Cybersix Fandom Wiki
m (Changed "transgendered" to "transgender" because the original word is simply wrong and offensive.)
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These are the '''common misconceptions''' surrounding the ''Cybersix'' series. Like any other series, ''Cybersix'' is no exception, so here is a list of the most popular misconceptions, anyone is welcome to add to this list.
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This is the page documenting those pesky '''common misconceptions''' for the ''Cybersix'' series, both old and new alike. Noticed a widely believed yet incorrect statement? Write that down here!! So let's get to it!
   
''Common misconception: an erroneous belief that is held by many people.''
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''The definition for "common misconception" is: An erroneous belief that is held by many people.''
  +
  +
* ''See also: [[FAQ|Frequently Asked Questions]] and [[Questions and Answers]]''
   
 
== General ==
 
== General ==
   
=== Cybersix is gender-fluid/transgender ===
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=== Cybersix is transgender ===
  +
* ''See also: [[Trans vs not trans]]''
This is a common and favourite misconception that Cybersix is gender-fluid or transgender, that she identifies as a male, or shifts or simultaneously identifies as both a female and male. The animated series is ambiguous as to why Cybersix would cross-dress and leaves it open to interpretation, which is why the series was cancelled in Italy, and the voice-actress herself, Cathy Weseluck, believed it to be so as well. But despite this ambiguity, the comics are pretty straightforward and explains this; as a young child Cybersix was running away from Von Reichter when she came across the deceased body of a young boy named Adrian Seidelman, she adopts his identity in order to live a normal life in the city as well as to keep hidden away from Von Reichter. Many commentors have said that the animated series was very LGBT-friendly, however, another commentor has once suggested to keep away from the comic book series because it was very homophobic and is not as friendly as they thought it would be.
 
  +
Cybersix is not transgender (or gender-fluid or queer). She does not identify as male.
  +
  +
The reason people may believe this is because she cross-dresses as a man during the day and the animated series has kept the reasoning unexplained. This ambiguity opens it up to interpretation that she is transgender, it is what her voice actor believed and is what prevented the series from airing in Italy.
  +
  +
However, the source material clearly tells us that Cybersix identifies as a woman and is unhappy with her Adrian persona. The reason for this is that she is not Adrian, it is a name and identity she stole from a boy when she was a child so she could live in the city and keep in hiding. When she meets Adrian's grandfather, she feels an immense sense of guilt over it. She is even unsure if Adrian will ever return at the end of the series.
   
 
=== Cybersix is a robot/android/cyborg ===
 
=== Cybersix is a robot/android/cyborg ===
  +
Cybersix is a human being and is not a robot, android or cyborg.
Cybersix, and thus the Cyber Series, are described as being "genetically-engineered" super-soldiers, they have great strength and acrobatic abilities, because of this Cybersix believes she isn't human but is more machine than anything else. This has confused a great number of people even up to this day, but it is certain that Cybersix is a human and not a robot, android, or a cyborg (a combination of a human and machine). The Cyber Series were created from the egg of a female human acrobat with the DNA of Von Reichter so as to birth and raise a whole generation of soldiers with natural superb agilities, perhaps the largest and only biological difference between the Cybers and humans is that the Cybers (like all of Von Reichter's creations) were created with a dependence to Sustenance/Substance, a mysterious life-sustaining green liquid.
 
  +
 
Cybersix, and thus the Cyber Series, are described as being "genetically-engineered" super-soldiers, they have great strength and acrobatic abilities, because of this Cybersix believes she isn't human but is more machine than anything else. This has confused a great number of people even up to this day, but it is certain that Cybersix is a human and not a robot, android, or a cyborg (a combination of a human and machine). The Cyber Series were created from the egg of a female human acrobat with the DNA of von Reichter so as to birth and raise a whole generation of soldiers with natural superb agilities. Perhaps the largest and only biological difference between the Cybers and humans is that the Cybers (like all of von Reichter's creations) were created with a dependence to Sustenance/Substance, a mysterious life-sustaining green liquid.
  +
Von Reichter, a geneticist, also has a foil in the villain Werner Schneider, who creates robots such as Tristan 0.
  +
  +
=== Data-7 is a black panther jaguar ===
  +
Data-7 is a black panther, specifically, a leopard. Not a jaguar. According to the official websites, Data-7 is a leopard.
  +
  +
Black panthers are big cats with melanism that causes their skins or coats to be black (the opposite of albinism that causes a white skin or coat), it is not its own species. Assumptions may have been made as its never explicitly stated in the series, it is only mentioned on the official websites, which may have taken from the animated series' production Bible. <ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20081121151804/http://www.telecom-anime.com/cybersix/japanese/tips/tipsdata7.html Official Telecom website</ref>
   
