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== Anime and Manga ==
 
== Anime and Manga ==
 
* A truly bizarre case is ''[[GaoGaiGar]]'' and ''[[Betterman]]'', which take place in the same universe despite the former being a [[Super Robot]] [[Reconstruction]] and the later a [[Real Robot]] horror series.
 
* A truly bizarre case is ''[[GaoGaiGar]]'' and ''[[Betterman]]'', which take place in the same universe despite the former being a [[Super Robot]] [[Reconstruction]] and the later a [[Real Robot]] horror series.
* ''[[Dragon Ball]]'' (and thus ''Z'' and ''GT''), ''[[Doctor Slump]]'', ''Nekomajin'', ''Jaco the Galatic Patrolman'', '''and pretty much every other manga written by Akira Toriyama occupy the same universe.'''
+
* ''[[Dragon Ball]]'' (and thus ''Z'' and ''GT''), ''[[Doctor Slump]]'', ''Nekomajin'', ''Jaco the Galatic Patrolman'', '''and pretty much every other manga written by Akira Toriyama''' occupy the same universe.
 
* ''[[Cromartie High School]]'' and ''[[Di Gi Charat]]''
 
* ''[[Cromartie High School]]'' and ''[[Di Gi Charat]]''
 
   
 
== Comic Books ==
 
== Comic Books ==
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== Film ==
 
== Film ==
* Because Marvel Films holds the rights to all [[Marvel Comics]] characters not given to other studios ([[Spider-Man (film)|Spider-Man]], [[X-Men (film)|X-Men]], [[Blade]], [[Daredevil (film)|Daredevil]], etc), they have managed to bridge together a single continuity family with links between the characters stories. Nick Fury makes a cameo in ''[[Iron Man (film)|Iron Man]]'' referring Tony Stark to the "Avenger Initiative," Tony appears in the film of ''[[The Incredible Hulk (film)|The Incredible Hulk]]'' talking to General Ross about putting a team together (also having a nod to ''[[Captain America]]''), ''[[Iron Man]]'' II gave many hints to ''[[The Mighty Thor]]'', and all of this coalesced into ''[[The Avengers (Comic Book)|The Avengers]]'' movie as a [[Crisis Crossover]]. This led into future films, such as ''Guardians of the Galaxy''. In addition, Marvel also started to acquire several of the characters held by other studios, with the current exceptions of Namor and the Ultraverse charcters (due to Disney currently buying assets of Fox), and have integrated them into the universe, be they in new films or in TV series.
+
* Because Marvel Films holds the rights to all [[Marvel Comics]] characters not given to other studios, they have managed to bridge together a single continuity family with links between the characters stories. Nick Fury makes a cameo in ''[[Iron Man (film)|Iron Man]]'' referring Tony Stark to the "Avenger Initiative," Tony appears in the film of ''[[The Incredible Hulk (film)|The Incredible Hulk]]'' talking to General Ross about putting a team together (also having a nod to ''[[Captain America]]''), ''[[Iron Man]]'' II gave many hints to ''[[The Mighty Thor]]'', and all of this coalesced into ''[[The Avengers (Comic Book)|The Avengers]]'' movie as a [[Crisis Crossover]]. This led into future films, such as ''Guardians of the Galaxy'' and ''Ant-Man'', as well as television shows and one-off short films that are rarely acknowledged by the films. In addition, Marvel also started to acquire several of the characters held by other studios, with the current exceptions of Namor and the Ultraverse charcters (due to Disney currently buying assets of Fox), and have integrated them into the universe, be they in new films or in TV series.
   
 
== Literature ==
 
== Literature ==
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* The [[DCLAU]], the Disney Channel Live Action Universe, which is comprised of ''[[Even Stevens]]'', ''[[That's So Raven]]'', ''[[The Suite Life of Zack and Cody|The Suite Life of Zack and Cody/On Deck]]'', ''[[Hannah Montana]]'', ''[[Cory in The House]]'', ''[[Wizards of Waverly Place]]'', ''[[Zeke and Luther]]'', ''[[I'm in The Band]]'', ''[[Pair of Kings]]'', ''[[ANT Farm]]'', and ''[[Kickin It]]''.
 
