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[[WMG: Game hopping is possible due to services such as [=GameFly=]]]
When the rental games are installed on new hardware, it enables inhabitants of one system to travel to others.
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[[WMG: Megabyte's increasing malice in Season 3 was due to becoming Gigabyte and becoming separated from Hex again.]]
When he got merged, they became one entity temporarily, but when they separated, what little honor or restraint he had went into Hexadecimal.
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nanosecond is 1 billionth of a second, got my math wrong


He was infected as a child by a [[ThePrankster Benign virus]] - a powerful cat-like being that pranks everyone she ever came across, but was forbidden by her User to [[ThouShaltNotKill ever harm anyone]]. Bob was a nerdy unfunny boy in the Supercomputer, who utterly ''hated'' viruses. The virus (whom we shall call Pixel from this point onward) unwittingly swept him up into her latest joke on the User. As the Guardians attacked, Pixel escaping, didn't realize Bob was along for the ride [[PrankGoneTooFar until it was too late]]. She tried to save him from a delete command, both end up severely injured and land in a garbage dump. Pixel laments how unfunny it is to go from mocking the gods (users) to [[HowTheMightyHaveFallen dying with a child in the trash]]. Bob says she's a virus, therefore ''is trash'' and one day he'll be a Guardian that cleans up all the trash. He weakly tries to leave. Pixel begs him not to let her die alone, as death is never a funny thing. Bob reluctantly stays. The virus thanks him by downloading her code into him, as "one last prank on the Net". It not only saves his life, but makes him a pseudo-Guardian Cadet. Bob is alarmed, but Pixel tells him not to bother telling anyone. It'll ''take weeks'' for the Guardians to figure out her code. [[note]]a mere second in the User world is [[YearInsideHourOutside well over 37 years]] in cyberspace![[/note]]. Bob protests the Net needs a Guardian. Pixel refutes him - the Net has plenty of executioners and murderers, in the form of Guardians and Codemasters. ''The Net needs laughter'', and Bob will always have a dorky fun-loving nature, even during hard times from now on. Pixel remarks his life will never be boring again as she disappears. Bob is deeply moved by this experience, and becomes the pacifist we know towards viruses.

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He was infected as a child by a [[ThePrankster Benign virus]] - a powerful cat-like being that pranks everyone she ever came across, but was forbidden by her User to [[ThouShaltNotKill ever harm anyone]]. Bob was a nerdy unfunny boy in the Supercomputer, who utterly ''hated'' viruses. The virus (whom we shall call Pixel from this point onward) unwittingly swept him up into her latest joke on the User. As the Guardians attacked, Pixel escaping, didn't realize Bob was along for the ride [[PrankGoneTooFar until it was too late]]. She tried to save him from a delete command, both end up severely injured and land in a garbage dump. Pixel laments how unfunny it is to go from mocking the gods (users) to [[HowTheMightyHaveFallen dying with a child in the trash]]. Bob says she's a virus, therefore ''is trash'' and one day he'll be a Guardian that cleans up all the trash. He weakly tries to leave. Pixel begs him not to let her die alone, as death is never a funny thing. Bob reluctantly stays. The virus thanks him by downloading her code into him, as "one last prank on the Net". It not only saves his life, but makes him a pseudo-Guardian Cadet. Bob is alarmed, but Pixel tells him not to bother telling anyone. It'll ''take weeks'' for the Guardians to figure out her code. [[note]]a mere second in the User world is [[YearInsideHourOutside well over 37 31 years]] in cyberspace![[/note]]. Bob protests the Net needs a Guardian. Pixel refutes him - the Net has plenty of executioners and murderers, in the form of Guardians and Codemasters. ''The Net needs laughter'', and Bob will always have a dorky fun-loving nature, even during hard times from now on. Pixel remarks his life will never be boring again as she disappears. Bob is deeply moved by this experience, and becomes the pacifist we know towards viruses.
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** Also Hexadecimal, for taking an instant liking to him, as she was somewhat a CrazyCatLady with Scuzzy in the beginning.
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He was infected as a child by a [[ThePrankster Benign virus]] - a powerful cat-like being that pranks everyone she ever came across, but was forbidden by her User to [[ThouShaltNotKill ever harm anyone]]. Bob was a nerdy unfunny boy in the Supercomputer, who utterly ''hated'' viruses. The virus (whom we shall call Pixel from this point onward) unwittingly swept him up into her latest joke on the User. As the Guardians attacked, Pixel escaping, didn't realize Bob was along for the ride [[PrankGoneTooFar until it was too late]]. She tried to save him from a delete command, both end up severely injured and land in a garbage dump. Pixel laments how unfunny it is to go from mocking the gods (users) to [[HowTheMightyHaveFallen dying with a child in the trash]]. Bob says she's a virus, therefore ''is trash'' and one day he'll be a Guardian that cleans up all the trash. He weakly tries to leave. Pixel begs him not to let her die alone, as death is never a funny thing. Bob reluctantly stays. The virus thanks him by downloading her code into him, as "one last prank on the Net". It not only saves his life, but makes him a pseudo-Guardian Cadet. Bob is alarmed, but Pixel tells him not to bother telling anyone. It'll ''take weeks'' for the Guardians to figure out her code. [[note]]a mere second in the User world is [[YearInsideHourOutside well over 37 years]] in cyberspace![[/note]]. Bob protests the Net needs a Guardian. Pixel refutes him - the Net has plenty of executioners and murderers, in the form of Guardians and Codemasters. ''The Net needs laughter'', and Bob will always have a dorky fun-loving nature, even during hard times from now on. Pixel remarks his life will never be boring again as she disappears. Bob is utterly moved by this experience, and becomes the pacifist we know towards viruses.

