chronological order
26 April 2026

Resident Evil - Chronological Order Guide - Films

Resident Evil Franchise, Complete Chronology

The Complete Survival Horror Timeline: Games & Films

The narrative of Resident Evil unfolds across decades of biological warfare, corporate greed, and human resilience. This guide cleanly separates the three different beasts of the franchise: the Prime Canon (video games and CGI features), the Live-Action Alice Saga, and the Standalone Reboot.

If you want an official tone setter before diving into the lore, PlayStation’s Resident Evil introduction is a fantastic on-ramp. For navigating gameplay order across massive franchises, see our guide on how to play series chronologically.

Chronological order of the Resident Evil games

1. The Prime Canon (Games & CGI Films)

This is the definitive, interconnected timeline. The CGI films and series exist in the exact same continuity as the flagship video games. Society-ending events are heavily engineered over decades, echoing the cataclysm of Emergence Day seen in other sci-fi universes.

Resident Evil 0

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Rebecca Chambers, Billy Coen Core Theme: Corporate Vengeance
In-Universe Timeline: July 23, 1998

Plot and Lore

Set a mere twenty-four hours before the horrors of the initial Spencer Mansion invasion, this narrative follows S.T.A.R.S. Bravo Team’s investigation into the cannibalistic Arklay murders. Rookie medic Rebecca Chambers teams up with fugitive ex-marine Billy Coen. Together they navigate the doomed Ecliptic Express train and uncover a subterranean training facility. The lore reveals the bitter rivalry between Umbrella’s founders. Dr. James Marcus, betrayed and assassinated by his own proteges, returns as a bio-organic leech entity seeking revenge.

This game provides vital context, proving the T-Virus outbreak was not a mere lab accident but a deliberate act of vengeance born from cutthroat corporate backstabbing.

Resident Evil

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Jill Valentine, Chris Redfield Core Theme: Survival Horror Template
In-Universe Timeline: July 24 to July 25, 1998

Plot and Lore

Following the disappearance of Bravo Team, Alpha Team enters the seemingly abandoned Spencer Mansion, only to find an elaborate gothic deathtrap built over a massive buried laboratory. While the shuffling zombies are the headline threat, brutal betrayal is the real infection eating away at the team. Players slowly realize that Umbrella is gathering active field data on their bioweapons, using the elite S.T.A.R.S. unit as high-value test subjects.

The stellar 2002 Remake is universally recognized as the definitive canon reference point, deepening Umbrella’s internal structure and adding the tragic ecological horror subplot of Lisa Trevor.

Resident Evil 3: Nemesis

Type: Video Game Protagonist: Jill Valentine Core Theme: The Outbreak Collapse
In-Universe Timeline: September 28 to October 1, 1998

Plot and Lore

Set immediately before, during, and after the events of Resident Evil 2, this game follows Jill Valentine as she tries to escape an unraveling city. Umbrella is running a ruthless active field test in the chaos utilizing Nemesis. This towering, highly intelligent hunter-killer weapon is programmed with a singular goal to erase all remaining S.T.A.R.S. members to prevent them from testifying.

The zombie outbreak quickly becomes background noise. The real story is a desperate game of cat-and-mouse with a corporation actively cleaning up its witnesses while the city burns to the ground. It turns the sprawling outbreak into a high-octane chase film.

Resident Evil 2

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Leon S. Kennedy, Claire Redfield Core Theme: Intimate Tragedy
In-Universe Timeline: September 29 to September 30, 1998

Plot and Lore

Rookie cop Leon S. Kennedy and college student Claire Redfield arrive in Raccoon City at the absolute worst moment in modern horror history. Separated by a fiery crash, they must independently survive the labyrinthine halls of the Raccoon City Police Department. Their journey forces them down into the city's sewers and eventually into Umbrella’s clandestine NEST facility.

The narrative shifts to the devastating G-Virus story, turning the domestic tragedy of the Birkin family into an extinction-level biological accident. The relentless pursuer pressure from Mr. X teaches players the harsh lesson that safety in safe rooms is temporary. The stellar 2019 Remake established a gritty tone that heavily informs modern franchise lore.

Resident Evil: Code Veronica

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Claire Redfield, Chris Redfield Core Theme: Global Umbrella Empire
In-Universe Timeline: December 1998

Plot and Lore

Claire Redfield's relentless search for her brother Chris drags her into a secretive Umbrella prison on Rockfort Island. The island is ruled by the deeply disturbed Ashford twins, representing the decaying aristocratic legacy of Umbrella's founders. Chris eventually enters the fray mid-crisis, only to discover that Albert Wesker has miraculously returned from the dead.

This entry completely reinvents Albert Wesker from a standard twist-villain into an overarching, long-term threat. Enhanced with a mysterious virus, Wesker possesses terrifying superhuman speed and power, turning viral arms races into the series’ next massive narrative arc.

Resident Evil 4

Type: Video Game Protagonist: Leon S. Kennedy Core Theme: Action Pivot & Mind Control
In-Universe Timeline: Autumn 2004

Plot and Lore

Six years after surviving Raccoon City, a battle-hardened Leon S. Kennedy is dispatched to a remote village in rural Spain to rescue the US President’s kidnapped daughter, Ashley Graham. Instead of zombies, Leon uncovers the Los Illuminados cult and a terrifying ancient parasite known as Las Plagas. Meanwhile, Ada Wong operates in the shadows, running a parallel espionage war to secure a master Plaga sample.

This parasite shifts the fundamental biothreat from a mindless lab virus to a highly intelligent, living hive-mind control system. Widely considered one of gaming’s most successful pivots, it retains a horrific atmosphere but dresses it in high-octane velocity.

