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Category: Voltron: Legendary Defender

Who’s Running This Planet, Anyway? Earth’s Government in Voltron Legendary Defender

Posted on November 18, 2018 by Greg Tyler

The Voltron Legendary Defender seventh-season episodes “The Last Stand Part 1” and “The Last Stand Part 2” tell an entertaining tale of what happens on Earth between the departure of Shiro and his comrades, and their return as Paladins of Voltron, to defend their home from a Galra occupation. These episodes also suggest an alarming situation on Earth that predates the Galra invasion:

The entire planet Earth seems to be governed by the military.

In “The Last Stand Part 1,” Sam Holt has returned to Earth after having been gone for six years. Admiral Sanda of the Galaxy Garrison informs Sam that the joint chiefs want to debrief Sam, to learn about his intergalactic experiences.

We know nothing about the organization or authority of the joint chiefs on Earth in Voltron’s time.

According to the About page of the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff official website, the Joint Chiefs of Staff consist of chiefs of staff of the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the Marine Corps, and the National Guard. During World War II, the Joint Chiefs of Staff had command authority over combatant commands. In later years, the Joint Chiefs lost their executive authority and began to serve instead as advisers, entrusted with providing advice to the President, the Secretary of Defense, and the National Security Council.

If the joint chiefs in Voltron’s future Earth were similarly empowered, then this would suggest the existence of a civilian government.

Or would it?

As of this writing — less than one month before the December 14, 2018, release of Voltron Legendary Defender‘s eighth and final season — no other evidence exists to suggest a civilian government on Earth. On the contrary, “The Last Stand Part 1” and “The Last Stand Part 2” suggest that Earth’s government might actually consist of the senior-most officers of the Galaxy Garrison.

In “The Last Stand Part 1,” Admiral Sanda seems to be the commanding officer of the entire Garrison. At the end of the episode, Sam Holt challenges her leadership.

SAM HOLT: Right now, the world needs a leader that’s not afraid to face facts, and you’re not it.

SANDA: And you think you are?

SAM HOLT: Yes.

Sanda then yields much of her authority to Sam. On the other hand, in “The Last Stand Part 2,” after Galra Commander Sendak addresses Earth and demands that Earth turn over the Voltron Lions, it is Admiral Sanda who replies as Earth’s representative. Whatever the case, there are no references in these episodes — or any others — to Earth having a president, a prime minister, a congress or parliament or governing council, or indeed any civilian political entities.

It’s possible that Earth does not have a central government, and that individual nations have their own governments, and that the Galaxy Garrison controls only Earth’s exploration of space, and planetary defense. On the other hand, if this is true, wouldn’t Garrison leadership advise the countries of Earth during the Galra invasion and occupation? The episodes don’t suggest that anything like this occurs.

It’s also interesting to note that the Galaxy Garrison is a military organization. Everyone seems to be a commissioned officer or a cadet. Sanda is an admiral, Sam Holt is a commander, and at the time of Shiro’s disappearance at Kerberos, he is a lieutenant. Regardless of whether the Galaxy Garrison controls Earth, why is the Garrison a military organization when, in episodes like “The Rise of Voltron” (“The New Alliance”) and “A Little Adventure,” Iverson and Shiro mention that the Garrison consists of astroexplorers? Why is a space exploration group organized like a military, and why is the group called a garrison?

“The Last Stand Part 2” mentions that humanity experienced a third world war. After World War III ended, did the people of Earth decide to create a military organization charged with exploring space, defending Earth, and oh, by the way, governing all of humanity? Is Admiral Sanda, and later Sam Holt, a benevolent dictator?

Maybe the eighth season of Voltron Legendary Defender will reveal just who is in charge of Earth and its people. I’m hopeful that it isn’t the Galaxy Garrison.

Posted in Special Features, TV, Voltron: Legendary Defender

To the Letter: The Altean Alphabet in Voltron Legendary Defender

Posted on September 21, 2018 by Greg Tyler

In the seventh-season Voltron Legendary Defender episode “The Road Home,” Coran and Romelle sing the Altean equivalent of the English “alphabet song” — the “ABCs.” The lryics are:

♪ Exus, plexis, ceedus, flee,
jaydus, nacto, pledum, ree ♪
♪ Joodum, ruu, and leeum too
That puts us just halfway through ♪
♪ There’s mai-ox, kay, and jibley-way
Afus, nofus, youkus-play ♪
♪ Beefur, leefur, agus-play ♪
♪ At the end, flancko and blee! ♪

It’s almost a certainty that the show’s writers created this song purely on a whim, just to give the Paladins another source of annoyance during their long journey to Earth. Having said that, let’s look more closely at the song, in typical Lions and Pilots and Bots Dot Com geeky fashion.

