It's pretty simple: Just write your own concept for a Power Rangers season. Goofy or serious, it's all good. Here's mine:
It was inspired a little by Gundam Wing, and the working title was Power Rangers: Seraph.
Basically, a few centuries pass and colonies planted by ships like Terra Venture on other planets have grown. Earth has figured out how to make large numbers of Power Ranger-based weapons systems, including battle suits and Zords. Not as powerful as the original ones but able to be mass-produced. They serve as a peacekeeping force for the various colony planets. However, one world was home to a civilization that also created Power Rangers long ago. Unfortunately, these Power Rangers were created as weapons of conquest by the corrupt, power hungry king of that world, and were used to forge a great empire. These Power Rangers were imprinted with all of the dark impulses of the King so that he could enslave them to his will through telepathy. It took another world's Power Rangers, the Seraph Rangers, and the united strength of several worlds to defeat them, but when they did the King unleashed a superweapon that exterminated all sentient life for lightyears around, taking all of his enemies with him. This area has several worlds suitable for human life with ancient ruins, but nobody could figure out why.
Until the governor of the colony world that was the capital of that empire, resentful at the influence of Earth and wishing he could have the power he used to have before Earth re-established contact, finds the morphers created by the Dark King long ago. Knowing about the Power Rangers, he decides to try them out-And ends up activating the Morpher of the Dark King himself. Now the Dark King reborn, he enslaves a few other citizens of the colony with the other morphers and decides that HE will rule over the Universe. The mass-produced Ranger Teams are no match against these Dark Rangers, but one member of the governor's government manages to escape with the information on the Dark King, and the Seraph Rangers who defeated him long ago.
The United Terran Worlds quickly form a taskforce to go out and find the morphers of the Seraph Rangers, in hopes of obtaining a means of defeating the Dark Rangers. This task force would operate from a starship like In Space and seek out the morphers while also trying to find more information on the Dark King and his Rangers, as well as his empire. However, the Seraph Rangers were on different worlds when the superweapon went off, and over the years some have been found and circulating around the galaxy, complicating matters. The Seraph Ranger Team would ultimately include: The sole survivor of an MP Ranger unit that went up against the Dark Rangers; a xeno-archaeologist who has been studying the Dark Empire's remains and never wanted to save the galaxy; the daughter of a freighter captain who has lived in space her whole life and is a bit naive but an expert with machines; a thief and rogue who stole his morpher and managed to keep it from being sold to the Dark King; the son of a wealthy industrialist who got the morpher for his birthday and is a kind, gentle person with an army of servants closer to him than his family; and an emotionally-stunted cyborg girl who was built by an eccentric inventor to replace his wife but chose instead to become a Power Ranger.
At first the Seraph Rangers would mostly operate alone: whether due to losing their entire unit in battle or due to the nature of their lives. The billionaire's son would decide to fight the Dark King's forces with his personal army at first, while the freighter captain's daughter would operate as a wandering superhero until both were contacted by the Seraph Task Force and brought into it. The thief would be caught and would be pressed into service fighting the Dark King's forces in exchange for a pardon under the commander of the MP Ranger survivor, and the xeno-archaeologist would have found his morpher while working for the Seraph Task Force and had to use it to keep it out of the Dark Force's hands. The cyborg girl would find the other Rangers afterwards. The Dark King would try to prevent the six Rangers from coming together by excellent use of his conventional forces (including his own citizens turned into mindless Drones) attacking multiple locations and using underworld contacts to try and find the morphers. Finally he would leave single survivors of combat units sent against him and a few survivors of worlds he ransacked to escape and demoralize his enemies. However, every so often, his children (whom he left un-mindslaved) would awaken the old parts of him, trying to soften him and keep him from going completely dark. The same thing would be for the Dark Rangers. The ultimate goal of the Dark King is conquest, and the ultimate goal of the Seraph Rangers is to stop him, hopefully before he can reactivate the Super Weapon of Old and use it, this time to only destroy those he wishes dead.
Make My Monster Grow would largely be the domain of robots, until the Dark King got nasty and started using turned humans as his monsters. This is where the Dark King would struggle with his human conscience.
Bulk and Skull would be two normal guys who worked with the Seraph Task Force who did a lot of troubleshooting and testing of captured and experimental gear, and would more often than not mess it up in hilarious ways. Hey, we need comic relief.
Overall the themes of this series would be similar to In Space and Lost Galaxy-It's a space opera, however the war focus would be a decidedly different tone for it. But it's also got a focus on humans: Our strengths, our weaknesses, and who and what we are. It would also explore the differences between the Power Rangers in their backgrounds-How does a thief relate to a billionaire's son? How does a cyborg learning how to be human relate to everyone else? How does a military leader who was the only survivor of her unit relate to an archaeologist who has been alone for most of his life due to his genius? And what of the Dark King and the Dark Rangers? Are they merely slaves to the darkness of their morphers and truly good, or are they irredeemably evil depending on who they were before?
