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** In [[Recap/TheLoudHouseS4E12StallMonitorAPimplePlan "Stall Monitor"]], Rusty is worried about an incident when he called Mrs. Johnson "mom". [[Recap/TheLoudHouseS6E15SaveTheLastPantsAStellaPerformance A later episode]] reveals Stella did the same thing at her old school.

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** In [[Recap/TheLoudHouseS4E12StallMonitorAPimplePlan "Stall Monitor"]], Rusty Lincoln is worried about an incident when he called Mrs. Johnson "mom". [[Recap/TheLoudHouseS6E15SaveTheLastPantsAStellaPerformance A later episode]] reveals Stella did the same thing at her old school.
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** In "[[Recap/TheLoudHouseS4E12StallMonitorAPimplePlan "Stall Monitor"]], Rusty is worried about an incident when he called Mrs. Johnson "mom". [[Recap/TheLoudHouseS6E15SaveTheLastPantsAStellaPerformance A later episode]] reveals Stella did the same thing at her old school.

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** In "[[Recap/TheLoudHouseS4E12StallMonitorAPimplePlan [[Recap/TheLoudHouseS4E12StallMonitorAPimplePlan "Stall Monitor"]], Rusty is worried about an incident when he called Mrs. Johnson "mom". [[Recap/TheLoudHouseS6E15SaveTheLastPantsAStellaPerformance A later episode]] reveals Stella did the same thing at her old school.
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** [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/TheLoudHouseS4E12StallMonitorAPimplePlan is worried about an incident when he called Mrs. Johnson "mom".]] [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/TheLoudHouseS6E15SaveTheLastPantsAStellaPerformance A later episode reveals Stella did the same thing at her old school.]]

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** [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/TheLoudHouseS4E12StallMonitorAPimplePlan In "[[Recap/TheLoudHouseS4E12StallMonitorAPimplePlan "Stall Monitor"]], Rusty is worried about an incident when he called Mrs. Johnson "mom".]] [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/TheLoudHouseS6E15SaveTheLastPantsAStellaPerformance [[Recap/TheLoudHouseS6E15SaveTheLastPantsAStellaPerformance A later episode episode]] reveals Stella did the same thing at her old school.]]
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** [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/TheLoudHouseS4E12StallMonitorAPimplePlan is worried about an incident when he called Mrs. Johnson "mom".]] [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/TheLoudHouseS6E15SaveTheLastPantsAStellaPerformance A later episode reveals Stella did the same thing at her old school.]]

Added: 1871

Removed: 64

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Per here.


* [[PortmanteauCoupleName/TheLoudHouse Portmanteau Couple Name]]


