- Dark power is usually associated with evil, so probably not. Also, technically Cure Peace IS earth to an extent (she uses lightning, but lightning is a part of weather which affects the Earth.) A red Cure could have powers like Heart/Love, while a purple Cure could have something like Soul.
- Evidently, Cure Sunny's case may be similar to that of Cure Muse (who had a purple Fairy Tone and a yellow color scheme). She uses a Red Decor and the Smile Pact glows red during the transformation, but her overall image color is orange. There are three different warm colors on the pact (one of which belongs to Cure Sunny): yellow (Cure Peace), amber/gold, and red/orange. So either way, the Sixth Ranger Cures being purple and amber/gold is still legit.
- The element of Darkness worked for Sailor Saturn I believe. A shame they may not be able to do that in Pretty Cure to explain that Dark Is Not Evil.
- Ultimately jossed.
- Sunny's Cure Decor is orange...but the light is red.
- In the title eyecatch, Sunny holds a red and orange balloon.
- There are 7 lights in the Smile Pact (which fits with the rainbow theme), and it's the red one that glows when she transforms. The unaccounted for ones are purple and orange(/gold?).
- Jossed.
- Jossed.
- Jossed. However,cure sunny used an attack with cure march. and cure beauty used a duo attack with cure march/
- Surprisingly, this appears to be the most likely theory.
- And has now been confirmed.
- Jossed.
- Jossed.
- Jossed.
- Jossed. Though what really happened (Candy becoming the new queen of Märchenland and the Barrier Maiden Royale Candy) is pretty close.
- Jossed. There will be another group attack — an upgraded version of Rainbow Burst, as if that alone wasn't powerful enough — at that point.
- Jossed, apparently.
- Ultimately confirmed; while the standard Super Modes' names replace "Cure" with "Princess", their final episode Super Modes are called Ultra forms instead.
- This kind of happened, except that the season really turned out to be a giant comedy parody of the franchise up to that point.
- Jossed.
- He won't appear until episode 22 at the earliest. Refer to the countdown clock of doom shown during each episode when the villain appears. The appearance delay means he's more likely to be the real Big Bad.
- Sabaku and Mephisto appeared much earlier in their respective seasons of Heart Catch Pretty Cure and Suite Pretty Cure ♪.
- When he appears in episode 23, he is killed by Pretty Cure Rainbow Burst five minutes later... leaving behind a core that is found by his subordinates. So technically he still has a chance of being the Final Boss.
- Ultimately confirmed.
- Sabaku and Mephisto appeared much earlier in their respective seasons of Heart Catch Pretty Cure and Suite Pretty Cure ♪.
- Hence why she knows exactly who the Precures are when they transform and their powers and her knowledge about the Cure Decor. Like a similar situation to Kerberos from Cardcaptor Sakura, Candy is in a "little" form and her true form as the Queen can only be released by gathering the Decor, the pieces of her power.
- Jossed. An upcoming episode summary reveals she's the Miracle Jewel.
- Actually, somewhat confirmed. The Miracle Jewel is an egg that opens forth to transform Candy into the next Queen of Märchenland once the Precures gather all the Decor together.
- Mostly Confirmed. As seen in Episode 45, they are Märchenland's fairy equivalents, although in Majorina's case it appears she might be from another story.
- Then I suppose this would make her older brother Pop a prince and possibly the rightful heir to the throne.
- Unless, of course, Marchenland is a matriarchal society. Which would make Candy the heir in this case.
- Jossed.
- Confirmed, actually.
- Jossed.
- With the birth of Nao's youngest sibling, it appears less likely, as they've already used that particular plot. Still not impossible yet.
- Jossed. The upgrades come from the Pegasus and (later) Royal Clock. Although they do get slightly stronger versions of their main attacks during their individual focus episodes late in the season.
- Jossed.
- If we go by the way she reacted to him in the 3DS game opening, then this is jossed.
Let's look at the archetypical Big Bad Wolf.
- The Big Bad Wolf is always alone. He has no pack. Wolf packs are not motley crews of unrelated individuals, they're families consisting of a breeding pair and their children. We think of the "lone wolf" as a cool individual whose isolation is voluntary. But in reality, lone wolves are alone because either their pack is dead or because the pack was so antagonistic towards the wolf that it decided that going it alone and risking starvation was better.
- TL;DR: The Big Bad Wolf's family is either dead, or was so abusive that he ran away.
- The Big Bad Wolf does not hunt normally. He cannot hunt normally, because wolves hunt in packs, and The Big Bad Wolf has no pack. Without his pack to help him down large prey, he had to hunt smaller prey. But smaller prey is also quicker and harder to catch, and even if the hunt is successful, the meat from a rabbit is barely worth the energy sunk into chasing it. Combine this with the fact that not every day is going to end with a successful hunt, and The Big Bad Wolf will quickly start starving. In this case, the only reliable, plentiful source of food is human livestock. This will quickly draw the ire of humans.
