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#REDIRECT [[Pikipedia:Canon]]
{{game icons|p=y|p2=y|p3=y}}
{{for|Pikipedia's policy involving the canon|Pikipedia:Canon policy}}
'''Canon''' is any information that is considered to be "real", "official", or "true" in a fictional universe. For the most part, it is trivial to understand what constitutes as canon and what doesn't, as one needs to simply follow the storyline of a main ''Pikmin'' game. But there are some aspects outside of the story modes that could count as either canon or not.
 
==Levels==
===Pure canon===
Pure canon is all information that is undoubtedly canon; events that "really happened" in the ''Pikmin'' universe. This is mostly decided by the parties that develop the games and media related to the ''Pikmin'' franchise, meaning [[Nintendo EAD]] and [[Shigeru Miyamoto]].
 
Currently, only the main ''Pikmin'' games – ''[[Pikmin (game)|Pikmin]]'', ''[[Pikmin 2]]'' and ''[[Pikmin 3]]'' – are considered canon games. Anything that happens within the story mode of each main ''Pikmin'' game is canonical. Bonus content, such as the [[Cutscenes#Louie's Dark Secret|reward]] obtained by completing all [[Challenge Mode (Pikmin 2)|''Pikmin 2'' Challenge Mode]] levels with a pink flower, can vary in canon, but whenever it does not contradict with – and makes sense within the context of – the main story mode, it is considered canon.
 
===Objectionable canon===
Some content in some games could be considered canon or not. This could be because there is not enough information to accept or reject it as "real", or could simply be a matter of opinion.
 
Trophies, stickers, and other side-content in the [[Super Smash Bros. series|''Super Smash Bros.'' series]] features canonical information from elements in some franchises, and occasionally, adds its own information as well. For the most part, this extra information is created and approved by [[Nintendo]], but is never confirmed to be true or false. This, combined with the fact that the information is contained from within a non-canon media, makes the canonical value of the information questionable. In addition, there are times where the likes of trophy descriptions contain information that directly contradicts the canon in the games and are as such, considered non-canon. For a list of such cases, see '''[[Mistakes in the Pikmin series#Non-canon mistakes|Mistakes in the ''Pikmin'' series]]'''.
 
Some external content like the [[e-Reader|e-cards]] or the [[Pikmin Short Movies|''Pikmin'' Short Movies]] have information that matches up with the existing canon and makes sense in the ''Pikmin'' universe. However, no official word has been given on their canon, and because they do not belong to the main ''Pikmin'' series of games, their content is left as ambiguously canonical.
 
[http://www.primagames.com/ Prima Games] has a vague relationship with the developers of games they make guides for. On top of containing walkthroughs and tips, some guides include some extra information about aspects of a franchise; in the ''Pikmin'' series' case, this could be extra descriptions of enemies, for instance. Prima Games works with all sorts of companies, making it doubtful that they can have a meaningful connection with all of them such that the extra information they write can be accepted as canon by the developers. On the other hand, it is clear that Prima Games has a strong connection with at least some departments of the development teams, seeing that their guides usually contain maps and charts that were rendered using 3D models or in-game images, resources that can only be obtained legally by agreement with the developer company.
 
===Non-canon===
[[File:Pikmin3 battle.png|thumb|right|Amongst other things, [[Bingo Battle]] is not canon. It would not make sense for [[Alph]] and [[Olimar]] to gather [[Pikmin family|Pikmin]] and fight against one another by filling up a bingo card.]]
Some aspects in the games are not canon whatsoever. They belong to the game, but are considered to "not have happened" in the ''Pikmin'' universe.
 
The [[Super Smash Bros. series|''Super Smash Bros.'' series]] feature games that are considered non-canon for the franchises that take place in them. This is clear due to the fact that, naturally, ''Pikmin'' does not share a universe with the likes of ''Mario'' or ''The Legend of Zelda''. ''[[Pikmin Adventure]]'', despite being directly related to the ''Pikmin'' franchise, is not canon. It does not, in any way, relate to [[PNF-404]] or the actual [[Pikmin family|Pikmin]], but rather, it is a mini-game in ''[[Nintendo Land]]'', themed around the ''Pikmin'' franchise.
 
Activities that happen on an alternative game mode in a ''Pikmin'' game are not considered canon. Said game modes were created for the purpose of entertaining the player, and for the most part, they do not follow the main story mode's canon. For instance, it is canon that Captain Olimar landed on [[PNF-404]] and had to gather his missing [[ship part]]s, not that he chose to begin a [[Challenge Mode (Pikmin)|challenge]] where he had to cultivate the most Pikmin possible in one day.
 
