Alternative Titles
Synonyms: Fang of the Sun Dagram, Fang of the Sun Dougram, Taiyou no Kiba Dagram
Japanese: 太陽の牙ダグラム
Information
Type:
TV
Episodes:
75
Status:
Finished Airing
Aired:
Oct 23, 1981 to Mar 25, 1983
Premiered:
Fall 1981
Broadcast:
Fridays at 17:55 (JST)
Producers:
None found, add some
Licensors:
None found, add some
Studios:
Sunrise
Source:
Original
Duration:
23 min. per ep.
Rating:
PG-13 - Teens 13 or older
Statistics
Ranked:
#24052
2
based on the top anime page. Please note that 'Not yet aired' and 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity:
#7866
Members:
7,155
Favorites:
76
Available AtResources |
New Interest Stack
Interest Stacks![]() ![]() Interested in the genre? Despite what people might say, mecha is a rich character focused genre with a variety of incredibly unique stories to tell. Here's a collection of shows with short, straight-to-the-point descriptions about each. Note that some of these were translated by fans, and aren't available officially/legally. A good amount of these are available on various streaming services, tho as for all well you might have to sail the high seas a bit. Disregard my personal scores, as its subjective at end of the day and you might like it. Also please don't dismiss some of these just because they're really old, they pretty much all hold up well even today. Check each out, and see what strikes your fancy. Any shows I personally haven't watch I got info on from fellow mecha friends of mine: ![]() ![]() Anime that comes packaged with socio-political commentary. Sometimes as subtext or metaphor, sometimes screamed out loud with abandon. ![]() ![]() Japan has waged countless wars within its territories and beyond her shores for thousands of years now, and in anime we can see some of the perspectives, interpretations and depictions the Japanese people have developed with regards to this topic. ![]() ![]() Real robots are a subgenre of the mecha genre, in which the mechas are depicted as realistic warmachines as opposed to the superheroistic depiction of the super robot subgenre. It was started in 1979 by Mobile Suit Gundam. ![]() ![]() Since Mecha/Space animes is somewhat not appreciated nowadays by the general people, i'm making a list to someone who want to see more than the surface of what it offers. ![]() ![]() Part two of the list of anime released between January 1963 and January 2000 that are worth your time. (For better or worse). ![]() ![]() The best anime I've seen, not all of them appeal to me or align with my preferences, but I can't deny their qualities. That being said, I still have a lot of anime to consume, so this list will likely change over time or not. ![]() ![]() Tired of adaptions, reboots, and remakes in your sci-fi anime? Frustrated that MAL doesn't allow you to filter by source material? Well, this list has you covered. ![]() ![]() For most series the score is falling over time, however some special series it is rising over time. ![]() ![]() Series that been represented in Super Robot Wars in the Decade the Series Debuted In. ![]() ![]() http://fightingstreet.com/folders/variousinfofolder/ripofffolder/ripoffpage1.html ![]() ![]() This is a list of the most important mecha series from the Showa era, every one of these shows released between 1972 and 1988 and had a substantial impact on the genre and helped shape it. They're compiled in chronological order, and director is listed when he's important person in his own right. ![]() ![]() Ryousuke Takahashi is a Japanese anime director, screenwriter, and producer. He has worked for Sunrise on many anime shows in the real robot genre, including Armored Trooper VOTOMS, Fang of the Sun Dougram, Panzer World Galient, and Blue Comet SPT Layzner. ![]() ![]() These are extremely good, high quality mecha anime picked across 5 decades of the medium you can get emotionally invested in, creating a genuine level of immersion to their masterful work. They are meaningful, real life influencing works, with themes that serve as important life lessons, with characters so connectable they might as well be real people, with fully realized concepts and fantasies, with stories worth the gravitas and seriousness they demand. While they might be on different levels in the immersion scale, they're all pieces of art that with their good animation, writing, directing, sound direction, art direction, and theming are well worth a watch even for non-mecha fans. |








