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He was infected as a child by a [[ThePrankster Benign virus]] - a powerful cat-like being that pranks everyone she ever came across, but was forbidden by her User to [[ThouShaltNotKill ever harm anyone]]. Bob was a nerdy unfunny boy in the Supercomputer, who utterly ''hated'' viruses. The virus (whom we shall call Pixel from this point onward) unwittingly swept him up into her latest joke on the User. As the Guardians attacked, Pixel escaping, didn't realize Bob was along for the ride [[PrankGoneTooFar until it was too late]]. She tried to save him from a delete command, both end up severely injured and land in a garbage dump. Pixel laments how unfunny it is to go from mocking the gods (users) to [[HowTheMightyHaveFallen dying with a child in the trash]]. Bob says she's a virus, therefore ''is trash'' and one day he'll be a Guardian that cleans up all the trash. He weakly tries to leave. Pixel begs him not to let her die alone, as death is never a funny thing. Bob reluctantly stays. The virus thanks him by downloading her code into him, as "one last prank on the Net". It not only saves his life, but makes him a pseudo-Guardian Cadet. Bob is alarmed, but Pixel tells him not to bother telling anyone. It'll ''take weeks'' for the Guardians to figure out her code. [[note]]a mere second in the User world is [[YearInsideHourOutside well over 37 years]] in cyberspace![[/note]]. Bob protests the Net needs a Guardian. Pixel refutes him - the Net has plenty of executioners and murderers, in the form of Guardians and Codemasters. ''The Net needs laughter'', and Bob will always have a dorky fun-loving nature, even during hard times from now on. Pixel remarks his life will never be boring again as she disappears. Bob is utterly deeply moved by this experience, and becomes the pacifist we know towards viruses.

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[[WMG:Phong knew all along that Enzo, [=AndrAIa=] and Friskit survived.]]

