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* AnachronismStew/ComicBooks



* AnachronismStew/{{Music}}
* AnachronismStew/TabletopGames



* AnachronismStew/{{Webcomics}}


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[[folder:Comic Books]]
* Comic books from the major publishers DC and Marvel are prone to this in general due to ComicBookTime and the desire to keep memorable stories as canon. For example, the ''ComicBook/New52'' has established that the ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'' story ''ComicBook/TheKillingJoke'' is still a part of [[ComicBook/{{Batgirl}} Barbara Gordon's]] history happening sometime in the past five years but the original story was written in the late 1980s. ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'' even {{invoked|Trope}} this as an intentional design decision, featuring ArtDeco architecture alongside 1950s-looking television alongside almost science-fiction-level technology such as virtual reality and bionic eyes.
* The eponymous character of ''ComicBook/LeonardLeGenie'' is an inventor living in the 14th century. However, he has electricity, modern tools and a CoolCar available, and his inventions include computers and robots, among others. Somewhat justified by him being a genius inventor, but still... {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d at least once; Léonard invents a photo camera and, on having put the film into an envelope, realizes there's nowhere to mail it to. "Do I have to invent everything myself?"
* ''ComicBook/{{Hellblazer}}'' occasionally falls into this, the most JustForFun/{{egregious}} example being issue #186's {{Anvilicious}} portrayal of the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_War Black War]] as a one-sided Nazi-style genocide, completed with a barbed-wire-fenced extermination camp in 1833 (30 years before the actual invention of barbed wire).
* ''ComicBook/{{Asterix}}'' is a mixture of this and PurelyAestheticEra. The albums set abroad in particular include lots of elements for which the countries in question are famous ''now'': [[TorosYFlamenco bullfighting and flamenco dancing]] in Hispania, [[SwissBankAccount anonymous bank vaults]] and fondue in Helvetia, [[RugbyIsSlaughter rugby]] and [[BritsLoveTea afternoon tea]] in Britannia, etc. Likewise, the regional specialties from different parts of Gaul in ''Asterix and the Banquet'' are all based on modern French cuisine. On the other hand, a lot of the stuff is actually well researched and Uderzo, for instance, later was quite embarrassed about some ''unintentional'' anachronisms, such as the appearances of a fiddle and a wheelbarrow in two early stories.
* ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'':
** Hob Gadling has been alive since the 13th century and now [[CursedWithAwesome will not die unless he chooses to]]. In the 20th century, his girlfriend dresses up to visit a Ren Faire. He has several criticisms about the realism of the place (mostly that [[TheDungAges nothing is covered in shit]] the way it should be), and when he sees her in wench costume, she attempts to talk YeOldeButcheredeEnglishe to him. His response: "Thou lookst passing fair, milady. Save thou manglest the Queen's good English and thy tits are hanging out."
** Delirium is this on legs. She turns up in ancient Greece wearing a fishnet vest and miniskirt.
* The newspaper comic strip ''ComicStrip/{{BC}}'' had lots of these. Despite supposedly taking place, um, in the years B.C. (specifically, in prehistoric times), there were often references to modern times, especially as the strip went on; at least one strip had a character refer to the United States. It turns out that [[spoiler:the series actually takes place AfterTheEnd, with mankind reduced to the same level of technology as was had in prehistoric times]].
** Plus, especially in later years when Johnny Hart became more religious, ''they celebrated Christmas'' and made other Christian references. Which is kind of the definition of anachronistic in a strip named ''B.C.''[[note]]Though one of the major characters is named BC, and the strip could be named after him rather than the other way around. Later strips sometimes feature an Italian-esque character who lives across the sea named Anno Domini.[[/note]]
** "The Wizard of Id" by the same creators is another case of this. It supposedly takes place in medieval times, but it has plenty of modern-day references.
* Deliberately used in ''ComicBook/{{Alias}}'' to {{lampshade|Hanging}} the Marvel's [[ComicBookTime floating timeline]]. For example, a flashback to [[ComicBook/SpiderMan Peter Parker]]'s teen years uses fashion and slang straight out of a 1960s [[MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] comic, despite the fact that it was actually set in the late 1980s.
* {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d again in ''ComicBook/AllNewXMen'', another Creator/BrianMichaelBendis work. The original X-Men likely started off in the early 1990s or late 1980s thanks to ComicBookTime, but still dress and act as though they came straight from the 1960s, when the original ''X-Men'' comics were published.
* ''ComicBook/{{Scion}}'' took place on a world which combined medieval European fantasy trappings (kingdoms, castles, dragons, etc.) with sci-fi elements (holograms, bioengineering, computers, etc.).
* One of the stories in ''[[ComicBook/{{Shazam}} Captain Marvel Adventures]]'' #95 (1949), ''History Goes Wild'', has an invisible version of Earth in space with history different to Earth, long ago the twin worlds branched apart in space. The North Pole has just been discovered, people are using rocket ships to return from holiday in Antarctica, people with different eras' clothing style are together, and cats and dogs are extinct. Also, President George Washington is on holiday in Antarctica and Julius Caesar is attacking America. Captain Marvel shoves the world away to another star system.
* Opal City from ''ComicBook/StarmanDCComics'' was deliberately designed to have a retro [[MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks Golden Age]] aesthetic, despite taking place in the 1990s. The series' protagonist, Jack Knight, runs an antique shop and is quite fond of using dated slang and clothing.