 
== Animated series ==
 
== Animated series ==
   
 
=== The series is hand-drawn ===
 
=== The series is hand-drawn ===
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The animated series is computer animated, not hand-drawn.
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Many fans still believe the animated series was animated using the tedious-yet-reputable method of hand-drawing it, since the series looks gorgeous even by today's standard, however the series was animated using the computer animated method. This is a great example of using this method right, it does not look like the notorious flash animation that we know of today. Using a computer to animate the series meant the animators had greater flexibility and freedom, they were able to re-use animated sequences and change the backgrounds, to changing colours of a given scene afterwards (this could be seen on the TMS comparison video)<ref>https://youtu.be/dpVrmmuJsKo TMS comparison video</ref>.
 
Many fans still believe the animated series was animated using the tedious-yet-reputable method of hand-drawing it, since the series looks gorgeous even by today's standard, however the series was animated using the computer animated method. This is a great example of using this method right, it does not look like the notorious flash animation that we know of today. Using a computer to animate the series meant the animators had greater flexibility and freedom, they were able to re-use animated sequences and change the backgrounds, to changing colours of a given scene afterwards (this could be seen on the TMS comparison video)<ref>https://youtu.be/dpVrmmuJsKo TMS comparison video</ref>.
   
 
=== Each episode had cost 1 million dollars ===
 
=== Each episode had cost 1 million dollars ===
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The episodes from the animated series did not cost 1 million dollars.
  +
 
It is still sometimes believed that the animated series was so expensive to produce that each episode had cost 1 million CAD to make, the source of this misconception may be even older than Fundock's website on which he repeats this statement<ref>http://frundock.sixie.net/ Frundock FAQ</ref>. However, the earliest source confirms that this simply isn't true, each episode had cost 360,000 USD to create, making the entire series cost 5 million USD<ref>http://playbackonline.ca/1998/06/15/21922-19980615/ Playback online website</ref>.
 
It is still sometimes believed that the animated series was so expensive to produce that each episode had cost 1 million CAD to make, the source of this misconception may be even older than Fundock's website on which he repeats this statement<ref>http://frundock.sixie.net/ Frundock FAQ</ref>. However, the earliest source confirms that this simply isn't true, each episode had cost 360,000 USD to create, making the entire series cost 5 million USD<ref>http://playbackonline.ca/1998/06/15/21922-19980615/ Playback online website</ref>.
   
 
=== There was never a home release before Discotek (2014) ===
 
=== There was never a home release before Discotek (2014) ===
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''Cybersix'' had several official home releases, starting as VHS tapes in both Canada and France.
Before Discotek/Eastern Star licenced ''Cybersix'' to DVD and released it in 2014, many people believed the only way to watch the series was through online sources. Of course there were people who knew of the French DVDs, but little knew of the various VHS tapes releases, and probably even thought these were illegal or unofficial bootlegs, but the official Telecom website indicates they were aware of these home releases in France and Canada<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20110928132850/http://www.telecom-anime.com/cybersix/english/faq/faq.html Telecom FAQ</ref>. Even after Discotek's release, we'll sometimes still see the odd "first ever home release of Cybersix".
 
  +
 
Before Discotek/Eastern Star licenced ''Cybersix'' to DVD and released it in 2014, many people believed the only way to watch the series was through online sources. Of course there were people who knew of the French DVDs, but little knew of the various VHS tapes releases, and probably even then believed these to be illegal/unofficial/bootlegs, but the official Telecom website indicates they were aware of these home releases in France and Canada<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20110928132850/http://www.telecom-anime.com/cybersix/english/faq/faq.html Telecom FAQ</ref>. Even after Discotek's release, we'll sometimes still see the odd "first ever home release of Cybersix".
   