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[[WMG:Bob is a viral]]
He was infected as a child by a [[ThePrankster Benign virus]] - a powerful cat-like being that pranks everyone she ever came across, but was forbidden by her User to [[ThouShaltNotKill ever harm anyone]]. Bob was a nerdy unfunny boy in the Supercomputer, who utterly ''hated'' viruses. The virus (whom we shall call Pixel from this point onward) unwittingly swept him up into her latest joke on the User. As the Guardians attacked, Pixel escaping, didn't realize Bob was along for the ride [[PrankGoneTooFar until it was too late]]. She tried to save him from a delete command, both end up severely injured and land in a garbage dump. Pixel laments how unfunny it is to go from mocking the gods (users) to [[HowTheMightyHaveFallen dying with a child in the trash]]. Bob says she's a virus, therefore ''is trash'' and one day he'll be a Guardian that cleans up all the trash. He weakly tries to leave. Pixel begs him not to let her die alone, as death is never a funny thing. Bob reluctantly stays. The virus thanks him by downloading her code into him, as "one last prank on the Net". It not only saves his life, but makes him a pseudo-Guardian Cadet. Bob is alarmed, but Pixel tells him not to bother telling anyone. It'll ''take weeks'' for the Guardians to figure out her code. [[note]]a mere second in the User world is [[YearInsideHourOutside well over 37 years]] in cyberspace![[/note]]. Bob protests the Net needs a Guardian. Pixel refutes him - the Net has plenty of executioners and murderers, in the form of Guardians and Codemasters. ''The Net needs laughter'', and Bob will always have a dorky fun-loving nature, even during hard times from now on. Pixel remarks his life will never be boring again as she disappears. Bob is utterly moved by this experience, and becomes the pacifist we know towards viruses.
** It would explain why Glitch was very reluctant to join with him after Dixon's death - the Keytool sensed Pixel's code in Bob. Bob has shown several times through the series he resists the Guardian code (because he's not really a proper Guardian). This is why Frisket (a dog) hates him (Pixel's a cat!) for no reason.
** If another Benign virus accidentally referred to Bob as 'Pixel', it would mortify Dot, and probably sadly scupper any plans to be married - she detests viruses, and the idea of being the wife to anyone who's viral.

[[WMG:Phong knew all along that Enzo, [=AndrAIa=] and Friskit Frisket survived.]]
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* Now there's a twist! But the games resembling our reality though do throw a spanner in the works with that theory. Unless we're dealing with ''[[{{Transhuman}} highly evolved]]'' humans in the far future. Or maybe even aliens [[AliensStealCable hijacking our Internet]] on their quantum computers for their own pleasure.



She's a living viral upgrade. When Kilobyte upgraded to Gigabyte it was stated to have skipped a generation. However, as it was upgrading it was teleported away by Welman Matrix and seperated into two viruses. Megabyte is the real virus, the skipped generation, strong, persistent and infectious. Hexadecimal is the interrupted upgrade, she's raw power given form, her chaotic behaviour is due to a lack of purpose. Notice how, throughout the entire series, Hexadecimal lacks a function, no other character has this problem. Every single virus we see is on a mission to infect or destroy but Hexadecimal just sits around until she gets bored and then stirs up some trouble, not even seeming particularly bothered when she is ultimately thwarted and even switches sides without much thought or effort. Further notice that Gigabyte really is little more than Megabyte with Hexadecimal's powers.

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She's a living viral upgrade. When Kilobyte upgraded to Gigabyte it was stated to have skipped a generation. However, as it was upgrading it was teleported away by Welman Matrix and seperated separated into two viruses. Megabyte is the real virus, the skipped generation, strong, persistent and infectious. Hexadecimal is the interrupted upgrade, she's raw power given form, her chaotic behaviour is due to a lack of purpose. Notice how, throughout the entire series, Hexadecimal lacks a function, no other character has this problem. Every single virus we see is on a mission to infect or destroy but Hexadecimal just sits around until she gets bored and then stirs up some trouble, not even seeming particularly bothered when she is ultimately thwarted and even switches sides without much thought or effort. Further notice that Gigabyte really is little more than Megabyte with Hexadecimal's powers.




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* Jossed. It's said explicitly in the show, the User is downloading the games from the Net (i.e. the Internet).
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* If the Twin City is another computer on a home LAN, and not a partitioned hard drive, then yes, there's probably a parent and child user doing work and playing games on both those computers. Since Games keep downloading to Mainframe, it's likely the mother/father is extremely pissed their computer (Twin City) had a meltdown, and is purchasing a replacement.

