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* ''[[Jurassic Park]] 3''. A fourth film languished in [[Development Hell]], but when [[Michael Crichton]] [[Author Existence Failure|died]], producer Kathleen Kennedy initially decided against making more, and then, in a subversion, Steven Spielberg revealed at 2011's Comic-Con that a fourth film should be released within the next two to three years. Four years later, ''Jurassic World'' was released, to mixed reviews. Time will tell whether or not the franchise will continue from here.
 
* ''[[Jurassic Park]] 3''. A fourth film languished in [[Development Hell]], but when [[Michael Crichton]] [[Author Existence Failure|died]], producer Kathleen Kennedy initially decided against making more, and then, in a subversion, Steven Spielberg revealed at 2011's Comic-Con that a fourth film should be released within the next two to three years. Four years later, ''Jurassic World'' was released, to mixed reviews. Time will tell whether or not the franchise will continue from here.
 
* ''[[Spider-Man (film)|Spider-Man]] 4'' managed to do this without even being released, being canceled in favor of a [[Continuity Reboot]] right before filming started, after a release date had been announced. It's hard to say if it was justified, but Felicia Hardy (a.k.a. Black Cat) becoming a female Vulture isn't something many will mourn the loss of. The true culprit for the death/rebooting of the franchise was [[Executive Meddling]] -- director [[Sam Raimi]] walked only because he felt he couldn't deliver the level of quality he wanted in the deadline he was given. Meanwhile, the rebooting was done because Sony didn't want the Spider-Man film rights to fall into Marvel Studios' hands instead of, you know, acknowledging the murder of the golden egg-laying goose (So no Spidey-as-written-by-[[Joss Whedon]] in the ''Avengers'' film for you!).
 
* ''[[Spider-Man (film)|Spider-Man]] 4'' managed to do this without even being released, being canceled in favor of a [[Continuity Reboot]] right before filming started, after a release date had been announced. It's hard to say if it was justified, but Felicia Hardy (a.k.a. Black Cat) becoming a female Vulture isn't something many will mourn the loss of. The true culprit for the death/rebooting of the franchise was [[Executive Meddling]] -- director [[Sam Raimi]] walked only because he felt he couldn't deliver the level of quality he wanted in the deadline he was given. Meanwhile, the rebooting was done because Sony didn't want the Spider-Man film rights to fall into Marvel Studios' hands instead of, you know, acknowledging the murder of the golden egg-laying goose (So no Spidey-as-written-by-[[Joss Whedon]] in the ''Avengers'' film for you!).
*
+
*
 
* Despite being made for what many felt were the wrong reasons, the rebooted Amazing Spider-Man was considered a good enough movie to justify its existence. Its sequel, however, was poorly received due to its handling of [[I Let Gwen Stacy Die|the death of Gwen Stacy]] and the fact that multiple villains and storylines were competing for attention. A planned Sinister Six spinoff movie was cancelled, and Sony made a deal with Marvel Studios to allow another reboot with Spider-Man being featured in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
 
* Despite being made for what many felt were the wrong reasons, the rebooted Amazing Spider-Man was considered a good enough movie to justify its existence. Its sequel, however, was poorly received due to its handling of [[I Let Gwen Stacy Die|the death of Gwen Stacy]] and the fact that multiple villains and storylines were competing for attention. A planned Sinister Six spinoff movie was cancelled, and Sony made a deal with Marvel Studios to allow another reboot with Spider-Man being featured in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
 
* ''[[Terminator]] Salvation'' not only apparently killed off the movie franchise (it was intended to be part one of a trilogy), but also [[Creator Killer|the company that made it]]. The rights went on sale, but no one was that interested and they ended up in the possession of...a hedge fund that had invested in the company. In 2011, it was reported that Universal Pictures and Annapurna Films are working on two more films in the franchise, and the fifth is expected to herald the return of... [[And the Fandom Rejoiced|SARAH CONNOR!]]
 
* ''[[Terminator]] Salvation'' not only apparently killed off the movie franchise (it was intended to be part one of a trilogy), but also [[Creator Killer|the company that made it]]. The rights went on sale, but no one was that interested and they ended up in the possession of...a hedge fund that had invested in the company. In 2011, it was reported that Universal Pictures and Annapurna Films are working on two more films in the franchise, and the fifth is expected to herald the return of... [[And the Fandom Rejoiced|SARAH CONNOR!]]
*
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*
 
* And indeed Sarah Connor returned, this time being played by Emilia Clarke in Terminator: Genysis. However, reception from the film has ranged from lukewarm to negative.
 
* And indeed Sarah Connor returned, this time being played by Emilia Clarke in Terminator: Genysis. However, reception from the film has ranged from lukewarm to negative.
 
* ''[[Halloween (film)|Halloween]] Resurrection'' (and [[Author Existence Failure|Producer Existence Failure]]) killed the original series. Then [http://www.thehollywoodnews.com/2012/04/03/platinum-dunes-picks-up-halloween-franchise-from-dimension/ Platinum Dunes buying the franchise from Dimension Films] killed the [[Rob Zombie]] remake series, though whether or not that's a good thing due to the involvement of Platinum Dunes is up for debate.
 
* ''[[Halloween (film)|Halloween]] Resurrection'' (and [[Author Existence Failure|Producer Existence Failure]]) killed the original series. Then [http://www.thehollywoodnews.com/2012/04/03/platinum-dunes-picks-up-halloween-franchise-from-dimension/ Platinum Dunes buying the franchise from Dimension Films] killed the [[Rob Zombie]] remake series, though whether or not that's a good thing due to the involvement of Platinum Dunes is up for debate.
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== Western Animation ==
 
== Western Animation ==
  +
The failure of ''The Avengers: United They Stand'' was the final nail in the coffin of the (loosely defined, but still there) [[Marvel Animation|Marvel animated universe]] that aired on Fox Kids throughout the '90s. All subsequent Marvel cartoons have taken place in other continuities and aired on other networks.
* Ever wondered why you don't hear much about ''[[Felix the Cat]]'' anymore outside of merchandising or that 2004 direct-to-video Christmas film? You can pin the blame on the failure of ''[[Felix the Cat: The Movie]]'', as well as the surprisingly good ''[[The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat|Twisted Tales of Felix]]'' series (Then again, Felix is getting a supposed upcoming CGI series, but still).
+
* Ever wondered why you don't hear much about ''[[Felix the Cat]]'' anymore outside of merchandising or that 2004 direct-to-video Christmas film? You can pin the blame on the failure of ''[[Felix the Cat: The Movie]]''. [[Lull Destruction]], poor animation and lip-syncing, a [[Random Events Plot]] (and a poorly executed one at that) and numerous plot holes can make this movie painful to watch for even the most avid Felix fan. The 90's cartoon ''[[The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat]]'' attempted to revive the franchise, but an unsuccessful retool in the second season quickly brought Felix to an early grave yet again.
  +
Even before those was the failure of the early 30's sound cartoons; Pat Sullivan made little effort to upgrade the Felix cartoons to sound (not helped by his private life being in shambles due to his wife's alleged suicide and his heavy alcoholism) and when he did, they were rushed, sloppy, and far behind the times, resulting in the Felix cartoon series getting forgotten by the far more popular [[Mickey Mouse]] shorts—Sullivan's subsequent death put the final nail in the coffin for his animation studio. An attempt to revive the cartoons was done in the mid 1930's by [[Van Beuren Studios]]; while the cartoons were seemingly well received despite having little in common with the character's previous appearances, when RKO negated Van Beuren's contract in favor of distributing Disney, it caused Van Beuren to go belly-up, thus sending Felix to an early grave yet again, [[Stillborn Franchise|after only three color shorts]]. What caused the franchise to not fully die out is that while the cartoons were put on ice, Felix still ran in newspaper and magazine comics for quite a long time.
  +
* ''[[Blue's Clues]]'' has several moments that potentially killed the show. Steve Burns leaving was the first one. For some reason, some parents and fans of Steve just didn't find Donovan Patton (AKA Joe) [[Adorkable]] enough. However, the show managed to pull on for another 5 years with Patton as host. The second, clearer one, was the [[Spin-Off]] ''Blue's Room'' in 2006. The many changes made to the spinoff- specifically, the [[Chuck Cunningham Syndrome|non-appearance of many of the cast from the main show]] and that [[Suddenly Voiced|Blue can now talk]], aside from the change to [[Art Shift|puppetry]], gave the franchise one year to live before production of both shows ceased in 2007 and the franchise slowly faded off into obscurity.
 
* After ''[[Beast Machines]]'' there was supposed to be a sequel series (complete with prototype toys made) called ''[[Transformers Trans Tech|Transtech]]'' and it would have continued even further into the series timeline. While ''Beast Machines'' still had solid ratings, the reception was mediocre and the toys themselves were subpar and didn't sell. Recognizing they had taken the Beast era franchise as far as it could go, they scrapped ''Transtech'' and imported ''[[Transformers Robots in Disguise]]'' while they worked on a complete [[Continuity Reboot]] with ''[[Transformers Armada]].'' This did have the interesting effect of splitting ''[[Transformers]]'' into many [[Alternate Universe]]s rather than just [[Alternate Continuity|Alternate Continuities]].<br />If you're still confused over why it's considered a [[Franchise Killer]], let's just say this; up until ''[[Beast Machines]]'', all Transformers franchises were made in or spun off from ones made in the West; ''after'' ''Beast Machines'', ''no'' Transformers series would be developed in the West until ''[[Transformers (film)|almost a decade later]]''.
 