Letters

According to the Altean alphabet song, the Altean language includes 22 letters. We don’t know which are consonants and which are vowels — or indeed whether the Altean alphabet even has such concepts.

It’s also worth noting that many letters start with the same phonemes. Examples include…

Phoneme Letter(s)
Short e (as in “egg”) exus
pl plexis, pledum
s ceedus
fl flee, flancko
j jaydus, joodum, jibley-way
n nacto, nofus
r ree, ruu
l leeum, leefur
m mai-ox
k kay
Short a (as in “apple”) afus, agus-play
y youkus-play
b beefur, blee

At first glance, it seems that at least some letters aren’t named for their phonemes. For example, if there were an Altean word that sounds like “bell”…

  • Which letter might make the b sound? Beefur? Blee?
  • Which letter might make the l sound? Leeum? Leefur?

Glyphs

Throughout Voltron Legendary Defender, we catch glimpses of Altean text, featuring distinctive glyphs. There’s no way to know how all of these might match the letters that were identified in the Altean alphabet song, but it’s still fun to look at them!

In search of Altean alphabetic glyphs, I skimmed three episodes of Voltron Legendary Defender: “Eye of the Beholder,” “Reunion,” and “The Colony.” I found at least 27 — possibly 28 — glyphs. Each episode revealed glyphs that weren’t in the other episodes. The glyphs that I identified are shown below.

With 27 or more glyphs, and only 22 letters in the Altean alphabet, it’s clear that there can be no one-for-one mapping between glyphs and letters. Maybe Altean uses cases (upper case, lower case, etc.) like English does, or some other means of giving each letter multiple glyphs.

Whatever the case, after finding new Altean glyphs in each of the three episodes that I checked, I decided to stop. It looks like Romelle and Bandor were thinking the same thing in “The Colony.”

Posted in Special Features, TV, Voltron: Legendary Defender

Too Soon?

Posted on August 11, 2018 by Greg Tyler

Too soon? Probably.

Posted in Special Features, Voltron, Voltron: Legendary Defender

Voltron Legendary Defender’s Sixth Season Released – Fake Spoilers

Posted on June 15, 2018 by Greg Tyler

Today Netflix released the seven-episode sixth season of Voltron Legendary Defender! To celebrate, here are some of the fake spoilers that I tweeted on Twitter in the days and weeks leading up to the release. For all of these tweets, plus many more by many fellow Voltron fans, click here.

#FakeVLDS6Spoiler Varkon discovered to be Keith's great aunt. @Voltron @LetsVoltron @VoltronStore

— Greg Tyler (@LetsVoltronGreg) June 4, 2018

#FakeVLDS6Spoiler Lotor wins the lotor-ry. @Voltron @LetsVoltron @VoltronStore @AJLoCascio

— Greg Tyler (@LetsVoltronGreg) June 4, 2018

#FakeVLDS6Spoiler Hunk and Shay, plus a bit of gene splicing, produce #HayHay @Voltron @LetsVoltron @VoltronStore @TyLabine @EmilyEiden pic.twitter.com/oL52vmvYt6

— Greg Tyler (@LetsVoltronGreg) June 5, 2018

#FakeVLDS6Spoiler Blue Lion gets a pair of Blue Lion slippers. @Voltron @LetsVoltron @VoltronStore

— Greg Tyler (@LetsVoltronGreg) June 6, 2018

#FakeVLDS6Spoiler Castleship fuses with Haggar and a scaultrite-producing creature, and is renamed to the Castle of Lions, the Witch, and the Weblum. @Voltron @LetsVoltron @VoltronStore

— Greg Tyler (@LetsVoltronGreg) June 6, 2018

#FakeVLDS6Spoiler The new big bad is an astrophysicist who destroys non-spherical planets with rational thought. The big bad will be defeated by one loud swoosh of Voltron's Blazing Sword, in space, where there's no sound or oxygen. @Voltron @LetsVoltron @VoltronStore

— Greg Tyler (@LetsVoltronGreg) June 5, 2018

#FakeVLDS6Spoiler Citizens of the Galra Empire reveal what will *really* make them peaceful: infinite supplies of @evanescence . @AmyLeeEV @Voltron @LetsVoltron @VoltronStore

