Phantom Hoover wrote:Well, yes, but Bell has stated outright that the Elite and Frontier universes are separate, which kind of makes that redundant or even non-canon.
Where's the problem? Frontier
is non-canon, as far as Elite is concerned, and nobody has ever claimed otherwise.
When David Braben wanted to create a sequel to Elite, he took over a completely different game, and merely squeezed in a handful of Elite planet names, in order to make it (
extremely superficiously)
look as if the Frontier universe were the same as the Elite universe. And that's it. If you look at the maps only for a second, it is immediately obvious that the two don't have anything to do with each other (one map is two-dimensional, the other is three-dimensional; the names don't match; system positions don't match either; one has systems with one planet each, the other has multiple-planet-systems; etc. pp.).
It's two unrelated games.
But David Braben (who is one of the two creators of Elite)
wanted Frontier to be understood as a sequel. And Ian Bell (who is the other guy who created Elite, so his word counts equally) disagrees. The evidence is clearly on Bell's side.
However, there are many players who played Frontier, and were okay with it being a sequel to Elite. For
them the two games take place in the same universe. So they made efforts to reconcile the contradictions which result from the two different universes. One heroic effort is the work of Selezen which Drew linked to. It consists mainly of a timeline which tries to place the events in Elite and Frontier in a logical and sensitive relation to each other. As an added bonus it even fits in Oolite (which is
not exactly the same as Elite).
So,
if you're of the opinion that Elite and Frontier are related, Selezens work gives you a grip on exactly
how they are related.
However, nobody
needs to be of the opinion that Elite and Frontier are related, and would be in good company (Ian Bell).
Our own community here is fairly equally divided between those who think of Elite, Oolite, and Frontier as one continuity, those who see the continuity between Elite and Oolite but disregard Frontier, and those who simply don't care as long as they get to blow up stuff.
And we generally don't feel the need to get into flame wars about it.
Canon is what each player accepts as canon. For most of us that includes everything from Elite (the game; whatever version you played back then), its printed (or online) manual, and
The Dark Wheel (the novella that came with Elite). Everything else is personal choice, and some youngsters who never knew any version of Elite or
The Dark Wheel wouldn't even necessarily accept them as a minimum.
In other words: you are totally free, as far as "canon" is concerned. And the only thing everybody can agree with is that there is no agreement. But that doesn't stop us from having a lot of fun.