Thread:Nausiated/@comment-1895174-20121111221650/@comment-1895174-20121111234315

I am legitimately surprised that the argument has gotten this far.

Darkseid01: Possibly. The question is whether or not that version of the Doctor is from a different reality than the mainstream Doctor Who universe, which is in itself difficult since the Doctor regularly jumps between different universes to begin with. Furthermore, there's not enough evidence that suggests the character is from a separate universe, since every statement that says that on both the Dr. Who page and the comic he appears in was written by Tony ingram and is unsourced.

Sidenote: Now that both Lucasfilm and Marvel Comics are owned by Disney, someone could make the argument that the Star Wars universe is now part of the Marvel multiverse.

Nausiated: The argument on the other edit war I'm trying to resolve boils down to "What does it mean to be a featured character?" For me, it's simple - if the character is mentioned by the title of the show, s/he is a featured character. So, for X-Men Evolution, the featured characters would be the X-Men. What Supermorff argues is that the "featured character" distinction is based on a character's prominence. A fair enough argument, but one that is flawed in a few ways. For one, it is open to wildly different interpretations that will be based on nothing more than individual opinion. Furthermore, Supermorff also argues that definition of "featured character" also removes any necessity for "supporting character" and "villain", and just boils down to "featured" and "other", requiring a massive overhaul of just about every page with an appearances section.

More admin input on which interpretation is right is something that could be needed.