Resident Evil: Degeneration

Type: CGI Film Key Cast: Leon S. Kennedy, Claire Redfield Director: Makoto Kamiya
In-Universe Timeline: 2005

Plot and Lore

A bio attack detonates in a public airport and the story snaps into crisis logistics. It focuses heavily on containment, evacuation, government messaging, and the dirty overlap between medicine and money. Leon arrives as the already scarred specialist, while Claire arrives as the human cost conscience through her work with the TerraSave NGO.

The plot builds to a familiar shape: a public outbreak above ground and a corporate rot underneath, dealing with the direct fallout of the G-Virus legacy on the black market.

Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness

Type: CGI Series Key Cast: Leon S. Kennedy, Claire Redfield Director: Eiichiro Hasumi
In-Universe Timeline: 2006

Plot and Lore

Leon investigates a White House incident that smells like classified rot, while Claire follows a separate thread that exposes how humanitarian aid can be used as cover for bioweapon politics. The tone leans heavily into conspiracy files, hacking, and black ops.

It exposes the uneasy truth that global institutions learned to weaponize outbreaks the exact same way Umbrella did, just with substantially better PR departments.

Resident Evil 5

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Chris Redfield, Sheva Alomar Core Theme: Blockbuster Bioterror
In-Universe Timeline: March 2009

Plot and Lore

Chris Redfield, now a hardened BSAA captain bearing immense trauma, travels to the sun-baked region of Kijuju in West Africa. Partnered with local agent Sheva Alomar, they uncover TRICELL, a massive corporate successor capitalizing on Umbrella’s old research. The plot escalates wildly as Albert Wesker reveals his endgame: the Uroboros virus, designed to force global genetic evolution.

This entry definitively closes the long-running Chris versus Wesker chapter. The devastating twist of Jill Valentine being mind-controlled and weaponized turns her very identity into a psychological tool for Wesker, culminating in an infamous, bombastic volcano finale.

Resident Evil: Damnation

Type: CGI Film Key Cast: Leon S. Kennedy, Ada Wong Director: Makoto Kamiya
In-Universe Timeline: 2011

Plot and Lore

Leon steps into an Eastern European civil war where both sides are flirting with bioweapons because they think it will end the conflict faster. It does not. The film makes the bioweapons black market feel tangible, showcasing outbreaks as military strategy and monsters as political leverage.

Ada Wong appears as the franchise’s eternal shadow operator, always lingering near the viral samples and always intimately connected to the geopolitical lies.

Resident Evil: Vendetta

Type: CGI Film Key Cast: Chris Redfield, Leon S. Kennedy, Rebecca Chambers Director: Takanori Tsujimoto
In-Universe Timeline: 2014

Plot and Lore

A new bioterror plan utilizing the A-Virus threatens New York City, but the real story is the psychological state of its legacy heroes. Chris has hardened into a pure military operator, Leon is burned out into a weary cynic drinking heavily, and Rebecca serves as the bridge back to optimism through her scientific expertise.

The villain’s motive is highly personal, keeping the massive urban outbreak from feeling like a random repeat of past disasters.

Resident Evil: Death Island

Type: CGI Film Key Cast: Jill, Chris, Leon, Claire, Rebecca Director: Eiichiro Hasumi
In-Universe Timeline: 2015

Plot and Lore

An outbreak hits San Francisco, and the investigation tightens around Alcatraz Island. The film functions as an all-star team-up. The sheer pleasure is simple: it treats the long-running legacy heroes like a cohesive military unit rather than isolated protagonists.

The villain’s angle is deeply personal because, in a world this far past Raccoon City, nobody is doing bioterror for fun. They are doing it as a reaction to what the bio-wars have already taken from them.

Resident Evil 7: Biohazard

Type: Video Game Protagonist: Ethan Winters Core Theme: The Intimate Horror Reset
In-Universe Timeline: July to August 2017

Plot and Lore

Everyman Ethan Winters travels to a derelict plantation in Dulvey, Louisiana, searching for his missing wife, Mia. He unwittingly walks into a terrifying, mold-infected family tragedy engineered by a synthetic bioweapon child named Eveline. Stripped of the franchise's trademark heavy artillery, the game shifts to a claustrophobic first-person perspective.

The sentient Mutamycete mold and the shadowy crime syndicate known as The Connections become the robust new myth engine. Jack Baker acts as a relentless pursuer, proving that dark, twisted humor and genuine horror can share the exact same heartbeat. It firmly puts vulnerable survival horror back in the driver’s seat.

Resident Evil Village

Type: Video Game Protagonist: Ethan Winters Core Theme: Folklore & Mythological Roots
In-Universe Timeline: February 2021

Plot and Lore

Following a violent raid on his home by Chris Redfield, Ethan Winters is dragged into a snowy, folkloric nightmare in Eastern Europe to save his kidnapped infant daughter, Rose. Here, the mold lineage violently expands into a full-blown religious cult led by Mother Miranda and her four monstrous lords.

The story brilliantly connects the modern horror right back to the oldest Umbrella symbols, revealing that Oswell E. Spencer was originally inspired by Miranda's work. The towering Lady Dimitrescu and her opulent, blood-soaked castle became a massive cultural phenomenon, while Ethan’s heartbreaking final sacrifice provides heroic closure.

Resident Evil Requiem

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Grace Ashcroft, Leon S. Kennedy Core Theme: Returning to the Ruins
In-Universe Timeline: 2026

Plot and Lore

Just released to the world, this highly anticipated entry follows FBI analyst Grace Ashcroft as she investigates a string of bizarre new deaths tied to the condemned Wrenwood Hotel, sitting right on the irradiated outskirts of the Raccoon City ruins. Veteran agent Leon S. Kennedy returns as a second playable lead, officially pulling the series' narrative weight back toward its absolute origin point.

