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11[[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/FantasticFour1961 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/doombot.png]]]]
12[[caption-width-right:350:Around Doombot #758, they begin [[AesopAmnesia to sense a pattern...]]]]
13%%
14->''"Alfred, go get that device that can tell us if someone is Clayface, a Martian, or a robot."''
15-->-- '''[[Characters/BatmanTheCharacter Bruce Wayne]]''', ''ComicBook/TheBatmanAdventures'' (2003) #6
16
17A character, usually one relatively high on the power scale, loses a fight. Sometimes they die, other times they're just humiliated. The point is, they just got their butt handed to them by the other guys in a largely fair fight. Is this the end of our eternal rivalry between good and evil? Has one side truly triumphed!?
18
19Not really, no. It turns out that the truly epic character we just saw get beaten up was NotHimself. Rather, he was Actually a Doombot, either a proxy robot or an impersonator who was pretty much impossible to distinguish from the genuine article until the writer told us so at the last minute -- [[{{Retcon}} or later]].
20
21The narrative role of this trope is obvious: it works to prevent TheWorfEffect or a VillainDecay, and also ensure that characters don't "really" die, thus allowing them to come back on next week's program. This can, nonetheless, still come off as an AssPull and/or ShaggyDogStory since there are rarely ever any clues given that the character was really a doombot, nor does it have any future relevance in the story. It's also a cheap trick since the other side is denied the feat of actually taking down the formidable character. Seldom will the characters (or the audience) ask what the difference is between defeating a perfect copy of the character and defeating the character himself.
22
23The doombot may be used as well to fix a ContinuitySnarl, or as a ResetButton of an AudienceAlienatingEra. The hero fought a classic villain the writer was not aware that's supposed to be dead? Easy: it was actually a doombot. Of course, the longer the period that the character was supposed to have been a doombot, the less credible the trick may be.
24
25If the robot is a character in its own right, or if the replacement generates new plot directions, or is even the starting point rather than the outcome (for example in a detective story in a sci-fi setting), then this trope does not apply. If there is no personification, if the robot was simply a background element that nobody took in consideration, it means that [[TheDogWasTheMastermind The Dog (or whatever) Was the Mastermind]].
26
27A semi-popular form of RetCon and a very cheap way of pulling off a NoSell. Often involves by necessity RidiculouslyHumanRobots. See OpeningACanOfClones for some of the negative results that crop up when this trope is used over a long period of time. Compare FightingAShadow, BackupTwin, DecoyGetaway, CloningGambit, NinjaLog, RemoteBody, RobotMe, and RobotMaster. If the original simply comes back with little or no explanation, then it's a case of JokerImmunity.
28
29[[AC: Due to this trope being SpoileredRotten, beware of unmarked spoilers]]
30
31----
32
33!! Examples:
34
35[[foldercontrol]]
36
37[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
38* ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'':
39** [[BigBad Aizen]] has lots of fun with this, using [[MasterOfIllusion Kyoka Suigetsu]] to, on two separate occasions, [[FakingTheDead fake his own death]] and [[spoiler:[[KickTheDog trick Hitsugaya into stabbing Hinamori]]]].
40** Pulled off to astonishing effect by [[GreaterScopeVillain Yhwach]]: he has Royd Lloyd, a Sternritter with the ability to [[{{Doppelganger}} mimic his appearance and memories]], [[BodyDouble take his place]] while he is busy [[WeCanRuleTogether chatting with Aizen]] in [[TheAlcatraz Muken]], leaving Yamamoto to waste his Bankai on a mere lackey. Shortly after Yamamoto realizes the deception, Yhwach shows up, [[BadBoss vaporizes Royd]] ([[MercyKill who is already dying from his wounds]], but still...) and [[PowerParasite steals Yamamoto's Bankai]], leaving the latter defenseless when Yhwach kills him.
41** In the final battle, [[EvilVersusOblivion Aizen]] even does this ''to Yhwach'', using Kyoka Suigetsu to take Ichigo's place, [[PokeInTheThirdEye mess up]] Yhwach's [[RealityWarper The Almighty]] and fool him into thinking he's just impaled Ichigo since, [[ImmortalLifeIsCheap as an immortal, Aizen has nothing to fear from Yhwach's attacks]]. Lacking the firepower to deliver a killing blow himself, Aizen taunts Yhwach as Ichigo exploits the opening and attacks Yhwach from behind.
42** Shaz Domino and Guenael Lee are this to Gremmy, as [[ImaginationBasedSuperpower they are both figments of his imagination]]. Shaz subverts it, however, as he recreates his own body using [[FromASingleCell his power and gains free will, becoming Sternritter Σ]].
43* ''Manga/DeathNote'': In one of the first chapters, L uses a decoy L to trick Light into revealing the region he lives in. In the first display of how ruthless L actually is, the decoy is really a criminal who was convicted to die anyway, and the whole point is to wait for Light to kill him, after which L reveals it wasn't him. Unusually for the trope, the decoy doesn't look anything like the real L, but since Light doesn't know L's appearance at that point, it still fools him.
44* In Episode 33 of ''Anime/DigimonFrontier'', the FallenAngel [[BigBadWannabe Cherubimon]] sends an image of himself to assess the strength of the Chosen Children. In an unusual take on this trope, this image of Cherubimon is strong enough in its own right to NoSell the strongest attacks of the Chosen Children and ''would have killed them'' if their newest member hadn't managed to unlock the true strength of the Spirits of Darkness right then and there.