* ''ComicBook/{{Iznogoud}}'':
** Space rockets in the 9th century?
** The story "Calculated Risk" features a magical computer invented by a character named [[Creator/{{IBM}} I-Bee'Em]].
--->'''Iznogoud:''' [[LampshadeHanging If there's a pun there somewhere, I don't get it.]]
* Creator/DCComics' [[MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks Golden Age]] FunnyAnimal character Nero Fox was described as the "Jive-Jumping Emperor of Ancient Rome". As such, his two shticks were being emperor of the UsefulNotes/RomanEmpire and being obsessed with playing (poorly) his "gobble pipe" (saxophone). His appearance in a ''ComicBook/CaptainCarrotAndHisAmazingZooCrew'' story also showed him using anachronistic 1940s-era music slang, to a time-travelling Capt. Carrot and Pig Iron's bewilderment.
* An odd case of InUniverse AnachronismStew is ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies'', where the original stories took place in a somewhat bizarre BroadStrokes version of the standard one. Among other things, the majority of the Avengers are still wearing their 70s getups, Magneto has his Acolytes, which implies the 90s, and characters from 2000s teams like ''ComicBook/YoungAvengers'' or ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'' pop up.
* ''ComicBook/MortadeloYFilemon'': Whenever historical events are portrayed, expect some out-of-place item, usually a contemporary one like a cardboard-made TV in old Rome. Other characters will invariably call it a [[ItWillNeverCatchOn fleeting style which will be out-of-fashion soon]].
* ''ComicBook/WizardsOfMickey'' is set in a standard medieval fantasy setting, but the communicating stone is called the ''Amulet Cellphone'' (an "amulettophone" in the original version), even if regular cellphones do not exist, there are multiple references to things such as magical credit cards, and Fethry Duck builds a disco palace in the fourth arc. In the third arc, Fafnir starts dressing and behaving like [[Series/HappyDays Fonzie]], of all things. Various robots are also seen throughout the series.
* In a ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'' storyline in which the villain Dominus was trapping Superman in four contradictory realities (based on MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks, MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks, MediaNotes/TheBronzeAgeOfComicBooks, and the old "Superman of the 30th century" back-up strips), there were frequent suggestions that things weren't quite right. The most obvious was the Silver Age, which not only had Modern Age characters like Maggie Sawyer and Professor Hamilton but had things like Lois telling Jimmy to download his digital photos, while talking to Perry on her "cellphone" (a 1960s phone receiver with an ariel sticking out of it).
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[[folder:Music]]
* ''Series/HappyDays'': Most of the time, the series was true to its roots and played 1950s music in the background. Enter Suzi Quattro (Leather Tuscaredo), who – when she performed – always performed in her late 1970s style. This included her ballad "Find Strength in Your Friends," which she sang using a very 1978 music bed in the episode "Richie Almost Dies" (under which clips of Richie played), an episode that was set in 1959.
* Music/PDQBach ignores the fact that what we think of today as "classical" music actually happened over several centuries and is divided into distinct stylistic periods. Peter Schickele is quite aware of this, but [[RuleOfFunny ignores it]] in favor of [[AffectionateParody parodying]] as many different things as possible, and {{lampshade|Hanging}}s the eclecticism of PDQ's style many times. Then there are the anachronisms which are more obvious to the layperson, such as "Iphigenia in Brooklyn" or the "Bluegrass Cantata" or "Classical Rap" (though Schickele claimed to have altered the original lyrics of that one).
* The Brazilian song "Samba do Crioulo Doido", or "the crazy negro's samba", composed by Stanislaw Ponte Preta for a play's soundtrack. It is about a composer that had to learn Brazilian history because law dictated all carnival music had to be based on it (TruthInTelevision). When required to write one about current politics, he goes insane and writes a samba whose [[http://lyrics.wikia.com/wiki/Quarteto_Em_Cy:Samba_Do_Crioulo_Doido/en lyrics]] mix several historical figures from different periods in a completely nonsensical tale. The title of the song is still a slang for an absurd situation or a piece of fantastic, badly reasoned writing.
* The video for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8txk6EhYZKA ''Glukoza's Schweine'']] is all over the place. The Pig Army (clearly a Nazi parody) is armed with [=G43's, MP40's, MG34s=], Zeppelins, Triplanes, Sd.kfz 250's, and Renault FT's. Meanwhile the Rebel Army Leaders use a G36, a Kalashnikov, an RPG-7, 2 MPL's, a Vickers MG, giant War Elephants, and Pterodactyls. The Rebel Army itself is comprised mainly of Samurai with some Ninjas using swords and pistols respectively.
* The Italian progressive rock group Jacula has one weird example - in the mid 1980's they re-released their debut album In Cauda Semper Stat Venenum, supposedly originally released in 1969. The audio production however is very consistent with that of mid 80's Doom metal, and the album also includes the use of samplers (which did exist in the 60's, but their use certainly was not widespread), most notoriously a loop of flowing water that was also used in former band member Doris Norton's 1984 album "Personal Computer".
* Not even Satan is immune to this trope. Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}}' ''Sympathy For The Devil'' from ''Music/BeggarsBanquet'' includes the BadassBoast "I laid traps for troubadoures/Who get killed before they reach Bombay" presumably in a [[Series/DoctorWho TARDIS]].
* The novelty song ''Grandad'' (a 1970/1 UK hit for Creator/CliveDunn) has the titular grandad reminiscing about his memories of growing up in the old days. Judging by the mishmash of references, his childhood lasted from about the 1840s to the 1940s.