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* If the Twin City is another computer on a home LAN, and not a partitioned hard drive, then yes, there's probably a parent and child child. One user doing work work, and the other playing games on both those computers. Since Games keep downloading to Mainframe, it's likely the mother/father is extremely pissed their computer (Twin City) had a meltdown, and is purchasing a replacement.
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* If the Twin City is another computer on a home LAN, and not a partitioned hard drive, then yes, there's probably a parent and child user doing work and playing games on both those computers. Since Games keep downloading to Mainframe, it's likely the mother/father is extremely pissed their computer (Twin City) had a meltdown, and is purchasing a replacement.
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* Or, they could go the ''Anime/MegaManNTWarrior'' route. The world of users could build giant [[AmazingTechnicolorBattlefield Dimensional Areas]] [[note]]A dimensional convergence between the cyberworld and the real world that turns a set area into its own phantom zone. Where sprites can travel in and out of mainframe into the real world within a limited field shielded with generators without using surrogate suits.[[/note]] And [[HenshinHero Cross Fusion]] along the way. Which is the global form of the Dimensional Area Generator that are installed and utilizes satellite dishes and orbital reflectors turning the entire globe into a giant Dimensional Area where Sprites and Humans can co-exist.
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The system from "Icons" is a personal PC that downloaded Matrix and AndrAIa off a floppy disk delivered to it.

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The system from "Icons" is a personal PC that downloaded Matrix and AndrAIa [=AndrAIa=] off a floppy disk delivered to it.



The system from "Number 7" is the UN, more specifically for a seat of power to a foreign ambassador, also routed through an antivirus company, which is how Matrix and AndrAIa were able to enter the system in the first place.

The Desert Port System is an Ethernet hub, which explains how Matrix and AndrAIa were finally able to find ports to the Net. That said, the Y2K infection, Daemon, was already ensuring that system errors meant the two could not find a way back to Mainframe.

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The system from "Number 7" is the UN, more specifically for a seat of power to a foreign ambassador, also routed through an antivirus company, which is how Matrix and AndrAIa [=AndrAIa=] were able to enter the system in the first place.

The Desert Port System is an Ethernet hub, which explains how Matrix and AndrAIa [=AndrAIa=] were finally able to find ports to the Net. That said, the Y2K infection, Daemon, was already ensuring that system errors meant the two could not find a way back to Mainframe.
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The system from "Icons" is a personal PC that downloaded Matrix and AndrAIa off a floppy disk delivered to it.

The system from "Where No Sprite Has Gone Before" is the computer to a foreign center of government, similar to the Pentagon. The Hero Selective is antivirus software routed through that country's military HQ, same as the Pentagon is for the Guardian Collective of the SGC.

The system from "Number 7" is the UN, more specifically for a seat of power to a foreign ambassador, also routed through an antivirus company, which is how Matrix and AndrAIa were able to enter the system in the first place.

The Desert Port System is an Ethernet hub, which explains how Matrix and AndrAIa were finally able to find ports to the Net. That said, the Y2K infection, Daemon, was already ensuring that system errors meant the two could not find a way back to Mainframe.
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Sorry if this is natter, any mod who wants to can edit.

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[[WMG: The User is Samantha Carter.]]
And Mainframe is the SGC's Net analog, made possible by the excitement of particles within a subspace compression plane, and is responsible for the relativistic effects in time dilation between the world of Users and Net systems. The Supercomputer is based in the Pentagon's computer networks. When Captain Carter was brought aboard to study the Stargate in 1993, she had an IBM System/390 ES/9000 mainframe computer requisitioned to help with the heavy number-crunching that was necessary in generating new Stargate coordinates.

Shortly after the mission to Chulak, Carter hooked up her mainframe computer to the Internet, figuring that it would prove to be useful in their line of work, which while prophetic, nevertheless had the unintended side effect of downloading a virus into the system from German hackers who had uploaded a VIRDEM variant into the computers of the Pentagon in an effort to thwart US and NATO-allied installations and facilities. While the plan failed, VIRDEM split into the variants 792 and 824, or Megabyte and Hexadecimal. The process of downloading the virus crashed the system and was responsible for purging the second hard drive of Mainframe, resulting in the Twin City Disaster.

Acting quickly, Captain Carter downloaded most essential OS to the secondary hard drive, though most of the program and system files were deleted, so as added precaution, she downloaded the Angry Bob program, which was an antivirus program on loan and routed through the Pentagon supercomputer. When the Angry Bob was uploaded into the SGC's main computer database, she repartitioned important drivers off the Dot Matrix printer to write new programming language for the SGC's mainframe, and given the importance of the Stargate Program and the information which she had stored, Carter was unable to requisition a replacement, and so she merely allowed the Angry Bob to fulfill its function and keep the viral infection at bay, though never completely erased.

