I know Cowboy Bebop is typically considered to be cyberpunk but I just don’t see it. Yes, they’re low-lifes living in space, but is that enough to qualify as cyberpunk?

I guess yes, Jet has a cybernetic arm, and yes Radical Edward is a hacker, but it still just doesn’t feel cyberpunk to me. Part of the problem may be that technology never really feels dehumanizing, and society never feels on the verge of collapse. The show is also considered to be a space western and I can see that more than the cyberpunk label, honestly. For the most part, people don’t seem to be beaten down by society; they seem more like they’re just kinda lazily doing their own thing. That feels more “western” to me than “cyberpunk”. It’s weird how a lot of the tropes (like cybernetic limbs and hackers) can be present but I just don’t think the themes are there.

What do you think? Am I crazy? Would you classify Cowboy Bebop as more cyberpunk or more space western? Obviously I’m referring to the anime classic Cowboy Bebop here and not the mediocre live-action Cowboy Bebop.

I guess here’s a trailer if you’ve never watched it. It’s streaming on Tubi, Hulu, and Crunchyroll.

  • MrJameGumb@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    This is the first I’m hearing of Cowboy Bebop being cyberpunk. I don’t think the lable really fits. It’s such a well rounded show I don’t know exactly what category I’d put it in, but it’s definitely not cyberpunk. It’s more of a noir space-western with a lot of action and comedy mixed in. If someone put a gun to my head and said pick a genre I’d probably just call it sci-fi since that’s a pretty broad term that covers a lot of ground

    • HammerjackOPM
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      7 months ago

      I agree, it’s mostly just a great sci-fi, no need to restrict it to a single genre. It’s just weird to me that even the Cowboy Bebop Wikipedia page says things like:

      One reviewer described it as “space opera meets noir, meets comedy, meets cyberpunk”.

      and

      The series also includes extensive references and elements from science fiction, bearing strong similarities to the cyberpunk fiction of William Gibson.

      And I wouldn’t have said that at all. So I made this post to see if I was missing something.