* 'Hail Caesar' by Music/{{ACDC}}- The lyrics clearly refer to the assassination of Julius Caesar, but apparently the killing ''started in the Colosseum'' despite the fact that the Colosseum wasn't built until more than 100 years later.
* The video for ''Music/StandAndDeliver'' by Music/AdamAnt mostly has a 17th or 18th century look, but with several unexplained modern elements. The song itself is also an anachronism stew, referencing highwaymen but also modern things like records and old age pensions.
* In Paint's song, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=diU70KshcjA After Ever After]], a heavy amount of SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome in the Disney films, which for the most part take place centuries before said surprisingly realistic outcome happened. Examples include Ariel's kingdom being affected by the BP Oil Spill, Elsa taking action over the global warming crisis, or even Aladdin got nabbed by the CIA during the War on Terror. The only cases where the anachronism is justified or averted is during Tiana's segment, where she suffers the consequences of Hurricane Katrina (The Princess and the Frog took place in the 1930's, so it wouldn't be any stretch of the imagination for Tiana to go through that in her old age) and Pocahontas, where the FridgeHorror of colonialism is fully realized.
* Music/DavidByrne and Music/FatboySlim's 2010 album ''Here Lies Love'' is a rock opera about Imelda Marcos, first lady of the Philippines. It ends, with her political career, in 1986. The song "American Troglodyte" describes the Americanization of the Philippines after it gained independence from the USA, but it has some blatant references to culture circa 2010: "Americans are surfing the internet. / Americans are listening to Music/FiftyCent."
* In Music/FiveIronFrenzy's video for "Zen and the Art of Xenophobia", the band members stage a gleefully absurd play. It involves Abraham Lincoln (who has Wolverine's claws for some reason), the native Americans and first white colonizers of America, and modern-day Arabs all brushing shoulders. At the end, Jesus shows up and kills them all with a semi-auto rifle.
* The novelty song "Walk the Dinosaur" by Music/WasNotWas, takes place "40 million years ago" (or 25 million years after the Cretaceous) and describes the singer not only interacting with dinosaurs, but meeting a cave-painting woman, watching ''Series/MiamiVice'', and something about Elvis landing in a rocket ship. Arguably, the lyrics cross the threshold from anachronistic to surreal.
* Music/JohannSebastianBach is portrayed in the presence of a Moog synthesizer on the album cover of ''Music/SwitchedOnBach'' by Music/WendyCarlos.
* The dog in 16th century clothing on the cover of Music/FrankZappa's ''Music/ThePerfectStranger'' and ''Music/FrancescoZappa'' wears CoolShades.
* Music/{{Falco}} combines 1980s fashion with 18th century style clothing in the music video of "Rock Me Amadeus".
* A parody of Music/TheBeatles' "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" once hosted by [=AmIRight=], a music fansite for mondegreens and original parodies, stated in the very first verse that the ''VideoGame/GameAndWatch'' series of games from Nintendo was started ''after'' MediaNotes/TheGreatVideoGameCrashOf1983 and the release of the Macintosh took place. That's not the only thing it gets wrong, either--in the very same verse it's not just assumed that the Apple II and the Macintosh were one and the same (when in fact they were very different product lines offered by Apple), but also that Game & Watch itself was intended to compete with Apple's computers.
-->''It was 20 years ago today''\\
''Gunpei Yokoi taught the world to play''\\
''[='=]Cause Atari and Mattel were through''\\
''Only thing left was the Apple II''\\
''But it cost a little too [[PrecisionFStrike damn]] much''\\
''So to compete with the Macintosh''\\
''Nintendo released the Game & Watch''
* Music/{{Heilung}} play "amplified history." They use texts from all over pre-Christian Northern Europe, some of their stage outfits are historically correct reproductions of Nordic Bronze Age clothing, and their music mixes traditional instruments with electronic effects. See the start of [[https://youtu.be/QRg_8NNPTD8 this live video]], where one of the band blows down a buffalo horn, then loops it to set up a drone.
* The video for Music/{{Sabaton}}'s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b4vj_WB5w_k "The Unkillable Soldier"]] consciously leans on RuleOfFunny as a [[BlackComedy deliberately slapsticky]] interpretation of Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart's military service. Among other things, Sir Adrian actually lost his eye putting down a native uprising in Somaliland (he used the injury as an excuse to return to Britain so he could be reassigned to the Western Front, UsefulNotes/WorldWarI having broken out shortly after he was sent to Africa), the HospitalHottie's uniform is completely inaccurate to what British Army nurses wore at the time, and the Tommygun wouldn't be introduced until after the war ended. According to Joakim in the associated ''WebVideo/SabatonHistory'' video, the director wanted the band members, who were playing German soldiers, to all wear Stahlhelms for historical accuracy, and the band pointed out that very little else that was going on was historically accurate and [[HelmetsAreHardlyHeroic went helmetless]].
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[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* Even ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' and its derivatives have this. Many settings (and many more [=DMs=]) [[FantasyGunControl don't allow firearms]], but will gladly allow many weapons that, in real life, came about after, and sometimes as a direct consequence of, the invention and proliferation of guns in real life. Rapiers, a longtime standard of Bards and Rogues, are just one example.
** Armour also falls into this, with all types of armour being portrayed as available in the same time period and simply being a matter of personal choice to balance weight and protection. In reality, full plate armour did not exist until around the 15th century, by which time many other types of armour were obsolete (particularly scale), at least in Europe. In addition, most armour has historically been a mix of various types, frequently mail or scaled on limbs with plates or scales covering the torso, which is rarely represented in such games at all. Helmets are possibly even worse, generally all being treated as identical despite a huge amount of development over thousands of years.
