Spiritual Licensee: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* ''[[Mobile Suit Gundam Unicorn]]'' is practically ''[[The Da Vinci Code]]'' [[Recycled in Space|in the Universal Century]], with the Vist Foundation, Unicorn Gundam and Laplace's Box standing in for the Priory of Sion, codex and Holy Grail respectively. And as of the last episode, it can also pass for a Gundam version of ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey]]'' {{spoiler|given that Laplace's Box resembles a monolith and that Banagher and Full Frontal's Newtype vision begins very similarly to the infamous Star-Gate sequence}}.
* ''[[Mobile Suit Gundam Unicorn]]'' is practically ''[[The Da Vinci Code]]'' [[Recycled in Space|in the Universal Century]], with the Vist Foundation, Unicorn Gundam and Laplace's Box standing in for the Priory of Sion, codex and Holy Grail respectively. And as of the last episode, it can also pass for a Gundam version of ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey]]'' {{spoiler|given that Laplace's Box resembles a monolith and that Banagher and Full Frontal's Newtype vision begins very similarly to the infamous Star-Gate sequence}}.
* ''[[Shimoneta|Shimoneta: A Boring World Where the Concept of Dirty Jokes Doesn't Exist]]'' can be described as a more risque adaptation of ''[[Demolition Man]]'', if it took place in future Japan rather than [[Crap Saccharine World|future California]]. All that's missing are the Taco Bells and three seashells. It also helps that the series also satirizes and deconstructs [[Political Correctness Gone Mad]].
* ''[[Shimoneta|Shimoneta: A Boring World Where the Concept of Dirty Jokes Doesn't Exist]]'' can be described as a more risque adaptation of ''[[Demolition Man]]'', if it took place in future Japan rather than [[Crap Saccharine World|future California]]. All that's missing are the Taco Bells and three seashells. It also helps that the series also satirizes and deconstructs [[Political Correctness Gone Mad]].
* ''[[Shinmai Renkinjutsushi no Tenpo Keiei]]'' is essentially an ''[[Atelier (franchise)|Atelier]]'' anime: A budding young alchemist girl manages a small business that sells her creations, and goes on adventures to find materials alongside friends who are ''[[Yuri Genre|very]]'' close to her.


== Film ==
== Film ==

Latest revision as of 06:53, 8 November 2022

A counterpart of Better by a Different Name in a way, and also a sort of subtrope of Spiritual Successor and Follow the Leader (but not always), in effect a Captain Ersatz of a story rather than a character. It's particularly evident with video games; most people have certain movie characters with tons of potential they dream of playing as in an amazing game, yet as most movie licensed games are terrible, there's almost no chance of that happening...

Technically no chance, anyway. This is when something has nothing to do with a certain series, but evokes almost the same feeling you'd imagine a decent license invoking with a certain franchise, making it (intentionally or not) a Spiritual Licensee.

This can also occur after a developer decides to create a Spiritual Successor to a game from a previously established franchise, but put an original spin on the game to differentiate it from its predecessor(s).

Please do not add personal examples; the main page should be for comparisons that you have seen numerous times (or ones that are really, really obvious).

Contrast Dolled-Up Installment.

Examples of Spiritual Licensee include:

Anime and Manga

Film

Literature


Live-Action TV


Recorded and Stand Up Comedy


Tabletop Games


Video Games

Western Animation

Other

  • The MagiQuest simulated-adventure franchise, although much lower-tech and modest in scale, is currently the closest that fans of Niven & Barnes Dream Park can come to savoring the fictional mega-theme park's attractions.
  1. Debatably. Basically, they both have Space Marines, a Horde of Alien Locusts and Scary Dogmatic Aliens, but that's also true of several other science fiction franchises.