— Greg Tyler (@LetsVoltronGreg) June 12, 2018

Posted in News, Special Features, Voltron, Voltron: Legendary Defender

Time and Time Again – Another Voltron Legendary Defender Chronology

Posted on June 2, 2018 by Greg Tyler

As a fan of “metafiction” books such as Star Trek Spaceflight Chronology, the Star Trek Chronology, and Timeline of the Planet of the Apes, I’m fascinated by how some enthusiasts of a television or movie-based fictional universe create chronologies from clues in the TV episodes or films. In two previous articles on this website (https://lionsandpilotsandbots.com/2017/12/27/5-11-14-and-monday-chronologizing-voltron-legendary-defender/, https://lionsandpilotsandbots.com/2017/11/12/yearning-for-a-year-voltron-legendary-defender/), I attempted to start a Voltron Legendary Defender chronology from clues in the episodes.

I decided to try once more, now incorporating information from Voltron Legendary Defender: The Paladin’s Handbook, plus additional information from the television program that I had not previously considered.

Data Points:

  • In “The New Alliance” (the first part of “The Rise of Voltron”), Lance records a Galaxy Garrison Flight Log with a date of “5-11-14.”
  • In “The New Alliance,” in daylight on the day after “5-11-14” – Shiro, Keith, Lance, Pidge, and Hunk leave Earth in Blue Lion.
  • In “Some Assembly Required,” Hunk recalls his last night on Earth being on a Monday.
  • In “Reunion,” Matt Holt’s false grave marker displays an incorrect birth date of “0010.05.25,” and a death date of “0014.04.28.”
  • In “Reunion,” shortly before the launch of the Kerberos Mission, Katie Holt wonders how she’ll “have to go through middle school without” her brother Matt.
  • In “From Days of Long Ago”, Shiro states that he had been “locked up by aliens for a year.”
  • In “Tears of the Balmera,” Sam Holt hints that the Kerberos Mission’s journey from Earth to Kerberos will take two months.
  • In “Tears of the Balmera,” the public announcement of the missing Kerberos Mission crew was made five months after the mission’s launch.
  • Voltron Legendary Defender: The Paladin’s Handbook states that Katie Holt (Pidge) was 14 when the Kerberos Mission launched.
  • Voltron Legendary Defender: The Paladin’s Handbook provides the age and birth month and day-of-month for each Paladin from Earth:
    • Shiro: Age 25, born February 29 (during a leap year, since February 29 is a “Leap Year Day”)
    • Keith: Age 18, born October 23
    • Lance: Age 17, born July 28
    • Hunk: Age 17, born January 13
    • Pidge (Katie Holt): Age 15, born April 3
  • Voltron Legendary Defender: The Paladin’s Handbook describes Allura as a teenager.

Assumptions:

  • “5-11-14” is the actual date on which Lance records the Galaxy Garrison Flight Log.
  • “5-11-14” is an Earth calendar date, rather than something exotic like a Star Trek “stardate.”
  • “5-11-14,” Hunk’s last night on Earth, is a Monday.
  • “0014.04.28” is a plausible date of death for Matt Holt. In “Reunion,” Pidge notices the incorrect birth date on Matt’s false grave marker, but she does not seem to question the plausibility of the death date.
  • The dates on Matt Holt’s false grave marker are Earth calendar dates.
  • “5-11-14” occurs sometime between Earth years 2100 and 2599. Preferably the date occurs sometime between 2200 and 2499, to avoid dates which are “too soon” or “too distant” in the future. (This date range is a personal preference.)
  • On Earth, an academic year begins sometime between June and August, and it ends sometime between May and July. (These month ranges accommodate year-round schools and schools with summer breaks between academic years.)
  • Most kids begin kindergarten at age five and complete kindergarten at age six.
  • Pidge’s middle school included the seventh and eighth grades, and possibly also an earlier grade or two.
  • For Pidge to express concern about going through middle school without Matt, she would need to be in the eighth grade or earlier as of the launch of the Kerberos Mission.