* The [[DCLAU]], the Disney Channel Live Action Universe, which is comprised of ''[[Even Stevens]]'', ''[[That's So Raven]]'', ''[[The Suite Life of Zack and Cody|The Suite Life of Zack and Cody/On Deck]]'', ''[[Hannah Montana]]'', ''[[Cory in The House]]'', ''[[Wizards of Waverly Place]]'', ''[[Zeke and Luther]]'', ''[[I'm in The Band]]'', ''[[Pair of Kings]]'', ''[[ANT Farm]]'', and ''[[Kickin It]]''.
 
* The various seasons of ''[[Power Rangers]]'' are shown to exist in the same Universe. This was most obvious in the early years of the series, which had one, continuing storyline culminating in ''[[Power Rangers in Space]]''. Later seasons tend to downplay this, but the various crossovers and reappearing characters establish that the universe is the same. However, ''[[Power Rangers RPM]]'' takes place in an [[Alternate Universe]], something not made obvious until its crossover with ''[[Power Rangers Samurai]]''.
 
* The various seasons of ''[[Power Rangers]]'' are shown to exist in the same Universe. This was most obvious in the early years of the series, which had one, continuing storyline culminating in ''[[Power Rangers in Space]]''. Later seasons tend to downplay this, but the various crossovers and reappearing characters establish that the universe is the same. However, ''[[Power Rangers RPM]]'' takes place in an [[Alternate Universe]], something not made obvious until its crossover with ''[[Power Rangers Samurai]]''.
  +
** ''Masked Rider'' and ''Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation'' are also established as being in the universe via crossovers, though ''Time Force'' shows that the majority of the former is a [[Show Within a Show]]. In printed material from the 1990s, ''Big Bad Beetleborgs'' was also added, and ''VR Troopers'' flip-books appeared alongside PR material, and a character from VR Troopers was meant to be Zeo's Gold Ranger. However, ''The Mystic Knights of Tir Na Nog'' and ''Los Luchadores'' remain the only Saban Toku to not be connected to PR in any way.
  +
** Meanwhile in Japan, ''Super Sentai'' is in the same universe as ''Kamen Rider'' and ''Metal Heroes'', while the ''Toei Fushigi Comedy series'' remained unconnected for years until the ''Gavan'' revival.
 
* ''[[JAG]]'',''[[NCIS]]'', ''[[NCIS: Los Angeles]]'' and the new ''[[Hawaii Five-O|Hawaii Five-0]]'' are a shared world, as evidenced by Kensi's presence in Hawaii.
 
* ''[[JAG]]'',''[[NCIS]]'', ''[[NCIS: Los Angeles]]'' and the new ''[[Hawaii Five-O|Hawaii Five-0]]'' are a shared world, as evidenced by Kensi's presence in Hawaii.
 
* All the ''[[Law and Order]]'' series share a world with ''[[Homicide: Life On the Street]]'', due to [[John Munch]].
 
* All the ''[[Law and Order]]'' series share a world with ''[[Homicide: Life On the Street]]'', due to [[John Munch]].
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** The first ''Rival Schools'' features Sakura as a playable character (although, her blood type is different from the one given in the ''Alpha'' series). Moreover, the ''Nekketsu Seisyun Nikki'' spin-offs has Hinata studying the "Ken Masters style of Karate" and Iinchou/Chairperson learning "Saikyou-Style" through mail. On the other hand, there are a few date discrepancies according to the first game's intro and Sakura's storyline (in which she's yet to meet Ryu, placing the series pre-''[[Street Fighter Alpha]] 3'').
 
** The first ''Rival Schools'' features Sakura as a playable character (although, her blood type is different from the one given in the ''Alpha'' series). Moreover, the ''Nekketsu Seisyun Nikki'' spin-offs has Hinata studying the "Ken Masters style of Karate" and Iinchou/Chairperson learning "Saikyou-Style" through mail. On the other hand, there are a few date discrepancies according to the first game's intro and Sakura's storyline (in which she's yet to meet Ryu, placing the series pre-''[[Street Fighter Alpha]] 3'').
 
** While not quite part of the main ''Street Fighter'' continuity, the Arika-developed ''[[Street Fighter EX]]'' games shares a couple of characters (Allen and Blair) with their independently developed arcade game ''[[Fighting Layer]]''.
 