* After ''[[Beast Machines]]'' there was supposed to be a sequel series (complete with prototype toys made) called ''[[Transformers Trans Tech|Transtech]]'' and it would have continued even further into the series timeline. While ''Beast Machines'' still had solid ratings, the reception was mediocre and the toys themselves were subpar and didn't sell. Recognizing they had taken the Beast era franchise as far as it could go, they scrapped ''Transtech'' and imported ''[[Transformers Robots in Disguise]]'' while they worked on a complete [[Continuity Reboot]] with ''[[Transformers Armada]].'' This did have the interesting effect of splitting ''[[Transformers]]'' into many [[Alternate Universe]]s rather than just [[Alternate Continuity|Alternate Continuities]].<br />If you're still confused over why it's considered a [[Franchise Killer]], let's just say this; up until ''[[Beast Machines]]'', all Transformers franchises were made in or spun off from ones made in the West; ''after'' ''Beast Machines'', ''no'' Transformers series would be developed in the West until ''[[Transformers (film)|almost a decade later]]''.
 
* After the second season of ''[[Gargoyles]]'', creator [[Greg Weisman]] jumped ship, and a third season called ''Gargoyles: The Goliath Chronicles'' sank the franchise on TV. Greg wrote a comic series to replace the third season, but unfortunately it didn't sell well enough to keep up once [[Screwed by the Network|Disney hiked up the licensing fee]].
 
* After the second season of ''[[Gargoyles]]'', creator [[Greg Weisman]] jumped ship, and a third season called ''Gargoyles: The Goliath Chronicles'' sank the franchise on TV. Greg wrote a comic series to replace the third season, but unfortunately it didn't sell well enough to keep up once [[Screwed by the Network|Disney hiked up the licensing fee]].
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* The ''[[Holly Hobbie and Friends]]'' direct-to-DVD series has an interesting case of this when the producers of the show decided to change several aspects of the franchise from the fifth DVD on. Said DVD, Fabulous Fashion Show, was so badly reviewed across the board, with an overall 1.3/5 on Amazon with 18 reviews, compared to 4+ star averages for the others, that it all but killed the franchise. The subsequent DVD, Marvelous Makeover, rebounded to 3.3 stars, but the various changes that had been made to the series, such as moving to 22 minute stories and replacing most of the voices, were still generally poorly regarded. Making things worse was the shoddy voice replacement job- the new cast sounds nothing like the old one, and while they opted to use a [[Non-Singing Voice]] for the titular character, the singing voice and speaking voice weren't even matched either. Aside from that, the characterizations were all botched and the characters were passing the [[Idiot Ball]] around. The show's final picture book release was seen a bit later in 2008, and afterwards, production on all media was discontinued entirely.
  +
* Universal released an animated ''[[The Jetsons]]'' feature film in 1990, complete with [[Conspicuous CG]], a [[Green Aesop]] played out with a [[Gang of Critters]] that was essentially a rewrite of an old episode of ''Star Trek'', and reuniting nearly all of the surviving original cast members save for Elroy Jetson, whose voice actor Daws Butler had died in 1988 and was replaced with a young Patrick Zimmerman and Judy Jetson being voiced not by Janet Waldo but by '80s pop starlet Tiffany thanks to [[Executive Meddling]]. The film also marked the last performance ever of noted voice artist [[Mel Blanc]] (Mr. Spacely), who was still recording while in the hospital (as he had years before then) and died before the film was completed, as well as George O'Hanlon (George), who by that point had to have the lines read and acted to him before recording, who also passed away before he could quite finish the film. Both Blanc and O'Hanlon's remaining lines had to be completed by a sound-alike. Penny Singleton did not die during production like Blanc and O'Hanlon, but the movie remained her last acting role until her death thirteen years later in 2003. Coming on the heels of the 1980's ''Jetsons'' revival (the new syndicated episodes and two TV movies), this film's disappointing box office and harsh critical reviews were apparently enough to send the franchise back into hibernation. It has stayed there ever since, a potential live-action film being stuck in [[Development Hell]] for years notwithstanding.
 
* In a rare example of a character being a one-person [[Franchise Killer]], Elmyra managed to be the prime cause for the untimely demise of ''[[Pinky and The Brain]]''.
 
* In a rare example of a character being a one-person [[Franchise Killer]], Elmyra managed to be the prime cause for the untimely demise of ''[[Pinky and The Brain]]''.
  +
* The negative reception and ratings failure of ''[[Planet Sheen]]'' has killed off all interest in the ''[[Jimmy Neutron]]'' franchise for the forseeable future.
  +
* The abrupt cancellation of ''[[The Ren and Stimpy Show|Ren & Stimpy]]: Adult Party Cartoon'' put the series on the kibosh, as no plans to revive the series have come about. The lackluster sales of the DVD sets didn't help this. It also helped put an early end to the entirety of the then-new Spike's animation block, thus taking down ''[[Stripperella]]'' (which was also hampered by a lawsuit) and ''[[Gary the Rat]]'' along with it, although the former was at least popular enough once it hit DVD...only to see more negative reception pile on over the years.
  +
* ''[[Scooby-Doo]]'' in Arabian Nights helped to kill off the franchises of ''[[Yogi Bear]]'' (whose fate was set in motion by the failure of ''Yo Yogi!'' three years earlier) and ''[[Magilla Gorilla]]'', as this was Magilla's last animated appearance, and the final cartoon by Hanna-Barbera to feature Yogi Bear and Scooby-Doo, although the latter was revived with great success in 1998 by Warner Bros. with ''[[Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island]]'', making Scooby a [[Cash Cow Franchise]] for them in the years since. Yogi Bear has since had a few new cartoons by [[John Kricfalusi]], but hardly anybody's seen them, as well as a financially successful, but critically ravaged, live-action film.
  +
* The ratings failure of ''Super Mario World'', along with the cancellation of ''Captain N: The Game Master'' and the closure of NBC's Saturday morning cartoon block, killed off any further attempts to keep the [[Super Mario Bros.]] on television. The only subsequent Super Mario Bros.-related television series made since then was ''The Super Mario Challenge'', a live-action game show from the United Kingdom that aired and ended around the same time as ''World'', as well as the [[Donkey Kong Country]] CGI cartoon to a much lesser extent. However, ''Super Mario World'' may be one of the rarest examples of a cartoon being [[Vindicated by History|Vindicated by YouTube Poop]].
  +
* The ''[[Rugrats]]: Tales From the Crib'' series was a direct-to-DVD series of [[Fractured Fairy Tale]]-esque movies, which attempted to make the original series popular again after it ended. However, there were only two entries in the series; "Snow White" and "Three Jacks and a Beanstalk", as the latter failed to impress. This also forced the "Pre-School Daze" spin-off (which had its episodes included as bonuses on the DVDs) to end at only four episodes.
  +
* The failure of ''[[Beware the Batman]]'' ([[Invisible Advertising|not helped by being]] [[Screwed by the Network|screwed over to a degree seldom seen before or since]]), along with [[Cartoon Network]]'s obsession with ''[[Teen Titans Go!]]'', led to the killing of ''[[DC Nation]]''. Though putting the block on hiatus previously for more ''[[Johnny Test]]'' ([[Adored by the Network|which was the previous network favorite]], and unlike ''Teen Titans Go!'' didn't even have the fan-base or ratings) didn't help either.
  +
* The poor critical reception and massive controversy surrounding the 2016 reboot of ''[[The Powerpuff Girls]]'' seems to have killed interest in the franchise off for good.
  +
* With ''[[The Boondocks]]'', when series creator Aaron McGruder left after Season 3 due to a contract dispute with [[Sony Pictures]] and [[[adult swim]]], Season 4 was developed without him. Due to heavy fan backlash against the fourth and final season, along with aborted plans for a live-action feature film based around supporting character Uncle Ruckus, it's unlikely that the franchise will continue.
  +
* Subverted with the ''[[My Little Pony]]'' franchise. After Generation 3 concluded with the decent ''Twinkle Wish Adventure'' special, Hasbro released two entries in the Newborn Cuties sub-series called ''So Many Different Ways to Play'' and ''Over Two Rainbows''. The [[Deranged Animation]] and [[No Budget|nonexistent budget]] of these specials would've certainly killed the franchise had [[Lauren Faust]] not been called in to reboot the entire franchise. The result? The hugely successful ''[[My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic]]'', which continues to this day.
   
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 02:16, 8 August 2016

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Cquote1
"I think we might have killed the franchise."
George Clooney on Batman and Robin (and until 2005, he was right)
Cquote2


Sometimes a sequel sucks. Sometimes it sucks, but leaves the possibility open that the followup will be better and that this is just a blip in the quality of the franchise. Then sometimes it sucks so much that it kills the franchise stone dead, destroying the producers'/publishers' hopes for further sequels.

Occasionally a few Franchise Killers over too short a period (or one really bad one) can put a whole genre out of favour for a while. Even the executives could tell when it's time to stop following the leader.

Note that sometimes the franchise turns out to be Not Quite Dead, and can be salvaged with a Continuity Reboot. If the franchise experiences what should have been a Franchise Killer but carries on regardless, it's a Franchise Zombie. Occasionally it's a Stillborn Franchise, an all-new product for which plans for sequels were made and then scrapped when it was discovered that the product was crap, or so hyped up that the creators have unrealistic expectations of its success. Or it just didn't profit enough, even though it was a Cult Classic. If the Franchise that was killed also happened right as the creators were setting up for a new installment to the series, it will overlap with Woody's Finest Hour.

