Kingdom Hearts - Wikipedia

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  • 中文 Edit linksMain article: List of Kingdom Hearts media

Games

2002 Kingdom Hearts
2003
2004 Chain of Memories
2005 Kingdom Hearts II
2006
2007 Re:Chain of Memories
2008 Coded
2009 358/2 Days
2010 Birth by Sleep
Re:coded
2011
2012 Dream Drop Distance
2013 1.5 Remix
χ
2014 2.5 Remix
2015 (Unchained / Union) χ
2016
2017 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue
2018
2019 Kingdom Hearts III
2020 Dark Road
Melody of Memory
2021
2022
2023
2024 Missing-Link
TBA Kingdom Hearts IV
  • Kingdom Hearts is the first game in the series, released in Japan on March 28, 2002, for PlayStation 2.12 Tetsuya Nomura served as game director, his first time in this position. Kingdom Hearts introduced the main characters (Sora, Kairi, and Riku) of the series, and established the plot’s framework involving hearts and dark beings known as the Heartless. It also established the role of Disney characters in the series, with character cameos from the Final Fantasy series. Kingdom Hearts was released in North America on September 17, 2002,12 and featured additional content that was not in the original Japanese version. The game was later re-released in Japan as Kingdom Hearts Final Mix on December 26, 2002.12Final Mix includes the content from the North American release and additional enemies, cutscenes, and weapons.3
  • Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories is a direct sequel to the first game. It was released on the Game Boy Advance in Japan on November 11, 2004.45Chain of Memories was touted as a bridge between the two PlayStation 2 games, introducing and previewing plot elements that would be explored in the next game.6 The gameplay system is a departure from the original and employs card game mechanics in real time. Players construct decks out of cards that correspond to different actions in battle, such as attacking or using magic. It was remade into a PlayStation 2 game titled Kingdom Hearts Re:Chain of Memories, which contains polygonal graphics instead of the sprites used in the original game. The remake was released in Japan as a second disc packaged with Kingdom Hearts II Final Mix on March 29, 2007, and in North America as a standalone game on December 2, 2008.78
  • Kingdom Hearts II takes place one year after the events of Chain of Memories. It was released for the PlayStation 2 in Japan on December 22, 2005.910 The game further explores the “heart” concept by involving a new group of enemies, the Nobodies, which are the cast-off shells of those who have become Heartless. The gameplay is similar to that of the first Kingdom Hearts game, with the addition of the Reaction Command, which performs reflex-sensitive actions in battle. Kingdom Hearts II was revised into Kingdom Hearts II Final Mix, which contains more material than the original release, such as additional cutscenes and bosses. Kingdom Hearts II Final Mix was released with Kingdom Hearts Re:Chain of Memories in a collection titled Kingdom Hearts II Final Mix+, which was released in Japan on March 29, 2007.11
  • Kingdom Hearts Coded is an episodic mobile phone game that picks up directly after Kingdom Hearts II. The “preinstall” episode was released in Japan on November 18, 2008, and eight episodes were released between June 3, 2009, and January 28, 2010.12 The game was remade for the Nintendo DS as Kingdom Hearts Re:coded, and features updated gameplay combining that of two later entries in the series, 358/2 Days and Birth by Sleep. Unlike the original version, Re:coded was released internationally: October 7, 2010, in Japan;13 January 11, 2011, in North America;14 and January 14, 2011, in Europe.15
  • Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days was released for the Nintendo DS in Japan on May 30, 2009. It is primarily set between Kingdom Hearts and Kingdom Hearts II, focusing on Roxas’ time in Organization XIII and his motives for leaving. It is the first game in the series to feature cooperative multiplayer in addition to the traditional use of AI-controlled partners.1617 Gameplay is mission-based with optional objectives that yield additional rewards. The game also has a unique panel system which governs character improvement, special abilities, and equipped weapons.
  • Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep is a prequel to the series, released for the PlayStation Portable in Japan on January 9, 2010, and in North America on September 7, 2010, with additional content.18 The game is set ten years before the events of the first Kingdom Hearts game, revealing the origins of the villain, Xehanort.19 It consists of four scenarios, three of which focus on one of the game’s three protagonists, Terra, Ventus, and Aqua. The game was re-released in Japan under the title Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep Final Mix on January 20, 2011, with the content from the English versions as well as new features, such as an additional fifth scenario.
  • Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance was released on March 29, 2012, in Japan for the Nintendo 3DS. The game focuses on Sora and Riku’s Mark of Mastery exam under Yen Sid in anticipation of Xehanort’s return and their subsequent conflicts with enemies from their past.20 In addition to similar systems inherited from Birth by Sleep, this game features “Dream Eaters” which serve as both enemies and allies. Players may collect and breed friendly Dream Eaters and train them to become more powerful. The English edition came out on July 20, 2012, in Europe while it came out on July 31, 2012, for North America.
  • Kingdom Hearts χ: At Tokyo Game Show 2012, Square Enix announced Kingdom Hearts χ, previously known as Kingdom Hearts for PC Browsers.21 It is a browser game for PCs, and is only playable in Japan since July 18, 2013. It features cartoon-like 2D models and is a prequel to the series, detailing the events leading up to the Keyblade War.
  • Kingdom Hearts: Unchained χ: An international port of Kingdom Hearts χ that was released for Android and iOS devices.22Unchained χ was released in Japan on September 3, 2015,23 in North America on April 7, 2016,24 and in Europe on June 16, 2016.25 Later in April 2017, it was rebranded as Kingdom Hearts: Union χ, featuring an all-new story that expanded and diverged from the original.26 In January 2019, the game was available on the Amazon Appstore for Amazon devices.27 The app was rebranded once again to Kingdom Hearts: Union χ Dark Road with the release of Kingdom Hearts Dark Road.28 The game was shut down and converted into a cutscene viewer in May 2021.29
  • Kingdom Hearts Dark Road is a mobile game accessed within Kingdom Hearts Union χCross,28 which released worldwide on June 22, 2020.30 The game is set 70 years before Birth by Sleep and explores the origins of Xehanort and his eventual turn to darkness,31 and was developed by the same team working on Union χ.32 Following the shutdown of Union χ, Dark Road was converted into an offline game and received its final story update in August 2022.33
  • Kingdom Hearts III: In September 2010, Tetsuya Nomura stated that his team was too busy with other projects such as Final Fantasy XV (known as Final Fantasy Versus XIII at the time) to work on Kingdom Hearts III. He also stated that his team was researching how to create the high-definition graphics of the game, which depended on the technical restrictions of the next generation consoles.34 On June 10, 2013, at the E3 Sony press conference, after years of rumors and speculations, Nomura introduced a teaser for Kingdom Hearts III, which stated it was in development for the PlayStation 4. It was announced the next day to be in development for the Xbox One as well.35 In Kingdom Hearts III, the series protagonist Sora embarks on a journey to regain his lost “Power of Waking” while Sora’s friends, Riku and King Mickey, search for the Keyblade wielders Aqua, Terra, and Ventus in preparation for their final battle against Xehanort. The game concludes the “Dark Seeker Saga”.36 The game was released on January 25, 2019, in Japan and on January 29 worldwide.3738
  • Kingdom Hearts III + Re Mind: A port of Kingdom Hearts III with the Re Mind DLC included that was released for Windows and the Nintendo Switch. It was initially released on Windows exclusively via the Epic Games Store on March 30, 2021, followed by a Steam release three years later on June 13, 2024.3940 A cloud version for the Nintendo Switch was announced during Sora’s reveal as the final DLC fighter for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate on October 5th, 2021, and released as part of the series’ 20th anniversary celebration on February 10, 2022.41
  • Kingdom Hearts: Melody of Memory is a rhythm-based game for the Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One.4243 It released in Japan on November 11, 2020, and worldwide on November 13.44 Featuring 140 songs, it sees players travel to each stage in a Gummi ship, and features gameplay similar to Theatrhythm Final Fantasy.424345Melody of Memory continues Kairi’s story from the end of Kingdom Hearts III,45 with Nomura saying the Kingdom Hearts III Re Mind title screen laid “some of the groundwork for it”.32

Other

  • A Kingdom Hearts game was developed for V CAST, Verizon Wireless’s broadband service, and was released on February 1, 2005, in the United States.4647 It was one of the launch games for the V CAST services.48 The game, developed by Superscape and published by Disney Mobile with no involvement from Square Enix, features gameplay akin to the first Kingdom Hearts game, modified for the input method of mobile phones.49 The game’s storyline features Sora struggling to free himself from a nightmare induced by Maleficent’s magic.
  • Kingdom Hearts Mobile was a Kingdom Hearts-themed social game in which players could play mini-games together. Unlike Kingdom Hearts for the V CAST and Kingdom Hearts Coded, this game does not have a storyline and focuses more on socializing. The service operated in conjunction with Kingdom Hearts Coded, as new avatar costumes became available after the player completed an episode of Kingdom Hearts Coded. Kingdom Hearts-related media such as wallpapers, ringtones, graphics, and other items could be purchased and downloaded through the service for mobile phones.
  • Kingdom Hearts VR Experience: Announced in September 2018, Kingdom Hearts VR Experience is a free, 10-minute interactive video “featuring iconic moments and music from the Kingdom Hearts games” with the ability to unlock additional content by progressing through the experience.50 The first part was released in Japan on January 23, 2019, with the second part releasing in early 2019.5152 The first part had initially been scheduled to release on January 18, 2019,52 after initial release dates of December 25, 2018, for the first part, with the second part releasing on January 18, 2019.53

Collections

  • Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5 Remix was released for the PlayStation 3 in Japan on March 14, 2013.54 The collection includes remastered versions of Kingdom Hearts Final Mix and Re:Chain of Memories, which include gameplay enhancements and trophy support. In addition, a “Theater Mode” has been added, consisting of high definition cutscenes from Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days.55 The collection was released in North America on September 10, 201356 in Australia on September 12, 2013,57 and in Europe on September 13, 2013.58
  • Kingdom Hearts HD 2.5 Remix: After the announcement of HD 1.5 Remix, Nomura stated that it would be “pretty unnatural” if Kingdom Hearts II did not receive an HD update.59 In the credits of HD 1.5 Remix, clips of Kingdom Hearts II Final Mix, Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep Final Mix, and Kingdom Hearts Re:coded were shown, hinting at another collection.60 On October 14, 2013, the collection was announced for the PlayStation 3, and included the previously mentioned games, with Re:coded appearing as HD cinematics, similar to 358/2 Days in HD 1.5 Remix.60 The collection was released in Japan on October 2, 2014,61 North America on December 2, 2014, Australia on December 4, 2014, and Europe on December 5, 2014.62
  • Kingdom Hearts HD 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue: In the credits of HD 2.5 Remix, clips of Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance were shown as well as the inclusion of a secret ending related to the game, hinting at a possible additional collection.63 In September 2015, Square Enix announced Kingdom Hearts HD 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue. The collection features an HD remaster of Dream Drop Distance as well as Kingdom Hearts χ Back Cover, a cinematic telling of the backstory behind the events of Kingdom Hearts χ, and Kingdom Hearts 0.2: Birth by Sleep – A Fragmentary Passage, a new game taking place after the events of the original Birth by Sleep, told from the perspective of Aqua.64 It was released in Japan on January 12, 2017, and in North America and Europe on January 24, 2017,65 with a later release on February 18, 2020, for the Xbox One,66 and on March 30, 2021, and June 13, 2024, for Windows via Epic Games Store and Steam respectively.3940 A cloud version for the Nintendo Switch was released on February 10, 2022.41
  • The following are repackaged versions of the above collections:
  • Kingdom Hearts Starter Pack: HD 1.5 + 2.5 Remix: A collector’s pack released in Japan includes Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5 Remix and Kingdom Hearts HD 2.5 Remix.
  • Kingdom Hearts Collector’s Pack: HD 1.5 + 2.5 Remix: A collector’s pack released in Japan includes Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5 Remix and Kingdom Hearts HD 2.5 Remix, a code to get an Anniversary Set for Kingdom Hearts χ, music, and a booklet with art from the series.61
  • Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5 + 2.5 Remix: In October 2016, Square-Enix announced a single-disc compilation release of Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5 Remix and Kingdom Hearts HD 2.5 Remix for the PlayStation 4. The compilation was released on March 9, 2017, in Japan; March 28, 2017, in North America; and March 31, 2017, in Europe.67 It was later released on February 18, 2020, for the Xbox One,66 and on March 30, 2021, and June 13, 2024, for Windows via Epic Games Store and Steam respectively.3940 A cloud version for the Nintendo Switch was released on February 10, 2022.41
  • Kingdom Hearts: The Story So Far: Announced in early October 2018, this bundle collects the Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5 + 2.5 Remix PlayStation 4 collection and Kingdom Hearts HD 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue. It was released in North America on October 30, 2018, for the PlayStation 4.68
  • Kingdom Hearts: All-In-One-Package: This bundle contains everything in The Story So Far, along with Kingdom Hearts III. It was released digitally on the PlayStation 4 in North America on January 29, 2019.69 The bundle became available physically in North America on March 17, 2020.70
  • Kingdom Hearts Integrum Masterpiece for Cloud: This bundle contains cloud versions of everything in the All-In-One-Package, along with the Kingdom Hearts III Re Mind DLC. It was released on the Nintendo Switch on February 10, 2022.41 A non-cloud version, simply titled Kingdom Hearts Integrum Masterpiece, was later made available for Steam on June 13, 2024. 71