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* PortmanteauCoupleName:
** If a ship involves Lincoln at all, it will have one of these:
*** Ronnie Anne/Lincoln = Ronniecoln. Became {{ascended|Fanon}} in ''WesternAnimation/TheCasagrandesMovie'', where Ronnie Anne has a playlist labeled "Ronniecoln".
*** Cristina/Lincoln = Cristincoln.
*** Clyde/Lincoln = Clincoln [=McCloud=], their InUniverse friendship name. Any ships between Clyde and the Loud sisters use a similar template, being C[insert Loud sibling name here] [=McCloud=].
*** Lynn/Lincoln = Lynncoln.
*** Luan/Lincoln = Luancoln.
*** Lucy/Lincoln = Lincy or Lucycoln.
*** Luna/Lincoln = Lunacoln.
*** Leni/Lincoln = Lenicoln.
*** Lori/Lincoln = Loricoln or Lincori.
*** Twins/Lincoln = Twincoln.
*** Lola/Lincoln = Lolacoln.
*** Lana/Lincoln = Lanacoln.
*** Lisa/Lincoln = Lisacoln.
*** Lily/Lincoln = Lilycoln.
*** Any of the four Sadie Hawkins date/Lincoln = Pollycoln (Polly Pain), Tabbycoln (Tabby), Gigglescoln (Giggles) and Haicoln (Haiku).
*** Lincoln's crush in "L is For Love" Paige/Lincoln = Paigecoln.
*** Lincoln/Girl Jordan = Jordacoln.
*** Lincoln/Stella = Stellcoln.
** The sisters get this too when paired with each other. The most popular ones include:
*** Lori/Leni (Loreni/Lenori)
*** Luna/Luan (Luana/Lunan)
*** Luna/Lynn (Lynnuna)
*** Lynn/Lucy (Lynnucy)
*** Lola/Lana (Lanola)
** InUniverse, besides Clincoln [=McLoud=], Clyde has also gotten Clach [=McGurdle=] with Zach and Cacholn [=McClurdle=], Zlydcon [=McGloudle=], and Lydach [=LurdleMc=] with Zach and Lincoln. Zach and Rusty also use Zusty Spurdles as their friendship name, and in ''Series/TheReallyLoudHouse'', Rusty comes up with Crusty [=McSpokes=] as a potential name for himself and Clyde.
** Leni/Carlota: In "Fashion No Show", Leni coins "Team Carleni" to refer to her friendship with Carlota. Later, Mariella refers to them as "Team Lenota" instead, which Carlota admits has a nice ring to it.
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** Season 6 was initially met with a divisive reception by the fanbase, until the second half of season 6 onwards, where fans have noted that said flanderization has been dialed back and there have been more comparatively grounded episodes, and while the show hasn't quite [[WinBackTheCrowd won back the crowd]], they feel that it's at least a step in the right direction.

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** Season 6 was initially met with a divisive reception by the fanbase, until the second half of season 6 onwards, where fans have noted that said flanderization has flanderizations have been dialed back and there the fantasy elements have been balanced out with more comparatively grounded episodes, stories, and while the show hasn't quite [[WinBackTheCrowd won back the crowd]], they feel that it's at least a step in the right direction.
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** Season 5 is widely considered (apart from a handful of positively received episodes, such as "The Boss Maybe" and "Camped!") to be the weakest season thus far. In spite of playing NothingIsTheSameAnymore by having the characters age up by a year (after numerous complaints from viewers over the cast remaining the same age between several annual special episodes like the Halloween or April Fools ones), many fans have claimed the show officially went downhill as soon as the season 5 premiere special "Schooled!" aired, with the main criticisms being that the flanderizations kicked in even harder and there were many more rehashed plots. A few also complained about some plots being less grounded in reality than past seasons via the addition of fantastical elements that they perceive as going against of the show's slice-of-life feel.
** Season 6 was initially met with a divisive reception by the fanbase, until the second half of season 6 onwards, where fans have noted that said flanderization has been dialed back, and while the show hasn't quite [[WinBackTheCrowd won back the crowd]], they feel that it's at least a step in the right direction.

to:

** Season 5 is widely considered (apart from a handful of positively received episodes, such as "The Boss Maybe" and "Camped!") to be the weakest season thus far. In spite of playing NothingIsTheSameAnymore by having the characters age up by a year (after numerous complaints from viewers over the cast remaining the same age between several annual special episodes like the Halloween or April Fools ones), many fans have claimed the show officially went downhill as soon as the season 5 premiere special "Schooled!" aired, with the main criticisms being that the flanderizations kicked in even harder and there were many more rehashed plots. A few also complained about some plots being less grounded in reality than past seasons via the addition of fantastical elements that they perceive as going against of the show's slice-of-life feel.
** Season 6 was initially met with a divisive reception by the fanbase, until the second half of season 6 onwards, where fans have noted that said flanderization has been dialed back, back and there have been more comparatively grounded episodes, and while the show hasn't quite [[WinBackTheCrowd won back the crowd]], they feel that it's at least a step in the right direction.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Season 5 is widely considered (apart from a handful of positively received episodes, such as "Hurl Interrupted" and "Camped!") to be the weakest season thus far. In spite of playing NothingIsTheSameAnymore by having the characters age up by a year (after numerous complaints from viewers over the cast remaining the same age between several annual special episodes like the Halloween or April Fools ones), many fans have claimed the show officially went downhill as soon as the season 5 premiere special "Schooled!" aired, with the main criticisms being that the flanderizations kicked in even harder and there were many more rehashed plots. A few also complained about some plots being less grounded in reality than past seasons via the addition of fantastical elements that they perceive as breaking the show's slice-of-life flow.