My approach to creating a Voltron Legendary Defender chronology was as follows:

  • Compute all reasonable Earth calendar dates that “5-11-14” might represent.
    • Although the format of “5-11-14” is likely either month/day/year or day/month/year, assume it could be any permutation of year, month, and day. (Having said that, month/year/day and day/year/month would be… strange.)
    • If “5” is a year, then allow the possibility that “5” could be a one-digit year or a two-digit year. (Having said that, a one-digit year would be… strange.)
  • Compute all reasonable Earth calendar dates that “0010.05.25” and “0014.04.28” might represent.
    • Assume both dates have the same format.
    • Although the format of the dates is likely year/month/day, assume it could be any permutation of year, month, and day.
    • For “0014.04.28” to be a plausible date of death for Matt Holt, it should be no earlier than roughly two months after the Kerberos Mission launch date, and it should be no later than when Pidge discovered Matt’s false grave marker (sometime not much later than 5-11-14).
  • Score each possible “5-11-14” date according to the following criteria:
    • Format Score: If the “5” in “5-11-14” is a two-digit year, and the format isn’t “strange” (day/year/month or month/year/day), then the date is given one point. If the “5” is a one-digit year or the format is “strange,” then the date is given only 0.7 points.
    • Monday Score: If 5-11-14 is a Monday, then the date is given 1 point; otherwise it is given 0 points.
    • Matt Score: If “0014.04.28” can be parsed to a plausible death date relative to 5-11-14, then the date is given 1 point; otherwise it is given 0 points.
    • Shiro Score: If Shiro’s age can be 25 as of 5-11-14, then the date is given one point. If Shiro’s age can be 26 as of 5-11-14, then the date is given 0.7 points. Otherwise the date is given 0 points. (I assumed that age 26 was acceptable, although not ideal. A 26-year-old Shiro’s age could still be 25 in the Galaxy Garrison records as of 5-11-14, if the Garrison had assumed that he was dead.)
    • Total Score: Add the previously mentioned scores.
    • Adjusted Total Score: If “5-11-14” is between 2200 and 2499, then multiply the score by 1. Otherwise, if “5-11-14” is between 2100 and 2599, the multiply the score by 0.7. This reflects my bias that dates between 2100 and 2199 are acceptable but “too soon” in the future, and that dates between 2500 and 2599 are acceptable but “too distant” in the future.
  • Sort the “5-11-14” dates by Adjusted Total Scores, from highest to lowest. The highest-scoring “5-11-14” date “wins.”

Result:

  • Based on the approach above, the highest-scoring date parsed from “5-11-14” is May 11, 2314. (This is consistent with my reckoning here: https://lionsandpilotsandbots.com/2017/12/27/5-11-14-and-monday-chronologizing-voltron-legendary-defender/.)
    • May 11, 2314 has a reasonable format. (It’s neither month/year/day nor day/year/month.)
    • May 11, 2314 is a Monday.
    • Matt’s false date of death can be parsed to April 28, 2314, which is plausible. Matt’s false date of birth can be parsed to May 25 during some year ending in 10 – likely 2210 or earlier, making him at least 104 as of his falsified death. (This age would be absurd to Pidge or anyone else who had known Matt on Earth. On the other hand, Matt’s non-human rebel comrades would not likely know a human’s average life expectancy — but even they would be suspicious of a 2310 birth year, making Matt only four years old as of his falsified death.)
    • For Shiro to be 25 as of May 11, 2314, his February 29 birth month and day would need to be in the year 2289. Unfortunately, 2289 is not a leap year. The closest leap year is 2288, which would make Shiro 26 as of May 11, 2314.
    • (The single highest-scoring date parsed from “5-11-14” which enabled Shiro to be 25 as of that date is November 14, 2405. Unfortunately, no plausible date of death for Matt Holt could be parsed from “0014.04.28”, and the  adjusted total score of November 14, 2405, was less than that of May 11, 2314.)
  • Derived dates:
    • As previously stated, Matt Holt’s false date of death is April 28, 2314 – about two weeks before Shiro crashed to Earth. Matt Holt’s false and incorrect date of birth is May 25 of some year ending in 10.
    • Shiro, age 26 as of 5-11-14, was born on February 29, 2288.
    • Keith, age 18 as of 5-11-14, was born on October 23, 2295.
    • Lance, age 17 as of 5-11-14, was born on July 28, 2296.
    • Hunk, age 17 as of 5-11-14, was born on January 13, 2297. Hunk is about six months younger than Lance.
    • Pidge, age 15 as of 5-11-14, was born on April 3, 2299. Pidge had turned 15 about a month before 5-11-14.
    • For Pidge to have been 14 when the Kerberos Mission launched, the launch date could be no earlier than Pidge’s 14th birthday, April 3, 2313. Shiro returned to Earth on May 11, 2314, after about a year in Galra captivity, which followed a two-month flight from Earth to Kerberos. If Shiro spent slightly less than a full year in Galra custody, and/or the flight from Earth to Kerberos took slightly less than two months, then the launch date of the Kerberos Mission could plausibly be on or shortly after April 3, 2313. Since Pidge’s birthday isn’t mentioned in “Tears of the Balmera,” it’s likely that the launch date was soon after rather than on April 3, 2313. If so, then the Kerberos Mission crew could plausibly have been captured shortly after their arrival on Kerberos in early June 2313 – meaning Shiro would have spent about eleven months (close enough to round up to a year) in Galra captivity. In conclusion…
      • The Kerberos Mission launched in April 2313, sometime soon after April 3.
      • The Kerberos Mission reached Kerberos in early June 2313. Soon afterward, the crew was captured by the Galra.
      • Pidge and her mother watched the news announcement of the disappearance of the Kerberos Mission in September 2313, about five months after the mission launched. In “Tears of the Balmera,” Pidge was surprised by the news announcement, but in “Reunion,” it was established that Pidge could communicate with Matt using a secret code. This implies that, for about three months after the Kerberos Mission crew was captured, Pidge was unable to communicate with Matt. Perhaps other factors had already prevented Pidge from communicating with Matt, so that she could still be surprised by news of the crew’s loss.
    • The future Paladins left Earth in Blue Lion on the morning after 5-11-14; that is, on May 12, 2314. On this date they reached Arus and inadvertently revived Princess Allura and Coran from cryo-sleep.
    • Allura and Coran, in cryo-sleep for 10,000 years by the time of their revival, would have been placed in cryo-sleep in roughly 7787 B.C.E.
    • If we conjecture that Allura was 17 years old when she and Coran were placed in cryo-sleep, then she would have been born in roughly 7804 B.C.E.
    • The Castle of Lions, built some 10,600 years prior to 5-11-14, would have been built in roughly 8387 B.C.E.
  • About Pidge’s grade in school:
    • As of the April 2313 launch date of the Kerberos Mission, Pidge was 14 years old, but she had not yet completed middle school. If like many kids, she began kindergarten at age five and completed it age six, then she would have begun eighth grade (a middle school grade) when she was 13 and completed it when she was 14. It’s plausible that a 14-year-old Pidge was in the final months of middle school when Matt departed Earth with the Kerberos Mission.

Partial Chronology

  • 8387 B.C.E. (approximate): The Castle of Lions is built.
  • 7804 B.C.E. (approximate): Allura is born.
  • 7787 B.C.E. (approximate): Allura and Coran are placed in cryo-sleep.
  • February 29, 2288: Takashi “Shiro” Shirogane is born.
  • October 23, 2295: Keith is born.
  • July 28, 2296: Lance is born.
  • January 13, 2297: Hunk is born.
  • April 3, 2299: Pidge is born.
  • April 3, 2313: Pidge becomes 14 years old.
  • April 2313 (shortly after April 3): The Kerberos Mission is launched. At this point, 14-year-old Pidge is an eighth-grade middle school student, and Shiro is 25 years old.
  • June 2313: The Kerberos Mission reaches Kerberos. Shortly after its arrival, the crew is captured by the Galra.
  • September 2313: Pidge and her mother watch a news announcement that the Kerberos Mission has been lost.
  • April 28, 2314: According to Matt Holt’s false grave marker, Matt Holt died on this date. (The marker’s false and incorrect date of Matt’s birth is May 25 of some year ending in 10.)
  • May 11, 2314: Lance, Hunk, and Pidge fail a simulated Galaxy Garrison rescue mission. That night, Shiro crashes to Earth.
  • May 12, 2314: Shiro, Keith, Lance, Pidge, and Hunk leave Earth in Blue Lion. They reach Arus, where the group inadvertently revives Allura and Coran from cryo-sleep.

This chronology is conjectural, but it holds together surprisingly well. I doubt that there will ever be a “canon” chronology for Voltron Legendary Defender, but for now, this partial one is good enough for me. In the future, I’ll probably add information from more episodes as well as tie-in fiction.

In the meantime, I hope this chronology doesn’t tick off too many fellow fans. (See what I did there?)

