So many of these genres are applied to works long after they have been completed. For example, The Flintstones are labeled as stonepunk, even though it originally aired in the early 60s.
I wonder if the hyper taxonomization of genres is something specific to our era.<p>When I was a kid we barely distinguished between horror and thriller but nowadays books are written on the subtle differences between slipstream and new weird, and the subgenres of fantasy and sci-fi are legions.<p>Maybe it's Wikipedia's fault.
> Cyber noir is subgenre that combines elements of noir and cyberpunk.<p>Isn't cyber punk supposed to be film noir set in a high tech future? So we just increasing the amount of film noir to get Cyber Noir?
See also "Punk Punk" on TV Tropes:<p>> <a href="https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/PunkPunk" rel="nofollow">https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/PunkPunk</a>
Cyberpunk derivatives? I guess <i>cyberpunk futures</i> are a well defined market (some would argue we are living in one right now), but are there also <i>cyberpunk options</i> and <i>cyberpunk swaps</i>?