** An oft-overlooked example is the fact that one of the standard units of currency is the platinum piece (worth more than the [[GoldSilverCopperStandard gold, electrum, silver, and copper pieces]]) but platinum wasn't seen as anything but an impurity in gold until the eighteenth century.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Space 1889}}'' well, it is Victorians in Space meeting canal Martians which have a pre-industrial society with some leftover technology from a much more advanced era, stone-age Hill Martians and High Martians on Mars and stone-age lizardmen and dinosaurs on Venus.
* ''King Arthur Pendragon'' takes a mix of all the main Arthurian myths, mostly Malory, and sets it in sub-Roman Britain. The appearance of medieval technology later in Arthur's reign is [[AWizardDidIt explained by magic]] and it all fades away after the Battle of Camlann with history re-asserting itself.
** ''Pendragon'' is not above {{shout out}}s to later history either, including Merlin prophesying that the Pope would live in Avignon, and Myth/KingArthur quoting UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy "ask not what your country can do for you..." before the Battle of Badon Hill.
* Parodied in the TabletopGames ''[[Series/XenaWarriorPrincess Diana: Warrior Princess]]'' and ''[[Series/HerculesTheLegendaryJourneys Elvis: The Legendary Tours]]'', which take the AnachronismStew approach to modern-day pop-culture.
* Quirkily {{lampshade|Hanging}}d by the {{Sourcebook}} ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}} Middle Ages''. Its opening chapter includes a sidebar that actually explains the concept of Anachronism Stew by pointing out all the historical mismatches in its own cover art.
** Also acknowledged in ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}} Camelot'', the Arthurian sourcebook. There are ''three'' Arthurian settings mentioned - the Mythic one (Geoffry of Monmouth style, with plenty of anachronism), a Realistic one (as close as research can get us), and the Cinematic one (based on movies, with chrome armor and French castles and all the other goodies - not so much Anachronism Stew as an Anachronism Smoothie).
* ''Mythic Russia'' has a few that are [[LampshadeHanging pointed out]] and {{justified|Trope}} in the book. The Russians drink vodka even though it hadn't yet become popular historically, because "what is a game in Russia without vodka?" The Mongols are Tengrist pagans even though the Golden Horde had converted to Islam by the time it was set, partly because it's easier to handle in the game's ReligionIsMagic system and partly because of plain old RuleOfCool.
* The ''Pirates Constructible Strategy Game'' by Wizkids is a naval combat game set sometime before, during, and after the American Revolution/War of 1812 era. When the first set came out, things were fine, but with each new expansion, they seem to be intent on adding a new crazy mechanic. They get alright justifications/{{Handwave}}s most of the time, but it is still silly. They are currently halfway between this and FantasyKitchenSink. Some of these include:
** Sea Monsters/Titans
** Cursed pirates
** Submarines (based off Creator/JulesVerne)
** Vikings ({{Handwave}}d as being northerners who believe Myth/NorseMythology)
** Bombardiers (Ships with long-range and ''flame cannons'' attached to their decks)
** Turtle ships (which at least existed around the time)
** "Switchblades" (metal ships with giant pincers attached to the sides)
* ''TabletopGame/VisigothsVsMallGoths'' is anachronistic by nature, due to TimeTravel bringing some antiquity-era Barbarians to 1990s Los Angeles. That aside, most of the references are true to the time period, but some of the names are more modern references for the RuleOfFunny. For instance, the store Big Disc Energy plays off [[https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/big-dick-energy a 2019 meme that also has the acronym BDE]].
* The old ''Atlantean Trilogy'' by Bar Games mixed AnachronismStew with AllMythsAreTrue, and came up with an alternate Earth where Atlantis coexists with Avalon, Amazons rub shoulders with gypsies, and you can sail from Hyperborea to Nazca. Never mind it's supposed to be set in 15,000 BC, and the continents' geographies are radically different?
* The defunct trading card game ''Anachronism'' was built on this trope. The idea was that you could play as, say, Ivan the Terrible while wielding a claymore, wearing Japanese armor, and with Aphrodite on your side.
* The TabletopGame/YuGiOh OCG name for the Chronomaly archetype, "[=OOPArts=]", is an acronym for "Out-of-Place Artifact", a term used to describe artifacts that make no logical sense given the technology available at the time they were created. The TCG name, "Chronomaly", is a portmanteau of the word "chronology" which is the sequential order in which past events occur and "anomaly" as in an irregularity or something odd. Put together these monsters are "chronological anomalies" or "chronomalies" since these objects deviate from what would have been possible to create given the resources and technology available at that time.
** Note that this isn't even the most notable example. From the very start, there were magicians, knights, dragons, and the like along side stuff like tanks, military infantry, and both [[RidiculouslyHumanRobot ridiculously human]] and {{Super Robot}}s.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}''
** The one most people have pointed out in Fantasy Battles is Bretonnia, which is an Arthurian-style Feudal Kingdom with your traditional knights, bows, and trebuchets, right next door to the Empire, which is nearly 2-3 centuries ahead with cannons, guns, and ''tanks''.
*** In fact, the Empire has knights and archers (and crossbowmen!) of its own, deployed right alongside the cannons, guns and tanks.
** Other examples in the game (there are many) include the Skaven, who have access to Gatling- oh wait - ''[[{{Pun}} Ratling]]'' guns and ''Lightning cannons'', while other races, such as the Elves or the Tomb Kings, still use ballistae, bows and chariots.