45* ''Manga/FairyTail'': [[MookMaker Wall Eehto]] of Alvarez's [[PraetorianGuard Spriggan 12]] assaults Fairy Tail alongside two of his fellow Spriggans and faces off against the Thunder Legion and Ichiya, whereupon he reveals he, much like his robotic creations, is a [[MechanicalLifeforms Machias]]. After a hard battle, Wall is seemingly destroyed, but manages to [[ActionBomb detonate his head]] and take out the Thunder Legion...and then it's revealed the ''real'' Wall Eehto was hundreds of miles away on a ship, having been controlling the robot body like a puppet so he could take out the defensive barrier the Legion were maintaining around the town. [[{{Irony}} Ironically]], the real Wall [[RoboticReveal is a Machias himself]].
46* Volume 4 of the political-drama ''Manga/TheFirstPresidentOfJapan'' sees an AxCrazy Chinese general kill China's prime minister in a coup d'etat. He then finds an actor who looks and sounds enough like the Prime Minister to be the figurehead of state while the Chinese Army does the ''real'' leadership. The plan is foiled when a Japanese intelligence analyst superimposes the impersonator's face over that of the genuine article, and finds that the two don't ''quite'' line up.
47* ''Anime/GhostInTheShellStandAloneComplex'', in multiple cases. Since lots of people are cyborgs with fully mechanical bodies it's just so easy.
48** Noteworthy are the episodes when a criminal turns out to have not only one Doombot, but a whole number of them, and the one in which the Major "dies", which is straight from the manga.
49*** The interesting thing about the former is that it turns out the process of making these doombots actually killed the original. All that's left ''are'' the doombots, and they're basically indistinguishable from the original.
50* ''Anime/DotHackSign'' does this in Episode 26. Tsukasa, Subaru and Mimiru are in a secluded location separated from the others. As the three encounter each other they find themselves being hostile. Tsukasa calls out a fake Mimiru which dissolves into several small data bugs before taking them into Morganna's lair.
51* ''Manga/{{Inuyasha}}'' BigBad Naraku uses this repeatedly with dolls to the point where later in the series the heroes just assume certain incarnations are fakes.
52* In ''Manga/MegaManMegamix'', near the beginning of ''The Greatest Enemy in History'' story arc, after Copy Mega Man foils Dr. Wily's plans, he ''shoots him in the forehead'', only for the head to start bouncing on a spring, revealing it be a robot fake. The real Wily observed the event from his Wily Capsule, shocked at how Mega Man would shoot a human.
53* Happens frequently in ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia'' thanks to the villain Twice, who can create temporary copies of himself or others that melt into gray goop when "killed." The opening scene of ''[[Anime/MyHeroAcademiaHeroesRising Heroes: Rising]]'' appears to have several heroes in a car chase with the League of Villains, but when Endeavor incinerates the bad guys, they all turn out to be just copies.
54* Done in one occasion in ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'' when the good guys struggle against two very powerful villains and finally defeat them, only to find out they merely defeated inferior copies made out of animated corpses. From exchanges made beforehand, it then becomes clear that the copies only had 30% of their [[{{Mana}} chakra]] to work with.
55** There was a partial example later: When Kisame fought Killer Bee, the real him was there for most of the fight but was switched with a much weaker duplicate by the end. Granted, there's a very good chance that Killer Bee and the Raikage ''really could'' have beaten the real him together. The switch was made to save his life, not to fake his death.
56* ''Manga/MyMonsterSecret'': Perverts have the ability to control wind and steam in order to make themselves sexier by giving tantalizing glimpses of their naked bodies. The most powerful, like the Charismatic Pervert, can create life-like doubles out of steam, which Shiho only discovers after she seemingly defeats her mother in a pervert contest. [[OnlySaneMan Asahi is the only one who finds any of this odd]].
57-->'''Asahi:''' What even ''are'' perverts, anyway?
58* ''Manga/OnePiece'': During the Dressrosa arc, we learn about Doflamingo'ss Black Knight technique: he can make string marionettes indistinguishable from humans, resembling either himself or anyone that he wants. We find this out the hard way when Usopp breaks Doflamingo's spell over the city, and Kyros manages to actually decapitate Doflamingo in a single stroke. Shortly afterward, the real one appears behind Kyros to attack him.
59* ''Anime/OutlawStar'' does this in Episode 9 when Gene is attempting to collect a bounty on the criminal Zomba. Gene wins the fight and is surprised that the guy's a cyborg and takes him in only to find out the real Zomba wasn't a cyborg. [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] immediately after when Suzuka walks out of the police station and as she's walking away some people come running up and announce that she's the one who took down the legendary Zomba (completely offscreen).
60* In ''Anime/PsychoPass'', Chief Kasei had an array of cyborg body doubles as it was first revealed at the end of Episode 16. Whenever it gets damaged or destroyed, there would always be another one. But the brain residing that body does not. In [[Anime/PsychoPassTheMovie the movie]], it turns out that the [=SEAUn=] chairman is a body double because the real one was assassinated by mercenaries hired by the Sibyl system themselves.
61* ''Manga/QueenMillennia'': Both Yayoi and Millennium Thieves use android copies of themselves as body doubles, which come in handy if they're captured. Selene's even carries an explosive and manages to damage Larela's ship.
62* ''Manga/TimeStopHero'': Bahamut blows up the King of Darkness with a fireball. Just as the heroes start celebrating, his voice echoes and reveals they only destroyed an avatar and he was in another country the whole time.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Comic Books]]
66!!Franchise/MarvelUniverse
67* In ''ComicBook/{{Annihilators}}: Earthfall'', Rocket Raccoon and Groot have been captured by Mojo and forced to star in one of his deadly reality TV shows. They eventually escape and Rocket shoots Mojo in the head, at which point they learn that "Mojo" is actually a robotic duplicate, built by his Major Domo to run things in the real Mojo's absence.
