>>1403994
Well have we heard from that anon lately? He's clearly too autistic to ever leave this site, so either he killed himself due to Rouge clearly being more into Shadow in recent entries, or he ended up in jail for throwing an autistic fit over it, or he's still around, but hopefully too embarrassed to ever admit it was him. But if we point out that Rouge clearly loves Shadow now, he might sperg out about it again. You never know.
>>1404065
Honestly, while it has a few things that irk me in terms of not matching continuity, it can fit kinda okay. Despite nerds obviously wanting to care about what happened in it, it's also disposable enough that it can just never be referenced again.
>>1404228
You must understand that the way it's used now is not the way it was used historically. Marvel has just started saying everything is an alt-universe for no damn reason, but originally, when DC invented the modern autistic multiverse, and then Marvel copied it not too long after, the point was just to bring together characters and concepts that previously existed, but whose continuities couldn't fit together. It was fun. They rebooted The Flash, then wanted to have the old Flash come back and meet the new one, even though he was established as a fictional character in new Flash's world. So it was just fun fanservice. Most comics multiverses are like that.
Sometimes they make a brand new universe, but that's rare, and usually just to play with a fun gimmick. The classic example is the Mirror universe from Star Trek, where the good guys are evil. DC did it slightly earlier, with Earth-Three, but Star Trek is more famous and it's the same basic deal.
But modern Marvel movies and the garbage that copies them does multiverse bullshit for no reason. They'll have Mr. Fantastic show up and just say he's from an alt-universe for no reason. They'll have Professor X show up, played by the same actor you knew, but he's a different Professor X from a different universe, for no reason. In Deadpool and Wolverine, the X-Men movies already had an alternate timeline with a bad ending (hence Wolverine went back in time and changed it in Days of Future Past), but when they wanted to bring back Wolverine from a continuity where he didn't die, and whose universe also had a bad ending, they made him be from a new universe, instead of from the alt-timeline that already existed.
Sonic Prime is a prime example of this retardation. In it, Sonic goes to four alt-universes. One is just a dead universe, so okay, it doesn't count. The others are a dystopian Blade Runner city where Robotnik took over, a jungle universe where they fight a wild jungle girl, and a pirate universe. These universes are clearly based on the SatAM universe, the Sonic Boom universe, and Blaze's universe. I wouldn't be surprised if Ian Flynn, the writer of the comics and recent games, and consultant on Sonic Prime, suggested having Prime be going to these other universes, since that's just his type of autism. I wouldn't be surprised if Sega said no, because it's too autistic and kids wouldn't get it, yet used the basic idea anyway, just with all the appeal stripped out. But kids would get it, because they have the internet, and modern audiences love to read Wikipedia and pretend they're huge fans who always knew all the deep details. They'd just Google Princess Sally and then act like they watched the show and read all the comics, and the show would then actually have a reason to have its plot. Instead, it has a multiverse for no reason other than to make sure that you don't actually care about the characters in each other universe, since they only look like the characters you know, but are actually brand new people you have no reason to care about.