, September 8, 2018-June 22, 2019 CAN)
Capcom, Dentsu
Entertainment USA, DHX Media, DXH Media Studios Vancouver
(Cartoon Network, August 5, 2018-May 23, 2019 US
Family Chrgd, September 8, 2018-June 22, 2019 CAN)
MAIN CAST:
Vincent Tong – Mega Man/Aki Light, Namagem
Ryan Beil – Mega Mini, Wayne
Caitlyn Bairstow – Suna Light
Garry Chalk – Dr. Thomas Light
Vincent Tong – Mega Man/Aki Light, Namagem
Ryan Beil – Mega Mini, Wayne
Caitlyn Bairstow – Suna Light
Garry Chalk – Dr. Thomas Light
Mega
Man: Fully Charged was the second western-developed animated series
featuring the Blue Bomber since 1994’s Mega Man from
Ruby-Spears, and the
fifth solo series overall including the OVA series Upon a Star, NT
Warrior and Star Force. It was meant to coincide with the 30th
anniversary of the franchise.
In 2015, Capcom entered into a production deal with Dentsu Entertainment USA to create a new
26-episode Mega Man series. Dentsu chose the writing team Man of Action—Joe Casey, Joe Kelly, Duncan Rouleau, and Steven T. Seagle—to
oversee the development of the series, considering their successful billion
dollar franchise Ben 10,
which also starred a heroic young boy with various abilities. While they issued
assurances that they would be sticking closely to the spirit and established
look of the franchise, there would be some
changes made and an attempt to appeal to western audiences with the
storytelling.
Mega Man
was now Aki Light (“Aki” could mean “bright” or “sun”, voiced by Vincent Tong),
a robot who looked like an ordinary boy and attended junior high school with
other children in Silicon
City. He could summon his Mega Man armor in a stock transformation
sequence, which resembled the game’s depiction of it with a few added
flourishes. Along with his regular Mega Buster blaster, Mega Man could fire a
beam onto a robot that would copy their abilities after about a minute and
allow him to use them. As a side effect, Mega Man would also gain some of their
personality traits as well that would often work against him. Unlike the games
where he could hold onto all of the boss abilities, this Mega Man was limited
to only three at a time via a safeguard; otherwise, his blaster would overheat
and cause personality glitches. Being a little boy, he displayed a level of
self-confidence and cockiness that often led to his being impetuous and leaping
without thinking. He also had some locked-away memories from being in the Hard
Wars, a period when humans were at war with robots at a time known as the Hard
Age.
Dr. Thomas
Light (Garry Chalk, who played various roles in the 1994 series) was Aki’s
father and strong advocate for human/robot relations, having been a veteran from
the Hard Wars. He knew Aki was secretly Mega Man, but kept it to himself for a
while. He was the keeper of the Mega Key: a device that
could grant complete access to the schematics and programming of any robot
placed inside it. Suna Light (a play on “sun light”, voiced by Caitlyn
Bairstow) was Aki’s intelligent human sister who had a variety of gadgets at
her disposal. She openly knew of Aki’s double life and often aided him. She was
this show’s version of Roll (who appeared on a poster in her bedroom), and later revealed to become their version of Zero from the Mega Man X spin-off
game series. Rush
was Aki’s loyal robot dog as in the games, but colored a normal brown instead
of red (although he would be upgraded with armor that would bring him closer to
his original look). After being injured in a supervillain battle, Rush
developed a fear of them and often froze up when Aki took him into a fight. A
new addition to the Mega crew was Mega Mini (Ryan Beil), a small quippy robot
that lived in Aki’s head and monitored his circuits, offered (often ignored) advice,
and handled his transformation into Mega Man.
Aki’s best
friend was Bert
Wily (Cole Howard, who
voiced Mega Man in Mega
Man Powered Up), designed to resemble both Alan
from the Dreamwave
comics and traditional arch villain Dr.
Wily (the latter of whom was actually his grandfather). He was a genius
inventor whose devices tended to be adorned with a skull motif reminiscent of
the bad doctor. Other characters included Principal
100100 (Brian Drummond),
the building-sized school principal that used to be a battle robot; Peter Punkowski (Howard),
a know-it-all with a love for history and a perpetually runny nose; Ashley
Adderley (Shannon Chan-Kent),
a semi-egotistical science lover that Aki had a crush on, but who had a crush
on Mega Man (not knowing they’re one and the same); Junk
Man, a robot made out of scrap by Aki and Suna as a training dummy for Rush,
later turned into a lab protector by Dr. Light; Man Man (Ian Hanlin), a
bumbling human who wanted to be like Mega Man (modeled after Bad Box Art Mega
Man); and The Good
Guild, Silicon City’s robotic peacekeeping force that served as various
public services such as police and firefighters.
The primary
antagonist of the series was Sgt. Breaker
Night, aka Lord Obsidian (Michael Adamthwaite). As
Sgt. Night, he was a human veteran of the Hard Wars that lost an arm and had it
replaced with a robotic one by Dr. Light. He sought to destroy human/robot
relations by encouraging some robots to attack humans to turn them against
them, and believed humans were superior to robots since they created them. Sgt.
Night shared a lot of similarities with the villain Xander Payne from the Archie Comics Mega Man
series. Night donned powerful armor to become his alter ego Lord Obsidian, a
robot supremacist seeking to turn Mega Man into the perfect weapon for his
goals (essentially playing both sides of the conflict he sought to create). He
desired the Mega Key to obliterate all robot kind. His second-in-command was Namagem
(Tong), who shared all of Mega Man’s abilities but could hold up to five
copied powers at once. It turned out that Namagem was actually Aki’s long-lost
twin brother who was stolen and brainwashed by Sgt. Night at the end of the
Hard Age. He was this series’ version of Proto Man.
The Robot
Masters that often caused trouble around town were comprised of Fire
Man (Hanlin), a hot-headed former construction robot that grew to despise
humans; Drill
Man (Andrew McNee), a
perpetually angry robot whose unfeeling father replaced his hands with drills
to take part in the family construction business, rather than pursue his
musical passions; Wave
Man (Samuel Vincent), a
sanitation robot who took his job too far and almost flooded the city; Ice Man
(Travis Turner), a glitched
robot who takes everything too literally and believes he’s helping bring humans
and robots together by freezing them; Air
Man (Hanlin), a wind-blowing robot with a superiority complex and quirky
siblings called The
Bluster Bunch (he’s a composite of Wind Man and Tengu Man); Guts
Man (Peter New), a powerful
waste-disposal robot powered by eating garbage who took issue with Dr. Light’s
eco-friendly recycling program; Elec
Man (McNee), a hyperactive robot with electrical abilities; Cut
Man (Colin Murdock), the
Lights’ perfectionist gardener who flew off the handle whenever that perfection
was disturbed or challenged; and Wood
Man (Mark Oliver, who
voiced FreezeMan.EXE
in Mega Man: NT Warrior), a paranoid who was deactivated during the Hard
Wars and believed he was still fighting in them when accidentally reawakened
(although he’s a Robot Master as far as the games go, he operated independently
of the others and Night).
Additionally, three series-exclusive
Robot Masters were introduced: Hypno Woman, a robot
with hypnotic abilities that used to be a guidance counselor until she got
tired of listening to students’ problems; Blasto Woman (both Kathleen Barr), a former flying
cargo-delivering robot who sought to make money through illegal means; and Chemistry Man (New), a
former chemistry teacher that Sgt. Night convinced to go rogue when he was
fired for putting his students to sleep with boring lectures. Other foes
included Chaotique (Rhonda Rees), a prankster
fun-loving robot who tended to be a bad influence on Mega Man and worked as a
double agent of Obsidian; and The Hoover Gang, former
custodians-turned-criminals that carried non-lethal weapons, comprised of
humans Duane (Adamthwaite) and Wayne (Beil), and a vacuum robot.
The first 10 episodes of Mega
Man: Fully Charged were made available through the Cartoon Network app and website on
August 3, 2018 before debuting on the network itself on August 5. It was
initially reported that the series would air on Disney XD (where it would
air in Southeast Asia in 2019). Despite a traditionally-animated demo reel being leaked
by studio Film Roman featuring Mega Man
battling Fire Man and Drill Man, DHX Media was
announced as the animation studio for the series in 2016 and that they
would be using a computer-generated 3D style. It would be one of the last shows
made under the DHX name before they became WildBrain
in 2019.