Occasionally, other members of SG-1 would take turns playing games on the SGC mainframe. Which explains why the Game Cubes appear so frequently. The User who beat Enzo in Immortal Konflict? Teal'c chose the role of Zaytan and landed the finishing blow that took out a young Enzo's eye, leaving him scarred and making for delicious karmic irony due to his history as Apophis's First Prime.
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[[WMG: Megabyte is the real hero.]]
He's trying to take over the internet not to dominate it, but to save mankind. He had a vision of the future, showing what the internet will become in the next few decades: a cesspit where opinions are scorned, memes run rampant, corporations overcharge on everything, and politicians spread lies to further their agendas. All he wants to do is destroy the internet before this happens.
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She's likely still ticked off at him when she realized in "Trust No One" that he used her.

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She's likely still ticked off at him when she realized for using her and nearly had her blown up with the rest of Mainframe in "Trust No One" that he used her.One".
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[[WMG: At some point, we'll see Mouse punch Turbo.]]
She's likely still ticked off at him when she realized in "Trust No One" that he used her.

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moving Guardian Code WM Gs to the correct page


* Possibly confirmed by ''The Guardian Code''.

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* Possibly confirmed by ''The Guardian Code''.



[[WMG: In ''Reboot: The Guardian Code,'' the ContinuityReboot will be referenced as a canonical in-universe event.]]
In the future of the original show, Mainframe undergoes a system reformatting that makes the characters different design-wise and possibly personality-wise. Their memories will be altered and there may be use of BroadStrokes while incorporating new elements into the show. A possible storyline could be the characters discovering what happened in the events of the original show, possibly to prevent similar conflicts.
* {{Jossed}}. When Mainframe is reactivated, it is reset to its original season one appearance.



[[WMG: The Sourcerer is [[VideoGame/SonicForces Infinite]] reborn as a human.]]
Is an OmnicidalManiac who wants to destroy civilization for a barely explained reason? Has some form of [[RealityWarper control]] over a virtual reality? Is impossibly edgy in just about every facet of their appearance and general demeanor? Throws a tantrum when they get bested by a heroic (or anti-heroic) character? Teams up with a ManipulativeBastard villain who commands a powerful army? The Sourcerer ticks the same boxes as Infinite does.

[[WMG: In ''Guardian Code'', Sourcerer will get upstaged by Megabyte.]]
The guy's a MagnificentBastard who's turned on just about anyone who he's enlisted the help of or anyone who's enlisted ''his'' help. It's not so much a matter of ''if'' his alliance with the Sourcerer remains intact, but rather ''when'' the virus will turn on him and begin seizing power of the external world as opposed to destroying it. Whether or not he kills the edge singularity who brought him to life, spares him out of some form of gratitude and merely locks him away, or uses him as a physical body of sorts is up for grabs.

[[WMG: In ''The Guardian Code'' Megabyte's new voice will be {{Lampshaded}} at some point.]]
It seems that his new voice actor isn't making even a token effort at sounding like the late, great Sir Creator/TonyJay, so someone, likely Enzo or maybe Mike, will call attention to this fact.

[[WMG: The Sourcerer Is....]]
[[spoiler: ....Austin's father. The show conspicuously avoids showing his face during the flashback to the digitization device in episode five. The Sourcerer lacks even a cursory backstory, which is suspicious in-and-of-itself, but he also immediately leaps to the conclusion that the Guardians are digitized humans in a later episode, which makes perfect sense if he invented the technology.]]

[[WMG: In ''The Guardian Code'' the Next Generation Guardians will get the ability to [=ReBoot=]]]
Either VERA or Mouse will be responsible.
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Correcting Main/Reboot links.


Plays games all the time, never erased the RAM which spawns the game characters in ''System Crash'', only updated the system files once, never ran a virus scan before the system crashed, didn't even try to fix the system when Megabyte destroyed it, and after the system crashed he only types YES when the computer asked for a system restore. The user was simply to young to know how to do anything on a computer other than play games.

