Squad Leader
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Собственно вот нашел:
Anything in the films and from George Lucas (including unpublished internal notes that we might receive from him or from the film production department) is considered "G" canon. Next we have what we call continuity "C" canon which is pretty much everything else. There is secondary "S" continuity canon which we use for some older published materials and things that may or may not fit just right. But, if it is referenced in something else it becomes "C". Similarly, any "C" canon item that makes it into the films can become "G" canon. Lastly there is non-continuity "N" which we rarely use except in the case of a blatant contradiction or for things that have been cut.
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By everything else I mean EVERYthing else. Novels, comics, junior novels, videogames, trading card games, roleplaying games, toys, websites, television. As I've mentioned earlier, any contradictions that arise are dealt on a case-by-case.
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There are 4 levels: G-canon, C-canon, S-canon, and N-canon. G, C, and S together form an overall continuity that is considered by Lucasfilm to be the "true" Star Wars canon.
G-canon is absolute canon; the movies, the novelizations of the movies, the radio plays based on the movies, and the DK Star Wars books "Incredible Cross Sections", "Visual Dictionaries", and "Inside The Worlds Of" based on the movies. "G-canon" always overrides the lower levels when there is a contradiction.
C-canon is essentially everything in the current Expanded Universe. Games are a special case as generally only the stories would be "C-canon" while things like stats and gameplay are "N-canon". C-canon elements have been known to appear in the movies, thus making them G-canon. (This includes: the name "Coruscant", swoop bikes, Aayla Secura, YT-2400 freighters and Action VI Transports.)
S-canon is "secondary" canon; the story itself is considered non-continuity, but the non-contradicting elements are still a canon part of the Star Wars universe. This includes things like the popular online roleplaying game Star Wars Galaxies and certain elements of a few N-canon stories.
N-canon is "non-canon". What-if stories, game stats, and anything else directly contradicted by higher canon ends up here. "N-canon" is the only level that is not considered canon by Lucasfilm.
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G-canon, C-canon, S-canon, and N-canon.G, C, and S together form an overall continuity. Each ascending level overrides the lower ones. e.g. Boba Fett's back story was radically altered with the release of Attack of the Clones, forcing retconning of older source material to fall in line with the new G-canon back story.
G-canon is absolute canon; the movies and anything coming directly from George Lucas (including unpublished production notes from him or his production department that are never seen by the public). Elements coming directly from Lucas in the movie novelizations, reference books, and other sources are also G-canon, though anything created by the authors of those sources is C-canon (see below).
C-canon is pretty much everything in the Expanded Universe; Star Wars books, comics, games, cartoons, and more. Games are a special case as generally only the stories are C-canon while things like stats and gameplay may not be.
S-canon is "secondary" canon; the story itself is considered non-continuity, but the non-contradicting elements are still a canon part of the Star Wars universe. This includes things like the popular online roleplaying game Star Wars Galaxies and certain elements of a few N-canon stories.
N-canon is "non-canon". What-if stories (such as stories published under the Star Wars: Infinities label), some game stats, and anything else directly contradicted by higher canon ends up here. N-canon is the only level that is not considered canon by Lucasfilm
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