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The Earth-Prime Theory

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The Multiverse is a weird thing. Depending on the genre of the work, it can mean a dozen different things. But most sci-fi has a pretty clear definition of what a "Multiverse" is. For every decision someone makes, the universe diverges into several parallel dimensions, one for every possible choice. As such, there are a nearly infinite number of universes where every conceivable version of you (or the lack thereof) exists.
This is a problem for Omnicidal Maniacs. How can one possibly destroy all of reality if, somewhere, there is another reality where they fail? The answer is to find Earth Prime: If you find and destroy the original universe that all others diverged from, you can retroactively destroy all of them.
It also restores stakes to a story, which are lost when one admits the existence of a multiverse. It's easy to ask what the point is of fighting to save your universe when you've established there's already an infinity of universes where you succeed, and an infinity of universes where you fail. Explaining there is one "prime" universe on which everything else depends makes the heroes' actions meaningful again.
Not to be confused with dimensional travelers who simply call the universe they're from "Earth Prime" to avoid confusion. Examples of that go under Prime Timeline.
Related to Expendable Alternate Universe. Compare Cosmic Keystone and No Ontological Inertia. Of course, Time Travel Paradoxes and Logic Bombs abound in this theory, so it definitely requires some Willing Suspension of Disbelief. Theoretically, the very act of doing that would simply create another infinite number of possibilities. Therefore, destroying everything should be impossible (of course, that won't stop the villain from trying).
Warning: May be some spoilers ahead.
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Sonic the Hedgehog (Archie Comics) has Mobius Prime, which all other parallel worlds (called Zones) are based off. Interestingly, despite the franchise starting with video games, Mobius Prime is the comic's Zone and not the one of the games. It's unknown how far this has stuck after the Continuity Reboot, as the entire multiverse has collapsed in on itself.
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A Diplomatic Visit: In Diplomacy Through Schooling (the third story of the Diplomacy-verse), Luna explains that their multiverse began from one of these, as the Creators and the Powers born from Them helped to shape a world — the Prime, the first world in Existence, with Others coming from ripples of its movement and the decisions of those who lived there, dividing endlessly into other worlds within their own separate universes. Consequently, all the different series in this multiverse take place in universes spun off from the original.
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Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths has Owlman, who wants to use the QED on Earth Prime, thus wiping out all life. His reason for this is that he learned that any choice made by anyone creates a separate parallel universe for each possible outcome and decided that the only truly meaningful choice that anyone could possibly make is to destroy everything (it doesn't matter that another Owlman will choose not to destroy everything since he would also be destroyed). When Batman foils his plan by sending him and the bomb to another universe where Earth is a frozen wasteland devoid of all life, Owlman has plenty of time to stop the countdown and save himself. Realizing that no matter what he chooses to do, another Owlman will make the opposite choice, he smiles, says, "It doesn't matter," and lets himself die.
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Supernatural: There are many alternate universes with many alternate Sams and Deans, but the two main characters inhabit the "real", Prime Universe. This is because God is easily distracted, so he often creates more universes to explore every possible story. In the final season, after it is revealed that God Is Evil, he starts dismantling the rest of the multiverse, then starts planning a "hard reset" of the Prime Universe to recreate it in In Their Own Image... despite, well, having already done so. He just hates Sam and Dean that much.
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Final Fantasy XIV has this with the Source and the 13 Shards; the Source is the primary version of the world and the one most of the game is set on, while the Shards are a set number 'reflections' of the Source that are connected to it through an inter-dimensional link; if the Source is destroyed, so is every Shard. All Shards, including the Source, were in turn created when the goddess Hydaelyn sundered the original world of Etheirys into multiple parallel realities in order to defeat her dark counterpart Zodiark.
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However, according to the Maker (Reed Richards) in The Ultimates 2, 616 is unique because it is the "hub" the rest of the Multiverse revolves around. As a result the laws of reality are more flexible: science and magic are interchangeable, and higher levels of existence can be accessed more easily.
Gwenpool supposedly comes from the real world, or at least from a world where all the rest of Marvel continuity is the stuff of comic books. Notably, when she believes she's been sent home, she discovers that she really hasn't, and it's actually just a comic book version of her real home. She then returns to the main Marvel Universe.