** Note that these are actually justified in the lore- the Bretonnian elite are protected by the Lady's blessing against firearms, while Bretonnian law forbids the use of "cowardly" gunpowder weapons on their soil (and as a result, have the most guns on their ''navy''), because the Lady they worship is actually worship a Wood Elf goddess who deliberately keeps them at a pre-industrial level so they won't start massively chopping down her forests.
* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' has this as well, with many troops (especially Orks) being armed with bladed melee weapons such as swords, axes, and [[CarryABigStick warhammers]], while others have machine guns, lasers, automatic bazookas, and space ships.
** A prime example being the Imperial Guard, where you can have tribals with axes & bows, horse cavalry, World War I-style tanks, {{Chicken Walker}}s and {{Future Copter}}s all in the same force. And a whole line of 20th-century weaponry classified as stubbers & autoguns like M1911, Uzi, AK-47, & M2 Browning are still in service with them.
** Characterized even farther by the fact that the lore states there are planets that have slid back technologically to a MedievalStasis from being cut-off from other worlds, which may have been used at one point in early source books to try and incorporate the ''Warhammer Fantasy Battle'' universe into that of 40k.
* ''TabletopGame/HoylesRulesOfDragonPoker'': The author never bothers to explain why a game played at ancient Pompeii has rules for surge protectors and Weird Al.
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[[folder:Webcomics]]
* ''Webcomic/ThePaulReveres'' takes place during the American Revolution, but features electric guitars, modern drum kits, blue mohawks, and somehow they know who David Bowie is, among other modern music references.
* ''Webcomic/NoNeedForBushido'', while technically set in imperial Japan, cheerfully features a hodgepodge of ninjas, Taoist monks, an order of scantily clad female assassins, giant anime-style swords (well, ok, one giant sword), Hong Kong kung-fu action movie fighting styles, and modern-day references. And TWO blind kick-ass fighters. Also, ''birdfish''. (The NNFB fanmixes take this anachronism with modern day references even further, to absurd but often hilarious extremes)
* ''Webcomic/ArthurKingOfTimeAndSpace'' gleefully throws the anachronisms into the "fairy tale" arc (the standard Arthurian romance with the standard medieval trappings) with two justifications: the author (and to a lesser extent, the characters) ''knows'' the sources are flawed and anachronistic in and of themselves, and half the anachronisms are [[AWizardDidIt Merlin's fault]], since he has the gift of foresight (at one point, for example, using a fly swatter to kill a fairy spy).
* ''Webcomic/DinosaurComics''. While inherently unrealistic (talking dinosaurs), they oftentimes reference human events, which obviously would take place many millions of years in the future. This is often {{lampshade|Hanging}}d.
** There's anachronisms in ''every'' strip: The third panel has T-Rex about to step on a house that's next to a car, and the fourth panel has T-Rex about to step on a person.
--> '''Utahraptor:''' [[HypocriticalHumor History for you is a big party where everyone just hangs out together, isn't it?]]
* ''ComicStrip/ThePerryBibleFellowship'': [[http://pbfcomics.com/?cid=PBF209-Now_Showing.jpg this strip]] shows a technologically advanced future civilization for whom the history of the second millennium seems to be a big blur.
* ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'':
** In Azure City, not only are there sewers, but there are three tunnels, clearly labeled "Ocean," "Anachronistic Sewage Plant," and "Obligatory Sewer-Themed Labyrinth." Such things have been {{lampshade|Hanging}}d.
** And in Cliffport, there's a ''municipal park''. Amid ''high-rise buildings''.
--->'''Vaarsuvius''': I'm simply saying that the architectural motifs found here in the city of Cliffport are inconsistent with the presumed medieval time period.\\
'''Durkon''': [[AWizardDidIt It be magic]].\\
'''Vaarsuvius''': Yes, fine, I grasp the premise that [[ClarkesThirdLaw any sufficiently advanced - and in particular, reliable - magic would be indistinguishable from technology]], I merely find the implementation here haphazard, at best.\\
'''Durkon''': Meh. It could be worse, ye know.\\
'''Vaarsuvius''': Oh?\\
'''Durkon''': They could have [[TabletopGame/{{Eberron}} magic trains]].\\
'''Vaarsuvius''': Point taken.
*** And it's then played straighter by Redcloak [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0543.html here]].
---->'''Redcloak''': (...) but I'm the one who has to make the magical lightning-powered trains run on time.
** The C.C.P.D. are a modern day police force with swords and plate armor, complete with sirens (on the horses), sketch artist and mayor yelling at DaChief for failing to catch the murderer when elections are coming up, and underlings being yelled at by said cigar-smoking, coffee downing chief.
** It's subtle, but look at [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0692.html this comic.]] Where did Hayley get a metal detector? And more importantly, where was she keeping it? (Same questions apply to Roy and his [[NewerThanTheyThink sextant]]...)
** When [[spoiler:the High Priest of Hel tries to find a memory of Durkon's about Belkar that isn't related to the latter insulting the former in some way]], what shows up is a modern-style search engine result saying [[spoiler: the memory he was looking for]] was unable to be found. Similarly, when Vaarsuvius tries to scry for Haley's location, they instead receive a 404 error.
* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'', Ms. Jones' students watch [[http://www.gunnerkrigg.com/archive_page.php?comicID=582 a documentary hologram]] about the founding of the Court. The characters in the hologram include a guy who looks like he stepped out of TheCavalierYears or UsefulNotes/TheAmericanRevolution, and another fellow wearing a modern trench coat, an article of clothing which wasn't introduced until UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. Shortly afterwards, Jones points out that "this simulation is an artistic representation". Although she said that in regards to an indistinct glow, represented as such because they didn't know what it was. And present was also the man who designed robots. Maybe the others just liked to dress that way.