Examples of Franchise Killer include:


Anime & Manga

  • El Hazard: The Alternative World performed poorly to the point that it was Cut Short with the show's way too many plots being wrapped up (very poorly) in only a single episode. It also killed the El Hazard franchise, with no further work of any kind being done in the decade since. And we never saw the Stable Time Loop established in the original El Hazard: The Magnificent World through to its completion.
    • Tenchi Muyo!, another AIC franchise of the same era, barely escaped this fate one year earlier with Tenchi in Tokyo. Despite being in most regards worse than El Hazard: The Alternative World, Tenchi in Tokyo managed to last for a full 26 episodes, and only set back the franchise by 5 years instead of killing it altogether.
  • Post-Chars Counterattack, Mobile Suit Gundam's Universal Century continuity entered an agonizing death-spiral. This started off with Mobile Suit Gundam F91 being developed as a TV series, but crammed into a movie loaded with so many dangling plot threads that it took a manga-only sequel to resolve them all. The next series, Victory Gundam, was Yoshiyuki Tomino's gigantic middle-finger to the franchise before departing. However, the true death blow was when Gaia Gear and G-Saviour were produced; Sunrise does not list them with other UC productions. While the continuity continued to live on in OVAs covering events from the One Year War to the Gryps conflict, every subsequent TV production has been in an Alternate Continuity, and the UC timeline has not progressed any further beyond V Gundam. Only time will tell if Gundam Unicorn will revive UC fully.
    • This probably has something to do with the fact that Tomino was planning on ending it with Counterattack (in fact, he'd never even wanted to do any sequels in the first place, as his original plan had been to kill off pretty much any future threat from Zeon), but his sponsors just kept trying to squeeze blood from the stone. It's very telling that when they finally wised up and let Tomino bow out of the franchise and hired directors who were actually enthusiastic about the material they produced some of the most highly regarded work not only in the Gundam franchise, but in all of '90s anime.
    • Gundam X almost killed the franchise, where due to consumer fatigue, the series entered an ice age for 3 years (if you don't count Endless Waltz). Gundam X is one of only two Gundam TV series to be cut short of a full two-season run. The first? The original Mobile Suit Gundam; it's easy to forget given what a massive franchise it's become that the original installment had poor ratings.
    • In America, it was Gundam SEED that killed the franchise. In this case, one can blame the heavy edits Toonami made. Desperate to air the show in a daytime slot, Cartoon Network's cuts turned the show into a complete mess, most notably by forcing the series to Never Say "Die", drastically changing battle scenes, and featuring the use of the notorious Disco Guns. In spite of the show's serious nature, the bizarre and drastic edits caused the fanbase to not take the show seriously and it showed in the ratings. By episode 26, the series could only be seen at Friday at midnight. After it's shaky run, Gundam would go back to being only seen on DVD until Sy Fy revived the franchise by airing Mobile Suit Gundam 00.
      • Its sequel Gundam SEED Destiny managed to kill Sunrise's official English-language Gundam message board (the centerpiece of the English language website), despite not even airing outside of Japan until years later (and even then it only aired in Canada). Numerous American fans were watching fansubs of the SEED Destiny episodes within days of their air dates (or even sooner in the case of American fans who speak Japanese, which in the Gundam fandom turns out to be a surprisingly large number) and thus it was the biggest topic of discussion the message board (without, of course, the fansub aspect being mentioned; it was the official message board after all). The extremely divided fan opinion about SEED Destiny is well known, but the disagreements were kept mostly civil. And then the final episode aired, and the opinions voice on the message board were almost universally (and often quite vehemently) negative, even among those who'd generally approved of the way the story had gone in the second half. Shortly afterward (and without advance notice), Sunrise pulled the plug on the message board entirely, leaving Gundam Official.com little more than an empty shell that to this day no longer gets updated (when Gundam 00 aired on Sy Fy, it was given its own separate English-language website). In fact, given that the SEED Destiny finale aired in Japan less than six months after the SEED finale aired in North America (many Gundam fans, especially those newly-introduced to the franchise, went straight from watching SEED in English to watching fansubs of SEED Destiny), this incident may have even played a role in Gundam's long disappearance from American TV broadcasts, with Sunrise drawing the (ridiculously false) conclusion that negative reaction to the SEED Destiny finale meant that Americans just didn't like Gundam.
    • A movie meant to tie up the Cosmic Era timeline has been stuck in Development Hell for years (due to the declining health of one of the writers), and its fate is uncertain.
  • The Animated Adaptation of CLAMP's Tsubasa Reservoir Chronicle came to a screeching halt after a lackluster second season that had almost nothing but Filler episodes (when there was so much more material left to adapt). They tried to Retcon it in the Tokyo Revelations OVA (the adaptation of the Acid Tokyo arc in the manga), but the damage had already been done.
  • Zoids: Fuzors is often accused of being one of these by the English-speaking Zoids fanbase, but it was in fact the fan favourite Zoids: Chaotic Century that killed the franchise, having gotten such low ratings during its run on Cartoon Network that it was cancelled, with the final four episodes only being shown after complaints from the fanbase. Fuzors was more of a last-ditch effort to salvage what was already a doomed franchise.
    • Similarly, in Japan, Zoids Genesis was a franchise killer; the anime got a so-so reception, but The Merch failed to sell, effectively dooming the chances of another Zoids anime being made any time soon, and causing Tomy to change its marketing strategy by pandering exclusively to Otaku rather than general audiences as they did before.
  • In a similar vein to El Hazard: The Alternative World, Great Dangaioh's performance was bad enough to have the show get cancelled and leave things hanging in episode 12 (out of a planned 26). This effectively ensured that the Dangaioh franchise would never get a proper ending (let alone resolve the OVA's events).
  • Sailor Moon had two franchise killers happen. The first was the anime, which was dealing with declining ratings and it ended after exactly 200 episodes. Then six years later, a live action version of the show. After a year later, it ended and effectively killed off what was left of the Sailor Moon franchise.


Films -- Animation

  • Originally, there was actually going to be a third film in The Rescuers series movies by Disney. However, due to Down Under's financial failure (it's the only animated Disney movie released during the 1990s to ever suffer this fate, combined with the death of actress Eva Gabor (who voiced Miss Bianca), the idea for a third Rescuers movie was scrapped.
    • And actually it did more than that, as Disney vowed never to release theatrical sequels again and from then on they were direct-to-video, which had a negative effect on their quality for the most part. They've started to get back to theatrical sequels in recent years, though only sporadically, as seen with with a few Winnie the Pooh movies as well as Return To Neverland and The Jungle Book 2.
  • The critical and financial failure of the infamous Tom and Jerry movie (the one where the famously silent cat-and-mouse duo talk and sing) prevented the making of another theatrical Tom and Jerry film.
  • There was actually once a restaurant at Walt Disney World that opened in 1986 replacing the "Lancer's Inn" that was around since the park's opening in 1971 called "Gurgi's Munchies and Crunchies" that was supposed to promote The Black Cauldron. However, the movie failed and as a result the restaurant was immediately closed down (it was first replaced by a Beauty and the Beast-themed restaurant called "Lumiere's Kitchen", and now replaced with a Robin Hood-themed restaurant called "The Friar's Nook"). No further movies based on The Chronicles of Prydain have been made since.
    • There was once a ride at Tokyo Disneyland called "Cinderella Castle Mystery Tour" that focused on all of the Disney villains up to the Horned King. Since Disney found out that the Horned King was actually one of the villains featured in that ride, it too was closed down as well. Disney eventually changed its mind about the Horned King, who is on the way to being an official Disney Villain, but not yet the Prydain series itself (circa September 2011).
  • Speaking of The Black Cauldron, that movie itself almost became the franchise killer of the entire Disney Animated Canon. It cost the studio so much money they could only barely manage to get back up. Understandably, it took Cauldron till 1998 to get released on home video.
  • The failure of the DuckTales movie, Duck Tales the Movie Treasure of The Lost Lamp, prevented the making of movies based on Darkwing Duck and Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers.
  • The critical failure of Rugrats Go Wild (a crossover film between Rugrats and The Wild Thornberrys) actually prevented the making of a fourth Rugrats film and a third Wild Thornberries film.
  • When Looney Tunes Back in Action failed in the box office, a new batch of Looney Tunes shorts being made for theaters were cancelled in mid-production.
  • Similar to The Rescuers above, originally, there was actually going to be a third film based on The Jungle Book where Baloo and Shere Khan are both captured and sold off of a circus, and as a result Mowgli, Shanti, and Bagheera actually all had to save them both. And over the course of the film, Shere Khan (who went into Knight of Cerebus mode in the second, and according to this film's plot, is revealed to have survived falling into a volcano at the end of that film) would have actually regretted his hatred against humanity because of his capture and may have eventually reformed over the course of the film. However, due to the failure of The Jungle Book 2, this film was ultimately scrapped, and Khan's fate at the end of the sequel remained ambiguous.
  • The critical (but not financial, as it was the second-biggest moneymaker in the series) failure of Shrek the Third resulted in DreamWorks abandoning their planned fifth film Shrek Pleads the Fifth, and instead made the fourth installment, Shrek Forever After, the final entry of the film franchise.


Films -- Live-Action

  • The Fantastic Four films weren't bad, exactly, but the underperforming sequel ensured that the standalone Silver Surfer movie will never happen.
    • The films received a Continuity Reboot in 2015, with a new cast and a new origin story, and a darker, grittier, and more 'grounded' treatment in which the Fantastic Four's origin was played for Body Horror. Even before the film was released, fans were not thrilled by the changes made from the original material, such as making Sue Storm Johnny's adopted sister so that they could cast a black actor as Johnny Storm, or making Dr. Doom a blogger. The rumors of the film being a very Troubled Production didn't help matters any. When the film was released in the summer of 2015, it was panned by critics and fans for cutting out much of the material seen in the trailers (including much of the action and comic relief) and trying too hard to do a 'grounded' and 'realistic' approach to fantastic super-hero material. The film ended up being one of the lowest performing superhero movies of the new millenium at the box office. With the film being both a critical and a box office failure, the future of the Fantastic Four movie franchise is (as of this edit) uncertain.
  • After the surprise success of The Blair Witch Project, plans were made for a trilogy, but the second movie, Book of Shadows, killed those dreams.
  • Batman and Robin was so awful (lead actor George Clooney even said "I think we killed the franchise") that it convinced Warner to let the Batman fields lie fallow for a while, then let someone else take a crack at the series. Some Marvel Studios high-up is on record for saying that Batman and Robin was the most influential comic book movie, on account of it definitively showing to movie studios that they can't shovel out crap comic movies and expect the fans to like it.
  • Superman III was bad. Superman IV was in some ways an improvement; but where it did go wrong, including glaring Special Effect Failure, it broke Willing Suspension of Disbelief. The series went comatose for nearly twenty years and when it came back, Superman Returns was a sequel to Superman II and ignored the continuity of Superman III and Superman IV. Returns was decent (even taking into account the Broken Base), but didn't perform well enough to keep the franchise resurrected without another reboot.
  • Star Trek Nemesis' plot contained a Sequel Hook, but its financial and critical failure ended any chance the Star Trek the Next Generation crew had of getting another film. Then again, this section of the franchise may have been killed shortly before the release of this film because Brent Spiner (who played the android Data) refused to participate further because he was visibly aging and straining suspension of disbelief. You can't do TNG without Data, and Paramount's marketing department knew it, hence the tagline:
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  "A Generation's Final Journey Begins".

