In Defense of Trigun Stampede/Stargaze - Media Created in Culture
I just finished the whole series three days ago. I can't get it out of my head. It has touched me in a way that shows rarely do for me, and so when I sought out online opinions, I was... caught off guard. The reception is a lot more mixed than I expected, and I had to swallow my initial defensiveness to properly absorb the valid critiques online.
And the critiques are valid. Arcs are rushed, conflicts are resolved too soon, and the ending ultimately doesn't give you enough breath to know if it was at all earned. Most glaringly, key characters don't die. The "good" ending is thus: Wolfwood and Livio and Meryl and Milly and Vash live together with the promise to support each other through their woes, without showing a hint of what these woes might look like for the future.
The manga is compiled into 14 volumes, all packed with character development and exploration, in a blend of gag humor and religious philosophy, and it sits on a moral conundrum: is one extreme more right than the other? Can pacifism cause more harm than good? Can violence protect? It takes its time to form and conclude arcs for each character, explore Vash's rise and fall and rise again, with all the tragedies that follow him. This is, of course, the purest form of Trigun. It is the start, the Bible, the core of 98' and Badlands and Stampede.
So, naturally, when an anime is constrained to two seasons, 12 chapters each, it's simply never going to live up to the manga. It does not have the funding or time. As said by the anime's director, Masoka Sato, in an interview with Animage:
We struggled a lot along the way. As a fan of the original myself, I really wanted to see a complete and faithful anime adaptation of the story, but the circumstances just didn’t allow for it. (x)
Originally, they planned for the following:
Vash and Knives would kill each other as a result of their fight.
Both of these did not happen. And because of this, the tone of the entire anime changes. Wolfwood lives. Vash doesn't kill a human because Nai steals that decision from him. This prevents Vash from grappling with the consequences of his decision to kill, since there is no ensuing fallout. The planet obtains its first source of natural water due to Nai's sacrifice, and they all laugh at the end, riding off into the sunset.
And I know some people don't like this. It can feel shallow. How can Vash lose his brother and smile at the end? How can we skip over a pivotal point in Vash's character arc by scrapping his murder of Legato? Does this not feel hollow in comparison? But hear me out. Just for a little longer.
Trigun in the Culture of 2026
In the article mentioned above, Sato says the following:
"For the people who haven't read the original, this is what Trigun will mean to them."
This really stuck with me. I suppose it's especially impactful to me because, as Nightow says, I was introduced to Trigun through Stampede. And I loved it. I loved the blend of 2d and 3d animation and the capabilities it gave the team. I loved the original four—Vash, Meryl, Roberto, and Wolfwood—and their dynamics. I was so deeply taken by Vash as a main character—tortured by guilt, motivated by love, relentless in his pacifism yet stubborn in his protective nature. It exasperated his companions, most obvious of all Wolfwood, and yet it burrowed deep into each of them that it started changing the way that they would resolve conflicts.
And we see this blossom in Trigun Stargaze. Wolfwood refuses to kill, even when Vash isn't there to look over his shoulder. Wolfwood spends two years searching for Vash, trekking through endless desert to find him. Meryl and Milly do the same, though not so singlemindedly, with the responsibility as reporters. Nevertheless, their connection to Vash enables them to look at others—the plants, especially, who are framed as the misunderstood, the captives, the objects without a voice—in a new light, with much more compassion, and endows them with a yearning to improve plants' lives. Vash has impacted each of his companions so deeply that they act as an extension of his values and desires, while he remains almost comatose, so wrecked with guilt that he has nearly lost all memories, and he is only shaken out of it when a friend's life is at risk. He returns to himself—relentlessly protective, at the cost of his own safety—and when he arrives Home, he stumbles into a support group he doesn't think he's earned, brought to tears as they hold him tight and make him not feel so fucking lonely.
And therein lies the crux of the anime. This is the heart. And in light of 2026, it is the balm that myself and many others yearn for. We've all heard the phrase "media is impacted by the culture it's built in," and Trigun Stargaze is a direct example of this point.