** While not quite part of the main ''Street Fighter'' continuity, the Arika-developed ''[[Street Fighter EX]]'' games shares a couple of characters (Allen and Blair) with their independently developed arcade game ''[[Fighting Layer]]''.
*** Other games, such as ''[[Asura's Wrath]]''<ref>Ryu and Akuma's appearance in the DLC</ref>, ''[[Strider]]''<ref>Zeku from Street Fighter 5 is said to desire founding a ninja organization called the "Striders", and he has many of Hiryu's moves</ref>, ''[[Darkstalkers]]''<ref>Felicia wants to have Blanka as her leading man, and some of the DS characters (though possibly cosplayers) show up on Ken's Alpha 2 stage. It can also be taken that Anita grew up to be Rose</ref> (and possibly henceforth ''Ghosts & Goblins''), ''Forgotten Worlds'' <ref> It is teased that Two-P (now Two-III) is the second player from the game, with amnesia</ref>, ''Pirate Ship Higemaru'' <ref>Higemaru has a Street Fighter profile</ref>, and even ''Tekken'' <ref>Akuma's role in the seventh</ref> are also implied to be in this universe.
+
*** Other games, such as ''[[Asura's Wrath]]''<ref>Ryu and Akuma's appearance in the DLC</ref>, ''[[Strider]]''<ref>Zeku from Street Fighter 5 is said to desire founding a ninja organization called the "Striders", and he has many of Hiryu's moves. Strider also shows up in the background of Ken's stage in Alpha 2.</ref>, ''[[Darkstalkers]]''<ref>Felicia wants to have Blanka as her leading man, some of the DS characters (though possibly cosplayers) show up on Ken's Alpha 2 stage, and the Wraith from Slam Masters II is said to be involved with the Makai realm. It can also be taken that Anita grew up to be Rose</ref> (and possibly henceforth ''Ghosts & Goblins'' & ''Maximo'')<ref>Both set in the Makai realm</ref>, ''Forgotten Worlds'' <ref> It is teased that Two-P (now Two-III) is the second player from the game, with amnesia</ref>, ''Pirate Ship Higemaru'' <ref>Higemaru has a Street Fighter profile</ref>, and even ''Tekken'' <ref>Akuma's role in the seventh</ref> are also implied to be in this universe. A number of other Capcom games are indicated as a [[Show Within a Show]] in this universe <ref>For example, ''Three Wonders''</ref>
 
* Koei's [[Warriors Orochi]] was made to confirm that it's series [[Dynasty Warriors]] and [[Samurai Warriors]] take place in the same universe but the second trailer of Warriors Orochi 3 more or less confirms Koei's other games [[Warriors: Legends of Troy]] and [[Blade Storm The Hundred Years War]] due to the presence of Achilles and Jeanne D'Arc. But it also confirms that it's business partner Tecmo series [[Ninja Gaiden]] and [[Dead or Alive]] series take place there due to the presence of Ryu Hayabusa. (By extension it might also might also put it in the same universe as the [[Halo Series]] due to the Spartan Nicole's Presence in Dead Or Alive 4.)
 
* Koei's [[Warriors Orochi]] was made to confirm that it's series [[Dynasty Warriors]] and [[Samurai Warriors]] take place in the same universe but the second trailer of Warriors Orochi 3 more or less confirms Koei's other games [[Warriors: Legends of Troy]] and [[Blade Storm The Hundred Years War]] due to the presence of Achilles and Jeanne D'Arc. But it also confirms that it's business partner Tecmo series [[Ninja Gaiden]] and [[Dead or Alive]] series take place there due to the presence of Ryu Hayabusa. (By extension it might also might also put it in the same universe as the [[Halo Series]] due to the Spartan Nicole's Presence in Dead Or Alive 4.)
 
* The ''Ultima'' series features references to the ''Wing Commander'' series. In ''Ultima I'' there were spaceships that in ''Ultima 7: The Black Gate'' was explained to be the spaceship of the Kilrathi. As pointed out by [[The Spoony Experiment|Spoony]] [http://spoonyexperiment.com/2011/02/01/ultima-7-the-black-gate-review/ here.]
 