Future

  • Kingdom Hearts Missing-Link: In April 2022, Square Enix revealed Kingdom Hearts Missing-Link was in development for iOS and Android devices. It is set in Scala ad Caelum between the events of Union X and Dark Road. A closed beta was originally set for late 2022.7273 However, it was delayed to October 30, 2023 for its closed beta. The game is set for a 2024 launch on mobile devices.
  • Kingdom Hearts IV: Though Kingdom Hearts III was the end of the “Dark Seeker Saga” which revolved around Xehanort, it had been decided where certain characters end up in order to potentially continue their stories in future games.74 In January 2020, Nomura said there would need to be “more time” before the next main entry in the series,32 later noting in September that Yozora would “definitely… be involved” in the future of the series, in an unexpected and surprising way.75 In April 2022, Square Enix revealed Kingdom Hearts IV was in development, confirmed that Sora, Donald, and Goofy would return, and that the game would be set in Quadratum, a realistic world inspired by Tokyo. Kingdom Hearts IV will be the start of the “Lost Master arc”.72 In March 2023, during a Kingdom Hearts concert breath concert, Nomura vaguely announced something happened that determined the “direction of the series” going forward.76 Additional clarity and direction for the series was determined after the April 2022 Kingdom Hearts event.77

Common elements

Disney and Square Enix characters

Further information: Characters of Kingdom Hearts Kingdom Hearts features a mixture of familiar Disney and Square Enix characters, as well as several new characters designed and created by Nomura.78 In addition to original locations, the Kingdom Hearts series features many worlds from Disney films. Sora must visit these worlds and interact with various Disney characters to protect them from enemies. Often, his actions in these worlds closely follow the storylines of their respective Disney films. The main characters try not to interfere with the affairs of other worlds, as it could negatively affect the universe’s order.7980 Various Final Fantasy characters also make appearances within several worlds throughout the series. This includes Moogles, small creatures who are another common element in the games. They provide the player with a synthesis shop in order to create and purchase items used in the game. The main cast from The World Ends with You also makes an appearance in the series in Dream Drop Distance, and Kingdom Hearts III features characters from Pixar films such as the Toy Story series and Monsters, Inc., as well as Schwarzgeist, one of the bosses from Einhänder.818283 Nevertheless, the usage of Disney characters is not without restrictions. For example, Nomura had requested the use of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit in Kingdom Hearts III, but the response from Disney was that the character would be “too difficult” to use, with no further clarification or details from Disney.84

Story

This article’s plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise.(April 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Kingdom Heartschronology
- Kingdom Hearts χ - Birth by Sleep - A Fragmentary Passage - Kingdom Hearts - Chain of Memories - 358/2 Days - Kingdom Hearts II - Coded - Dream Drop Distance - Kingdom Hearts III - Melody of Memory - Kingdom Hearts IV
- v - t - e
The series starts with Kingdom Hearts, where a boy named Sora is separated from his friends Riku and Kairi when their home Destiny Islands is consumed in darkness. At that moment Sora obtained a weapon called the Keyblade that allows him to fight creatures called Heartless, before ending up in another world, Traverse Town, where he meets Donald Duck and Goofy, two emissaries from Disney Castle sent to find the Keyblade wielder under orders from their missing king.8586 As the three band together and travel to save various worlds from the Heartless while searching for their companions, they encounter a group of Disney villains whose ability to control the Heartless was given to them by Maleficent, who enlists Riku’s aid in seeking seven maidens called the Princesses of Heart whose power would open the way to Kingdom Hearts, the heart of all worlds.8788 Though eventually defeating Maleficent and reunited with Kairi after sacrificing himself to restore her heart to her body, Sora learns that Maleficent was manipulated by a sentient Heartless who possesses Riku and claims himself to be the Heartless researcher Ansem. Though Sora defeats Ansem, he is forced to trap Riku and Mickey in the Realm of Darkness after sealing the door and resolute to find them while Kairi remains at the Destiny Islands for their return.
In Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories, Sora’s search for Riku and Mickey leads his group to Castle Oblivion,89 a fortress controlled by a mysterious group of non-existent “Nobodies” called Organization XIII, the castle’s overseer Marluxia using the power of a girl named Naminé to alter the group’s memories for his agenda. After Marluxia’s defeat, the three are placed in a year-long sleep by Naminé to restore their original memories while losing their experience in Castle Oblivion.90 At the same time Sora ventured through Castle Oblivion, Riku ended up in the basement levels and ascends to the ground floor with Mickey’s aid while dealing with a Replica of himself that fought Sora. Finding the comatose Sora while joining forces with the mysterious DiZ, Riku helps Naminé keep his friend safe until he is awoken. In Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days, a snag in the plan over the year forces Riku to capture Roxas—Sora’s Nobody and Organization XIII member that came into being when Sora briefly became a Heartless in the first game-after he was forced to defeat and absorb Xion, a Replica of Sora in Kairi’s image.
In Kingdom Hearts II, after Roxas was integrated back into him, an awakened Sora and his friends resume their search for Riku and King Mickey, the latter’s mentor Yen Sid re-familiarizing the trio with the Nobodies and Organization XIII’s remaining members whom they deal alongside Maleficent and her right hand Pete. The three reunite with King Mickey and encounter Organization XIII’s leader Xemnas, him and the Heartless Ansem revealed to the splintered halves of the real Ansem’s apprentice Xehanort.9192 The Organization’s plan is also revealed: regaining their lost hearts by using Keyblade users to create an artificial Kingdom Hearts from slain Emblem Heartless. Axel, a rogue Organization member who is Roxas’ friend and first encountered Sora in Castle Oblivion, abducts Kairi in an attempt to see Roxas. Axel’s action only give Saix, his former friend and Xemnas’ enforcer, leverage to force Sora into finishing what Roxas and Xion began. Axel sacrifices himself to help Sora’s group reach The World That Never Was (Organization XIII’s headquarters) and, after defeating Xemnas’s right hand Xigbar, reunite with Riku and Kairi. DiZ, revealed to be the real Ansem, attempts dissipating some of the artificial Kingdom Hearts before being engulfed in an explosion when his extraction device self-destructs and is sent to the Realm of Darkness.93 Sora and his friends then battle Xemnas.94 After Sora and Riku defeat Xemnas, they get trapped in the Realm of Darkness, but a letter from Kairi summons a gateway for them, and the two are reunited with their friends at their home.95 Sometime after his first adventure in Disney Castle, Sora discovered a portal at Disney Castle, and ventured through it to find a mysterious armour referred to as ‘Lingering Will’. During their exchange, it mistook Sora for Xehanort, after which Sora fought the mysterious armour. Sora won the battle, and the Lingering Will merely knelt down after this, saying that he once felt the power Sora possessed.
Sometime later after the events of the game, Sora, Riku, and Kairi receive a letter from King Mickey. The letter, written by Mickey during the events of Kingdom Hearts Coded, describes the parts of their past that Naminé learned while restoring Sora’s memory.96 As they read the letter, they learn of Xehanort’s true identity as a Keyblade Master who sought the secrets of the Keyblade War which created their current reality and the fates that befall the apprentices of his friend Eraqus during the events of Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep: Terra having ended up possessed by Xehanort and made into the original being that Xehanort’s Heartless and Xemnas were split from; Ventus sacrificing his heart by fighting his dark counterpart Vanitas, while trying to prevent Xehanort from recreating the legendary χ-blade which allows the user to control Kingdom Hearts, and hiding within four-year-old Sora’s heart; and new Keyblade Master Aqua trapped within the Realm of Darkness while an amnesic Xehanort ended up Ansem’s apprentice alongside his accomplice Braig (Xigbar’s original self).97 King Mickey also discovers that the destruction of “Ansem” and Xemnas has led to Xehanort’s restoration.98 To combat the new threat Xehanort poses, Sora and Riku take an exam to attain the Mark of Mastery that will allow them to become Keyblade Masters themselves.99
During the test in Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance, Sora and Riku enter the Realm of Sleep where they encounter a young version of Xehanort who can travel through time.100 The two Keyblade wielders also learn how Xehanort has long manipulated events since Birth by Sleep with Organization XIII’s true purpose in providing thirteens vessels for him to inhabit and use against seven hearts of pure light in an ultimate battle to recreate the χ-blade.101102 But Sora’s interference forced Xehanort to retrieve his alternate selves, Marluxia, Larxene, Demyx, Luxord, Vanitas, and Xion from across time in Replica bodies to form his ideal Organization XIII with Xigbar, Saix, and Vexen.103 Sora is narrowly saved from being Xehanort’s final vessel with the aid of Lea (Axel’s original self) and Riku learns about data that Ansem the Wise had implanted within Sora during his year-long sleep, which may be used to save those connected to Sora.104 At the end of the exam, Riku is declared a Keyblade Master;105 in Kingdom Hearts HD 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue, Sora embarks on another journey to regain his “Power of Waking” while Riku helps Mickey find Aqua, Yen Sid training Kairi and Lea so they can help in the final battle against Xehanort and keep him from the Princesses of Heart.106
In Kingdom Hearts III, Sora regains his “Power of Waking” in his group’s travels while Riku and Mickey retrace Aqua’s steps to find her and Terra. Sora later discovers Eraqus’s Keyblade on the beach and uses it to open a door to the Realm of Darkness, finding Aqua who has been consumed by darkness after Ansem was abducted by Xehanort’s Heartless. Once Aqua is purified by Sora and Riku, she leads them to Castle Oblivion which she restores to its true form as the Land of Departure to revive Ventus despite Vanitas’ interference. The group are joined by Kairi and Lea as they face Xehanort and his followers, with a Riku Replica completing the group, at the Keyblade Graveyard. After initially losing the fight, Sora once again uses the “Power of Waking” to restore the guardians and call upon the “Lingering Will” armour, to assist in the fight. Afterwards it is revealed that Saix and Vexen sabotaged the Organization’s plan by restoring Roxas as Sora’s group manage to defeat all of Xehanort’s remaining selves while freeing Xion and Terra from his control. Xehanort kills Kairi to force Sora to manifest the χ-blade, revealing his true plan is to use the true Kingdom Hearts to wipe the slate on reality clean before finally being defeated. Xehanort departs with Eraqus’s spirit into the light as Sora closes Kingdom Hearts. Sora also sacrifices himself by using the “Power of Waking” once more to revive Kairi. Sometime later, all the guardians, including their close friends and allies, celebrate victory at Destiny Islands. Xigbar, revealed to be the current incarnation of the ancient Keyblade Master Luxu from the time of the Keyblade War, summons the Foretellers, his fellow Keyblade Masters, to the present for the next phase of his mission. A year later, all attempts to find a clue to Sora’s current whereabouts have proven to be futile until Riku and Kairi, with the help of the Fairy Godmother, find clues that lead them to believe that Sora has been transported outside of their reality. Riku embarks on a search for him after opening a portal to another reality in the Final World. Elsewhere, Sora meets Yozora, a supposedly fictional character from a video game. During their exchange Yozora claims that he is tasked to “save Sora” and the world is transported into Shibuya. Sora is challenged to a fight by Yozora, whom he defeats. Yozora fades away as Sora returns to The Final World. Both Sora and Yozora wonder if their meeting was real, with neither character making sense of it.
The Kingdom Hearts timeline

