What struck me the most is that they landed in L.A. and not another fictitious DC Comics city.
Season 2 was basically predicated on something they did wrong in Season 1. They blew up the Time Masters and eliminated a law-enforcement body that was probably much better equipped to do the job that the Legends end up inheriting. You will see in the finale that it’s an amplified version of that. The longer the Legends are traveling through time, well, you have these bulls in a China shop. Everywhere they go, they break things. Their intentions are usually noble, but they can’t help but make mistakes along the way. It’s like they get deeper and deeper into debt. The more they try to help, the more they realize there is more work to be done. They’ve broken more than they’ve fixed.
The FX team for these shows has a digital model of the LA skyline which they use for National City in Supergirl
Flash back to the 90s with me and assume that Star Trek TNG and Star Trek DS9 were still overlapping when the Dominion War storyline was happening
Does this mean this season only has 17 episodes?
I guess we just have to pretend that the other shows take place in the reality that will eventually be restored once the Legends fix things.
The fact that this even has to be considered is a problem.
I'm not even going to bother watching the remainder of The Flash and Arrow's current seasons, and won't be watching them or Legends next season. The entire Earth-1 segment of the Arrowverse has been fundamentally broken, and in a way that can't be fixed.
You're overreacting.
Why is it so difficult for people to understand that it is fundamentally impossible for time to be broken on Legends and simultaneously unbroken on The Flash and Arrow?
The entirety of Legends' third season is not going to take place out-of-sync with Arrow Season 6 and The Flash Season 4, which is what would need to happen in order for this to even remotely make sense.
It's also fundamentally narratively impossible for the "time travel" excuse to actually mean something in-universe due to the way that all 3 of the E1 Arrowverse series have DEALT with the concept of time travel and its "ripple effects".
Legends didn't just have its characters "break time"; the show itself broke the entire Earth-1 segment of the Arrowverse, to the point that literally the only way to fix it is do something that I had up to this point been very strongly against: a "Crisis on Infinite Earths".
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