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Plays games all the time, never erased the RAM which spawns the game characters in ''System Crash'', only updated the system files once, never ran a virus scan before the system crashed, didn't even try to fix the system when Megabyte destroyed it, and after the system crashed he only types YES when the computer asked for a system restore. The user was simply to too young to know how to do anything on a computer other than play games.



** As was mentioned above, ''ReBoot'' was made in the 90's--1994, to be exact. The series far and away predates the concept of automatic updates for mainstream operating systems. [[https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/224420 Windows 98]] was the first Microsoft operating system to have a program that ''scanned'' for updates and ''notified'' the user if any were available. It wouldn't be until Windows Me, however, that this feature included the ability to ''automatically'' download updates and install them. It's only been since Windows 10 that these automatic updates have been taken completely out of the user's hands.

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** As was mentioned above, ''ReBoot'' ''[=ReBoot=]'' was made in the 90's--1994, to be exact. The series far and away predates the concept of automatic updates for mainstream operating systems. [[https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/224420 Windows 98]] was the first Microsoft operating system to have a program that ''scanned'' for updates and ''notified'' the user if any were available. It wouldn't be until Windows Me, however, that this feature included the ability to ''automatically'' download updates and install them. It's only been since Windows 10 that these automatic updates have been taken completely out of the user's hands.



All the ExecutiveMeddling ABC did to ReBoot was an attempt to force the show to fail and kill the medium before FollowTheLeader took effect and spawned a wave of CGI shows that would replace traditional Western Animation. While ReBoot survived the meddling, ABC succeeded in preventing FollowTheLeader and delayed the wave of CGI shows for about a decade. ABC's motive for this was to maintain the AnimationAgeGhetto by preserving the Status Quo of Western Animation.

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All the ExecutiveMeddling ABC did to ReBoot [=ReBoot=] was an attempt to force the show to fail and kill the medium before FollowTheLeader took effect and spawned a wave of CGI shows that would replace traditional Western Animation. While ReBoot [=ReBoot=] survived the meddling, ABC succeeded in preventing FollowTheLeader and delayed the wave of CGI shows for about a decade. ABC's motive for this was to maintain the AnimationAgeGhetto by preserving the Status Quo of Western Animation.



That system was really a Playstation and The User had loaded the ReBoot video game for the console. But since Matrix was in the game RecursiveCanon kicked in and destabilized the game code. As Matrix derailed the game looking for the Number 1, the game code continued to deteriorate and all sense of logic was lost, resulting in a MindScrew. Matrix's "chat" with young Enzo finally crashed the game and rendered Matrix unconscious while the User went back to playing a golf game. Being a game sprite [=AndrAIa=]'s memory was reset when the ReBoot game crashed and had no idea why Matrix was unconscious, and decided to tease Matrix by saying he was knocked out by a golf ball.

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That system was really a Playstation and The User had loaded the ReBoot [=ReBoot=] video game for the console. But since Matrix was in the game RecursiveCanon kicked in and destabilized the game code. As Matrix derailed the game looking for the Number 1, the game code continued to deteriorate and all sense of logic was lost, resulting in a MindScrew. Matrix's "chat" with young Enzo finally crashed the game and rendered Matrix unconscious while the User went back to playing a golf game. Being a game sprite [=AndrAIa=]'s memory was reset when the ReBoot [=ReBoot=] game crashed and had no idea why Matrix was unconscious, and decided to tease Matrix by saying he was knocked out by a golf ball.



[[WMG: In ''The Guardian Code'' the Next Generation Guardians will get the ability to ReBoot]]

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[[WMG: In ''The Guardian Code'' the Next Generation Guardians will get the ability to ReBoot]][=ReBoot=]]]
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* There is another possibility not considered: most of the games are demos. In the time that the show was produced, computer game magazines like PC Gamer included CDs, which often included demos for various games. Since the show's run takes place within a two-day period, it's likely that the User purchased a PC gaming magazine and all the games featured are demos of actual games. This would account as to how quickly the User can play them (where multiple levels can be played in a short timeframe) and the overabundance of them in the show's run.

