ChihabM
For decades, Japan guarded Senshadō as a tradition that belonged to no one else. A discipline of honor, heritage, and generations of young women raised inside its armored rituals. But across the ocean, the West had shaped something different from the same steel and treads: a louder, faster, spectacle-driven sport that refused to bow to the old ways.
When Gaijin Entertainment moved to claim the Japanese broadcasting rights and pull Senshadō into the global arena, the quiet tension with the Senshadō Federation finally became a storm.
What began as a dispute over rules and ownership soon escalated into a challenge the world could not ignore. A clash of traditions, technologies, and pride. Now, as both sides gather for the decisive international match, one question rises above all engines and politics: when strict punishing traditions meet the corrupte corporate greed on the battlefield, whose way of tankery will stand triumphant?