Home

mainseries

Mainseries is a term used to describe the central, canonical sequence of works within a franchise. It denotes the core installments that advance the main storyline, feature recurring characters, and establish the primary setting. The label distinguishes these entries from spin-offs, side stories, reboots, or alternative continuities. In reference works and databases, mainseries is often used to indicate a coherent, ongoing arc rather than ancillary material.

Usage across media varies but shares a common aim: to identify the principal line of development within

The distinction can be fluid. Franchises may not officially label their entries as the main series, and

a
franchise.
In
video
games,
the
main
series
typically
refers
to
the
primary
titles
that
drive
the
franchise’s
core
gameplay
and
narrative,
usually
released
as
part
of
a
continuous
lineage.
A
widely
cited
example
is
the
Pokémon
main
series,
the
core
RPG
titles
that
span
generations.
In
literature
and
film,
the
main
series
comprises
the
principal
novels
or
films
that
form
the
central
narrative
arc,
with
spin-offs
or
standalone
works
treated
as
separate
branches.
fan
communities
sometimes
debate
which
works
belong
to
it,
especially
in
crossovers,
shared
universes,
or
soft-reboot
scenarios.
As
a
descriptive
term,
mainseries
helps
organize
understanding
of
a
franchise’s
structure,
but
its
application
may
vary
by
context
and
source.
See
also:
spin-off,
canon,
franchise
chronology.