

Artistic License Gun Safety: Episode 3 is a particularly blatant example.A C-ball user can fall "up" or walk on walls, and even extend that same field to people or objects around them. Ange herself uses a C-ball, a Cavorite-based handheld spherical device that lets her effectively realign her own personal gravity. Artificial Gravity: The principal property of Cavorite technology, seen most prominently in the airships it levitates.Albion's Cavorite monopoly, and the fleet of airships built using the stuff, allowed the Kingdom to establish itself as the dominant world power.


While the show drops a number of hints (made more plausible by the sneaky-spies-and-espionage theme), it's never made explicit. Ambiguously Gay: Ange and Princess's relationship can very easily be interpreted as a secret romantic one.

Buildings are much larger than would be feasible and London features a system of elevated freeways supported by iron trusses in our world, the first elevated roadways wouldn't appear until 1924 at the earliest, while the wall dividing London is easily far bigger than any concrete structure ever constructed in our world. Automotive technology is both far more common and well in advance of what was available at the time, with cars that start without cranking.
CAVORITE BLOCKING GRAVITY SERIES
Most of the firearms shown in the series are period appropriate, though a few weren't available until a few decades into the twentieth century. Technology appears to be anywhere from roughly equivalent to the nineteenth century to some years in advance of reality.The Geneva Protocols (here misnamed as the Geneva Conventions ) were apparently ratified a few decades earlier than in Real Life.Albion is implied to control parts of France, given the Duke of Normandy's title (and mention of a Duke of Aquitaine as well) as well as the presence of military forces in Rouen, situated in northern France.Both sides continue their conflict in secret, fighting a shadow war with the goal of defeating the other and uniting the empire under one rule. A truce splits the island into two separate countries (the Kingdom of Albion and the Commonwealth of Albion) and leads to London being divided by an enormous barrier known as the London Wall. However, discontent among the lower classes boils over, causing them to revolt against the nobility. The discovery of a mineral known as Cavorite leads to a technological revolution in Albion, propelling the kingdom to the forefront of global power. The series takes in an alternate 19th century England known as the Kingdom of Albion.Kingdom or Commonwealth, is worthy of alliance to Japan, a nod to the the Real Life alliance between Britain and Japan in 1902. Allohistorical Allusion: Chise's mission is to determine which Britain.Episode titles might get in on this as well, such as in the case of Episode 3, "Vice Voice". Alliterative Title: "Princess" and "Principal" share the same first five letters.All Asians Wear Conical Straw Hats: Literally in this case, since Chise is the only Asian on the team, and she wears such a hat.Abusive Parents: Ange, Dorothy, Beatrice, and Chise all had abusive fathers.Princess Principal contains examples of the following tropes:
