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General WM Gs The movie Stargate occurred in an Alternate Universe in relation to the SG-1 universe.
Well, it just makes a sort of sense. The alternate Samantha Carter says in "There But For the Grace of God" that alternate universes differ in their degrees of likeness to each other. It's not inconceivable that there's an alternate universe in which everyone looked different, O'Neill had only one L in his name, and Sha're was called Sha'uri.
Daniel Jackson is a Timelord.
It's the reason he has come back from death so many times.
Glasses in Stargate are the opposite of goatees in Star Trek.
Daniel's incident with the sarcophagus that chewed up his soul, or whatever, progressively corrected his vision. If his vision was considered normal for him (so the sarcophagi didn't bother "fixing" it), his vision should have stayed bad every time he used the sarcophagus. But when he went all Dark Daniel from abusing the healing powers, he didn't need his glasses. Their loss must have been a visual representation of his soullessness, or whatever, just like Mirror Spock's goatee and the beards in the Middleman alt-world special.
O'Neill is a Troper
Think about it.
The SG 1 team ran out of helmets that fit them
In early episodes they have helmets but later on budget cuts mean that they can't afford helmets for everybody. So the old helmets got used up and the remaining can't fit SG 1.
Naqida is an element in the island of stability.
It's a superheavy element with a very long half-life, but it is extremely unstable to explosions- the slightest explosion will make it go supercritical and cause a nuclear explosion. These are properties we would anticipate for elements in the island of stability (which has not, as of yet, been observed).
The ship encountered in Grace belongs to the guys from Foothold, AKA the Stragoth.
The planet of the feral Goa'uld is not the Goa'uld homeworld. Or it is, but it isn't, really.
Thousands of years ago, an "older, wiser" species stumbled across a planet inhabited by a large, sentient, bipedal, reptilian species that was infested by a horrible brain-eating parasite. Being merciful and kind, they removed some of the unfortunate creatures from their homeworld to an experimental station on an uninhabited planet. However, they discovered that the two species had a symbiotic relationship. Without the weird worm-like creatures, the reptilians were reduced to animal intelligence and near-total amnesia. They also became sterile. The symbiote, meanwhile, slowly lost its intelligence and wasted away. Still creeped out by the idea of two species being linked that way, the scientists working on the project tried to make it possible for them to live separately. The result: the first Unas—intelligent, but forced to rediscover everything from firebuilding on up—and the first Goa'uld—ironically, true parasites, no longer dependent on their hosts for a brain boost and able to take control in a way that their ancestors could not. The scientists gave up and left and some of the feral Goa'uld later managed to kidnap Unas hosts and escape. The actual homeworld of the original, unmodified species is still out there somewhere.
Tealc lost his staff and had to grow his hair after he lost a bet.
He did have experience playing poker.
General Hammond is Jewish.
In "The Serpent's Lair" he uses the Yiddish expression "From your mouth to God's ears."
Stargate personnel use armor-piercing bullets.
When Apophis attacks Cheyenne Mountain in "Children of the Gods", Jaffa armor proves mostly bulletproof, with only one killed by a lucky shot. But later in the episode, and in all subsequent episodes, Tau'ri bullets do quite well. What happened was that they used Cheyenne Mountain's supply of armor-piercing bullets for the mission to Chulak, and all subsequent requisition orders have included plenty of armor-piercing bullets.
The entire series is Teal'c's dream. The only real part is the "normal world" in "The Changeling".
Come on, somebody had to propose it. (It's the basis for one fanfic communitySome of the things Teal'c and O'Neill did when stuck in the loop in "Window of Opportunity"
Just like the gate wouldn't dial outside addresses, no one could die/be murdered in "Window of Opportunity"
Merlin's tablet was encrypted with his public key
The alliance of four great races were of races that inspired one another
Yet another alternative to the above theory. The cycle starts with the furlings, who are an ancient and powerful race. When they felt their end coming and retreated far away (possibly integrating with background radiation from the big bang, just to integrate SGU) they passed on their knowledge to the race they saw most worthy, the nox. The Nox, inspired by the furling ideas, develop even further, integrating various ideas into their society. But when the Nox felt that they had grown stagnant and complacent, they gave their legacy to a race that had recently fled to their galaxy; the Ancients. What happened to the ancients is pretty well known to all by now, and they passed their knowledge down to a race that had just created their first hyperdrive, yet were already capable of reaching another galaxy; the asgard. The asgard, inspired by their predeccesors, protected the children of the ancients, the tau'ri, and built the Heliopolis complex so that none of the four great races would be lost to history. And when their history was over, they passed on all their knowledge once again.
