The series ran until November 2, 1996, when it aired its final episode. The pilot was shown during the week of Decemin syndication as a five-part miniseries, and the show began its official run on October 1, 1988. Based on the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comic books created by Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird, the series was the first animated adaptation of the property. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (initially known as Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles in the UK and some European countries, and retroactively also known as TMNT 1987) is an American animated television series produced by Murakami-Wolf-Swenson and the French company IDDH.
You just kind of have to roll with it.Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003 TV series) The Nickelodeon season 5 multi-parter "Wanted: Bebop and Rocksteady" features the Technodrome underground, which would seem to set it in Fred Wolf season 3, but it ends with the Technodrome being destroyed, Shredder and Krang being captured, and Bebop and Rocksteady turning over a new leaf. The Nickelodeon season 4 episode "Trans-Dimensional Turtles" is in a similar boat, though it features a completely revised origin for the Fred Wolf incarnation of Krang. (because the Turtles are drawn in their pre-“red sky” designs). Place anywhere between Fred Wolf season 3 (because Casey Jones appears) and season 7 *The cameo in the Nickelodeon season 2 episode “Wormquake!” could really take *For instance, “Turtles Forever” concludes with the Technodrome returning to the Fred Wolf universe, but retaining the upgrades the 4Kids Shredder imposed upon it. However, the writers for those stories play very loosely with continuity that would contradict or impact the Fred Wolf timeline. That being said, I would definitely say the 4Kids-produced “Turtles Forever” film and the various cameos/crossovers with the Nickelodeon TMNT cartoon are It also features a line from Krang boasting about the Technodrome's imminent return to Earth, so it makes for a solid prelude to the season finale "Return of the Technodrome" (which ultimately sees it buried at the Earth's core). *"The Catwoman from Channel 6", as mentioned, sees Irma finally meeting the Turtles after pining for them all season, so it should come near the end.
"Teenagers from Dimension X" is another episode where Shredder tries to open a portal to Dimension X, so it has to take place after his first attempt. *"Splinter No More" sees the Shredder making his first effort to open a portal to Dimension X while "Invasion of the Punk Frogs" has Splinter say that they now know the Shredder is attempting to return the Technodrome to Earth, so those two pair together nicely. A recurring theme in the season is Irma's desire to meet the Turtles, so episodes like "New York's Shiniest" have to take place before she meets them in "The Catwoman of Channel 6". *The second half of the season requires a bit more attention to get the continuity straight, but there's definitely a chronology. It's the looser second half of the season that inspired some episode shuffling, even if on the surface it might not seem like anything was needed. The first arc is the Eye of Sarnath multi-parter and its continuity is intuitive (spanning "The Incredible Shrinking Turtles" through "Curse of the Evil Eye"). *Season 2 has one major story arc with tight continuity and then a second "arc" with much looser continuity. The Technodrome Frozen in the Arctic Chasm The Foot Soldiers Are Revolting ( review).What's Michelangelo Good For? ( review).Slash – The Evil Turtle from Dimension X ( review).Funny, They Shrunk Michelangelo ( review).Bebop and Rocksteady Conquer the Universe ( review).The Technodrome on the Dimension X Planetoid (European Vacation) Leatherhead Meets the Rat King ( review).Super Bebop and Mighty Rocksteady ( review).Corporate Raiders from Dimension X ( review).Invasion of the Turtle Snatchers ( review).Leatherhead, Terror of the Swamp ( review).