(Note, if you have not read this book and do not want to spoil some, do not read on)
The rule that changes is that only one tribute can win. It is changed for the 74th Hunger Games, the games Katniss is in The Hunger Games, to 2 tributes being allowed to win. It gets changed back to only one tribute, but in the very end two tributes are allowed to win.
There are no rules in the Hunger Games, so if that's what your asking, then, yes.
Gale. He'd never changed.
The Appalachia area is in the exact same place as it is in real life. The location never changed.
The Food games The death games the fighting games Or the appetite games
Wiress, being quite a timid character killed no one in the 75th Hunger Games but she herself was killed by Gloss from District 1, the male tribute. Obviously due to the Quarter Quell rules she was in another Hunger Games previously but it is not mentioned what one she was in nor if she killed anyone. Hope this helped :)
Claudius Templesmith
There are no rules in the Hunger Games, so if that's what your asking, then, yes.
the author
Mostly water. Hope this helped
1
There are unwritten rules of how you cannot eat another tribute once you have killed them, also in the end of part two of The Hunger Games it is told two tributes from the same District may win the Hunger Games together.
Gale. He'd never changed.
The Hunger Games
Katniss had to follow rules like: -No fighting in the training center -No eating dead people in the arena (kinda gross but someone in the hunger games did it) I don't know the rest but I really hoped this helped a little bit! :)
Peeta says that he wants to come out of the hunger games the same beacause he doesn't want to be changed by the rules of the games, he also said that he would rather die for Katniss than come out alive, crazed and dangerous. -<3 Jessi
The new rules in "The Hunger Games" allowed for two victors from the same district, which fundamentally changed the dynamics of the competition. This shift encouraged alliances and collaboration among tributes, particularly between Katniss and Peeta, who leveraged their relationship to manipulate the audience and the Capitol. The potential for shared victory heightened the emotional stakes and strategic gameplay, transforming the Games into a more complex social and political arena. Ultimately, it highlighted themes of rebellion and solidarity against a tyrannical system.
Most of the lines from the book are in the movie only a few are changed around.