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  • The Daredevil movie wasn't quite bad enough to kill Daredevil 2. Elektra, on the other hand, was. That film and Halle Berry's Catwoman squashed rumors of a new spate of super-heroine movies.
  • Alien: Resurrection differs so much from the tone of its predecessors and eliminates so much of the series' mythology (like the USCM and Weyland-Yutani) that it managed to kill a franchise that even Alien3 couldn't kill. More recently, of course, Alien vs. Predator spun off into film territory; Alien vs. Predator: Requiem killed that section of the franchise (meaning that only its comics, novels and video games are still alive and kicking).
  • Serenity, the feature-film continuation of the Firefly television series, drastically underperformed in the theaters, much like Firefly itself. Interestingly, Serenity was only green-lit due to the impressive sales of Firefly DVDs, and Serenity's failure killed the idea that DVD sales can be used to extrapolate a fanbase's ability to support a motion picture. It should not surprise anyone that DVD sales of Serenity are often used to justify the franchise's strength, despite the under-performance of the film itself.
  • The Nightmare on Elm Street franchise self-terminated with the combination of the fifth film, The Dream Child, in 1989 and Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare in 1991. The former film was poorly received by fans and was the lowest-grossing film in the franchise up to that point, causing New Line to pull the trigger with Freddy's Dead, a film that, despite making a bit more money, is today regarded as the series' rock bottom.

    Several attempts were made later to revive the series, none of which went anywhere. 1994 brought Wes Craven's New Nightmare, a stand-alone Spin-Off that New Line produced because they liked the script, and moreso because it could be produced cheaply. It was very well-received by critics and fans, and is now regarded as one of the best films in the series from a pure horror standpoint, but it did even worse than at the box office. In 2003 Freddy vs. Jason, the long-awaited Crossover with Friday the 13 th, won the approval of fans of both series and was the highest grossing film in either franchise, but plans for a sequel have largely been restricted to the realm of comic books. The 2010 remake of the original film, despite being a box-office hit, was utterly ravaged by series fans and viewers, and almost killed co-star Rooney Mara's career (before David Fincher swooped in and saved it).
  • The film adaptation of Fat Slags (a strip in British comic Viz) was so bad that their creator allegedly claimed he was going to kill off the strip as a result, though this later turned out to be misquoted/misreported.
  • While the first two films in The Godfather franchises are regarded as classics, The Godfather: Part III is considered much less so. That, and director Francis Ford Coppola's declining health, effectively killed discussions about a fourth film. (Mario Puzo dying prevented the rumours from coming back.)
  • Mortal Kombat, while not a blockbuster hit, is a decent action flick with solid characters. The second movie is a slopfest of one-shot character cameos, terrible dialogue, and (for the series) an inexplicable plot. After several rumors of a possible sequel/reboot by New Line were killed by Warner Bros buying the Mortal Kombat franchise and all rights therein[1], WB opted for the cheaper idea of a Web Original series, Mortal Kombat Legacy, instead of a movie.
  • Sadly, the four-hour epic movie Gettysburg, based on a novel by Michael Shaara, had its franchise killed by the abominably executed sequel/prequel Gods and Generals, based on the novel written by Jeff Shaara (son of Michael) which had promised a third entry, The Last Full Measure, also based on the Jeff Shaara book. The shocking thing about Gods and Generals is that, having seen a variety of pre-release scenes, unreleased scenes, and different (superior) cuts of shown scenes in the film that there was quite a lot of good footage that simply was not used; in effect, the whole franchise was killed by bad editing.
  • Jurassic Park 3. A fourth film languished in Development Hell, but when Michael Crichton died, producer Kathleen Kennedy initially decided against making more, and then, in a subversion, Steven Spielberg revealed at 2011's Comic-Con that a fourth film should be released within the next two to three years. Four years later, Jurassic World was released, to mixed reviews. Time will tell whether or not the franchise will continue from here.
  • Spider-Man 4 managed to do this without even being released, being canceled in favor of a Continuity Reboot right before filming started, after a release date had been announced. It's hard to say if it was justified, but Felicia Hardy (a.k.a. Black Cat) becoming a female Vulture isn't something many will mourn the loss of. The true culprit for the death/rebooting of the franchise was Executive Meddling -- director Sam Raimi walked only because he felt he couldn't deliver the level of quality he wanted in the deadline he was given. Meanwhile, the rebooting was done because Sony didn't want the Spider-Man film rights to fall into Marvel Studios' hands instead of, you know, acknowledging the murder of the golden egg-laying goose (So no Spidey-as-written-by-Joss Whedon in the Avengers film for you!).
  • Despite being made for what many felt were the wrong reasons, the rebooted Amazing Spider-Man was considered a good enough movie to justify its existence. Its sequel, however, was poorly received due to its handling of the death of Gwen Stacy and the fact that multiple villains and storylines were competing for attention. A planned Sinister Six spinoff movie was cancelled, and Sony made a deal with Marvel Studios to allow another reboot with Spider-Man being featured in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
  • Terminator Salvation not only apparently killed off the movie franchise (it was intended to be part one of a trilogy), but also the company that made it. The rights went on sale, but no one was that interested and they ended up in the possession of...a hedge fund that had invested in the company. In 2011, it was reported that Universal Pictures and Annapurna Films are working on two more films in the franchise, and the fifth is expected to herald the return of... SARAH CONNOR!
  • And indeed Sarah Connor returned, this time being played by Emilia Clarke in Terminator: Genysis. However, reception from the film has ranged from lukewarm to negative.
  • Halloween Resurrection (and Producer Existence Failure) killed the original series. Then Platinum Dunes buying the franchise from Dimension Films killed the Rob Zombie remake series, though whether or not that's a good thing due to the involvement of Platinum Dunes is up for debate.
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III put the movie series on hold for 14 years. The 2007 animated film made a decent-but-not-spectacular showing at the box office, but poor reviews have led to the series being rebooted in live-action once again. Unfortunately, said reboot was produced by Michael Bay... The film franchise was zombified thereafter.
  • Conan the Destroyer was critically panned and didn't perform well at the box office, dropping many things of what made the original what it was plus its Lighter and Softer tone turning away fans of the first movie while failing to attract younger audiences. Its flop put a possible third Conan movie into Development Hell, and the Red Sonja movie, where Arnold Schwarzenegger plays an obvious Captain Ersatz of Conan, discredited the whole idea of adapting Howard's works for more than 20 years (the only attempt, Kull the Conqueror, was a flop).
    • A reboot film came out in 2011, and if the incredibly poor box office (barely half of its cost) and a lawsuit filed by SLM--a company in bankruptcy that's supposed to have been dormant for a decade, mind you--over the rights to the franchise are any indication, it may have killed the franchise all over again.
  • The failure of Grease 2 prevented further Sequelitis. There were studio plans of having at least three more sequels and a TV series, but they were instantly scrapped after Grease 2 bombed.
  • Planet of the Apes initially died with the terrible Battle for the Planet of the Apes. Tim Burton's movie in 2001 made some money, but the proposed sequel was scrapped. In all fairness, each Apes sequel was written to be the last in the series, and further movies were only created because 20th Century Fox demanded them. Battle merely put a end to needlessly prolonging the series, which had already wrapped up its loose ends in the previous films anyway.
  • The negative critical reception and underwhelming (but still relatively successful) box office intake for Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (not to mention the deaths of Bosley #2 Bernie Mac and Charlie himself, John Forsythe) means that the prospects for a third movie in the foreseeable future are unlikely. And with the new TV series burned at the stake by critics and cancelled after four episodes were aired[2], it's not so much "Good morning, Angels" as "Goodbye, Angels."
  • Licence to Kill, the 16th official James Bond movie (and the second and last one to star Timothy Dalton) seemed to do this for a while. With inflation in account, it's the lowest grossing film in the franchise. The franchise was already entering uncertain territory as production had to be moved from England to Mexico in order to save money. Not only that, but the marketing for the movie was subpar at best (it's to date, the last Bond movie to be released during summer). Add that to LTK itself, being one of the most polarizing Bond movies of recent memory due to its decidedly Darker and Edgier, Miami Vice-influenced plot (especially considering the Lighter and Softer Roger Moore era was still fresh in the general public's mind). LTK felt like an end of an era (dating back to the Sean Connery era) as it was the last Bond movie to have any involvement from director John Glen, screenwriter Richard Maibaum, title designer Maurice Binder, cinematographer Alec Mills, and producer Albert "Cubby" Broccoli (not to mention the last Bond movie to take place during the Cold War). There wouldn't be a Bond movie released for six years (the longest such delay in franchise history) due to legal wrangling over control of the series. In the meantime, Dalton's contract expired, Pierce Brosnan was hired, and the 17th movie started being Saved From Development Hell.
    • While Die Another Day by no means performed badly (it was the best performing of the series until Casino Royale) it was deemed ridiculous by many, and received at best mixed reviews. Soon after, Brosnan was dismissed and the franchise rebooted with a back-to-basics movie starring Daniel Craig as Bond.
  • The film of Eragon inexplicably altered so many plotlines and cut so much (even given it is based on a Doorstopper), including the entire Dwarf race that a sequel based on the plot of the second book would have been impossible, even if it wasn't an awful film.
  • The Cat in the Hat killed off the live-action Dr. Seuss movie franchise, not so much because of its box-office receipts (which were not as bad as the reviews) but because Theodore Geisel's widow was disgusted enough by it to deny any further live-action adaptations.
  • The Legend Of The Lone Ranger ended any chance of further Lone Ranger adaptations for the next two and a half decades with ITC's behavior, especially toward the classic Lone Ranger, Clayton Moore (such behavior would become ITC's undoing, as it only survived while Sir Lew Grade was still alive).
  • Scream and Scream 2 each made just over $100 million at the domestic box office, while Scream 3 clocked in at just under $90 million. Scream 4 didn't even reach the $40 million mark (although it's far from universally loathed, and is the only film in the series to have done better outside North America). Having a gap between the third and fourth films longer than the period in which all three previous films were released may not have helped.
  • The first two Crocodile Dundee films were tremendous hits, each grossing over $100 million at the North American box office alone. However, series star Paul Hogan and company took 13 long years before making a third Croc picture, which ultimately underperformed at the box office (opening at #4 and grossing roughly $25 million domestically). Besides the long gap in-between the previous film, Crocodile Dundee in Los Angeles seemed less serious than the previous two films (coming off as more of a broad family comedy) with a plot that felt left over from Beverly Hills Cop.


