
Power Rangers, which first aired with Mighty Morphin in 1993, is one of the most enduring shows on television. Over the decades, it’s consistently evolved with new seasons, each featuring a different team of color-coded heroes and thrilling battles with giant robots called Zords. While the show has changed a lot over the years, it’s always stayed true to its core identity and holds a special place in many people’s childhoods.
I’ve always been fascinated by how Power Rangers came to be, and it’s amazing to realize that every single version really started with footage from the Japanese show, Super Sentai. It’s incredible how they took those original scenes – the giant robots, the Rangers transforming during fights – and built an entire, globally-loved franchise around them. That Sentai footage is truly the heart of what makes Power Rangers feel so epic and action-packed, no matter which team you’re watching!
After three decades of constantly changing and adapting, Power Rangers is facing a major turning point. The show’s connection to its original Japanese source material, Super Sentai, is changing permanently, pushing the franchise in a completely new direction. For longtime viewers, the Power Rangers they’ve come to know and love is essentially ending.
Super Sentai Is Ending After 50 Years
Sentai’s Half-Century Run Is About To Close, Spelling A Huge Blow For Power Rangers
After 50 years, the long-running series Super Sentai is ending. The current season, No. 1 Sentai Gozyuger, which started in February 2025, will be the last, bringing the show—which began in 1975—to a close.
This means the original footage used to create the monster battles, Zord fights, and transformation sequences in Power Rangers will be harder to access. For many years, the American version of Power Rangers relied heavily on footage from Sentai, using and editing those action scenes alongside newly filmed American content.
The Power Rangers’ iconic look – from the giant robots to the monster battles and dramatic Zord fights – heavily relies on visuals from the original Japanese show, Super Sentai. Now that Super Sentai is ending or changing significantly, it’s becoming harder to find the footage needed to create new Power Rangers episodes. We may see fewer of those epic robot clashes, city-wide destruction scenes, and monster fights featuring the distinctive Sentai costumes.
If it weren’t for Super Sentai, things might seem the same in name only. However, a shift away from Sentai for Power Rangers was anticipated after Cosmic Fury, especially with years of rumors about a fresh start. This change signals not just the end of using Sentai material, but a complete reinvention of Power Rangers as fans remember it.
Power Rangers Had Already Been Moving Away From Super Sentai
The Franchise Began Charting Its Own Path Long Before Sentai’s End
While the conclusion of Super Sentai will definitely change Power Rangers, the franchise has adapted to big changes before. The 2023 season, Cosmic Fury, already showed a shift in how things were done. It used action sequences from Uchu Sentai Kyuranger for the giant robot battles, but all the fight scenes with the Rangers themselves, and their costumes, were original and filmed in the United States.
This was the first time a large part of a Power Rangers season was made completely in the United States. It signaled the show was preparing for a future where it wouldn’t depend so heavily on footage from Japan. Now, American writers, filmmakers, and costume designers took the lead, with the Japanese footage becoming just one piece of the production. Eventually, this change became intentional, and the show started to move away from being a direct adaptation.
Leading up to Cosmic Fury, the Power Rangers: Once & Always special relied very little on footage from the Japanese Sentai series and instead featured mostly original American-made content. This showed the creative team was realizing that the traditional approach of combining Sentai footage with American scenes might not be sustainable in the future.
The previous way of making Power Rangers was becoming impractical due to rising production costs, tricky licensing issues, and changing viewer preferences. At the same time, the show started exploring new creative paths, changing the teams, designs, and storylines to work better for streaming services instead of traditional children’s television. This move away from using the Japanese Sentai series as a direct source wasn’t abrupt; it happened gradually over time.
Now that Super Sentai has wrapped up, everything they tried with it is basically the starting point for what Power Rangers will become. The days of Power Rangers just being a copy of Super Sentai are over. Honestly, the show has to completely change to stay relevant, and if you’re hoping for more of what you’ve always known, it’s going to feel pretty different.
Disney+’s Power Rangers Reboot Will Be A New Beginning For The Franchise
The Next Power Rangers Chapter Will Unshackle The Show From Its Japanese Roots Entirely
Even if the original Japanese show Super Sentai hadn’t ended, Power Rangers was always heading towards a big change. The show stopped airing in 2023, which has led to a complete reboot planned for Disney+ and developed with Hasbro.
The next era of Power Rangers will be completely different from anything fans have seen before. This Disney+ reboot is a fresh start, and because it won’t use footage from the Japanese show Super Sentai, every action sequence – like when the Rangers transform or fight in their Zords – will have to be created and filmed entirely new.
This new direction allows for more creative possibilities, but it also comes with some challenges. The iconic elements that defined the show for so many – like massive robots, monster costumes, and quick transformations – will need to be reinvented. While fans might enjoy more complex storylines, higher production quality, and a faster pace similar to streaming shows, they’ll also encounter a Power Rangers that looks and feels quite different from what they remember.
Disney+ offers a great opportunity for the Power Rangers franchise, moving it away from traditional children’s television and into the world of global streaming. This means changes to how shows are made – bigger budgets, a different style, and a wider audience. The brand is being updated to appeal to fans who grew up with Power Rangers while also attracting new viewers. Simply put, the new Power Rangers series isn’t just continuing the story; it’s a complete fresh start.
The classic version of Power Rangers, as longtime fans remember it, is coming to an end. While the franchise isn’t disappearing, the familiar elements – like the iconic costumes, giant robots (Zords), and weekly monster battles – are being retired. The new Power Rangers will still have the same name and core ideas, but it will be a significantly different experience than what fans have known for years.
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2025-11-08 20:00