Doraemon X 10 Hot -
Her eyes turn red. She activates her High-Voltage Electric Current move (a rarely seen feature of cat-type robots). The resulting electromagnetic pulse is so hot and bright that it’s visible from space. This scene proves that “hot” isn’t just about temperature—it’s about passion. Who can forget the Memory Bread (Ankipan)? When pressed onto a page, it transfers knowledge into your brain when eaten. But in the episode “Spiciest Test Ever,” Nobita accidentally presses the bread onto a Carolina Reaper pepper image.
From literal fire-breathing enemies to gadgets so powerful they could rewrite reality, here are the things in the Doraemon universe. 1. The “Hot” Gadget: Anywhere Door’s Lava Malfunction The Anywhere Door (Dokodemo Door) is a fan favorite. But in the episode “The Door to Hell,” Nobita misprograms the coordinates and opens the door not to a tropical beach, but directly into the Magma Core of the Earth . doraemon x 10 hot
The fight forces Doraemon to use his Small Light and Air Cannon simultaneously, creating a thermal shockwave that levels a mountain. The animation budget for this scene alone was reportedly through the roof, with every frame dripping with fiery particle effects. Not all heat comes from lava. The emotional rivalry between Nobita and Gian (Jaian) can reach a boiling point. In the special “10 Years Later” , a grown-up Gian challenges Nobita to a final baseball match on a 100°F (38°C) summer day . Her eyes turn red
In one story, Nobita accidentally uses it to cut through a bank vault (don’t ask), but the real heat comes from the gadget’s downside: it overheats after ten seconds and explodes. The suspense of using it is hotter than the beam itself. In what is perhaps the most underrated “hot” episode, Doraemon introduces the Transfer Cream —a lotion that teleports whatever it touches. Nobita uses it on a giant air conditioner, sending it into the Jurassic period. As a result, modern-day Tokyo experiences a massive heatwave of 50°C (122°F). This scene proves that “hot” isn’t just about
Biting into it, his brain doesn’t just receive knowledge—it receives pure, undiluted spicy heat. Steam pours from his ears. His eyes turn into whirlpools. Doraemon has to use the Time Kerchief to reverse the burning sensation. It’s the hottest gag in the series’ history. In one rarely-adapted manga chapter, Doraemon takes Nobita to the year 2222 to see a “perfect” climate-controlled city. But a malfunction in the Global Thermostat System turns the entire metropolis into a 10x Hot simulation —a desert where robots overheat and shade is currency.