Spiritual Licensee

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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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 & Manga

  • Summer Wars is getting a reputation for being the best Digimon film ever. Having the same director and basic plot as one of the most popular actual Digimon films probably helps on that front.
  • The Big O is considered to trump Batman: Gotham Knight at being an anime adaptation of the Caped Crusader.
  • Spirited Away is quite possibly the best adaptation of Alice in Wonderland.
  • Flag seems to be Beyond Good and Evil set in Afghanistan, with the United Nations Task Force standing in for the American military.
  • Voices of a Distant Star is perhaps the best and most tear-inducing adaptation of The Forever War made by a single man, with a dash of Ender's Game to boot.
  • Code Geass could easily pass as an adaptation of Frank Herbert's Dune saga...with robots and spinning kicks!
    • It could also pass for a damn good Gundam series. Especially given how the premise could easily be described as what Mobile Suit Gundam would be like from Char Azanable's perspective rather than Amuro Ray's.
  • Simoun is essentially what happens when you add Les Yay-tastic action to A Canticle for Leibowitz. Better Than It Sounds.
  • Histeria! and Horrible Histories may be long gone, but really they live as a series called Axis Powers Hetalia.
  • Mobile Suit Gundam 0083: Stardust Memory is basically an anime adaptation of Top Gun, if it took place in the future and involved Gundams. Even the openings are reminiscent of Danger Zone and late 80s-early 90s power ballads. Though it eventually bears more similarities with Metal Gear of all things, thanks to the GP-02 being a literal Metal Gear Gundam and the secretive Patriots-like conspiracy that result in the Titans coming out into the open.
    • However, a better one came out later on in the form of Macross Plus.
  • Future GPX Cyber Formula essentially is a modern-day adaptation of Speed Racer (Mach Go Go Go), albeit with computer-aided race cars.
  • Fist of the North Star could be described as an anime adaptation of Mad Max, only with martial arts.
  • Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann is pretty much an adaptation of Getter Robo's later arcs with a bit more silliness.
  • Golgo 13 has been described as a Japanese retelling of James Bond, which isn't helped at all by the fact that the original mangaka also made official Bond manga back in the day.
  • Mobile Suit Gundam Unicorn is practically The Da Vinci Code 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 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: A Boring World Where the Concept of Dirty Jokes Doesn't Exist can be described as a more risque adaptation of the world seen in Demolition Man. All that's missing are the Taco Bells and three seashells.

Film

Literature


Live Action TV


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.