to:

** Season 5 is widely considered (apart from a handful of positively received episodes, such as "Hurl Interrupted" "The Boss Maybe" and "Camped!") to be the weakest season thus far. In spite of playing NothingIsTheSameAnymore by having the characters age up by a year (after numerous complaints from viewers over the cast remaining the same age between several annual special episodes like the Halloween or April Fools ones), many fans have claimed the show officially went downhill as soon as the season 5 premiere special "Schooled!" aired, with the main criticisms being that the flanderizations kicked in even harder and there were many more rehashed plots. A few also complained about some plots being less grounded in reality than past seasons via the addition of fantastical elements that they perceive as breaking going against of the show's slice-of-life flow.feel.
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** Ronnie Anne received some backlash from the Loudcest shippers very quickly, even more after the events of "Save the Date".

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** Ronnie Anne Santiago received some backlash from the Loudcest shippers very quickly, even more after the events of "Save the Date".Date". After she moved away to star in her own SpinOff, some of the hate transferred over to Lincoln's new friend Stella. Not all mind you, as Lincoln and Ronnie Anne still visit each other regularly.
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Section becoming too complain-y.


* FranchiseOriginalSin: A growing criticism of the franchise is newer media [[DenserAndWackier featuring more fantastical situations]] compared to Seasons 1-3 of the original animated series. There were already instances of unrealistic things happening in the show's prior seasons, like the extent of Lisa's intelligence and child prodigy nature, but these were forgiven for the most part because they were subtle, sporadic instances that rarely broke the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief and mostly were just for quick gags and didn't dramatically impact the plot, and previous seasons at least had boundaries for the reality of ''The Loud House'''s world. In other words, reality was stretched, but it remembered to quickly snap back. As early as Season 3, however, one episode ("The Mad Scientist") had the conflict be resolved via time travel. By Season 4, many had begun to take notice of these instances happening practically several episodes and becoming far more zany and explicitly outside the realm of realism, with it getting seemingly more ingrained into the show's formula as Season 5 came around, and reaching its apex in the film ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouseMovie'', which features magic and dragons as relevant aspects of the plot (with the climax featuring a "dragon vs. magic" battle), and ghosts being major characters in the film who provide crucial plot information. This made people decry it as moving too far away from the show's original premise as a relatable, grounded series about a boy and his 10 sisters. And this criticism only got worse when the series' sixth season and later ''The Really Loud House'' only further cranked up the fantastical elements and scenarios, as does its spin-off ''The Casagrandes'', which throws Mesoamerican gods into the mix, in both the series and the movie.
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* ObscurePopularity: The franchise has a large and active fanbase that produces lots of fanart and fanfiction, and Creator/{{Nickelodeon}} considers it its second best-performing franchise (behind ''Franchise/SpongeBobSquarePants'') to the point of having a [[WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouseMovie movie]] and [[WesternAnimation/TheCasagrandes two]] [[Series/TheReallyLoudHouse spin-offs]]. However, it's barely talked about among both mainstream audiences and the Western Animation community as a whole, largely due to a number of controversies surrounding its fans and its creator[[note]]An event that occured nearly seven years ago, but fans and detractors alike still react as if it had just happened.[[/note]]. Most fans are commonly stereotyped as incest-obsessed[[note]]Due to the popularity of Loudcest and its spinoff fandom Sin Kids, though the fanbase largely rejects Loudcest fans nowadays[[/note]], pedophiles[[note]]With a big fandom comes a big Rule 34 scene[[/note]], or merely immature[[note]]A lot of the show's fans lean younger, and don't have the best reputation among adult fans and the animation community at large[[/note]], despite most fans not belonging to any of these groups. In the rare event that it *is* brought up, it is usually done to mock the show or give unfavorable comparisons [[WesternAnimation/{{Amphibia}} to]] [[WesternAnimation/TheOwlHouse the]] [[WesternAnimation/TheGhostAndMollyMcGee show's]] [[WesternAnimation/CraigOfTheCreek contemporaries.]] The show getting poor treatment and generally being overlooked by popular cartoon [=YouTubers=] and the Western Animation community's preference for serialized Dramedy shows doesn't help matters.
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* FranchiseOriginalSin: A growing criticism of the franchise is newer media [[DenserAndWackier featuring more fantastical situations]] compared to Seasons 1-3 of the original animated series. There were already instances of unrealistic things happening in the show's prior seasons, like the extent of Lisa's intelligence and child prodigy nature, but these were forgiven for the most part because they were subtle, sporadic instances that rarely broke the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief and mostly were just for quick gags and didn't dramatically impact the plot, and previous seasons at least had boundaries for the reality of ''The Loud House'''s world. In other words, reality was stretched, but it remembered to quickly snap back. As early as Season 3, however, one episode ("The Mad Scientist") had the conflict be resolved via time travel. By Season 4, many had begun to take notice of these instances happening practically several episodes and becoming far more zany and explicitly outside the realm of realism, with it getting seemingly more ingrained into the show's formula as Season 5 came around, and reaching its apex in the film ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouseMovie'', which features magic and dragons as relevant aspects of the plot (with the climax featuring a "dragon vs. magic" battle), and ghosts being major characters in the film who provide crucial plot information. This made people decry it as moving too far away from the show's original premise as a relatable, grounded series about a boy and his 10 sisters. And this criticism only got worse when the series' sixth season and later ''The Really Loud House'' only further cranked up the fantastical elements and scenarios.