Laura Cadman is gay.
When Laura Cadman's mind is stuck inside Rodney McKay's brain, she insists he turn up to a dinner date, keeps giving him advice on romance, and eventually takes over his body and passionately kisses his date. That seems to suggest that she's attracted to his date herself. Her pursuit of Carson is done purely to annoy McKay — Carson's later relationship with her doesn't go beyond a couple of dinner dates. Even McKay seems to recognize this. He irritably says that he doesn't need her to be his "Cyrano". The Cyrano from the play was in love with Roxanne himself.
In "It's Good to be King", Garan (the woman who supports Maybourne by listing all the good things he's done) is actually the Ancient who built the Prophecy Wall.
Well, the Ancient had to be there somewhere, right?
They use the guoald hand healing device off screen to heal away all their injuries
Lets face it their medical insurance would probably bankrupt the programme anyways and they do manage to heal away some injuries which should leave some scarring. Aside form Col O'Niell's scar on his eyebrow probably because he wanted to out do Quatrich.
The Stargate Program is the worst-kept secret in the armed forces.
Maybe they're keeping the information quiet from civilians, but there is no way they can be keeping something of this magnitude quiet anymore. Everyone has undoubtedly heard the rumors.
The sticking point on the revelation of the Stargate Program isn't technology or science, it's religion.
All the upper echelons of every major established world religion have already been briefed. They're just still bickering a bit on how to explain things to the faithful.
By all accounts, the Ancients seem to massively outpace the Asgard and possible the Nox? But how true is that?
Daniel never actually decended
According to a somewhat crackish theory that this troper read he ascended that first time and never actually came back. He just raised a homunculus with his non-ascended memories to act as his pawn in the material universe via some sort of ascended loophole. Each time one homunculus gets itself killed, he manufactures another one.
How the Stargate system works The point of origin symbol is the equivalent of the Enter key.
Since the POO symbol is always the last one in a sequence, and since it stays the same for every address dialed, its only meaning can be to signal that the address is complete — thus allowing the dialing program to distinguish between situations where seven, eight, or all nine chevrons are used.
Explaining why it's different for every Stargate is trickier. In Stargate the movie, the Earth and Abydos Stargates had completely different symbol sets — an aspect that SG-1 quietly retconned away. Since all Stargates are now identical except for the POO symbol, the idea is probably to tell Stargates apart even if they are moved between planets.
DHDs were invented between the colonization of the Milky Way galaxy and the colonization of the Pegasus galaxy. Before, only manual dial was used.
This is based solely on the fact that Pegasus Stargates don't have moving parts, not allowing manual dial at all, unlike Milky Way Stargates. Presumably, once the Ancients invented DHDs and installed them everywhere in the Milky Way, they declared manual dial obsolete; its possibility was only retained for already existing Stargates.
The Milky Way, Othalla, and Ori home galaxies' Stargates have three junk symbols.
Consider: Both the 'newer'/more advanced Pegasus Galaxy Stargates have 36 glyph spaces. The new 'proto-Stargate' seen on the Gateship Destiny and in some episode previews on distant planets also have 36 glyphs. The Milky Way,
The SGC uses the dialing computer instead of a DHD intentionally.
They could get a DHD if they really wanted one. The dialing computer is far more secure.
Stargate addresses map to real coordinates differently from Daniel's explanation in Stargate.
First, having three lines intersecting in 3D space is redundant: if a set of fixed points is enough to cover all addresses, then addresses only need to have four components, not six, to get two intersecting lines.
Second, Daniel's model would imply that addresses allow a number of permutations: for example, 2-1-3-4-6-5, 4-3-2-1-5-6, or even backwards, as the three intersecting lines would stay the same. However, in Stargate SG-1, it's implied that addresses are unique and strictly order-dependent.