68* ''ComicBook/{{Blade}}'': The return of Characters/{{Blade}}'s arch nemesis Deacon Frost was explained by him being able to create scientific doppelgangers of himself. He can create these (vampiric) copies from other characters as well, as seen in ''ComicBook/TheTombOfDracula'' where he made an evil version of Blade.
69* When the Marvel UK ''ComicBook/DarkGuard'' team clashes with the immortal sorceress Tyburn, they swiftly realise that she's sent a LivingWeapon duplicate rather than turning up in person. That works out well for the heroes, as the duplicate's not protected by Tyburn's DealWithTheDevil and its LoadBearingBoss contingencies.
70* [[Characters/MarvelComicsDoctorDoom Doctor Doom]]:
71** The name comes from Doombots, which are used by writers in the Marvel Universe to explain how Doctor Doom rarely ever actually "loses" battles. This has been pulled so often, there are [[EpilepticTrees fan theories]] that ''the real Doctor Doom has never appeared in a comic'', that ''there is no "real" Doctor Doom'', and that Doctor Doom does exist, but not in a true physical form. He might be an electromagnetic source of dark energy that makes the Doombots and takes possession of them until they get destroyed. Of course, that would mean he actually does lose all those battles, as well as making it not this trope but FightingAShadow. The latter theory was explored in ''ComicBook/LokiAgentOfAsgard'', deconstructing it in the process, and does it with such a BadassBoast, too.
72--->'''Doom:''' Not the move '''I''' would have made. Still-- it's a fair question. Why '''do''' they look like me? Doesn't it create the possibility that I '''am''' one? That Doom '''may''', at any moment, be a '''machine?''' That I am not '''myself'''? Of course it does. That is how I '''wish''' it. I once let '''Arcade''' strike a match on me, just to '''maintain''' that confusion. '''Think''', boy. If I am ever '''defeated''' or '''dishonored'''-- If I ever act in ways '''unworthy''' of myself... If I ever '''die'''... The word goes out: "It must have been a '''Doombot'''." And the '''reverse''' is true. My robots '''often''' confuse my foes--I may be a robot '''now''', speaking these words. How would '''you''' know? How would '''I'''? [[ContemplateOurNavels What is Doom?]] The '''flesh and blood''' I can swap out at my '''convenience'''? The '''mind''' that can be copied into '''a thousand machines'''? No. Doom cannot '''fit''' in such '''small''' containers. I am '''not''' my body. '''Not''' my '''mind'''. I am... I am the '''old trunk''', filled with ancient '''mysteries'''. I am the '''explosion''' in the '''college laboratory'''. I am the '''mask''' that '''burns''' with the fires of '''vengeance'''. I am the '''legend''' that unites this '''nation'''. I am the '''story''' of '''Doom'''."
73** The above speech references a rather bizarre invocation of this trope in the early eighties. During a meeting between Arcade and Doom in ''ComicBook/UncannyXMen'' #146, the former lights a match by striking it against the latter's armor. This upset John Byrne, the ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'' writer at the time, who felt that Doom would've never let anyone get away with such a disrespectful action towards his person. Thus, in ''Fantastic Four'' #258, he revealed that the Doom at the meeting was a Doombot and then had the real Doom destroy it for failing to punish Arcade.
74** A doombot also appears in ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'', but it's actually Ultron's.
75** {{Inverted|Trope}} in a 2005 ''[[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules Hercules]]'' miniseries, where Herc was tasked with a modern version of his twelve labors for a reality television series. One of his new labors was to sneak into Latveria and run off with a Doombot, but it's suggested that Herc screwed up and grabbed the real Doom instead (he gets credit for succeeding anyhow).
76** Early in Walter Simonson's run on ''ComicBook/FantasticFour,'' he has the FF face a Doctor Doom who's wearing a new suit of armor -- and who claims that every single Doom they've fought for the past 25 years of real time [[OnlyTheCreatorDoesItRight (since the Lee/Kirby days)]] has been a Doombot. Since this retcon includes things like Doom's appearance in ''ComicBook/SecretWars1984'' and the entirety of Creator/JohnByrne's run (regarded as one of the definitive eras for Doom), everyone since has assumed he was lying or a deluded Doombot himself, as there have been other Doombots that thought themselves the original.
77*** For a long time, comic book fanlore claimed that Simonson had compiled a list categorising which appearances of Doom were real and which were actually Doombots, but he's since put paid to the rumour (not that it's stopped many fans from a) claiming he's fibbing about it, b) assuming that ''other'' writers who have worked on FF maintain similar lists, or c) creating such lists of their own!).
78*** The first arc of [[Characters/MarvelComicsBuckyBarnes The Winter Soldier]] comic implies that Doom actually programmes several Doombots to believe themselves to be the real Doom, to make them more life-like.
79** Hilariously, one of Doom's only defeats that never got an official Doombot retcon was when [[Characters/TheUnbeatableSquirrelGirl Squirrel Girl]] took him down (more info on her page).
80** He has, of course, taken this to the natural conclusion of creating whole armies of Doombots as well as using it for impersonation.
81** Used in ''ComicBook/UltimateFF'' (in the ComicBook/UltimateMarvel universe, not the main one) to explain Doctor Doom returning after his death at the end of ''ComicBook/{{Ultimatum}}''; Victor Van Damme is genuinely confused when Namor says he saw him die, and when Tony says he tried to destroy the world. He reveals he had Mary Storm pose as him during his time away from Earth-1610 as a contingency plan. Additionally, the ''ComicBook/SupremePower'' crossover ''Ultimate Power'' sees an actual use of this as Mary (as it's among the stories where's "Doom"'s involvement is now attributed to her, not the real Doom) uses a Doombot in the ''ComicBook/SupremePower'' universe.