Live-Action TV

  • Fantasy Leader, a Blogspot user, created a detailed essay on what was almost the Franchise Killer for Super Sentai here. To recap: the coincidental collision of a gradual Broken Base that built up starting with Chikyuu Sentai Fiveman five years ago (within the fandom) and a pair of Genre Killing real-life incidents (outside of the fandom[3]) led to show ratings falling to a new low in Chouriki Sentai Ohranger and Toei was prepared to pull the plug... until they noticed that Ohranger toy sales somehow reached a monstrous new high for Sentai overall.
  • Stargate Universe was a Soap Opera IN SPACE! that couldn't be less like Stargate. Unlike many of these examples, it had a nice little fanbase, but not enough to keep it afloat, and with its failure came the official announcement of the indefinite hiatus of the awaited Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis projects - the kind of 'hiatus' that means you start dismantling sets.
  • Heroes Volumes 3 and 4 (both making up season 3) qualify as such. The second season was a major letdown, but people forgave it because there was the big writer's strike and The Powers That Be did the best they could. When season three came along, they expected a return to form, but got a Random Events Plot with characters acting wildly Out of Character as the writers seemed to be changing their minds on key plot points three times per episode. Best known is Sylar's being more evil, then less evil, then more, then less constantly, but really, it was like that with everything. By the end of that season, most of the fans had given up on it. Season four (Volume 5) got to happen, and was better than season three but it wasn't without its problems, and really, by then, nobody cared anymore. Because of this, not only is the TV series cancelled, but the graphic novels were also scrapped as well. However, in 2015 they got the greenlight for a new series called Heroes Reborn. It remains to be seen if the new series will bring this franchise back to life.


Music

  • After the violence at Woodstock '99, the owners of the Woodstock name have gone on record to say it will never be used again.


Video Games

Midway Games

  • Gauntlet (1985 video game) was a fairly decent hack-and-slash arcade-style adventure series, until Seven Sorrows came along. It was an Obvious Beta, with a lot of old standby techniques gone (like not being able to shoot potions), and none of the "new features" touted for the game anywhere. Any plans for the franchise after that were effectively shelved.
  • Spy Hunter: Nowhere to Run was intended to be a tie-in to a cancelled movie. Needless to say, the game flopped belly up, sinking the franchise altogether.
  • LA Rush was billed as a Spiritual Successor to San Francisco Rush, but ended up as just another average street racer.
  • Blacksite: Area 51 is an interesting chicken-or-the-egg case. While the game was so atrociously bad that it ensured no future Area 51 games would be made, the game's Obvious Beta glitches and other over signs of poor quality were an indication that Midway Games was already on the brink of collapse. Sure enough, the entire company folded soon after the game's release. To paraphrase Word of God: "This project was so fucked up. I just wasn't excited about this Area 51 game."

Capcom

  • Dino Crisis 3 stretched Willing Suspension of Disbelief beyond all hope of recovery when it put dinosaurs on a spaceship in the future. That's not even getting into the gameplay, which stunk due to the inclusion of anti-gravity without the controls to make it bearable, or the plot, which discarded the running story of the previous games despite the fact that part 2 ended on a cliffhanger!
  • Although it wasn't exactly bad, Breath of Fire: Dragon Quarter was such an incredible deviation from the rest of the Breath of Fire games (a series that's usually very big on continuity, to boot) that the series came to a screeching halt. Several years and a new console generation later, the series has shown no signs of reawakening. Even when another company offered to buy the license to make a new Breath of Fire game, Capcom refused.
  • Due to poor sales and, more specifically, Executive Meddling, the Darkstalkers series has no foreseeable future.
  • Ditto for Mega Man, once a staple in Capcom's line-up and one of the faces of the company. With series creator Keiji Infaune's departure from the company, any further games starring the Blue Bomber are looking very unlikely.
    • Mega Man 8, due to various factors (including widely reviled voice acting and some poorly devised weapons and items), resulted in the core part of the franchise being left fallow for twelve years. And while the eighth game is still in continuity (deliberate references to it were made in both Mega Man 9 and Mega Man 10), the gameplay and design aesthetic have reverted back to that of the second installment, widely considered the Magnum Opus of the Classic series.
      • Unfortunately, Mega Man 10 did even more harm. This game might have killed the whole franchise as a result. Lame Robot Master designs and concepts (Pump Man? SHEEP Man?), gobs of Fake Difficulty, and a story made of wasted potential all managed to flunk and finally do in the last thread of Mega Man left.
    • The Mega Man Legends series died at its second official game, with the announcement of the Nintendo 3DS revival's cancellation sparking a very angry reaction from passionate Legends fans looking forward to the project.
  • Final Fight: Streetwise proved to be a critical dud and put an end to any further games in the Final Fight continuity. Most of its characters now live on as part of Street Fighter canon.

THQ

  • The Nicktoons Unite! series died after Nicktoons: Globs of Doom's poor reception. THQ has since given up on Nicktoons licensed games, so the game that followed Globs of Doom was 2K Games' Nicktoons MLB, a crossover between Nicktoons characters and real MLB players.
  • THQ released two Destroy All Humans! games in 2008 - Big Willy Unleashed for the Wii, and then Path of the Furon for PlayStation 3/Xbox 360 - after original developer Pandemic Studios was snapped up by Electronic Arts. Neither game managed to successfully capture the spirit of the first two games, and sold terribly as a result.
  • With the underwhelming reception of Red Faction: Armageddon and the multiplayer-focused Battlegrounds, THQ has announced that it won't be doing any more RF games for a while. Of course, if they listened to the fans who made the second to last game Red Faction Guerrilla a hit, they'd have continued RFG's open world destruction gameplay style instead of making a generic underground corridor shooter.
  • The publisher also canned its MX vs. ATV franchise after the various changes in gameplay to MX vs. ATV: Alive left fans cold.

Square Enix / Eidos Interactive

  • Tomb Raider: Angel of Darkness didn't sell well, so Eidos passed the franchise's development rights on from Core Design to Crystal Dynamics.
  • Deus Ex: Invisible War was the much anticipated sequel to the seminal Deus Ex. It was so poorly received (by the community; it received decent marks from critics) that developer Ion Storm: Austin was driven to collapse, and the spin-off title Deus Ex: Clan Wars was changed to Project Snowblind to remove negative association with the ballyhooed franchise. Another title in the series wouldn't be made until 2011's Deus Ex: Human Revolution.
  • Act Raiser II was an In Name Only sequel that lacked the original game's popular Simulation Mode. The unGodly difficulty level couldn't have helped it out at all, either.
  • After Unlimited Saga was released in 2002, the only new SaGa games have been remakes of existing games in the series.
  • Dawn of Mana effectively killed off the World of Mana series with frustrating and nonsensical gameplay and a level system that reset whenever you started a new chapter, which meant Loads And Loads Of Grinding.
  • Front Mission Evolved crashed and burned in Japan, but it has been generally better received in America. The poor ratings/sales have more or less ended the future of Front Mission video games (the franchise still lives on with its manga and novels, which remain very popular in Japan due to its high storytelling qualities). Ironically, among all things, Evolved was panned for its terrible storytelling.

Sega

  • Sega's Shinobi franchise was killed quite dead by the poor Shinobi Legions installment in 1995, not returning until a reboot in 2002. It died again in 2004 with Nightshade (2003 video game), which itself was a perfectly good game, but had little to no marketing and its link to the Shinobi franchise was not played up, so it sat in obscurity. Time will tell if the Nintendo 3DS game will bring it back from the brink again.
  • On a similar note, Shenmue was a Franchise Killer after the first episode in the US owing both to the end of the Sega Dreamcast and slow gameplay, but the second episode (of a proposed four) was released to the rest of the world. Unfortunately, the second episode managed to fail financially on both the Dreamcast and the Xbox, rendering its huge and startling cliffhanger the end. As the mastermind behind the series, Yu Suzuki, has left Sega, there is little hope of revival... Up until they announced Shemnue 3 anyway.
  • Virtual On MARZ arguably killed its series. The game was changed from a 3D Fighting Game to an arena-based Beat'Em Up (of sorts, Virtual On has guns), it became single-player, had a horrible, generic anime-like plot, and the English version was plagued by Blind Idiot Translation. Ironically enough, most of the cameos Virtual On has gotten elsewhere (outside of indie circles) are more heavily based on MARZ than any other part of the series, namely in Super Robot Wars Alpha 3, in which the robots had human voices, and featured Hatter, who only appeared in MARZ.
  • Alex Kidd and the Enchanted Castle flopped so badly that Sega ditched the titular character as their mascot, and replaced him with Sonic the Hedgehog. While Alex probably didn't have much of a future as Sega's mascot anyway, since the company wanted a more "hip" audience for the Genesis, his series would probably have survived if Enchanted Castle had been better received. Instead, he only appeared in the Dolled-Up Installment Alex Kidd in Shinobi World before disappearing off the gaming map.
  • And speaking of Sonic, it seems his spin-off series have been dying one by one. The two-hit combo of Sonic Rush Adventure and Sonic Rivals 2 killed original handhelds in favor of handheld counterparts to the home games returning, Sonic and the Black Knight ended the Storybook series, Free Riders ended non-crossover racing games, the aformentioned handheld counterparts were curtailed by the disastrous Lost World, the Classic revival was killed by Sonic 4 Episode 2... And now with the total failure of Rise of Lyric, the entire franchise is hanging by a thread...

