Saved by Canon

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Yoda: Kill you, I cannot! But kill me, YOU cannot!
Emperor Palpatine: Because we are equally-matched opponents on opposite sides of the same almighty Force?
Yoda: No, because already released have the sequels to this movie been! And in them we both appear! Problem this is with prequels - no suspense can there be when already we know which characters live!

Mad Magazine's parody of Revenge of the Sith

In that last movie you watched, or the last game you played, there're maybe some epic and great battles between two or more characters fighting to the death and one of them seems to be on his last leg, or maybe one of them seems to about to die by being poisoned by something, or maybe they're about to fall of a cliff and hit the ground below, or maybe they're about to crash in the middle of a carchase. Whatever the case, you know that they'll survive because if they die, the fictional works that takes place chronologically after wouldn't be able to exist in the first place then.

This trope usually exist in prequels and Interquels. In them, characters from the original material usually appears on their younger ages, and like the new characters, they usually are forced to fight deadly battles against the enemy, and many of those battles are as nasty and brutal as they come, and many of them seems to result with the old characters dying and the villain laughing his ass off in triumph. But you know that whatever convincing they may try to make it look like, they're still alive and will not die since if they did die, the original stories that came first may end up with the Canon Discontinuity stamp on their heads.

Constast Doomed by Canon, when the characters are going to die no matter what because the original works said they died some time before the story takes place.

Examples of Saved by Canon include:

General

  • Trailers Always Spoil: It's generally not a good idea to look up a continuation of a series if you still haven't experienced all of the current installments. Simply seeing the trailer for a series can spoil you by detailing which characters survive.

Comic Books

  • Any tale of Wolverine's past will have the same prepared answer to the question of whether Wolvie's going to make it.

Film

Literature

Live-Action TV

  • Aughra in The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance, along with the majority of Skeksis who appear in the show, since they also appeared in the movie.
  • Since Better Call Saul is set prior to the events of Breaking Bad, you know that Jimmy McGill is safe since he has to become Saul Goodman in the other series. Also, Mike Ehrmantraut and his family, Francesca, most of the Salamanca family (the major exception being Lalo, who doesn't appear in Breaking Bad but is mentioned in passing), and a whole bunch of others are pretty much safe at least until the series timeline catches up to that of Breaking Bad‍'‍s.

Video Games

  • Since Kingdom Hearts: Birth By Sleep takes place ten years before the first game, you know that most of the bosses will survive after you defeated them, especially Maleficent and Xehanort.
  • In The Force Unleashed, you already knew that neither Darth Vader or Emperor Palpatine would die in their duels with Galen Marek, or that none of the rebel leaders would be executed by the Imperials since the game takes place two-six years before the original trilogy.
  • In Final Fantasy VII: Crisis Core, Sephiroth, Aeris and Cloud are gonna survive no matter what, since if they died, then it means that the series' most successful game well might not have existed in the first place. Zack however is Doomed by Canon.
  • Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater lampshades the survival of Revolver Ocelot by calling you out on creating a Time Paradox if you actually do kill him.