to:

* FranchiseOriginalSin: A growing criticism of the franchise is newer media [[DenserAndWackier featuring more fantastical situations]] compared to Seasons 1-3 of the original animated series. There were already instances of unrealistic things happening in the show's prior seasons, like the extent of Lisa's intelligence and child prodigy nature, but these were forgiven for the most part because they were subtle, sporadic instances that rarely broke the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief and mostly were just for quick gags and didn't dramatically impact the plot, and previous seasons at least had boundaries for the reality of ''The Loud House'''s world. In other words, reality was stretched, but it remembered to quickly snap back. As early as Season 3, however, one episode ("The Mad Scientist") had the conflict be resolved via time travel. By Season 4, many had begun to take notice of these instances happening practically several episodes and becoming far more zany and explicitly outside the realm of realism, with it getting seemingly more ingrained into the show's formula as Season 5 came around, and reaching its apex in the film ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouseMovie'', which features magic and dragons as relevant aspects of the plot (with the climax featuring a "dragon vs. magic" battle), and ghosts being major characters in the film who provide crucial plot information. This made people decry it as moving too far away from the show's original premise as a relatable, grounded series about a boy and his 10 sisters. And this criticism only got worse when the series' sixth season and later ''The Really Loud House'' only further cranked up the fantastical elements and scenarios.scenarios, as does its spin-off ''The Casagrandes'', which throws Mesoamerican gods into the mix, in both the series and the movie.
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* "[[YMMV/TheCasagrandesMovie The Casagrandes Movie]]''

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* "[[YMMV/TheCasagrandesMovie ''[[YMMV/TheCasagrandesMovie The Casagrandes Movie]]''
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* ''The Casagrandes Movie''

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* ''The "[[YMMV/TheCasagrandesMovie The Casagrandes Movie''Movie]]''


* CreepyCute: Lucy Loud is definitely this to a good number of viewers, and, for some, the rest of the Morticians Club count as well, with Boris in particular being UglyCute.

