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1[[quoteright:286:[[Webcomic/BasicInstructions https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/miliscorns_7933.gif]]]]
2
3A system of measurement for something that doesn't seem like it could be measured in discrete units in the first place. Almost always used for humor. BrokeTheRatingScale may invoke this when it gets silly. This is presumably how you tell if something is TwentyPercentMoreAwesome.
4
5Compare HiroshimaAsAUnitOfMeasure, which is when someone measures a quantifiable thing in a strange way. Also see ThingOMeter.
6----
7!!Examples:
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9[[foldercontrol]]
10
11[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
12* Scouter readings for PowerLevels in ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' don't seem to just quantify stored energy, but are able to quantify fighting effectiveness, as evidenced by Goku's and Picolo's power levels registering higher after they take off their weighted clothing. The author states they ''are'' just supposed to be measurements of raw power, and thus an unreliable oversimplification for determining fighting ability, but what's shown in-series speaks to the contrary.
13* In ''Manga/TheDisastrousLifeOfSaikiK'', one of the titular [[TheOmnipotent Kusuo Saiki]]'s [[NewPowersAsThePlotDemands stranger]] [[PsychicPowers abilities]] is a counter that measures love. It's usually used by his parents, often [[AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachOther revealing more than they'd like]].
14[[/folder]]
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16[[folder:Blogs]]
17* Blog/DeadcodersReviews used Aelita as a measurement of Trauma and Hollywood as a measure of makeup.
18[[/folder]]
19
20[[folder:Film]]
21* At the end of the first ''Film/MenInBlack'' movie, J quantifies the battle with the Bug as ranking 9.5 on the "Weird-Shit-O-Meter".
22* In ''Film/TeamAmericaWorldPolice'', terrorist acts are measured in multiples of the [[UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror September 11 World Trade Center attack]]. One upcoming terrorist event, if not stopped, would be "Nine Eleven times a hundred" ("basically all the [[FireAndBrimstoneHell worst parts]] of Literature/TheBible"). Another is "Nine Eleven times a thousand." Kim Jong-Il described his ultimate plan, which involves simultaneous terrorist attacks with weapons of mass destruction across the world as "Nine Eleven times 2356."
23* In ''Film/TheAbyss'', Hippie measures one of the encounters with the aliens as a 9.5 on the Sphincter Scale.
24[[/folder]]
25
26[[folder:Literature]]
27* Beauty has been measured in [=milliHelens=] (the amount of beauty needed to [[UsefulNotes/TheTrojanWar launch a single ship]]) in ''Literature/TheRebelAngels'', a novel by Robertson Davies. This system was invented by Cambridge mathematician W.A.H. Rushton; the term was possibly first suggested by Creator/IsaacAsimov. ''Webcomic/IrregularWebcomic'', however, pointed out that you shouldn't mix metric prefixes with [[{{Pun}} Troy units]].
28** Note that Helen herself scores 1.186 Helens.
29* Not new: {{Creator/Stendhal}} wrote "''De l'amour''" in 1822. He considered the following situation: "Alberic meets on a stage a woman more beautiful than his lover"; in the comparison Stendhal gives a strict mathematical evaluation of the beauty of the women, with units of happiness, but in the sequent calculations he inserts TheLove that changes the conclusion of the evaluation. Creator/ItaloCalvino notes that his mathematics are not so obvious.
30* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' has the thaum, a basic unit of magical strength "universally established as the amount of magic needed to create one small white pigeon or three normal-sized billiard balls." Naturally, it is measured by thaumometers. Some early books measure magic in "Primes", the amount of magic needed to move one pound of lead one foot. ''[[UniverseCompendium The Companion]]'' eventually [[AllThereInTheManual explained]] that the Prime was the metric measurement, and the thaum is the "imperial" one. Wizards tending to be hidebound traditionalists, the Prime never caught on.
31** A few straighter examples are found in ''Moving Pictures''. "Numbers" Riktor was a mad wizard who believed everything could be measured, and created such devices as the "swamp meter".
32** In later books, the thaum is regarded as a fundamental particle of magic rather than a unit, though they might happen to coincide.
33* ''Literature/GoodOmens'' gives us the alp as a way of measuring belief (in reference to the notion that "faith moves mountains"). Most people are only able to generate millialps, while more passionate believers like Anathema Device can raise about half an alp. [[spoiler:[[RealityWarper Adam's]] belief is measured in ''Everests''.]]
