Terminator’s Time Travel: Every Rule & Retcon Explained

Time travel is one of the pillars of the Terminator series, but the rules of going back in time are not quite easy to understand given the number of retcons that have happened throughout the franchise. While James Cameron’s The Terminator was not defined by its time travel element, we cannot deny that time machines and alternate timelines are part of the franchise’s DNA. A large portion of Terminator’s lore is built on time travel, including a couple of intentional paradoxes that would forever affect the franchise and its most important heroes.

Like every time travel movie, The Terminator and its sequels have a lot of plot holes and paradoxes. While some of these paradoxes are meant to be part of the story – such as the fact that Kyle Reese was always John Connor’s father – others happened simply because the rules of that universe were inconsistent. Rewatching the Terminator movies can reveal some harsh realities about the franchise, especially regarding the confusing mechanics of its time travels. That said, the Terminator films have stuck to a somewhat consistent set of rules for the most part.

Time Travel In Terminator Is Done Through The Time Displacement Equipment

The Time Machine In Terminator Is Often Portrayed As Three Giant Rings

Although there are some exceptions to this, time travel in Terminator can only be done through the Time Displacement Equipment. Described as a time weapon, the TDE was presumably created by Skynet and is usually depicted as a major device formed by three rings that accelerate an incredible speed before opening a portal to another time. The Time Displacement Equipment is always hidden in a large facility, usually controlled by Skynet. Interestingly, there is no confirmation in any of the Terminator movies about who created the first TDE, humans or Skynet.

The time travel process is not always accurate, meaning the subject can accidentally be sent to the wrong time or location.

We can ᴀssume that Skynet was the one who started this “time war,” but the fact is that only the original script for The Terminator and the novelization for Terminator 2: Judgment Day actually state that the machines were the ones who discovered time travel. It is also worth noting that, according to Terminator 2, Skynet’s very existence is a time loop since its creation was based on the technology of the T-800’s hand that was left in the 1980s. Considering that Skynet created the first time machine, the creation of time travel in Terminator is a paradox.

Judgment Day Dates In The Terminator Franchise

Movie/Show

August 29, 1997

Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Terminator Zero

2003~2004

Terminator: Salvation

July 25, 2004

Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines

April 21, 2011

The Sarah Connor Chronicles

2017

Terminator Genisys

2020s

Terminator: Dark Fate

Terminator: Rise of the Machines establishes that, in this timeline (the one created after the events of Terminator 2 postponed Judgment Day), there are two-time machines. Both Skynet and the Resistance have access to a time device, which is known as the Continuum Transporter in this version of the story. Other time travel devices in Terminator include the Time Door, which, in Terminator Salvation, is used to send data to the past instead of machines or living beings. The time travel process is not always accurate, meaning the subject can accidentally be sent to the wrong time or location.

Only Things Surrounded By Living Tissue Can Be Transported By The TDE (Supposedly)

Terminator’s Most Famous Rule Is Not As Simple As It Seems


T-800 iwith no shirt on and part of his face destroyed in Terminator Genisys.

Perhaps the most famous yet misunderstood time travel rule in Terminator refers to what can actually be transported by the Time Displacement Equipment. For something to be sent back in time through the TDE, it must be surrounded by living tissue. While there might be an exception to this rule regarding the T-1000, the fact is that involving a machine in living tissue is supposedly the only way to send a Terminator back in time. What causes so much confusion about this rule is that, in The Terminator, Kyle Reese says only living things can be sent back in time.

While a Terminator head (without the living tissue) was shown to have been sent back in time in Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, its living tissue was presumably destroyed right before the process was completed.

Although the Terminator franchise is full of retcons, we can ᴀssume that Kyle Reese either did not express himself correctly or did not fully understand how the Time Displacement Equipment worked. The idea that Terminators must be covered in living tissue rose as the best explanation for why the T-800 could be sent back despite what Kyle Reese said about the time machine. The living tissue rule also explains why humans and Terminators must be naked while using the time machine. Whether other objects such as weapons can also be covered in living tissue and sent back is unclear.

Going Back In Time Does Not Change Your Future In Terminator

Terminator (Mostly) Adheres To The Existence Of Multiple Timelines


John Connor from Terminator 2 and a Terminator for Terminator Zero
Custom image by Yeider Chacon

A recent addition to the Terminator lore, Terminator Zero established what is likely the most important rule regarding the franchise’s time travel – going back in time does not change your future. Instead, it creates a new timeline. While previous Terminator movies and The Sarah Connor Chronicles had tackled alternate timelines before, Terminator Zero made it clear that every change to the past creates a new reality. In other words, every time Skynet and the Resistance use time travel, they are creating infinite new branches. The existence of infinite timelines solves a lot of plot holes in Terminator.

Terminator Zero does not feature Sarah or John Connor.

Terminator Zero confirmed that going back in time creates a new timeline particularly to highlight how pointless the “time war” fought between humans and Skynet had been. While the series did not mention John Connor, it talked about how leaders would rise, achieve a major victory, and prompt the machines to use time travel, which would restart the cycle. The “multiple timelines” explanation is usually the best way to explain any time travel story, and it can hardly be contradicted by any of the Terminator movies since it establishes the existence of infinite realities.

This also adds to the idea that the war is never over in Terminator. ᴀssuming the existence of infinite timelines, there is an infinite number of realities in which Skynet and humanity are still at war, which is why both Terminators and human agents keep showing up in the present day. Not every Terminator property has stuck to this explanation, but is the one that best explains how time travel affects the timeline in the franchise.

Every Time Terminator Changed Its Time Travel Rules

Terminator Has Bent Its Own Rules A Few Times

The Terminator’s biggest plot twist was intentionally paradoxical, but it ended up raising some questions about that universe’s time travel rules. The fact that Kyle Reese was John Connor’s father suggested that the future was already written and that everything was happening within a closed loop. However, in Terminator 2: Judgment Day, we are asked to believe that the future has not been written yet, and that humanity can save itself. Terminator 2’s message is that it is never too late to change the future, but Terminator 3 established that Judgment Day cannot be prevented, only postponed.

Another instance in which Terminator broke its rules, or at least made them more complicated, is when the T-1000 was sent back. Unlike the T-800, the T-1000 was not covered in living tissue as far as we know it. Its “human skin” was actually a mimetic polyalloy, which is what made it a shapeshifter. This suggests that, in addition to living tissue, time machines in Terminator can also transport mimetic polyalloy, adding an important exception to the famous rule.

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