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The Chosen One: Every Generation Found Its One Saga to Obsess Over

Whether it is the Balance of the Force or the Prince Who Was Promised, we are all chasing the same high. From the long wait for the Star Wars prequels to the internet breaking over R+L=J, every generation has one iconic saga that turns lore into a literal cult.

6 min read
The Chosen One: Every Generation Found Its One Saga to Obsess Over

The Prince Who Was Promised.

There is something so haunting about a hero being "promised" to a world that usually doesn't deserve them. It is a concept that turns a standard story into something that feels like ancient mythology. For every dark shadow rising in a franchise, there is always a Chosen One destined to meet it. Every generation has at least one of these saviors to obsess over. It is the core myth we all cling to.

Whether it is the "Balance of the Force" or the "Prince Who Was Promised" these lores turned into literal cults. We do not just watch these stories. We become amateur theologians debating ancient prophecies with the same intensity people used to reserve for actual history.

Gen X and the Skywalker Legacy

For Gen X the "Chosen One" trope in the Sci-Fi genre was the blueprint. They saw Luke Skywalker first. He was the farm boy who was the face of the rebellion. But the real deep talk, the stuff that keeps geeks arguing for decades, is the tragedy of the man who was actually supposed to bring balance.

George Lucas made us wait 30 years to see the full arc. Gen X got the original trilogy then waited three decades for the prequels to explain why Anakin Skywalker was the way he was. This craze eventually blended with Millennials who grew up in the heat of the Prequel Trilogy. This is where the fandom really became a culture. We spent years debating if "bringing balance" meant destroying the Sith or if the Jedi were just as responsible for the mess.

We have to talk about Hayden Christensen. The man is a legend now but he had a rough start with the critics. Real fans know his performance was a masterclass in portraying a young man being groomed and manipulated by a Sith Lord. Lucas was so committed to Hayden being the "true" Anakin that he digitally edited his face into the end of Return of the Jedi as a Force Ghost. It was a move that basically shouted that this is the Chosen One. Seeing a middle aged Hayden return in recent canon like Obi-Wan Kenobi and Ahsoka, looking exactly like the "Clone Wars" Anakin we theorized about for years, feels like a collective win for everyone who defended him in 2005.

Millennials: The Spoiled Generation of Saviors

If you are a Millennial you were absolutely spoiled. You did not just get one Chosen One. You got a whole roster of them. You grew up in the golden age where directors were taking massive swings with massive source material.

First and foremost we have to talk about J.R.R. Tolkien. He is the architect of this entire vibe. Without his "Return of the King" lore we do not have anything else on this list. Peter Jackson brought Tolkien's vision to life and Millennials spent their lives obsessed with the bloodline of Aragorn and the burden of Frodo. We were the generation that watched the 12 hour extended editions just to see the behind the scenes footage of the actors living in New Zealand.

Then you had Harry Potter. We literally grew up with the "Boy Who Lived." We saw the cast hit puberty on screen while we were doing the same. We spent a decade debating the prophecy about how either must die at the hand of the other. It was a decade long mystery that defined our childhoods. We were spoiled because we had the wizarding world and Middle-earth happening at the exact same time.

Game of Thrones: The R+L=J Fever Dream

The R+L=J theory was the holy grail of internet sleuthing. For almost ten years fans obsessed over the idea that Jon Snow was the secret son of Rhaegar Targaryen and Lyanna Stark. We looked at every blue winter rose and every mention of the "Song of Ice and Fire" as proof. When the show finally confirmed it with that transition from the baby’s face to Jon’s face the internet basically broke. Even though a lot of fans did not like Season 8, we have to admit that Millennials grew up with that show and the hype remains unmatched to this day. It was the peak of theory culture where the lore became more important than the show itself.

Stranger Things: The Final Upside Down

Now that Stranger Things has reached its grand conclusion we can finally look back at the chaos of this Supernatural Horror masterpiece. The Duffer Brothers really played with our hearts by dropping the final season in parts. The wait between those drops was agonizing. It felt like the old days of waiting for a book release. The hype was so massive that the finale even had cinema premieres. Everyone wanted to see the fate of Hawkins on the big screen.

Before the release the theories were out of control. Fans were convinced Eddie Munson would return as Kas the Destroyer to help Eleven. People spent hours analyzing the clock chimes and the Vecna lore. The obsession was peak internet culture.

Seeing the show end felt like the end of an era. It was the rare saga that managed to touch everyone. It had the 80s aesthetic and synth-heavy vibe that made Gen X nostalgic. It had the "kids on bikes" friendship and D&D focus that Millennials loved. And for Gen Z and Gen Alpha it was their defining saga. It was their Star Wars.

Whether you are waiting for a dragon to hatch or a lightsaber to ignite you are part of a massive wholesome tradition of being a nerd. These stories are the glue between us all.

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