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1[[quoteright:327:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/reboot_guardian.png]]
2''[=ReBoot=]: The Guardian Code'' is a CGI/Live-Action reimagining of the animated series ''WesternAnimation/ReBoot''.
3
4In a hidden lab in the basement of Alan Turing High, an artificial intelligence named [=VERA=][[labelnote:*]]''[[FunWithAcronyms Virtual Evolutionary Recombinant Avatar]]''[[/labelnote]] watches over cyberspace. Its stability and security is threatened by a deranged hacker [[NoNameGiven known only as "The Sourcerer"]] and his viral army. To lead that viral army, the Sourcerer has also resurrected the very dangerous virus known as Megabyte to ravage the Net once more.
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6To stop this new evil, [=VERA=] [[RecruitTeenagersWithAttitude recruits four teenagers]] to travel into the digital world and stop him. Their ''de facto'' leader, Austin (Creator/TyWood), is also the son of [=VERA=]'s creator and hopes to use the experience to discover more about his deceased father and the creations he left behind. Along with his nerdy friend Parker (Ajay Parikh-Friese), social media butterfly and popular vlogger Tamra (Sydney Scotia), exceptional and [[WellDoneSonGuy exceptionally put-upon]] athlete Trey (Creator/GabrielDarku), and a newly-humanized teenage [=VERA=] (Hannah Vanderbygaart), these five must balance their personal lives with saving cyberspace from the Sourcerer.
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8The show aired its only season in 2018, divided into two half-seasons (marketed as Season 1 and 2 on Netflix), from March - September 2018 on Creator/{{Netflix}} and Creator/{{YTV}}.
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10----
11!!This series provides examples of:
12* ArtisticLicense:
13** Half of the source code shown in the series is just lists of numbers. The other half is [[CoolCodeOfSource sufficiently obscure C code]] coming from [[https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms701881(v=vs.85).aspx the Microsoft Developer Network]] and [[http://csapp.cs.cmu.edu/2e/ics2/code/conc/echoservert.c the Carnegie Mellon University]].
14** The Sourcerer eventually gets his hands on a computer that has the ability to access the internet without actually being connected to it. Somehow.
15* CallingYourAttacks: The guardians activate their various powers/vehicles by calling them out by name.
16* CliffhangerCopout: At the end of the original series, Megabyte had successfully taken control of Mainframe's Principal Office, telling Bob and the rest of Mainframe to "Prepare [themselves] for the hunt". There is no mention of this at all in ''The Guardian Code''.
17* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: The Sourcerer's code is dark purple, Megabyte's code is sickly green, and the Guardian's code is light blue. Digitized human blood shows up as red code.
18* ContinuityNod:
19** In "Resurrection", during Megabyte's debut scenes, Frisket (or a dog reusing his design) as well as Dot's Diner can be seen. Megabyte also asks the Sourcerer about Bob.
20** The huge storm in episode nine is named Hurricane Cecil.
21---> ''"Cess-seal!"''
22* CreatorCameo: The ''WesternAnimation/ReBoot'' fanboy from the episode "Mainframe Mayhem" is played by Mark Leiren-Young, the episode's writer ''and'' the only writer from the original series to return.
23* DeadlyDodging: To defeat the worm virus which multiplies if cut and devours whatever it gets its mouth on, Austin tricks it into biting its own tail, causing it to devour itself.
24* DemotedToDragon: Thanks to an ExplosiveLeash, Megabyte is reduced to the Sourcerer's enforcer, at least until he can figure out a way to break free.
25* DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment: The Sourcerer has a habit of repeating the same thing in a different way as a VerbalTic.
26* DesignatedGirlFight: Only Enigma fights against Hexadecimal.
27* EpicFail: The Sourcerer hacks a cell phone network and runs a search for relevant keywords: "Guardian", "Megabyte", and "Sourcerer". This nets him calls about cell phone data plans, a private security company, and a ''sorcerer'', until he finally happens upon Parker's cell phone. Even then, he twice ignores it because the words are so common he assumes they aren't specifically referring to his activities.
