inb4 "the guy who isn't translating apocrypha"
Everything TM has published.
Everything Nasu has written.
The "core" Nasu works (name them).
The Nasuverse as a common setting and the works that follow its rules.
The stories & lore that you personally consider "serious", as opposed to "jokes/memes/etc".
Whatever fits your personal idea of what the Nasuverse is and how it works, fanon included.
Each TM work in its own right and in relation to its self-contained setting.
There is no canon, just an illusion of a consistent setting.
Hangups over "canon" seem like a weirdly Western obsession.
I've seen this ball bounced back and forth in other fandoms, too, such as Gundam. There's a lot of raging debate about whichever manga or spin-off counts toward canon, whether or not the Zeta Gundam movies make ZZ non-canon, if Tomino-written manga have as much weight as non-Tomino animated entries, etc.
None it mattered over there, either.
Mark Simmons, a prolific translator and super-fan, has pointed out that the Japanese Gundam fans don't really care. Stories are stories. Enjoy them or hate them. Take it or leave it.
So it doesn't matter if a new spin-off introduces ideas of Grand Servants or a reserve system or if Touko shows up in Case Files. They're all just stories. You're not obligated to read them all or try to cram them all together. It's not a tapestry that was meant to be woven together. It's an ongoing jam session.
Last edited by Imperial; June 14th, 2020 at 02:53 PM.
Spoiler:
You made it sounds like Turn A was not a big meta narrative about canons, but oh well
Nasuverse canon can be seen as each micro-canon like Fate/Stay Night has its own canon, Fate/Hollow Ataraxia has its own canon, Tsukihime Has its own canon etc etc.
But if we are trying to find canon in a common unified Nasuverse then its either Nasu make a grand compendium or it's "What the fans think make sense".
Last edited by SteelBeowulf; June 15th, 2020 at 02:10 AM.
That was largely window dressing.
The notion of an overarching narrative encompassing all things Gundam (up until 1999, at least) is a fun one, but it does not fundamentally change the nature of Turn A.
There were great and terrible wars that bombed us back to the Stone Age. All of the cute little winks are kitschy decorations. The “canon” of G Gundam doesn’t matter to Turn A and in fact flies in the face of it. The magical superpowers of G clash pretty severely with the world presented in Turn A, so much so that I can’t think of them as related.
The same goes for T-M. Doesn’t FGO try to say Servants were designed to battle the Beasts one day? What about a bunch of German homunculi trying to get their Magic back? Not to mention the division of Fate Worlds and Tsukihime Worlds. You can see the moment Nasu realized he goofed and decided to fix a minor scrape with a major surgery.
Spoiler:
What Japan says (author included) is irrelevant, this is about the English-speaking fandom in the first place.
My fault for being too wordy then.
I was using Gundam to get at my main point:
It doesn't matter. Never did. The mythology is only ever a skeleton that you hang the meat of the story on.
That Kairi got a pack of smokes from Touko is immaterial. Who he is as a person and how he strives to achieve his wish make him far more compelling than who he knows or what oblique reference can be gleaned from his background.
It's a living, breathing franchise with new entries and retcons being made all of the time. Trying to keep it consistent is a fool's errand. Let the stories be stories and don't bother tracking power levels or DEEPEST LORE.
Even shorter now: The question of "canon" isn't worth answering.
Spoiler:
It matters, and Nasu would never have tried so hard to make the clarifications he did about why X thing is like this in one work and like that in the other while this world Y is like world Z if this thing never happened if it did not. What is the point of material books and dictionaries if not to establish a corpus of canonical information in relation to the existing works? That this model became untenable the more far-fetched the connections became and the more ridiculous the rationalisations had to be in turn to maintain the pretense of consistency is not indicative of the authorial attitude that spawned GD lore-policing in the first place.
Last edited by Leftovers; June 14th, 2020 at 03:28 PM.
That's like asking why DC Comics needs mega-crossover retcon events like The Crisis of Infinite Earths to sort out their continuity tangles. It's all a wild mess, and trying to line it up creates more headaches than it cures. Each author goes off and does his own thing with his own idea of how the rules work (or should work), and then some editor on high (or Nasu) has to try to tie it all back together again.
I don't care if Gotham by Gaslight is an Elseworlds title that sits outside of the main DC narrative or if Fate/Apocrypha exists in a split timeline where the Fourth and Fifth Grail Wars never happened. Do I find them entertaining or thematically resonant or simply worth my time?
I've certainly bugged moon runers like You for out-of-text explanations from those source books they so lovingly translate for us, but these revelations are decorative.
If Nasu swings in during an interview ten years from now to tell us that Shirou is distantly related to the Ryougi family, it won't change Fate/Stay Night in any way.
