Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Canon Invasion

 Canon Invasion
type
FeatureClass
 Canon Invasion
label
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion
page
CanonInvasion
 Canon Invasion
comment
Canon Invasion is when two unrelated titles are originally owned by two different entities but are forced into the same fictional universe after one buys the rights from the other. Sometimes, it's immediately after; other times, it's Canon Welding belatedly kicking in.
The "Invaders" bring their own, possibly conflicting, continuity with them; and since they didn't originate with the same creator, the differences will likely be more severe than with Canon Welding. Expect Retcons, especially if the invaders are inserted directly.
Because of the Continuity issues, Canon Invasion may turn The 'Verse into The Multiverse as its first effect (if the original 'verse wasn't already a multiverse), especially if there are huge differences in the laws of metaphysics. The original canon characters are in one universe, and the newer ones in another, and now there is a bridge between them. Thus, Canon Invasion is sometimes less disruptive than Canon Welding.
 Canon Invasion
fetched
2023-08-17T09:13:52Z
 Canon Invasion
parsed
2023-08-17T09:13:52Z
 Canon Invasion
processingComment
Dropped link to CanonDiscontinuity: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Canon Invasion
processingComment
Dropped link to KidEternity: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 Canon Invasion
processingComment
Dropped link to Rewrite: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Canon Invasion
processingComment
Dropped link to WCW: Not an Item - IGNORE
 Canon Invasion
processingUnknown
KidEternity
 Canon Invasion
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Canon Invasion / int_19ed47db
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_19ed47db
comment
The Question, Blue Beetle, Captain Atom and others started out in Charlton Comics before being sold to DC Comics in 1983. In fact, Watchmen was going to use them as its characters, except DC actually wanted to be able to use them again later. Hence the team of Captain Ersatzes instead.
 Canon Invasion / int_19ed47db
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_19ed47db
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Question (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_19ed47db
 Canon Invasion / int_21c594df
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_21c594df
comment
The Hasbro Comic Universe was a shared setting of various classic Hasbro properties that were never originally written with the intention of sharing the same world. This includes Transformers, G.I. Joe, M.A.S.K., Rom Spaceknight, Micronauts, Action Man, and Visionaries. As of 2018, this shared universe has come to an end, with some of the associated titles being rebooted.
 Canon Invasion / int_21c594df
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_21c594df
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hasbro Comic Universe (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_21c594df
 Canon Invasion / int_27777760
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_27777760
comment
Eureka, Warehouse 13 and Alphas were not part of the same Shared Universe conceptually; this was retconned in later and it shows. Nothing of significance was done with the concept, to the point that if you skipped the specific crossover episodes, you wouldn't even know that they did share a universe. The most notable thing that happened was a contrived romance between two characters from Eureka and Warehouse 13, which did not last past the initial crossover episodes.
 Canon Invasion / int_27777760
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_27777760
featureConfidence
1.0
 Eureka
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_27777760
 Canon Invasion / int_2a842e3a
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_2a842e3a
comment
Doctor Who is arguably canon if only because the Doctor has crossed over with Death's Head, Marvel's version of Merlin, and the obscure Alan Moore superteam Special Executive who first appeared in Doctor Who Magazine before appearing in Captain Britain.
 Canon Invasion / int_2a842e3a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_2a842e3a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doctor Who – Expanded Universe (Franchise)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_2a842e3a
 Canon Invasion / int_43d9221b
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_43d9221b
comment
Technically the Marvel Transformers comics took place on alternate universes (Earth-91274 for the American comics and Earth-120185 for the UK comics) and are a huge part of the character Death's Head origin, so the Transformers comics are very loosely canon.
 Canon Invasion / int_43d9221b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_43d9221b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Death's Head (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_43d9221b
 Canon Invasion / int_44e08ee8
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_44e08ee8
comment
Homicide: Life on the Street and Law & Order began separately, but went on to do several crossover stories throughout the late 1990s. After Homicide ended, main character John Munch became part of the main cast of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.
 Canon Invasion / int_44e08ee8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_44e08ee8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Homicide: Life on the Street
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_44e08ee8
 Canon Invasion / int_4a2ff29b
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_4a2ff29b
comment
Evil Dead fits in here as the Dynamite Army of Darkness comics got referenced in the Marvel Zombies crossover and numbered in an issue of The Official Handbook to the Marvel Universe.