Third, constellations are not fixed points in space: they're areas of the imaginary sky sphere created by projecting stars of varying distance from Earth onto a single sphere.
Fourth, there are addresses differing in only one symbol. In Daniel's model, it would result (at best) in two intersecting lines and one line not passing through their intersection point.
What do the addresses mean, then? Well, in 3D space, you need at least three coordinates, although the coordinate system itself can vary (Cartesian, cylindrical, spherical, etc.) It's possible that the "constellations" do not correspond to real constellations (as Daniel assumed) and instead only serve as digits in base 38, and the mapping between "constellations" and digits was arbitrarily chosen. They translate into some coordinate system, and each of the three coordinates uses two "constellation" digits (and thus each coordinate has 1444 possible values — presumably, in some coordinate system, this gives sufficient resolution to address the entire galaxy).
What about the SGC address correction program, then? Well, presumably, Samantha came up with her own (correct) explanation of the addresses, independently, and probably never learned about Daniel's erroneous guess because she wasn't present when he explained it.
The Goa'uld and the Tok'ra Having a symbiote in you increases your inteligence
Okay we know that knowledge gets blended over but when faced with new situations like the sg team face it requires much more intuitive thinking. Vala was able to learn how to operate the prometheus despite bing just a common thief. Major Carter often complained about how we couldn't operate or understand alien technology but after having jolinar, new technologies happen to be as challenging as a newspaper soduku.
The Furlings are the Goa'uld or the Goa'uld's predecessors.
Who are the most advanced aliens who aren't in the four great races? That's right, the Goa'uld. Genetic memory can't occur naturally; it just doesn't work that way. The Furlings ascended, leaving behind their petty descendants who were more interested in conquering; this, using their genetic memory technology, evolved into a species-wide god complex.
Anise/Freya was a Goa'uld, and she alone was responsible for the supposed za'tark problem
Anise/Freya created the supposed za'tark detector as a means to create za'tarks. The first thing she did on Earth was to make Astor kill herself to create paranoia. She then made sure that Carter and O'Neill came out positive so that they would be locked up and unable to stop the real za'tark, Martouf, from assassinating the President.
The za'tark "detector" only works if it can find a memory gap to exploit, possibly taking advantage of the mind's possibly vulnerable state as it tries to fill in missing blanks from a given situation. (Nobody's memory is perfect, especially in a stressful situation.) Daniel and Teal'c had been lucky.
When Anise/Freya retested O'Neill and Carter, she didn't expect that they could fill in the blanks. She didn't 'trigger' them because she wanted O'Neill's DNA to start her own Goa'uld (hence, her trying to seduce him), and she likely knew that O'Neill would certainly not be in the 'mood' if anything happened to Sam.
The "nikta" is not the ass, but a part of the Goa'uld anatomy
Wouldn't be out of place.
System Lord Ba'al = Baal, Lord of Terror
Consider. Overlord Baal is capable of body surfing every time his current body is destroyed and can even hijack multiple bodies at once! Therefore, somewhere along the lines, one of the Ba'al clones went through a Stargate that had Phlebotinum liberally applied to it and ended up in one of the Netherworlds. Through the same explanation that gave us Overlord Prier{e}, Lord of Terror Baal was born.
System Lord Ba'al = Baal, Lord of Destruction
The Soulstone and Goa'uld itself are related.
Hades is/was a Tok'ra (or at least allied)
Kronos and Ares existence indicate the Greek pantheon were Goa'uld. Hades was pretty much the only guy there who didn't make a hobby of being a dick to mortals.
The Tok'ra exist as the result of covert manipulation by the Ancients.
Egeria, the queen who founded the Tok'ra, is also the only Goa'uld we've seen to take on a role from a specifically Roman myth. The Ancients are explicitly associated with Rome (both in language and in their role as "road-builders"). Obviously when they communicated with Rome, they discovered Egeria attempting to set up a power base in Italy, convinced her of the immorality of the Goa'uld methods, and got her to go into hiding to try to stop them.