On October 2024, a year into the Gaza genocide, 41,909 people were killed, 16,756 of which were children (x). That same year, the ICJ stated that it found Israel's actions against the Palestinian people to "plausibly amount to genocide" and issued six provisional measures to prevent further genocidal activity (x). A year later, in 2025, fatal casualties have increased to 67,075. 169,430 people have been injured, totaling 236,505 casualties (x). While there have been multiple promises of ceasefires, we still have not seen a long-lasting one. The genocide continues.
On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes against Iranian nuclear infrastructure, thus beginning the 2026 Iranian war. Thousands of people are dead in Lebanon and Iran, and a sixth of Lebanon's population has been displaced. And while there has been an agreed two-week ceasefire, we do not know if this tentative peace will remain. (x)
To those of you who grew up, or are growing up, in Certain Political Leaning Families, you are watching your loved ones rejoice in this enormous loss of life. My own family is the same; the brothers are conducting their weekly calls and listening to each other celebrate the news. The only one silent is my uncle, ten years of service in the military, who is staunchly against the Iranian war. Soberingly, when they asked him what he thought, he said, "I don't want to watch my classmates die."
Media is not created in a vacuum. Culture has had the freedom to meet online, through group chats and social media and movies. While these conflicts may be centered on one continent, their impact is felt across the world, a ripple of injustice and rage and powerlessness swallowing the masses, who protest in the street, who are shot while unarmed, who are pulled away from their families. With this comes a sense of hopelessness. Injustice runs rampant, politicians are unchecked, and rent continues to skyrocket, with no hope of allowing any of us to see the future our parents or grandparents had, as homeowners and landowners, with lawns to mow in front of our mailboxes. Our sense of community continues to be dashed by the intensifying violence, encouraging us to stay home and stay safe. Therein lies us, who sit silently in a rotting apartment and think, I'm alone, I'm alone, I'm alone.
And so when Trigun Stargaze reaches the apex of its climax, and it reveals that plants are dying not because they are poisoned by humans, but because they are lonely, I feel. When it asks the question, what if Nai was a lonely, scared plant who just wanted his brother, I feel. When Vash sobs loud and hard into Meryl's arms because the weight of his suffering is crushing him, and Meryl vows to lift him up, I feel. And yes, when the plants stretch out and explode into feathers for humans to touch and hold and feel the suffering and love they've all endured, I was a sobbing mess, thank you very much. Wolfwood lived because he had a friend in Vash and support from the orphanage and his brother, who fought for his life then and for his future. Nai died because he couldn't live with Vash making one final sacrifice, to force him into eternal loneliness for him and him alone. Vash smiles at the end because, while he has had his time of mourning (and I do truly believe he mourned, with the state of his clothes and outfit harkening back to Ericks and the near-comatose state the anime opened with), his friends pull him by the creases of his shirt and urge him to follow them, into the sunlight and out of the dingy ruins of past choices.
Trigun Stargaze asks the question: "How do we live in the suffering of this world?" And they answer it with, "Love." And yeah, it's corny. It's riddled with flaws. But it's so deeply earnest. And in today's political climate, it felt like a balm. It felt like a warm blanket. It felt like the first droplets of rain on a desert planet.
One thing I was very mindful of for this project, was making sure it never became a story that incites hatred. When working on the world of Trigun, it’s easy to fall into depicting people as consumed by hatred for one another. But when I thought about the viewers who might become fans of this work and want to keep enjoying it long after its conclusion, maybe through cosplay or by repeating and treasuring their favorite lines, I felt that sending them off with a dark and hopeless ending just wasn’t the right choice. I wanted it to close it as a story that carries the hope and brightness of the characters choosing to live their lives with admirable resilience on the harsh planet of No Man’s Land. - Masako Sato
If you liked this, I also encourage you to read the article from Animate Times, in their exclusive interview with Yasuhiro Nightow and his thoughts on Stargaze.