* The idea of anachronism stew was theorized, later {{defictionaliz|ation}}ed, and generally slammed in [[http://xkcd.com/239/ this]] ''Webcomic/{{XKCD}}'' comic.
** And again [[http://xkcd.com/771/ here]] and in the title text [[https://xkcd.com/2396/ here]].
* ''Webcomic/HarkAVagrant!'' [[http://www.harkavagrant.com/index.php?id=139 is all about this]].
* ''[[http://hellbastardcomix.com/ Hellbastard Comics]]'' starts with an alien war that interrupts {{Satan}}'s viewing of ''Bridezillas'' in what is later revealed to be the pre-Napoleonic era and just [[RuleOfCool gets better]] from there.
* ''Webcomic/BladeBunny'' takes place in a historical mashup of feudal Japan and ancient China, with [[spoiler: robots]] one of which has [[spoiler: futuristic guns]] and a [[PlayboyBunny BunnyGirl]] in a microskirt. Justified in that it's revealed that [[spoiler: the robots and the [[PlayboyBunny BunnyGirl]] come from different dimensions.]]
* [[Webcomic/SanThreeKingdomsComic San Three Kingdoms]] has no problem using modern machine guns.... [[http://san.paulguo.com/?id=150 in 208 AD]]. Or [[http://san.paulguo.com/?id=19 sniper rifles (Cao Cao is sexy...)]]
* [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2000/8/25/ This]] ''Webcomic/PennyArcade'' comic has a flashback to 1988 showing characters using a Powerglove (introduced in 1989 and quickly flopped), reading ''Magazine/NintendoPower'' #31 (December, 1991), talking about ''WesternAnimation/ThunderCats'' (ran from 1985-89), and drinking a New Coke (introduced in 1985 and quickly flopped). To be fair, the date is only implied, and everybody didn't immediately quit drinking New Coke, playing with Powergloves, or referencing cancelled cartoons. But the overall impression is a mishmash of things associated with the '80s, regardless of which part of the '80s (or early '90s) they actually came from.
* ''Webcomic/ProblemSleuth'' is theoretically set in the Prohibition era, but the main characters play board games from the 50s, have 90s murals celebrating ethnic diversity on their walls, and use computers to check [=GameFAQs=] to solve the hardest puzzles.
* ''Webcomic/{{Nimona}}'' often sees combinations of fantasy-medieval and sci-fi themes. The secondary main character, Ballister Blackheart, is a BlackKnight with a robotic arm.
* ''Webcomic/KnightsOfBuenaVista'' is a anachronistic as the Franchise/DisneyAnimatedCanon films it [[CampaignComic takes place in]]. Such as Haagan-Dazs existing in ''WesternAnimation/Frozen2013'' despite taking place over a century before that company was founded.
* ''Webcomic/PepsiaPhobia'' is set in UsefulNotes/AncientGreece and has things like banks, dining-and-dashing, XP points, and quotes of Creator/FriedrichNietzsche. This is lampshaded in a gag strip when Philia calls Klepto's drink, a Beijing Peach, anachronistic. The comic also parodies this trope by having the [[http://gastrophobia.com/pix/extras/mapofancientgreece.gif map of Greece]] be a recolored map of Texas. ''Some'' parts are justified due to the machinations of the cast's TimeTravel-capable characters ([[spoiler: Lord Nightsorrow]] explicitly claims to have brought back Halloween with him).
* ''Webcomic/BrunoTheBandit'' is set in a vaguely-medieval fantasy kingdom, yet features television, cell phones, [[BurgerFool fast-food joints]] and several other fairly modern inventions, heavily played for {{Rule of Funny}}.
* ''Webcomic/PowerOfEther'' In what world would [[http://www.powerofether.com/archive/14-comic-1-10 genetic manipulation]] predate [[http://www.powerofether.com/archive/14-comic-1-11 ocean travel?]] One where humanity is too busy fighting wars to bother with ocean travel. The author explains it in more detail in the commentary for [[http://www.powerofether.com/archive/14-comic-1-11 this]] page.
* While ''Webcomic/SaffronAndSage'' takes place in a fantasy setting there are still very noticeable non-fantasy elements such as modern looking swimsuits and spas.
* Deliberately invoked in ''Webcomic/NeverSatisfied''. Motorboats and polaroid photos exist alongside archaic clothing and pre-industrialization town square marketplaces. To quote [[http://ohcorny.tumblr.com/post/176656257510/ the author]], "Sometimes they dress like Tudors. Sometimes there's a car."
* Present Lady gives Willa a toy train for [[YouMeanXmas Xmas]] in ''Webcomic/LatchkeyKingdom'', which has a pre-industrial setting. She [[LampshadeHanging notices]] the anachronism and asks Willa to act surprised if a real one is invented.
* ''Webcomic/PoisonIvyGulch'': Some of the characters, namely Ace and Lorraine (a saloon girl), are shown chewing bubble gum and even blowing bubbles. Bubble gum wasn't invented until 1928; the time period is TheWildWest of the 19th century. But this modern inclusion is due to the RuleOfFunny.
* ''Webcomic/HobbitsAndHoleDwellers'': [[https://gemofwonder.livejournal.com/5815.html #22]] parodies this by Bailey using it as an off-the-cuff excuse for Balin being able to find Dwalin so quickly (Dwalin called Balin's cellphone-in a ''pre-medieval'' setting). Ted seems to be about to hang a lampshade on this, but he's interrupted.
