Prison Battleship -
The sequel, Prison Battleship 2 (監獄戦艦2), continues Donny's story immediately after the events of the first game. Following his victory, he sets his sights on taking over the moon Cordelia. His targets this time are the royal heirs, and Maya Cordelia , whom he must brainwash to secure his control over the lunar colony.
Imagine descending into the orlop deck of a 74-gun ship. Designed for 600 sailors, it now held 1,200 convicts. The decks were covered in iron bars and heavy gratings. Light and air came only through scuttles (portholes) too small for a human head to pass through.
Why does this image resonate so powerfully? prison battleship
The concept collapses under existing treaties:
: Prioritize Naomi through specific choices after the first save point. Imagine descending into the orlop deck of a 74-gun ship
While most of these remained classified, survivor testimonies from the 1923 Great Kanto earthquake describe prisoners being left to drown in locked cells aboard a battleship hulk in Yokohama harbor—a tragedy the navy officially denied for decades.
The game's popularity quickly led to an anime adaptation. Prison Battleship (OVA) was developed by the studio Pixy and adapts the "good ending" of the original game. The OVA follows the same premise, with Donny brainwashing the two female officers. It was released in multiple episodes, including a "Prelude of Brainwashing," "Brainwashing Restructuring," "Breakdown Complete," and a finale titled "Hell". The series concluded on December 30, 2010. The OVA's popularity, combined with the subsequent sequels, helped cement the series as a significant player in the adult anime market. Light and air came only through scuttles (portholes)
The 19th century saw the heyday of the prison battleship. As European empires expanded, the need for secure penal institutions grew, and the prison battleship became an attractive solution. These vessels were used to house a wide range of prisoners, from common criminals to political dissidents and revolutionaries.
The "Prison Battleship," also known as HMAS Kutoubia, or more commonly referred to as the "Battleship of Fremantle," was a Royal Australian Navy (RAN) ship with a notorious history. Its primary function was to serve as a transportation vessel for prisoners and a deterrent to potential escapees.
These ships, often mighty men-of-war that had served their country, were stripped of their masts and armaments and moored in rivers like the Thames. They became known as "hulks"—floating prisons that would hold convicts and prisoners of war in abysmal conditions. Around 40 ships of the Royal Navy were transformed into floating prisons. Some of the most notorious floating prisons included HMS Warrior and HMS Argenta . In England in 1776, the first such vessel was commanded by Mr Duncan Campbell and was moored at Barking Creek.
This article charts the grim evolution of the prison battleship, from the rotting "hulks" of the British Empire to the high-tech, theoretical detention strategies of modern navies.