WCFP Wiki
We Can Fix Pawbert Wiki
The comprehensive encyclopedia for We Can Fix Pawbert, the fan-created continuation of the Zootopia universe.
The Pack
The core four who anchor the series:
- Pawbert Pawthorne (née Lynxley) — Canada lynx; protagonist
- Luther Pawthorne — Gray wolf; ZPD-ZSI Liaison
- Nick Wilde — Red fox; Detective
- Judy Hopps — Rabbit; Detective
The Pack
The core four who anchor the series:
- Pawbert Lynxley — Canada lynx; protagonist
- Luther Pawthorne — Gray wolf; ZSI Agent
- Nick Wilde — Red fox; ZPD Officer
- Judy Hopps — Rabbit; ZPD Officer
Seasons
Key Locations
- Pawthorne Mansion — Pack home in the Meadowlands
- ZSI Crisis Coordination Center — ZSI's command center
- Zootopia Correctional Facility — Where Pawbert served his sentence
- Reptile Ravine — Ancestral home of Zootopia's reptile population
- Lynxley Manor — Former Lynxley family estate in Tundratown
- Gnu York University — Where Pawbert earned his social work degree
Key Items
- The Green Sweater — Lillian's sweater; Pawbert's most treasured possession
- The Chart — Nick Wilde's recovery-tracking masterpiece
- Pack Charter — The official rules of pack life
- Agnes's Patent — The stolen weather wall design
- STAY Notebook — Pawbert's prison countdown journal
- Wedding Rings — Engraved "Stay"; the series finale
- Heist Trophy — Pawbert's B99 Halloween victory
Crossover Series
The series features crossover characters from (not exhaustive):
- Brooklyn Nine-Nine (Precinct 99) — 7 episodes
- Reacher (ZSI Field Operatives) — 10+ episodes
- 9-1-1 (Station 118) — 4 episodes
- Criminal Minds (ZSI-BAU) — 4 episodes
- The Rookie (Precinct 7) — 4 episodes
- Suits (Pearson Specter Litt) — 3 episodes
Other
- Author — About the creator
- Deviations — Departures from Zootopia canon
- Soundtrack — End credit songs and featured music
- Romance and Intimacy — The series' approach to relationships
About the Series
"I don't want to be different."
We Can Fix Pawbert is a 104-episode fan-created television series set in the Zootopia universe, written in teleplay format with novel-style prose. It begins immediately after the events of Zootopia 2 and follows the redemption arc of Pawbert Lynxley, the youngest son of the Lynxley crime family, who attempted to murder Judy Hopps and destroy evidence that would free an entire species.
Pawbert spent his whole life seeking his father's love. When that love never came, he made a choice — a terrible, premeditated choice. Now he sits in a holding cell, abandoned by the family he sacrificed everything to please, facing a kill order from his own father. He deserves to rot. Everyone knows it. Except those assigned to protect him don't see a monster — they see a mammal who was taught that love has a price, and who paid it in full, only to be discarded.
The series asks whether someone who did monstrous things for love can learn to be loved differently. Whether apology and forgiveness are separate journeys. Whether found family can replace what was never truly there. Over five seasons, Pawbert transforms from a terrified, suicidal prisoner into a confident licensed social worker, husband, and pack member.
Core Themes
- Redemption through choice — moral transformation requires repeated choices over time, not a single moment
- Found family — what "pack" looks like when built from trust rather than blood
- Love without conditions — what happens when someone finally receives the dignity his family denied him
- Trauma as expertise — the journey from victim to social worker, turning pain into purpose
"You aren't too damaged to be loved. You never were."
Series Structure
| Season | Episodes | Focus | Tone | Inspirations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Season 1 | 24 | Trial and conviction | Thriller / Drama | The Blacklist |
| Season 2 | 24 | Prison and clemency | Action / Drama | Jack Ryan, Homeland |
| Season 3 | 8 | Lionheart crisis | Limited series thriller | Reacher, Prison Break |
| Season 4 | 24 | Release and reintegration | Slice-of-life | — |
| Season 5 | 24 | Icener crisis and wedding | Action-thriller | 24 |
Each season deliberately adopts the tone, pacing, and narrative structure of its inspirations. The crossover episodes push this further, matching the voice patterns, humor styles, and dramatic rhythms of their source shows — from the heist energy of Brooklyn Nine-Nine to the laconic brutality of Reacher to the profiling cadence of Criminal Minds. Knowledge of the inspiration and crossover series is not required to follow along.
Rating
TV-MA DLSV from the first episode. Real consequences. Real deaths. Real love.