Gallowpedia:Canon

The following policy is based on the consensus of Gallowpedia editors and is thus subject to change.

In fiction, canon is the material accepted as officially part of the story in an individual universe of that story. This policy describes the current system for determining what is canon on Gallowpedia.

The hierarchy of canonicity

Due to varying authorship for the released materials, contradictions between sources can arise. In order to ensure that Gallowpedia's articles don't contradict each other, a hierarchy of canonicity is set in place to decide which sources take precedence and which facts should be accepted as canon.

Examples of usage

  • In the An Introduction to MediEvil section of the MediEvil comic, Sir Dan's year of birth is given as 1154. This contradicts MediEvil 2, where in a book at the beginning of The Museum, Sir Dan's birth year is said to be "around 1250." This information is reconciled by shifting forward the year in the comic by 100 years, thus making 1254 Dan's canonical year of birth.
  • Lord Palethorn is said to be 56 years old in the Medievil Times promotional newspaper. This contradicts the official MediEvil 2 website and other press releases where he is said to be 45 years old. Because the newspaper was created by the Claydon Heeley Jones Mason advertising agency, it is considered a tier 4 resource and thus ranks lower than the official website for the game, making Palethorn's canonical age 45.

Apocrypha

On Gallowpedia, the word apocrypha refers to works outside of the accepted canon.

MediEvil: Resurrection

MediEvil: Resurrection is not considered a mainline MediEvil game on Gallowpedia. This is due to it having many storyline changes that are ultimately irreconcilable with the original game and the 2019 remake. Examples of such changes include the replacement of Morten the Earthworm with Al-Zalam and the introduction of the Anubis Stone.

As such, information from MediEvil: Resurrection should be presented on articles as an incorrect, alternative history, as is done in the MediEvil comic:

"Some scholars offer an alternative tale of Dan's resurrection. Among other things they claim that when first reanimated, Dan had a cantankerous one-eyed 'genie' hanging out inside his skull. They suggest that the Hall of Heroes was some open-air Greek spa floating in the clouds... Pah! Preposterous! None of that makes any sense!"
An Introduction to MediEvil from MediEvil: The Game Prequel

On article pages whose subjects only exist in MediEvil: Resurrection, it is fine to present them as fact, so long as the Resurrection article notice appears at the top of the page.

Ghosthunter

 
Concept art of Freddie.

Although Ghosthunter is not considered a part of the MediEvil series, the game features a character called Colonel Freddie Fortesque, who is said to be a relation of Sir Dan. While the Colonel is not strictly canon to the MediEvil universe, it is acceptable to mention him and the references he makes on relevant pages, such as the Fortesque family article. A notice can be placed at the start of relevant sections.

However, covering the Ghosthunter universe is beyond the scope of Gallowpedia. Therefore, please refrain from making pages about anything Ghosthunter-related; you can make them on our sister project, the SCEE Cambridge Wiki, instead.

Crossovers

A crossover is the placement of two or more otherwise discrete fictional characters, settings, or universes into the same context. MediEvil has had several crossovers, the major ones being Everybody's Golf 2, PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale and wipEout purE. Due to their nature as crossovers and the generally limited involvement of the MediEvil development teams in their creation, they are not considered a part of the canon. However, they should still be mentioned on relevant pages in an appropriate non-canon section.

Real world information

MediEvil 2 contains several references to real historical figures such as Ramesses II and Queen Victoria. It also features real locations like Kew Gardens and the Greenwich Observatory. Although MediEvil games do not take place in our world but an alternative version of it,[1] some information from our world, such as dates, may be used to supplement game information where the games do not provide such information themselves. Real world information as used within in-universe articles is subject to change should future entries into the series contradict it.

References

  1.   "...But it is not really our world or history - it is an alternative history." — Jason Wilson, MediEvil developers - Q&A; on MediEvil Boards. Published December 25, 2012.

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