(Incidentally, this is also the Stargate 'verse's explanation for why Roman mythology is mostly cribbed from Greek mythology—the Ancients stopped any Goa'uld from gaining any foothold in the Italian peninsula, but they weren't willing to go so far as to prevent its inhabitants from worshipping the next nearest "gods".)
Ba'al has a symbiotic relationship with his host, much as the Tok'ra do.
This is why he's so much less of a Large Ham Card-Carrying Villain than your standard Goa'uld—their personalities have blended considerably over the 2000 years they've been together. (It also means that Vala is about to get a big shock at the end of Stargate Continuum—she's expecting to help support someone who like her was a passive observer of Goa'uld tyranny, when in reality she's going to end up having to deal with a man who was entirely complicit in it.)
Ba'al's host is his own Harcesis.
We already know that a Goa'uld queen can choose what they pass on to their spawn, so logically they could do the same with normal kids, since they also get the Goa'uld genetic memory. We know Apophis tried to pull it off, and given how terrible unoriginal he was, there's no way he thought of it on his own. He had to get the idea somewhere, and given how innovative Ba'al is, he probably thought of it first and, some time ago, pulled it off, probably with Anat if you go by the RPG's books. This is why he's so much better at everything than the other Goa'uld: there are effectively two of him in each body. It also gives a good excuse to reuse him post-continuum. So what if the Symbiote is gone, Ba'al's still there.
Before his exile, Anubis was in the entertainment industry.
He wrote teleball dramas, mostly made for Goa'uld audiences. He was exiled after writing one too many cliffhanger season finales.
Most SGC personnel are at least minimally-proficient in Goa'uld
Jackson had to provide the translation early on, but over the years, most SGC personnel picked up the language, and eventually it became part of the training program. It explains why no one seems to have any trouble communicating with displaced human populations throughout the galaxy (even if Goa'uld isn't their native tongue, it's probably a lingua franca of sorts.) By now, Jackson has proven himself indispensable in far more ways than just as a walking Universal Translator, so of course they keep him around.
The Goa'uld are capable of sexual reproduction
The powerful males seem to keep Queens as "mates" and Heru'ur has two Goa'uld parents apparently. It also seems very odd for the "drones" to be the ones who hold more political power than the average Queen. Instead the Goa'uld are quite capable of sexual reproduction but they prefer to use parthenogenesis to reproduce instead for whatever reason, perhaps they can't incorporate the host species' DNA to ensure host compatibility unless it's done asexually
Ba'al's clones have no consciousness in the hosts
The Jaffa Jaffa helmets have built-in Universal Translators. That is why everyone seems to speak in English.
In the first seasons SG-1 used the translators that were salvaged from dead Jaffa, and later they managed to reverse engineer the technology.
The sodan eat their goauld symbiotes after they mature.
Well why not, a warrior's gotta eat.
And if the system lords do it, why not their slaves?
Trenonin allows Jaffa to live far longer and slows down aging
Take Teal'c for example who should now be older than Bratac but all he got was a patch of white.
Time Travel and Alternate Realities Jenny from "1969" is Jenny from Stargate
The young female hippie from the episode "1969" and the Chevron Gal in Stargate are the same person. Both are named "Jenny" (the latter according to the credits), their appearance is similar (aside from hair color), and the Stargate Jenny is just about the right number of years older.
You see, after SG-1 escaped through the Stargate back to 1999, the military searched the area, found the hippies, questioned them about SG-1, and then sent Michael to Vietnam, where he died. The Stargate Program was then started to investigate what happened (creating a Stable Time Loop), and Jenny somehow became involved, possibly since the military didn't want to bring any more civilians into the fold.
Jenny eventually ended up being the Chevron Gal at the time of the first Abydos mission. She was fired after the project got mothballed and was not brought back when the program was restarted; hence the reason there are civilian technicians in the film and military technicians in the series.
Cam Mitchell didn't exist until the end of season eight
Season eight ends on time travel, and it's implied that SG-1 managed to change a little more than they thought they did during that particular adventure. (Jack's fish, for example.) Mitchell had never been so much as alluded to before the premiere of season nine, despite apparently having been involved in events before that. Obviously, seasons 1-8 were one timeline, in which Mitchell was never born. After season eight, the timeline we'd been watching stopped existing, we caught a glimpse into another timeline where the Stargate program was never created at all, and then switched permanently over to a timeline where there were fish in Jack's pond and Cam Mitchell existed.