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In the All-New, All-Different Marvel era, Earth-616 was reclassified as Prime Earth, due to it being the first Earth recreated by the Beyonder-powered Reed Richards. This still doesn't give it any more cosmic significance though, it only means this is where the world displaced characters are most likely to end up (some people even kept referring to it by its old number).
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Marvel Universe:
In the All-New, All-Different Marvel era, Earth-616 was reclassified as Prime Earth, due to it being the first Earth recreated by the Beyonder-powered Reed Richards. This still doesn't give it any more cosmic significance though, it only means this is where the world displaced characters are most likely to end up (some people even kept referring to it by its old number).
Not that the Marvel Universe was averse to the theory before that era either. The real world (our world) in that case would be Earth-1218, the problem is it's unreachable from the rest of the multiverse so nobody can tell what happened if it got destroyed. (An editor did claim it was destroyed in an Incursion and subsequently recreated, but how could that be tested?) To date when anybody claimed to find Earth-1218 in any Marvel media it always turned out to be just a Close-Enough Timeline.
However, according to the Maker (Reed Richards) in The Ultimates 2, 616 is unique because it is the "hub" the rest of the Multiverse revolves around. As a result the laws of reality are more flexible: science and magic are interchangeable, and higher levels of existence can be accessed more easily.
Gwenpool supposedly comes from the real world, or at least from a world where all the rest of Marvel continuity is the stuff of comic books. Notably, when she believes she's been sent home, she discovers that she really hasn't, and it's actually just a comic book version of her real home. She then returns to the main Marvel Universe.
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Dungeons & Dragons: Certain sourcebooks like Tasha's Cauldron of Everything and Fizban's Treasury of Dragons mention of a primordial version of the Material Plane known as the First World, where many of the peoples and monsters of the D&D multiverse originated. After an unknown cataclysm all but annihilated the First World, countless parallel worlds came into existence along the Material Plane with the progeny of the First World's inhabitants appearing in every one of them. By this theory, worlds like Oerth, Toril, Krynn, Eberron, Exandria, and many others are reflections—or in some cases, distortions—of the First World.
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After Season 2 of The Flash (2014) establishes the existence of The Multiverse, the season finale has Zoom confirm that Earth-1 (the main setting of the Arrowverse) is the center of it all, being the doorway to all the other Earths.
After the Crisis, the new multiverse creates Earth Prime that appears to be an amalgamation of Earth-1, Earth-38 (Supergirl's world), and Black Lightning's Earth. Some characters from other Earths have also been moved to Earth Prime like Jay Garrick (native to Earth-3), and exiles from now-destroyed realities occasionally trickle in, although they are unable to coexist with their doubles for long.
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Not that the Marvel Universe was averse to the theory before that era either. The real world (our world) in that case would be Earth-1218, the problem is it's unreachable from the rest of the multiverse so nobody can tell what happened if it got destroyed. (An editor did claim it was destroyed in an Incursion and subsequently recreated, but how could that be tested?) To date when anybody claimed to find Earth-1218 in any Marvel media it always turned out to be just a Close-Enough Timeline.
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In Yu-Gi-Oh! ARC-V it is revealed that there are alternative dimensions in the Yu-Gi-Oh! franchise; also, the Arc-V worlds called Standard, Fusion, Synchro and Xyz dimensions were once a single world - Original dimension - which split into these 4 ramifications but disappeared in the process.
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Following Dark Nights: Death Metal, the main DCU's Earth is no longer the center of the Multiverse; there are now two centers, they're currently beyond the instruments of the main DCU, they're opposites, and one of them is called the Elseworld.
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Pre-Crisis Wonder Woman Vol 1 storyline Judgment In Infinity establishes that the main universe Earth-One is the multiverse's keystone; and if it's destroyed, all alternate Earths will follow.
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The Pony POV Series chapter "Applejack's Dream" establishes the existence of a "Heart World" from which the Pony POV Series world and all other Alternate Timelines diverged from and which anyone still connected to is affected by, implied to be the main series timeline. However, in an interesting twist, it is possible for a world to "break off" and continue on its own without any connection to the Heart World. The plot of that chapter involved preparing for the possibility that would happen so as to prevent Applejack from going insane and turning into Nightmare Mirror in the event that it did. This later bites Nightmare Eclipse in the flank when her plan has basically made her the Heart World Nightmare Eclipse, and tied all her other selves to her — in other words, defeating her defeats all versions of her.