Originally intended for a 2017
debut, Dentsu and DHX announced it would
be delayed until 2018. DHX revealed the show’s title at the 2018 Licensing
Expo and held its premiere on July 20 at the San Diego Comic-Con. Sister network Boomerang began airing reruns as early as
August 12th, however it was removed from both channels’ schedules
after 10 weeks until January. Internationally, DHX-owned Family Chrgd (now WildBrainTV) broadcast the
show in Canada beginning on September 8th; POP in the United Kingdom on October 1st;
and 9Go! in Australia on July 15th,
2019.
The series was written by Man of
Action with Marcus Rinehart,
A.J. Marchisello, Michael Oliver,
Joe Barnathan, Justin Peniston, Janis Robertson, Kevin Somers, Lawrence H. Levy, Kevin Grevioux, Beata Harju, Sean Kennedy
Moore (as Sean Patrick Geraghty), Jeff Treppel, Rocco Pucillo, Ricky Mammone, Dan Goldman,
M.J. Offen, Greg Hart, Bob Fingerman, Patricia Villetto,
Dan Marmor,
Ian Drazen, Tanner
Marchisello and Henry Stukenbog. Peter DeTina was the lead
designer, with Derek Weselake, Diane Quach, Francine Delgado, Harrison
Hemeon and Lera Nyukalova serving as
designers. Mega Man’s machinery graphics were handled by Greg Sepelak. The modelers
included Colin Robinson, Aldrich
Chung, Ezra Petruik, Ben Hutchinson, Ingrid Clemeno, Brooke Schlaphoff, Derek Levesque, Jaroslav Chorny, Jin Man Kim, Jin Sung Jim, Kenneth Ma, Melissa Sylvana and Snehal Gopal. Episodes ran for
11 minutes and were typically shown together until they were split up halfway
through the run. The series’ music was composed by Steffan Andrews. As a nod to the franchise’s video
game origins, there were times when the animation switched to 2-D pixel art;
typically in flashbacks, fantasy sequences, enemy encounters and images
displayed during the end credits. These was done by Gurkan Tenekecioglu, Juan
Carlos Lopez and Paul Johnson.
Cartoon
Network has been noted as having not been very supportive of Fully Charged
(or, frankly, any third-party programs). There was little to no promotion on
the network’s part for it, instead all promotion came from the websites of the
companies involved with making it and advertisements could only be found on YouTube. Cartoon Network initially placed it
at 6:30 AM on Sunday morning. After, it bounced between Saturdays and Sundays
before ending its season in a Monday-Thursday 12:30 PM timeslot. Most of the
episodes were released in batches on the Cartoon Network app just before they
began airing on the network itself. While Cartoon Network’s YouTube channel
previewed the first few episodes, the official Fully Charged channel had very little activity. The
series was once available to stream on Cartoon Network’s website,
and available to purchase digitally on Prime
Video.
There was
some question as to whether or not a second season was happening. An online
article posted by Rockman Corner had anonymous sources claim that they were
told that a renewal was “99% greenlit” with some minor things to iron out.
Those minor things ended up being a disagreement over DHX wanting to take the
funding for several of the episodes to make promotional Mega Man shorts
for their YouTube
channel—like music videos or “a day in the life” of characters—and Dentsu
not wanting to allow it. Production on the new season had begun halfway during
production on the first, so things were ready to go. All they needed was the
word. Unfortunately, between that disagreement and the abysmal ratings due to
Cartoon Network’s neglect of the series, Fully Charged was effectively
dead.
In 2019, Jakks Pacific released a line of
Fully Charged toys. Mega Man, Air Man, Ice Man and Wave Man were
included in the basic set, while Drill Man, Guts Man and Mega Man with Drill
Man’s schematics were included in the deluxe. There were two Mega Busters; one
for kids to wear, and one that opened up into Dr. Light’s lab. A second wave
was planned but ultimately cancelled. The toys were used in cheaply-made
“Toyplay” shorts and stop-motion
videos on the series’ official YouTube channel. In 2020, BOOM! Studios published a 6-issue
comic series set after the events of the show. Written by A.J. Marchisello
and Reinhart with art by Stefano Simeone,
colors by Igor Monti and
letters by Ed Dukeshire, the series
saw the Robot Masters gain a new leader in Skull
Man, who seemed to have insights into Aki’s role during the Hard Age. He
faced off against them and Namagem with the aid of the mysterious Zero and Hard
Age authority Dr. Wily.
EPISODE GUIDE:
“Throwing Shade Part I / Throwing Shade Part II” (8/3/18
app, 8/5/18 CN) – When Sgt. Night crashes Dr. Light’s speech on human/robot
coexistence, Fire Man arrives to make an example out of him. / Mega Man must
fight to control his anger after copying Fire Man’s powers.