82* ComicBook/IronMan's enemy/[[DatingCatwoman occasional love interest]] Madame Masque had had so many contradictory interpretations and seeming deaths over the years that Creator/KurtBusiek finally declared in an issue of The Avengers that the real Madam Masque was a reclusive paranoid who interacted with the outside world mainly through {{Expendable Clone}}s who occasionally went rogue and defied her wishes. One of them even became an Avenger.
83* Perhaps the most outrageous example is Marvel's "Earth A" reality, where heroes like to take vacations to the main Marvel Universe, where they tend to act in manners contradictory to their counterparts, leaving our normal heroes to clean up the mess. This includes things like ComicBook/SheHulk sleeping with the Juggernaut, or the ComicBook/YoungAvengers joining [[ComicBook/AvengersTheInitiative the Initiative]] during the Civil War. In other words, this provides a rather cheap way to retcon any previous character action that the writer disapproves of.
84* Marvel's [[Characters/MarvelComicsDemons Mephisto]] has sometimes been impersonated by lesser demons who imitate his form. Such demons are defeated far more easily than the virtually invincible Mephisto.
85* Happens quite a bit with ComicBook/NickFury, who has had "Life Model Decoy" robots as a standard part of his stock-in-trade ever since he joined ComicBook/{{SHIELD}} Several 1960s stories had Nick Fury-shaped [=LMDs=] slaughtered by [[Characters/MarvelComicsHydra Hydra]] and other foes. They had little to no other function or characterization. A 1977 [[ComicBook/TheDefenders Defenders]] storyline was the first to introduce a Fury LMD with some individuality, and later that year the real Fury faced a LMD version of himself with independent thought and ambition. Since then several stories have featured [=LMDs=] with some degree of autonomy.
86** In a small Marvel event ''Over the Edge'', [[Characters/MarvelComicsFrankCastle the Punisher]] killed ComicBook/NickFury. Later it was revealed that it had been an android.
87** A major ComicBook/{{SHIELD}} storyline of the 1980s "revealed" that several key SHIELD-affiliated characters had been replaced for quite some time by [=LMDs=] controlled by a HYDRA-created android, the so-called Deltite. The storyline, termed the Deltite Conspiracy, featured [=LMDs=] of Laura Brown, Nick Fury, Eric Koenig, Sidney Levine, Clay Quartermain, Jasper Sitwell, Jimmy Woo, and even Obadiah Stane (a major opponent of ComicBook/IronMan). As well as an unnamed female LMD who was apparently a combination of Laura Brown, Gail Runciter, and Valentina de Fontaine. (Brown and de Fontaine being love interests of Fury, and Runciter a love interest of ComicBook/CaptainAmerica.)
88** ''ComicBook/OriginalSin'' has revealed that possibly ''all'' modern day appearances by Fury have been LMD appearances. The original? Still alive, but much older. Then, it revealed that Dum-Dum Dugan was ''also'' an [=LMD=], that the real one had been DeadAllAlong!
89** Even before that, ''ComicBook/SecretWarriors'' revealed that Nick's brother, Jake, was one of the first people to acquire an LMD, created by accident when he was retrieving the technology they were based on. It was that LMD that became the villainous Scorpio, while the real Jake was a deep-cover agent known only to his brother. This basically meant every post-WWII appearance by Jake prior to the reveal was actually the LMD.
90* Played with in the Marvel crossover ''ComicBook/SecretInvasion2008'', but instead of robots, it's with Skrulls, shape-shifting aliens. It begins with a character who is revealed to be a Skrull, who managed to stay undetected, and the whole story is about the paranoia of who ''else'' may be an undetectable Skrull. And then it got to the controversial ''ComicBook/CivilWar2006'': the New Avengers were so damn sure that [[Characters/MarvelComicsTonyStark Stark]] only did the things he did because he was secretly a Skrull, and Stark suspected that [[Characters/MarvelComicsSteveRogers Captain America]]'s resistance to the Registration Act may had been because he was a Skrull... but no. ''Secret Invasion'' was not used as a ResetButton of anything, and did not organize or start any of the recent disasters. Stark and Rogers in ''Civil War'' were both themselves, Hulk in ''ComicBook/WorldWarHulk'' was himself (and the creature that destroyed ''ComicBook/PlanetHulk'' to make him go in a rampage of revenge, too), [[Characters/MarvelComicsQuicksilver Quicksilver]] was himself when he stole the Terrigen crystals and started a war between ComicBook/TheInhumans and the human race, the Characters/ScarletWitch was herself in ''ComicBook/AvengersDisassembled'' (and Characters/TheWasp, who reminded her of her lost sons, too), and also in ''ComicBook/HouseOfM'' (and Quicksilver, who made her change reality, too), and so on. The Skrulls were simply in the background, trying to take advantage of the things happening, but not causing them.
91** Played with up to eleven by Quicksilver. After the Secret Invasion, he tried to clean his name of his recent disasters by ''claiming'', in-universe, that he had been replaced by a Skrull. Of course, that was not the case, and Jarvis and [[ComicBook/AntMan Henry Pym]] (who were real hostages) realized that he was lying in the same page. Quicksilver's psychic daughter Luna also sees through the lie immediately, and this pretty much destroys their relationship until Quicksilver publicly recants.
92* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'':
93** Spider-Man's enemy Mysterio uses this trick a lot too. Seeing as Mysterio is also fond of holograms and illusions, Spider-Man often cannot tell if he facing the real Mysterio, an illusion, or a robot, and even worse, the same often goes for a lot of other stuff he has to fight when the villain is involved.
94*** This has become more complex since the original Mysterio acquired a couple of imitators who also use this identity. And they don't really get along with each other. A storyline in ''Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man'' #11-13 (October-December, 2006) had all three Mysterios independently seeking a confrontation with Spidey, resulting in a rather complicated MeleeATrois scenario. With Spidey having trouble telling which is which, and further confused because the original was supposed to be dead.
95*** In ''ComicBook/SpiderMen'', Mysterio doesn't actually have an ComicBook/UltimateMarvel counterpart. "Ultimate Mysterio" is actually a robot double he was controlling all along.
96*** One reason this trick works so often is that Mysterio is a well-established [[EvilGenius technical genius.]] His robots are [[MasterOfIllusion incredibly]] [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots realistic]], so much so that in the ''ComicBook/GuardianDevil'' story arc by Creator/KevinSmith, he manages to convince ''[[Characters/MarvelComicsMattMurdock Daredevil]]'', the man who can [[SuperSenses hear heartbeats,]] into believing that Mysterio is dead.
97** Perhaps the most infamous usage of this trick in Spider-Man history is the first "death" of Aunt May. She peacefully died of old age in a realistic and tasteful manner; Peter and the other characters mourned her and eventually moved on. However, later editor-in-chief Bob Harras ''demanded'' that she be brought back to life. So, Aunt May was found alive and it was revealed that [[Characters/MarvelComicsNormanOsborn Norman Osborn]] had hired an actress to impersonate Aunt May perfectly, and kept up the charade even on her deathbed, meaning Peter (and the readers) cried over a total stranger. Even worse it contraindicated the one-shot ''Osborn Journal'', presented as Norman's private account detailing his plans behind the Clone Saga, which had Norman specifically state he had nothing to do with May's death ''even if he wished he had''.
98** Another famed Spidey villain who does this trick in the Hobgoblin, Roderick Kingsley. Despite being souped up with the Goblin Formula, he isn't stupid -- he'll send out random schmoes powered up and brainwashed to do his bidding and if they die, no skin off his back. If they do good, then he's more than willing to let them keep going, but if they screw up, he'll step in personally and kill the schmook himself. Just ask Jason Macendale... oh, wait...
99*** And one early issue has Roderick send an actual robot, ''then'' a brainwashed dupe, to attack people.
100** In the storyline ''ComicBook/{{Hunted}}'', it is suggested that all appearances of Kraven the Hunter since the end of ''ComicBook/GrimHunt'' was actually one of his 87 clones. This seemingly includes an appearance in ''ComicBook/ScarletSpider'' where he tried to force Kaine to kill him and his appearances in ''Unbeatable Squirrel Girl'' where she tried to help him along with a HeelFaceTurn.
101* The Super-Adaptoid is an [[Characters/MarvelComicsAIM A.I.M.]]-created robot which has plagued ComicBook/TheAvengers since 1966. Because of its PowerCopying abilities it is rather difficult to take down. A 1993 Spider-Man story had it serving as a LivingWeapon henchman and easily defeated by a BadassNormal opponent. Which interfered with developments in other titles where the Adaptoid was revealed as the DiabolicalMastermind behind the efforts of AIM to become a power player in the world stage. As an explanation the Super-Adaptoid of the Spider-Man story was retconned to an inferior copy of the original.
102* [[Characters/MarvelComicsThanos Thanos]] has duplicates called [[http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-8hakNOtM5KM/Uid1n3SREzI/AAAAAAAACZ0/SYWdc8789Kk/s1600/thanosclones19.jpg Thanosi]], some of which are indistinguishable from the original.[[note]]Others are given the abilities of various superheroes for Thanos to test himself against them.[[/note]] Like Doombots, these are used (usually by Thanos creator Jim Starlin) to explain away defeats. Particularly more embarrassing ones.
103** His ''first appearance'' turned out to be a robot duplicate.
104** There was a [[ArmedWithCanon War of the]] {{Retcon}}s about the Thanosi and [[Characters/TheUnbeatableSquirrelGirl Squirrel Girl]], where S.G. defeated Thanos offscreen in a ''ComicBook/GreatLakesAvengers'' miniseries, and the Watcher was dragged on to say "This is definitely the real Thanos" -- and then in a different book some time later, Thanos casually mentions that he can create Thanosi that can fool even the Watcher. Just to make this even more ridiculous, the original story and the RetCon were written by the same guy. Of course, he visibly reels when S.G. [[ArmorPiercingQuestion threateningly asks what the difference is if the duplicate was completely identical to the real deal]], to which he responds by [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere leaving]].
105*** Squirrel Girl's entire gimmick is defeating powerful villains like Doom and Thanos, usually off-panel, with it being left ambiguous whether it was Actually a Doombot she fought.
106* {{Exploited|Trope}} and {{inverted|Trope}} by [[Characters/MarvelComicsUltron Ultron]] in his first appearance. A new villain called the Crimson Cowl is revealed to have a duplicate, and when both unmask, one is a robot, and the other is [[ComicBook/TheAvengers Avengers]] butler Edwin Jarvis. The twist is that the robot is the real one -- Ultron had hypnotized Jarvis into acting as his Doombot, and pretended he wasn't sentient to deceive both the Avengers and his own flunkies.