Gameplay

The Kingdom Hearts games contain elements of actionrole-playing video games with hack-and-slash elements. The games are driven by a linear progression from one story event to the next, usually shown in the form of a cutscene, though there are numerous side quests available that provide bonus benefits to the characters. In most games, the player primarily controls the principal protagonist of the series, Sora. Sora is usually accompanied by Donald Duck and Goofy, who are artificial intelligence-controllednon-playable characters that aid Sora in battle. In the first and third game, their behavior can be altered to suit different combat objectives. The games feature real-time combat that incorporates physical attacks, magic, and summonings, though each game handles battles differently. The game also allows for items to be used on the field of battle to heal oneself or one’s party members. Gummi Ships are another common element of the series, which serve as the main mode of transportation between worlds in the games. The gameplay for the Gummi Ship sections is more akin to a rail shooter. Because it received negative criticism in the first game, it was modified in the third game.107 Most games also feature a journal which is accessible from the main menu. This journal keeps track of information regarding the story, characters, enemies, and locations. In Kingdom Hearts, Chain of Memories, Kingdom Hearts II, and Kingdom Hearts III, the journal is kept by Jiminy Cricket, who was appointed by Queen Minnie as the royal chronicler.108 In 358/2 Days, Birth by Sleep, and Dream Drop Distance, the main characters write their own journal entries. A battle in the first Kingdom Hearts game The games are influenced by their parent franchise, Final Fantasy,109 and carry its gameplay elements over into their own action-based, hack-and-slash system. Like many traditional role-playing games, Kingdom Hearts features an experience point system which determines character development. As enemies are defeated, the player gains experience which culminates in a “level-up”, where the characters grow stronger and gain access to new abilities.110 The amount of experience is shared with all party members and each character grows stronger as experience is gained.111

Music

Further information: Music of Kingdom Hearts The music for the series has been primarily composed by Yoko Shimomura. Kaoru Wada works as the arranger for orchestral music, including orchestral renditions of the main vocal themes and the ending themes.112113 The orchestral music was performed by the New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra and the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra.112113 Soundtracks were released for the first and third installments following the release of their respective games. A compilation soundtrack was later released that included soundtracks for the entire series, including reworked tracks for the re-released Kingdom Hearts Re:Chain of Memories.114115 While the themes for some of the Disney-based worlds are taken directly from their Disney film counterparts,113 most of them are given entirely original musical scores. In addition to each world having unique background music, each is given its own battle theme rather than having a common theme to cover all fights. Several of the main characters have themes, and the final boss of each game has several themes played in the various phases of those fights. The fights with Sephiroth feature a modified version of Nobuo Uematsu’s “One-Winged Angel” from Final Fantasy VII.115 The main theme songs for the Kingdom Hearts games were written and performed by Japanese pop star, Hikaru Utada. The three main themes are “Hikari”, originally from Kingdom Hearts,116 “Passion”, from Kingdom Hearts II,117 and “Oath” from Kingdom Hearts III. Each song has an English counterpart, “Simple and Clean”, “Sanctuary”, and “Don’t Think Twice” respectively, for the North American and European releases. Utada was the only singer Tetsuya Nomura had in mind for the first Kingdom Hearts theme song.118 This marked the first time Utada had produced a song for a video game. Both of the first two theme songs reached notable popularity; on weekly Oricon charts, “Hikari” reached No. 1 in 2002 and “Passion” reached No. 4 in 2005.119120

Development and history

History

The initial idea for Kingdom Hearts began with a discussion between Shinji Hashimoto and Hironobu Sakaguchi about Super Mario 64.121 They were planning to make a game with freedom of movement in three dimensions like Super Mario 64 but lamented that only characters as popular as Disney’s could rival a Mario game. Tetsuya Nomura, overhearing their conversation, volunteered to lead the project and the two producers agreed to let him direct.121 A chance meeting between Hashimoto and a Disney executive in an elevator (Square and Disney previously shared the same building in Japan) allowed Hashimoto to pitch the idea directly to Disney.122123 Development began in February 2000 with Nomura as director and Hashimoto as producer.124 While Nomura had done previous work in the Final Fantasy series as monster designer and graphic director, he did not gain widespread recognition until he was the lead character designer for Final Fantasy VII. Kingdom Hearts marked his transition into a directorial position, though he also served as the game’s character designer. Scenarios were provided by Kazushige Nojima who was a scenario writer for Square from Final Fantasy VII until he left in 2003. Originally the development focused on the gameplay with a simple story to appeal to Disney’s target age range. After Kingdom Hearts executive producer Hironobu Sakaguchi told Nomura the game would be a failure if it did not aim for the same level as the Final Fantasy series, he began to develop the story further.125 In June 2013, Nomura stated the name of the game came from him thinking about Disney Theme Parks, especially Animal Kingdom. However, Nomura could not get the IP with just “Kingdom”, so the development team began to think about “heart” as a core part of the story, so they decided to combine the two to form “Kingdom Hearts”.126127 Nomura placed a secret trailer in Kingdom Hearts in hopes that fans would want a sequel. He was unsure if fans would want a sequel and felt that if they did not, then it would be best to leave certain events in the first game unexplained.128 After Kingdom Hearts Final Mix was completed, development for Kingdom Hearts II began.129 There were several obstacles to clear before development could begin on a sequel. One was the development team’s desire to showcase Mickey Mouse more;128 Mickey’s inclusion in the first game was restricted to a very small role.125 Nomura had planned for the sequel to take place a year after the first and originally intended for the events of that year to be left unexplained. To bridge the gap between the two games, Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories was developed.130 Nomura was hesitant about releasing a game on the Game Boy Advance because he felt the 3D graphics of the original game would not translate well into 2D. He changed his position after hearing that children wanted to play Kingdom Hearts on the handheld system.131

Creation and design

Though Disney gave Nomura freedom in the characters and worlds used for the games, he and his staff tried to stay within the established roles of characters and boundaries of the worlds.132 Nomura has stated that though many of the Disney characters are not normally dark and serious, there were not many challenges making them so for the story and despite this, their personalities shine because they maintain their own characteristics.133 He also felt managing and keeping multiple worlds was problematic.134 When deciding which worlds to include in the game, the development staff tried to take into account worlds with Disney characters that would be interesting and made an effort to minimize any overlap in the overall look and feel of each world.125135 The inclusion of specific Final Fantasy characters was based on the opinions of both fans and staff.136 Another criterion for inclusion was whether the staff felt the characters would fit into the storyline and in the Kingdom Hearts universe.137 Initially, Nomura was hesitant to use characters he did not design, because he was unfamiliar with the backstory of such characters.138 For Kingdom Hearts II, he changed his mind after receiving pressure from his staff.136 Throughout the development of the games, Nomura has often left certain events and connections between characters unexplained until the release of future games. Nomura does this because he feels that games should have room for fans to speculate and use their imagination. He has stated that with speculation, even though a game gets old, people can still be happy with it.128

Promotion

The first Kingdom Hearts was announced at E3 in May 2001.78 Initial details were that it would be a collaboration between Square and Disney Interactive, and would feature worlds developed by both companies and Disney characters. New characters were designed by Nomura and include Sora, Riku, Kairi, and the Heartless.78139 On May 14, 2002, a press release announced a list of the English voice actors. The list included Haley Joel Osment, David Gallagher, and Hayden Panettiere as the three new characters introduced into the game. It was also announced that many of the Disney characters would be voiced by the official voice actors from their respective Disney films.78140 A secret trailer in the first Kingdom Hearts and Kingdom Hearts Final Mix hinted at the possibility of a sequel. Rumors for a sequel on the PlayStation 2 were spurred in Japan when a Japanese video game site, Quiter, stated that “an internal (and anonymous) source at Square Japan” confirmed that development of Kingdom Hearts II had begun.141 It was not until Kingdom Hearts II was announced, along with Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories, at the Tokyo Game Show in September 2003 that rumors were confirmed.142 Initial details were that it would take place some time after Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories, which takes place directly after the first game. Other details included the return of Sora, Donald, and Goofy, as well as new costumes. At the 2004 Square Enix E3 press conference, the producer, Shinji Hashimoto, stated that many mysteries of the first game would be answered.143 To help market the games, websites were set up for each game and demos were on display at gaming events. Each game in the main series was also re-released in Japan with additional content and served as canonical updates to the series.144 The additional content foreshadowed later plot elements in the series. The rereleases of the main series games had the term “Final Mix” added after the title, while Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories and Kingdom Hearts Coded were re-released as Kingdom Hearts Re:Chain of Memories and Kingdom Hearts Re:coded and released on the PlayStation 2 and Nintendo DS, respectively, with 3D graphics, voice overs during some cutscenes, and new game content.145146

Reception

As of January 24, 2019.| Game | Famitsu | Metacritic | |—|—|—| | Kingdom Hearts | 36/40147 | 85148 | | Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories | 36/40149 | 76150 | | Kingdom Hearts II | 39/40151 | 87152 | | Kingdom Hearts Re:Chain of Memories | | 68153 | | Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days | 36/40154 | 75155 | | Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep | 37/40156 | 82157 | | Kingdom Hearts Re:coded | | 66158 | | Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance | 38/40159 | 75160 | | Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5 Remix | | 77161 | | Kingdom Hearts HD 2.5 Remix | | 81162 | | Kingdom Hearts Unchained χ | | 70163 | | Kingdom Hearts HD 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue | 34/40164 | 78165 | | Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5 + 2.5 Remix | | 84166 | | Kingdom Hearts III | 39/40168 | 83167 | | Kingdom Hearts: Melody of Memory | 34/40170 | 74169 | The Kingdom Hearts series has been critically and commercially successful. As of March 2014, the series has sold over 20 million copies worldwide.171 The three main games in the series all met with positive sales at the time of their releases. In the first two months since the North American release of Kingdom Hearts, it was one of the top three highest-selling video games.172Chain of Memories sold 104,000 units in 48 hours in Japan, a record for a Game Boy Advance game at the time.173 Its positive debut sales placed it in the top spot of sales charts in Japan.174 In the first month of its North American release, it was ranked 1st on GameSpot’s ChartSpot for portable systems and 6th for all consoles.175 Within three days of the Kingdom Hearts II release in Japan, it shipped 1 million copies, selling through within a month.176177 By the end of March 2006, the NPD Group reported that Kingdom Hearts II was the highest-selling console game in North America, with 614,000 copies.178 In the month after its release in North America, Kingdom Hearts II sold an estimated 1 million copies.179 As of February 2019, the Kingdom Hearts series has shipped more than 30 million copies worldwide.180 This number reached to over 35 million copies shipped by October 2021.181 On April 11, 2022, Kingdom Hearts III was revealed to reach a total of 6.7 million units as of September 2021 surpassing Kingdom Hearts 6 million units to become the current best selling title in the series.182 As of March 2022, the Kingdom Hearts series has shipped more than 36 million copies worldwide.183 The games have also received high ratings and positive comments from reviewers. All of the main games in the series have scored a 36 out of 40 or higher from the Japanese gaming magazine Famitsu, known for its harsh grading.149151184 All six games have been praised for their visuals. Game Informer considers the series the eleventh “must-play PlayStation 2” series.185 The individual games have also won several awards. GameSpot commented that the concept of mixing the serious elements of Final Fantasy with the lighter elements of Disney seemed impossible, but was pulled off quite well. Because of that they awarded Kingdom Hearts “Best Crossover Since Capcom vs. SNK” in their 2002 Best and Worst of the Year awards.186IGN named Kingdom Hearts “Best Art Style/Direction” in their 2003 list of “Best Looking Games on PS2”.187G4 awarded it “Best Story” at their 2003 G-Phoria awards show.188Electronic Gaming Monthly awarded Kingdom Hearts II “Best Sequel” of 2006.189 It tied with Resident Evil 4 as Famitsu’s Game of the Year 2005.190 The manga series has also been well received. Several of the manga volumes were listed on USA Today’s “Top 150 best sellers”.191192193 The highest ranked volume was Kingdom Hearts volume 4 at #73.192 Every volume listed stayed on the list for at least two weeks; Kingdom Hearts volume 4 stayed the longest at four weeks.