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%%ZCE * CreepyCute: Lucy Loud is definitely this to a good number of viewers, and, for some, the rest of the Morticians Club count as well, with Boris in particular being UglyCute.
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* ''The Casagrandes Movie''
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* CreepyCute: Lucy Loud is definitely this to a good number of viewers, and, for some, the rest of the Morticians Club count as well, with Boris in particular being UglyCute.
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** Season 4 has come under criticism from some fans, who think that Lincoln's character has undergone {{Flanderization}}, accentuating his most negative characteristics and making him more selfish and clumsy, and more likely to attract bad consequences for himself and those close to him (citing "Kings of the Con" and "Stall Monitor" as examples). Like with Season 3, some have also made claims of plots being recycled, such as "The Last Loud on Earth" being compared to "The Price of Admission". And that's without mentioning how the season devoted its first five episodes (with nine segments) to a PoorlyDisguisedPilot of ''WesternAnimation/TheCasagrandes'' before said SpinOff series premiered properly, an act largely hated for deviating from the show's main core focus.
** Season 5 is widely considered (apart from a handful of generally positively received episodes, such as "Hurl Interrupted" and "Camped!") to be the weakest season thus far. In spite of playing NothingIsTheSameAnymore by having the characters age up by a year (after numerous complaints from viewers over the cast remaining the same age between several annual special episodes like the Halloween or April Fools ones), many fans have claimed the show officially went downhill as soon as the season 5 premiere special "Schooled!" aired, with the main criticisms being that the flanderizations kicked in even harder and there were many more rehashed plots. A few also complained about some plots being less grounded in reality than past seasons via the addition of fantastical elements that they perceive as breaking the show's slice-of-life flow.

to:

** Season 4 has come under criticism from some fans, who think that Lincoln's character has undergone {{Flanderization}}, accentuating his most negative characteristics and making him more selfish and clumsy, and more likely to attract bad consequences for himself and those close to him (citing "Kings of the Con" and "Stall Monitor" as examples). Like with Season 3, some have also made claims of plots being recycled, such as "The Last Loud on Earth" being compared to "The Price of Admission". And that's without mentioning not even getting into how the season devoted its first five episodes (with nine segments) to a PoorlyDisguisedPilot of ''WesternAnimation/TheCasagrandes'' before said SpinOff series premiered properly, an act largely hated for deviating from the show's main core focus.
** Season 5 is widely considered (apart from a handful of generally positively received episodes, such as "Hurl Interrupted" and "Camped!") to be the weakest season thus far. In spite of playing NothingIsTheSameAnymore by having the characters age up by a year (after numerous complaints from viewers over the cast remaining the same age between several annual special episodes like the Halloween or April Fools ones), many fans have claimed the show officially went downhill as soon as the season 5 premiere special "Schooled!" aired, with the main criticisms being that the flanderizations kicked in even harder and there were many more rehashed plots. A few also complained about some plots being less grounded in reality than past seasons via the addition of fantastical elements that they perceive as breaking the show's slice-of-life flow.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Season 4 has come under criticism from some fans, who think that Lincoln's character has undergone {{Flanderization}}, accentuating his most negative characteristics and making him more selfish and clumsy, and more likely to attract bad consequences for himself and those close to him (citing "Kings of the Con" and "Stall Monitor" as examples). Like with Season 3, some have also made claims of plots being recycled, such as "The Last Loud on Earth" being compared to "The Price of Admission". And that's without going to mention the fact that the season dedicated its first five episodes (with nine segments) to a PoorlyDisguisedPilot of ''WesternAnimation/TheCasagrandes'' before said SpinOff series premiered properly, an act largely hated for deviating from the show's main core focus.

to:

** Season 4 has come under criticism from some fans, who think that Lincoln's character has undergone {{Flanderization}}, accentuating his most negative characteristics and making him more selfish and clumsy, and more likely to attract bad consequences for himself and those close to him (citing "Kings of the Con" and "Stall Monitor" as examples). Like with Season 3, some have also made claims of plots being recycled, such as "The Last Loud on Earth" being compared to "The Price of Admission". And that's without going to mention the fact that mentioning how the season dedicated devoted its first five episodes (with nine segments) to a PoorlyDisguisedPilot of ''WesternAnimation/TheCasagrandes'' before said SpinOff series premiered properly, an act largely hated for deviating from the show's main core focus.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Season 5 is widely considered to be the weakest season thus far. In spite of playing NothingIsTheSameAnymore by having the characters age up by a year (after numerous complaints from viewers over the cast remaining the same age between several annual special episodes like the Halloween or April Fools ones), many fans have claimed the show officially went downhill as soon as the season 5 premiere special "Schooled!" aired, with the main criticisms being that the flanderizations kicked in even harder and there were many more rehashed plots. A few also complained about some plots being less grounded in reality than past seasons via the addition of fantastical elements that they perceive as breaking the show's slice-of-life flow.

to:

** Season 5 is widely considered (apart from a handful of generally positively received episodes, such as "Hurl Interrupted" and "Camped!") to be the weakest season thus far. In spite of playing NothingIsTheSameAnymore by having the characters age up by a year (after numerous complaints from viewers over the cast remaining the same age between several annual special episodes like the Halloween or April Fools ones), many fans have claimed the show officially went downhill as soon as the season 5 premiere special "Schooled!" aired, with the main criticisms being that the flanderizations kicked in even harder and there were many more rehashed plots. A few also complained about some plots being less grounded in reality than past seasons via the addition of fantastical elements that they perceive as breaking the show's slice-of-life flow.

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Changed: 375

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** Seasons 5 and 6 have an even bigger polarizing reception by the fanbase. In spite of playing NothingIsTheSameAnymore by having the characters age up by a year (after numerous complaints from viewers over the cast remaining the same age between several annual special episodes like the Halloween or April Fools ones), many fans have claimed the show officially went downhill as soon as the season 5 premiere special "Schooled!" aired, with the main criticisms being that the flanderizations kicked in even harder and there were many more rehashed plots. A few also complained about some plots being less grounded in reality than past seasons via the addition of fantastical elements that they perceive as breaking the show's slice-of-life flow, with them being more common in Season 6, until the second half of season 6 onwards, where fans have noted that said flanderization has been dialed back, and while the show hasn't quite [[WinBackTheCrowd won back the crowd]], they feel that it's at least a step in the right direction.

to:

** Seasons Season 5 and 6 have an even bigger polarizing reception by is widely considered to be the fanbase.weakest season thus far. In spite of playing NothingIsTheSameAnymore by having the characters age up by a year (after numerous complaints from viewers over the cast remaining the same age between several annual special episodes like the Halloween or April Fools ones), many fans have claimed the show officially went downhill as soon as the season 5 premiere special "Schooled!" aired, with the main criticisms being that the flanderizations kicked in even harder and there were many more rehashed plots. A few also complained about some plots being less grounded in reality than past seasons via the addition of fantastical elements that they perceive as breaking the show's slice-of-life flow, with them being more common in flow.
**
Season 6, 6 was initially met with a divisive reception by the fanbase, until the second half of season 6 onwards, where fans have noted that said flanderization has been dialed back, and while the show hasn't quite [[WinBackTheCrowd won back the crowd]], they feel that it's at least a step in the right direction.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Fixed formatting