- TL;DR: The only reason The Big Bad Wolf comes into conflict with humans is because he's starving to death.
- The Big Bad Wolf eats humans. Wolves only prey on humans when they're very desperate and hungry. Maybe The Big Bad Wolf got injured by a human on a failed livestock raid, and now he cannot chase even his normal prey. Humans, though, have no fangs or claws, and cannot run very fast. If The Big Bad Wolf can get an unarmed human alone, they're easy prey. This is also highly risky, since if he kills even one human, the nearest human settlement will burn the forest down just to get vengeance. He would not try to eat humans unless he was at the end of his rope.
- TL;DR: The Big Bad Wolf has done bad things because he desperately wants to live.
- The Big Bad Wolf never wins. With the exception of "The Boy Who Cried Wolf", all fairy tales starring The Big Bad Wolf end with the wolf losing. Details vary (run away in humiliation; get drowned in a river, get your stomach cut open and filled with rocks), but it's always a Downer Ending for the wolf.
- TL;DR: Wolves don't get happy endings, because "happy ending for wolves" and "happy ending for everyone else" are mutually exclusive.
TL;DR: There's a high possibility that Wolfrun had a tremendously crappy life, and his bad attitude is due to him having crossed the Despair Event Horizon a looong time ago.
- Appears to be confirmed, not just for Wolfrun, but all three generals.
- Considering he'll probably debut around episode 22, and Pretty Cure averages 49 episodes, there will most likely be another story arc and villain.
- If this happens, then we might go the way of the original series.
- Jossed. They're gonna try reviving him all over again.
- If this happens, then we might go the way of the original series.
- Because Echo used the Smile system to henshin in the movie.
- Jossed.
This leads us straight to:
- All three are half-confirmed, half-jossed. A yellow-nosed Akanbe appears in episode 23, but it's killed off by Happy Shower. Joker does use another one later as well, but he has not as of yet given a yellow one to the others. The relation to the tassels on his hat is also demonstrated, as he pulled the yellow nose directly from his hat the second time.
- Appears to be jossed for now. In episode 21, he steals the last Décor, plus the Décor Décolle and Candy, before the Queen can be revived.
- Now completely jossed.
- Mostly jossed. It does open up along that line, but provides an alternate activation point for the Décors, as demonstrated by Candy in Episode 30. Also demonstrated as early as episode 7's opening, when the cell phone decor is used to contact Pop.
- Kill off the other three agents to use their energy for either himself or Pierrot.
- End up fusing with Pierrot when he's near-death from the Precure Princess Forms, and have to constantly find more Bad Energy to keep his new powers.
- Both are jossed. For now.
- And now the second one is half-confirmed. He turns himself into Bad End Paint to merge with Pierrot and revive him in the final battle. Though it's after having been backed into a corner, not near-death.
- Jossed. Same old bad guys, with a new clock and powered-up Monster of the Week.
- Jossed.
- Jossed. Sadly.
- Jossed.
- Jossed. Candy is the Miracle Jewel.
Rather, once the Hyper Akanbe are all dealt with, they'll be replaced by Ultimate Akanbe (or somesuch), combining the "Two Plot Coupon" method of making Super Akanbe with the "merged villian" method of the Hyper Akanbe. Only when all of them are defeated will the bad guys finally have permission to die...
- Pretty much Jossed, unless you count the Bad End Precure.
- Indeed it won't happen. "Mankai Smile" again.
- Yayoi's mother works for Fairy Drop and mentions Erika's mother. Even more, episode 34 has magazines bearing pictures from the fashion show and they show Yuri, Itsuki and Tsubomi (along with Cobraja) in the pictures clearly.
- Umm, no, the fashion show pics showed different people. If you were talking about the ones from kokoda_koji's review on the Pretty Cure Livejournal community, these were photoshopped.
- Pierrot's design seems to be based on a clown. Joker is the only one of the generals who has a clown-like (or rather a harlequin) design? Coincidence? I think not.
- For example, even if Wolfrun did set out to destroy Akane and all she cares about, it may be revealed that he was seriously under the influence at the time.
- Confirmed as of Episode 45, assuming the Cures defeat Pierrot and Joker, which is probably a Foregone Conclusion. Though here's the catch: they reverted to fairies.
- Technically, Candy didn't go through a Plot-Relevant Age-Up. She just turned human.
- Jossed. While the manga episode did get dubbed, the episode is named Goldenlight, and presumably/possibly, the character as well.