Daria Multiverse

The Daria Multiverse is an artificial designation created by CINCGREEN that encompasses not only canon Daria episodes but all other Daria fanfiction universes as well, when those alternate realities explored in Daria fanfiction diverge signficantly from what is considered canon Daria.

These universes are designated by a numerical combination (and only rarely, letters) in the format "Daria-XXX", where XXX stands for the number. Since there is no way to automatically designate numbers, the method of assigning numbers is inspired by the late Marvel Comics editor Mark Gruenwald. In Marvel cosmology, the "number" of a universe is determined by the number of a comic book where that universe made its first appearance, or is heavily influenced by that book. The number might also relate to an important date or fact about that alternate reality.

Designations
Daria-39: the Driven Wild Universe, created by Kara Wild. The number comes from a type of eyeglass lens, CR-39. Quinn learns that her eyesight is poor in the first episode, "Rose-Colored Lenses", which necessitates Quinn wearing eyeglasses.

Daria-69: the universe of Daria 2007: The Girl From Hope written by The Angst Guy. The number "69" is referenced twice in the story.

Daria-81: the universe of The Submariner Series by Wildgoose. The number "81" was part of Wildgoose's e-mail address.

Daria-109: the Pause in the Air universe of The Angst Guy. In the fifth story, Shock and Aww, the childbirth class is held in room 109A.

Daria-125: the universe of All My Children by Deref and Thea Zara. In Chapter 3, California Dreaming, $1.25 is the price of a hamburger, fries and a coke at a hamburger joint near the Springfield Hotel.

Daria-157: the universe of Daria Von Doom by Richard Lobinske. In Marvel Comics continuity, Doctor Doom's face was injured when a machine he had created exploded after 2 minutes and 37 seconds of operation -- 157 seconds. Doctor Doom is the biological father of Daria Morgendorffer in this series.

Daria-210: the Living Dead Girls universe by Psychotol. This universe is based on the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer and the main character, Buffy Summers, supposely had 210 confirmed kills of humans and other supernatural life forms during the show's 144 episode run.

Daria-247: the universe of Roentgen's Legion of Lawndale Heroes. The first appearance of the Legion of Super-Heroes was in Adventure Comics #247.

Daria-303: the canon Daria universe, which is the universe where all episodes of Daria take place. The numerical code arises from the air date of the first episode of Daria on March 3, 1997, or 3/03/1997.

Fanfiction tales placed in the D-303 universe can be seen as fitting completely within the boundaries established by Daria episodes. D-303 stories do not significantly affect character development beyond the bounds of the show.

Daria-316: the Falling Into College universe of Richard Lobinske. Daria is assigned a room at 316 Fenderson Hall at Raft in the first episode of this story. The same author's First Summer and Last Summer series are prequels and part of the same universe.

Daria-387: the universe of It's All About Respect, created by Brother Grimace. A major character in that universe is Kyle Armalin, whose college G. P. A. was 3.87 upon graduating from the U. S. Naval Academy.

Daria-396: the A. D. Universe of Mr Anonymous. As of the time this entry was typed, there have been 396 episodes of The Simpsons aired, and Mr Anonymous is a major Simpsons fan.

Daria-550: the universe of Ben Breeck's The New Teacher Series. In Episode #107, Open Season, Daria helps the Lawndale Academic Team triumph as they score 550 points.

Daria-658: the universe of the stories of the "Diane Long continuum". The very first sentence of the very first story, It's My Party and I'll Cry, But Not in Front of You! is "It was 6:58 a. m."

Daria-706: the universe of C. E. Forman's Lost Seasons. The designation comes from Forman's apartment number at the time he created Lotto Nonsense, the first episode of his fanfiction series.

Daria-711: the universe of Richard Lobinske's Mother's Love. In the second story, Alien Home, Daria arrives at Nest sometime on early July 11th, or 7/11.

Daria-918: the universe of the The Look-Alike Series. The numerical designation comes from the conceit that Daria has a look-alike -- "The Patty Duke Show" first aired on 9/18/1963, and the premise of that program is that Patty Lane has a look-alike cousin, Cathy Lane.

Daria-1026: the universe of Bed and Breakfast Man. The universe is titled after a song by the British band Madness, and the song belongs to the album, "One Step Beyond" which was released on 10/26/1979.

Daria-1451: the universe of Richard Lobinske's John Lane. The first episode of that series, "John", starts on Columbus Day, and Christopher Columbus was born in 1451.

Daria-1839: the Love's Labour's Lost universe of E. A. Smith. Named after a Shakespeare play, "Love's Labour's Lost" was not performed in the modern era until 1839.

Daria-2012: the universe of Robert Nowall's Daria: 2010 continuum. Oddly enough, the name is not the obvious one -- the first scene starts in the 2012 Spring Semester.

Daria-5420: the universe of Michelle Klein-Hass's "Lawndale, CT" stories. The designation comes from a number on the animation model for Klein-Hass used in the Daria episode "Camp Fear"

Daria-23241: the universe of Steven Galloway's DF Continuum which includes such stories as Visitations. The designation comes from the tail end of Galloway's e-mail address at the time he submitted those stories to Outpost Daria.