* The ''Ultima'' series features references to the ''Wing Commander'' series. In ''Ultima I'' there were spaceships that in ''Ultima 7: The Black Gate'' was explained to be the spaceship of the Kilrathi. As pointed out by [[The Spoony Experiment|Spoony]] [http://spoonyexperiment.com/2011/02/01/ultima-7-the-black-gate-review/ here.]
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== Western Animation ==
 
== Western Animation ==
* ''[[Rugrats]] ''(and therefore ''[[All Grown Up]]''), ''[[The Wild Thornberries]]'', and ''[[Rocket Power]]''. Presumably also ''[[Aaahh Real Monsters|Aaaah! Real Monsters!]], ''as the three main characters made an appearance on the formermost.
+
* ''[[Rugrats]] ''(and therefore ''[[All Grown Up]]'' and ''Angelica & Suzie's Pre-School Daze''), ''[[The Wild Thornberries]]'', and, only through a comic book story, ''[[Rocket Power]]''. Presumably also ''[[Aaahh Real Monsters|Aaaah! Real Monsters!]], ''as the three main characters made an appearance on the formermost.
 
* ''[[Family Guy]]'' and ''[[The Cleveland Show]]'', along with ''[[American Dad]]''.
 
* ''[[Family Guy]]'' and ''[[The Cleveland Show]]'', along with ''[[American Dad]]''.
 
* A subtle link exists among four of Marvel and Sunbow's [[Merchandise-Driven]] 1980s cartoons — the character of Hector Ramirez, a [[No Celebrities Were Harmed|thinly veiled]] [[Parody]] of Geraldo Rivera, appears in ''[[Inhumanoids]]'', ''[[G.I. Joe]]'', ''[[Transformers Generation 1]]'' and ''[[Jem]]'', though this has not been confirmed.
 
* A subtle link exists among four of Marvel and Sunbow's [[Merchandise-Driven]] 1980s cartoons — the character of Hector Ramirez, a [[No Celebrities Were Harmed|thinly veiled]] [[Parody]] of Geraldo Rivera, appears in ''[[Inhumanoids]]'', ''[[G.I. Joe]]'', ''[[Transformers Generation 1]]'' and ''[[Jem]]'', though this has not been confirmed.
** In Transformers Animated: The [[All Spark]] Almanac II, Vector Prime confirms that all these shows and [[C/O/P/S/]] take place in the Transformers Generation 1 continuity. Early plans for the first'' [[My Little Pony]]'' movie would have had some characters from Transformers and G.I. Joe show up, meaning it is probably in this universe as well.
+
** In Transformers Animated: The [[All Spark]] Almanac II, Vector Prime confirms that all these shows and [[C/O/P/S/]] take place in the Transformers Generation 1 continuity. Early plans for the first'' [[My Little Pony]]'' movie would have had some characters from Transformers and G.I. Joe show up, meaning it is probably in this universe as well. Vector Prime would later clarify that ''M.A.S.K.'' was not part of it, and generally existed somewhere outside the Transformers multiverse. No comment on any other Hasbro/Sunbow shows yet.
* Since the ''[[Looney Tunes]]'' characters are the teachers to the ''[[Tiny Toon Adventures]]'' characters, this makes an obvious example. A not-so-obvious addenum to this is that the ''Looney Tunes'' characters also made several cameos on ''[[Animaniacs]]'' and ''[[Histeria!]]'', which therefore means they too share the same universe. Additionally, the ''[[Animaniacs]]'' characters made cameos on ''[[Freakazoid]]!'' (and vice versa) so this also makes this part of the WB Animated Universe ([[Fan Nickname|as it has been nicknamed]]).
+
* Since the ''[[Looney Tunes]]'' characters are the teachers to the ''[[Tiny Toon Adventures]]'' characters, this makes an obvious example. A not-so-obvious addenum to this is that the ''Looney Tunes'' and ''Tiny Toons'' characters also made several cameos on ''[[Animaniacs]]'' and ''[[Histeria!]]'', which therefore means they too share the same universe, cemented by Elmyra being added to Pinky and the Brain. Additionally, the ''[[Animaniacs]]'' characters made cameos on ''[[Freakazoid]]!'' (and vice versa), but only in a [[Welcome to the Real World]] storyline. We can also add ''[[Taz-Mania]]'' and ''[[The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries]]'', two more animated series at the time featuring Looney Tunes characters.
 
* While it's pretty obvious that ''[[DuckTales]]'' and ''[[Darkwing Duck (animation)|Darkwing Duck]]'' share the same universe due to sharing one of the main characters, ''[[The Legend of the Chaos God]]'' storyline in ''[[Disney Adventures]]'' also placed ''[[Tale Spin]]'', ''[[Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers (animation)|Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers]]'' and ''[[Goof Troop]]'' in it as well.
 