Electronic Arts

  • Though Ultima IX was already planned to be the last game in the third trilogy, the way it turned out ensured that there would be no fourth trilogy.
  • The Command and Conquer franchise got killed off after the release of its fourth game of the main series, and that was only a few years after solid hits by the third games of both the main series and the Red Alert spin-off series. With EA having so many other Cash Cow Franchises at the time Tiberian Twilight came and tanked, there's little possibility they would give the franchise another chance now.
    • EA has announced that it's developing a sequel to Generals, but it remains to be seen if it will be any good or not.
  • EA Sports' NBA Live series was renamed NBA Elite for the 2011 year. However, the game's demo was so awful that they yanked it and cancelled the game weeks from release (as well as the 2012 edition). It didn't help that their primary competitor, Take Two's NBA 2K11, is widely considered one of the best sports games of all time.

Activision

  • Tony Hawk: Ride was meant to revive a franchise that was long stagnated and decaying by making the player use a skateboard peripheral that didn't work as well as advertised. Combined with Hawk himself saying critics decided to hate it before it came out, gamers weren't likely to be interested in a sequel, as the poor sales of Shred eventually convinced series publisher Activision to shelf the series for a while before announcing a "back-to-basics" reboot with Tony Hawk's Pro Skater HD.
  • The Guitar Hero franchise came to a halt after Warriors of Rock lost out to Rock Band 3. It didn't help that fans had gone through exposure fatigue with the release of several different attempts at spinoffs in the previous two years (Band Hero, DJ Hero) within several months of each other. Activision, for their part, have recognised that DJ Hero was the Guitar Hero Franchise Killer - they spent so much time and creative energy on DJH that they forgot that GH might have needed some love too (four spinoffs != love).
    • On a similar note, Rock Band appears to be hanging up on its five-button traditional gameplay, possibly due to the rather disappointing 82,000 units Green Day: Rock Band sold, and has chosen to expand on the Pro Mode from Rock Band 3.
  • Soldier of Fortune: Payback doesn't fit with the canon of the first two games, and it doesn't help that it ends with a Cliff Hanger that will likely never be resolved. This isn't surprising, since it was made by a completely different developer and released as a budget game.

Nintendo

  • Chibi-Robo: Park Patrol sold very poorly in the US (largely due to initially being a Wal-Mart exclusive), which in turn caused the next sequel to be Japan-only. However, when that game turned out to be a massive success, Nintendo decided to bring the series back overseas on the 3DS with a downloadable title called Chibi Robo: Photo Finder, a game that put less focus on the housekeeping aspect of the original games and more focus on the use of the 3DS camera. The game received mostly average reviews, again seemingly putting the series in jeopardy. Nintendo would announce another Chibi-Robo title for the 3DS that did away with the housekeeping concept entirely in favor of side-scrolling platforming called Chibi Robo: Zip Lash, even coming with a Chibi Robo amiibo. The series' creator stated that Zip Lash would likely be the last game in the series if it sold poorly...and it did.
  • One could argue that F-Zero: GP Legend was this for the F-Zero series. In addition to performing poorly sales-wise, it didn't help either that poor word-of-mouth effectively sunk the accompanying Animated Adaptation before it even hit North American airwaves. While there was only one other sequel to GP Legend (2005's F-Zero Climax), it was never released outside of Japan due to GP Legend's overall poor reception in North America. This was all also combined with Shigeru Miyamoto admitting to having Writer's Block in terms of bringing new ideas to the series.

Fire Emblem:

  • The Fire Emblem Tellius games seem to be this for home-console-based titles in the series, as the next games would be on portable systems, such as the Nintendo 3DS.
  • Fire Emblem Awakening is an inversion, but was close to being a franchise killer. Due to stagnating sales of previous Fire Emblem titles, as revealed in an interview with a Spanish website, if the game sold fewer than a quarter million units, it would have been the last game in the series. The opposite happened, and Awakening became one of the best selling titles in the franchise, causing a significant Newbie Boom.

The game most fans blame for putting the series on the edge of cancellation in the first place is, ironically, the remake of the first game, Shadow Dragon. To make the game faithful to the original, Intelligent Systems deliberately eschewed many of the features that made the later games so successful, like the Support system and the Weapon Triangle, resulting in a game that appealed to long-time fans in Japan but came across as Seinfeld Is Unfunny to Western players who got started with Elibe, Magvel, or Tellius, as well as newcomers eager to finally see the game where Marth actually hails from. That, and some questionable design decisions about what Intelligent Systems did add, gave Shadow Dragon a cold reception in the West. Although it was still a financial success, Nintendo decided on going back to a Japan-only release for the remake of the sequel, Mystery of the Emblem (which, ironically, fixed many of the complaints people had about Shadow Dragon), leading to the series' tough financial straits by the time Awakening was made.

  • The poorly-received Metroid: Other M put the Metroid series on ice for a second time (the first was the long hiatus between Super Metroid in 1994 and Metroid Prime in 2002 while Metroid wrestled with the Video Game 3D Leap). Despite good initial sales, poor word-of-mouth took its toll and new copies were rapidly marked down to bargain price. And Yoshio Sakamoto, the franchise co-creator who was heavily involved with Other M, said at the time that he didn't plan to return to Metroid or any of his other traditional video game creations any time soon. Only four years later, at E3 2014, Nintendo confirmed that new installments for both 2D and 3D-style Metroid games entered the planning stages, with Metroid Prime: Federation Force being unveiled in 2015 to even bigger skepticism.
  • Planet Puzzle League was a perfectly good game on its own, but received extremely negative consumer reception in Japan for almost completely ditching the Kawaisa aspect it had previously sold itself on. Other than a few Virtual Console rereleases of the original Panel de Pon, there hasn't been a new game in the series since.
  • The Broken Base that started with Star Fox Adventures managed to finally come back to bite the Star Fox franchise in the ass with Star Fox Command. It was the poorest selling game in the series to date, and barring the Nintendo 3DS remake of Star Fox 64, it took an entire decade for the series to receive a new title through Star Fox Zero for the Wii U. Alas, Star Fox Zero received polarizing reviews, and has reportedly sold even less than Command did, which paints a very bleak future of the series.
  • The Legendary Starfy seems to be this for the Starfy series, as the series hasn't had a new game in 8 years, and it was sadly the only game in the series to come out in America, and didn't even come out in Europe. While it did get good reviews in America, it sold poorly, and it wasn't received as well and didn't sell as well as the first four games in Japan, mainly due to being dumbed-down from the previous titles.
  • Wario World, Wario: Master of Disguise, and Wario Land: Shake It! all received decent reviews from critics, but they sold so poorly that the Wario Land series hasn't seen any new installments since 2008.
  • The poor critical reception of Mario Tennis: Ultra Smash seems to have killed off the Mario Tennis series for the forseeable future.

