Production and release
Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket was produced by animation studio Sunrise in association with toy company Bandai.[4] Kenji Uchida was the former representative and Minoru Takanashi was the latter's producer.[5] The series was created to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the Gundam franchise, created by Yoshiyuki Tomino in 1979.[6] War in the Pocket was directed by Fumihiko Takayama,[4] known for his work on Orguss 02 and WXIII: Patlabor the Movie 3, marking the first time anyone other than Tomino directed a Gundam show.[3] The screenplay was written by Hiroyuki Yamaga, with scenario by Kyosuke Yuki, while the character designer for this series was Haruhiko Mikimoto.[4]
War in the Pocket was originally released in Japan in VHS and Laser Disc as a six-part original video animation series between March 25, 1989, and August 25, 1989.[4][5] Bandai Visual re-released the series three times; first, into two three-episode DVD volumes on December 18, 1999;[7][8] then, as a DVD box set on April 22, 2011, as part of the "specially priced" DVD series "G-Selection";[9] and later on a Blu-ray disc box set on August 29, 2017.[10]
The first North American home media release of War in the Pocket was handled by Bandai Entertainment with dubbing produced by Animaze.[11] First announced in 1998,[12] Bandai originally released it in a VHS box set along with Mobile Suit Gundam 0083: Stardust Memory on March 9, 1999.[13] From September 14, 1999, to November 23, 1999, the company released it into three two-episode VHS volumes, followed by a six-episode box set on December 7, 1999.[14][15][16] In December 2000, Bandai announced its DVD release for the following year,[17]
Bandai initially planned to broadcast War in the Pocket in the United States in 2002, but Sunrise set a September 2001 airdate.[26] Ultimately, the anime aired on Cartoon Network's Toonami Midnight Run block, starting from November 5, 2001.[27] It was also aired by the same channel on its Adult Swim block on Saturday nights, from November 16, 2002, until December 28, 2002 (after which the Saturday block was removed),[28] and then on "Saturday Video Entertainment System" block, starting from March 1, 2003, and ending on April 19, 2003.[29] Following the 2012 closure of Bandai Entertainment, the company discontinued their home video distribution.[30] In July 2016, Right Stuf announced it would release the anime on DVD in late 2016 in partnership with Sunrise.[31]