* While it's pretty obvious that ''[[DuckTales]]'' and ''[[Darkwing Duck (animation)|Darkwing Duck]]'' share the same universe due to sharing one of the main characters, ''[[The Legend of the Chaos God]]'' storyline in ''[[Disney Adventures]]'' also placed ''[[Tale Spin]]'', ''[[Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers (animation)|Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers]]'' and ''[[Goof Troop]]'' in it as well.
 
** Disney did something similar years later by placing all of its then-running shows into the same universe by giving each show a [[Crossover]] with ''[[Lilo and Stitch: The Series]]'': ''[[Kim Possible]]'', ''[[American Dragon Jake Long]]'', ''[[The Proud Family]]'' and ''[[Recess]]''.
 
** Disney did something similar years later by placing all of its then-running shows into the same universe by giving each show a [[Crossover]] with ''[[Lilo and Stitch: The Series]]'': ''[[Kim Possible]]'', ''[[American Dragon Jake Long]]'', ''[[The Proud Family]]'' and ''[[Recess]]''.
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*** The CN Invaded event was one of four [[E En E]] specials that were mentioned in the [[E En E]] movie.
 
*** The CN Invaded event was one of four [[E En E]] specials that were mentioned in the [[E En E]] movie.
 
** Earlier, it was established that ''[[The Powerpuff Girls]]'' and ''[[Dexter's Laboratory|Dexters Laboratory]]'' shared a universe. While Dexter and the girls sadly never (offically) met, both parties have met [[The Justice Friends]]. Dexter himself made constant [[The Cameo|cameos]] in PPG to the point where it was practically a [[Running Gag]].
 
** Earlier, it was established that ''[[The Powerpuff Girls]]'' and ''[[Dexter's Laboratory|Dexters Laboratory]]'' shared a universe. While Dexter and the girls sadly never (offically) met, both parties have met [[The Justice Friends]]. Dexter himself made constant [[The Cameo|cameos]] in PPG to the point where it was practically a [[Running Gag]].
** Grim Adventures had many appearances by Hanna-Barbera characters, meaning it's part of the H-B universe. This means [[Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law|''Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law'']]'' ''is also presumably part of this.
+
** Grim Adventures had many appearances by Hanna-Barbera characters, meaning it's likely part of the H-B universe. This means [[Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law|''Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law'']] is also presumably part of this. Henceforth also ''[[Space Ghost: Coast to Coast]]'', a link further proven by his appearance in the ''Punch Time Explosion'' game as the narrator, and thus ''Aqua Teen Hunger Force''.
  +
   
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 15:38, 11 October 2018

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When The Verse is shaped by multiple creators, writing independently. Many different comic book titles are set in a collective continuity, making it easy to have a Crossover. In contrast, a single TV series with multiple writers is just the Verse with subcontractors. Likewise, when different continuities by the same author are tied together later by an Intercontinuity Crossover, that's Canon Welding.

The nature of the Shared Universe — multiple independent creators creating one continuity — can easily lead to a Continuity Snarl if it lasts a long time and the different creators don't take care to keep things straight. If a Shared Universe starts relying too heavily on continuity, especially if it's obscure or too reliant on each work in the Verse, a Continuity Lock Out may occur. When creators disagree on the direction the Verse should take, they may fight Armed with Canon. If some corners of the continuity are "off limits" to some characters to avoid theme-drift or plot derailing, then Superman Stays Out of Gotham.

When they go back centuries, and even further and further, long before copyrights and trademarks , the Shared Universe turns into one or more actual mythologies. Compare with The Verse, Expanded Universe and Canon. Contrast with Shout-Out.

Examples of Shared Universe include:


Anime and Manga

Comic Books

  • Various dimensions of Marvel Comics.
  • Similar to Marvel, The DCU is an examples of this, with multiple monthly titles who might not even have the same creative team month to month.
    • And those two are connected by the Amalgam dimension, several canonical crossovers and a few characters who break the fourth wall.
  • Ninja High School and Gold Digger loosely share a universe and occasionally engage in crossovers or use each other's villains.
  • In the Savage Dragon, there is a shared universe that not only consists of the rest of the Image Universe but also creator-owned properties such as Hellboy, Madman, and Bone have made appearances. Aside from that, Erik Larsen likes to slip in characters from the Marvel Universe and DC Universe. Often, this consists of characters showing up far in the background, being mention in passing but not shown, or having a single boot or glove visible that indicates that those characters are there but enough is concealed to avoid copyright issues.
    • Virtually all of the early Image Comics titles were set in the same universe, with the stars of any given book often making guest appearances in another. However, one of the core ideas of the company was and always has been creator ownership. This caused a Continuity Snarl no less than twice; Once, when Rob Liefeld picked up his characters and left to create Awesome Comics (though he returned after Awesome folded), and again when Jim Lee took his properties, which encompassed about half a dozen titles, and made his Wildstorm Studios into a DC imprint.
    • Currently, Invincible shoulders a lot of weight when it comes to establishing a larger Image universe. Characters from Kirkman's other books popping up frequently, and big events (like the funeral of the Guardians of the Globe or the Invincible War) feature just about anyone who's anyone in the company at the time. At one point Mark was even a member of the Pact, a team consisting of him, Zephyr Noble, Fire Breather, and Shadowhawk.