Other media

Both Square Enix and Disney have released a wide variety of Kingdom Hearts merchandise including toys, figurines, clothing, and jewelry.194195 Two of the games, Kingdom Hearts and Kingdom Hearts II, had a soundtrack released to coincide with the video games.196197 These were followed by a nine CD complete set which featured both soundtracks and unreleased tracks.114Kingdom Hearts has been adapted as a trading card game by the Tomy corporation of Japan.198 An English version of the game was released in November 2007 by Fantasy Flight Games.199 The video games have also been adapted into manga and novel series. Like the Final Fantasy games, a series of “Ultimania” books were released in Japan for many of the games. These books include game walkthroughs, interviews, and extra information from the developers. Kingdom Hearts -Another Report- was released along with Kingdom Hearts II Final Mix+ and features game information, visuals by Shiro Amano, and a director interview.200 In North America, Brady Games released strategy guides for each game. For Kingdom Hearts II, they released two versions, a standard version and a limited edition version. The limited edition was available in four different covers and included a copy of Jiminy’s Journal along with 400 stickers.201 Sora has made guest appearances in other video games, including World of Final Fantasy and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.202203

Printed adaptations

A manga based on the Kingdom Hearts storyline has been released in Japan and the United States. The story and art are done by Shiro Amano, who is also known for his manga adaptation of the Legend of Mana video game. The story follows the events that took place in the video games with differences to account for the loss of interactivity a video game provides. The manga was originally serialized in Japan by Square Enix’s Monthly Shōnen Gangan and eventually released in tankōbon format. The first tankōbon was released in Japan in October 2003.204 The manga was released in the US by Tokyopop two years later in October 2005.205 Yen Press now holds the rights to publish the books for the USA market. The first series, Kingdom Hearts, consists of four volumes, while the second series, Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories, has two volumes. The third series, Kingdom Hearts II, has ten volumes total, taking a hiatus to publish a fourth series based on Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days which has five volumes total, after which Kingdom Hearts II resumed. As of April 2019, a fifth series based on Kingdom Hearts III has been serialised monthly in Gangan Online with Amano returning to do story and artwork.206 Yen Press also licensed the series and published it online in English on apps such as Comixology and BookWalker alongside the Japanese release. This series will soon have two volumes published in tankōbon format.207208 The games have also been adapted as a light novel series, written by Tomoco Kanemaki and illustrated by Shiro Amano. Like the manga series, it is divided into separate series based on the games. Kingdom Hearts is divided into two volumes; “The First Door"209 and “Darkness Within”.210Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories is divided into two volumes. Kingdom Hearts II is divided into four volumes; “Roxas—Seven Days”,211 “The Destruction of Hollow Bastion”,212 “Tears of Nobody”,213 and “Anthem—Meet Again/Axel Last Stand”.214

Television series

A pilot for a television adaptation of the first Kingdom Hearts game was commissioned in 2003 for the Disney Channel, but did not go forward as a series. 215 In October 2022, the pilot’s director, Seth Kearsley, uploaded the pilot animatic to his personal YouTube channel and shared more details on the production. The cast of the games reprised their roles for the pilot with the exception of Haley Joel Osment, who was unavailable due to scheduling conflicts and was replaced with Bobby Edner.216 According to Kearsley, the pilot tested well with their test audiences, but the decision was made not to go further into production due to the franchise’s expansion and the difficulty of maintaining consistency with the ongoing game series.217 The animatic was later taken down by Kearsley at Disney’s request, though it was later reposted by minor channels.

Potential film adaptation

On May 27, 2020, it was reported that a TV series based on the franchise was in development for Disney+.218 On April 29, 2024, The DisInsider reported that a Kingdom Hearts film was in the works. While previously having been a show for Disney+, it was changed to a theatrical film. It was also noted that these are just rumors and nothing had officially been given the greenlight.219

Fandom

In October 2007, a fan-made web series of CG action films called Dead Fantasy was created by late web-based animator and writer, Monty Oum. Dead Fantasy featured Kingdom Hearts characters teaming up with Final Fantasy characters and competing against Dead or Alive and Ninja Gaiden characters in battle royale-style brawls.220221222

Further reading

  • Square Enix (2021) 2014. Kingdom Hearts Ultimania: The Story Before Kingdom Hearts III. Milwaukie: Dark Horse Comics. ISBN 978-15-0672-523-9.
  • Square Enix; Disney (2021) 2020. Kingdom Hearts Character Files. Milwaukie: Dark Horse Comics. ISBN 978-15-0672-578-9.

See also

  • List of Square Enix video game franchises
  • List of Japanese role-playing game franchises