The game presents a chilling new case that treats the crater of Raccoon City and the legacy of the RPD like a genuinely haunted, toxic landmark, refusing to use it merely as cheap nostalgia wallpaper. The dual-protagonist pacing expertly balances Grace's vulnerable survival tension against Leon's lethal competence.

A Chronological Guide to the Resident Evil Films

2. The Live-Action Alice Saga

Six films, one separate continuity, built around Alice (an original character created for the movies). It borrows names and iconography from the games, then drives hard into apocalyptic action, clones, and corporate myth-making.

Resident Evil

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Paul W. S. Anderson Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Michelle Rodriguez
In-Universe Timeline: 2002

Plot and Lore

Alice wakes up in a mansion with her memory wiped, which is the first clue that Umbrella treats people like file folders. A tactical unit escorts her to the Hive, a subterranean lab under Raccoon City, where the Red Queen AI has sealed the facility after a T-virus release. The film plays like a pressure cooker: clean corridors, automated defenses, and staff who become the problem they were hired to solve.

It pulls the early franchise grammar perfectly: Umbrella as the corporate villain, enclosed survival spaces, and the signature rhythm of escaping the facility only to realize the facility is everywhere.

Resident Evil: Apocalypse

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Alexander Witt Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Sienna Guillory
In-Universe Timeline: 2002 (Days after previous film)

Plot and Lore

Raccoon City collapses in real time and Umbrella responds like a government inside a company with walls, checkpoints, and a countdown to nuclear sanitization. Alice wakes up infected and enhanced, which quietly shifts the franchise from survival to pursuit. Jill Valentine and Carlos Oliveira pull the movie closer to recognizable franchise skin.

Nemesis is introduced as Umbrella’s walking eraser, a hunter designed to delete witnesses. This is the most overtly game-shaped entry in the Alice saga, heavily leaning on Resident Evil 3’s chase structure.

Resident Evil: Extinction

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Russell Mulcahy Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Ali Larter
In-Universe Timeline: 2007 (5 Years Later)

Plot and Lore

The T-virus has taken the whole planet. The saga becomes a desert convoy story where survivors ration fuel and hope, cities are skeletons, and Umbrella still operates like a parasite that refuses to die. Claire Redfield leads a caravan chasing a rumored safe haven, while Dr. Isaacs embodies Umbrella’s real obsession: replication over cure.

Alice becomes proof that the virus can be turned into power, so Umbrella attempts to turn her into a mass-produced product line via cloning.

Resident Evil: Afterlife

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Paul W. S. Anderson Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Wentworth Miller
In-Universe Timeline: 2010 (Months After Extinction)

Plot and Lore

Alice leads a clone raid on Umbrella’s Tokyo HQ, then the film strips her powers and forces her back into human limits. She and Claire chase the Arcadia rumor and end up at a prison full of survivors in the ruins of Los Angeles. Albert Wesker steps into the spotlight as a superhuman corporate warlord.

Chris Redfield enters the movie continuity, and suddenly the films are wearing more game faces than ever, borrowing heavy visual and creature cues from the RE5 era.

Resident Evil: Retribution

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Paul W. S. Anderson Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Bingbing Li
In-Universe Timeline: 2012 (Immediate Follow-Up)

Plot and Lore

Alice wakes in a massive underwater Umbrella facility that stages outbreaks like product demonstrations. Whole cities are rebuilt as sets, complete with scripted chaos, because the corporation is literally selling apocalypse as a commodity to foreign powers. Familiar faces return in altered forms through clones and mind control.

Ada Wong and Leon S. Kennedy appear in this continuity, signaling the saga admitting it has become a full franchise mash-up. It raids the action-era toy box, utilizing Jill's chest-mounted mind control device directly from the games.

If you want a quick "what do people even count as canon" temperature check before diving deeper into the lore debates, this newcomers guide on r/residentevil is a useful compass.

Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Paul W. S. Anderson Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Iain Glen
In-Universe Timeline: 2017

Plot and Lore

The saga sprints back to the Hive beneath Raccoon City and tries to tie its knots into something that looks like a cohesive plan. Alice is framed as the last piece that can break Umbrella’s machine, utilizing an airborne antivirus cure. It plays like a greatest-hits sprint through betrayal, origin stories, and corporate myth.

The film’s big move is recontextualization. It wants the audience to reread the whole saga through Umbrella’s founding lies and Alice’s manufactured identity, proving that survival is not enough; the ultimate fantasy is dismantling the institution that ruined the world.

resident evil film chronological order

3. The Standalone Reboot

A separate cinematic continuity that aims closer to the early survival-horror vibe of the 90s games, directly adapting major elements of the original PlayStation classics.

Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City

Type: Live-Action Reboot Director: Johannes Roberts Key Cast: Kaya Scodelario, Robbie Amell
In-Universe Timeline: September 1998 (Alternate Universe)

Plot and Lore

Raccoon City is already rotting when Claire returns, and the movie treats the town like a company-town ghost story. It features abandoned streets, an underfunded police department, and Umbrella looming over everything like a dying god. The narrative cuts between the Spencer Mansion and the RPD, compressing the events of two classic games into one single night of escalation.

This is the clearest attempt at direct adaptation in live action. It pulls major beats, locations, and names from Resident Evil and Resident Evil 2, then remixes them for film pacing. The core idea is brilliantly simple: if your whole town is built on one corporation, that corporation’s sins become your weather.

chronological order
22 April 2026

Star Trek: Chronological Timeline Order > TV + Films

The Final Frontier A Complete Chronological Timeline of Star Trek

The Star Trek franchise spans centuries of in-universe history, across dozens of television series, films, and alternate timelines. To help navigate this expansive canon, this guide organizes all major entries in strict chronological order 0 based on the events as they occur in the timeline of the universe, not by their real-world release dates.