* ''Webcomic/ThePrincesssJewels'' supposedly takes place in vaguely medieval fantasy kingdom, but features color-print magazines, polystyrene coffee cup, and mishmash between Victorian era and modern-day clothing.
* In ''Webcomic/KoanOfTheDay'', it appears to be a peaceful ancient village, but [[http://www.koanoftheday.com/zen/ hashtags]] and [[http://www.koanoftheday.com/76/ cars]] exist.
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* AnachronismStew/{{Radio}}
* AnachronismStew/{{Roleplay}}



* AnachronismStew/VisualNovels


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* ''Radio/BleakExpectations'' runs on this, especially after the first series, almost always for the purposes of humour.
* Creator/TheBBC Radio 4 sitcom ''The Castle'' set in MedievalBritain, works purely on the RuleOfFunny, whether it's the lord's daughter using textspeak, or a [[Series/TimeTeam group of archeologists led by a]] NoCelebritiesWereHarmed Tony Robinson digging up the castle grounds.
* Radio/RidersRadioTheater is a wild west RadioDrama that acts as if riding, roping and cowboying it up still exist alongside nuclear reactors and the internet.


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* ''Roleplay/CelestialRefresh'': TheMultiverse is it. While each world in the Multiverse is separated from each other with cosmic void, each world's inhabitants may know about other worlds, what [[ForegoneConclusion can and WILL lead to Anachronism Stew]].
** Currently it was smoothed out a bit, after introducing the Rings system, where each planet with similar technological progress are placed in one Ring to separate it from Lower-tech worlds and Higher-tech worlds. Terran type planets (different iterations of The Earth) are not separated, however.
* ''Roleplay/DestroyTheGodmodder'': Due to the style of play (Read as: a great lack of style of play) this forum game is a great example of this trope, from dinosaurs and lasers, to spacemen fighting knights.
* ''Roleplay/DinoAttackRPG'':
** As a result of MedievalStasis and SchizoTech, the LEGO Planet and Dino Attack Team is a NinjaPirateZombieRobot AnachronismStew.
** During the 1957 flashback, characters notably spoke with modern slang words and phrases such as "bro", "my man", and "dude". However, [[InvokedTrope this was intentional]]. [=PeabodySam=] wanted the characters to seem much younger than their 2010 counterparts, and so chose these words and phrases since readers would associate them with youth; however, [=PeabodySam=] did not want to use slang from TheFifties such as "swell" or "golly", fearing that they would distract readers with their "corniness" and thus detract from the point of the flashback.
*** In the same flashback, "Duplo School" was mentioned, but Duplo did not exist until 1973.
* ''Roleplay/RollToDodgeSavral'' is set an ancient-medieval fantasy world, yet it has several elements which come from notably different time frames. The witches in particular tend not to blend in with the ancient-medieval aesthetic, especially with regards to their clothing.
** The Witch Grimhilde dresses like a cowgirl and wields colt-45 revolvers. Her minions wield muskets even though most of the world uses spells, bows, or crossbows for ranged weapons.
** The Witch Beatrice wears an SS-officer's uniform.
** The Witch Schierke wears a lab coat and safety glasses. She also has an industrial facility in her lair complete with forges, lathes, mills, and power generators.
** The players are not immune to this either. One player becomes a bike-riding cavalier while another one uses a rocket propelled grenade launcher.


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[[folder:Visual Novels]]
* ''VisualNovel/ShikkokuNoSharnoth'' can't do this with technology as it's SteamPunk UsefulNotes/VictorianBritain, however, portrays multiple real and fictional characters as contemporaries. For example, Creator/CharlotteBronte and Heinz Heger were separated by a good half century.
* ''VisualNovel/HigurashiWhenTheyCry'' is set in [[The80s the early eighties]] but has multiple references to products that won't exist for over a decade. Mostly due to RuleOfFunny.
* Actually averted by ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'': despite popular misconception that the game takes place essentially in the present, WordOfGod says that it actually does several years in the past (around 2007)[[note]]Which is around when the project started[[/note]]. Fittingly, for example, nobody has access to the ultra-ubiquitous smartphones of today - using old "flippables" instead.
* ''VisualNovel/YoJinBo'' has a bunch of 1850s ronin who like to ShoutOut to modern pop culture. The technology is generally consistent with 19th century Japan, but it's never explained how they know about things like ''Franchise/BackToTheFuture'' and Creator/MrT.
* In ''VisualNovel/CorpsePartyD2FatalOperation'', while the closed space surrounding [[AbandonedHospital Divine Blessing Hospital]] was created in 1982, various pieces of state-of-the-art technology can be found within. Since the cursed dimension has the ability to draw in and trap victims, this is {{Justified|Trope}} by Naomi speculating that whatever consciousness created the closed space is really interested in this tech and deliberately stealing it.
* ''VideoGame/AviaryAttorney'', set in the 19th century, likes jokes and throwaway lines that play on if they aren't outright lifted from more modern sources.
--> How does that American proverb go, Falcon? Don't hate the player. Hate the game.
--> Merde's about to go down, yo.
* ''VisualNovel/AceAttorney'' takes place during or after 2016 (with the exception of certain flashback cases), making the appearance of phones with physical keypads and basic LCD screens all the more jarring, rather than smartphones which are extremely commonplace in developed countries. One character in ''VisualNovel/ApolloJusticeAceAttorney'' does possess what's clearly a smartphone, however. In addition, many photos in early games are in black and white, but later games start involving color photos.