Other

  • Turok: Evolution managed to kill off the franchise, no thanks to silly elements such as Tobias Bruckner, the cyborg cowboy riding a Tyrannosaurus Rex, along with the game's numerous other problems. Probably no coincidence that publisher Acclaim went bankrupt shortly after the release of this and BMX XXX. The 2008 Turok relaunch wasn't a bad game, exactly -- it just had the bad luck to be an average shooter during a time when great shooters were glutting the market. A sequel was planned, but was cancelled.
  • Betrayal at Krondor was supposed to be the first of a revolutionary series of games that combined adventure novel-style storytelling with interactive gameplay, in a setting based on The Riftwar Cycle by Raymond Feist. And while the game itself was very much successful, its sequel, Return to Krondor, was ruined by Executive Meddling and license problems and was released woefully unfinished and underpolished, making this a bad enough experience for Feist that he's been unwilling to risk a repeat experience.
  • Although Xenosaga was meant to be a six-part series, it ended after three games. None of the games individually was primarily responsible for the premature end, but altogether the games didn't perform as well as expected. Episode II performed so poorly that part of Episode III's selling point was that it (debatably) coherently summarized Episode II, removing the need to play it to understand the story. Players were thankful, but after the blow Episode II had dealt the franchise, almost every industry commentator observed that Episode III would have to be perfect in every way to keep the series afloat.
  • The ninth installment of the main Might and Magic series is generally regarded as the reason the developer stuck with the Heroes spinoff from then on; this was mainly due to the fact that the graphics of the engine had to be extensively upgraded in order to compete. However, all of the company's resources went into that and not into, say, a very good plot.
  • Bloody Roar 4 is considered the worst entry in the franchise by its small but dedicated fanbase. No new entries in the series were made after this one[4], but Eighting Raizing has since gone on to develop other licensed fighting games since as the Naruto Clash of Ninja series, Fate Unlimited Codes and Tatsunokovs Capcom.
  • With the surprise success of Zombies Ate My Neighbors, Lucas Arts decided to take a similar property in development and rework it into a sequel. Ghoul Patrol was a bomb, with tedious, confusing gameplay and none of the original's fun spirit. At least there's still the Wii Virtual Console release of the original game.
  • Bubsy did well enough to get a few 2D sequels and a short-lived cartoon show. Then came Bubsy 3D, seen as one of the worst games ever made, which smashed head-first into the Polygon Ceiling and destroyed any possible future for the series as a whole.
  • The poor critical reception of the 2008 Alone in The Dark game killed off the series. It's even worse when you consider that even though the game developers delayed the release of the game for three years to try to stave off the bad publicity generated by Uwe Boll's failed film adaptation, some elements from the film still made it into the new game.
  • The video game adaptation of E.T.: The Extraterrestrial deserves a dishonorable mention here for temporarily acting as a partial medium killer. The other half is the disastrously bad Atari 2600 port of the arcade classic Pac-Man. The makers were so confident in Pac-Man's success that they made more game cartridges than there were consoles to run them on. Smart, guys. Real smart. It has been theorized numerous times that Atari expected a significant rise in 2600 sales after the release of E.T., so the additional cartridges would have make sense had it worked out that way.
  • Fatal Frame III's poor reviews and worse sales killed the franchise... except in Japan, where there has been another game released, and could conceivably be more.
    • III's performance had nothing to do with the reason IV did not get localized. IV was not localized because of game-breaking bugs that both Nintendo and Tecmo refused to take responsibility for (and Nintendo not wanting to bring over a very imperfect game). A remake of II is being made, however, which will test the franchise's viability anew.
  • Five years elapsed between Winback and its sequel, which in the end turned out completely awful and flopped.
  • Blood II: The Chosen is the reason Caleb won't live again anytime soon.
  • Myth III: The Wolf Age wasn't especially terrible, though it was significantly worse than the first two, and used the much-reviled Gamespy Arcade for multiplayer instead of Bungie.net, killing all hopes for a fourth installment.
  • Driv3r, which was not particularly good, ends on a Cliff Hanger with the protagonist flatlining after being shot by the Big Bad. Then Infogrames made an In Name Only sequel, Parallel Lines, and that didn't perform so well either. It took several years (and a new publisher) for the franchise to return to form with Driver: San Francisco, which has taken strides to distance itself from the Grand Theft Auto-cloned Driv3r and Parallel Lines by going back to the style of the original two games.
  • Jet Moto 3 was a decent game, but it sold poorly, resulting in the planned fourth game being cancelled. So far, there are no plans to revive the series.
  • The first two games in the Double Dragon series were pretty successful at the arcade and on consoles. The first NES game even sold out on the day of its release. But then came Double Dragon 3, which was farmed out to an external developer, featured a poorly-thought out plot involving Mineral MacGuffins, flat level designs, fewer moves than its predecessors, and an ill-conceived shopping gimmick obviously added as a transparent means of inserting more tokens into the machine. There were a couple more Double Dragon sequels after the third game, but the series never quite recovered from there: the NES version of the third game (while considered to be an improvement from the arcade version) is ridiculously hard, the SNES-exclusive fourth game was an Obvious Beta, and the last two games made before Technos went out of business were standard competitive fighting games that did nothing to stand out from an already overcrowded market. The movie "adaptation" of the series wasn't helping matters either...
  • Rumble Roses suffered from a Broken Base before it was even released, with both Anime and Professional Wrestling fans interested in the game. During development it became obvious the game was designed to cater to anime fans, but it was a decent enough wrestling game that the pro wrestling camp wasn't fully alienated. Then came the sequel, Rumble Roses XX, with a labyrinthine and ludicrously time-consuming unlocking system, a completely pathetic create-a-wrestler feature, and a boring street fighting mode that no one liked. The killer, though, was the "Queens Match Mode", done in a style of Japanese erotica that, through Values Dissonance, came across as extremely creepy Fan Disservice elsewhere, evaporating most of its international fanbase. To make matters worse, RRXX was released on a different platform (Xbox 360) than the original game (Play Station 2), killing much of its built-in audience.
  • Rogue Squadron 3: Rebel Strike suddenly introduced half-assed Third-Person Shooter levels to the series, among other negative aspects, resulting in much backlash. Then Lair put the final nail in Factor 5's coffin.
  • King's Quest: Mask of Eternity started with a very unwelcome Genre Shift, taking a franchise that prized itself on emphasizing a creative, non-violent option whenever possible and making a hack and slash third-person action game, with a Darker and Edgier tone that sharply veered from the gentle humor and fairy-tale style of the previous seven games. What really iced the cake was that none of the Daventry royal family got speaking parts -- the Player Character might as well have been from a different franchise entirely. Some of the fan sites refuse to call it a King's Quest game at all. Even the Sierra "King's Quest Collection" quietly ignores it, and Roberta Williams herself was so dissatisfied with it that she refused to call the game King's Quest VIII, removing the numeral from the title altogether. Mask of Eternity's dubious status is reflected in the Fan Remake of King's Quest II, as you will receive full points whether or not you choose to knight Connor (acknowledging him as part of the story arc).
  • Empire Earth III was a commercial and critical failure and is widely thought to be responsible for the end of the Empire Earth series and Mad Doc studios. Mad Doc even removed any trace of the game from their website before getting bought by Rockstar Games.
  • Fade To Black, the 3D sequel to Flashback, slammed into the Polygon Ceiling head-on, crushing hopes of further sequels or a revival.
  • There was a fourth Descent game planned, but it was cancelled due to poor sales of Descent 3 and Interplay going bankrupt. Interplay has recently come out of bankruptcy and reregistered the trademark, and there are rumors that the fourth game may yet be made.
  • The poor critical reception of Mario Tennis: Ultra Smash seems to have killed off the Mario Tennis series for the forseeable future.
  • Master of Orion and Master Of Orion 2 were classics in the turn-based strategy genre. A toxic combination of Executive Meddling, Sequelphobic developers, and some other bad decisions resulted in a Master Of Orion 3 that bore a striking resemblance to doing one's taxes and was about as much fun. The game bombed hard on release, and since then there has been little hope that the series will be revived. Brad Wardell of Stardock expressed interest in making a fourth game in 2008, but his comments were mere speculation and there has been no follow-up.
  • No One Lives Forever was killed by the terrible Interquel / Gaiden Game Contract J.A.C.K, causing Monolith Productions to abandon the series entirely.
  • This nearly happened to the Ys series, with the fifth installement, Kefin, The Lost City of Sand. Kefin, perhaps, wasn't bad bad - but the game was only available on the Super Nintendo (with a franchise that had deep roots on the PC and Turbo Grafx 16), had very bland, generic graphics that looked like every other game of its era (which was even worse in context since the setting was supposed to be very exotic) and the music was all simple MIDI-synth (when Ys had become famous partly due to its powerful CD-supported Redbook-audio soundtracks). Fan backlash in Japan was intense, and it would be seven years before a new Ys game was made; the only thing that prevented the total death of the franchise was the good performance of remakes of the first two games, which were already in development when Kefin came out and were put out to recoup development costs.
  • While SNK had previously attempted to move the Samurai Shodown franchise into the third dimension with Samurai Shodown 64[5] with limited success (average review scores, but new characters Shiki and Asura have appeared in other SNK games, such as Neo Geo Battle Coliseum), they tried again with Samurai Shodown Sen (an Interquel to the SamSho 64 games) more than a decade later. The game was a critical flop, with reviewers pointing out the confusing controls, poor character balancing, and ugly graphics.
  • Leisure Suit Larry: Magna Cum Laude stumbled into, but ultimately survived its transition into 3D. Its follow-up game, Box Office Bust, added platforming, shooting and brawling elements, none which the game did well at all. Reviewers everywhere ripped the game apart, giving it some of the lowest composite scores of any game in the modern console era.
  • The Western version of the first Kunio Kun game was a surprise hit in Britain, and Renegade became a Spin-Off series. The first two games were beloved by ZX Spectrum owners, but the third game -- with its bizarre Time Travel plot, graphics that were monochrome even by Speccy standards, and gobs of Fake Difficulty resulting from poor controls, missing moves, and strict time limits -- spelt an end to the series.
  • After Atari's buy-out on Humongous Entertainment, the company tried to continue Putt-Putt and Pajama Sam. Putt-Putt's last game wasn't all too bad, it had some poor voice acting and way too much recycled content as well as was boring, but it's at least playable compared to their attempt at Pajama Sam, which had a very cringe-worthy choice of voice actor, a lame plot, Loads and Loads of Loading, and several other things. They didn't sell or score well enough to continue onward, while the Backyard Sports series continued to get a worse treatment.
  • Lunar: Dragon Song seems to have done this for the Lunar series; stemming from poor sales, bad reviews, and absurd gameplay mechanics. There hasn't been a non-remake Lunar title since Dragon Song's release.
  • Baten Kaitos: Origins came out near the end of the Game Cube's lifespan, four months before the Wii launch. Despite improving massively on EWLO's flaws, it was overlooked by a gaming community clamoring for next-gen consoles and never sold particularly well. With the rumored Nintendo DS installment canceled, the future of the series looks bleak.
  • Majin Tensei was a decently-received Mega Ten spinoff in the Strategy RPG genre, which ended up doing well enough to recieve one more successful sequel. Then came Ronde for the Saturn. Development was farmed out to Access while Atlus worked on other games, resulting in a game so legendarily awful that the release of a preview demo caused literally thousands of canceled preorders -- numbers that were virtually unprecedented in Japan at the time. Not only did it kill the Majin Tensei series (the only release in the series since was a cell phone game that came out 10 years later), but Atlus wouldn't release another Strategy RPG Mega Ten until Devil Survivor, twelve years later, which had entirely different gameplay from the earlier series to boot.
  • Codemaster's separate successor to the original Operation Flashpoint series went down the drain already after its second installment, Red River. Unlike the first one, Dragon Rising, Red River took what made the series unique, threw nearly all of it out and turned itself into a generic Modern Warfare clone, a move that appealed to fans of neither series, so guess how well that went... Worse yet, Red River doubled as a Creator Killer, since Codemasters promptly closed down its Guildford studio after the game's failure. Meanwhile, OFP's original creators are still going strong with their Arm A series, apparently being the winner in the Dueling Games affair they had with the Codemasters' Spiritual Successor.
  • Crystal Kingdom Dizzy ended up being this for the Dizzy series of Spectrum games. A full-priced title with a drop in quality from the previous budget titles, its relative failure would mean the planned next game Wonderland Dizzy would never be released.
  • Virtual Hydlide, the attempted reboot of Hydlide in 3D, killed off a series that had been moderately well appreciated in Japan during the 8-bit era.
  • Rygar: The Legendary Adventure was a good game, but didn't perform well enough to continue the series. It was less-than-spectacularly ported to the Wii several years hereafter, sealing the fate of the franchise. At one point, there was a Rygar 2 announced, but it ended up being Vaporware.