Notes

  1. ^Japanese: キングダム ハーツ, Hepburn: Kingudamu Hātsu

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Kingdom Hearts topics
| - v - t - e Kingdom Hearts | | - Square Enix - The Walt Disney Company | | Media | \| Video games \| - Kingdom Hearts (2002) - Chain of Memories (2004) - II (2005) - Coded (2008) - 358/2 Days (2009) - Birth by Sleep (2010) - Dream Drop Distance (2012) - χ (2013) - III (2019) - Melody of Memory (2020) - IV (TBA) \| \| Other games \| - Mobile (2008) - HD 1.5 Remix (2013) - HD 2.5 Remix (2014) - HD 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue (2017) \| \| Music \| - “Hikari” - “Passion” - “Face My Fears” - “Chikai” \| | |—| | Characters | - Sora - Riku - Xehanort - Roxas - Aqua | | People | - Daisuke Watanabe - Jun Akiyama - Kazushige Nojima - Shinji Hashimoto - Tetsuya Nomura - Hikaru Utada - Yoko Shimomura - Yoshinori Kitase | | Related | - Universe of Kingdom Hearts - Final Fantasy - The World Ends with You - Einhänder - Super Smash Bros. Ultimate | | - Category | | - v - t - e Square Enix video game franchises | |—| | Square Enix | - Bravely - Chaos Rings - Chocobo - Code Age - Chrono - The Diofield Chronicle - Dragon Quest - Drakengard - Final Fantasy - Front Mission - Hanjuku Hero - Itadaki Street - Kingdom Hearts - Lord of Vermilion - Mana - Million Arthur - Octopath Traveler - Ogre - SaGa - Schoolgirl Strikers - Star Ocean - Valkyrie Profile - Voice of Cards - The World Ends with You | | Square Enix Europe | - Championship Manager - Gex - Just Cause - Life Is Strange | | Taito | - Arkanoid - Battle Gear - Bubble Bobble - Darius - Densha de Go! - Groove Coaster - Gunslinger Stratos - Lufia - Sonic Blast Man - Space Invaders | | - v - t - e Visual Works | |—| | Feature films | - Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children - Kingsglaive: Final Fantasy XV | | Video game franchises | - Deus Ex - Dragon Quest - Drakengard - Final Fantasy - Gunslinger Stratos - Hitman - Kingdom Hearts - Parasite Eve - Tomb Raider | | Standalone video games | - The Bouncer - Chrono Cross - Densha de Go! - Namu Amida Butsu! - Thief - Vagrant Story - Xenogears | | - v - t - e Disney franchises and series | |—| | Walt DisneyStudios | \| Walt DisneyAnimation Studios \| - 101 Dalmatians - Aladdin - Alice in Wonderland - Atlantis - Beauty and the Beast - Cinderella - Donald Duck - The Emperor’s New Groove - Fantasia - Frozen - Goofy - Hercules - The Hunchback of Notre Dame - The Jungle Book - Lilo & Stitch - The Lion King - The Little Mermaid - Mickey Mouse - Oswald the Lucky Rabbit⸿ - Mulan - Peter Pan - Pocahontas - Prep & Landing - Sleeping Beauty - Silly Symphonies - Snow White - Tangled - Tarzan - Winnie the Pooh - Wreck-It Ralph - Zootopia \| \| Walt DisneyPictures† \| - Air Bud - Beverly Hills Chihuahua - The Chronicles of Narnia¶ - Dexter Riley - Father of the Bride - Flubber - Freaky Friday - Fright Night¶ - Herbie - Hocus Pocus - Honey, I Shrunk the Kids - Maleficent - The Mighty Ducks - The Muppets - National Treasure - The Parent Trap - Pirates of the Caribbean - The Santa Clause - The Shaggy Dog - Sister Act - Step Up⁋ - Tron - Turner & Hooch - Unbreakable⸿ - Who Framed Roger Rabbit - Witch Mountain \| \| Pixar \| - Cars - Finding Nemo - The Incredibles - Inside Out - Monsters, Inc. - Toy Story \| \| Disneytoon Studios \| - Tinker Bell \| \| Marvel Studios \| - Marvel Cinematic Universe - Captain America - Spider-Man# \| \| Lucasfilm \| - Indiana Jones§ - Star Wars \| \| 20th CenturyStudios‡ \| - Alien Nation - Alien - Alien vs. Predator - Alvin and the Chipmunks - Avatar - Behind Enemy Lines - Cheaper by the Dozen§ - Diary of a Wimpy Kid§ - Die Hard - Dr. Dolittle - Fantastic Four* - The Fly - The Hills Have Eyes - Home Alone - Ice Age§ - Independence Day - Kingsman - Maze Runner - Night at the Museum§ - The Omen - Percy Jackson - Planet of the Apes - Predator - Revenge of the Nerds - Rio - The Rocky Horror Show - Taken - World of Watches - X-Men* \| | |—| | Disney GeneralEntertainment Content | \| Disney Channel \| - The Cheetah Girls - Descendants - Halloweentown - High School Musical - - Zombies \| \| FX Networks \| - American Story \| \| 20th Television \| - Buffyverse - Firefly - M*A*S*H - The Walking Dead(international only) - The X-Files \| \| 20th TVA \| - Family Guy - The Simpsons \| | |—| | Disney Experiences | - Pirates of the Caribbean \| Disney ConsumerProducts \| - Disney Fairies - Disney Princess - Disney Tsum Tsum - Disney Villains - Marvel Universe - Mickey Mouse & Friends - Donald Duck - The Muppets \| \| Disney PublishingWorldwide \| - A Twisted Tale - Kingdom Keepers - W.I.T.C.H. \| \| Disney Games \| - Marvel Games - Hulk - Marvel vs. Capcom - Marvel’s Spider-Man - Punisher - Spider-Man - X-Men - Pirates of the Caribbean video games - The Simpsons video games - Star Wars video games - Battlefront - Knights of the Old Republic - Lego - Rogue Squadron - Club Penguin - Disney Infinity - Disney’s Activity Center - Disney’s Animated Storybook - Disney’s Magical Quest - Disney’s Print Studio - Illusion - The Incredible Machine - Kim Possible - Kingdom Hearts◈ - Monkey Island - Spectrobes - Tap Tap \| | |—| | - † Includes Touchstone Pictures and Hollywood Pictures - ‡ Includes Searchlight Pictures, 20th Century Animation, and related assets - § Shared with Walt Disney Pictures - ¶ Shared with 20th Century Studios - * Shared with Marvel Studios - ⸿ Shared with Universal Pictures - # Shared with Sony Pictures - ⁋ Shared with Lionsgate - ◈ Shared with Square Enix Category |
Kingdom Hearts–related topics
| - v - t - e Donald Duck in video games | | 1980s | - Donald Duck’s Playground (1984) - Donald’s Alphabet Chase (1988) - Donald Duck (1988) | | 1990s | - Mickey’s 123: The Big Surprise Party (1990) - The Lucky Dime Caper Starring Donald Duck (1991) - QuackShot (1991) - World of Illusion (1992) - Deep Duck Trouble Starring Donald Duck (1993) - Legend of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse (1995) - Maui Mallard in Cold Shadow (1995) - Magical Tetris Challenge (1998) | | 2000s | - Pop’n Music Mickey Tunes (2000) - Donald Duck: Goin’ Quackers (2000) - Mickey’s Speedway USA (2000) - Kingdom Hearts (2002) - Disney Golf (2002) - Disney Sports Soccer (2002) - Disney Sports Football (2002) - Disney Sports Skateboarding (2002) - Disney’s Party (2002) - PK: Out of the Shadows (2002) - Disney Sports Basketball (2002) - Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories (2004) - Kingdom Hearts II (2005) - Disney Magicboard Online (2007) - Disney Think Fast (2008) - Kingdom Hearts Coded (2008) - Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days (2009) | | 2010s | - Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep (2010) - Epic Mickey (2010) - Kinect: Disneyland Adventures (2011) - Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance (2012) - Epic Mickey: Power of Illusion (2012) - Kingdom Hearts χ (2013) - Disney Magical World (2013) - Disney Infinity 2.0 (2014) - Disney Magical World 2 (2015) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2016) - Kingdom Hearts III (2019) | | 2020s | - Disney Mirrorverse (2022) - Disney Illusion Island (2023) - Disney Speedstorm (2023) - Disney Dreamlight Valley (2023) - Kingdom Hearts IV (TBA) | | Series | - Illusion - Disney’s Magical Quest - Disney Learning: Mickey Mouse - Kingdom Hearts | | Related | List of Disney video games | | Category | | - v - t - e Goofy in video games | |—| | 1990s | - Mickey’s 123: The Big Surprise Party (1990) - Goof Troop (1993) - Goofy’s Hysterical History Tour (1993) - Legend of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse (1995) - Magical Tetris Challenge (1998) | | 2000s | - Pop’n Music Mickey Tunes (2000) - Mickey’s Speedway USA (2000) - Goofy’s Fun House (2001) - Disney’s Extremely Goofy Skateboarding (2001) - Kingdom Hearts (2002) - Disney Golf (2002) - Disney Sports Soccer (2002) - Disney Sports Football (2002) - Disney Sports Skateboarding (2002) - Disney’s Party (2002) - Disney Sports Basketball (2002) - Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories (2004) - Kingdom Hearts II (2005) - Disney Magicboard Online (2007) - Disney Think Fast (2008) - Kingdom Hearts Coded (2008) - Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days (2009) | | 2010s | - Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep (2010) - Epic Mickey (2010) - Kinect: Disneyland Adventures (2011) - Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance (2012) - Epic Mickey: Power of Illusion (2012) - Kingdom Hearts χ (2013) - Disney Magical World (2013) - Disney Magical World 2 (2015) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2016) - Kingdom Hearts III (2019) | | 2020s | - Disney Mirrorverse (2022) - Disney Illusion Island (2023) - Disney Speedstorm (2023) - Disney Dreamlight Valley (2023) - Kingdom Hearts IV (TBA) | | Series | - Disney Learning: Mickey Mouse - Kingdom Hearts | | Related | List of Disney video games | | Category | | - v - t - e Mickey Mouse in video games | |—| | 1980s | - Sorcerer’s Apprentice (1983) - Mickey’s Space Adventure (1984) - Mickey Mousecapade (1987) - Mickey Mouse: The Computer Game (1988) - Mickey Mouse (1989) | | 1990s | - Mickey’s 123: The Big Surprise Party (1990) - Castle of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse (1990) - Mickey Mouse II (1991) - Mickey’s Dangerous Chase (1991) - Fantasia (1991) - Mickey Mouse III: Yume Fuusen (1992) - Land of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse (1992) - World of Illusion (1992) - Mickey’s Safari in Letterland (1993) - Mickey Mouse IV: Mahō no Labyrinth (1993) - Mickey Mouse: Magic Wands! (1993) - Mickey’s Ultimate Challenge (1994) - Mickey’s Adventures in Numberland (1994) - Mickey Mania (1994) - Mickey no Tokyo Disneyland Daibōken (1994) - Legend of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse (1995) - My Disney Kitchen (1998) - Magical Tetris Challenge (1998) - Mickey’s Racing Adventure (1999) | | 2000s | - Pop’n Music Mickey Tunes (2000) - Mickey’s Speedway USA (2000) - Kingdom Hearts (2002) - Disney Golf (2002) - Disney Sports Soccer (2002) - Disney Sports Football (2002) - Disney Sports Skateboarding (2002) - Disney’s Party (2002) - Disney’s Magical Mirror Starring Mickey Mouse (2002) - Disney Sports Basketball (2002) - Disney’s Hide and Sneak (2003) - Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories (2004) - Kingdom Hearts II (2005) - Disney Magicboard Online (2007) - Disney Think Fast (2008) - Kingdom Hearts Coded (2008) - Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days (2009) | | 2010s | - Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep (2010) - Epic Mickey (2010) - Kinect: Disneyland Adventures (2011) - Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance (2012) - Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two (2012) - Epic Mickey: Power of Illusion (2012) - Disney Magical World (2013) - Disney Infinity (2013) - Castle of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse (2013) - Fantasia: Music Evolved (2014) - Disney Infinity 3.0 (2015) - Disney Magical World 2 (2015) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2016) - Kingdom Hearts III (2019) | | 2020s | - Disney Mirrorverse (2022) - Disney Illusion Island (2023) - Disney Speedstorm (2023) - Disney Dreamlight Valley (2023) | | Series | - Crazy Castle - Illusion - Disney’s Magical Quest - Disney Learning: Mickey Mouse - Kingdom Hearts | | Non-Disney | - Infestation: Origins (2024) | | Related | - List of Disney video games - List of Mickey Mouse films and appearances | | Category | | - v - t - e Final Fantasy | |—| | by Square Enix (formerly Square) | | Main games | \| \| Final Fantasy \| Final Fantasy II \| Final Fantasy III \| Final Fantasy IV \| \| - Music - Stranger of Paradise \| - Music \| - Music - Remake \| - Characters - Cecil - Rydia - Music - Chronicles - Remake - The After Years - Complete \| \| \|—\| \| \| Final Fantasy V \| Final Fantasy VI \| Final Fantasy VII \| Final Fantasy VIII \| \|—\|—\|—\|—\| \| - Characters - Faris Scherwiz - Exdeath - Music \| - Characters - Terra - Celes - Cyan - Edgar and Sabin - Gau - Leo - Locke - Relm - Setzer - Shadow - Strago - Kefka - Music - Opera House \| - Characters - Cloud - Barret - Tifa - Aerith - Yuffie - Cait Sith - Vincent - Sephiroth - Zack - Music - Compilation - Remake - Rebirth - Midgar \| - Characters - Squall - Rinoa - Selphie - Edea - Music - Triple Triad \| \| \|—\| \| \| Final Fantasy IX \| Final Fantasy X \| Final Fantasy XI \| Final Fantasy XII \| \|—\|—\|—\|—\| \| - Characters - Zidane - Vivi - Garnet - Freya - Quina - Kuja - Beatrix - Music \| - Characters - Tidus - Yuna - Lulu - Rikku - Music - X-2 - Music - HD Remaster - Spira \| - Grandmasters - Music \| - Characters - Vaan - Fran - Music - Revenant Wings - Ivalice \| \| \|—\| \| \| Final Fantasy XIII \| Final Fantasy XIV \| Final Fantasy XV \| Final Fantasy XVI \| \|—\|—\|—\|—\| \| - Characters - Lightning - Vanille - Music - XIII-2 - Music - Lightning Returns - Music \| - Hildibrand - Music - Original version - Heavensward - Stormblood - Shadowbringers - Endwalker \| - Characters - Noctis - Ignis - Prompto - Lunafreya - Ardyn - Cindy - Development - DLC - Music - Pocket Edition - The Dawn of the Future \| - Characters - Dion Lesage - Music \| \| \|—\| | |—| | Subseries | - Brave Exvius - War of the Visions - Chocobo - List of media - Dimensions - II - Crystal Chronicles - Dissidia - Fabula Nova Crystallis - Ivalice - Theatrhythm - Curtain Call - Final Bar Line | | Other games | - Airborne Brigade - All the Bravest - Artniks - Explorers - Mario Hoops 3-on-3 - Mobius - Mystic Quest - Record Keeper - The 4 Heroes of Light - Type-0 - HD - World of Final Fantasy | | Related series | - Bravely Default - Itadaki Street - Kingdom Hearts - Mana - SaGa - Super Smash Bros. | | Films and animation | - Legend of the Crystals - The Spirits Within - Unlimited - Advent Children - Last Order - Brotherhood - Kingsglaive - Final Fantasy XIV: Dad of Light - Brave Father Online: Our Story of Final Fantasy XIV | | Related | - The Black Mages - Final Fantasy Trading Card Game - 8-Bit Theater - Final Fantasy VII NES demake - Moguri Mod | | - Category - Media - video games - Recurring elements - ATB - Cactuar - Chocobo - Moogle - Music - concerts | | - v - t - e Final Fantasy VII and Compilation of Final Fantasy VII | |—| | Video games | \| Console \| - Final Fantasy VII (1997) - Dirge of Cerberus (2006) - Crisis Core (2007) - Remake (2020) - Rebirth (2024) \| \| Mobile \| - Before Crisis (2004) - Snowboarding (2005) - Dirge of Cerberus Lost Episode (2006) - G-Bike (2014) - The First Soldier (2021) - Ever Crisis (2023) \| | |—| | Films | - Advent Children - Last Order | | Music | - Original - Voices of the Lifestream | | Universe | - Characters - Cloud Strife - Barret Wallace - Tifa Lockhart - Aerith Gainsborough - Yuffie Kisaragi - Cait Sith - Vincent Valentine - Sephiroth - Zack Fair - Midgar | | Other | - Kingdom Hearts - Super Smash Bros. - for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U - Ultimate - Ehrgeiz - PowerWash Simulator - Unlicensed Famicom Demake | | - v - t - e Lewis Carroll’s Alice | |—| | - Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland - Through the Looking-Glass | | \| Universe \| \| \| Characters \| \\| Alice’s Adventuresin Wonderland \\| - Alice - portrayals - Bill the Lizard - Caterpillar - Cheshire Cat - Dodo - Dormouse - Duchess - Gryphon - Hatter - Tarrant Hightopp - King of Hearts - Knave of Hearts - March Hare - Mock Turtle - Mouse - Pat - Puppy - Queen of Hearts - White Rabbit - Minor characters \\| \\| Through theLooking-Glass \\| - Bandersnatch - Humpty Dumpty - Jubjub bird - Red King - Red Queen - The Sheep - The Lion and the Unicorn - Tweedledum and Tweedledee - White King - White Knight - White Queen - Minor characters \\| \| \|—\| \| Locationsand events \| - Wonderland - Looking-Glass world - Unbirthday \| \| Poems \| - “All in the golden afternoon…” - “How Doth the Little Crocodile” - “The Mouse’s Tale” - “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Bat” - “You Are Old, Father William” - “‘Tis the Voice of the Lobster” - “Jabberwocky” - Vorpal sword - “The Walrus and the Carpenter” - “Haddocks’ Eyes” - “The Mock Turtle’s Song” - The Hunting of the Snark \| \| Related \| - Alice Liddell - Alice syndrome - Alice’s Shop - Illustrators - John Tenniel - Theophilus Carter - The Annotated Alice - Mischmasch - Translations - Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland - Through the Looking-Glass \| \| \|—\| | |—| | \| Adaptations \| \| \| Stage \| - Alice in Wonderland (1886 musical) - Alice in Wonderland (1979 opera) - But Never Jam Today (1979 musical) - Through the Looking Glass (2008 opera) - Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (2011 ballet) - Wonderland (2011 musical) - Peter and Alice (2013 play) - Wonder.land (2015 musical) - Alice’s Adventures Under Ground (2016 opera) - Alice by Heart (2019 musical) \| \| Film \| - 1903 - 1910 - 1915 - Alice Comedies (1923–1927) - 1931 - 1933 - 1949 - 1951 - Alice of Wonderland in Paris (1966) - 1972 - 1976 - 1976 (Spanish) - Alice or the Last Escapade (1977) - 1981 - 1982 - The Care Bears Adventure in Wonderland (1987) - 1988 (Czechoslovak) - 1988 (Australian) - Malice in Wonderland (2009) - 2010 - Alice in Murderland (2010) - Alice Through the Looking Glass (2016) - Come Away (2020) - Alice and the Land that Wonders (2020) - Alice, Through the Looking (2021) \| \| Television \| - Alice in Wonderland (1962) - Alice in Wonderland or What’s a Nice Kid like You Doing in a Place like This? (1966) - Alice in Wonderland (1966) - Alice Through the Looking Glass (1966) - 1983 (TV film) - Fushigi no Kuni no Alice (1983) - 1985 (TV film) - Adventures in Wonderland (1992) - Alice through the Looking Glass (1998) - Alice in Wonderland (1999) - Alice (2009) - Once Upon a Time in Wonderland (2013) - Alice’s Wonderland Bakery (2022) \| \| Music \| - “White Rabbit” (1967 song) - “Don’t Come Around Here No More” (1985 music video) - Alice in Wonderland (2010) - Almost Alice (2010) - “Alice” - “Follow Me Down” - “Tea Party” - Alice Through the Looking Glass (2016) - “Just Like Fire” - “Alice” (2020 song) \| \| Video games \| - Through the Looking Glass (1984) - Alice in Wonderland (1985) - Märchen Maze (1988) - Wonderland (1990) - Alice: An Interactive Museum (1991) - Alice no Paint Adventure (1995) - Alice in Wonderland (2000) - American McGee’s Alice (2000) - Kingdom Hearts (2002) - Alice in the Country of Hearts (2007) - Alice in Wonderland (2010) - Alice: Madness Returns (2011) - Kingdom Hearts χ (2013) \| \| Sequels \| - A New Alice in the Old Wonderland (1895) - New Adventures of Alice (1917) - Alice Through the Needle’s Eye (1984) - Automated Alice (1996) \| \| Retellings \| - The Nursery “Alice” (1890) - Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland Retold in Words of One Syllable (1905) - American McGee’s Alice (2000) - Alice in Verse: The Lost Rhymes of Wonderland (2010) - Alice: Madness Returns (2011) \| \| Parodies \| - The Westminster Alice (1902) - Clara in Blunderland (1902) - Lost in Blunderland (1903) - John Bull’s Adventures in the Fiscal Wonderland (1904) - Alice in Blunderland: An Iridescent Dream (1904) - The Looking Glass Wars - 2004 - 2007 - 2009 \| \| Imitations \| - Mopsa the Fairy (1869) - Davy and the Goblin (1884) - The Admiral’s Caravan (1891) - Gladys in Grammarland (1896) - Rollo in Emblemland (1902) - Alice in Orchestralia (1925) \| \| Literary \| - Alice in Borderland - Alice in the Country of Hearts - Alice in Murderland - Alice in Sunderland - Lost Girls - Miyuki-chan in Wonderland - Pandora Hearts - Tweedledum and Tweedledee - Unbirthday: A Twisted Tale \| \| Related \| - Betty in Blunderland (1934 animated short) - Thru the Mirror (1936 animated short) - Jabberwocky (1971 film) - Jabberwocky (1977 film) - Donald in Mathmagic Land (1959 film) - Malice in Wonderland (1982 animated short) - Dungeonland (1983 module) - The Land Beyond the Magic Mirror (1983 module) - Dreamchild (1985 film) - The Hunting of the Snark (1991 musical) - How Doth the Little Crocodile (1998 artworks) - Abby in Wonderland (2008 film) - Disney franchise \| \| \|—\| | |—| | - Category | | - v - t - e Disney’s Hercules | |—| | Films | - Hercules - Hercules: Zero to Hero | | TV series | - Disney’s Hercules: The Animated Series - episodes | | Video games | - Hercules - Disney’s Animated Storybook: Hercules - Disney’s Hercules Print Studio \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts series - Kingdom Hearts - Chain of Memories - II - Coded - 358/2 Days - Birth by Sleep - χ - III - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Disney Mirrorverse - Disney Speedstorm \| | |—| | Music | - Film soundtrack - “Go the Distance” - “I Won’t Say (I’m in Love)” - “Shooting Star” | | Characters | - Meg | | Related topics | - Hercules musical - House of Mouse - Descendants 3 - Go the Distance: A Twisted Tale - Once Upon a Studio | | - v - t - e Winnie-the-Pooh by A. A. Milne | |—| | Books | \| Milne books \| - When We Were Very Young (1924) - Winnie-the-Pooh (1926) - Now We Are Six (1927) - The House at Pooh Corner (1928) \| \| Other authors \| - Winnie ille Pu (1958) - The Pooh Perplex (1963) - The Tao of Pooh (1982) - The Te of Piglet (1992) - Pooh and the Philosophers (1995) - Return to the Hundred Acre Wood (2009) - Finding Winnie (2015) - The Best Bear in All the World (2016) - Winnie-the-Pooh Meets the Queen (2016) \| | |—| | Characters | - Winnie-the-Pooh - Disney version - Tigger - Piglet - Eeyore - Christopher Robin - Rabbit - Roo - Heffalumps - Gopher | | People | - Christopher Robin Milne - E. H. Shepard - Harry Colebourn - Shirley Slesinger Lasswell - Stephen Slesinger - Sherman Brothers - David Benedictus - Mark Burgess - Sterling Holloway | | Related | - Ashdown Forest - Hundred Acre Wood - Poohsticks - Eeyore’s Birthday Party - Winnie-the-Pooh: Exploring a Classic - Winnipeg the Bear - Censorship in China | | \| Disney franchise \| \| Featurettes \| - Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree (1966) - Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day (1968) - Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too (1974) - Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore (1983) \| \| Short films \| - Winnie the Pooh Discovers the Seasons (1981) - Once Upon a Studio (2023) \| \| Feature films \| \| Theatrical \| - The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977) - The Tigger Movie (2000) - Piglet’s Big Movie (2003) - Pooh’s Heffalump Movie (2005) - Winnie the Pooh (2011) - Christopher Robin (2018) \| \| Direct-to-video \| - Pooh’s Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin (1997) - Seasons of Giving (1999) - The Book of Pooh: Stories from the Heart (2001) - A Very Merry Pooh Year (2002) - Springtime with Roo (2004) - Pooh’s Heffalump Halloween Movie (2005) - Super Sleuth Christmas Movie (2007) - Tigger & Pooh and a Musical Too (2009) \| \| \|—\| \| Televisionseries \| - Welcome to Pooh Corner (1983–1984) - The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1988–1991) - episodes - The Book of Pooh (2001–2003) - My Friends Tigger & Pooh (2007–2010) - episodes \| \| Televisionspecials \| - Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue (1990) - Winnie the Pooh and Christmas Too (1991) - Boo to You Too! Winnie the Pooh (1996) - A Winnie the Pooh Thanksgiving (1998) - A Valentine for You (1999) \| \| Video games \| - Winnie the Pooh in the Hundred Acre Wood (1986) - Disney’s Animated Storybook - Ready to Read with Pooh (1997) - Disney Learning: Winnie the Pooh (1999) - Adventures in the 100 Acre Wood (2000) - Tigger’s Honey Hunt (2000) - Party Time with Winnie the Pooh (2001) - Piglet’s Big Game (2003) - Winnie the Pooh’s Rumbly Tumbly Adventure (2005) - Winnie the Pooh’s Home Run Derby (2007) \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts series - Kingdom Hearts (2002) - Chain of Memories (2004) - II (2005) - Birth by Sleep (2010) - III (2019) - Disney Friends (2007) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2018) - Disney Mirrorverse (2022) \| \| \|—\| \| Music \| - “Winnie the Pooh” (1965) - Winnie the Pooh soundtrack (2011) - Christopher Robin soundtrack (2018) \| \| Attractions \| - The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh - Pooh’s Hunny Hunt \| \| Other \| - Comic strip - The New Musical Adaptation \| | |—| | \| Other adaptations and media \| \| Films \| \| Soyuzmultfilmfeaturettes \| - Winnie-the-Pooh (1969) - Winnie-the-Pooh Pays a Visit (1971) - Winnie-the-Pooh and a Busy Day (1972) \| \| The Twisted Childhood Universe \| - Blood and Honey (2023) - Blood and Honey 2 (2024) \| \| Biographical \| - A Bear Named Winnie (2004) - Goodbye Christopher Robin (2017) \| \| \|—\| \| Music \| - “House at Pooh Corner” (1970) - Return to Pooh Corner (1994) - More Songs from Pooh Corner (2000) \| \| Other \| - Bother! The Brain of Pooh - “Band in China” (2019) - “Winnie-the-Screwed” (2022) - Winnie’s Hole (2023) \| | |—| | - Category | | - v - t - e Disney’s Aladdin | |—| | Films | \| Animation \| - Aladdin (1992) - The Return of Jafar (1994) - Aladdin and the King of Thieves (1996) \| \| Live-action \| - Aladdin (2019) \| | | |—|—| | Adaptations | - TV series (episodes) - More Than a Peacock Princess - Aladdin Jr. - Aladdin (stage musical) - Disney’s Aladdin: A Musical Spectacular - A Whole New World: A Twisted Tale | | Video games | - Disney’s Aladdin (Sega Genesis) - Disney’s Aladdin (SNES) - Disney’s Aladdin (SIMS) - Disney’s Aladdin in Nasira’s Revenge \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts series - Kingdom Hearts - Chain of Memories - II - Coded - 358/2 Days - χ - Disney Princess: Enchanted Journey - Disney Princess: Magical Jewels - Disney Universe - Disney Princess: Enchanting Storybooks - Disney Infinity (2.0) - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Disney Mirrorverse - Disney Dreamlight Valley \| | |—| | Music | \| Soundtracks \| - 1992 - 2019 \| \| Songs \| - “Arabian Nights” - “One Jump Ahead” - “Friend Like Me” - “Prince Ali” - “A Whole New World” - “Proud of Your Boy” \| | |—| | Attractions | - The Magic Carpets of Aladdin - Arabian Coast - Le Passage Enchanté d’Aladdin - Adventureland Bazaar | | Characters | - Aladdin - Jasmine - Genie - Jafar - Iago | | Related | - Disney Renaissance - Waking Sleeping Beauty - Twisted (2013 musical parody) - The Music Behind the Magic - Disney Princess - House of Mouse - Mickey’s House of Villains - Once Upon a Time in Wonderland - Once Upon a Time (season 6) - The Thief of Baghdad (1940) - The Thief and the Cobbler (1964–95) - Ralph Breaks the Internet - Once Upon a Studio - Lego Disney Princess: The Castle Quest - Descendants | | - v - t - e Disney’s The Little Mermaid | |—| | Films | \| Animated \| - The Little Mermaid (1989) - The Little Mermaid II: Return to the Sea (2000) - The Little Mermaid: Ariel’s Beginning (2008) \| \| Live-action \| - The Little Mermaid (2023) \| | | |—|—| | Television series | - The Little Mermaid (1992–1994) - Sebastian (1993) - Ariel (2024–present) | | Characters | - Ariel - Ursula | | Music | \| Albums \| - The Little Mermaid (1989) - Sebastian from The Little Mermaid - Sebastian: Party Gras! - Songs from the Sea - Splash Hits - The Little Mermaid (2023) \| \| Songs \| - “Fathoms Below” - “Part of Your World” - “Under the