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Doraemon Nobita And The Steel Troops Bilibili Instant

Nobita and friends discover a giant robot part floating in the North Pole. Using Doraemon’s gadgets, they assemble it into a massive mecha named Zanda Claus. Meanwhile, a mysterious girl from a parallel world, Lilulu, arrives searching for the robot. She belongs to a race of mechanical beings planning to conquer Earth. The story evolves into a battle against the Steel Troops — and a deep moral inquiry into whether machines can feel, change, and be redeemed.


Unlike Western platforms (YouTube/Netflix), Bilibili fosters a subculture of "classic re-evaluation." Young Chinese viewers, who grew up with Doraemon on CCTV or local channels, return to Steel Troops as adults. They realize, often with shock, that a show about a blue cat robot taught them about genocide, slavery (Mechatopia enslaves robots), and the pain of loss. doraemon nobita and the steel troops bilibili

One popular Bilibili reviewer, "Old Anime Storyteller" (老番说), notes: "Watching Steel Troops at 10, I cried because Zanda died. Watching it at 25, I cry because Riruru represents how fascism grooms its soldiers. This is not a kids' film." Nobita and friends discover a giant robot part


For those unfamiliar, the plot of Nobita and the Steel Troops deviates significantly from the standard "Nobita gets bullied -> Doraemon gives gadget -> Nobita abuses gadget -> chaos ensues" formula. For those unfamiliar, the plot of Nobita and

The story begins on a lazy summer afternoon. Tired of his mundane life, Nobita wishes for a giant robot he can control. Using the Unexpectedly Similar Badge and the Secret Garage, Doraemon helps Nobita order a custom robot from a future catalog. Due to a mix-up, they don't get a controllable mech; they get a massive, sentient, stray robot from the planet Mirror World.

But the real twist comes with Pippo (or Riruru in the original Japanese). A blue-haired android from a distant mechanical planet known as the "Robot Corps," Pippo arrives on Earth on a reconnaissance mission. He is part of a collective AI consciousness that believes organic life is obsolete.

What follows is a chilling cat-and-mouse game. Nobita and his friends—Shizuka, Gian, and Suneo—must hide the giant robot (named Zanda Claus) while confronting Pippo’s moral dilemma. The film masterfully shifts from slice-of-life comedy to a survival thriller where children fight a genocidal machine army.

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