Hiveverse
What is this one? Are you saying the four-issue IDW Hive miniseries gets its own continuity?
GoldKeyverse
That's... one crazy 'verse!
Hiveverse
GoldKeyverse
Actually, a lot of those aren't really what I call "continuities." Okay, the Shatnerverse is, but that hasn't been active for eight years now. Crucible is just a trilogy that isn't part of the main novel continuity, that doesn't automatically make it its own continuity. Ditto Dark Passions, except that's a duology, not a trilogy. To be honest, I've never read the Rihannsu novels so I won't comment on them, save to say I was under the impression that they just depict Romulan culture and history in a manner later contradicted by the shows, that does not necessarily mean it's a whole other continuity. Regardless, like the Shatnerverse it hasn't been active in years.
Basically, Extrocomp wants to know: if you split up the set of all Trek Expanded Universe works into groups of works intended to be consistent with one another, how many groups bigger than a single book would you end up with?
A while back, I basically decided that this was the way of looking at things that would prevent my eventual personal descent into "Trek madness" :
Onscreen Trek = "History"
Everything else (novels, comics, etc.) = "Historical fiction"
It's not all going to fit. It was never going to fit, and no amount of pushing, pulling, curling, twisting, and/or stuffing will ever make it all fit. But, there are stories from each of the various eras/platforms of Trek storytelling that I personally love for one reason or another, so jettisoning them for the sake of trying to manage a single "continuity" seemed silly. This is especially true of anything pertaining to the original series characters and the five-year mission era in particular. As I still like writing 5YM stories, I opted to quit worrying about that other stuff.
YMMV.
What is the Decipherverse?
If the OP includes The Final Reflection and other 80s novels in the Rihannsuverse that would already rule out them being in the same continuity with TNG. I guess that's what ryan meant when he said that some people will be willing to merge some continuities which others aren't.
I'd add several other comics continuities to the mix. DC Vol. 2, DC's TNG, and Malibu's DS9 comic not only had their own internal continuities, but crossed over with each other, theoretically forming a connected whole. IDW has the Byrneverse, the continuity linking all of John Byrne's Trek comics. Marvel's '90s comics were an interconnected continuity (a number of whose characters and species have been adopted by the novelverse, though they don't wholly fit together). I suppose the post-TMP Marvel series and the syndicated newspaper strips from the same era constitute their own distinct (if rather episodic) continuities as well.
No, most of the cited examples are from prose or comics. The only exceptions I've seen mentioned so far are STO, FASA, and the Decipher RPGs.
Actually, a lot of those aren't really what I call "continuities." Okay, the Shatnerverse is, but that hasn't been active for eight years now. Crucible is just a trilogy that isn't part of the main novel continuity, that doesn't automatically make it its own continuity.
What is this one? Are you saying the four-issue IDW Hive miniseries gets its own continuity?
Interestingly, the Shatnerverse has likewise been referenced in the so-called "mainstream" Litverse on occasion, such as the discussion of Androvar Drake's downfall and the Enterprise-A's destruction over Chal in James Swallow's Cast No Shadow. Although in these cases, it's more that those specific, individual events are basically cherrypicked and integrated into the Litverse-continuity where appropriate, not entire novels (like, say, The Return or Spectre).The Shatnerverse could've easily been part of the Novelverse, since it included Novelverse characters like Christine Vale and Aili Lavena. All you had to do was ignore the brief mentions of Kirk being dead. Now that the Novelverse has introduced its own version of the mirror universe, that's no longer an option.
But contradicting other continuities does not make Crucible its own continuity, it just makes it unattached.The Crucible trilogy had McCoy dying in 2366 which contradicts almost every other continuity.
Although, didn't one of the Litverse continuity novels once pay lip service to the idea that Kirk could still be alive in the 24th century. Something like "Kirk's dead" "That's not what I heard."Interestingly, the Shatnerverse has likewise been referenced in the so-called "mainstream" Litverse on occasion, such as the discussion of Androvar Drake's downfall and the Enterprise-A's destruction over Chal in James Swallow's Cast No Shadow. Although in these cases, it's more that those specific, individual events are basically cherrypicked and integrated into the Litverse-continuity where appropriate, not entire novels (like, say, The Return or Spectre).
I think The Final Reflection is closer to the FASAverse than the Rihannsuverse, since both use the same version of Klingon culture and the same assumption that TOS happened in the 2210s.
How are the Byrne comics linked together and do they have anything which separates them from other continuities?
In what way do the Marvel comics and the Novelverse not completely fit together?
The newspaper strips are definitively a distinct continuity since Ilia was still alive and Sulu's first name was Itaka.
The Crucible trilogy had McCoy dying in 2366 which contradicts almost every other continuity.
The Shatnerverse could've easily been part of the Novelverse, since it included Novelverse characters like Christine Vale and Aili Lavena. All you had to do was ignore the brief mentions of Kirk being dead.
I think I've heard people say that there's not really anything in Ashes of Eden that would prevent it from being part of the novelverse. That's purely second hand though, since I haven't read it myself.Interestingly, the Shatnerverse has likewise been referenced in the so-called "mainstream" Litverse on occasion, such as the discussion of Androvar Drake's downfall and the Enterprise-A's destruction over Chal in James Swallow's Cast No Shadow. Although in these cases, it's more that those specific, individual events are basically cherrypicked and integrated into the Litverse-continuity where appropriate, not entire novels (like, say, The Return or Spectre).
But contradicting other continuities does not make Crucible its own continuity, it just makes it unattached.
They are what others call continuities, though.
That is, the term being applied to "a set of fictional works in a mutual shared universe" is a pretty common usage of the term, even if it's not one you apply yourself; and by the context of the first post, that's the usage that Extrocomp meant. Even if you object to that usage of the term (which is fair, I can see your usage as making sense too), why not just respond according to the meaning of the question rather than the specific wording?
Basically, Extrocomp wants to know: if you split up the set of all Trek Expanded Universe works into groups of works intended to be consistent with one another, how many groups bigger than a single book would you end up with?
DRG referenced Serpents Among the Ruins in Crucible, right? Meaning that Serpents takes place in the Crucible continuity as well.
How can a Lost Era novel be referenced in a TOS novel?
Oh yeah, I forgot about that.Because Crucible is a story that spans more than a century, from the TOS era through the TNG era.
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