 Canon Invasion / int_4a2ff29b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_4a2ff29b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Evil Dead (Franchise)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_4a2ff29b
 Canon Invasion / int_4aeea402
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_4aeea402
comment
Subverted in the case of the Marvel Doc Savage comics, which didn't last long and the only proof of Doc existing in Earth-616 is him crossing over with the Thing and Spider-Man.
 Canon Invasion / int_4aeea402
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Canon Invasion / int_4aeea402
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doc Savage
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_4aeea402
 Canon Invasion / int_558b4c84
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_558b4c84
comment
Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy/Killraven continuity's entire premise is that after the Martians of The War of the Worlds failed to conquer Earth the first time, they came back in 2001, and basically killed almost every super hero with only freedom fighters left to defend Earth.
 Canon Invasion / int_558b4c84
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_558b4c84
featureConfidence
1.0
 Guardians of the Galaxy (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_558b4c84
 Canon Invasion / int_62570927
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_62570927
comment
U.S. 1 is canon to the Marvel Universe.
 Canon Invasion / int_62570927
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_62570927
featureConfidence
1.0
 Marvel Universe (Franchise)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_62570927
 Canon Invasion / int_63e72a51
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_63e72a51
comment
2000 AD absorbed a similar SF based comic called Starlord in the 1980s. The only Starlord strips that stuck were Strontium Dog and Ro-Busters. The backstory of Strontium Dog has been absorbed into the same continuity as other 2000 AD strips and there have been crossovers with Judge Dredd, even though it happens after a nuclear war which is yet to occur in Dredd's universe. A Judge Dredd story called "Hammerstein" brought the Ro-Busters character into the Dreddverse, but the fundamental incompatibility of the Volgan War backstory meant this quickly became Canon Discontinuity.
 Canon Invasion / int_63e72a51
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_63e72a51
featureConfidence
1.0
 2000 AD (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_63e72a51
 Canon Invasion / int_668020b
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_668020b
comment
Although technically always owned by the same company, The Eternals at Marvel is otherwise an example. The series was created by Jack Kirby as separate from the Marvel Universe, but later brought into it, with the result that, for instance, there would be Marvel Universe versions of gods but Eternals who were posing as those same gods. This was lampshaded in an issue of The Mighty Thor where it was revealed the Eternals and the Olympians had made a pact so the former would "represent" the latter in front of mortals.
 Canon Invasion / int_668020b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_668020b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Eternals (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_668020b
 Canon Invasion / int_6c47db4e
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_6c47db4e
comment
Warriors Orochi 3 features characters from Ninja Gaiden and Dead or Alive as a result of Koei's merger with Tecmo, becoming Koei Tecmo Games.
 Canon Invasion / int_6c47db4e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_6c47db4e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dynasty Warriors (Video Game)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_6c47db4e
 Canon Invasion / int_7c9ace71
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_7c9ace71
comment
Fortune Street Special, a PS2 entry in Enix's computer board game series, was the first game since the Square Enix merger to feature characters from both the Dragon Quest and Final Fantasy franchises.
 Canon Invasion / int_7c9ace71
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_7c9ace71
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fortune Street (Video Game)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_7c9ace71
 Canon Invasion / int_7cf0865
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_7cf0865
comment
Other DC TV series were also retconned in as different universes within the Arrowverse, including The Flash (1990) and Smallville.
 Canon Invasion / int_7cf0865
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_7cf0865
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Flash (1990)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_7cf0865
 Canon Invasion / int_8e898734
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_8e898734
comment
Earth-7642 of the Marvel Multiverse is the universe for all the crossovers that act as if characters crossing over with Marvel were part of continuity the whole time. It consists of most of the 70's to 90's crossovers with DC Comics, the IDW version of Transformers, Shi, Painkiller, many Image Comics and Top Cow characters, Archie Comics, and a few WildStorm characters.
 Canon Invasion / int_8e898734
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_8e898734
featureConfidence
1.0
 Painkiller (Video Game)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_8e898734
 Canon Invasion / int_980c3316
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_980c3316
comment
Shazam! a.k.a. Captain Marvel and the Marvel Family were originally published by Fawcett Comics until the mid-1950s. DC began licensing the characters in 1973 to make their own Shazam! comic, which was originally set in the parallel universe of Earth-S. Crisis on Infinite Earths again integrated the characters into the main DC universe, along with other Fawcett characters such as Bulletman and Ibis the Invincible. Eventually DC purchased the characters outright.