107* [[Characters/MarvelComicsHydra Viper/Madame Hydra]] is a long-running Marvel villain who has appeared in many series. She had an out-of-character appearance in a storyline featured in ''Punisher War Journal'' #45-47 (August-October, 1992)., where she served as an ally to [[Characters/MarvelComicsMattMurdock Daredevil]], Nomad, and [[Characters/MarvelComicsFrankCastle the Punisher]]. A year later, Gregory Wright wrote a story where it was revealed that Viper has been using look-alike "Pit-Vipers" to act in her name. The "Viper" appearing in the Punisher storyline was a rogue Pit-Viper with her own agenda.
108* [[ComicBook/MultipleMan Jamie Madrox]] from ComicBook/XFactor is a mutant whose power lets him [[MesACrowd make duplicates of himself]]; he was believed to be a casualty of the Legacy Virus plague, but it was discovered later that the victim was one of his duplicates. (Still later, he claims he keeps a few of them active at all times for just such an emergency.)
109* Subverted at one point in ''ComicBook/XFactor2006'', when the team encounters Arcade. Rictor punches him out, knocking off a face mask to reveal Arcade's just a robot... but when everyone leaves, the "robot" turns out to be the ''actual'' Arcade, who notes next time to just use a proper robot. Getting punched in the face ''hurts''.
110* The ''Marvel Now'' iteration of ''ComicBook/XForce'' revealed that Cable has been making clones of himself and sending them out. The real one is in stasis, his body being awakened long enough to gather blood for a clone. As one clone states "He dies a little for two minutes. We die everyday."
111* Professor X's first "death" in the ''ComicBook/XMen'' comics was actually the shapeshifter Changeling having taken Xavier's place some issues earlier since he knew he was going to die anyways.
112
113!!Franchise/TheDCU:
114* In one of the ''ComicBook/TheBatmanAdventures'' comics, it was revealed that the redesigned green-skinned, elfin Poison Ivy that appeared in the later episodes of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'' was actually a PlantPerson created by the real Ivy to keep up appearances in Gotham while she went on the lam and shacked up with [[ComicBook/SwampThing Alec Holland]]. Disturbingly, the plant actually thought she was the real Ivy right up until the end when she fell victim to CloneDegeneration.
115* ''ComicBook/BatmanThreeJokers'': The Joker's inconsistent characterization over the years is retconned as being the result of there actually being three separate Jokers. The EarlyInstallmentWeirdness serious Joker of the Golden Age is the ringleader of their operation, while his two underlings represent the two extremes that Joker has vacillated between in recent times -- goofy Silver Age prankster for one, and psychotic MonsterClown for the other.
116* [[Characters/SupermanBrainiacCharacter Brainiac]] usually has an excuse in being a vastly advanced A.I. that has plenty of bodies to spare. However, ''ComicBook/TheNew52FuturesEnd'' goes one step further and reveals that he is actually an EldritchAbomination while all manifestations in canon so far have been probes sent to collect knowledge.
117* This is revealed to be the case during ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis'' for the ComicBook/NewGods and [[Characters/NewGodsDarkseid Darkseid]]. All that Earth has ever seen is somewhat limited projections of the real gods which operate on a higher plane of reality.
118* ''ComicBook/JusticeLeague Europe'' "ComicBook/TheExtremistVector": It turned out that the original Extremists are already dead, and that the ones seen in this story are just robot replicas. Except for Dreamslayer, who's the real deal.
119* Hugo Strange blows himself up in "The Double Life of Hugo Strange" when fighting Batman and Robin in a fake version of the Batcave under a fake Wayne Manor that's set up to make Bruce Wayne/Batman crazy by having numerous robotic clones ("mandroids") of his friends attack him and then disappear. With this setup and with Strange already having cheated apparent death before, it's not the most surprising move for him to later reappear and reveal that the one who blew up was another mandroid.
120* And then there's Prometheus, a DC villain who was created to be a sort of anti-Batman who was so intelligent and well-trained he could almost take out the entire Justice League on his own. Except that he had long since fallen prey to VillainDecay and had been reduced to just another generic baddie who gets his butt kicked by whatever hero happens to be around. The {{ComicBook/{{Justice League|OfAmerica}} miniseries ''ComicBook/JusticeLeagueCryForJustice'' attempted to fix this by revealing that the real Prometheus had been in hiding since he almost killed the JLA, and the loser who kept getting kicked around all these years was an impostor, who Prometheus had killed. But now the real deal was back, ready and able to... get killed off in short order by ComicBook/GreenArrow. It was quite a waste, but not nearly the worst thing about that series.
121** There were hints that Prometheus would actually return in some form, as both his helmet (which contained most of his knowledge) and the [[{{Lobotomy}} lobotomized]] [[EmptyShell body]] of his sidekick, I.Q., were later shown to be missing. It seems like there was a plan that was relegated to an AbortedArc thanks to the ''ComicBook/New52''.
122* Something similar was done with the Mad Hatter, whose appearances in the Silver Age were revealed as the result of an imposter, and the now-famous Jervis Tetch version was (re)introduced and explained in the Bronze Age.
123* ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'':
124** Super-villain Toyman's robots look like real human beings, and they are capable of deceiving even XRayVision. In ''[[ComicBook/Supergirl2005 2011 storyline]]'' ''ComicBook/DayOfTheDollmaker'', Characters/{{Supergirl|TheCharacter}} invokes the trope when she warns Toyman that if he does not answer her questions, she will tear him apart to make sure he is not a robot.
125--->'''Characters/{{Supergirl|TheCharacter}}:''' And how do we know you're even the real Winslow Schott? I've seen one of your robots before -- no, two of them. One here in Gotham, the other on New Krypton. And that one had a part in my world's destruction. A small part, sure, but an important one. Your work is very well made. Impossible to tell apart from real, live human beings, even with my X-Ray vision. So please. Answer Ms. Grant's questions, or else another outburst like that will lead me to believe you're one of Schott's automatons... and I'll start probing to make sure you're real.