 

Posted in Fan Art, Special Features, Voltron, Voltron: Legendary Defender

The Shake Ups – Legendary Defenders: Voltron-Inspired Album Releasing June 1

Posted on May 31, 2018 by Greg Tyler

The Shake Ups, a band that specializes in pop culture-themed “power pop” music, is releasing a Voltron-inspired album on June 1, 2018. Entitled The Shake Ups – Legendary Defenders, the album features 15 tracks that cover Voltron Legendary Defender and Voltron: Defender of the Universe. The tracks cover a variety of topics in Voltron lore, from Shiro, Haggar, and even the Space Mice from Voltron Legendary Defender to the Voltron Vehicle Team from Voltron: Defender of the Universe.

In a Let’s Voltron: The Official Voltron Podcast episode scheduled to be released on June 1, Marc Morrell and I spoke with band members Patrick O’Connor and Savannah O’Connor about the upcoming album. The Shake Ups were kind enough to allow Marc and I an early listen to the album, and… well… it’s a lot of fun! There’s something to like in each of the tracks. My personal favorites are “Space Mice”, “Quiznak!”, and “Team Punk.”

If you like Voltron and music, you’ll like Voltron music — and you’ll like this album, so check it out!

Posted in Fan Art, Let's Voltron Podcast, Lion Force Voltron, News, Special Features, Vehicle Team Voltron, Voltron, Voltron: Defender of the Universe, Voltron: Legendary Defender

Playmates Toys – No Pidge, Allura, Hunk Action Figures

Posted on May 1, 2018 by Greg Tyler

It has been reported on social media that Playmates Toys has decided not to produce Voltron Legendary Defender action figures of Pidge, Princess Allura, and Hunk. Although Playmates Toys released twelve action figures in its basic assortment, only three were of characters from the show — Shiro, Keith, and Lance. The other basic figures consisted of the five (non-transforming/combining) Lions, three Voltrons, and Robeast Myzax.

At various toy fairs, Playmates had teased figures of Pidge, Allura, and Hunk, as well as King Zarkon and Robeast Drazil. Zarkon and Drazil were not shown at the most recent toy fair, February’s New York Toy Fair 2018, which suggests that by that point, Playmates had already decided not to proceed with making those two figures. Other no-shows at NYTF 2018 that had appeared at previous toy fairs were a super-sized, non-transforming/combining Red Lion, which would have been bundled with an exclusive variant of the Keith figure, and a super-sized, non-transforming/combining Blue Lion, which would have been bundled with an exclusive variant of Lance.

This Voltron collector is saddened that only half the Paladins of Voltron are represented as action figures.

The link below is to the toy review video of Shiro, Keith, Lance, and Cannon Fire Voltron basic action figures, which I made for the Let’s Voltron YouTube channel.

Posted in News, Toys, Voltron, Voltron: Legendary Defender

Castle Ships in Voltron Lore

Posted on May 1, 2018 by Greg Tyler

In the first-season Voltron Legendary Defender episode “Taking Flight,” the Castle of Lions tears itself from the surface of the planet Arus, and assumes what became its ongoing new form: a spacecraft. Its crew informally called it the “Castle-ship.”

Voltron Legendary Defender wasn’t the Voltron-related program with a Castle-turned-spaceship.

In Beast King Golion, one of the anime programs that were adapted into Voltron: Defender of the Universe, the Golion Team calls Castle Gradam its home. In the 50th episode, “The Great Storming of Galra,” Raible reveals that the Castle can convert to a spaceship. The Golion Team uses the ship as part of a final assault on the planet Galra.

The Castle’s transformation initiates when Raible inserts a special key into the Castle’s main console.

The Castle does not launch from Altea until Golion‘s 52nd and final episode, “Burn Galra Castle.”

Because Golion‘s 52 episodes were adapted into episodes of Voltron: Defender of the Universe, Castle Gradam and its ship mode appear in Voltron, although in the latter program the Castle is called the Castle of Lions. In Voltron, the Castle’s ship mode is revealed in “Zarkon Becomes a Robeast,” which was adapted from Golion‘s “The Great Storming of Galra.”

The Castle of Lions’ ship mode makes a notable reappearance in “Fleet of Doom,” the two-part final story that was animated entirely new for Voltron. In that story, the Castle of Lions transports the Lions to the Galaxy Alliance’s Power Base, to rendezvous with the Voltron Vehicle Team and remove the Drule/Doom forces that threatened the base.

Although Voltron: The Third Dimension featured a Castle of Lions, no ship mode is seen or referenced in the program’s 26 episodes. Perhaps a ship mode would have been revealed had more episodes been produced.