Shazam got this twice. By the 1980s, DC had bought the rights to Kid Eternity from Quality Comics, and noticed that its title character was similar to Freddy Freeman/Captain Marvel Jr.—both were raised by a grandfather who died in a boating accident, then got a power activated By the Power of Grayskull!. As a result, the Kid—previously No Name Given, now Kit Freeman—was revealed to be Freddy's brother, and his adventures were placed on Earth-S, while other Quality characters lived on Earth-X.
 Canon Invasion / int_980c3316
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_980c3316
featureConfidence
1.0
 Shazam! (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_980c3316
 Canon Invasion / int_9ff4a8d9
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_9ff4a8d9
comment
When Marvel briefly had the rights to publish Godzilla comics, Big G himself was a character in the Marvel Universe. And it's still considered 616 canon!
 Canon Invasion / int_9ff4a8d9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_9ff4a8d9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Godzilla (Franchise)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_9ff4a8d9
 Canon Invasion / int_a03824e8
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_a03824e8
comment
In The DCU:
During The Golden Age of Comic Books, now-iconic characters such as Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman were initially not thought of as being part of the same continuity. The consolidation of these superhero stories into a single setting was largely a Silver Age phenomenon.
Characters such as Plastic Man, the Blackhawks and the Freedom Fighters were originally published by Quality Comics until DC bought them out in 1956. Originally set in a parallel universe, the characters were brought into the main DC universe in Crisis on Infinite Earths. The speedster hero Quicksilver (no, not that one) was also reinvented as Max Mercury and became a supporting character to The Flash. The original Quality Comics characters are now in public domain.
Shazam! a.k.a. Captain Marvel and the Marvel Family were originally published by Fawcett Comics until the mid-1950s. DC began licensing the characters in 1973 to make their own Shazam! comic, which was originally set in the parallel universe of Earth-S. Crisis on Infinite Earths again integrated the characters into the main DC universe, along with other Fawcett characters such as Bulletman and Ibis the Invincible. Eventually DC purchased the characters outright.
Shazam got this twice. By the 1980s, DC had bought the rights to Kid Eternity from Quality Comics, and noticed that its title character was similar to Freddy Freeman/Captain Marvel Jr.—both were raised by a grandfather who died in a boating accident, then got a power activated By the Power of Grayskull!. As a result, the Kid—previously No Name Given, now Kit Freeman—was revealed to be Freddy's brother, and his adventures were placed on Earth-S, while other Quality characters lived on Earth-X.
The Question, Blue Beetle, Captain Atom and others started out in Charlton Comics before being sold to DC Comics in 1983. In fact, Watchmen was going to use them as its characters, except DC actually wanted to be able to use them again later. Hence the team of Captain Ersatzes instead.
DC attempted this again in 2008 when they licensed the Red Circle characters from Archie Comics — including superheroes the Hangman, Inferno, Shield and Web — and attempted to integrate them into The DCU with a series of one-shots. (They had licensed the characters before in the early 1990s, but kept them separate.) The license lapsed in 2011, and the characters fell out of continuity again with the New 52 reboot.
Milestone Media, the creators of the Milestone Comics line (including Static), originally had them published via DC Comics, but as their own distinct universe. DC eventually struck a deal with Milestone to bring the characters into the DCU proper, as well as the Static Shock TV show getting pushed into the DC Animated Universe. Later on, they struck another deal so that Milestone would be its own distinct universe again, this time as part of the DC Multiverse.
The WildStorm Comics universe. Originally part of a loosely-defined Image Comics universe, Wildstorm was integrated into The Multiverse of the DCU as "Earth-50" with a series of crossovers involving Superman, Majestic, and Captain Atom. The New 52 reboot then integrated the characters into the main DC universe.
 Canon Invasion / int_a03824e8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_a03824e8
featureConfidence
1.0
 The DCU (Franchise)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_a03824e8
 Canon Invasion / int_a216bc3f
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_a216bc3f
comment
Even though Rom Spaceknight can't be referenced, all the supporting characters and villains can still be seen in comics and the series is still canon.
 Canon Invasion / int_a216bc3f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_a216bc3f
featureConfidence
1.0
 ROM: Space Knight (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_a216bc3f
 Canon Invasion / int_a43c65b6
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_a43c65b6
comment
Characters such as Plastic Man, the Blackhawks and the Freedom Fighters were originally published by Quality Comics until DC bought them out in 1956. Originally set in a parallel universe, the characters were brought into the main DC universe in Crisis on Infinite Earths. The speedster hero Quicksilver (no, not that one) was also reinvented as Max Mercury and became a supporting character to The Flash. The original Quality Comics characters are now in public domain.