126** In ''ComicBook/SupergirlRebirth #2'', Kara fights Cyborg Superman. She wins, but she is disappointed when she discovers that it is only a drone.
127--->'''Supergirl:''' Of course... Another lie. Another fake. A drone. It exploded but... I barely touched it.
128** ''ComicBook/ActionComics'' #865 revealed that AxCrazy Toyman was a robot designed to fool even Superman, and the real Toyman was still a HarmlessVillain.
129** ''ComicBook/SupermanBrainiac'' revealed that every single Post-Crisis Brainiac's prior appearance was actually a "Brainiac probe". Even Milton Fine wasn't possessed by Vril Dox's disembodied intelligence, but by nanoprobes.
130** ''ComicBook/TheEarthwarSaga'': When Boy Chameleon faces the leader of the Resource Raiders, he notes it is a living brain-like creature, like the former leader whom they defeated, who turned out to be a robot. The leader reveals that robot was a duplicate construct whose defeat efficiently fooled the Legionnaires into believing the Raiders had been crushed.
131--->'''Chameleon Boy:''' You're a living brain-- like the one who led the first group of Raiders! B-but that one turned out to be a robot!\
132'''Leader:''' Rest assured that I am not a robot, Chameleon Boy... That construct was merely my agent on Earth.
133** ''ComicBook/NewKrypton'' featured a Luthor robot who did Lex's dirty work for about half of the saga.
134** Following ''ComicBook/FinalNight'', a revitalized Lex Luthor is arrested for the destruction of downtown Metropolis back in ''ComicBook/TheFallOfMetropolis''. He successfully argues that it wasn't him, but a clone of him created by Dabney Donovan to ruin his image. This is MetaphoricallyTrue as it was a clone of Luthor, but ''he'' was the clone the entire time.
135** In ''ComicBook/FiftyTwo'', Luthor claims that the insanity he was caught up in after losing the presidency in ''ComicBook/PublicEnemies'' was caused by an evil, alternate dimension Luthor. He's able to present his evidence in the form of the altered body of Alexander Luthor, Jr. ComicBook/{{Steel}} realizes something's up, but he can't pin it down.
136* ''ComicBook/WonderWoman'' [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Vol 1]]: Wonder Woman uses her telepathy to know which "Blue Snowmen" are actually robots she can tear through without concern, instead of PoweredArmor since Byrna Brilyant made them identical to hide whether or not people are interacting with the real villain or not and help her maintain her SecretIdentity. Others are never sure whether they're dealing with a robot or the real thing.
137* The miniseries ''ComicBook/UnstoppableDoomPatrol'' has a part where the ComicBook/DoomPatrol confront Metagen CEO Brian [=McClane=], but find that they were talking to a robot double due to the real [=McClane=] being too much of a shameless coward to directly face the team.
138
139!!Other
140* A fairly literal example from ''ComicBook/BigBangComics'' -- Ultiman hints that he has never actually met his archenemy Cortex, and that Cortex commits all his crimes by way of a series of robotic doubles. This isn't a secret on Cortex's part, and he tends to destroy the doubles himself by having them self-destruct upon their capture.
141* ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'': Judge Death went missing after having ruled over all of Mega City One during "Necropolis". Dredd later encounters what appears to be Judge Death in a museum, but it's just a robot made in his image and not the real deal.
142* In ''ComicBook/MassEffectRedemption'', Liara manages to track down and shoot the reclusive Shadow Broker, only to realize that what she just shot was a humanoid-shaped communication device.
143* In ''ComicBook/MightyMorphinPowerRangersShatteredGrid'', Lord Drakkon sneaks into [[Series/PowerRangersRPM Corinth]] with the intent on taking out the team, taking their powers and taking over the domed city. In his act, he encounters Dr. K and makes the mistake of mentioning how she created the Venjix Virus, which caused the situation her world is in, actually being proud of it. This pisses off Dr. K so much that she goes in for the kill and strikes him down, revealing him to be a robot. What's frightening is that she didn't know and ''didn't care'' if that was the real Drakkon or not; he ''praised'' her for the biggest mistake of her life and she was not having it.
144* ''ComicBook/MortadeloYFilemon'': When they think they caught Mirake Tekasko, the BigBad of "Robots Bestiajos", it's revealed to be yet another of his robots with a rather...creative and unorthodox self-destruct mechanism.
145* In the fan-loved "Fragments of Autumn" issue of ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures, [[RobotGirl Lyla]] accidentally shot a policeman. Since droids were recently given legal rights, she was [[DeconstructedTrope put on trial for that, rather that just going through a check up]]. However it was revealed that the policeman was actually another robot and that the whole incident was staged by a corrupt politician.
146* ComicBook/Revolution2016's plot escalates when during a confrontation between the Autobots and G.I. Joes, R.O.M. murders several Joes, including General Colton. However, they were actually Dire Wraiths: but neither side knew this and the Joes go out for Cybertronian blood and Optimus wants to capture and punish R.O.M. for his actions. Thus showing the danger of Doombots when no one knows they are doombots.
147* {{Subverted|Trope}}/{{Averted|Trope}} in a (Warren times) ComicBook/{{Vampirella}} story, where your mad scientist of the week produces Vampirella clones. No advanced fanboy bookings, please -- the angered real Vampirella killed them all to prove that there is no substitute, and that was it. Astonishingly, none of those clones ever resurfaced in the Harris/Dynamite era. [[SarcasmMode Perhaps because no writer ever bothers to read the Warren comics.]]