Western Animation

The failure of The Avengers: United They Stand was the final nail in the coffin of the (loosely defined, but still there) Marvel animated universe that aired on Fox Kids throughout the '90s. All subsequent Marvel cartoons have taken place in other continuities and aired on other networks.

  • Ever wondered why you don't hear much about Felix the Cat anymore outside of merchandising or that 2004 direct-to-video Christmas film? You can pin the blame on the failure of Felix the Cat: The Movie. Lull Destruction, poor animation and lip-syncing, a Random Events Plot (and a poorly executed one at that) and numerous plot holes can make this movie painful to watch for even the most avid Felix fan. The 90's cartoon The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat attempted to revive the franchise, but an unsuccessful retool in the second season quickly brought Felix to an early grave yet again.

Even before those was the failure of the early 30's sound cartoons; Pat Sullivan made little effort to upgrade the Felix cartoons to sound (not helped by his private life being in shambles due to his wife's alleged suicide and his heavy alcoholism) and when he did, they were rushed, sloppy, and far behind the times, resulting in the Felix cartoon series getting forgotten by the far more popular Mickey Mouse shorts—Sullivan's subsequent death put the final nail in the coffin for his animation studio. An attempt to revive the cartoons was done in the mid 1930's by Van Beuren Studios; while the cartoons were seemingly well received despite having little in common with the character's previous appearances, when RKO negated Van Beuren's contract in favor of distributing Disney, it caused Van Beuren to go belly-up, thus sending Felix to an early grave yet again, after only three color shorts. What caused the franchise to not fully die out is that while the cartoons were put on ice, Felix still ran in newspaper and magazine comics for quite a long time.

  • Blue's Clues has several moments that potentially killed the show. Steve Burns leaving was the first one. For some reason, some parents and fans of Steve just didn't find Donovan Patton (AKA Joe) Adorkable enough. However, the show managed to pull on for another 5 years with Patton as host. The second, clearer one, was the Spin-Off Blue's Room in 2006. The many changes made to the spinoff- specifically, the non-appearance of many of the cast from the main show and that Blue can now talk, aside from the change to puppetry, gave the franchise one year to live before production of both shows ceased in 2007 and the franchise slowly faded off into obscurity.
  • After Beast Machines there was supposed to be a sequel series (complete with prototype toys made) called Transtech and it would have continued even further into the series timeline. While Beast Machines still had solid ratings, the reception was mediocre and the toys themselves were subpar and didn't sell. Recognizing they had taken the Beast era franchise as far as it could go, they scrapped Transtech and imported Transformers Robots in Disguise while they worked on a complete Continuity Reboot with Transformers Armada. This did have the interesting effect of splitting Transformers into many Alternate Universes rather than just Alternate Continuities.
    If you're still confused over why it's considered a Franchise Killer, let's just say this; up until Beast Machines, all Transformers franchises were made in or spun off from ones made in the West; after Beast Machines, no Transformers series would be developed in the West until almost a decade later.
  • After the second season of Gargoyles, creator Greg Weisman jumped ship, and a third season called Gargoyles: The Goliath Chronicles sank the franchise on TV. Greg wrote a comic series to replace the third season, but unfortunately it didn't sell well enough to keep up once Disney hiked up the licensing fee.
  • The Holly Hobbie and Friends direct-to-DVD series has an interesting case of this when the producers of the show decided to change several aspects of the franchise from the fifth DVD on. Said DVD, Fabulous Fashion Show, was so badly reviewed across the board, with an overall 1.3/5 on Amazon with 18 reviews, compared to 4+ star averages for the others, that it all but killed the franchise. The subsequent DVD, Marvelous Makeover, rebounded to 3.3 stars, but the various changes that had been made to the series, such as moving to 22 minute stories and replacing most of the voices, were still generally poorly regarded. Making things worse was the shoddy voice replacement job- the new cast sounds nothing like the old one, and while they opted to use a Non-Singing Voice for the titular character, the singing voice and speaking voice weren't even matched either. Aside from that, the characterizations were all botched and the characters were passing the Idiot Ball around. The show's final picture book release was seen a bit later in 2008, and afterwards, production on all media was discontinued entirely.
  • Universal released an animated The Jetsons feature film in 1990, complete with Conspicuous CG, a Green Aesop played out with a Gang of Critters that was essentially a rewrite of an old episode of Star Trek, and reuniting nearly all of the surviving original cast members save for Elroy Jetson, whose voice actor Daws Butler had died in 1988 and was replaced with a young Patrick Zimmerman and Judy Jetson being voiced not by Janet Waldo but by '80s pop starlet Tiffany thanks to Executive Meddling. The film also marked the last performance ever of noted voice artist Mel Blanc (Mr. Spacely), who was still recording while in the hospital (as he had years before then) and died before the film was completed, as well as George O'Hanlon (George), who by that point had to have the lines read and acted to him before recording, who also passed away before he could quite finish the film. Both Blanc and O'Hanlon's remaining lines had to be completed by a sound-alike. Penny Singleton did not die during production like Blanc and O'Hanlon, but the movie remained her last acting role until her death thirteen years later in 2003. Coming on the heels of the 1980's Jetsons revival (the new syndicated episodes and two TV movies), this film's disappointing box office and harsh critical reviews were apparently enough to send the franchise back into hibernation. It has stayed there ever since, a potential live-action film being stuck in Development Hell for years notwithstanding.
  • In a rare example of a character being a one-person Franchise Killer, Elmyra managed to be the prime cause for the untimely demise of Pinky and The Brain.
  • The negative reception and ratings failure of Planet Sheen has killed off all interest in the Jimmy Neutron franchise for the forseeable future.
  • The abrupt cancellation of Ren & Stimpy: Adult Party Cartoon put the series on the kibosh, as no plans to revive the series have come about. The lackluster sales of the DVD sets didn't help this. It also helped put an early end to the entirety of the then-new Spike's animation block, thus taking down Stripperella (which was also hampered by a lawsuit) and Gary the Rat along with it, although the former was at least popular enough once it hit DVD...only to see more negative reception pile on over the years.
  • Scooby-Doo in Arabian Nights helped to kill off the franchises of Yogi Bear (whose fate was set in motion by the failure of Yo Yogi! three years earlier) and Magilla Gorilla, as this was Magilla's last animated appearance, and the final cartoon by Hanna-Barbera to feature Yogi Bear and Scooby-Doo, although the latter was revived with great success in 1998 by Warner Bros. with Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island, making Scooby a Cash Cow Franchise for them in the years since. Yogi Bear has since had a few new cartoons by John Kricfalusi, but hardly anybody's seen them, as well as a financially successful, but critically ravaged, live-action film.
  • The ratings failure of Super Mario World, along with the cancellation of Captain N: The Game Master and the closure of NBC's Saturday morning cartoon block, killed off any further attempts to keep the Super Mario Bros. on television. The only subsequent Super Mario Bros.-related television series made since then was The Super Mario Challenge, a live-action game show from the United Kingdom that aired and ended around the same time as World, as well as the Donkey Kong Country CGI cartoon to a much lesser extent. However, Super Mario World may be one of the rarest examples of a cartoon being Vindicated by YouTube Poop.
  • The Rugrats: Tales From the Crib series was a direct-to-DVD series of Fractured Fairy Tale-esque movies, which attempted to make the original series popular again after it ended. However, there were only two entries in the series; "Snow White" and "Three Jacks and a Beanstalk", as the latter failed to impress. This also forced the "Pre-School Daze" spin-off (which had its episodes included as bonuses on the DVDs) to end at only four episodes.
  • The failure of Beware the Batman (not helped by being screwed over to a degree seldom seen before or since), along with Cartoon Network's obsession with Teen Titans Go!, led to the killing of DC Nation. Though putting the block on hiatus previously for more Johnny Test (which was the previous network favorite, and unlike Teen Titans Go! didn't even have the fan-base or ratings) didn't help either.
  • The poor critical reception and massive controversy surrounding the 2016 reboot of The Powerpuff Girls seems to have killed interest in the franchise off for good.
  • With The Boondocks, when series creator Aaron McGruder left after Season 3 due to a contract dispute with Sony Pictures and [[[adult swim]]], Season 4 was developed without him. Due to heavy fan backlash against the fourth and final season, along with aborted plans for a live-action feature film based around supporting character Uncle Ruckus, it's unlikely that the franchise will continue.
  • Subverted with the My Little Pony franchise. After Generation 3 concluded with the decent Twinkle Wish Adventure special, Hasbro released two entries in the Newborn Cuties sub-series called So Many Different Ways to Play and Over Two Rainbows. The Deranged Animation and nonexistent budget of these specials would've certainly killed the franchise had Lauren Faust not been called in to reboot the entire franchise. The result? The hugely successful My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, which continues to this day.
  1. after Midway Games, the franchise's original publisher, fell apart
  2. possibly an instance of Screwed by the Network, as ABC had to know it wasn't going to get much of anything by dumping the show against The X Factor and The Big Bang Theory
  3. The sarin gas attacks in the Tokyo subway and the Great Hanshin Earthquake, both in March of that year, made the 1995 season's Darker and Edgier plot very untenable.
  4. rumors of a new entry in the series due out in 2012 were revealed to be a hoax
  5. as in the Hyper Neo-Geo 64 arcade board, not Nintendo 64