^The location of Abydos (in the "Kalian galaxy") is one of a number of things that were changed when Stargate became a television series. Abydos is the closest planet with a Stargate to Earth in Stargate SG-1, which is the reason why the gate address for it written on the cover stone still worked.
Actually it was ONE of the closest planets, the other one that was mentioned on air was "Earnst's Planet" in "Torment of Tantalus". Another one mentioned in other sources that was viable prior to the realease of "Continuum" was the planet that the Germans found when THEY were experimenting with the gate in the 30s and early 40s.
^They couldn't have.
Remember, another important difference between the movie and the series is that Dr. Langford's nationality was retconned, she is clearly an American in the series.
The Stargate was taken directly to the US by Mitchell's grandfather.
The Germans did, however, find the DHD though it fell in to Russian hands after the war.
^Listen to the character in the film and then in one of her appearances on the show.
The ability to speak German does not make you one.
^Listen to the character in the film and then in one of her appearances on the show.
The ability to speak German does not make you one.
And niether does an accent or lack there of, unless it was stated somewhere you have nothing to back up that statement.
Well, not necessarily. The other two could be closer, though they'd still be unsuitable. Ernest's Planet's stargate was buried when the building was destroyed in the storm, and the apocryphal Nazi Planet is both apocryphal and, even if it wasn't, full of Nazis.
The "Nazi planet" isn't apocryphal. It appeared in AEG's role-playing books which, under their licence agreement, were considered "canon unless contradicted".
"Continuum" changed that though.
^Ah, okay, although I don't see what planetary shift has to do with anything when they were dialling randomly.
They did not know what the symbols meant at the time, after all, so it couldn't have been that they were targeting nearby stars.
The "Nazi planet" isn't apocryphal. It appeared in AEG's role-playing books which, under their licence agreement, were considered "canon unless contradicted".
"Continuum" changed that though.
The whole idea of a role playing game book being canon was ridiculous to begin with.
For the record, unless you see it happen or hear it described in an episode or one of the DVD movies, it did not happen in the canon Stargate universe.
Yes, I know...this is geekiness at a whole new level...![]()
Yes, I know...this is geekiness at a whole new level...![]()
It's also based on a dialling system that covers the entire galaxy with combinations of 39 symbols. It's not that precise.
^I understand how the Stargate works "in universe" perfectly well. Out of universe, trying to represent a galaxy believed to contain between 200 and 400 billion solar systems with 39 symbols which are themselves based on imaginary lines drawn in the sky is ridiculous.
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