“Drilling Deep / Videodrone” (8/3/18 app, 8/12/18 CN) – Aki
ends up humiliated in school when he has trouble controlling Drill Man’s copied
powers. / When everyone but Aki and Suna end up hypnotized at school, they
discover it’s the work of former teacher robot Hypno Woman.
“Please Rush Home / Blaze of Glory” (8/3/18 app, 8/19/18 CN)
– Aki searches for Rush after he runs away from home but ends up having to deal
with a sanitation robot flooding the city. / Cooling mechanisms fail throughout
the city during a heatwave, and Fire Man is the culprit.
“Nice on Ice / Hard Times in Silicon City” (8/3/18 app,
8/26/18 CN) – Ice Man decides the best way to help human/robot relations is to
freeze them all together. / An educational trip to the museum results in Aki
having to deal with Blasto Woman trying to rob the artifacts.
“Tripping the Light Fantastic / Running Wild” (8/3/18 app,
9/2/18 CN) – Dr. Light’s new date turns out to be Hypno Woman in disguise. /
Copying Air Man results in Aki becoming vain and arrogant, which he puts on
full display when he runs for school president against Bert and Peter.
“Unfriendly Competition / Opposites Attract” (8/3/18 app,
9/9/18 CN) – Aki makes fun of Bert for using robot legs and a speed button to
join the track team just as Chemistry Man attacks the school. / A weekend
vacation is put on hold when Aki and Suna discover Fire Man and Wave Man
working together.
“I.C.E. (In Case of Emergency) / Trust Your Guts, Man!”
(8/3/18 app, 9/16/18 CN) – Ice Man’s heroics cause Aki to doubt himself, and
copying his powers ends up making him take things too literally. / Guts Man
becomes offended by Dr. Light’s new garbage recycling device and decides to
destroy his lab.
“Drill of the Hunt / Power Cycle” (8/3/18 app, 9/23/18 CN) –
After using hypnosis on Drill Man to turn him good, Aki unintentionally
hypnotizes others around him. / Copying Elec Man’s abilities makes Mega Man
just a bit too hyper for anyone’s good.
“Bored to Be Wild / Enter the Wood Man” (8/3/18 app, 9/30/18
CN) – Megan Man is forced to rely on classmate Ashley’s help to solve Chemistry
Man’s riddles. / Aki and Suna are attacked in the woods by Wood Man who still
believes he’s fighting in the Hard Wars.
“Lightfall Part I / Lightfall Part II” (10/5/18 app, 10/7/18
CN) – Mega Man foolishly agrees to a battle with Lord Obsidian and loses
handily. / Obsidian invades the Lighthouse and attempts to take the Mega Key
unless Mega Man can stop him with some new tricks.
“Rush to Greatness” (11/11/18 CAN, 1/4/19 app, 1/5/19 US) – Despite
his fear of villains, Rush speeds out to try and stop Wave Man on his own.
“S.W.I.S.H.” (11/11/18 CAN, 1/4/19 app, 1/6/19 US) – Mega
Man is easily bested by Namagem until he has Rush retrieve a force field device
that causes Namagem’s blaster to overheat.
“Minus Mini” (11/18/18 CAN, 1/4/19 app, 1/12/19 US) – Mega
Mini ends up falling out of Mega Man’s head and Blasto Woman intends to sell
him on the black market.
“A Cut Above” (11/18/18 CAN, 1/4/19 app, 1/13/19 US) – Upset
over the accidental destruction of a tree, the Lights’ robotic gardener is
upgraded by Obsidian to get his revenge.
“A Bot and His Dog” (11/25/18 CAN, 1/4/19 app, 1/19/19 US) –
Mega Man feels the “emergencies” he’s called on are beneath him until Hyno
Woman takes over the city power plant.
“This Man, This Man Man” (11/25/18 CAN, 1/4/19 app, 1/20/19
US) – Mega Man is upset by a bumbling wannabe that interferes with stopping
Guts Man from attacking the school.
“A Guilded Cage” (1/4/19 app, 1/26/19 CN) – Aki’s new love
of mystery films comes at the perfect time as The Good Guild is suddenly
causing trouble around town.
