Whether or not this is real, I love how you guys get all worked up about the supposed 'flaw in logic' about having a new transformation in season 4.
Bear in mind, nobody ever actually said that a new season necessarily means a new transformation, though there would probably be one.
Don't get me wrong, I love this series, but since, when, I ask you, has Winx club
ever been based on any sort of logic?
You have a girl who was raised by parents on earth, and then almost ignores them altogether in search of her fairy parents.
You have a school devoted to teaching high school students, so badly unprepared for attacks that they rely on their own novice students to defend the school from danger - time and again.
Nobody had said a word about the existence of 'enchantix' till season 3, and suddenly it had become the most central theme in everyone's life. You'd think there would have already been other fairies with enchantix around to help out before bloom and friends achieved this transforamtion.
If this were based on logic, you'd think you would have seen the schoolmistress' enchantix before season 3, or really, at all, ever.
Remember earlier in the series, when Griselda repremanded the three senior witches? Her reason for repremanding them was that "they got caught," but later in the series she showed ethical awareness and a sense of responsibility toward the fairies, as well, which is contradictory to that.
Heck, even the way Bloom got into the school in the first place was ridiculous - if I recall correctly, Stella just randomly brought her there one day and then 'snuck her in.'
If things were logical, there would have been fairies with enchantix long before season 3 who could easily have helped out with the challenges the girls faced prior to season 3.
And, really, if Winx Club was based on logic, then Bloom would have dumped Skye for Baltor long ago
I could go on and on listing examples of logical flaws in this show. This show was never really about logic. This show was about fun, magical adventures of cool-looking, strong girls having cool-looking fairy transformations. It was a cross between Harry Potter and Sailormoon, which is a winning combination no matter how you look at it, and all in all, it was a fun show. You can just keep cranking out seasons about a show like this, leaving out logic and much of a plotline if you keep the story about stuff kids want to watch, which is cool-looking characters doing cool things.
Heck, Sailormoon dragged on for five seasons, just adding on more and more characters and more and more transformations, and although all million episodes were more or less exactly the same, we all just kept on watching to the bitter end.
That said, I personally am of the opinion that the way the movie ended clearly implies some sort of continuation to the story.