Wrong.
Unlike a reboot, which discards all continuity in a franchise, a "soft reboot" is a sequel which introduces a film, television, or video game series to a new audience while still maintaining continuity with previous installments.

Wrong.
Unlike a reboot, which discards all continuity in a franchise, a "soft reboot" is a sequel which introduces a film, television, or video game series to a new audience while still maintaining continuity with previous installments.
How I miss the days where Jar Jar’s scenes where the worst thing ever in Star Wars. Alas, those days are long gone after Disney’s soft reboot of the franchise...
First Class changing Xavier 's age when he met Erik is a retcon because it's literally "retroactive continuity", overriding a previously established bit of information with new information.
As far as an example of an actual continuity error goes, here's one from the Harry Potter novels:
In the very first book, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (Sorcerer's Stone in America), we are introduced to a minor character named Marcus Flint, who is a Sixth Year; the character is also featured in the second book, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, where he is in his Seventh and final year, and again in the third novel, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, even though he should have graduated from Hogwarts at the conclusion of the second book.
Rowling forgot that Flint was supposed to be gone from the school when she wrote PoA, creating discontinuity between that novel and CoS, and never bothered to try and explain, within the course of the narrative of PoA, why he was still at the school during that book.
But to relate it to your HP example, how is Jubilee in school and roughly the same age for at least 15 years?
2) Trying to treat Liev Schreiber and Tyler Mane's versions of Sabertooth as different characters is just creating narrative headaches for yourself unnecessarily. However, such is not the case with First Class' Emma Frost and Kayla's sister Emma from Origins: Wolverine, because the two characters are in fact Canonically disparate
Because the characters as seen in Apocalypse were born before the timeline alteration.3) I really don't understand why it's so difficult for people to accept the conceptual mechanics of Alternate Timelines in the XMCU - which are relied on heavily when it comes to introducing new versions of certain characters such as Angel, Psylocke, and Jubilee - when those same conceptual mechanics are easily accepted in other franchises, such as Star Trek.
Ripples in time just like with Star Trek.Because the characters as seen in Apocalypse were born before the timeline alteration.
Those things aren’t exclusive but if you don’t like it then that’s that.I don't buy it from Pegg and I don't buy it here. It's either time travel or it's an alternate timeline completely.
What's wrong with "alternate timeline that Spock thinks is the past of his own timeline"?For me personally Pegg’s interpretation is the only explanation given that makes sense.
Too many to write about in an X-Men thread. But not to sound evasive and to give you an example to me it looked like a brand new timeline even before Narada’s time travel in 2233. It was only after Pegg’s "ripples" explanation that I thought to myself "ahh, okay, that makes sense". That’s why I have no problem accepting the same in the X-Men Cinematic Universe.What's wrong with "alternate timeline that Spock thinks is the past of his own timeline"?
Trying to treat Liev Schreiber and Tyler Mane's versions of Sabertooth as different characters is just creating narrative headaches for yourself unnecessarily.
I really don't understand why it's so difficult for people to accept the conceptual mechanics of Alternate Timelines in the XMCU - which are relied on heavily when it comes to introducing new versions of certain characters such as Angel, Psylocke, and Jubilee - when those same conceptual mechanics are easily accepted in other franchises, such as Star Trek.
Being based on comic books which are known for rewriting their own history over and over, and having sliding timelines so key characters never age, I'd think most would be okay with X-Men's loose cinematic continuity.
As for the X-Men that you mentioned, I'll need to rewatch the relevant scene in X2 to say for sure but I still say that, if you squint, Jubilee disappears from the movie entirely. IIRC, Psylocke was never named on screen in X-Men: The Last Stand, so all we can say for sure there is that Magneto had a henchwoman with a purple streak in her hair in that film. As for Angel, my pet theory is that the version seen in X-Men: The Last Stand is actually the son of the character from X-Men: Apocalypse. Warren Worthington was actually his grandfather, who disowned his freak mutant son and raised his grandson as if he were his own son.
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