Fan Fiction

  • Dangerverse fans have written numerous fics of their own set in the same universe, many of which have been integrated into the canon, as well as Alternate Universe Fic aplenty. The author has no qualms about working in ideas from her friends and fans.
  • The AU Shadowverse stories about Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha characters Lutecia and Vivio, created by Radiant Beam, also involve many other writers who write about secondary characters in that universe. Each of the various authors tend to write around different themes (spy-thriller, emotional drama, political-thriller, etc) despite writing in the same AU.
  • More than a decade after the release of Under The Bridge, Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers fan fiction writers love to include enough elements from The Nowakverse into stories of their own, especially the main original characters.


Film

  • Because Marvel Films holds the rights to all Marvel Comics characters not given to other studios, they have managed to bridge together a single continuity family with links between the characters stories. Nick Fury makes a cameo in Iron Man referring Tony Stark to the "Avenger Initiative," Tony appears in the film of The Incredible Hulk talking to General Ross about putting a team together (also having a nod to Captain America), Iron Man II gave many hints to The Mighty Thor, and all of this coalesced into The Avengers movie as a Crisis Crossover. This led into future films, such as Guardians of the Galaxy and Ant-Man, as well as television shows and one-off short films that are rarely acknowledged by the films. In addition, Marvel also started to acquire several of the characters held by other studios, with the current exceptions of Namor and the Ultraverse charcters (due to Disney currently buying assets of Fox), and have integrated them into the universe, be they in new films or in TV series.

Literature

  • The Cthulhu Mythos is a famous example of this; professional fanfiction set in his world is not only published, but was also acknowledged and supported by Lovecraft before his death.
  • CS Lewis linked his world to his friend Tolkien's universe in That Hideous Strength.
  • Susannah Clarke's short story The Duke of Wellington Misplaces His Horse connects the universes of her novel Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell to that of Neil Gaiman's novel Stardust.
    • Hang on, isn't Stardust already implied to be part of the American Gods -verse already too?
  • The Wild Cards books were designed as Shared Universe Anthologies from the ground up.
  • Border Town is a city between the "real world" and Faerie. It was originally created by Terri Windling, but Emma Bull, Will Shetterly, Charles de Lint and several other writers have written stories set there.
  • 1632 was originally to be a one-off novel, but due to favorable fan response went beyond that, later expanding into The Grantville Gazette, one of whose main goals is to give previously unknown authors a way to be published, and paid for their work. Unlike with many anthologies, the contributions from other authors affect the "main" story line works. There are very few aspects that are truly forbidden to these authors, primarily those where it would interfere with the prerogatives of Eric Flint, the series creator.
  • Thieves' World was a dark fantasy Shared Universe created by Robert Asprin in the late 1970s. It had contributors like Poul Anderson, John Brunner and Marion Zimmer Bradley and generated 12 anthlogies of short stories, seven official novels and a bunch of roleplaying adaptations before writing stopped in 1989. It preemptively dealt with Continuity Snarl with a preface framing story about an old timer talking to a new arrival in the city about how one should not believe everything in the stories one hears, as everyone spins the stories to fit their agendas, to make themselves sound more important in a good story, or less to blame in a bad one, and two people telling the same story may have wildly different variations.
  • The universe of the Bolo super-tanks has been shared by everyone from John Ringo to Mercedes Lackey.
  • The Russian Death Zone series is worked on by several known Russian sci-fi authors and is loosely based on the STALKER games. Unfortunately, this tends to create certain lapses in continuity. For example, in Andrei Livadny's novels, the Order is portrayed as a rational group that believes in the existence of an otherdimentional point known as the Node based purely on empirical evidence. In Roman Glushkov's books, they are fanatics spouting religious nonsense about the Holy Node before sacrificing themselves for the cause. It could be explained that these are different members of the Order interpreting their teachings, if they were not using the same characters.
  • The Liavek anthology series- stories by several different authors, set in and around the titular city. Apparently Liavek started out as a RPG invented by Will Shetterly for his writer's group, The Scribblies; they later fleshed out the setting and produced five volumes of short stories (and a few poems). Two of the authors- John M. Ford and Pamela Dean- later wrote more stories in the same universe.
  • The Midnight Rose collective, a group of British SF writers, published several shared-universe anthologies in the early 1990s, with settings including Temps (tongue-in-cheek superhero stories) and The Weerde (shape-shifting aliens are the source of all the world's myths and conspiracies). Contributors included Stephen Baxter, Neil Gaiman, Mary Gentle, David Langford, Kim Newman, and Charles Stross.
  • All of Simon R Green's series appear to inhabit the same universe


