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Retroactive continuity, or retcon for short, is a literary device in which facts in the world of a fictional work that have been established through the narrative itself are adjusted, ignored, supplemented, or contradicted by a subsequently published work that recontextualizes or breaks continuity with the former.
~ From Wikipedia

Gorillaz are no strangers to retcons within their virtual lore, as many changes have had to be made over the years to accommodate differences in direction or writing adopted by their various writers, or to correct inconsistencies that arose as the story progressed.

This article aims to list all retcons that have ever been made regarding Gorillaz' fictional lore, and explain them in detail to clear up any confusion that may arise, as well as which versions of those stories are currently deemed 'canon'.

Murdoc's Deals with Satan and the Boogieman

Murdoc's deal with Satan was first addressed in Rise of the Ogre. In it:

This version, written during Phase 2, was the first retcon experienced by the Gorillaz lore, as Murdoc never employed El Diablo during Phase 1, and the first time he was ever seen with a Flying V bass was during the BRIT Awards performance of Clint Eastwood. During Phase 3, this story was expanded upon with a second deal, this time with the Boogieman, a demon described as being "the embodiment of all the evil in the world".

Murdoc's debt with the Boogieman was eventually paid off using the soul of the Impostor Murdoc, an impersonator he hired to trick the Boogieman into taking the wrong soul while he made his escape. Murdoc's plan was successful, thus fulfilling his debt and setting aside any grudges between the two.

The Devil's Due

As if all of that wasn't enough, the Gorillaz Almanac, released in 2020, has yet another explanation to how the deal with the Devil ended, titled "The Devil's Due". The story, which supposedly takes place at some point during Phase Four, sees Murdoc on his way to receive the "Music Icon" award for "The Music Icon Awards" ceremony when he is met by the Dark Lord himself, who came to collect his soul as payment from their first deal around twenty years prior, which was set to happen once he became a "world famous music icon". Murdoc, however, manages to escape capture after Noodle finds out that said awards ceremony was established by Murdoc himself just to give him an award, rendering the contract invalid in that occasion. She then proceeds to fold the contract into an airplane and lobs it into the flames of Hell, which apparently annulled it.

Regardless of if the events narrated in this story did indeed happen in the band's fictional universe or if Murdoc made the whole thing up, it could serve as an uninteded in-universe explanation as to why Murdoc stopped going by his middle name of "Faust" and why the El Diablo bass guitar stopped appearing after Phase Four; since the contract with the Devil was no longer active, the benefits he had adquired through it where taken back from him, reverting his middle name back to Alphonce and having to rely on a regular, commercially-available, bass guitar.

Murdoc's Arms Deal & The El Mañana Incident

In the original version of events, told during Phase 2:

Following the release of Rise of the Ogre, however, a distress signal sent by Noodle herself was picked up at Kong, and the story changed for the first time:

After Phase 2 concluded, a series of disastrous financial decisions led Murdoc to run out of money entirely, and he began looking for ways to make a quick buck:

Once the promotion cycle for Plastic Beach began, this story was edited and expanded to connect it to the El Mañana incident:

For months after Noodle was spotted in the music video for On Melancholy Hill, Murdoc and 2-D were confused as to how she had got out of Hell. She answered this in detail after arriving on the island on Russel's mouth following the events of Rhinestone Eyes:

This version of events remained 'canon' for over a decade, until the release of The Gorillaz Art Book:

It is unclear if, with this new retelling of events, Murdoc actually partook in arms trafficking before Phase 2, though regardless of what he did in Mexico, he appears to have not angered Malthus and The Black Clouds until after Gorillaz disbanded in 2006.

Knowing Murdoc is an infamously compulsive liar and, therefore, an unreliable narratorW, it is most likely that he only got involved in arms deals after he ran out of money following the release of D-Sides, and made up the story about the Black Clouds destroying the flying windmill island on the spot as he was not sure either who was actually responsible for shooting it down.

The Book of M.A.N./Murdoc's Immortality

TBA

The Destruction of Plastic Beach

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The Ending to Phase Three

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The Book of Noodle

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Cyborg Noodle's Fate

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Cortez's Death

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