 
=== Fox Kids edit ===
 
=== Fox Kids edit ===
There is extensive coverage of the Cybersix Fox Kids edit<ref>http://www.animationartist.com/ubb/Forum5/HTML/000069.html Animation Artist forum</ref><ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20040923090201/http://www.tvtome.com:80/tvtome/servlet/ShowMainServlet/showid-5645/</ref>, however we're at their mercy as there's no other way to tell for sure of what the edit consisted of. One (or a few) erroneous statements lead us to believe the opening theme song, Deep in My Heart, was cut down from 61 seconds down to 15 or 10 seconds, had sped up warped vocals, and consisted of a single verse. But since finding the opening theme song on the RetroJunk website, we see this is all not so<ref>http://www.retrojunk.com/content/child/intro/page/4232/cybersix#/content/child/intro/1218/show RetroJunk</ref>. Perhaps a faulty memory since the episodes only aired once (mostly), or a lapse in judgment after seeing a butchered form of the much anticipated Cybersix series finally aired in the US caused this.
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There were quite a few misconceptions of the Fox Kids edit of Cybersix, and had the edit not resurface online, we would have been at their mercy as to what was actually altered. According to a few websites<ref>http://www.animationartist.com/ubb/Forum5/HTML/000069.html Animation Artist forum</ref><ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20040923090201/http://www.tvtome.com:80/tvtome/servlet/ShowMainServlet/showid-5645/ TV Tome</ref>, the Fox Kids edit was cut down to 10-15 seconds, had sped up warped vocals, and the song had consisted of a single verse.
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But thankfully, we are now able to see for ourselves, and though not as dramatic as first recorded, it is still a butchered form of the show<ref>http://www.retrojunk.com/content/child/intro/page/4232/cybersix#/content/child/intro/1218/show RetroJunk</ref><ref>https://mega.nz/folder/pxgiGSLa#BQojYV3dmGvhU5rGEIbQuA My Mega folder, Cybersix Animated Series>English dub>Fox Kids version.</ref>
   
 
== Live-action series ==
 
== Live-action series ==
   
=== There were 5 or 11 episodes ===
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=== There were 5/11 episodes ===
Some online sources will say there were 5 or 11 episode of the live-action series, the numbers sometimes vary. Since we have no way of actually seeing the series for ourselves sometimes these misconceptions persist, but reliable sources have consistently stated there are 8 episodes<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/19980626060728/http://www.telefeinternational.com/english/programas/series/cybersix/index.html Telefeinternational website</ref>
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Some online sources will say there were around 5 to 11 episodes of the live-action series, the numbers sometimes vary. Since we have no way of actually seeing the series for ourselves sometimes these misconceptions persist, but reliable sources have consistently stated there are 8 episodes<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/19980626060728/http://www.telefeinternational.com/english/programas/series/cybersix/index.html Telefeinternational website</ref>
   
 
== Comic series ==
 
== Comic series ==
   
=== The series ends without a conclusion or is open-ended ===
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=== The series ends without a conclusion/open-ended/on a cliff-hanger ===
  +
''Cybersix'' conclusively ends on the 45th monthly issue by her original and longest-running publishers, Eura Editoriale from Italy in 1999. The series does end inconclusively in French and Spanish, however.
The ending most people are familiar with is where Cybersix cries in the rain and later sits sadly on a rooftop overlooking the city after her newly born son had been kidnapped, while Lucas is still lost in the jungle, their fates forever left unknown. However, this is the ending for the French volumes, which ended in 1998. The series continued to be published after this in Italy until 1999, ending on the 45th issue "The Final Challenge" where Cybersix is eventually reunited with her son and Lucas, and also obtains the recipe for sustenance while Von Reichter and José finally decide to give up on Meridiana and of their hunt for Cybersix, leaving the city once and for all. Due to the availability of the 12 French volumes as opposed to the 45 Italian monthly issues, this may have been the reason many thought the series ended inconclusively.
 
