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Rings of Power's Gandalf: A Radical Second Age Twist!

Gandalf in Rings of Power: A New Twist on an Old Wizard!

Rings of Power's Gandalf: A Second Age Twist That Changes Everything!

Amazon's Rings of Power has totally changed the Lord of the Rings game! This prequel, set in the Second Age, presents a completely new Gandalf story – one with major implications on everything you thought you knew!  And let's be totally honest, this changed a lot! Some audiences have hated the new approach presented here; many feel these kind of significant shifts fundamentally alter and degrade a masterpiece. This isn't something that necessarily changed something subtle, yet the entire lore regarding Gandalf was deeply changed and had many people questioning how this prequel really works!

This entire article involves spoilers; so if you want to maintain surprise in watching, don't read the rest of this!

Also Read: The Rings of Power: The Stranger's Purpose, Tom Bombadil, and Sauron

Gandalf's New Beginning: Finding His Name and His Staff

Gandalf the White holding his staff against a background of light in The Lord of the Rings Image

Rings of Power season 2 confirms the Stranger is Gandalf. But this isn’t the same Gandalf from The Lord of the Rings. His arrival in Middle-earth is very different– this was during the Second Age; instead of the Third Age. Even his very encounter and travels differ; and involved him meeting and traveling with Harfoots (Tom Bombadil included) instead of what's already found in canon.

In the show, Gandalf (still unnamed) is on a quest to find a name, and a staff! Tom Bombadil told him the perfect staff appears to him once he's proven himself; showcasing a deeper symbolic value embedded into Tolkien's stories and themes, not found elsewhere. This means Gandalf has to pass some incredibly important moral trial; the test really focuses on using morality instead of relying on raw force alone. It's after saving the Stoors (this isn’t something found in existing canonical writings) that a staff shows up; giving the Stoors the name Gandalf.

This storyline deviates from canon. In The Lord of the Rings, there’s no indication that wizards do such a ritual. However this presents an alternative take, and could become something memorable; making those experiences completely and entirely unique to Rings of Power's take! The added implication regarding the character's spiritual growth is interesting!

Also Read: The Rings of Power Season 2: Gandalf Arrives, But Is It Canon? Huge Twist Explained

Gandalf the White: A New Quest in the Third Age?

Frodo Baggin, Gandalf, The Stranger, and Nori Harfoot Image

Think about this.  Gandalf falls to the Balrog (in The Fellowship of the Ring); this involved him losing his clothes, staff and dying!  That was quite the event. When Gandalf comes back? He’s Gandalf the White – in completely new garb and a white staff (those original clothes supposedly came from Galadriel, this original explanation was shown across previous canon interpretations but that origin was simply rejected!). Yet Rings of Power adds an alternate theory— perhaps that Gandalf (still reborn) got that new staff during a separate quest, after that death! That implies it’s yet another unique trial undergone independently!

Also Read: Balrogs: The Fiery Demons of Middle-earth - Lord of the Rings & Rings of Power

More Retcons That Shake Up Gandalf’s History

Lord of the Rings The Rings of Power Season 2 Poster Showing Charlie Vickers as Sauron Image

This massive change involving Gandalf's arrival greatly impacts some things. That deep connection with Hobbits (in The Lord of the Rings)?   Rings of Power explains that through Gandalf's initial encounters in Middle-earth: The Hobbits’ ancestors help save him, further cementing their shared historical origin which has further implications which helps to emphasize that point of closeness found in the main Lord of the Rings canon text.

Another twist? That early rivalry in Rings of Power season 2,  the early fight against another Dark Wizard.  This greatly changes Gandalf's later unexpected confrontation against Saruman. It is hinted toward:   knowing such dark entities beforehand means that Gandalf should not have trusted Saruman in The Lord of the Rings. The implications are significant— this might even create many profound effects for upcoming seasons, changing some critical details within that important, complicated storyline.

Also Read: Celebrimbor & Sauron's Deception in The Rings of Power Season 2: Is It a Plot Hole?

Conclusion: Gandalf’s Second Age Story Adds a New Layer of Mystery

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Rings of Power's Gandalf isn't simply some fun change – these changed moments generate unexpected yet insightful reinterpretations for this already-famous character! Bringing Gandalf into that earlier Second Age is daring and adds yet another aspect.   Those changed encounters make his story and motivations even clearer for some fans who’ve longed for this alternative narrative presentation. Even that unique aspect involving his relationship with Hobbits, now shown earlier in Rings of Power's universe adds additional details that might satisfy that nostalgic craving that older viewers might have and it creates further mysteries and even unexpected questions which could leave viewers in awe regarding future changes that would only be discovered later.

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