Upcoming Disney live action Power Rangers series is breaking a major franchise rule, details explored 

Power Rangers (Image Source: Prime Video)
Power Rangers (Image Source: Prime Video)

After Power Rangers Cosmic Fury ended the old TV continuity in 2023, fans wondered what would come next. The good news is that Hasbro and 20th Century Television confirmed a brand-new live-action series on Disney+.

This isn’t just another sequel but a full reboot starting from scratch, not tied to the decades-long timeline. And here’s the biggest bombshell: the show won’t lean on Super Sentai footage, suits, or monsters.

That’s a major break from tradition since 1993, Power Rangers has always used content from Japan’s Super Sentai shows.


Disney live-action Power Rangers: Why this rule-breaking matters so much

Power Rangers (Image Source: Prime Video)
Power Rangers (Image Source: Prime Video)

Super Sentai has long been Power Rangers’ backbone as its suits, Zords, and monster battles came straight from Toei’s Japanese series.

But now, Hasbro and Disney want to build something original. They’re designing brand-new suits, fresh Zords, and custom action scenes. Without Sentai footage, the writers get more room to plan long-term stories. They can build a cohesive universe from the ground up.

It removes a big production headache: in the past, costumes and monsters often had to match weirdly between American and Japanese footage. Now, the show can stay visually consistent. It can feel modern and not like a patchwork of recycled clips.

The reboot might even redefine what it means to be a Power Ranger- how they morph, what their powers are, how they work together.


A bigger budget, but also a bigger risk

Disney+ brings serious production muscle. This isn’t low-budget TV anymore. That’s good because creating new Zords and monsters from scratch costs money.

But higher budgets mean more risk. If fans reject the reinvented Rangers, it could be a costly flop. Still, Hasbro clearly believes in the long-term. They’re treating this like a foundation for a new era.

Their option? Create a cinematic-feeling series, not just a kids’ TV show. And they’re doing it at a time when legacy brands and nostalgic reboots are hot on streaming platforms, so has-beens can become blockbusters again.


Why some fans might get nervous

Let’s be honest: the show purists might wince at the idea of ditching Super Sentai. For many fans, Sentai footage isn’t just visual material; it’s part of the show’s soul.

Some will worry that new suits and monsters won't “feel like Power Rangers.” Others might wonder: will this still be the team-based hero-action they grew up loving or something else entirely?

On the flip side, there’s real excitement. New risks could lead to bold storytelling and characters we’ve never seen.


What this means for the future of Power Rangers

Power Rangers (Image Source: Prime Video)
Power Rangers (Image Source: Prime Video)

With no obligation to Sentai, the creative team can build a Power Rangers mythos that’s truly original.

They finally get to build a universe that actually fits streaming. Not the old style of jumping from one toy-cycle theme to another or squeezing in random monsters because the footage demanded it.

This time, it can feel planned. Thought through. Something that grows season by season instead of resetting every year. And honestly, if the team plays this right, the reboot could do more than bring Power Rangers back.

It could flip the whole idea of what the franchise can be now. Kids, older fans, new viewers, and everyone could be meeting the Rangers in a way that isn’t tied to the 30-year playbook. Hasbro also gets a clean shot at building a stronger brand.

You can almost see the business logic here, but it lines up with the creative side too, which is rare. Stepping away from Super Sentai is a huge risk, yes. But it’s also their way of saying, “We trust the brand. We trust the fans. We think Power Rangers can stand on its own now.”

That’s a pretty big statement for a franchise that spent three decades built on adaptation.


The upcoming Disney+ series isn’t just another update or a shiny refresh. It feels like a hard reset, the kind you only try when you believe the next version can be stronger. A lot is riding on it, and the team surely knows it.

Edited by Priscillah Mueni