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In Sliders, Earth Prime is our Earth, which the protagonists originate from. At least until the Kromaggs conquered it. There is also Kromagg Prime, the Homeworld of the Kromaggs, from which they were exiled by that world's humans. It's also Quinn's real home.
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The DCU:
Pre-Crisis Wonder Woman Vol 1 storyline Judgment In Infinity establishes that the main universe Earth-One is the multiverse's keystone; and if it's destroyed, all alternate Earths will follow.
As of 52, the multiverse hinges on "New Earth" - not just a specific universe, but a specific planet in that universe. This becomes a plot point shortly afterwards in the Sinestro Corps War, where Sinestro wants to conquer Earth for this very reason.
Interestingly, DC's comic multiverse has generally not run on the constant temporal divergence model; Crisis on Infinite Earths established that the universes of the pre-Crisis multiverse diverged at the Big Bang, making that the point to attack, while 52 established that the new multiverse began as 52 identical Earths that got cosmologically edited.
Note that "Earth Prime" refers to another universe altogether that's like ours, where superheroes don't exist outside of comics. In some stories, it is "our" Earth for all intents and purposes. And it was actually destroyed in Crisis on Infinite Earths. It came back as Earth-33 of the DC multiverse in The Multiversity.
In Multiversity/New 52 continuity the main Earth is sometimes called Prime Earth (as well as New Earth and Earth-0), Earth-Prime having been renamed as above. It's described in The Multiversity Guidebook as "the foundation stone of the multiversal structure", and Doomsday Clock dubs it the Metaverse because of its unique status.
Doomsday Clock: Dr. Manhattan observes in issue 10 that the main DC universe is set apart from the rest of the DC multiverse; when it's changed, the multiverse reacts, to the point of reconfiguring its very nature - infinite universes, a single universe, 52 universes, the Dark Multiverse, etc. Because of this, Manhattan dubs the DC universe the Metaverse. When the original Wally West escapes in DC Rebirth, Manhattan discovers the Metaverse is not a passive subject he can reshape as he sees fit - it's aware of how he changed it, and it's taking action against him.
It's later posited that Superman is the axis around which the entire Metaverse/Multiverse turns. Every universe has some variation of Superman, even if it's simply as a comic book character (so yes, that includes our universe). And even if some timeline or universe currently lacks a Superman or Superman analogue, eventually one will show up or appear, even if it's a Dimensional Traveler from an entirely different universe.
Following Dark Nights: Death Metal, the main DCU's Earth is no longer the center of the Multiverse; there are now two centers, they're currently beyond the instruments of the main DCU, they're opposites, and one of them is called the Elseworld.
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In Magic: The Gathering, the plane Dominaria is the Nexus of the Multiverse, situated at the center of the Multiverse. Events on Dominaria reverberate throughout the Multiverse; most notably during the Time Spiral arc where its imminent destruction would have destroyed the rest of the Multiverse with it, and even fixing it turned all planeswalkers from Physical Gods into merely gifted mages. Unusually for this trope, it's not Earth at all, but was a Standard Fantasy Setting until the plot turned it post apocalyptic. Nor was it always the Nexus; there are planes, such as Equilor, which are older than Dominaria, and the role of multiversal nexus seems to vary depending on the "orbit" of the planes. As of Strixhaven, the current multiversal nexus is unknown.
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Loki (2021) plays with this idea. The movies and shows prior to Loki are a part of the "Sacred Timeline", with which all alternate timelines and universes spawn from. The "Sacred Timeline" is not a natural consequence of the multiverse, but instead enforced by the Time Variance Authority by pruning anyone and anything that does something that they weren't supposed to, whether it's be late for work or run away with the Tessaract as the protagonist did. The Time Keepers enforce the Sacred Timeline to prevent a Multiversal War from occurring. After Sylvie, a variant of Loki, kills the head of the TVA, the agency is unable to stop the multiverse from branching out, rendering the concept of a "Sacred Timeline" moot.