[[Unused content]], [[prototype information]], [[Mistakes in the Pikmin series|mistakes]] and [[glitch]]es are not canon. They are content that the game developers did not intend to provide to the players in a finalized game, and should not count as such for the purpose of deciding the canon.
 
==Gameplay==
Some media, like movies, have a specifically defined canon, in which what happens in the movie is objective truth in the movie's universe, and cannot be altered. Games, however, vary according to each player's experience, so some aspects of the gameplay cannot be correctly considered canon or non-canon.
 
For instance, it is no truer that "Captain Olimar first recovered the [[UV Lamp]] and then the [[Massage Machine]]" as it is the other way around. For this, common sense dictates that varying truths are not accounted for in the lore. Following the previous example, it is canon that Captain Olimar recovered his [[ship part]]s, but their order of collection is not confirmed. There are times where such events are confirmed in a different game, however, normally in the form of a [[captain]] outright saying it (e.g. in [[Olimar's notes|his notes]] in ''[[Pikmin 2]]''). Naturally, this does not change what a player might have actually done in their playthrough, but it does define the "standard", canon-wise.
 
The ending obtained in a game is also not relevant to the decision of the canon. Rather, the events that unfold in a following game decide which ending is the canon one.
 
==Overview of the canon==
{{spoiler|the plot of all three games}}
 
While traveling through space, the [[S.S. Dolphin]] hits a meteor, which sends it plummeting to the surface of [[PNF-404]], its [[Ship part|parts]] scattering about. While on the planet, [[Captain Olimar]] discovers [[Red Pikmin|Red]], [[Yellow Pikmin|Yellow]] and [[Blue Pikmin]], in that order, and manages to retrieve all of his missing ship parts, starting with the [[Main Engine]], and ending with the [[Secret Safe]].
 
It is likely that the ending in which he gathers all ship parts is the canon one, given that in ''Pikmin 2'', Olimar has brought a souvenir home for his son, something that only likely happened after the collection of the Secret Safe, which is even implied by Olimar himself<ref>{{transcript|{{Notes:Secret Safe/monolog}}|Captain Olimar after finding the [[Secret Safe]]}}</ref>. In addition, it's revealed that Olimar's wife eventually finds a "secret cash stash"<ref>{{transcript|Today, as I cleaned the bedroom, I found your secret cash stash. With thanks, I'll accept it gladly. I'll just pretend I didn't see that journal of yours...|[[Olimar's wife]] in a piece of [[mail]]}}</ref>, which can only be assumed to be the Secret Safe.
 
With the collection of the souvenir, Olimar returns to [[Hocotate]] to find that [[Hocotate Freight|his company]] had to undergo a debt to repay the loss of a cargo of [[golden pikpik carrot]]s. These carrots were actually eaten by [[Louie]], as revealed in a [[cutscene]] that is unlocked with all levels being perfected in [[Challenge Mode (Pikmin 2)|Challenge Mode]]. They land on the planet using the [[Hocotate ship]], and while there, Olimar rediscovered Red Pikmin, collects the [[Courage Reactor]], discovers [[Purple Pikmin|Purple]] and [[White Pikmin]], and rediscovers [[Yellow Pikmin|Yelow]] and [[Blue Pikmin]], in that order. Eventually, him and Louie repay the debt and return to Hocotate, but during the trip, Louie gets lost behind. They then return to the planet and recover Louie from the [[Titan Dweevil]].
 
Although the player can gather all treasures in PNF-404 and get a second ending that way (the first being when the debt is repaid), it is not clear how the events of ''Pikmin 2'' end, canonically. It is known in ''Pikmin 3'' that [[Hocotate Freight]], but it is not specified whether this is a new debt or the same one as the first. It is also known that the ship used by Olimar and Louie in ''Pikmin 3'' is the Hocotate ship sans golden painting. Finally, it is known that Louie is safe and sound, as he boarded on the mission as well. As such, the Hocotatian part of the ''Pikmin 3'' storyline could've taken place before the ''Pikmin 2'' debt was ever repaid (and before the ship became golden and Louie was lost), it could've happened after the dept was repaid and Louie was saved from the [[Dream Den]], meaning that there was a second debt and that the gold coating on the ship was likely sold.
 
==See also==
*[[Pikmin series|''Pikmin'' series]]
*[[Olimar's voyage log]]
*[[Data file]]
 
==References==
{{refs}}
 
[[Category:Real world]]