This journey begins with the foundational days of Starfleet in Enterprise, moves through the golden age of exploration with Kirk and Pike, and wades into the dense, politically charged 24th-century arc shared by The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager. It concludes in the far-flung 32nd century of Discovery. Alternate realities, like the branching Kelvin timeline, are noted exactly where they diverge.

Whether you're plotting a comprehensive rewatch or seeking the historical context for a specific episode, this timeline brings structure to one of science fiction’s most enduring and complex mythologies.

Star Trek: Enterprise

Timeline2151–2161  |  FormatTV Series


Captain Jonathan Archer commands Earth's first Warp 5 starship, the NX-01. The series chronicles humanity's initial, clumsy forays into deep space, navigating a hostile Temporal Cold War, preventing the destruction of Earth by the Xindi, and brokering the early alliances that directly result in the Coalition of Planets.

Unlike the polished utopia of later eras, Enterprise explores the messy, dangerous reality of being the "new kids on the galactic block." It relies heavily on themes of real-world post-9/11 paranoia (especially in Season 3) and the ethical growing pains required to ultimately draft the Prime Directive.

The theme song, "Faith of the Heart," was a massive departure from traditional orchestral scores and remains famously controversial. The show’s abrupt cancellation after four seasons marked the end of an uninterrupted 18-year run of Star Trek on television.

Star Trek: Discovery (Seasons 1–2)

Timeline2256–2258  |  FormatTV Series


Set a decade before Kirk's five-year mission, Specialist Michael Burnham's mutiny triggers a devastating war with the Klingon Empire. The USS Discovery utilizes a highly classified, experimental "Spore Drive" for instantaneous travel, eventually facing off against a rogue AI threat known as Control.

These early seasons deeply challenge Federation idealism. By thrusting Starfleet into a brutal war, it asks whether utopian values can survive existential threats, heavily exploring trauma, redemption, and the dark underbelly of Starfleet via the covert intelligence agency, Section 31.

As the first Trek show created for streaming, it modernized the franchise's visuals and adopted heavily serialized storytelling. Its introduction of Captain Christopher Pike in Season 2 was so well-received it directly spawned a highly successful spin-off.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds

Timeline2259–Present  |  FormatTV Series


Following the defeat of Control, Captain Christopher Pike leads the USS Enterprise on classic missions of deep space exploration. The crew encounters terrifying new threats like the Gorn Hegemony, while Pike secretly wrestles with the foreknowledge of his own tragic, inescapable fate.

A triumphant return to the franchise’s roots, the show emphasizes episodic, "planet-of-the-week" storytelling. It focuses on relentless optimism, the wonder of discovery, and the idea that true leadership requires serving others even when you know it will cost you everything.

Greenlit almost entirely due to fan demand for Anson Mount’s portrayal of Pike, the series is widely praised for perfectly bridging the gap between modern television production values and the vibrant, colorful aesthetic of the 1960s original.

Star Trek: The Original Series

Timeline2265–2269  |  FormatTV Series


Captain James T. Kirk and Mr. Spock in Star Trek: The Original Series

Captain James T. Kirk, Mr. Spock, and Dr. McCoy lead the USS Enterprise on an iconic five-year mission. They establish the Romulan Neutral Zone, enforce the Organian Peace Treaty with the Klingons, and face down omnipotent beings, rogue computers, and ancient space anomalies.

Conceived as a "Wagon Train to the stars," the show used allegorical sci-fi to tackle contemporary 1960s social issues. It presented a radically progressive vision of the future where racism, sexism, and global conflicts were eradicated, functioning as a beacon of Cold War-era hope.

This serves as the foundation of the entire mythos. It featured network television's first interracial kiss and introduced the world to now-ubiquitous sci-fi tropes like the transporter, warp drive, and the famous Vulcan salute (invented on set by Leonard Nimoy).

Star Trek: The Animated Series

Timeline2269–2270  |  FormatAnimated Series


Completing the final year of the five-year mission, the Enterprise crew encounters bizarre, non-humanoid alien life and cosmic phenomena. The animated medium allowed them to explore aquatic worlds and towering aliens (like crewmembers Arex and M'Ress) that live-action budgets couldn't achieve.

Despite being a Saturday morning cartoon, TAS maintained the mature, philosophical tone of the live-action series. It continued to explore themes of non-interference and peaceful diplomacy, expanding the universe without dumbing down the narratives.

Though its official status was fiercely debated by Gene Roddenberry and fans for decades, it introduced massive staples to the lore: the first depiction of a holodeck (the "rec room"), Spock's childhood on Vulcan, and Kirk's middle name, "Tiberius."

Star Trek: The Motion Picture

Timeline2273  |  FormatMovie


Admiral Kirk reassumes command of a newly refitted USS Enterprise to intercept a massive, mysterious energy cloud on a direct course for Earth, absorbing and destroying everything in its path.

Deliberately embracing a slow, awe-inspired tone reminiscent of classic sci-fi cinema, it focuses on the philosophical question of what it means for a machine to seek its creator and achieve true consciousness.

This film began life as a script for a cancelled television series called Star Trek: Phase II, eventually pivoting into a massive theatrical release due to the massive cultural success of competing sci-fi blockbusters.

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

Timeline2285  |  FormatMovie


A vengeful Khan Noonien Singh, a genetically engineered tyrant from Kirk's past, returns to steal a terraforming device capable of creating or destroying entire planets to exact his revenge.

The film acts as a deep exploration of aging, mortality, friendship, and the realization that past actions—even those made with good intentions—carry inescapable, deadly consequences.

Spock's iconic sacrifice and the film's tense submarine-style warfare saved the franchise, establishing the action-heavy "revenge" formula that future installments would attempt to replicate for decades.

Star Trek III: The Search for Spock

Timeline2285  |  FormatMovie


Following Spock's death, Admiral Kirk and his crew risk their careers, their freedom, and their lives to steal the USS Enterprise and return to the Genesis Planet to search for their friend's body and soul.