In the 26th and final episode of Voltron Force, the spirit of King Alfor activates the Castle of Lions’ transformation to its spaceship mode. The Castle’s ship mode is a surprise even to Princess Allura. The Castle helps Voltron win a decisive victory over Maahox.

Castles-turned-spacecraft are seemingly as much a part of Voltron lore as the Defenders of the Universe themselves.

Posted in Beast King Golion, Lion Force Voltron, Special Features, TV, Voltron, Voltron Force, Voltron: Defender of the Universe, Voltron: Legendary Defender, Voltron: The Third Dimension

Somewhere in Time: Lion Forge Comics, VR Chronicles, and Voltron Legendary Defender

Posted on February 28, 2018 by Greg Tyler

Updated October 25, 2018, to include information from Volume 3 of the comics.

Because Voltron Legendary Defender is serialized, it’s interesting to try to figure out when different works of tie-in fiction take place. As of this writing, there have been three works of tie-in fiction that aren’t short story adaptations of episodes of the show:

  1. Voltron Legendary Defender Volume 1 – A five-issue comic book mini-series by Lion Forge Comics, published between July and November 2016
  2. Voltron Legendary Defender Volume 2: Pilgrimage – A five-issue comic book mini-series by Lion Forge Comics, published between October and December 2017
  3. Voltron Legendary Defender Volume 3 – A five-issue comic book mini-series by Lion Forge Comics, published between July and November 2018
  4. DreamWorks Voltron VR Chronicles – A virtual reality experience by Digital Domain, released on September 26, 2017

Let’s look at each of these and try to figure out when its story takes place relative to episodes of the Voltron Legendary Defender TV series.


Voltron Legendary Defender Volume 1

Issue 1 establishes that Princess Allura is resting from her having saved the life of the Balmera. This places all of Volume 1 between the first-season episodes “Rebirth” and “Crystal Venom.”

Voltron Legendary Defender Volume 2: Pilgrimage

Issue 1 states that “the Paladins of Voltron have just learned of the existence of ‘The Blade of Marmora.'” The Paladins learn of the Blade of Marmora in the second-season episode “Shiro’s Escape,” so all of Volume 2 occurs between “Shiro’s Escape” and “Greening the Cube.”

Voltron Legendary Defender Volume 3

Each issue’s credits page states that “this series’ story takes place in the Voltron universe between seasons 4 & 5.”

DreamWorks Voltron VR Chronicles

This story focuses on Lance, who is still Paladin of Blue Lion. The Paladins form Voltron without effort, Lance is already familiar with Blue Lion’s Sonic Cannon, the teludav of the Castle of Lions is operational, and Shiro is still Paladin of Black Lion. This places the story sometime after “The Depths,” when Lance discovers the Sonic Cannon, and before “Blackout,” when Shiro vanishes. The story features Commander Morvok, who was first seen in “The Ark of Taujeer,” but there is no solid evidence to indicate whether “The Ark of Taujeer” takes place before or after DreamWorks Voltron VR Chronicles.

We know it can’t take place between…

  • “The Depths” and “Shiro’s Escape” – Because Shiro spends the entire time in recovery from the injuries that he suffered during “Across the Universe” (which occurred mostly in parallel with “The Depths”)
  • “Greening the Cube” and “Eye of the Storm” – Because “Eye of the Storm” picks up right after “Greening the Cube” ends
  • “Eye of the Storm” and “The Ark of Taujeer” – Because the teludav of the Castle of Lions doesn’t have enough teludav lenses to operate
  • “The Ark of Taujeer” and “Space Mall” – Because the teludav of the Castle of Lions still needs scaultrite lenses
  • “Space Mall” and “The Blade of Marmora” – Because at the end of “Space Mall,” the Castle sets course for the headquarters of The Blade of Marmora, and in “The Blade of Marmora,” the Castle arrives.
  • “The Blade of Marmora” and “The Belly of the Weblum” – Because at the end of “The Blade of Marmora,” Kolivan boards the Castle and says that the Blades and the Paladins must make immediate plans to stop Zarkon, and when “The Belly of the Weblum” starts, the plan has already been devised.
  • “The Belly of the Weblum” and “Escape from Beta Traz” – Because the episodes occur in parallel
  • “Escape from Beta Traz” and “Stayin’ Alive” – Because the episodes occur mostly in parallel, and the Paladins and the Castle of Lions, separated as of the end of “Escape from Beta Traz,” reunite during “Stayin’ Alive”
  • “Stayin’ Alive” and “Best Laid Plans” – Because “Stayin’ Alive” ends with the Castle and Paladins on Olkarion, and the Paladins discussing the upcoming execution of their battle plan against Zarkon, and “Best Laid Plans” begins on Olkarion with the Castle and Paladins still on Olkarion, preparing to execute their battle plan against Zarkon
  • “Best Laid Plans” and “Blackout” – Because “Blackout” begins immediately after “Best Laid Plans”