The alternate universe from "The Road Not Taken" is one of the ones Daniel finds in the Quantum Mirror in "Point of View".
In "Point of View", while they're in Kowalski's universe, Daniel has to scan through a bunch of other alternate universes to find the one they came from. There's a near miss that looks almost exactly like the right universe, except that Carter is a captain rather than a major. Seven years later, in "The Road Not Taken", Carter finds herself in a universe that again looks superficially similar to hers (though the longer she stays the more different it looks), except that she's a major instead of a lieutenant colonel.
The Ancients, the Ori, and the ascended The ancients got their knowledge from an even older race
Like the Precursors in halo
The ancients are actually humans gone back in time
Well even the ancients have to come from somewhere. The ori are probable anti-evolutionist anyway.
Macgyver is an ancient
He could build anything out of anything after all.
The ori are the pah-wraith and the ascended are the wormhole aliens
Wormholes exist in other realities so the ones from star trek and stargate are one and the same.
The Ori spread the use of English
It would be timewasting to estabilish a common dialogue so the ori secretly sent a means of teching english.
Near-Ascended Beings Can't Directly Kill People
There is something about the super-advanced human brain that prevents you from going around killing people. Telekinesis would make killing people easy, just choke them or break their necks or even just damage the heart or brain. But the only times I have seen near ascended beings kill people with telekinesis is indirectly. For example, pulling them onto a 50,000 volt metal plate or throwing them long distances. Even Kalek, homicidal maniac that he was didn't kill any of the SGC soldiers he was fighting by choking them, throwing their bullets back at them or just crushing them against a wall. Adria never killed anyone either (directly). The only times a direct kill has been done is but one of Nirrti's experiments (and he wasn't really near ascended) or by a Prior, who the Ori probably reprogramed to allow that, since he wasn't close to ascension anyway.
It was the post ascension ancients that were part of the alliance of four great races
Mostly a way to reconcile all the weird stuff going on with the timeline.
The timeline for the ancients would basically go like this:
1) Ancients flee from Ori galaxy
2) Ancients seed humanity
3) Ancients flee to Pegasus
4) Ancients build up a civilization/the Asgard quickly develop new technology/the nox something something/ the furlings something something
5) Ancients get their collective asses kicked by the wraith/The asgard travel to the milky way/the nox something something/ the furlings something something
6) The post-ascension ancients ally themselves with these dudes to discuss philosophy all day.
7) After a profound argument by Nox philosopher Telan, the ancients realize that, from a universal standpoint, a policy of non-interference would be the most logical according to their core beliefs.
8) Ancients and Nox stop talking to everyone and the alliance members don't really have any reason to contact one another anymore.
Alternate 4,5 and 6 from the previous theory
4) Ancients build up a civilization
5) Ancients get their collective asses kicked by the wraith
6) The ascended ancients artificially enhance the three races as to leave behind a legacy, teaching them stuff like the universal alphabet. This version possibly includes the four races never really meeting very often, with heliopolis being built by the furlings as a museum, rather than a meeting place.
The remaining three of the four great races (Furling, Asgard, Nox), realized that ascending doesn't solve any problems.
They realized that ascending is really a bit of a wash after seeing it didn't really improve on the quality of life.
The Ori have non-believers killed because otherwise they could used to weaken their power.
When people worship the Ori in the matter as set by the rules of Origin, the worshipers somehow create a "positive energy" which increases the Ori's power.
The reason the Ori have zero tolerance for non-believers is that, if enough non-believers were ever to get organised and work as one, then they could focus their anti-Ori beliefs to create a "negative energy" which would weaken the Ori enough that they could be defeated or even killed by mere mortals.
This is why they destroy worlds that do not bow to the Ori. They want to prevent that possibility of non-believers working together from ever happening.
The Ancients are actually human
Via time travel, future humans arrive to the Ori galaxy several hundred million years ago. After a while they forgot their origins. The Ancients arriving to the Milky Way (and Earth, specifically) witnessed the evolution of humans, and being the haughty bunch they are, they assumed that the universe revolves around them and they are their second evolution.