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Present in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Vogon Jeltz, tasked with demolishing the Earth, is deemed unsuccessful by his superiors because he only demolished one Earth, whereas in fact there are millions of others still existing in alternate universes. At the end of Mostly Harmless, he finally succeeds in eliminating every single one.
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As of 52, the multiverse hinges on "New Earth" - not just a specific universe, but a specific planet in that universe. This becomes a plot point shortly afterwards in the Sinestro Corps War, where Sinestro wants to conquer Earth for this very reason.
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Axiom Verge and its sequel establish that the Worldstream is an infinite tree of realities, with its root being a world called A'ansur. Traveling between worlds on the same "level" of the Worldstream is possible, as multiple characters in both games demonstrate, but going upstream to worlds closer to A'ansur is incredibly difficult for anyone who's not a PatternMind. Amashilama's ultimate goal is to destroy A'ansur under the belief that it will free all other worlds in the Worldstream, when in reality it'd just destroy them.
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It's later posited that Superman is the axis around which the entire Metaverse/Multiverse turns. Every universe has some variation of Superman, even if it's simply as a comic book character (so yes, that includes our universe). And even if some timeline or universe currently lacks a Superman or Superman analogue, eventually one will show up or appear, even if it's a Dimensional Traveler from an entirely different universe.
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Doomsday Clock: Dr. Manhattan observes in issue 10 that the main DC universe is set apart from the rest of the DC multiverse; when it's changed, the multiverse reacts, to the point of reconfiguring its very nature - infinite universes, a single universe, 52 universes, the Dark Multiverse, etc. Because of this, Manhattan dubs the DC universe the Metaverse. When the original Wally West escapes in DC Rebirth, Manhattan discovers the Metaverse is not a passive subject he can reshape as he sees fit - it's aware of how he changed it, and it's taking action against him.
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In Multiversity/New 52 continuity the main Earth is sometimes called Prime Earth (as well as New Earth and Earth-0), Earth-Prime having been renamed as above. It's described in The Multiversity Guidebook as "the foundation stone of the multiversal structure", and Doomsday Clock dubs it the Metaverse because of its unique status.
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In the movie Turtles Forever, when the Utrom Shredder realizes that there are literally hundreds of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles across the multiverse, he decides to destroy them all by defeating the versions from Turtle Prime; that is, those from the first issue of the original Mirage comic. This was used again in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012) episode "Trans-Dimensional Turtles" with the 87 Krang's plan to destroy reality to get rid of the Turtles, and in the third Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comic miniseries, where Krang has captured the Mirage Turtles in a bid to conquer the multiverse of Ninja Turtles.
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Re:CREATORS: According to Meteora, the real world gives birth to the worlds of fiction. If it were destroyed, all worlds connected to it will be destroyed as well.
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Note that "Earth Prime" refers to another universe altogether that's like ours, where superheroes don't exist outside of comics. In some stories, it is "our" Earth for all intents and purposes. And it was actually destroyed in Crisis on Infinite Earths. It came back as Earth-33 of the DC multiverse in The Multiversity.
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In The Chronicles of Amber, this is what makes Amber so special - it's the primal reality which defines the cosmos.
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 The Earth-Prime Theory / int_fe225cd4
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Chronicles of Amber
hasFeature
The Earth-Prime Theory / int_fe225cd4

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

 The Earth-Prime Theory
processingCategory2
Otherworld Tropes
 The Earth-Prime Theory
processingCategory2
Speculative Fiction Tropes
 Yu-Gi-Oh! ARC-V / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 All-New, All-Different Marvel (Comic Book) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 52 (Comic Book) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 Judgment In Infinity (Comic Book) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 New 52 (Comic Book) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 Sinestro Corps War (Comic Book) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 The Ultimates (2015) (Comic Book) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 The Unbelievable Gwenpool (Comic Book) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 Wonder Woman (1942) (Comic Book) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 A Diplomatic Visit (Fanfic) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 The Many Worlds Interpretation (Fanfic) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 Beyond Reality / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 EDENS ZERO (Manga) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 Errorverse: Tropes D-I (Roleplay) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 Loki (2021) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 Axiom Verge 2 (Video Game) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 Sonic Villains (Web Animation) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 The Crew of the Copper-Colored Cupids (Website) / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory
 Turtles Forever / int_f5138226
type
The Earth-Prime Theory