Dealing heavily with themes of loyalty and grief, it asks how far one is willing to go for a loved one, directly continuing the emotional fallout and literal destruction of the previous film.

Leonard Nimoy directed this installment, which gave him significant creative input on his character's resurrection and marked the beginning of his highly successful directing career.

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home

Timeline2286  |  FormatMovie


To save Earth from a destructive alien probe seeking to communicate with extinct humpback whales, the crew travels back in time in a stolen Klingon Bird-of-Prey to 1986 San Francisco to retrieve a pair of the mammals.

A significant departure in tone, this film is a lighthearted, comedic adventure with a strong environmental message about conservation and mankind's hubris regarding the natural world.

It became the most financially successful of the original cast films during its run, appealing broadly to general audiences who loved the accessible "fish out of water" comedy over hardcore sci-fi.

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier

Timeline2287  |  FormatMovie


Spock's long-lost, emotional half-brother hijacks the newly commissioned Enterprise-A on a messianic quest to the center of the galaxy to find the mythical planet of Sha Ka Ree, believed to be the home of God.

Directed by William Shatner, the film attempts to explore themes of religious zealotry, existential pain, and whether our trauma defines who we are or merely holds us back.

Plagued by a writers' strike, massive budget cuts, and special effects that fell far short of expectations, it was met with a mixed critical and fan reception, nearly ending the film series.

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country

Timeline2293  |  FormatMovie


After a catastrophic moon explosion pushes the Klingon Empire toward collapse, Kirk is tasked with escorting their chancellor to peace talks—only to be framed for his assassination by a vast conspiracy.

A tense political thriller heavily mirroring the fall of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War. It explores prejudice, racism, and the fear of letting go of lifelong hatreds.

This film serves as a widely beloved final bow for the entire original cast, ending poignantly with their physical signatures appearing gracefully across the screen in the final credits.

Timeline Branch: The Kelvin Timeline (Alternate Reality)

Star Trek (2009)

TimelineAlt. 2258  |  FormatMovie


A time-traveling Romulan destroys the USS Kelvin, altering history. In this new reality, an orphaned, rebellious James T. Kirk must rise to the occasion and team up with Spock to save Earth.

This timeline explores the "nature vs. nurture" debate, proving that Kirk and Spock are destined to be friends and leaders regardless of the tragedy that drastically reshaped their lives.

Created by J.J. Abrams to reboot the franchise for a broader, mainstream audience without erasing the original canon. It was a massive financial success that rejuvenated the brand entirely.

Star Trek Into Darkness

TimelineAlt. 2259  |  FormatMovie


When a devastating terrorist attack strikes Starfleet Command, the Enterprise crew is sent on a manhunt that uncovers a covert, militarized conspiracy led by a superhuman from the past.

The film heavily critiques drone warfare, preemptive strikes, and the compromise of utopian values in the name of security, reinterpreting the original story of Khan Noonien Singh.

While visually spectacular and successful at the box office, many hardcore fans debated the necessity of hiding Khan's identity and reversing the famous radiation sacrifice scene from The Wrath of Khan.

Star Trek Beyond

TimelineAlt. 2263  |  FormatMovie


Three years into their five-year mission, the Enterprise is ambushed and destroyed by a massive, coordinated swarm fleet, stranding the fractured crew on a hostile, uncharted planet.

Returning to core franchise values, the film argues that the Federation's strength lies in its diversity, unity, and exploration, rather than in isolationism and warfare.

Co-written by Simon Pegg (who plays Scotty), the film celebrated Star Trek's 50th anniversary with numerous homages and a dedication to the late Leonard Nimoy and Anton Yelchin.

Star Trek: The Next Generation

Timeline2364–2370  |  FormatTV Series


Captain Picard captured and tortured by Cardassians in the gripping TNG episode Chain of Command

A century after Kirk, Captain Jean-Luc Picard commands the massive Enterprise-D. The crew establishes peace with the Klingons, navigates border wars with the Cardassians, and faces existential threats from the cybernetic Borg and the omnipotent entity known as Q.

TNG represents Gene Roddenberry's ultimate, uncompromised vision. It relies on diplomacy, science, and philosophical debate over "cowboy diplomacy." The core theme is humanity's limitless potential to evolve past its violent, greedy history into enlightened explorers.

A television juggernaut that surpassed the original series in ratings and global reach. Patrick Stewart’s Picard became a cultural icon of intellectual leadership. The two-part episode "The Best of Both Worlds" is widely considered one of the greatest TV cliffhangers in history.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

Timeline2369–2375  |  FormatTV Series


Commander Benjamin Sisko commands a stationary outpost near a stable wormhole. What begins as a mission to help Bajor rebuild after a brutal Cardassian occupation erupts into a quadrant-spanning conflict against shape-shifting genetic engineers from the Gamma Quadrant.

DS9 brilliantly deconstructs the Starfleet utopia. It directly asks: "Is it easy to be a saint in paradise?" The series explores war, occupation, terrorism, religious zealotry, and the dark moral compromises good people must make when their survival is on the line.

Decades ahead of its time, DS9 abandoned episodic formats for intense, serialized storytelling. Featuring Star Trek's first Black lead and a deeply complex ensemble of morally grey characters, it is now critically regarded by many as the franchise's creative peak.

Star Trek Generations

Timeline2371  |  FormatMovie


Captain Picard and his crew face a madman willing to destroy entire star systems to re-enter a temporal energy ribbon called the Nexus, forcing Picard to seek the help of a legendary predecessor.

Serving as a literal bridge between The Original Series and The Next Generation, the movie explores themes of time, mortality, and what it means to make a lasting difference.

