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!Season 29
| rowspan="3" |{{Ublist|Georgina Wijs<br>{{Small|(2487–TBD)}}|item_style=text-align: center}}
|5
|20
|10 April 2488
|21 August 2488
|26.22
| colspan="2" |[[Emmelie Cleyton]]
|{{Ublist|[[Georgina Sheppard]] • [[Florence Saber]]|item_style=text-align: center}}
|-
|
!Season 30
|5
|20
|9 April 2489
|20 August 2489
|30.24
| colspan="2" |[[Emmelie Cleyton]]
|{{Ublist|[[Georgina Sheppard]] • [[Florence Saber]]|item_style=text-align: center}}
|-
|
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This season would have 26 regular episodes. The series would begin airing in March 2487. It aired every Saturday at 19:00 Wynnoan time, 18:00 Ahitereiran time, and 17:00 Kiavalari time. The episodes were filmed in Empheri, subtitled in Exteras. The show was re-dubbed in Exteras in a broadcast the following day. It was executively produced by Henry Beynes, and script edited by Emmelie Cleyton.
 
The cast would be Lachlan Thompson, Frankie Baldwin, and Abbie Sinclair, who would play Francesca. Baldwin would depart in ''The Organ Donor Part Two'', while Sinclair would be introduced in ''The Rain Obscures Part One'', and depart in ''The Heart Festival Part SIxSix''. Thompson would regenerate in ''Death To The Temptress Part Four'', being replaced by Georgina Sheppard, the first woman to headline the series. The series would feature Cleyton's debut as a sole writer, and the return of previous executive producer Lena Keating who contributed a story. Alongside the 26 episodes, an extra four episodes were commissioned for Thompson's departure story and 35th anniversary of the programme to air in September 2487. This was only separated from the series by a one-week gap in scheduling though.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
! style="width:2.5%; background:#8992D1; color:#ffffff" |<abbr>No.</abbr>story
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The cast would be Georgina Sheppard, the Eighth Wijs and first woman to play the role, alongside Florence Saber playing Eliza.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
! style="width:2.5%; background:#8992D100CD18; color:#ffffff" |<abbr>No.</abbr>story
! style="width:2.5%;background:#8992D100CD18; color:#ffffff" |<abbr>No.</abbr> in
season
! style="width:35%; background:#8992D100CD18; color:#ffffff;" |Serial title
! style="width:15%; background:#8992D100CD18; color:#ffffff" |Written by
! style="width:20%; background:#8992D100CD18; color:#ffffff" |Original air date(s)
! style="width:5%; background:#8992D100CD18; color:#ffffff" |viewers
(millions) 
|-
! colspan="6" style="width:5%; background:#8992D1; color:#ffffff" |'''Season 29'''
|-
!191
Line 2,268 ⟶ 2,266:
|23.7
|}
 
==== Season 30: The Greatest Hits (2489) ====
The second of three newly commissioned seasons under Cleyton as both executive producer and script editor would air beginning in April 2489. There were 20 regular episodes. This season was the 30th season and so the producers wanted to do a special serial to commemorate the longevity of the show. This season also contained the 200th story of the programme. Nicknamed ''The Greatest Hits'', this season was entirely written by previous showrunners including both Emmelie-Louise Waters and George Stagg who had contributed to the very first season and helped launch the show.
 
It aired every Saturday at 23:00 Wynnoan time, 22:00 Ahitereiran time, and 21:00 Kiavalari time, four hours later than usual. This slot was after the watershed which allowed the show to do darker storylines but also reduced it's exposure to children. The episodes were filmed in Empheri and subtitled in Exteras. The show was re-dubbed in Exteras in a broadcast on Sunday, the following day, on HKBC2 at the same timeslot. An earlier timeslot of 18:00 Wynnoan time, 17:00 Ahitereiran time, and 16:00 Kiavalari time was also available during a re-run on the Monday after the episode aired on HKBC3.
 
The cast would be Georgina Sheppard and Florence Saber, with various recurring guest stars. Due to the nature of the premiere being a large event, the episode count of other stories were sacrificed. Lottie French's ''The Coconut Men'' was cut to just two parts, while ''Crisis to the Society'' would take up just three parts, with the intention to continue the storyline of the serial in the next season.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
! style="width:2.5%; background:#331F2F; color:#ffffff" |<abbr>No.</abbr>story
! style="width:2.5%;background:#331F2F; color:#ffffff" |<abbr>No.</abbr> in
season
! style="width:35%; background:#331F2F; color:#ffffff;" |Serial title
! style="width:15%; background:#331F2F; color:#ffffff" |Written by
! style="width:20%; background:#331F2F; color:#ffffff" |Original air date(s)
! colspan="6" style="width:5%; background:#8992D1331F2F; color:#ffffff" |'''Season 29'''viewers
(millions) 
|-
!196
|1
|{{Unbulleted list|"[[The Maarvils' Master Plan]]"}}
|[[Emmelie-Louise Waters]]
|9 April 2489 – 28 May 2489 ''•'' (8 parts)
|32.5
|-
!197
|2
|{{Unbulleted list|"[[The Crisis of Society]]"}}
|[[Scarlett Alardice]]
|4 June 2489 – 18 June 2489 ''•'' (3 parts)
|31.9
|-
!198
|3
|{{Unbulleted list|"[[The Coconut Men]]"}}
|[[Lottie French]]
|25 June 2489 – 2 July 2489 ''•'' (2 parts)
|28.5
|-
!199
|4
|{{Unbulleted list|"[[The Seven Wijs]]"}}
|[[Lena Keating]] and [[Benjamin Holmes]]
|9 July 2489 – 23 July 2489 ''•'' (3 parts)
|29.7
|-
!200
|5
|{{Unbulleted list|"[[The Voyage of the Exomen]]"}}
|[[George Stagg]]
|30 July 2489 – 20 August 2489 ''•'' (4 parts)
|28.6
|}
 
 
== References ==
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