By process of elimination, DreamWorks Voltron VR Chronicles can take place only between “Shiro’s Escape” and “Greening the Cube.” This means that, chronologically, Morvok’s appearance in DreamWorks Voltron VR Chronicles predates his appearance in “The Ark of Taujeer.”

DreamWorks Voltron VR Chronicles and Voltron Legendary Defender Volume 2: Pilgrimage both take place during the gap between “Shiro’s Escape” and “Greening the Cube.” Since Voltron Legendary Defender Volume 2: Pilgrimage, Issue #1, states that “the Paladins of Voltron have just learned of the existence of ‘The Blade of Marmora,'” it’s reasonable to assume that Voltron Legendary Defender Volume 2: Pilgrimage takes place just after “Shiro’s Escape,” and before DreamWorks Voltron VR Chronicles.


With more tie-in fiction being published in the coming months, such as some Simon Spotlight short stories, it will be interesting to try to figure out when they take place. For now, we’re out of time.

Posted in Merchandise, Special Features, Voltron, Voltron: Legendary Defender

Lauren Montgomery’s Captain Olia Head Canon

Posted on February 4, 2018 by Greg Tyler

Captain Olia is one of the more intriguing guest characters in the fourth season of Voltron Legendary Defender. She appears in only three episodes, and speaks in only two, but her canine-like visual design and her distinctive, sweet-but-tough voice, provided by Jessica McKenna, make her easy to like and easy to remember.

Olia first appears in a brief cameo in the season-opening “Code of Honor,” as one of many rebel fighters on Olkarion.

She next appears in “Begin the Blitz,” commanding the rebel fleet that attacks the Zaiforge Cannon orbiting Teq. Her shipmates are Matt Holt and an unnamed, possibly cybernetic character. Olia’s struggle continues in the season-ending “A New Defender.”

On October 12, 2017, Voltron Legendary Defender co-executive producer Lauren Montgomery revealed on her Tumblr page that Olia is an homage to Hayao Miyazaki’s Sherlock Hound.

In an interview with Marc Morrell and myself for an upcoming episode of Let’s Voltron: The Official Voltron Podcast, to be released on February 7, Lauren mentioned that she had developed a “head canon” backstory for Olia, and that she’d tell the backstory if people were interested.

Afterward I reached out to Lauren and asked her if she would share Olia’s backstory with LionsAndPilotsAndBots.com — and she did! Keep in mind that this story is Lauren Montgomery’s “head canon” and is technically not part of the canon as defined in actual episodes of the program. (The italicized statements below are direct quotations from Lauren Montgomery, and the screen caps were made by yours truly.)

In one of the final episodes of last season, you can see in a shot of Olia piloting that she has some photos taped to the side of her console.

In those photos there is a picture of Olia and her eldest son. He looks to be about the human equivalent of 15.

There is a picture of Olia’s younger son on a playground. He looks to be about 10.

There is also another picture of 2 adults. On male, one female. The male is Olia’s brother, and the female is the sister of Olia’s late husband.

The pictures were all taken by her late husband which is why you don’t see him in any of the photos. But he looks a lot like his sister and his older son.

Olia and her husband were active in the rebellion from a young age. But Olia scaled back her involvement when they started a family, while her husband continued working full time with the rebels. Eventually Olia’s husband and brother were killed in an attack. They are just 2 of the many honored by the monument that Pidge visited in “Reunion.” As the rebellion continued to lose numbers, Olia asked her sister in law to care for her children while she stepped up and reclaimed her place as one of the rebellion’s top pilots. She tries to visit her children as often as she can between missions.

She’s had a tough life, but if she can help free the universe from Galra rule, then it all would have been for something.

Thanks to Lauren Montgomery for providing some insight into Olia that we might not have otherwise gained from the program itself!

Posted in Interviews, Special Features, TV, Voltron, Voltron: Legendary Defender

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