“To Air Is Robot” (1/4/19 app, 1/27/19 CN) – Aki must
overcome Air Man’s arrogance when he uses his schematics to stop him from
leveling buildings around the city.
“Watt’s Happening” (1/4/19 app, 2/3/19 CN) – Aki auditions
to play himself in Ashley’s Mega Man play, but needs to stop acting when Elec
Man crashes the show.
“Chill Out, Bruh” (1/4/19 app, 2/10/19 CN) – The Lights
rehabilitate Ice Man by giving him a device that balances his emotions, but
Sgt. Night secretly sticks a counter-device on him.
“Big Bad Dreams” (1/4/19 app, 2/17/19 CN) – Sgt. Night has
Hypno Woman attack Aki’s dreams at night, giving him nightmares about Namagem.
“License to Drill” (1/4/19 app, 2/24/19 CN) – Aki is
dismissive of Bert’s interest in Hover-Surfing until he needs his hoverboard to
help him defeat Drill Man.
“All Good in the Wood” (3/1/19 app, 3/3/19 CN) – Mega Man
copies Wood Man’s abilities and gains his paranoia just as Suna and Ashley
needs his help to stop their science project run amok.
“Fire Man in the Hole” (3/1/19 app, 3/10/19 CN) – When lava
blocks their exit during a fight, Mega Man and Fire Man work together to get to
safety.
“A Split End” (3/1/19 app, 3/11/19 CN) – Cut Man has become
a barber, but a customer complaint sends him back over the edge into
supervillainy.
“All Play and No Work” (3/1/19 app, 3/12/19 CN) – Mega Man
hangs out with Chaotique to relax until she frames Bert for theft.
“More More More!” (3/1/19 app, 3/13/19 CN) – Mega Man copies
Guts Man’s schematics to beat him, but ends up acquiring a voracious appetite
as the Robot Masters erect a wall through the city.
“Blast Resort” (3/1/19 app, 3/14/19 CN) – Blasto Woman
tricks Mega Man into helping her steal an EMP device, which she promptly uses
on him to hand him over to Obsidian.
“Too Much is Never Enough” (3/1/19 app, 3/15/19 CN) – Mega
Man has his schematic safeguard removed so he can carry more, but he becomes
moody and overloads as a result.
“The Bluster Bunch” (3/1/19 app, 3/24/19 CN) – Mega Man
battles Air Man to stop him from ruining his siblings’ work.
“It’s Chemistry, Man” (3/1/19 app, 3/31/19 CN) – The new
chemistry teacher proves a boon when Chemistry Man attacks and turns robots
into other metals.
“Flower Power” (3/29/19 app, 4/7/19 CN) – Mega Man pursues
Wood Man who has taken a Corpse Flower that is stinking up the entire city and
giving Mega Man an allergy attack.
“Enemy of My Enemy” (3/29/19 app, 4/14/19 CN) – Unable to
talk sense to Namagem, Mega Man teams up with Fire Man to take him down.
“Old School” (3/29/19 app, 4/21/19 CN) – Chaotique crashes a
school assembly to steal a device that can make things vanish and make the
school disappear.
“This Is Not a Drill” (4/26/19 app, 4/28/19 CN) – Mega Man
goes on patrol after a fight with Dr. Light and ends up having to stop Drill
Man from destroying a tunnel his father is working on.
“A Man Man for All Seasons” (4/26/19 app, 5/5/19 CN) – Man
Man causes Mega Man’s systems to be gummed up by the Hoover Gang, leaving him
unable to transform.
“Change the Charge” (4/26/19 app, 5/12/19 CN) – A blast from
Elec Man causes Mega Man to take everything literally again and leads to him
helping Elec Man carry out his task.
“Hide and Secrets” (4/26/19 app, 5/19/19 CN) – Using Wood
Man’s schematics prompts Mega Man to try and get the Mega Key to use against
Namagem.
“Make the Cut” (5/20/19) – An exhausted Mega Man must
protect Suna and Ashley from Cut Man.
“Panic in the Lighthouse” (5/21/19) – Obsidian convinces
Chaotique to invade the Lighthouse and steal the Mega Key to get back at Mega
Man.
“The Gauntlet Part I” (5/22/19) – Obsidian and the Robot
Masters attack the Lighthouse, but the Lights stand together to defend the Mega
Key.
“The Gauntlet Part II” (5/23/19) – Mega Man combines all of
his schematics to take on a powerful form to defeat Obsidian once and for all.
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