28* EverythingIsOnline: Whatever the Sourcerer needs to hack into, it's online.
29* ExplosiveLeash: The Sourcerer puts a delete code into Megabyte's upgrade so Megabyte has no choice but to obey him.
30* GenericDoomsdayVillain: The Sourcerer has no apparent motivation for his villainy, seemingly doing it for no other reason than because he can. [[spoiler:It's later revealed that he's been infected with "dark code" while in The Web. As dark code is only driven by a need to destroy, so is the Sourcerer.]]
31* GunshipRescue: In "Emotional Rescue", V.E.R.A. reveals that the Codec has weapons, which she uses to save the team. Unfortunately, she gets a bit too into it thanks to the emotion plugin she's running and forgets to let them get clear first, nearly killing them by mistake.
32* HackerCave: The Sourcerer has one.
33* HeroAntagonist: The Department of Internet Security becomes this in the second season. While they are opposed to the Sourcerer and Megabyte / Hexadecimal, they are also opposed to the Guardians in a bid to get Adam Carter's technology under their control.
34* HourOfPower: The Guardians can only stay in the net for as long as their suits have power. Once it drops to 5%, the suits enter a power-saving mode which puts the user into a temporary coma. If they run out of power, the suits would lose integrity and they'd die horribly.
35* HumanityEnsues: Thanks to Parker randomly pressing buttons when they first discover Room 0, V.E.R.A. gets a bio-printed teenage body.
36* HydraProblem: The worm virus doubles if it's cut in half. However, it also eats anything, including its copies, so Austin tricks it into eating its own tail and destroying itself.
37* InNameOnly: The series has very little to do with the original series, which is part of why fans of the original view it poorly. The presence of Megabyte and a single episode [[VoodooShark that raised even more questions about how this show fits in with the original]] are all this show shares with ''Reboot''.
38* InnocentlyInsensitive: Near the end of "Artificial Intelligence", Judy says "I don't want to have anything to do with Alyx or artificial intelligence anymore" to Vera, who is an AI in a human body.
39* KilledOffForReal: In "Black Hole", [[spoiler:the Sourcerer kills off the virtual assistant Alyx]].
40* KillItWithFire: Vera programs virtual flamethrowers for the Guardians when individually killing the Sourcerer's zombie bots proves untenable. It's a lot more efficient, but there are so many of them that the Guardians nearly run out of power just containing them and have to switch strategies.
41* LongRunnerTechMarchesOn: In Episode 10, [[spoiler:the original Mainframe system shows up, having been installed in Room 0 by Austin's father. It still works, and the old gang is still there. This proves problematic when the new Guardians are trapped in one of the old games and find their tech isn't backwards-compatible with the antiquated software. Fortunately, Bob still works just fine and Parker happens to remember a cheat code.]]
42* LukeIAmYourFather: [[spoiler:Austin's father, Adam Carter, is revealed to be the Sourcerer. During a trip in cyberspace, he was infected by dark code and his memories were lost.]]
43* MesACrowd: In "Game Day", Megabyte uses a code replicator to make copies of himself. The copies and the replicator are destroyed when Trey tackles the former into the latter, causing it to overload.
44* MissionControl: Vera directs the team from the control room.
45* MythologyGag: Bob's first lines in "Mainframe Mayham" are almost exactly the opening lines from the intro in the original series.
46* PasswordSlotMachine: In a rather blatant ShoutOut to ''Film/WarGames'', the Sourcerer uses a sequencer to try and crack a nuclear launch code in the episode "Nuclear Confusion". [[spoiler:He manages to get the complete code, but before he can do anything, the system clock (which has been sped up by Parker) rolls over to the next day, causing the system to randomize the launch code again - at which point the DIS arrives to flush the Dark Code from the system.]]
47* PurpleIsPowerful: The Sourcerer's dark code is represented by the color purple.
