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Buffyverse stories Location, time (if known) Buffy book: Buffy the Vampire Slayer: L.A., Various Novelization of the movie: Buffy book: The Harvest: Sunnydale, Various ‘Pilot’ and 'The Harvest' Buffy book: The Angel Chronicles, Vol. 1: Sunnydale, Various 'Angel,' 'Reptile Boy,' and 'Lie to Me' Buffy book: The Angel Chronicles, Vol. 2 ...
Buffy comic: The High School Years: No Need to Fear, the Slayer’s Here: Sunnydale, 1997. Between “The Harvest” and “Angel”. Buffy struggles with her Slayer duties. Buffy comic: Dead Love: Sunnydale, 1997 Buffy reads a story on one of Giles' journal about a man who has lost his wife in a car accident. Buffy comic: MacGUFFINS: Sunnydale ...
Buffyverse literature includes Buffy novels, Angel novels, Buffy/Angel novels, Tales of the Slayer, and both official and unofficial guidebooks.. Additionally, two magazine titles have been published by Titan Magazines in the United Kingdom for fans of the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer and its spin-off Angel.
The works sometimes flesh out background information on characters. For example, Go Ask Malice provides information about the origins of the character Faith Lehane. The Buffyverse comics were first published by Dark Horse, who have retained the right to produce Buffy comics. IDW now hold the license to produce Angel comics.
The huge success of the Buffy franchise led to a number of erotic parodies in comic and film formats. None of these stories were licensed by 20th Century Fox as official Buffy merchandise, and none would be considered Buffyverse canon. These parodies have included: 1993 - Muffy the Vampire Layer, a pornographic movie spoof of the Buffy film. [7]
At the Bronze, Ford entertains Willow and Xander with embarrassing stories about Buffy. Buffy introduces Angel to Ford, whom Angel becomes suspicious of. In the alley behind the Bronze, Ford sees Buffy stake a vampire; he reveals that he already knows that she is the Slayer, having found out shortly before she was expelled from their previous ...
In Part II, while fighting, Buffy comments on the choice of name, remarking she's "lived that whole thing", and that "her vampire" was much better. This is a comment on the perceived indebtedness of Meyer's Twilight, which is primarily a romance between a teenage girl and a good-natured vampire, to Whedon's Buffy.
An episode of the animated series Slayers finds the kids competing against a rival named Fluffy the Monster Annihilator, who appears as an air headed parody of Buffy. In the series 2 opener of Being Human, Annie remarks to Nina that there was a werewolf named Nina in Buffy, though this character actually appeared on its spin-off Angel. Also in ...