Sea” - “Poor Unfortunate Souls” - “Les Poissons” - “Kiss the Girl” \| \| Related \| - The Music Behind the Magic \| | |—| | Adaptations | - Musical - The Little Mermaid Jr. - Live television special - Once Upon a Time - “Ariel” - “Dark Hollow” - “The Jolly Roger” - “Poor Unfortunate Soul” - Part of Your World: A Twisted Tale | | Attractions | - Ariel’s Grotto - Ariel’s Undersea Adventure - A Musical Adventure - King Triton’s Carousel of the Sea - Mermaid Lagoon - Voyage of the Little Mermaid | | Video games | - The Little Mermaid (1991) - Ariel the Little Mermaid (1992) - Ariel’s Story Studio (1997) - Disney’s The Little Mermaid Print Studio (1998) - Disney’s The Little Mermaid Activity Center (1998) - The Little Mermaid II: Pinball Frenzy (2000) - The Little Mermaid Pinball (2005) \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts series - Kingdom Hearts 2002 - Chain of Memories 2004 - II 2005 - Disney Princess: My Fairytale Adventure (2012) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2018) - Disney Mirrorverse (2022) - Disney Speedstorm (2023) - Disney Dreamlight Valley (2023) \| | |—| | Related | - Adaptations of “The Little Mermaid” - Disney Renaissance - Disney Princess - House of Mouse - Mickey’s Magical Christmas - Mickey’s House of Villains - Sofia the First: The Floating Palace - Ralph Breaks the Internet - Waking Sleeping Beauty - Howard - Descendants - Descendants 2 - Lego Disney Princess: The Castle Quest - Once Upon a Studio | | - Category | | - v - t - e The Nightmare Before Christmas | |—| | Characters | - Jack Skellington | | Video games | - Oogie’s Revenge (2004) - The Pumpkin King (2005) \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts series - Kingdom Hearts 2002 - Chain of Memories 2004 - II 2005 - 358/2 Days 2009 - Disney Infinity (2013) - Disney Magical World 2 (2015) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2016) - Disney Mirrorverse (2022) - Disney Dreamlight Valley (2023) \| | |—| | Music | - The Nightmare Before Christmas - “This Is Halloween” - Nightmare Revisited | | Attraction | - Haunted Mansion Holiday - Halloween Screams | | - Category | | - v - t - e J. M. Barrie’s Peter Pan | |—| | \| Universe \| \| \| Characters \| - Peter Pan - Wendy Darling - Captain Hook - Mr. Smee - Tinker Bell - Disney version - Tiger Lily - Lost Boys \| \| Biographies \| - The Lost Boys - Finding Neverland \| \| Related \| - Neverland - Llewelyn Davies boys - George - Jack - Peter - Michael - Peter Pan syndrome - puer aeternus - Peter Pan copyright - Disney franchise - Disney Fairies - Tinker Bell cast - Peter Pan (London statue) - Peter Pan (Columbus, Ohio, statue) \| \| \|—\| | |—| | \| Media \| \| \| Literaryadaptations \| \\| Official books/plays \\| - The Little White Bird - Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens - Peter and Wendy (play, book) - Peter Pan in Scarlet \\| \\| Starcatchers books \\| - Peter and the Starcatchers - Peter and the Shadow Thieves - Peter and the Secret of Rundoon - Peter and the Sword of Mercy - The Bridge to Never Land - Never Land Books \\| \| \|—\| \| Filmadaptations \| \\| Peter Pan films \\| - Peter Pan (1924) - Peter Pan (1988) - Hook - Neverland - Peter Pan (2003) - Pan - Come Away - Wendy - The Lost Girls - Peter Pan’s Neverland Nightmare (2024) \\| \\| Disney’s Peter Pan films \\| - Peter Pan (1953) - Return to Never Land - Peter Pan & Wendy \\| \\| Tinker Bell films \\| - Tinker Bell - Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure - Tinker Bell and the Great Fairy Rescue - Pixie Hollow Games - Secret of the Wings - Pixie Hollow Bake Off - The Pirate Fairy - Tinker Bell and the Legend of the NeverBeast \\| \| \|—\| \| Otheradaptations \| \\| Television \\| - 1954 musical - 1976 musical - 1989 Animated Series - Fox’s Peter Pan & the Pirates - Jake and the Never Land Pirates - Once Upon a Time - Neverland - Peter Pan Live! - The New Adventures of Peter Pan - Peter and Wendy \\| \\| Stage \\| - 1950 musical - 1954 musical - Peter Pan: A Musical Adventure - Peter and the Starcatcher - Peter Pan 360 - Peter and Alice - Peter Pan Goes Wrong - Wendy & Peter Pan - Disney’s Peter Pan Jr. - Finding Neverland (musical) \\| \\| Video games \\| - Peter Pan and the Pirates - Hook - Peter Pan: Adventures in Never Land \\| \\| Prose \\| - The Child Thief \\| \\| Graphic novels \\| - Peter Pank - Lost Girls - Marvel Fairy Tales - Cheshire Crossing \\| \\| Music \\| \\| Albums \\| - Faith, Trust, and Pixie Dust \\| \\| Songs \\| - “Lost Boy” (Ruth B song) - Somewhere in Neverland - “Peter Pan” (Kelsea Ballerini song) \\| \\| \\|—\\| \\| Attractions \\| - Disney on Ice - Fantasmic! - Peter Pan’s Flight (ride) - Pixie Hollow \\| \\| Allusions \\| - Never Never Land \\| \| \|—\| \| \|—\| | |—| | - Category | | - v - t - e Disney’s Sleeping Beauty | |—| | Films | \| Animation \| - Sleeping Beauty (1959) - Keys to the Kingdom (2007) \| \| Live-action \| - Maleficent film series - Maleficent (2014) - Maleficent: Mistress of Evil (2019) \| | |—| | Attractions | - Sleeping Beauty Castle - Le Château de la Belle au Bois Dormant | | Music | - “Once Upon a Dream” (song) - Maleficent (soundtrack) - Mistress of Evil (soundtrack) - “You Can’t Stop the Girl” (song) | | Characters | - Aurora - Flora, Fauna, and Merryweather - Maleficent | | Video games | - Kingdom Hearts series - Birth by Sleep - χ - Disney Princess: Magical Jewels - Disney Infinity 2.0 - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Disney Mirrorverse | | Related | - Disney Princess - Kingdom Keepers - Descendants franchise - Descendants - Descendants 3 - Ralph Breaks the Internet - Once Upon a Dream: A Twisted Tale - Lego Disney Princess: The Castle Quest - Once Upon a Studio | | - Category | | - v - t - e Disney’s Beauty and the Beast | |—| | Films | \| Animation \| - Beauty and the Beast (1991) - Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas (1997) - Belle’s Magical World (1998) \| \| Live-action \| - Belle’s Tales of Friendship (1999) - Beauty and the Beast (2017) \| | | |—|—| | Adaptations | - Musical - Live on Stage - Sing Me a Story with Belle - Be Our Guest Restaurant - Enchanted Tale of Beauty and the Beast - Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration | | Video games | - Beauty and the Beast (1994; NES) - Disney’s Beauty and the Beast (1994; Super NES) - Disney’s Beauty and the Beast Print Kit - Disney’s Beauty and the Beast: A Board Game Adventure - Disney’s Beauty and the Beast Magical Ballroom \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts series - Kingdom Hearts - Chain of Memories - II - 358/2 Days - χ - Disney Princess: Enchanted Journey - Disney Princess: Magical Jewels - Disney Princess: Enchanting Storybooks - Disney Princess: My Fairytale Adventure - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Disney Mirrorverse - Disney Dreamlight Valley - Disney Speedstorm \| | |—| | Music | \| 1991 film soundtrack \| - “Belle” - “Gaston” - “Be Our Guest” - “Something There” - “Beauty and the Beast” - “The Mob Song” \| \| 1994 musical \| - “If I Can’t Love Her” - “Human Again” - “A Change in Me” \| \| 2017 film soundtrack \| - “How Does a Moment Last Forever” - “Days in the Sun” - “Evermore” \| \| Related \| - The Music Behind the Magic - Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration \| | |—| | Characters | - Belle (Belle’s ball gown) - Beast - Gaston | | Related | - Disney Renaissance - Disney Princess - Lego Disney Princess: The Castle Quest - House of Mouse - Waking Sleeping Beauty - Howard - Descendants - As Old as Time: A Twisted Tale - Ralph Breaks the Internet - High School Musical: The Musical: The Series season 2 - Once Upon a Studio | | - v - t - e Disney’s Cinderella | |—| | Films | \| Animation \| - Cinderella (1950) - Cinderella II: Dreams Come True (2002) - Cinderella III: A Twist in Time (2007) \| \| Live-action \| - Cinderella (2015) \| | | |—|—| | Attractions | - Cinderella Castle - Prince Charming Regal Carrousel - L’Auberge de Cendrillon | | Music | - “A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes” - “Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo” - “So This is Love” - Cinderella (2015) soundtrack | | Characters | - Cinderella - Lady Tremaine | | Video games | - Kingdom Hearts series - Birth by Sleep - χ - Enchanted Journey - Magical Jewels - Enchanting Storybooks - My Fairytale Adventure - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Disney Dreamlight Valley | | Related | - Disney Princess - Once Upon a Time - “The Other Shoe” - season 7 - Sofia the First: Once Upon a Princess - Descendants - Descendants: The Rise of Red - Ralph Breaks the Internet - So This is Love: A Twisted Tale - Once Upon a Studio | | - Category | | - v - t - e Fantasia | |—| | - Fantasia - Fantasia 2000 - soundtrack | | Conductors | - Leopold Stokowski (Fantasia) - Irwin Kostal (1982 digital re-recording) - James Levine (Fantasia 2000) | | Orchestras | - Philadelphia Orchestra (Fantasia) - Chicago Symphony Orchestra (Fantasia 2000) | | Segments | \| Fantasia \| - Toccata and Fugue in D minor - The Nutcracker Suite - The Sorcerer’s Apprentice - The Rite of Spring - Symphony No. 6 (Beethoven) - Dance of the Hours - Night on Bald Mountain/Ave Maria \| \| Fantasia 2000 \| - Symphony No. 5 (Beethoven) - Pines of Rome - Rhapsody in Blue - Piano Concerto No. 2 (Shostakovich) - The Carnival of the Animals - The Sorcerer’s Apprentice - Pomp and Circumstance Marches - The Firebird Suite \| | |—| | Characters | - Mickey Mouse - Donald Duck - Daisy Duck | | Video games | - Sorcerer’s Apprentice (1983) - Fantasia (1991) - Fantasia: Music Evolved \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts - Dream Drop Distance - Epic Mickey - Disney Magical World - Disney Infinity \| | |—| | Parodies | - A Corny Concerto - Gumbasia - Allegro Non Troppo | | Related | - Fantasmic! - Sorcerer’s Hat - Mickey’s PhilharMagic - Fantasound - Destino - Lorenzo - One by One - The Little Matchgirl - The Sorcerer’s Apprentice (2010) - Once Upon a Studio - Once Upon a Time - season 4 - Ten Pieces - Deems Taylor | | - Category | | - v - t - e Disney’s Mulan | |—| | Films | \| Animation \| - Mulan (1998) - Mulan II (2004) \| \| Live-action \| - Mulan (2020) \| | | |—|—| | Characters | - Mulan - Mushu | | Musicals | - Mulan Jr. | | Video games | - Disney’s Mulan - Disney’s Animated Storybook: Mulan \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts series - II - Disney Infinity 3.0 - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Disney Mirrorverse - Disney Speedstorm \| | |—| | Music | \| Soundtracks \| - Mulan (1998 soundtrack) - Mulan (2020 soundtrack) \| \| Songs \| - “Honor to Us All” - “Reflection” - “I’ll Make a Man Out of You” - “A Girl Worth Fighting For” - “True to Your Heart” - “Written in Stone” - “Keep ‘Em Guessing” - “Loyal Brave True” \| | |—| | Related | - Disney Princess - Ralph Breaks the Internet - Reflection: A Twisted Tale - Once Upon a Studio - Hua Mulan | | - Category | | - v - t - e Tron | |—| | Films | - Tron (1982) - Legacy (2010) - Ares (2025) | | Television | - Uprising (2012–13) | | Video games | \| Official \| - Tron - Discs of Tron - Deadly Discs - Adventures of Tron - Solar Sailer - Tron 2.0 - Space Paranoids - Evolution - Battle Grids - Tron RUN/r - Identity \| \| Unofficial \| - Armagetron Advanced - GLtron \| \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts series - II - Dream Drop Distance - Disney Infinity 3.0 - Disney Mirrorverse \| | |—| | Music | - Tron: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack - Tron: Legacy – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack - “Derezzed” - Tron: Legacy Reconfigured | | Comics | - The Ghost in the Machine - Betrayal | | Attractions | - ElecTRONica - PeopleMover - TRON Lightcycle Run | | Related | - Characters - Light Cycle - MAGI - Triple-I - Jay Maynard | | - Category | | - v - t - e Pirates of the Caribbean | |—| | Theme parkattractions | - Pirates of the Caribbean - Battle for the Sunken Treasure - The Legend of Captain Jack Sparrow - Pirate’s Lair on Tom Sawyer Island - Mickey’s Pirate and Princess Party - Western River Expedition (cancelled) \| Restaurants \| - Blue Bayou Restaurant - Captain Jack’s \| | |—| | Films | - The Curse of the Black Pearl - Dead Man’s Chest - At World’s End - On Stranger Tides - Dead Men Tell No Tales‎ \| Related \| - Cast - Accolades \| | |—| | Universe | - Black Pearl - Locations \| Characters \| - Jack Sparrow - Hector Barbossa - Joshamee Gibbs - Will Turner - Elizabeth Swann - Tia Dalma - Davy Jones \| | |—| | Music | \| Albums \| - Walt Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean - The Curse of the Black Pearl - Dead Man’s Chest - Swashbuckling Sea Songs - Soundtrack Treasures Collection - At World’s End - At World’s End Remixes - On Stranger Tides - Dead Men Tell No Tales \| \| Songs \| - “Yo Ho (A Pirate’s Life for Me)” - “He’s a Pirate” \| | |—| | Video games | - The Curse of the Black Pearl - Pirates of the Caribbean - Multiplayer Mobile - Dead Man’s Chest - The Legend of Jack Sparrow - At World’s End - Pirates of the Caribbean Online - Armada of the Damned (cancelled) - Lego Pirates of the Caribbean: The Video Game \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts - II - III - Disney Universe - Kinect: Disneyland Adventures - Disney Infinity - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Sea of Thieves: A Pirate’s Life - Disney Mirrorverse - Disney Speedstorm \| | |—| | Books | - Jack Sparrow - Legends of the Brethren Court - The Price of Freedom | | Related | - Lego Pirates of the Caribbean - “Jack Sparrow” (song) | | - Category | | - v - t - e The Lion King | |—| | Films | \| Traditional animation \| - The Lion King (1994) - The Lion King II: Simba’s Pride (1998) - The Lion King 1½ (2004) \| \| CGI animation \| - The Lion King (2019) - Mufasa: The Lion King (2024) \| | |—| | Theatre | - The Lion King (musical) | | Television series | - Timon & Pumbaa - episodes - The Lion Guard - episodes | | Characters | - Simba - Nala - Scar - Timon and Pumbaa | | Music | \| 1994 soundtrack \| - “Circle of Life” - “I Just Can’t Wait to Be King” - “Be Prepared” - “Hakuna Matata” - “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” \| \| Musical cast recording \| - “Endless Night” - “The Madness of King Scar” - “Shadowland” \| \| 2019 soundtrack \| - “Spirit” \| \| The Lion King: The Gift \| - “Bigger” - “Brown Skin Girl” - “Already” - “Find Your Way Back” - “Black Parade” \| \| Other \| - Rhythm of the Pride Lands - “He Lives in You” - Return to Pride Rock - “We Are One” - “Love Will Find a Way” \| | |—| | Video games | - The Lion King - Timon & Pumbaa’s Jungle Games - The Lion King 1½ - Timon and Pumbaa’s Virtual Safari \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts - II - Disney’s Extreme Skate Adventure - Disney Friends - Disney Universe - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Disney Mirrorverse - Disney Dreamlight Valley \| | |—| | Attractions | - Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable - Theme park live adaptations of The Lion King - Hakuna Matata Restaurant | | Other media | - Friends in Need - Wild About Safety | | Related | - Disney Renaissance - Once Upon a Studio - Waking Sleeping Beauty - Black Is King - Claims of resemblance to Kimba the White Lion | | - Category | | - v - t - e Disney’s Snow White | |—| | Films | - Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) - Snow White (2025) | | | Other media | - 7 Wise Dwarfs - All Together - Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (musical) - The 7D - episodes - Mirror, Mirror: A Twisted Tale | | Attractions | - Snow White’s Enchanted Wish - Snow White Grotto - Seven Dwarfs Mine Train | | Characters | - Snow White - Evil Queen | | Film soundtrack | - “With a Smile and a Song” - “Whistle While You Work” - “Heigh-Ho” - “The Silly Song” - “Someday My Prince Will Come” | | Video games | - Disney’s Villains’ Revenge - Kingdom Hearts series - Kingdom Hearts - Birth by Sleep - χ - Disney Princess: Enchanted Journey - Disney Princess: Magical Jewels - Disney Magical World 2 - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Disney Mirrorverse | | Related | - 61st Academy Awards ceremony - Disney Princess - Once Upon a Time - Once Upon a Halloween - Descendants franchise - Descendants - Ralph Breaks the Internet - Lego Disney Princess: The Castle Quest - Once Upon a Studio | | - v - t - e Lilo & Stitch | |—| | Films | - Lilo & Stitch (2002) - Stitch! The Movie (2003) - Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch (2005) - Leroy & Stitch (2006) - Lilo & Stitch (TBA) | | Television | - Lilo & Stitch: The Series (2003–2006) - episodes - Stitch! (2008–2015) - episodes - Stitch & Ai (2017) | | Video games | \| - Disney’s Lilo & Stitch - Disney’s Lilo & Stitch: Trouble in Paradise - Disney’s Stitch: Experiment 626 \| \| Related \| - Kingdom Hearts - II - Birth by Sleep - III - Disney Friends - Kinect: Disneyland Adventures - Disney Magical World - Disney Infinity 2.0 - Disney Magical World 2 - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Disney Mirrorverse - Disney Dreamlight Valley - Disney Speedstorm \| | |—| | Attractions | - Stitch’s Great Escape! - Stitch Encounter - Lilo & Stitch’s Big Panic “Find Stitch!” ja - The Enchanted Tiki Room: Stitch Presents Aloha e Komo Mai! - Stitch’s Supersonic Celebration | | Other | - Characters - Stitch - Once Upon a Studio | | - Category | | - v - t - e Disney’s Tangled | |—| | Films | - Tangled (2010) - Tangled Ever After (2012) - Tangled: Before Ever After (2017) | | | Characters | - Rapunzel - Flynn Rider - Pascal and Maximus - Mother Gothel | | Music | - “When Will My Life Begin?” - “Mother Knows Best” - “I’ve Got a Dream” - “I See the Light” | | TV series | - Rapunzel’s Tangled Adventure - Episodes - Season 1 - Season 2 - Season 3 | | Video games | - Tangled: The Video Game (2010) - Disney Princess: Enchanting Storybooks (2011) - Disney Princess: My Fairytale Adventure (2012) - Disney Infinity (2013) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2016) - Kingdom Hearts III (2019) - Disney Mirrorverse (2022) - Disney Dreamlight Valley (2023) | | Related | - Disney Princess - Sofia the First: The Curse of Princess Ivy (2013-2018) - Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018) - Lego Disney Princess: The Castle Quest (2023) - Once Upon a Studio (2023) - What Once Was Mine: A Twisted Tale - Fantasy Springs | | - Category | | - v - t - e Toy Story | |—| | Films | \| Main series \| - Toy Story (1995) - Toy Story 2 (1999) - Toy Story 3 (2010) - accolades - Toy Story 4 (2019) - accolades \| \| Spin-offs \| - Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins (2000) - Lightyear (2022) \| | |—| | Short films | - Toy Story Toons - Hawaiian Vacation (2011) - Small Fry (2011) - Partysaurus Rex (2012) | | Television | \| Series \| - Buzz Lightyear of Star Command (2000–2001) - Forky Asks a Question (2019–2020) \| \| Specials \| - Toy Story of Terror! (2013) - Toy Story That Time Forgot (2014) \| | |—| | Characters | - Woody - Buzz Lightyear - Jessie - Bo Peep | | Video games | - Toy Story - Disney’s Animated Storybook: Toy Story - Toy Story 2 - Toy Story 2: Buzz Lightyear to the Rescue - Toy Story Racer - Buzz Lightyear of Star Command - Toy Story Mania! - Toy Story 3 \| Related \| - Disney’s Extreme Skate Adventure - Disney Friends - Rush: A Disney–Pixar Adventure - Disney Infinity - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Kingdom Hearts III - Disney Mirrorverse - Disney Dreamlight Valley - Disney Speedstorm \| | |—| | Attractions | \| Toy Story Land \| - Alien Swirling Saucers - RC Racer - Slinky Dog Dash - Slinky Dog Zigzag Spin - Toy Story Mania! - Toy Soldiers Parachute Drop \| \| - Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin - Woody’s All-American Roundup & Big Thunder Ranch Barbecue - Jessie’s Critter Carousel - Woody’s Roundup Village \| | |—| | Music | - Toy Story - “You’ve Got a Friend in Me” - Toy Story 2 - “When She Loved Me” - Toy Story 3 - “We Belong Together” - Toy Story 4 - “The Ballad of the Lonesome Cowboy” - Lightyear - Woody’s Roundup: A Rootin’ Tootin’ Collection of Woody’s Favorite Songs | | Related | - Live Action Toy Story - Toy Story: The Musical - Lego Toy Story - Toy Story Hotel - Tokyo Disney Resort Toy Story Hotel - Tin Toy - Tiny Toy Stories | | - Category | | - v - t - e Disney’s Frozen | |—| | Feature films | - Frozen (2013) - accolades - Frozen II (2019) - accolades | | Shorts | - Frozen Fever (2015) - Olaf’s Frozen Adventure (2017) - Once Upon a Snowman (2020) - Olaf Presents (2021) | | Characters | - Anna - Elsa - Olaf - Kristoff - Sven - Hans | | Music | \| Frozen \| - “Frozen Heart” - “Do You Want to Build a Snowman?” - “For the First Time in Forever” - “Love Is an Open Door” - “Let It Go” - “Reindeer(s) Are Better Than People” - “In Summer” - “Fixer Upper” \| \| Frozen II \| - “All Is Found” - “Into the Unknown” - “Lost in the Woods” - “Show Yourself” - “The Next Right Thing” \| \| Other \| - “Life’s Too Short” - “Making Today a Perfect Day” - “Monster” \| | |—| | Live shows | - For the First Time in Forever: A Frozen Sing-Along Celebration - Frozen – Live at the Hyperion - Frozen (musical) | | Video games | - Frozen: Olaf’s Quest (2013) \| Related \| - Disney Infinity (2013) - Disney Magical World 2 (2015) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2016) - Kingdom Hearts III (2019) - Disney Mirrorverse (2022) - Disney Dreamlight Valley (2023) \| | |—| | Literature | - The Art of Frozen - Conceal, Don’t Feel: A Twisted Tale - Frozen 2: Dangerous Secrets | | Related | - “The Snow Queen” - World of Frozen - Frozen Ever After - Wandering Oaken’s Sliding Sleighs - Fantasy Springs - The Story of Frozen: Making a Disney Animated Classic (2014) - Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II (2020) - Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018) - Once Upon a Studio (2023) - Once Upon a Time (season 4) - High School Musical: The Musical: The Series (season 3) - “Frozen” (political advertisement) | | - Category | | - v - t - e Big Hero 6 | |—| | - Steven T. Seagle - Duncan Rouleau | | Characters | - Hiro Takachiho - Baymax - Fredzilla - GoGo Tomago - Wasabi-No-Ginger - Honey Lemon - Silver Samurai - Sunfire - Sunpyre - Ebon Samurai | | Disney adaptation | \| Film \| - Big Hero 6 (2014) - soundtrack - “Immortals” \| \| TV series \| - Big Hero 6: The Series (2017–2021) - episodes - Baymax! (2022) \| \| Video games \| - Disney Infinity 2.0 (2014) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2018) - Kingdom Hearts III (2019) - Disney Mirrorverse (2022) \| \| Related \| - Disney characters - Tadashi Hamada - Once Upon a Studio (2023) \| | |—| | - Category | | - v - t - e Wreck-It Ralph | |—| | Films | - Wreck-It Ralph (2012) - Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018) | | Music | - Wreck-It Ralph (2012) - “When Can I See You Again?” - “Sugar Rush” - Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018) - “Zero” | | Video games | - Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed (2012) - Disney Infinity (2013) - Disney Magical World 2 (2015) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2018) - Kingdom Hearts - III 2019 - χ 2019 - Disney Dreamlight Valley (2023) - Disney Speedstorm (2023) | | Related | - Once Upon a Studio (2023) | | - Category | | - v - t - e Disney Princess | |—| | - Snow White - Cinderella - Aurora - Ariel - Belle - Jasmine - Pocahontas - Mulan - Tiana - Rapunzel - Merida - Moana - Raya | | Films | \| Theatrically animated \| - Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) - Cinderella (1950) - Sleeping Beauty (1959) - The Little Mermaid (1989) - Beauty and the Beast (1991) - Aladdin (1992) - Pocahontas (1995) - Mulan (1998) - The Princess and the Frog (2009) - Tangled (2010) - Brave (2012) - Moana (2016) - Raya and the Last Dragon (2021) - Moana 2 (2024) \| \| Direct-to-video \| - The Return of Jafar (1994) - Aladdin and the King of Thieves (1996) - Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas (1997) - Belle’s Magical World (1998) - Pocahontas II: Journey to a New World (1998) - Belle’s Tales of Friendship (1999) - The Little Mermaid II: Return to the Sea (2000) - Cinderella II: Dreams Come True (2002) - Mulan II (2004) - Cinderella III: A Twist in Time (2007) - Disney Princess Enchanted Tales: Follow Your Dreams (2007) - The Little Mermaid: Ariel’s Beginning (2008) \| \| Shorts \| - Tangled Ever After (2012) - The Legend of Mor’du (2012) \| \| Live-actionadaptations \| - Maleficent (2014) - Cinderella (2015) - Beauty and the Beast (2017) - Aladdin (2019) - Maleficent: Mistress of Evil (2019) - Mulan (2020) - The Little Mermaid (2023) - Snow White (2025) \| | |—| | Television | - The Little Mermaid (1992–1994) - Aladdin (1994–1995) - Sing Me a Story with Belle (1995–1997) - Tangled: Before Ever After (2017) - Rapunzel’s Tangled Adventure (2017–2020) - The Little Mermaid Live! (2019) - Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration (2022) - Lego Disney Princess: The Castle Quest (2023) - Ariel (2024–present) | | Albums | - Disney’s Princess Favorites - Disney Princess: The Ultimate Song Collection - Disney Princess Tea Party - Ultimate Disney Princess - Princess Disneymania | | Video games | - Enchanted Journey - Magical Jewels - Enchanting Storybooks - My Fairytale Adventure | | Other Media | - “If You Can Dream” - Mickey’s Pirate and Princess Party - Whisker Haven - Lego Disney | | Related | \| Princes \| - The Beast - Aladdin - Flynn Rider \| \| Media \| - House of Mouse - Kingdom Hearts - Once Upon a Time - Disney Magic Kingdoms - Sofia the First - Frozen - Elena of Avalor - Elena and the Secret of Avalor - Descendants - Enchanted - Disenchanted - Ralph Breaks the Internet - Kilala Princess - Once Upon a Studio \| \| Other \| - Tinker Bell - Sleeping Beauty Castle (Disneyland) - Cinderella Castle (Magic Kingdom and Tokyo Disneyland) - Le Château de la Belle au Bois Dormant (Disneyland Paris) - Enchanted Storybook Castle (Shanghai Disneyland) - Castle of Magical Dreams (Hong Kong Disneyland) \| | |—| | - Category | | - v - t - e Disney Villains | |—| | Characters | - Pete - Evil Queen - Lady Tremaine - Maleficent - Cruella de Vil - Ursula - Gaston - Jafar - Scar - Claude Frollo - Mother Gothel - Hans - King Magnifico | | Films | - Mickey’s House of Villains (2002) - Once Upon a Halloween (2005) - Welcome to the Club (2022) \| Descendants \| - Descendants (2015) - Descendants 2 (2017) - Descendants 3 (2019) - Descendants: The Rise of Red (2024) \| | |—| | Television | - “A Disney Halloween” (1983) - Once Upon a Time (2011-2018) \| Disney anthology \| - “Our Unsung Villains” (1956) - “Disney’s Greatest Villains” (1977) - “Halloween Hall o’ Fame” (1977) - “A Disney Halloween” (1981) - “Disney’s Halloween Treat” (1982) - “Scary Tales of Halloween” (1986) \| | |—| | Live events | - Fantasmic! - HalloWishes - Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party - Halloween Screams | | Video games | - Disney’s Villains’ Revenge (1999) - Kingdom Hearts series (2002-ongoing) - Disney Magic Kingdoms (2016) - Disney Twisted-Wonderland (2020) - Disney Mirrorverse (2022) - Disney Dreamlight Valley (2023) | | Other media | - Kingdom Keepers (book series) - Vinylmation (collectible toys) - Once Upon a Studio (short film) | | - Category |
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