Live Action TV

  • "The Girls Of Hollywood High," the second of two Poorly Disguised Pilots (for a proposed series about Texan private detectives called Eyes Of Texas) which aired as BJ And The Bear episodes, established that this shares a universe with another Glen A. Larson series - at one point the female PIs pay a visit to the Los Angeles Coroner's Office. John S. Ragin and Robert Ito turn up as the characters they play on that particular series, but Jack Klugman, alias Quincy, is conspicuously (and given how he felt about Glen Larson understandably) absent.


Multi-Type

  • Older Than Steam: Perhaps the oldest non-mythology example is the Jianghu (literally "rivers and lakes") fantasy world in which most Chinese Wuxia books, films, TV series, etc. are set. Jianghu dates at least to the 14th-century novel Water Margin.
  • Each Dungeons and Dragons campaign setting is its own 'Verse (See the page on D&D for more information), and the associated novels have many different authors, though - like the Star Wars Expanded Universe - the writers usually have to clear their ideas through the universe's owner.
    • Dungeons and Dragons also has all of the settings linked in Planescape and Spelljammer, but those are rarely mentioned as existing except for their own continuities.
      • Given that Urban Arcana is our Earth, only with hidden fantasy elements, the Earth that Forgotten Realms canonically is connected to[1] is probably that Earth. Planescape, at least, has a connection to Urban Arcana via a shared character that namedrops Sigil and has a way to traverse the Shadow that otherwise acts as a boundary between Urban Arcana and the rest of the multiverse.
  • The Warhammer 40000 universe is shared by a large number of writers; the sheer scale of the setting in both space and time helps avoid continuity problems.
    • In early versions of the background, it was heavily hinted that the Warhammer Fantasy world was part of a planet cut off from the rest of the universe by warp storms, explaining the many shared elements. However, mentioning this nowadays is liable to get you bundled into a van and never seen again.
  • Word of God places Doctor Horribles Sing Along Blog, The Tick and the Venture Brothers in the same universe.
  • Spells R Us was started off with Bill Hart's story A Strangeness at the Frat House and then became not so much a universe but a single series of the same character in the same errant shop all ending up with customers being transformed into something.