48* RageQuit: Unlike ''WesternAnimation/ReBoot's'' super-determined user, this shows how players would react if the [=NPCs=] in the game could outright cheat. When Parker decides to test out a blaster he designed on a ''VideoGame/ClashOfClans''-style mobile app, the kid whose game he's so rudely hijacked gives up in frustration, and that's before Megabyte takes over her castle and turns it into his new base.
49* RatingsStunt: "Mainframe Mayhem", the final episode of the ten-episode "first season"[[note]]for marketing purposes only, as the "second season" (i.e. the back-half of the first season) was aired less than three months later[[/note]], brings back the entirety of the main characters from the original series, who have now been revealed to have been reactivated -- seemingly as a way to dodge criticism of ''Guardian Code'' straying away from the series' roots by adding live-action material. As the series was canned after this, the stunt didn't work.
50* RemovingTheHeadOrDestroyingTheBrain: The Sourcerer's zombie bots can [[PullingThemselvesTogether reattach severed limbs]] and reboot if disabled, but are permanently destroyed if their heads are cut off.
51* SequelHook: The second season ends with [[spoiler:the Sourcerer/Adam Carter lost in cyberspace without a trace, Megabyte and Hexadecimal ready to start their own evil plans, and someone having stolen the supercomputer the Sourcerer was using to wirelessly hack into any system]].
52* SeriesContinuityError: Despite dialogue treating ''The Guardian Code'' as a sequel to the original series, there are numerous inconsistencies between the two shows:
53** Megabyte was upgraded towards the end of the original series, giving him a more organic appearance and the ability to disguise himself as other sprites. Here, he sports his original appearance before being upgraded again, which gives him a skeletal appearance. No mention is made of his shapeshifting powers.
54** Enzo appears as "Little" Enzo and not as [[spoiler:Matrix]].[[note]]While a version of "Little" Enzo did exist after ''Daemon Rising'' and ''My Two Bobs'', Matrix, AndrAIa, and Wellman Matrix are all missing and not referred to and Hexadecimal is evil, suggesting this version of Enzo is the original.[[/note]]
55** Hexadecimal is shown to still be living in Lost Angles at the end of Season 1, every bit as evil and deranged as she was originally, despite her having been healed both physically and mentally, performing a HeelFaceTurn, and most notably, performing a HeroicSacrifice and ''dying'' to save the Net from Daemon by the end of the original series.
56* StrictlyFormula: Most episodes follow the same pattern: The Guardians are in the middle of some school activity, The Sourcerer or Megabyte infects a website, the Guardians enter cyberspace to take care of it, then DIS takes all the credit when the day is saved.
57* TookALevelInBadass: The Sourcerer furnishes Megabyte with an upgrade, making him a match for present technology. [[spoiler:This is best demonstrated when he casually {{No Sell}}s a blast from Hexadecimal.]]
58* UnexplainedRecovery: Hexadecimal died in a HeroicSacrifice to stop a supervirus from destroying the Net in the original series. Here, she's perfectly fine, as well as back to being evil, for no discernible reason.
59* WeatherControlMachine: The Sourcerer hijacks a military weather satellite so he can amplify a tropical storm into a hurricane which will destroy the eastern seaboard of the United States.
60* WhamEpisode: "Mainframe Mayhem" [[spoiler:reintroduces Mainframe and has Megabyte recruit Hexadecimal to his cause, putting some motion back into his stalled plot to break free of the Sourcerer. However, Hexadecimal is captured in the next episode and plays no part in Megabyte regaining his freedom, though they end up forming a partnership again when Megabyte himself is captured]].
61* YouAreInCommandNow: Megabyte frequently [[RunningGag kills his Alpha Sentinel]] and promotes one of the mooks to replace him.
62* ZombieApocalypse: In "Zombie Army", the Sourcerer releases zombie drones that are designed to infect computers, eventually forming a botnet that will crash the internet through [=DDoS=] attacks.

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