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1[[WMG: ''Literature/BattleRoyale'' and Literature/NineteenEightyFour are in the same world]]
2Obviously, the totalitarian Republic of Greater East Asia is the same nation as Eastasia. Orwell says that Oceania, Eurasia and Eastasia are all the same, and the similarities are striking. ''Literature/BattleRoyale'' shows the rewriting of history books (Noriko is genuinely surprised that people had it better in the "feudal times"), publicly broadcast executions as entertainment, propaganda against the "evil imperialists", and even a Big Brother figure in the Great Dictator.
3* Supported by the fact that, if 1984 is to be believed, Eurasia and Eastasia never ally with each other, which is unlikely if Eastasia were China, but makes sense if Eastasia is Imperial Japan. After all, after UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, neither Russia nor Japan liked the America or the rest of the Anglosphere, but they both respected them for being badass warriors. If the war ended in a conditional armistice, rather than nuclear weapon-induced unconditional surrender, Japan would have retained considerable territory on the Mainland and the world would not have developed a healthy aversion to the use of nuclear weapons.
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6[[WMG:''Film/BattleRoyale'' and ''Film/ChildrenOfMen'' are in the same continuity]]
7BR is set a few years before ''Children of Men'', before everyone outside Britain went nuts, but the first symptoms are already showing. The unruly schoolchildren are the last generation -- and completely detached. Taking parts of BR2 ([[FanonDiscontinuity and only some parts]]), the youth of Japan will rise against the grownups, resulting in a civil war which more or less wipes out the nation but the 2030's of COM.
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9[[WMG: ''Literature/BattleRoyale'' and ''Literature/TheHungerGames'' are in the same continuity]]
10BR is set in (novelverse and mangaverse) an AU where Japan apparently won UsefulNotes/WorldWarTwo, or TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture in the movie. In either case, this is several hundred years before ''The Hunger Games'' starts...but the government of Panem could have remembered the BR Program, and modeled the Hunger Games on it.
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13[[WMG:''Film/BattleRoyale'' and ''Literature/AClockworkOrange'' are in the same continuity]]
14The Republic of Greater East Asia have the Program as a means to control the criminal youth as well as possible insurrection. The United Kingdom have the Ludovico Technique for that.
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16[[WMG: ''Film/BattleRoyale'' and ''Film/KillBill'' are in the same continuity]]
17Gogo Yubari could easily be the winner of a previous Battle Royale, and have either kept the weapon she was randomly assigned (the meteor hammer) or obtained another one after going into O-Ren Ishii's service.
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19[[WMG: The Selection of which class is a part of the program is not random]]
20The class that is selected is always the one that is determined to be the one most likely to produce someone that shall grow up to be a potential threat to the regime. The BR program ensures that almost all of these students are killed and that the "winner" is so traumatized by their ordeal and so marginalized by society that the odds of them ever accomplishing anything are zero.
21* Almost certainly true. When [[spoiler: Kawada]] hacked into The Program's website, [[spoiler: he]] found a list of all the classes selected to participate, thus [[spoiler: he's able to join the next class half a year before the game]].
22* Considering how many unique freaks there are in this class -- at least half of them are completely insane or became so with just a little push -- odds are good the Powers That Be choose it because it would put on the best show.
23** Maybe in the movie but the novel and manga have the Program as something seen only by the people in charge of it and even they mostly see it as blips on a GPS and recorded conversation - not much of a show.
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25[[WMG: There is a small group of schools, no more that a few dozen or so, that are officially exempt from the BR programme]]
26These schools are reserved for the children of the Greater Republic of East Asia's ruling elite.
27* Completely wrong. It was stated several times during the manga that EVERYONE, as long as they're of appropriate age, can be selected for play, no matter if they're the child of a cubicle worker or the President. One of the contestants' father held a high government post, but that didn't save him.
28** [[UnreliableNarrator And how do you know that's not a lie told to demoralize the contestant?]]
29** And there's always the possibility that that father had been disgraced in some way and had thus lost any special privileges for him and his family.
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31[[WMG: The current Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara might draw inspiration from the Battle Royale Program]]
32He's declared his hatred for Otaku and Gay people, but this [[http://www.sankakucomplex.com/2011/01/29/ishihara-young-people-have-no-culture/ article]] makes me think he would implement the program if he could.
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34[[WMG: If Film/TheHungerGames film is successful, then the film ''Film/BattleRoyale'' will be exported as a Hollywood Film]]
35The only difference between The Hunger Games and Battle Royale is that in the Hunger Games the tributes aren't high school students, and they exposit more on the setting. The movie for Hunger Games might be given advertisements as if it was a Hollywood film. If successful, someone would notice Battle Royale and decide to export it as well.
36** Confirmed, sort of. The first official DVD release will be out in late March when Film/TheHungerGames movie comes out.
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38[[WMG: The cat killed by Kaori in the manga wasn't real]]
39Even if there were cats on the island, they should have been stray, not the cuddly variety. And stray cats avoid people, especially if they've noticed that said people are loud and violent. Seeing how Kaori is completely insane, her hallucinating a kitten seems not unlikely.
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41And the cat Noriko's seen earlier was actually... a squirrel. Yes. Most definitely.
42** The island used to be inhabited, so it's possible that someone might have left their pet cat behind (intentionally or not).
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44[[WMG: ''Literature/BattleRoyale'' is set in the same universe as ''Literature/TheLongWalk.'']]
45Both are a last man standing tournament for youths with [[ThereCanBeOnlyOne one survivor]] being the victor. The only difference, really, is that The Long Walk is more a battle of attrition.
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47[[WMG: The original purpose of the Program was to generate [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure Stand Users]].]]
48If you don't have at least a piece of one of the Arrows, your only options for getting Stand Users are (a) be lucky enough to find someone born with a Stand ''and'' sympathetic to you, or (b) put the right person through enough stress that the Stand spontaneously awakens, and that's ''still'' a remote chance. So, if someone like Yoshihiro Kira (Dio and Enya clearly approved of him if he was given an Arrow by them, even if that couldn't have been until the 1980s) were in the 1940s Japanese military or government--he's about the right age--and knew about Stands (probably meaning that he himself was born with a Stand, and was in something like Unit 731 with lots of desperate guinea pigs whose own Stands might awaken otherwise unknown), he could come up with this way to both keep the populace too fearful of each other to rebel ''and'' make a slowly growing contingent of [[SuperSoldier Super Soldiers]] via stress/terror/etc. evocation. Ideally, Stand-using survivors (anybody with a Stand is going to have a ''huge'' advantage over more normal classmates, so the odds are against an awakened Stand User losing) will end up being just broken enough to no longer be averse to killing, but not so broken/vengeful that they're more of a threat to the bakufu than the bakufu's enemies.
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50[[WMG: In ''Film/BattleRoyale'' Mitsuko resents that Noriko has people protecting her because no one ever protected her.]]

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