The overall theme of this series could be summed up in one word: Humanity.
Basically, a few centuries pass and colonies planted by ships like Terra Venture on other planets have grown. Earth has figured out how to make large numbers of Power Ranger-based weapons systems, including battle suits and Zords. Not as powerful as the original ones but able to be mass-produced. They serve as a peacekeeping force for the various colony planets. However, one world was home to a civilization that also created Power Rangers long ago. Unfortunately, these Power Rangers were created as weapons of conquest by the corrupt, power hungry king of that world, and were used to forge a great empire. These Power Rangers were imprinted with all of the dark impulses of the King so that he could enslave them to his will through telepathy. It took another world's Power Rangers, the Seraph Rangers, and the united strength of several worlds to defeat them, but when they did the King unleashed a superweapon that exterminated all sentient life for lightyears around, taking all of his enemies with him. This area has several worlds suitable for human life with ancient ruins, but nobody could figure out why.
Until the governor of the colony world that was the capital of that empire, resentful at the influence of Earth and wishing he could have the power he used to have before Earth re-established contact, finds the morphers created by the Dark King long ago. Knowing about the Power Rangers, he decides to try them out-And ends up activating the Morpher of the Dark King himself. Now the Dark King reborn, he enslaves a few other citizens of the colony with the other morphers and decides that HE will rule over the Universe. The mass-produced Ranger Teams are no match against these Dark Rangers, but one member of the governor's government manages to escape with the information on the Dark King, and the Seraph Rangers who defeated him long ago.
The United Terran Worlds quickly form a taskforce to go out and find the morphers of the Seraph Rangers, in hopes of obtaining a means of defeating the Dark Rangers. This task force would operate from a starship like In Space and seek out the morphers while also trying to find more information on the Dark King and his Rangers, as well as his empire. However, the Seraph Rangers were on different worlds when the superweapon went off, and over the years some have been found and circulating around the galaxy, complicating matters. The Seraph Ranger Team would ultimately include: The sole survivor of an MP Ranger unit that went up against the Dark Rangers; a xeno-archaeologist who has been studying the Dark Empire's remains and never wanted to save the galaxy; the daughter of a freighter captain who has lived in space her whole life and is a bit naive but an expert with machines; a thief and rogue who stole his morpher and managed to keep it from being sold to the Dark King; the son of a wealthy industrialist who got the morpher for his birthday and is a kind, gentle person with an army of servants closer to him than his family; and an emotionally-stunted cyborg girl who was built by an eccentric inventor to replace his wife but chose instead to become a Power Ranger.
At first the Seraph Rangers would mostly operate alone: whether due to losing their entire unit in battle or due to the nature of their lives. The billionaire's son would decide to fight the Dark King's forces with his personal army at first, while the freighter captain's daughter would operate as a wandering superhero until both were contacted by the Seraph Task Force and brought into it. The thief would be caught and would be pressed into service fighting the Dark King's forces in exchange for a pardon under the commander of the MP Ranger survivor, and the xeno-archaeologist would have found his morpher while working for the Seraph Task Force and had to use it to keep it out of the Dark Force's hands. The cyborg girl would find the other Rangers afterwards. The Dark King would try to prevent the six Rangers from coming together by excellent use of his conventional forces (including his own citizens turned into mindless Drones) attacking multiple locations and using underworld contacts to try and find the morphers. Finally he would leave single survivors of combat units sent against him and a few survivors of worlds he ransacked to escape and demoralize his enemies. However, every so often, his children (whom he left un-mindslaved) would awaken the old parts of him, trying to soften him and keep him from going completely dark. The same thing would be for the Dark Rangers. The ultimate goal of the Dark King is conquest, and the ultimate goal of the Seraph Rangers is to stop him, hopefully before he can reactivate the Super Weapon of Old and use it, this time to only destroy those he wishes dead.
Make My Monster Grow would largely be the domain of robots, until the Dark King got nasty and started using turned humans as his monsters. This is where the Dark King would struggle with his human conscience.
Bulk and Skull would be two normal guys who worked with the Seraph Task Force who did a lot of troubleshooting and testing of captured and experimental gear, and would more often than not mess it up in hilarious ways. Hey, we need comic relief.
Overall the themes of this series would be similar to In Space and Lost Galaxy-It's a space opera, however the war focus would be a decidedly different tone for it. But it's also got a focus on humans: Our strengths, our weaknesses, and who and what we are. It would also explore the differences between the Power Rangers in their backgrounds-How does a thief relate to a billionaire's son? How does a cyborg learning how to be human relate to everyone else? How does a military leader who was the only survivor of her unit relate to an archaeologist who has been alone for most of his life due to his genius? And what of the Dark King and the Dark Rangers? Are they merely slaves to the darkness of their morphers and truly good, or are they irredeemably evil depending on who they were before?
The overall theme of this series could be summed up in one word: Humanity.