The film is famous for the controversial, permanent death of Captain Kirk and the spectacular crash-landing and total destruction of the iconic USS Enterprise-D.

Star Trek: Voyager

Timeline2371–2378  |  FormatTV Series


The bridge crew of the USS Voyager led by Captain Kathryn Janeway

Thrown 70,000 light-years from home by an alien entity, Captain Kathryn Janeway must merge her Starfleet crew with a band of Maquis rebels. Their 75-year journey back brings them face-to-face with new enemies like the Kazon, Species 8472, and the heart of Borg space.

The core of Voyager is perseverance and found family. Stranded without Federation backup, the show explores how difficult it is to uphold Starfleet ideals when rules like the Prime Directive are actively hindering your chances of getting home alive.

Janeway was the franchise’s first female captain in a lead role, inspiring a generation of women in STEM. The introduction of the liberated Borg drone, Seven of Nine, provided the series with its most compelling character arc regarding the reclamation of humanity.

Star Trek: First Contact

Timeline2373  |  FormatMovie


Captain Picard faces off against the Borg Queen in Star Trek: First Contact

The Borg travel back in time to stop humanity's first warp flight and prevent the birth of the Federation. Picard and his crew must follow them to 2063 to ensure history unfolds correctly.

Widely considered the best of the TNG films, it is an action-packed exploration of the Borg's terrifying nature and a deep character study of Picard's unresolved PTSD from his assimilation.

The film radically altered franchise lore by introducing the Borg Queen, giving a face and singular voice to the previously faceless, collective cybernetic race.

Star Trek: Insurrection

Timeline2375  |  FormatMovie


Captain Picard defies a corrupt Starfleet admiral's orders to protect a peaceful, technologically stagnant race whose homeworld emits regenerative, life-extending radiation.

The film attempts to return to the moral and ethical dilemmas of the television series, questioning the ethics of forced relocation and whether the ends justify the means.

While praised for its character moments, many critics and fans felt its smaller scope and localized stakes made it feel more like an extended, high-budget TV episode than a feature film.

Star Trek: Nemesis

Timeline2379  |  FormatMovie


The Enterprise is diverted to Romulus under the guise of peace, where a human clone of Picard named Shinzon has taken brutal control of the Senate and seeks the destruction of Earth.

A dark reflection on identity, the film asks whether we are born good or evil, or if we are shaped entirely by our circumstances, experiences, and choices.

Featuring the tragic sacrifice of Data, the film was a critical and commercial failure that effectively killed the TNG film era and put the entire film franchise on ice for seven years.

Star Trek: Lower Decks

Timeline2380–2381  |  FormatAnimated Series


Set just after Nemesis, the series follows the support crew serving on one of Starfleet's least important ships, the USS Cerritos. Ensigns Mariner, Boimler, Tendi, and Rutherford handle the menial tasks while upper management hogs the bridge and the glory.

While fundamentally a comedy, it explores the mundane realities and bureaucratic absurdities of living in a utopia. It ultimately proves that heroism, sacrifice, and genuine Starfleet ideals exist in the lower ranks just as much as they do in the captain's chair.

The first outright comedy in Star Trek history. Despite its humorous tone, it is incredibly rigorous with its canon, bringing back obscure lore and successfully executing a highly praised, mind-bending live-action crossover with Strange New Worlds.

Star Trek: Prodigy

Timeline2383–2384  |  FormatAnimated Series


A motley crew of enslaved alien teenagers in the Delta Quadrant discover an abandoned Starfleet vessel, the USS Protostar. Guided by a holographic Janeway, they must learn to work together to escape their captors and navigate their way toward Federation space.

Geared towards a younger audience, Prodigy takes a brilliant approach: the characters know nothing about the Federation. Through their fresh eyes, the audience learns the fundamental values of Starfleet—cooperation, scientific curiosity, and the right to a second chance.

Visually stunning, the 3D-animated series acts as a direct spiritual successor to Voyager. It successfully introduced a new generation of children to the philosophical concepts of Star Trek while maintaining high-stakes storytelling that long-time fans praised.

Star Trek: Picard

Timeline2399–2402  |  FormatTV Series


Decades after retiring in protest over Starfleet's refusal to aid Romulan refugees, Jean-Luc Picard is pulled into a conspiracy involving synthetic life. Over three seasons, he traverses the galaxy to save Data's offspring, battles Q, and reunites the old TNG crew.

A melancholic character study, the series wrestles with aging, hubris, and the realization that trusted institutions can fail us. It focuses on finding renewed purpose at the end of one's life, transitioning into a story about parenthood and passing the torch.

Season 3 became a massive cultural event for Trek fans, acting as the true finale that the TNG cast never received in Nemesis. The spectacular rebuild of the Enterprise-D bridge and the promotion of Seven of Nine left a major mark on the modern canon.

Star Trek: Discovery (Seasons 3–5)

Timeline3188–3191  |  FormatTV Series


To hide vital data from Control, the USS Discovery jumps 930 years into the future. They arrive to find the Federation shattered by "The Burn," a cataclysm that destroyed most warp capability. Burnham and her crew must solve the mystery and rebuild the alliance.

By moving to a fractured, post-apocalyptic future, the show flips the premise of Star Trek: instead of exploring the unknown to build a utopia, they are trying to rebuild a utopia that was lost. The overarching theme is connection and restoring hope.

The time jump was an unprecedented creative decision that completely freed the show from existing canon constraints. It introduced radical future technologies like programmable matter and detached warp nacelles, pushing the timeline further ahead than any previous media.

chronological order
20 April 2026

X-Men Movies in Chronological Order + Timeline

Mutant History Chronology

The X-Men Film Universe in Chronological Order

The X-Men film series stands as a convoluted, magnificent achievement in superhero cinema. Spanning 24 years, two distinct timelines, and multiple reboots, it tracks the ideological war between Charles Xavier and Erik Lehnsherr across nearly a century. This guide navigates the "Fox Universe" (Earth-10005) from the 1960s Cuban Missile Crisis through the revised timeline created by time travel, culminating in the multiversal crossover of 2024.