* FranchiseOriginalSin:A growing criticism of the franchise is newer media [[DenserAndWackier featuring more fantastical situations]] compared to Seasons 1-3 of the original animated series. There were already instances of unrealistic things happening in the show's prior seasons, like the extent of Lisa's intelligence and child prodigy nature, but these were forgiven for the most part because they were subtle, sporadic instances that rarely broke the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief and mostly were just for quick gags and didn't dramatically impact the plot, and previous seasons at least had boundaries for the reality of ''The Loud House'''s world. In other words, reality was stretched, but it remembered to quickly snap back. As early as Season 3, however, one episode ("The Mad Scientist") had the conflict be resolved via time travel. By Season 4, many had begun to take notice of these instances happening practically several episodes and becoming far more zany and explicitly outside the realm of realism, with it getting seemingly more ingrained into the show's formula as Season 5 came around, and reaching its apex in the film ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouseMovie'', which features magic and dragons as relevant aspects of the plot (with the climax featuring a "dragon vs. magic" battle), and ghosts being major characters in the film who provide crucial plot information. This made people decry it as moving too far away from the show's original premise as a relatable, grounded series about a boy and his 10 sisters. And this criticism only got worse when the series' sixth season and later ''The Really Loud House'' only further cranked up the fantastical elements and scenarios.

to:

* FranchiseOriginalSin:A FranchiseOriginalSin: A growing criticism of the franchise is newer media [[DenserAndWackier featuring more fantastical situations]] compared to Seasons 1-3 of the original animated series. There were already instances of unrealistic things happening in the show's prior seasons, like the extent of Lisa's intelligence and child prodigy nature, but these were forgiven for the most part because they were subtle, sporadic instances that rarely broke the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief and mostly were just for quick gags and didn't dramatically impact the plot, and previous seasons at least had boundaries for the reality of ''The Loud House'''s world. In other words, reality was stretched, but it remembered to quickly snap back. As early as Season 3, however, one episode ("The Mad Scientist") had the conflict be resolved via time travel. By Season 4, many had begun to take notice of these instances happening practically several episodes and becoming far more zany and explicitly outside the realm of realism, with it getting seemingly more ingrained into the show's formula as Season 5 came around, and reaching its apex in the film ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouseMovie'', which features magic and dragons as relevant aspects of the plot (with the climax featuring a "dragon vs. magic" battle), and ghosts being major characters in the film who provide crucial plot information. This made people decry it as moving too far away from the show's original premise as a relatable, grounded series about a boy and his 10 sisters. And this criticism only got worse when the series' sixth season and later ''The Really Loud House'' only further cranked up the fantastical elements and scenarios.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* FranchiseOriginalSin:A growing criticism of the franchise is newer media [[DenserAndWackier featuring more fantastical situations]] compared to Seasons 1-3 of the original animated series. There were already instances of unrealistic things happening in the show's prior seasons, like the extent of Lisa's intelligence and child prodigy nature, but these were forgiven for the most part because they were subtle, sporadic instances that rarely broke the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief and mostly were just for quick gags and didn't impact dramatically the plot, and previous seasons at least had boundaries for the reality of ''The Loud House'''s world. In other words, reality was stretched, but it remembered to quickly snap back. As early as Season 3, however, one episode ("The Mad Scientist") had the conflict be resolved via time travel. By Season 4, many had begun to take notice of these instances happening practically several episodes and becoming far more zany and explicitly outside the realm of realism, with it getting seemingly more ingrained into the show's formula as Season 5 came around, and reaching its apex in the film ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouseMovie'', which features magic and dragons as relevant aspects of the plot (with the climax featuring a "dragon vs. magic" battle), and ghosts being major characters in the film who provide crucial plot information. This made people decry it as moving too far away from the show's original premise as a relatable, grounded series about a boy and his 10 sisters. And this criticism only got worse when the series' sixth season and later ''The Really Loud House'' only further cranked up the fantastical elements and scenarios.

to:

* FranchiseOriginalSin:A growing criticism of the franchise is newer media [[DenserAndWackier featuring more fantastical situations]] compared to Seasons 1-3 of the original animated series. There were already instances of unrealistic things happening in the show's prior seasons, like the extent of Lisa's intelligence and child prodigy nature, but these were forgiven for the most part because they were subtle, sporadic instances that rarely broke the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief and mostly were just for quick gags and didn't impact dramatically impact the plot, and previous seasons at least had boundaries for the reality of ''The Loud House'''s world. In other words, reality was stretched, but it remembered to quickly snap back. As early as Season 3, however, one episode ("The Mad Scientist") had the conflict be resolved via time travel. By Season 4, many had begun to take notice of these instances happening practically several episodes and becoming far more zany and explicitly outside the realm of realism, with it getting seemingly more ingrained into the show's formula as Season 5 came around, and reaching its apex in the film ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouseMovie'', which features magic and dragons as relevant aspects of the plot (with the climax featuring a "dragon vs. magic" battle), and ghosts being major characters in the film who provide crucial plot information. This made people decry it as moving too far away from the show's original premise as a relatable, grounded series about a boy and his 10 sisters. And this criticism only got worse when the series' sixth season and later ''The Really Loud House'' only further cranked up the fantastical elements and scenarios.
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* FranchiseOriginalSin:A growing criticism of the franchise is newer media [[DenserAndWackier featuring more fantastical situations]] compared to Seasons 1-3 of the [[WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouse original animated series]]. There were already instances of unrealistic things happening in the show's prior seasons, like the extent of Lisa's intelligence and child prodigy nature, but these were forgiven for the most part because they were subtle, sporadic instances that rarely broke the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief and mostly were just for quick gags and didn't impact dramatically the plot, and previous seasons at least had boundaries for the reality of ''The Loud House'''s world. In other words, reality was stretched, but it remembered to quickly snap back. As early as Season 3, however, one episode ("The Mad Scientist") had the conflict be resolved via time travel. By Season 4, many had begun to take notice of these instances happening practically several episodes and becoming far more zany and explicitly outside the realm of realism, with it getting seemingly more ingrained into the show's formula as Season 5 came around, and reaching its apex in the film ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouseMovie'', which features magic and dragons as relevant aspects of the plot (with the climax featuring a "dragon vs. magic" battle), and ghosts being major characters in the film who provide crucial plot information. This made people decry it as moving too far away from the show's original premise as a relatable, grounded series about a boy and his 10 sisters. And this criticism only got worse when the series' sixth season and later ''The Really Loud House'' only further cranked up the fantastical elements and scenarios.

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* FranchiseOriginalSin:A growing criticism of the franchise is newer media [[DenserAndWackier featuring more fantastical situations]] compared to Seasons 1-3 of the [[WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouse original animated series]].series. There were already instances of unrealistic things happening in the show's prior seasons, like the extent of Lisa's intelligence and child prodigy nature, but these were forgiven for the most part because they were subtle, sporadic instances that rarely broke the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief and mostly were just for quick gags and didn't impact dramatically the plot, and previous seasons at least had boundaries for the reality of ''The Loud House'''s world. In other words, reality was stretched, but it remembered to quickly snap back. As early as Season 3, however, one episode ("The Mad Scientist") had the conflict be resolved via time travel. By Season 4, many had begun to take notice of these instances happening practically several episodes and becoming far more zany and explicitly outside the realm of realism, with it getting seemingly more ingrained into the show's formula as Season 5 came around, and reaching its apex in the film ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouseMovie'', which features magic and dragons as relevant aspects of the plot (with the climax featuring a "dragon vs. magic" battle), and ghosts being major characters in the film who provide crucial plot information. This made people decry it as moving too far away from the show's original premise as a relatable, grounded series about a boy and his 10 sisters. And this criticism only got worse when the series' sixth season and later ''The Really Loud House'' only further cranked up the fantastical elements and scenarios.

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