 Canon Invasion / int_a43c65b6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_a43c65b6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Plastic Man (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_a43c65b6
 Canon Invasion / int_a9fdd959
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_a9fdd959
comment
Also in 2021: New Japan Pro-Wrestling star Kenta Kobayashi (aka KENTA) showed up at the end of the February 4 episode of AEW Dynamite to attack Jon Moxley as a build to their IWGP Heavyweight Championship match later that month. This was especially significant because the former president/CEO of NJPW Harold Meij had always disdained working directly with American promotions; this "forbidden door" was only opened after Takami Ohbari became head of the company.
 Canon Invasion / int_a9fdd959
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_a9fdd959
featureConfidence
1.0
 New Japan Pro-Wrestling (Wrestling)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_a9fdd959
 Canon Invasion / int_c524d51b
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_c524d51b
comment
Shang-Chi was originally Fu Manchu's son. This has been quietly retconned away, with his father now identified as Zheng Zu.
 Canon Invasion / int_c524d51b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_c524d51b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Shang-Chi (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_c524d51b
 Canon Invasion / int_c5c45c70
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_c5c45c70
comment
Aside from actually calling the Micronauts, the Micronauts, all the characters created for the comic can still be used and are all canon. Hell the character Bug was a member of the Guardians of the Galaxy and Captain Universe nearly killed Juggernaut in a Spider-Man comic.
 Canon Invasion / int_c5c45c70
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_c5c45c70
featureConfidence
1.0
 Micronauts (Marvel Comics) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_c5c45c70
 Canon Invasion / int_ee221a4e
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_ee221a4e
comment
While ignored later on, Spider-Man appeared in early issues of The Transformers (Marvel), which made the Autobots and Decepticons Canon Immigrants to the Marvel Universe, at least temporarily.
Technically the Marvel Transformers comics took place on alternate universes (Earth-91274 for the American comics and Earth-120185 for the UK comics) and are a huge part of the character Death's Head origin, so the Transformers comics are very loosely canon.
But don't ask where Earthforce fits in as not even Marvel or Hasbro will attempt to make it canon. These are the companies where Marvel What Th—?! and Transformers: Kiss Players are to some degree canon.
 Canon Invasion / int_ee221a4e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_ee221a4e
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Transformers (Marvel) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_ee221a4e
 Canon Invasion / int_f9e75921
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_f9e75921
comment
Kenny Omega began his Heel Turn in AEW at the end of 2020, and cemented it in the beginning of 2021 when his former Bullet Club partners Luke Gallows and Karl Anderson (who were signed to Impact Wrestling, not AEW) invaded AEW Dynamite as his enforcers. Within the storyline, Omega also appeared at IMPACT tapings to challenge for their championship title.
 Canon Invasion / int_f9e75921
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_f9e75921
featureConfidence
1.0
 Kenny Omega (Wrestling)
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_f9e75921
 Canon Invasion / int_fb855235
type
Canon Invasion
 Canon Invasion / int_fb855235
comment
Originally NBC's Constantine was completely unrelated to CW's "Arrowverse" (consisting of Arrow, The Flash (2014) and Legends of Tomorrow), but it was later stated to be part of the verse with Matt Ryan reprising his role as the titular John Constantine in the fourth season of Arrow, and eventually becoming a regular on Legends.
Other DC TV series were also retconned in as different universes within the Arrowverse, including The Flash (1990) and Smallville.
 Canon Invasion / int_fb855235
featureApplicability
1.0
 Canon Invasion / int_fb855235
featureConfidence
1.0
 Constantine
hasFeature
Canon Invasion / int_fb855235

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Canon Invasion
processingCategory2
Comic Book Tropes
 Canon Invasion
processingCategory2
Continuity Tropes
 Freedom Fighters (Comic Book) / int_f124c64f
type
Canon Invasion
 Freedom Fighters (DC) (Comic Book) / int_f124c64f
type
Canon Invasion
 Freedom Fighters (DC Comics) (Comic Book) / int_f124c64f
type
Canon Invasion
 The Question (Comic Book) / int_f124c64f
type
Canon Invasion
 Arrowverse (Franchise) / int_f124c64f
type
Canon Invasion
 Marvel Universe (Franchise) / int_f124c64f
type
Canon Invasion
 The DCU (Franchise) / int_f124c64f
type
Canon Invasion
 DoctorSolar
seeAlso
Canon Invasion
 SolarManOfTheAtom
seeAlso
Canon Invasion
 TheQuestion
seeAlso
Canon Invasion
 ValiantComics
seeAlso
Canon Invasion