Repli!Carter survived
When her ship was hit by the energy weapon of Dakara, we see the ship disintegrate and we see both her and Daniel disappear in a flash of light. Daniel survived because Oma ascended him just before he would have died. However, Daniel had ascended before, and would presumably know quite a lot about the process as a result of being ascended and from studying the process independently. When Repli!Carter fought Daniel, they both gained each other's knowledge. Perhaps Repli!Carter figured out a way to ascend a split second before the weapon destroyed her ship.
The Ancients are Jedi and Elves
Star Wars occurred 'a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away' and the 'advanced humans', aka Jedi, were part of an evolutionary process towards ascension. Eventually they came to earth as 'the oldest race' but when they got old they didn't die but 'went to the gray havens.' All three groups wear similar clothing and have a deep reverence for the natural world and try not to interfere with humanity as much as they can.
The Furlings The Furling were/are dragons.
The Furlings are the Aliens who crewed the ship in "Grace"
The Furling are humans from the far future.
The Furlings were Replicators, before they became evil.
Bit of explaining to do, bear with me. Reese, the robot girl who created the Replicators, was created by a priest of the Furlings, who (much like the Goa'uld) pretended to be gods on many planets. She was able to create Replicators because she was programmed to do so by the priest, who got the coding directly from his gods. The Furlings, in the meantime, were suffering from errors that were passed down into all existing members of their species (similar to the Asgard terminal illness, perhaps) and needed new ways to reproduce indirectly, so that the new Furlings wouldn't have the same fatal errors they were having. The plan was going smoothly, Reese had the programming, but when she turned out to be child-like, acting on whims and emotions, they realized they had made a great mistake, as she passed down her emotional control to the new Furlings. In their attempt to wipe the slate and get rid of Reese, the turned her entire planet against her, only to have her and her Furling army win. Having failed, the Furlings left, refusing to acknowledge the new Furlings as members of their species as they themselves either died out or became as feral as the other Replicators due to their errors. And so the Replicators became a great galactic power as the Furlings disappeared entirely, forgotten by members of the Four Races to distance themselves from the new galactic scourge.
The Furlings are the "giant aliens" from Crystal Skull.
The ones with whom Daniel's grandfather was left at the end of the episode. They seem super-powerful, they have very advanced technology, they are shrouded in myth and awe... sounds like one of the Four Great Races to me.
The Furlings did not call themselves that
The Ancients, Asgard, and Nox came up with that name, on the basis that the Furlings' own name for themselves was way too pretentious. I mean, seriously, "the Time Lords"?
The Asgard The Asgard naming the ship from the Season 4 opener the "O'Neill" wasn't a compliment.
It may have been of the highest technology, but it was a finicky, troublesome prototype only designed to get the job done - possibly destroying itself in the process.
Asgard computer interfaces are the pinnacle of user-friendly.
In "Nemesis" O'Neill was able to operate an Asgard computer with no instructions, no real tech skills, or any knowledge of the Asgard language. There is only one explanation - over the millenia, the Asgard have made multiple breakthroughs in computer interface design, resulting in systems that are incredibly intuitive, efficient, and user-friendly.
Over the course of the series, the amount of Asgard alive drops to the single digits. (warning, ending spoilers)
Almost all Asgard died out in the replicator wars. The only slightly densely populated area was the Asgard homeworld, which was conquered, and even that had only a few hundred or thousand running around. The amount of Asgard living on other planets ranked in the mere dozens. Remember they haven't been capable of sexual reproduction for the last 50 million yearsstatistically,. Most of these were killed when the replicators escaped the black hole and started spreading again. Each Asgard ship is piloted by only one Asgard, but there are only a few ever shown. By the 10th season, most Asgard have become depressed by their cities being overwhelmingly empty and slowly decaying, most of their loved ones having died, and even having become obsolete in the defense of other people. They have become unnecessary, are unhappy, have no hope of ever rebuilding their civilization (they're infertile, and all the scientists who were researching improved cloning technology were slaughtered). In the last episode, the last two or three Asgard left alive decide to just quit. Their hopes have been shattered, their work undone, their friends and family brutally killed, their very species out-thought and outfought by any who chose to ally or attack them. It's not an Idiot Ball that caused them to blow themselves up, it's just the suicide following the depression from being the Cosmic Plaything subject to every Diabolus ex Machina the writers could throw at them.