Note: The timeline was "soft rebooted" in 2014, meaning events in films set after 1973 diverge into two separate realities.

January Jones in X-Men: First Class

Era I: Origins and The Divergence (1962–1992)

The prequel films that established the relationship between Charles Xavier and Erik Lehnsherr. This era serves as the foundation for both the "Original" and "Revised" timelines.

1. X-Men: First Class

Release: 2011 Setting: 1962

Set during the Cuban Missile Crisis, the film reveals the origin of the "X-Men" name and the paralysis of Charles Xavier. It introduces the Hellfire Club, led by Sebastian Shaw, who manipulates nations toward nuclear war. The climax sees Magneto kill Shaw and embrace his helmet (which blocks telepathy), officially creating the ideological split between the X-Men and the Brotherhood.

Timeline Connection: Establishes the close brotherly bond between Xavier and Mystique, a relationship that becomes the emotional hinge for the timeline reset in Days of Future Past.
Lore Note: Actress January Jones, who played Emma Frost, took the role to do something different from her 1960s-set TV show Mad Men, only to discover First Class was also set in the '60s.

2. X-Men: Days of Future Past

Release: 2014 Setting: 1973 / 2023

The fulcrum of the entire franchise. In a dystopian 2023 where Sentinels have exterminated mutants, Kitty Pryde sends Wolverine's consciousness back to 1973 to stop Mystique from assassinating Bolivar Trask. This assassination is the key event that originally authorized the Sentinel program. By stopping it, Wolverine erases the "Original Trilogy" timeline (X-Men, X2, The Last Stand) and creates a new, hopeful future.

Timeline Connection: The "New Future" shown at the end features a living Jean Grey and Cyclops, confirming that the tragic events of The Last Stand never happened in this new reality.
Lore Note: In the film's universe, President John F. Kennedy was secretly a mutant. His assassination is re-contextualized as a conspiracy against mutants.

3. X-Men Origins: Wolverine

Release: 2009 Setting: 1845–1979

A look at Logan's life before the X-Men, covering his time in the Civil War, WWI, WWII, and Vietnam alongside his half-brother Victor Creed (Sabretooth). The core plot details his time in "Team X" under William Stryker and the painful procedure that bonded adamantium to his skeleton. It culminates in a fight against "Weapon XI" — a butchered, mute version of Deadpool.

Timeline Connection: The film's version of Deadpool is universally reviled and is explicitly "cleaned up" by Ryan Reynolds via time travel in the post-credits of Deadpool 2.
Lore Note: The screenplay was co-written by David Benioff, who would later co-create HBO's Game of Thrones.

4. X-Men: Apocalypse

Release: 2016 Setting: 1983 (Revised Timeline)

Set in the new timeline created by Days of Future Past. The ancient mutant En Sabah Nur awakens and recruits Four Horsemen (including Magneto) to cleanse the earth. The film re-introduces younger versions of Cyclops, Jean Grey, Storm, and Nightcrawler. It features a pivotal scene where a feral Wolverine escapes the Weapon X facility, gifted a small memory restoration by Jean Grey.

Timeline Connection: Shows the first flare of the Phoenix Force within Jean Grey, setting up the conflict for the next film.
Lore Note: Features the third on-screen appearance of Nightcrawler, played by Kodi Smit-McPhee (previously Alan Cumming in X2).

5. X-Men: Dark Phoenix

Release: 2019 Setting: 1992 (Revised Timeline)

The final chapter of the prequel quadrilogy. During a space rescue mission, Jean Grey absorbs a massive cosmic entity. The power corrupts her, leading to the accidental death of Mystique and a fracture within the X-Men. The film ends with Xavier retiring and the school being renamed the "Jean Grey School for Gifted Youngsters."

Timeline Connection: Unlike The Last Stand, Jean is not killed by Wolverine but evolves into a cosmic being, leaving Earth to explore the universe.
Lore Note: This is the first mainline X-Men film without Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, marking the end of an era for the Fox franchise.

Era II: The Original Trilogy (Early 2000s)

These films take place in the original timeline that was eventually erased/overwritten by the time travel in Days of Future Past.

6. X-Men

Release: 2000 Setting: ~2000

The introduction of mutants to the wider public. Rogue runs away from home after nearly killing her boyfriend with her power absorption abilities and meets Logan. They are taken in by the X-Men, who are fighting Magneto's plan to use a machine on the Statue of Liberty to forcibly mutate world leaders.

Timeline Connection: Establish the "amnesia" plot point for Logan that drives the trilogy, a direct result of the adamantium bullet he took in Origins: Wolverine.
Lore Note: In the comics, Sabretooth is an Iron Fist villain; this film cemented his connection to Wolverine in pop culture.

7. X2: X-Men United

Release: 2003 Setting: 2003

Widely considered the peak of the original trilogy. Colonel William Stryker attacks the X-Mansion to kidnap students and use Xavier's powers (via a duplicate Cerebro) to telepathically kill all mutants. The X-Men and Brotherhood form a temporary alliance. Jean Grey seemingly sacrifices herself at Alkali Lake to stop a massive flood.

Timeline Connection: Flashes of Logan's past at Alkali Lake directly reference the Weapon X procedures shown in Origins and Apocalypse.
Lore Note: The "Danger Room" set was built but the scene was cut due to budget constraints.

8. X-Men: The Last Stand

Release: 2006 Setting: 2006

The darkest chapter of the original timeline. A "mutant cure" is developed, sparking a war. Jean Grey returns as the Dark Phoenix, killing Cyclops and Professor Xavier. The film ends with Wolverine being forced to kill Jean to save the world, a trauma that haunts him for years.