  +
  +
The ending most people are familiar with is where Cybersix cries in the rain and later sits sadly on a rooftop overlooking the city after her newly born son had been kidnapped, while Lucas is still lost in the jungle, their fates forever left unknown. This is, however, not the actual ending for ''Cybersix''. After the Argentine creators, Carlos Trillos and Carlos Meglia, had disagreements with the French publishing house, the French publishers canceled the series in France and leaving 12 volumes, the 12th volume containing the aforementioned ending.
  +
  +
''Cybersix'' also ended prematurely due to lack of success in Argentina, the creator's home country, and in Spain. Argentina would only release about 7 volumes until 1995, volumes which did not follow a chronological story and had seemingly taken random issues from Italian. Spain had ended with the introduction of José in 1998, an introduction that had already happened in Italy in 1992, a whole 6 years prior.
  +
  +
''Cybersix'' would continue her story with the ongoing publication in Italy until there too, disagreements would cancel the series, leading to a rushed but conclusive 45th issue in 1999. In ''Final Challenge'', Cybersix is eventually reunited with her son, Gengis, and Lucas. She also obtains the recipe for sustenance while von Reichter and José finally decide to give up on Meridiana and of their hunt for Cybersix, leaving the city once and for all. Cybersix is shown to be unsure of her place in Meridiana, but surrounded by her friends, they reassure her that this is her home.
  +
  +
Due to the availability of the 12 French volumes as opposed to the 45 Italian monthly issues, this may have been the reason many thought the series ended inconclusively.
  +
  +
=== Lori is a teenager and attends a high school ===
  +
Although this is true of the animated series where Lori attends Meridiana High School, this is not the case for the comic series.
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  +
We learn in the sixth French volume, by an investigator sent by Abraham Seidelman, that Adrian works as a professor at a college. The students should be around late teens to early twenties. The age difference between Lori and Adrian isnt as drastic here as the animated series, with Adrian being 24 years old at the start of the series.
   
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}
  +
[[Category:Information]]

Latest revision as of 11:56, 15 April 2024

This is the page documenting those pesky common misconceptions for the Cybersix series, both old and new alike. Noticed a widely believed yet incorrect statement? Write that down here!! So let's get to it!

The definition for "common misconception" is: An erroneous belief that is held by many people.

General

Cybersix is transgender

Cybersix is not transgender (or gender-fluid or queer). She does not identify as male.

The reason people may believe this is because she cross-dresses as a man during the day and the animated series has kept the reasoning unexplained. This ambiguity opens it up to interpretation that she is transgender, it is what her voice actor believed and is what prevented the series from airing in Italy.

However, the source material clearly tells us that Cybersix identifies as a woman and is unhappy with her Adrian persona. The reason for this is that she is not Adrian, it is a name and identity she stole from a boy when she was a child so she could live in the city and keep in hiding. When she meets Adrian's grandfather, she feels an immense sense of guilt over it. She is even unsure if Adrian will ever return at the end of the series.

Cybersix is a robot/android/cyborg

Cybersix is a human being and is not a robot, android or cyborg.

Cybersix, and thus the Cyber Series, are described as being "genetically-engineered" super-soldiers, they have great strength and acrobatic abilities, because of this Cybersix believes she isn't human but is more machine than anything else. This has confused a great number of people even up to this day, but it is certain that Cybersix is a human and not a robot, android, or a cyborg (a combination of a human and machine). The Cyber Series were created from the egg of a female human acrobat with the DNA of von Reichter so as to birth and raise a whole generation of soldiers with natural superb agilities. Perhaps the largest and only biological difference between the Cybers and humans is that the Cybers (like all of von Reichter's creations) were created with a dependence to Sustenance/Substance, a mysterious life-sustaining green liquid. Von Reichter, a geneticist, also has a foil in the villain Werner Schneider, who creates robots such as Tristan 0.

Data-7 is a black panther jaguar

Data-7 is a black panther, specifically, a leopard. Not a jaguar. According to the official websites, Data-7 is a leopard.

Black panthers are big cats with melanism that causes their skins or coats to be black (the opposite of albinism that causes a white skin or coat), it is not its own species. Assumptions may have been made as its never explicitly stated in the series, it is only mentioned on the official websites, which may have taken from the animated series' production Bible. [1]

Animated series

The series is hand-drawn

The animated series is computer animated, not hand-drawn.