The reason the Asgard were in our galaxy in the first place was the study of the Gou'uld as a means of stopping their genetic problem
If they could transplant their consciousness into one it may have solved a lot of their issues. Unfortunately it didn't work and the Asgard just ended up in a picky relationship with a frustrating alien race.
Connecting Stargate SG- 1 to other works The Star Wars galaxy was colonized by the Ancients, who go by the name "Whills" there.
This explains the apparently-independent evolution of humans in the Star Wars galaxy: the Ancients seeded humans and near-humans there before ascending, like they did with the Tau'ri. Powers attributed to "the Force" stem from residual Ancient genes (screw midichlorians); and Force ghosts are ascended beings. Qui-Gon, self-admittedly, received the knowledge of ascension from the Whills, who are already-ascended beings (ergo, the Ancients). Oh, and Stargates? They exist
Sylar from Heroes is the Father of the Shadows, and Peter Petrelli is the Father of the Vorlons of ''Babylon 5, after they encounter Dr. Jackson and/or O'Neil
At some point, Sylar will kill and "examine" either Daniel Jackson's or Jack O'Neill's mind, gain the Ancient knowledge, and ascend. Sylar decides to force his evolutionary theory upon the rest of the universe by creating the Shadows and "kicking over the anthills" to force the races to evolve. Peter, who at some point walked past the Stargate character that Sylar didn't kill, also ascends and tries to stop Sylar by creating the Vorlons.
Lt. Mitchell and Vala are John Crichton and Aeryn Sun on a deep undercover mission.
They managed to find a wormhole after all, and it eventually brought them back to Earth. John is interested in wormholes and their possible uses (including as doomsday weapons), so naturally he and his wife will be all over the Stargate project. They have been assigned by a deep, secretive Terran organization to monitor the SG-1 operation. Sadly, Scorpius attempted to come through the gate once to warn them of some Scarran shenanigans, but he got accidentally shunted off to the Ewoks' planet, which is why he never made a crossover to SG-1.
Variation: Cameron Mitchell and Vala are actually John Crichton and Aeryn Sun
The Carters are descended from the Cartwrights of Bonanza fame.
They changed the name to try to avoid the curse. But all in all, Sam's mother was lucky to live long enough to have two kids; and that was only because her husband, being in the military, was away a lot. Carter figured it out and joined the military for that reason. Her involvement with O'Neill was a sneaky way to fast-track to head of the team, but he stubbornly kept coming back to life.
We may or may not be safe from the Great Old Ones.
Facts: Carter blew up a star. The Ori and priors have done some nasty things, too. So, there is a possibility that the stars may never be right from now on. Of course, there is also the possibility that the Old Ones planned it all and needed that star destroyed to rise again...
DANIEL JACKSON IS THE FINAL CYLON!!!
What? They even say that the last one is named Daniel. That could explain why he never dies. He's not coming back in a new and creative way every time. He's resurrecting!
Hammond was killed by Kira
He died of a heart attack.
The aliens out of Assasin's Creed 2 are ancients
Latin sounding names and advanced technology coupled with creating humans.
Merlin created the Wizards of Waverly Place wizards
One of Merlin's early efforts to combat the Ori was to create his own version of the Priors. These were the first human wizards. Upon discovering their ability to access the Wizard World, however, they lost interest in fighting the Ori, and Merlin instead set about building his superweapon.
The wizards of Harry Potter are descended from Ancients stranded on Earth.
Think about it. Of all the pop culture references made in the Stargate Verse, Harry Potter isn't mentioned once. In the Potter Verse, we have no idea where wizards came from; but it seems to be genetic, and the oldest era we know they existed in is... Ancient Egypt. Yes, several Stargate characters have the Ancient Gene and never went to Hogwarts, but they could be Squibs that were given to Muggle families by disgusted wizarding parents.
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