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* There is another possibility not considered: most of the games are demos. In the time that the show was produced, computer game magazines like PC Gamer included CDs, [=CDs=], which often included demos for various games. Since the show's run takes place within a two-day period, it's likely that the User purchased a PC gaming magazine and all the games featured are demos of actual games. This would account as to how quickly the User can play them (where multiple levels can be played in a short timeframe) and the overabundance of them in the show's run.
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* There is another possibility not considered: most of the games are demos. In the time that the show was produced, computer game magazines like PC Gamer included CDs, which often included demos for various games. Since the show's run takes place within a two-day period, it's likely that the User purchased a PC gaming magazine and all the games featured are demos of actual games. This would account as to how quickly the User can play them (where multiple levels can be played in a short timeframe) and the overabundance of them in the show's run.
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[[WMG: Hack and Slash are part-Keytool]]
It would certainly explain how they can generate a seemingly endless array of tools, weapons, and jetpacks from their bodies. If you consider ''VideoGame/ReBootCountdownToChaos'' canon, then ''Clash'' was part-Keytool and Hack and Slash inherited those abilities when Clash split.
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spelling correction




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\n* Possibly confirmed by ''The Guardian Code''.



He created a copy of Medusa and Bob had to go to the Super Computer to stop it. Megabyte could have created another Viral Bug and sent it into the Super Computer while Bob was entering it and programed it to infect Gaurdians and draw enough power to take a humanoid shape. Daemon did say she wasn't an entity...
* Conversely the copy of Medusa ''is'' Daemon. Megabyte said Hexadecimal's Medusa is quite inferior to his so it's likely he designed it to infect Gaurdians and by the time its infection followed Bob into the Super Computer it mutated into Daemon and skipped the stone part and went straight to waiting until time runs out to delete everything(which Medusa does after turning things to stone: it waits for a time before it deletes the object).

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He created a copy of Medusa and Bob had to go to the Super Computer to stop it. Megabyte could have created another Viral Bug and sent it into the Super Computer while Bob was entering it and programed it to infect Gaurdians Guardians and draw enough power to take a humanoid shape. Daemon did say she wasn't an entity...
* Conversely the copy of Medusa ''is'' Daemon. Megabyte said Hexadecimal's Medusa is quite inferior to his so it's likely he designed it to infect Gaurdians Guardians and by the time its infection followed Bob into the Super Computer it mutated into Daemon and skipped the stone part and went straight to waiting until time runs out to delete everything(which Medusa does after turning things to stone: it waits for a time before it deletes the object).
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[[WMG: In ''The Guardian Code'' the Next Generation Guardians will get the ability to ReBoot]]
Either VERA or Mouse will be responsible.

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Continuity connection with The Guardian Code



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* If the Guardian Code shows this to be true, she was created by the Sourcerer and originally did his bidding, until she rebelled against him.
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The absence of even a cursory backstory for the Sourcerer, and the conspicuous avoidance of Austin's father's face during his video in episode five, very strongly hint at this. The Sourcerer is also unsurprised humans can be digitized, and Austin's father was the one who invented the digitization technology.]]

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* {{Jossed}}. When Mainframe is reactivated, it is reset to its original season one appearance.


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[[WMG: The Sourcerer Is....]]
[[spoiler: ....Austin's father. The show conspicuously avoids showing his face during the flashback to the digitization device in episode five. The Sourcerer lacks even a cursory backstory, which is suspicious in-and-of-itself, but he also immediately leaps to the conclusion that the Guardians are digitized humans in a later episode, which makes perfect sense if he invented the technology.]]

The absence of even a cursory backstory for the Sourcerer, and the conspicuous avoidance of Austin's father's face during his video in episode five, very strongly hint at this. The Sourcerer is also unsurprised humans can be digitized, and Austin's father was the one who invented the digitization technology.]]
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[[WMG: In ''The Guardian Code'' Megabyte's new voice will be {{Lampshaded}} at some point.]]
It seems that his new voice actor isn't making even a token effort at sounding like the late, great Sir Creator/TonyJay, so someone, likely Enzo or maybe Mike, will call attention to this fact.
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** If the trailer for ''The Guardian Code'' is any indication, Mainframe is at least accessible from a high school computer lab.

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