Video Games

  • Portal shares a universe with Half-Life.
  • The Super Mario and Donkey Kong series exist in the same universe, as shown through Donkey Kong, Diddy, Dixie, and Funky appearing in Mario spin-offs, as well as Mario and Yoshi appearing in Donkey Kong Country 2. Additionally, due to first appearing in Super Mario World and Super Mario Land 2 respectively, the Yoshi, Wario Land, and Wario Ware series are also part of the expanded Super Mario Universe. The entire Shared Universe of Mario, however, is perhaps much, MUCH larger. At the very least, it also includes Punch-Out!, due to Mario characters making in-person appearances within, Gyromite, the Game and Watch games, Banjo-Kazooie, and Conker.
  • Street Fighter, Final Fight, Saturday Night Slam Masters, Rival Schools, and Captain Commando take place in the same universe.
    • A few Final Fight characters (namely Guy, Sodom, Rolento, and Cody) have appeared as fighters in the Street Fighter Alpha series, with stages and endings featuring cameos by other characters. Andore appears in Street Fighter III under the name of "Hugo" with Poison acting as his manager. Both, Guy and Cody returned in Super Street Fighter IV. Additionally, Chun-Li makes a cameo in Stage 1 of Final Fight 2 and the portable versions of Alpha 3 features Maki as an extra character.
    • Haggar appeared in Slam Masters as a wrestler. The U.S. localization refers to him as the "former mayor of Metro City", although the original Japanese storyline actually places the games before Haggar was elected. A couple of Street Fighter characters have cameos in the Slam Masters series (such as Chun-Li, Honda, and Balrog) and the Slam Masters are referenced in Hugo's ending in 2nd Impact.
    • Captain Commando takes place in the future version of Metro City. A sculpt of Mike Haggar is featured in the game as an bonus item, and Ginzu the Ninja is a future successor of Guy in the Bushin style of Ninjutsu. On the other hand, the game is never mentioned in any of the other games in the universe.
    • The first Rival Schools features Sakura as a playable character (although, her blood type is different from the one given in the Alpha series). Moreover, the Nekketsu Seisyun Nikki spin-offs has Hinata studying the "Ken Masters style of Karate" and Iinchou/Chairperson learning "Saikyou-Style" through mail. On the other hand, there are a few date discrepancies according to the first game's intro and Sakura's storyline (in which she's yet to meet Ryu, placing the series pre-Street Fighter Alpha 3).
    • While not quite part of the main Street Fighter continuity, the Arika-developed Street Fighter EX games shares a couple of characters (Allen and Blair) with their independently developed arcade game Fighting Layer.
  • Koei's Warriors Orochi was made to confirm that it's series Dynasty Warriors and Samurai Warriors take place in the same universe but the second trailer of Warriors Orochi 3 more or less confirms Koei's other games Warriors: Legends of Troy and Blade Storm The Hundred Years War due to the presence of Achilles and Jeanne D'Arc. But it also confirms that it's business partner Tecmo series Ninja Gaiden and Dead or Alive series take place there due to the presence of Ryu Hayabusa. (By extension it might also might also put it in the same universe as the Halo Series due to the Spartan Nicole's Presence in Dead Or Alive 4.)
  • The Ultima series features references to the Wing Commander series. In Ultima I there were spaceships that in Ultima 7: The Black Gate was explained to be the spaceship of the Kilrathi. As pointed out by Spoony here.
  • Dig Dug, Baraduke (or Alien Sector if you prefer), and Mr. Driller are set in the same world, by virtue of Taizo Hori and Toby "Kissy" Masuyo being the parents of Susumu, Ataru, and Taiyo Hori (the first of the three being The Hero of the Mr. Driller series) and the events of the first Dig Dug being referenced directly in Mr. Driller (the "Dig Dug incident").
  • Eve Online and the upcoming FPS DUST 514 are part of the same universe... literally. Players will be able to accept contracts and do missions for the player-run companies of Eve Online, and even form their own corporations that Eve Online players will be able to join.
  • The Dead or Alive and Ninja Gaiden series both take place in the same universe, complete with having characters originating in one becoming plot-integral in the other. Of course, characters will change looks to match the art style of the respective games.
  • The presence of both Seath the Scaleless and Patches the Hyena seem to indicate that Dark Souls shares the same world and universe as the Kings Field series and Demons Souls.
  • Broderbund Software tried to work the Bungeling Empire into most of its early 1980s action games. Choplifter and Lode Runner had it All There in the Manual; Raid on Bungeling Bay had it in the title but wasn't really a sequel to anything.
  • Space Harrier is set in the Fantasy Zone; several Fantasy Zone games reference it to various degrees. The culmination of this was the unreleased crossover game Space Fantasy Zone.

Webcomics


Web Original


Western Animation


  1. And hilariously so: among other things, the first edition of the Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting was canonically written with the help of Elminster
  2. Ryu and Akuma's appearance in the DLC
  3. Zeku from Street Fighter 5 is said to desire founding a ninja organization called the "Striders", and he has many of Hiryu's moves. Strider also shows up in the background of Ken's stage in Alpha 2.
  4. Felicia wants to have Blanka as her leading man, some of the DS characters (though possibly cosplayers) show up on Ken's Alpha 2 stage, and the Wraith from Slam Masters II is said to be involved with the Makai realm. It can also be taken that Anita grew up to be Rose
  5. Both set in the Makai realm
  6. It is teased that Two-P (now Two-III) is the second player from the game, with amnesia
  7. Higemaru has a Street Fighter profile
  8. Akuma's role in the seventh
  9. For example, Three Wonders