34* An amateur sci-fi writer group on Website/LiveJournal attempted to come up with "Brian's Scale" to measure the fame of sci-fi authors, based on number of non-self-publications, with units ranging from the [[Creator/KurtVonnegut Trout]] to the [[Creator/JohnScalzi Scalzi]] to finally the [[Creator/NeilGaiman Gaiman]].
35* In ''The Schrodinger's Cat Trilogy'', the sequel to ''Literature/TheIlluminatusTrilogy'', Dr. Dashwood is a sex researcher, whose scales are named after pornographic stars:
36-->"Sincerity we measure in Spelvins on a scale of zero to ten," Dashwood went on, totally absorbed in his subject. "Hedonism in Lovelaces-we've been lucky there; subjects are able to distinguish sixteen graduations. Finally, there's the dimension of Tenderness-we find zero to seven covers that, so that the perfect Steinem Job, if I may use the vernacular, would consist of ten Spelvins of Sincerity, sixteen Lovelaces of Hedonism, and seven Havens of Tenderness."
37* In [[Creator/StanislawLem Stanislaw Lem's]] short story ''[[Literature/TheCyberiad Experimenta Felicitologica]]'', the protagonist uses a unit he calls "hedones" to measure the happiness of a being at a given time. His professor uses a unit called "bromeons" for the same purpose.
38** Lem appears to be fond of this trope. In "''Let Us Save the Universe (An Open Letter from Ijon Tichy)''", a tale from ''The Star Diaries'' (''Dzienniki gwiazdowe'') he describes an alien skunk that has the power of 500 olfat (unit of olfaction). In ''Cyberiad'' the narrator speaks of a femmefatalatron, which power is measured in "erotic units".
39* ''Literature/AmericaTheBook'' book gauged the value of a news story in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joey_Buttafuoco Buttafuocos.]]
40* ''Literature/WordsOfRadiance'': According to Wit, Shalan Davar is exactly 77% more agreeable than her mistress, Jasnah Kholin. He took a poll.
41-->'''[[spoiler: Jasnah]]:''' You're lying.\
42'''Wit:''' Okay, so it was a rather ''informal'' poll. But the ugly lizard-crab-thing gave you really poor marks for--\
43'''[[spoiler: Jasnah]]:''' About the ''other'' things.
44* In ''Literature/TheBible'' Jesus refers to "faith as small as a mustard seed", implying faith is measured by volume.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
48* ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000'': The ''Angels' Revenge'' episode had Tom Servo's "shame-o-meter", for measuring the amount of shame emanating from washed-out actors in a 70s ''Series/CharliesAngels'' rip-off movie. It measured in (Peter) Lawfords. Jim Backus registered well into the giga-Lawford range.
49* One episode of ''Series/TheColbertReport'' had Stephen rating Nazis on a scale of 1 to 10 Hitlers. UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler himself got only 9 Hitlers because "[[EvenEvilHasStandards nobody gets 10 Hitlers."]]
50* ''Series/TheDailyShowWithTrevorNoah'' has "What the Actual Fact?", a recurring segment in which correspondent Desi Lydic rates the Democrats' and Republicans' statements, based on how verifiably true they are. She's rated claims with "a Teletubby", "Chinese character tattoo at a strip mall", and "a hotel porn channel".
51[[/folder]]
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53[[folder:Roleplay]]
54* ''Roleplay/DestroyTheGodmodder'' features the OP Scale, a scale that measures something's power level. If something is too overpowered, it causes the scale to roll over back to 0 due to integer overflow. This, in turn, decreases the power level of the attack to nothing. Conveniently, the Godmodder is always at the very top of the scale, positioned just so that he never makes it roll over.
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57[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
58* Rather common in roleplaying games featuring magic or anything like it. In ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' your basic magical ability can come from Intelligence, which is at least something people seriously ''attempt'' to measure in real life, but also Wisdom, which has something to do with good moral sense, or maybe attunement to nature if you're a druid, or the ability to see the broad picture - anyway divination spells are based on it. The third potential stat tied to casting spells is Charisma, which is both the measure of one's force of personality and how pretty they are.