* ''VisualNovel/BurlyMenAtSea'' is, according to WordOfGod, set in the early twentieth century, but has Dark Ages Norse monsters and wizards and a very twenty-first century coffee shop.
* ''VisualNovel/DetectiveHankAndTheGoldenSneeze'' features a steampunk mobile phone!
* ''VisualNovel/{{Aquarium}}'': For a standard late medieval setting, Aqua's casual clothes and swimsuit are quite modern.
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Sometimes, this can become so culturally embedded that it actually becomes [[RealityIsUnrealistic difficult to tell a story accurately without confusing the audience.]] This is particularly true with peoples and settings that had already been stewing for centuries, such as Vikings or the Aurthurian legend.

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Sometimes, this can become so culturally embedded that it actually becomes [[RealityIsUnrealistic difficult to tell a story accurately without confusing the audience.]] This is particularly true with peoples and settings that had already been stewing for centuries, such as Vikings or the Aurthurian Arthurian legend.

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* In ''WebAnimation/TheGastonTrilogy'' (another case of RuleOfFunny), Xbox 360s (and ''VideoGame/BatmanArkhamAsylum''), Taco Bell, at least UsefulNotes/McDonalds if not Burger King, Billy Mays, Music/JustinBieber, "I'm a Scatman", Six Flags, ''Literature/{{Babar}}'', and raves with glowsticks and electronic music exist in [[WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast 18th century France]] and no one cares. Also it's apparently both directly after and contemporary with [[WesternAnimation/{{Aladdin}} pre-Islamic Arabia]].

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* In ''WebAnimation/TheAmazingDigitalCircus'': "[[Recap/TheAmazingDigitalCircusE2CandyCarrierChaos Candy Carrier Chaos!]]": The Candy Canyon Kingdom is a medieval-esque land, but it also has Old West bandits and modern-day trucks.
-->'''Pomni:''' What time period is this supposed to be, anyway?
*
''WebAnimation/TheGastonTrilogy'' (another case of RuleOfFunny), RuleOfFunny): Xbox 360s (and ''VideoGame/BatmanArkhamAsylum''), Taco Bell, at least UsefulNotes/McDonalds if not Burger King, Billy Mays, Music/JustinBieber, "I'm a Scatman", Six Flags, ''Literature/{{Babar}}'', and raves with glowsticks and electronic music exist in [[WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast 18th century France]] and no one cares. Also it's apparently both directly after and contemporary with [[WesternAnimation/{{Aladdin}} pre-Islamic Arabia]].
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[[folder:Mythology and Religion]]
* Literature/TheBible, especially in some versions/translations, has been known to contain a few anachronisms since often the "books" composing it were written some time after the events were supposed to have taken place. For example the descriptions of armor, especially that worn by Goliath, in [[Literature/BooksOfSamuel 1 Samuel 17]] are typical of Greek armour of the 6th century BC rather than of Philistine armour of the 10th century BC.
** [[LostInTranslation The original Hebrew]] text is, however, a surprisingly accurate description of the 11th century BC ''maryannu''.
** The Tribes of Israel are RetConned as having extensively used iron weapons - Deborah is given a battle chariot protected by iron plates - even though bronze would have been universal for all peoples - including mighty Egypt - in this time period. And ignoring that in another passage Israel was unable to defeat an enemy army because the ''enemy'' possessed iron chariots.
** All of the Hebrew Bible from [[Literature/BookOfGenesis Genesis]] through [[Literature/BooksOfKings 2 Kings]] wasn't written down and in its final form until around 500 BC or later, so descriptions such as the above would be based on contemporary examples.
** The Apocrypha-- books written between the Old and New Testaments not found in Protestant Bibles (but found in Catholic and Orthodox Bibles, and considered inspired Scripture) often have these. Whether or not this is deliberate is debated. Some, like Judith, are so riddled with anachronisms that they are essentially the Israelite equivalent of a Tarantino film (only with more morals).
*** The book of Tobit takes place in the 8th century BCE but uses quotes from the books of Chronicles (which many scholars date to the 4th century BCE.)
*** The Literature/BookOfJudith begins by declaring Nebuchadnezzar as the king who "ruled over the Assyrians", though he actually ruled over the Babylonians. A Catholic Bible commentary suggests that this was an Assyrian king that went by this name that was a contemporary of King Manasseh of Judah, and thus should not be confused with the Babylonian king.
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* ''[[Creator/RaphaelSanzio The School of Athens]]'' depicts an adult Aristotle in the same building as Socrates, who was executed 15 years before Aristotle was born. Then there's the CreatorCameo from Raphael himself and the Muslim philosopher Averroes, none of which had access to enough TimeTravel to make it to the school on time.

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* ''[[Creator/RaphaelSanzio The ''Art/RaphaelRooms'': "The School of Athens]]'' Athens" depicts an adult Aristotle in the same building as Socrates, who was executed 15 years before when Aristotle was born. 15. Then there's the CreatorCameo TheCameo from Raphael himself and the Muslim philosopher Averroes, none of which whom had access to enough TimeTravel to make it to the school on time.
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* ''WebVideo/DougDougAIInvasion'': Doug tries to keep the options limited to the campaign's time period, but anything the AI comes up with becomes fair game. As such, the American Revolution eventually devolves into the Americans and French fielding {{Humongous Mecha}}s against the British, ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk'' being published in the 1700s, ''Theatre/{{Hamilton}}'' being on tour with the original cast, and the Americans inventing nuclear warheads but not planes to drop them from.

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