Is Fate/Strange Fake Manga Canon To The Fate Series?

2025-09-07 18:20:12 1.1K

2 Answers

Rowan
Rowan
2025-09-08 00:27:30
Man, diving into the Fate series lore feels like unraveling an ancient tapestry sometimes! 'Fate/Strange Fake' is this wild spin-off that started as an April Fool's joke by Nasu but got so popular it evolved into a legit light novel and manga. While it's not part of the 'main' timelines like 'Stay Night' or 'Zero,' it's absolutely considered canon within the broader Nasuverse. The way it blends absurd humor with deep lore—like Richard the Lionheart summoning *Excalibur as a jet*—somehow feels both ridiculous and perfectly Fate-like. The mangaka, Morii Shizuki, nails the chaotic energy, and Nasu himself oversees it, so it's got that official stamp.

What's fascinating is how it plays with established rules. The Holy Grail War in 'Strange Fake' is a messed-up imitation, which lets the story go bananas with concepts like False Servants and rogue Masters. It's like the series took a vacation from its own seriousness without breaking continuity. Plus, characters like Enkidu and Alcides (a twisted Heracles) tie back to 'Fate/Stay Night' in clever ways. If you're into the franchise, this one's a must-read—just don't expect it to fit neatly into any single timeline.
Rhys
Rhys
2025-09-08 05:49:05
As a lore junkie, I treat 'Strange Fake' as a parallel-world story—canon-adjacent but not core. It's packed with nods to other works (Gilgamesh's backstory, Bazett's reappearance), and the manga expands on the novels with gorgeous art. The fact that Nasu greenlit it means it 'counts,' but it's more of a playground for experimental ideas than a pillar of the franchise. Still, that unpredictability is why I adore it.
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