Timeline Connection: The massive loss of life and political instability here leads directly to the dystopian Sentinel future seen in the opening of Days of Future Past.
Lore Note: Briefly the most expensive film ever made at the time ($210 million).
Hugh Jackman in The Wolverine

Era III: The Modern Era & The End (2013–2029)

The films that deal with the aftermath of the timeline reset, the solo adventures, and the final conclusion of the Fox Universe.

9. The Wolverine

Release: 2013 Setting: 2013

Set years after The Last Stand, Logan lives as a hermit in the Yukon, hallucinating Jean Grey. He travels to Japan to say goodbye to a dying soldier he saved in WWII, only to be stripped of his healing factor and hunted by Yakuza. He regains his spirit but loses his adamantium claws (regrowing his bone ones).

Timeline Connection: The post-credits scene features a resurrected Xavier and Magneto approaching Logan at an airport, warning him of the Sentinel threat, leading directly into Days of Future Past.
Lore Note: The "Unleashed Extended Edition" features 12 extra minutes of more brutal combat.

10. Deadpool

Release: 2016 Setting: 2016 (Revised Timeline)

Wade Wilson, a mercenary diagnosed with cancer, undergoes a rogue experiment to cure himself, leaving him disfigured but immortal. He hunts down Ajax, the man responsible. The film ignores the "Weapon XI" version from Origins entirely.

Timeline Connection: Features a scrapped Helicarrier that resembles the ones from the MCU, and explicitly jokes about the confusing timeline ("McAvoy or Stewart?").
Lore Note: Ryan Reynolds' muscle mass was so significant that the muscle padding in the suit had to be removed.

11. Deadpool 2

Release: 2018 Setting: 2018 (Revised Timeline)

Deadpool forms the X-Force to protect a young mutant, Russell, from Cable, a time-traveling soldier from the future. Cable's future is different from the Days of Future Past Sentinel future, indicating the timeline has indeed shifted. Key plot involves the use of a Time Travel device.

Timeline Connection: In the mid-credits, Deadpool uses Cable's device to travel back and kill the Origins version of Deadpool, canonically cleaning up the timeline errors.
Lore Note: The cameo of the main X-Men team closing the door was filmed on the set of Dark Phoenix.

12. The New Mutants

Release: 2020 Setting: ~2026

Five young mutants are held in a psychiatric hospital that is revealed to be a facility run by the Essex Corporation. They must face their fears (manifested by the Demon Bear) to escape. It's a contained horror story that highlights the corporate exploitation of mutants.

Timeline Connection: The Essex Corporation (Nathaniel Essex/Mr. Sinister) link ties this film to the DNA collection plot points hinted at in Apocalypse and Logan.
Lore Note: The final film of the Fox era before the Disney acquisition.

13. Logan

Release: 2017 Setting: 2029

The tragic finale. In 2029, no new mutants have been born for 25 years due to genetically modified food. The X-Men are dead, killed by a seizure-induced telepathic blast from an aged Charles Xavier in Westchester. Logan, dying of adamantium poisoning, makes one last run to save his clone daughter, Laura (X-23). He dies protecting her, marking the end of the Wolverine.

Timeline Connection: This is the definitive end of the Fox X-Men timeline (Earth-10005). The grave of Logan becomes a sacred point in the multiverse.
Lore Note: Inspired by the "Old Man Logan" comic run and classic westerns like Shane.

14. Deadpool & Wolverine

Release: 2024 Setting: 2024 / The Void

Six years after Deadpool 2, Wade Wilson is detained by the Time Variance Authority (TVA). He learns that his universe (Earth-10005) is decaying because its "Anchor Being" (Logan) died in 2029. To save his world, Deadpool travels the multiverse to find a replacement Wolverine. He teams up with a "failed" variant of Logan to stop Cassandra Nova in the Void.

Timeline Connection: It officially bridges the Fox Universe to the Marvel Cinematic Universe (Earth-616). It canonizes Logan (2017) as the absolute end of the 10005 timeline while allowing variants to exist.
Lore Note: Features the return of Hugh Jackman, who previously retired from the role, and explicitly references the Disney acquisition as a plot point.

Multiverse Incursions: X-Men in the MCU

Following Disney's acquisition of 20th Century Fox, classic X-Men actors began appearing in Marvel Cinematic Universe projects via the multiverse.

WandaVision

Release: 2021 Format: TV Series

Evan Peters, who played Quicksilver (Peter Maximoff) in the Fox prequel films, appears at Wanda Maximoff's door claiming to be her lost brother Pietro. While initially seeming like a massive multiverse crossover, it is later revealed he is a resident of Westview named Ralph Bohner under a spell, serving as a meta-commentary on the audience's expectations.

Legacy: The first acknowledgment of Fox casting within the MCU architecture.

Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness

Release: 2022 Format: Film

Doctor Strange visits Earth-838, where he stands trial before the Illuminati. The group is led by Professor Charles Xavier, played once again by Patrick Stewart. This version utilizes the classic yellow hoverchair from *X-Men: The Animated Series* and quotes dialogue from *Days of Future Past* before being killed by the Scarlet Witch.

Legacy: Confirmed that variants of the classic X-Men exist in parallel MCU dimensions.

The Marvels

Release: 2023 Format: Film

In the post-credits scene, Monica Rambeau wakes up in a parallel universe where her mother, Maria, is the hero Binary. She is treated by none other than Dr. Hank McCoy (Beast), voiced and played by Kelsey Grammer in his classic blue fur form from *X-Men: The Last Stand*, confirming the X-Men are active in this reality.

Legacy: Sets up a direct link between the MCU main timeline and a fully operational X-Men universe.
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