Spoiler:
To be clear up front, more power to you if you can hold a text to scrutiny on its own merits, that's the kind of opinion the thread asks for and is in itself a way of approaching works that is fair both for the writers to be judged for what they write - and not in relation to what they write - and to you for taking the effort to read it. As far as canon as a personal perception of the TM corpus is concerned, I'm good with that. I have Some Thoughts about interconnectivity in TM and how it is an intrinsic factor in any attempt to write a Nasuverse anything, but deep into writing them out I realised that they relate to the topic at hand only in that it's the reason why fans think of a "shared setting" with "common rules" in the first place. Read if you want, I don't have the heart to delete them.
Spoiler:
Personal take on canon:
The common sense of the fandom used to align with that of Nasu for the time when the number of works was small and the connections easy to draw and maintain; encouraged by Nasu's worldbuilding efforts the fans were happy to conceive of a setting where everything they'd seen existed and happened in more or less the same shape and form. When Nasu's writing began to depart from this 'base' setting he chose, for one reason or the other, to contextualise this departure and foster a sense of setting consistency and clearly defined threads of continuity. As the works and the deviations piled up, the threads multiplied and the rationalisations that keep them anchored to the 'base' setting got more convoluted. The fandom's 'common sense' on what is canon is challenged to evaluate these rationalisations, contextualise the departures, and trace the connections between threads through their shared setting elements - themselves also subject to revision and convolution - and generally to decide if the mental construct of a Nasuverse stands on its own as a narrative framework or if it's an ever-expanding mess of a structure held upright by constantly propping up explanations, reattaching connections, constructing exceptions to the rules of architecture in order for the overall construct to stand (up to scrutiny), however dysfunctional and ugly it might look. Whether someone wants to engage in mental gymnastics to accommodate this model, or prefers to just look at the individual rooms and floors, or is holed up in the basement and pretends everything above doesn't exist hinges on how they engage with TM works primarily and then how important the idea of the setting and worldbuilding, lore and consistency is to them.
I can't say I've given up on the illusion of a consistent setting even after years of getting kicked in the balls by TM so I can only put myself down in all honesty as Whatever Fits with a dash of Core Works (Tsuki, FSN, KnK) because, while I'd love to be able to say that God is dead and nothing matters, Nasushit requires synthetic thinking if you want to engage it as an immersive setting rather than some cool anime fantasy stories or something. Can definitely say the thunderdome approach of calling everything that contradicts your idea of how things are-or-should-be retarded is much more fun than playing the GD Knight of Holy Canon ever was. Having opinions is fun!
- - - Updated - - -
I know very few who say it doesn't, and they happen to not particularly care about the idea of lore in general. For the moderately immersed fan I'd posit that it not only exists and interfaces with it but at a certain point even supplants the text itself. The more that stories are supplemented by dictionaries and fans experience them through summaries and primarily engage with contextualising information in a framework of lore underpinning the story, the more apparent it becomes.
Last edited by Leftovers; June 14th, 2020 at 11:01 PM.
I'd argue that, in regards to Fate and most other franchises, it very much does. At least in the sense that the writers expect you to be aware of that information. Even putting aside relevant FGO Materials, or all that discussion around Last Encore's website, it does feel like TM expects you to be engaged with the lore on a deeper, multi-work level, even in the case of series that aren't directly connected.
Just remember scenes like the reveal of Fou's true identity, for example. That scene is clearly set up to surprise you not only due to Fou being Beast IV, but also being Primate Murder. That can only happen if you've been engaging with supplementary content (I've yet to read anything Tsukihime, but IIRC, Primate Murder only exists in supplementary material, not in any actual work). What about the constant mention of Overcount 1999 in Fate/Extra works? Clearly meant to get a reaction from the reader/player/watcher (at least in Last Encore), despite being a meaningless term to anyone who attempts to only watch that show.
"Baby, don't hurt me, don't hurt me no more"...
Canon Inc. (キヤノンキャノン株式会社, Kyanon kabushiki gaisha) is a Japanese multinational corporation specializing in the manufacture of imaging and optical products, including cameras, camcorders, professional displays, TV broadcasting and film equipment, projectors, photocopiers, photolitography equipment (steppers, scanners), computer printers, image scanners, binoculars, microscopes, medical equipment (including Computer Tomography diagnostic systems, MRI and diagnostic ultrasound systems), LCD and OLED panel manufacturing equipment, CCTV solutions, imagining sensors, calculators, high precision positioning and measurement devices (such as rotary encoders), and custom optical components (including lenses) for third party companies. It is headquartered in Ōta, Tokyo, Japan.[3]
Q.) What is "Canon"?
"Man, if you have to ask what it is, you'll never know."
- Louis Armstrong (Definitely)
"You can't explain [canon] to anyone without losing the experience because it's feelings, not words."
- Bill Evans (...Probably)
"[Canon] is the type of [narrative] that can absorb so many things and still be [canon]."
- Sonny Rollins (...maybe?)
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Yeah, I got nuffin' chief.
"Here's a bangin lil' tune about takin' on The Man!"
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Whether you have nothing else to say or had to get it out of your systems, shitposts earn warnings from now on.
My opinion on canons
Spoiler:
Last edited by Glazy; June 14th, 2020 at 03:24 PM.