59** Certain spells, as well as the creation of magic items, require using materials "worth" a certain number of gold pieces, despite the value of resources (as well as the gold they are equivalent to) being relative and subjective. For instance, a Raise Dead spell requires 5000 gp worth of diamonds, so better hope a new diamond mine opening doesn't cause prices to drop! [[note]]Although the notion of value being decided by markets rather than "inherent value" was very uncommon in pre-modern societies. The mode of thinking, at least, is TruthInTelevision.[[/note]]
60* ''TabletopGame/GeniusTheTransgression'' has several different unit systems (most likely a reference to all the different temperature scales) to measure "mania".
61* Some games use a hard-to-typify numerical catch-all, often called "bulk", to roughly indicate how awkward something is to carry around. A thing with high "bulk" could be that way because it's heavy, odd-shaped, badly balanced, droopy, whatever.
62* ''Wavelength'' gives players one of several scales (e.g. from Boring Topic to Facinating Topic). The clue giver receives a position on said scale, and gives a clue about the position (e.g. TV Tropes). Other players turn the dial in order to match the position explained by the clue giver, then removes the cover to see if they were close enough to score points (e.g. Dial was at 90%, but the correct answer was 80% - only two of four points scored.) The other team can also guess whether the dial should be further left or right for one extra point.
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65[[folder:Video Games]]
66* In ''VideoGame/SuperPaperMario'', when Dimentio first brings the heroes to Dimension D, He believes that his power has increased by 256 times, [[spoiler:though it actually increases everyone's power by that amount]] and he claims that he could obliterate the heroes with the amount of power it would take to lift an eyebrow.
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69[[folder:Webcomics]]
70* An archon in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'' measured evil in terms of [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0489.html kilonazis]], with a baseline of a hypothetical offspring of [[WesternAnimation/OneHundredAndOneDalmatians Cruella de Vil]] and [[Literature/TheLordOfTheRings Sauron]] clocking in at an average of 5 (that means as evil as '''5000''' nazis). The person being discussed, Belkar, had his worst at around 3.4 kilonazis before meeting his new friend and boss Roy. For comparison, one might assume Adolf Hitler to have been worth about '''13,000''' kilonazis, if judging by the number of people in his army.
71** Relating to the ''Dungeons & Dragons'' example above, an apprentice was sent to get some diamonds, and proudly reveals that they were on sale...only to be sent back for more, because the sale means they aren't "worth" enough to be a spell component.
72* Early on in ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'', there is frequent mention of an absolute system of measurement for pain in [[{{Pun}} Kill-o-Hurtz]]. Various medical instruments are rated according to how much pain they inflict, as measured by the [[PunnyName Ouchdammitometer]]. The concept hasn't been mentioned in a long time, however, as the ''Schlock Mercenary'' universe (if not the actual story) has [[CerebusSyndrome become somewhat more "serious"]].
73* In ''Webcomic/CaseyAndAndy'', Andy names the "fundamental unit of time travel" after [[http://www.galactanet.com/comic/view.php?strip=282 himself]] (and the fundamental unit of stupid after Casey).
74* [[http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=1716#comic This]] ''Webcomic/SaturdayMorningBreakfastCereal'' measures anger in [[TheComicBook/IncredibleHulk miliHulks]], fear in [[BringMyBrownPants deciPantscraps]] and awkwardness in [[SelfDeprecation microWeiners]] (all in the "votey", the red button).
75* ''Webcomic/MegaTokyo'' features a MagicalGirl Detector that's calibrated in [[http://www.megatokyo.com/strips/1107.png sparklogems]], of course.
76* ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'':
77** Grace refers to "Seymours", [[http://www.egscomics.com/?date=2011-02-11 a unit of measure for sadness]] using the infamous "Jurassic Bark" episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' as a baseline.
78** Also, Elliot and Ellen discussing Noah. "He's ''[[http://www.egscomics.com/?date=2010-04-05 third grade Tedd]]'' awkward?!"
79* ''Webcomic/QuestionableContent'':
80** Gets this now and again with its odd TwentyMinutesInTheFuture setting; usually coming from Hannelore, who grew up on a space station. For example, the current arc's "Fournier-Goldman Happiness Transforms", which measure happiness (Marten makes an attempt at calculating Hannelore's happiness for her father's benefit, but he couldn't follow the material after it brought up Irrational Birthday Integers).
81** Faye in [[http://questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=702 this]] installment claims to be a unit of measurement, but the formula is rather complex.
82* ''Webcomic/{{Paranatural}}'' has the [[http://paranatural.net/chapter-2-page-4/ international scale of creepy]] to measure PJ's smile.
