![]() ![]() ![]() 6 Franchises originating in board games, card games, table-top games, and role-playing games.5.2 Not including film and/or television works.5.1 Including film and/or television works. ![]() 5 Franchises originating in video games.4.2 Franchises originating in live-action films.4.1 Franchises originating in animated films.3.2 Franchises originating in live-action television series.3.1 Franchises originating in animated television series.3 Franchises originating in television series.2 Franchises originating in comics and printed cartoons.1 Franchises originating in literary works.List of multimedia feature length original blockbuster franchises: DC Comics ( Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman), Marvel Comics ( Spider-Man, Hulk and X-Men), Disney ( Mickey Mouse, Winnie the Pooh, The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, Pirates of the Caribbean, The Lion King, Frozen and Lilo & Stitch), Pixar ( Toy Story and Cars), Warner Bros., Turner Entertainment and Hanna-Barbera ( Looney Tunes, The Flintstones, Scooby-Doo and Tom and Jerry), Lucasfilm ( Star Wars and Indiana Jones), The Railway Series and Thomas & Friends, Nickelodeon ( SpongeBob SquarePants) and many others. Only works of fiction are only considered part of the series a book or a documentary film about the franchise is not itself an installment in the franchise. Note: In the following table, the initial media through which the franchise characters or settings became known is shown in boldface. A franchise may be included if it obtained multimedia franchise status prior to works within the collection entering the public domain. This list does not include public domain works from which adaptations have been made in multiple media, but which do not involve licensing or other means by which an author or owner controls the franchise. For example, a television series that spawned one film and one novelization would not qualify a television series that had a spin-off series, or was remade as a new series, and which spawned two films and one novelization does qualify. In order to qualify for this list, a franchise must have works in at least three forms of media, and must have two or more separate works in at least two of those forms of media (a television series or comic book series is considered a single work for purposes of this list multiple spin-off series or reboots of a previously ended series are considered multiple works). Multimedia franchises usually develop due to the popularization of an original creative work, and then its expansion to other media through licensing agreements, with respect to intellectual property in the franchise's characters and settings, although the trend later developed wherein franchises would be launched in multiple forms of media simultaneously. A multimedia franchise (or a transmedia franchise) is a media franchise for which installments exist in multiple forms of media, such as books, comics, films, television series, and video games. ![]()
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