A (Neo)vim color theme inspired by the Neon Genesis Evangelion anime.
Nvimgelion is a color theme for Vim and Neovim editors inspired by the Neon Genesis Evangelion anime. It provides a unique visual style for code editing by applying a palette derived from the series' iconic aesthetics. The theme integrates with modern Neovim plugins like nvim-treesitter for enhanced syntax highlighting.
Vim and Neovim users who are fans of the Evangelion anime or seek visually distinctive, themed editor color schemes.
It offers a niche, anime-inspired aesthetic not commonly found in other themes, with ready-made configurations for popular plugin managers and compatibility with key Neovim plugins like nvim-treesitter and indent-blankline.nvim.
Evangelion but for Vimmers
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Directly inspired by Neon Genesis Evangelion, providing a visually distinct palette not found in standard themes, as highlighted in the README's Evangelion-inspired focus.
Enhances syntax highlighting through nvim-treesitter, with setup instructions in the README requiring it for Neovim to enable advanced parsing.
Includes pre-configured snippets for Vim-Plug, Lazy.nvim, and packer.nvim, making installation straightforward without manual tweaks.
Offers specific Lua code to integrate with indent-blankline.nvim for context highlighting, as shown in the README with custom color examples.
Requires nvim-treesitter for optimal functionality, adding an extra setup step and potential compatibility issues, as noted in the dependencies section.
The TODO list mentions checking for redundant highlight groups and extracting plugin highlight groups, indicating ongoing development and possible inconsistencies.
The Evangelion theme may not appeal to users seeking minimalist or professional aesthetics, limiting its broader adoption in diverse coding environments.
Fixed palette based on the anime means users must manually override highlight groups, as hinted in the config examples, rather than having built-in options.