Citations:Xenaverse

Proper noun: "(fandom slang) the fictional universe depicted in the Xena: Warrior Princess series"

 * 1998, Greg Cox, Battle On!: An Unauthorized, Irreverent Look at Xena: Warrior Princess, page 88:
 * Guess things are different in the Xenaverse. Maybe Ares and the other gods don't like competition?
 * 1998, Robert Weisbrot, Xena: Warrior Princess: The Official Guide to the Xenaverse
 * 2005, "Doris", quoted in Sue Austin, Women's Aggressive Fantasies: A Post-Jungian Exploration of Self-hatred, Love and Agency, page 22:
 * The show is an amazing foray into women's expressions of rage — there's a lot of other women in the Xenaverse with a penchant for feats of arms
 * 2013, Jennifer Sky, "My Life as a Warrior Princess", The New York Times, 9 September 2013:
 * Gender was not relevant in the Xenaverse. There, a girl or a boy could be a warlord or a farmer, a bard or a sad sack needing protection.
 * 2005, "Doris", quoted in Sue Austin, Women's Aggressive Fantasies: A Post-Jungian Exploration of Self-hatred, Love and Agency, page 22:
 * The show is an amazing foray into women's expressions of rage — there's a lot of other women in the Xenaverse with a penchant for feats of arms
 * 2013, Jennifer Sky, "My Life as a Warrior Princess", The New York Times, 9 September 2013:
 * Gender was not relevant in the Xenaverse. There, a girl or a boy could be a warlord or a farmer, a bard or a sad sack needing protection.
 * The show is an amazing foray into women's expressions of rage — there's a lot of other women in the Xenaverse with a penchant for feats of arms
 * 2013, Jennifer Sky, "My Life as a Warrior Princess", The New York Times, 9 September 2013:
 * Gender was not relevant in the Xenaverse. There, a girl or a boy could be a warlord or a farmer, a bard or a sad sack needing protection.

Proper noun: "(fandom slang) the fandom of Xena: Warrior Princess"

 * 2002, Jo Marriott & Carly Bramwell, "Maid Marion, Meet Xena", in How Xena Changed Our Lives: True Stories by Fans for Fans (ed. Nikki Stafford), page 72:
 * Many wonderful people and events have come into our lives from being part of the Xenaverse.
 * 2003, Sara Gwellian-Jones, "Histories, Fictions and Xena: Warrior Princess", in The Audience Studies Reader (eds. Will Brooker & Deborah Jermyn), page 188:
 * The task of mapping the online Xenaverse is, of course, an impossible one. The Xenaverse is too expansive, too unstructured, too fluid and fast moving to be charted;
 * 2005, Anik LaChev, "Fan Fiction: A Genre And Its (Final?) Frontiers", Spectator, Volume 25, Number 1, Spring 2005, page 91:
 * For instance, when I lived in Italy a couple of years ago, I stumbled across the Italian Xenaverse.
 * 2017, Liz Millward, Janice G. Dodd, & Irene Fubara-Manuel, Killing Off the Lesbians: A Symbolic Annihilation on Film and Television, page 142:
 * Because the internet was anonymous and easy to access the number of people who actively participated in the Xenaverse was much higher than would ever had [sic] been involved in more traditional fandoms (Gwenllian Jones 407).