83* One ''Webcomic/{{Achewood}}'' comic cites the made-up unit "the fermule" as "the basic unit of physics." One reader lampshades the silliness of this in the comments section: "That's right. Losing control of a 200 kg van on an icy road while traveling at 45 mph, skidding off a 45-degree turn and wrapping that van three times around a tree takes a total of 67 fermules of physics."
84* In ''Webcomic/AnsemRetort'', a plan devised to get Zexion elected governor of Pennsylvania by getting his opposition murdered is measured by Zexion in [[Film/TheGodfather Michael Corleones]].
85[[/folder]]
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87[[folder:Web Original]]
88* ''WebVideo/TheSpoonyExperiment'': Doctor Insano built [[{{Gaydar}} a device to measure gayness]] in giga-queers.
89* ''WebVideo/VisionOfEscaflowneAbridged'' reveals that angst can be measured in [[Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion megaShinjis]].
90* The [[http://catb.org/jargon/html/M/milliLampson.html milliLampson]] is a unit of talking speed - [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butler_Lampson Butler Lampson]] was said to run at [[MotorMouth 1000 milliLampsons]], when a normal person averaged [=200mL=]. Can also be a unit of thinking speed.
91* [[http://wiki.fandomwank.com/index.php/Snapes_on_an_Astral_Plane "The epic insanity of Lady Darkness really needs to be memorialized, so I propose the creation of an official unit of batshit, named after her. One Ladark (a portmanteau -- don't want to use an existing word) is defined as the amount of batshittery necessary to believe a fictional character originating within the last 20 years is real and speaks to you. Most wanks can be measured in milliLadarks. This one hits about three."]]
92* One article on ''Website/TheOnion'', mocking [[http://www.theonion.com/articles/revolutionary-new-insoles-combine-five-forms-of-ps,759/ pseudoscience]], features a "biotrician" named Doctor Frankel boasting that his specially-developed insoles "convert the wearer's own energy to match the Earth's natural vibrational rate of 32.805 kilofrankels."
93* Website/{{Cracked}}'s go-to comparison for crazy behavior is none other than Creator/GaryBusey.
94* Certain fans on the internet have made the [[http://1d4chan.org/wiki/The_Henderson_Scale_of_Plot_Derailment Henderson]], a unit of [[OffTheRails plot derailment]] (one full Henderson means that the GM's intended plot is irretrievably gone and a new one must be made from scratch), particularly of [[TabletopGames tabletop RPGs]]. Its creation was inspired the story of FanFic/OldManHenderson, the man who "won" TabletopGame/CallOfCthulhu (which is practically impossible). Henderson was a highly eccentric (and psychotic) PlayerCharacter devised to get back at a particularly agitating GM in the most imaginative ways possible. His exploits include: burning a Shoggoth, stealing a yacht from a Hastur cult, dropping said yacht on a Cthulhu cult's penthouse (and starting a cultist gang war), ''The'' tanker truck incident, and "Hell on Ice". Henderson's exploits included a surprising number of counts of arson, most accidental, and accidentally killing a lot of people, including nearly every other player's characters at least once, and incidentally, everybody who could link Henderson to a crime.
95* [[http://www.halfbakery.com/idea/Two_20Cats_20Mad This idea]] on the Halfbakery suggests that madness be measured in cats.
96-->"6 cats mad - ventures out only to but cat food and kitty litter. Has straggly hair."
97* Website/SFDebris has introduced two units of measurement named for ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'''s [[ButtMonkey Ensign Kim]]: the deci-Kims, which is the measure of Harry Kim's sexual trauma applied per cubic meter/second, and the metric-Kim, which is a measurement of personal shame.
98[[/folder]]
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100[[folder:Western Animation]]
101* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' once had a device that measured coolness in [[Series/HappyDays mega-Fonzies]]. There was also the funkometer for smells and a device that measured the musical talents of Music/BeastieBoys.
102-->'''Leela:''' Impressive! They're laying down mad rhymes with an 80% success rate.
103-->'''Bender:''' I believe that qualifies as "ill," at least from a technical standpoint.
104** The What-If Machine can answer any what-if question accurately to within one-tenth of a plausibility unit.
105** In "Xmas Story", the department store sells a jolly-seeking missile launcher as an [[BadSanta anti-Santa]] defense.
106** It's stated in ''Bender's Big Score'' that a normal person emits about 10 milli[[DoomyDoomsOfDoom dooms]] per second. It becomes a plot point that duplicates created by the Time Sphere [[OnlyOneMeAllowedRightNow emit much larger quantities]] in order to prevent/correct [[TemporalParadox paradoxes]].
107* ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' has devices that cause similar effects, such as Phineas' Cute-Tracker ([[ShipTease Isabella made it overload]]). Santa's elves also carry meters that measure people's relative niceness or naughtiness.
108[[/folder]]
109
110[[folder:Real Life]]
111* The [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kent_Hovind Hovind Scale]] measures the craziness of creationists. It was, of course, meant largely as a joke.
112* Fame is sometimes measured in Warhols. Someone who is famous for 15,000 minutes would have one kiloWarhol.
113** The Helen is a metric measurement of beauty, with 1 Helen of beauty being the amount of beauty required to launch a thousand ships. By extension, we can have a Kilohelen, which would be the amount of beauty required to launch a million ships, and a Millihelen - the amount of beauty required to launch a single ship.
114* UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler used to joke: "Do you know what is the difference between [[UsefulNotes/NaziGermany a goering and a goebbels]]? A goering is [[ChestOfMedals the amount of metal a man could pin on his chest]] and a goebbels is [[PropagandaMachine the amount of nonsense man could say in an hour]]." He often said the joke with both Joseph Goebbels and Hermann Goering present, to their great embarrassment.
115* Speaking of fascists, one [[https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2016/10/21/how-fascist-is-donald-trump-theres-actually-a-formula-for-that/ Washington Post historian/writer]] jokingly created a ranking system to measure how UsefulNotes/{{Fascist}} a leader is, where the leader gets 0-4 "Benitos" for each of 11 different criteria, for a total of 44.
116* UsefulNotes/{{NASA}} measures resistance to Space Adaptation Sickness in Garns, where a person who rates one Garn being totally useless in microgravity.
117* UNIX system load average is measured in Vastons, even though there's no meaningful or objective way to measure or compare load averages between systems.
118* When a Linux computer boots, it measures the performance of the processor it is running on in "[=BogoMIPS=]", defined as "the number of million times per second a processor can do absolutely nothing". This unit is explicitly meaningless for any kind of comparison between computers (although that doesn't stop people from boasting about their values); its only purpose is to calibrate the kernel's internal busy-loop.
119* Behold, the [[http://cuiltheory.wikidot.com/what-is-cuil-theory Cuil Theory]]: a theoretical system of measurement by which we can ascertain just how weird any given situation is.
120* The [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality-adjusted_life_year quality-adjusted life year]] (QALY) measures the total happiness over a span of time. It's nigh impossible to measure, but very important if you want to make sure your charity does a lot of good.
121* In an inversion; there are lots of legitimate units you could use to say how fast somebody can run but in UK sport most commentators go with the 'yard of pace'.
122* There's a common Facebook image macro that claims that the pain of a GroinAttack on a male is equivalent to the pain of many, ''many'' childbirths for a female, even offering an exact unit of measurement, e.g. 9000 del. Even though a "del" is not a recognized unit of measurement (pain isn't quantifiable except very generally, a la the 1-10 "scale") and even though the macro [[PoesLaw wasn't even remotely intended as serious,]] that hasn't stopped a lot of people from taking it as fact.
123* Quality rating scales for films, games, restaurants, video games, apps, products, and so on.
124* In the field of psychology, it's possible to create a rating scale for pretty much any human trait, so researchers sometimes end up creating unusual and offbeat scales for things that they want to study but few others attempt to measure. There are widely used and thoroughly validated scales for things like personality and emotion, of course, and slightly more offbeat measures like how much of a morning person you are or how much you conform to your designated gender role, but also weirder things like the enjoyment of some random consumer product, experiences with alien abduction, obedience to political leaders, correlations between creativity and psychoticism, etc. Psychologists who measure such bizarre constructs sometimes get the HardOnSoftScience treatment and/or ItWillNeverCatchOn.
125[[/folder]]
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127[[folder:Other]]
128* The (sometimes) clever bits of wordplay known as "Sniglets" (as introduced by comedian Rich Hall on the '80s HBO program ''Not Necessarily the News'') have featured a few of these, such as:
129--> '' '''BEVAMETER:''' '' The distance a drink coaster, attached to the bottom of a wet glass, will travel before it falls back to earth.
130--> '' '''CRAVAMETER:''' '' 3.72 inches, the proper distance between the ends of a tied tie.
131[[/folder]]

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