Many fans still believe the animated series was animated using the tedious-yet-reputable method of hand-drawing it, since the series looks gorgeous even by today's standard, however the series was animated using the computer animated method. This is a great example of using this method right, it does not look like the notorious flash animation that we know of today. Using a computer to animate the series meant the animators had greater flexibility and freedom, they were able to re-use animated sequences and change the backgrounds, to changing colours of a given scene afterwards (this could be seen on the TMS comparison video)[2].

Each episode had cost 1 million dollars

The episodes from the animated series did not cost 1 million dollars.

It is still sometimes believed that the animated series was so expensive to produce that each episode had cost 1 million CAD to make, the source of this misconception may be even older than Fundock's website on which he repeats this statement[3]. However, the earliest source confirms that this simply isn't true, each episode had cost 360,000 USD to create, making the entire series cost 5 million USD[4].

There was never a home release before Discotek (2014)

Cybersix had several official home releases, starting as VHS tapes in both Canada and France.

Before Discotek/Eastern Star licenced Cybersix to DVD and released it in 2014, many people believed the only way to watch the series was through online sources. Of course there were people who knew of the French DVDs, but little knew of the various VHS tapes releases, and probably even then believed these to be illegal/unofficial/bootlegs, but the official Telecom website indicates they were aware of these home releases in France and Canada[5]. Even after Discotek's release, we'll sometimes still see the odd "first ever home release of Cybersix".

Fox Kids edit

There were quite a few misconceptions of the Fox Kids edit of Cybersix, and had the edit not resurface online, we would have been at their mercy as to what was actually altered. According to a few websites[6][7], the Fox Kids edit was cut down to 10-15 seconds, had sped up warped vocals, and the song had consisted of a single verse.

But thankfully, we are now able to see for ourselves, and though not as dramatic as first recorded, it is still a butchered form of the show[8][9]

Live-action series

There were 5/11 episodes

Some online sources will say there were around 5 to 11 episodes of the live-action series, the numbers sometimes vary. Since we have no way of actually seeing the series for ourselves sometimes these misconceptions persist, but reliable sources have consistently stated there are 8 episodes[10]

Comic series

The series ends without a conclusion/open-ended/on a cliff-hanger

Cybersix conclusively ends on the 45th monthly issue by her original and longest-running publishers, Eura Editoriale from Italy in 1999. The series does end inconclusively in French and Spanish, however.

The ending most people are familiar with is where Cybersix cries in the rain and later sits sadly on a rooftop overlooking the city after her newly born son had been kidnapped, while Lucas is still lost in the jungle, their fates forever left unknown. This is, however, not the actual ending for Cybersix. After the Argentine creators, Carlos Trillos and Carlos Meglia, had disagreements with the French publishing house, the French publishers canceled the series in France and leaving 12 volumes, the 12th volume containing the aforementioned ending.

Cybersix also ended prematurely due to lack of success in Argentina, the creator's home country, and in Spain. Argentina would only release about 7 volumes until 1995, volumes which did not follow a chronological story and had seemingly taken random issues from Italian. Spain had ended with the introduction of José in 1998, an introduction that had already happened in Italy in 1992, a whole 6 years prior.

Cybersix would continue her story with the ongoing publication in Italy until there too, disagreements would cancel the series, leading to a rushed but conclusive 45th issue in 1999. In Final Challenge, Cybersix is eventually reunited with her son, Gengis, and Lucas. She also obtains the recipe for sustenance while von Reichter and José finally decide to give up on Meridiana and of their hunt for Cybersix, leaving the city once and for all. Cybersix is shown to be unsure of her place in Meridiana, but surrounded by her friends, they reassure her that this is her home.

Due to the availability of the 12 French volumes as opposed to the 45 Italian monthly issues, this may have been the reason many thought the series ended inconclusively.

Lori is a teenager and attends a high school

Although this is true of the animated series where Lori attends Meridiana High School, this is not the case for the comic series.

We learn in the sixth French volume, by an investigator sent by Abraham Seidelman, that Adrian works as a professor at a college. The students should be around late teens to early twenties. The age difference between Lori and Adrian isnt as drastic here as the animated series, with Adrian being 24 years old at the start of the series.

References