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・ Shogun
・ Shogun (1986 board game)
・ Shogun (2006 board game)
・ Shogun (disambiguation)
・ Shogun (Stormwitch album)
・ Shogun (toolbox)
・ Shogun (Trivium album)
・ Shogun and Little Kitchen
・ Shogun Assassin
・ Shogun Films
・ Shogun Finance Ltd v Hudson
・ Shogun Iemitsu Shinobi Tabi
・ Shogun Lodge
・ Shogun Tsuka
・ Shogun Warriors
Shogun Warriors (toys)
・ Shogun Warriors (video game)
・ Shogun's Joys of Torture
・ Shogun's Sadism
・ Shogun's Samurai
・ Shoguna
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・ Shohachi Ishii
・ Shohada
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・ Shohada Basij Ray FSC
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・ Shohada Rural District (Mazandaran Province)


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Shogun Warriors (toys) : ウィキペディア英語版
Shogun Warriors (toys)
The Shogun Warriors were the central characters of a line of toys licensed by Mattel Inc. during the late 1970s that consisted of a series of imported Japanese robots based on anime and tokusatsu shows featuring giant robots. Originally manufactured in three sizes: the plastic versions, the diecast metal versions and the slightly taller but much more detailed and articulated 5" diecast versions, several vehicles were also offered as well as a set that could be put together to form the super robot Combattra. Midway through the line Mattel introduced some original plastic vehicles, exclusive to the U.S. for the 3.5" figures to ride in.
==Features==
These toys featured spring-loaded launcher weapons such as missiles, shuriken and battle axes. Some were able to launch their fists while the later diecast versions also had the ability to transform into different shapes. Raydeen, for example, could become a birdlike spaceship. These "convertible" editions were the precursors to the Transformers line of toy robots, but unlike the later products, it was not unusual for minor dissasembly to be required to achieve the secondary form. There was even a robot named Megatron in issue #18 of the comic, a name subsequently used multiple times for the leader of the evil Decepticons from Transformers. The second form of the toy was not always functional, one example being Gaiking's "giant skull," which was the head for Daiku Maryu, a space dragon toy not released in the U.S.
Several of the anime-based toys from this line were seen in the 1980s as part of Jim Terry's ''Force Five'' series. A single movie version was edited from each series and sold on Home Video. These features aired on the cable network Showtime in 1981 under the name "Shogun Warriors".
The ''Shogun Warriors'' name was revived by Toynami in 2010 as an all-new toy line.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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