148[[/folder]]
149
150[[folder:Fan Works]]
151* Examples from ''Fanfic/TheCalvinverse'':
152** Calvin ''[[WrongGenreSavvy thinks]]'' Retro is this in ''Fanfic/RetroChill'', and spends some time trying to undo his "disguise".
153** The CreepyMonotone clones in ''Fanfic/CalvinAndHobbesTheSeries''.
154* ''Fanfic/DungeonKeeperAmi'': Thanks to her Golems that can look just like her, be [[DemonicPossession possessed]] by her, and only lose some magical capacity if she dies while possessing them, Ami has survived numerous assassination attempts and surprise attacks with nothing more than a scare for both herself and her would-be killer.
155* ''Fanfic/ThinkingInLittleGreenBoxes'': Don't worry, that was just the [[ComicBook/{{SHIELD}} Life Model Decoy]] of Cedric Diggory.
156* In the ''Fanfic/FacingTheFutureSeries'', [[WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom Vlad Plasmius]] has a tendency to use his [[SelfDuplication duplication power]] to make quick escapes.
157* [[BigBad General-Admiral Makarov]] from the ''Fanfic/PonyPOVSeries'' apparently has a habit of doing this to avoid assassination attempts. He also does it after being defeated by Cadence and shot in the head by Dima. Justified as he's a RealityWarper capable of replacing himself with a robotic copy at will, and a ParodySue who uses this for it's normal narrative effect of avoiding admitting he was beaten.
158* [[PragmaticHero Ian/Nate]] from ''Fanfic/ForTheMission'' rarely speaks in person after he [[InternalReveal reveals his true mission to the guild]]. From then on, he uses [[ExpendableClone Substitute clones]] as communication, receiving the memories from them after the fact. He's put so much [[SubvertedTrope introspection]] [[ImpostorForgotOneDetail and detail]] into their construction that [[MirrorMatch they'll make the same decisions he would.]]
159* ''[[Fanfic/AdoptedDisplaced Three More Things!]]'': After Valmont dissolves their partnership, Daolong Wong takes to hiding in the Shadow Realm and sending out magical copies of himself to handle missions while he's safely ensconced away from the danger.
160* In [[https://waitingforthet.tumblr.com/post/187639464740/what-is-spider-man-hanging-from-this-comic-is this]] Marvel Comics parody, the trope namer reveals himself to be a Doombot...and then it's revealed that this applies to ''every hero on the scene'' (except Hawkeye, who complains about being the only one who actually showed up for work).
161* ''Fanfic/DarthVaderHeroOfNaboo'':
162** When Darth Sidious seemingly kills Darth Plagueis, it turns out to be a Force illusion.
163** Done again later when Plagueis is fighting Sidious and notices that his apprentice isn't reacting like he should; he quickly discovers that "Sidious" is a droid wearing a holographic disguise, which is soon joined by a whole squad of them.
164* Subverted in ''Fanfic/FireDarkMark''. When the Fantastic Four find Doctor Doom's body, the Human Torch cannot believe it is the real deal. Nonetheless, the Thing cuts off his "Maybe it's a robot or an android or..." ramblings, stating he can recognize a corpse when he sees it.
165-->'''Human Torch:''' "Maybe it's a robot. Or an android. Or..."\
166'''The Thing:''' "Or, nothin'. I smelled enough corpses in the War, Torchy. I know the scent. That's a dead body. That's Dr. Doom."
167[[/folder]]
168
169[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
170* ''WesternAnimation/Incredibles2'': Thanks to handy mind-control goggles, the Screenslaver, aka Evelyn Deavor, makes an innocent pizza delivery guy out to be the Screenslaver during the attack during Elastigirl's TV interview, resulting in her being able to act as MissionControl for Helen during the incident, making her seem innocent at the time.
171* A rare heroic example occurs in the first installment of ''WesternAnimation/TheJimmyTimmyPowerHour''. [[EvilTeacher Mr. Crocker]] has seemingly defeated [[WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfJimmyNeutronBoyGenius Jimmy Neutron]] and his MiniMecha, and lands the finishing blow only to discover it was a robotic double with Cosmo & Wanda pulling a TheManBehindTheCurtain. The ''real'' Jimmy was off making repairs to Fairy World's CosmicKeystone the entire time.
172* ''WesternAnimation/{{Megamind}}'': In the final battle against Tighten, Megamind rescues Roxanne but is killed -- only to be revealed as Minion wearing a holographic disguise.
173[[/folder]]
174
175[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
176* ''Film/TheDevilsDouble'' is the story of Uday Hussein forcing Latif Yahia to become his body double.
177* In ''Film/DiamondsAreForever'', Film/JamesBond's nemesis, Blofeld, has started using MagicPlasticSurgery to turn his henchmen into such uncanny body doubles of himself that neither Bond nor the audience can tell them apart from the genuine article.
178* Comes up in the rather cruel TwistEnding to ''Film/TheEagleHasLanded''. The man the protagonist shot dead just before being gunned down himself was not the real Winston Churchill, but a comic actor who specialised in celebrity impersonations, hired by the Ministry of War to help prevent German intelligence from learning that the Prime Minister was out of the country for [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yalta_Conference the Yalta Conference.]]
179* ''Film/GodzillaVsMechagodzilla'' has Anguirus being beaten up by what appears to be Godzilla, managing to scrape off a little bit of flesh and revealing some kind of shiny material underneath, but later ''another'' Godzilla shows up while the first one was attacking a refinery. The second Godzilla hits the first with his atomic breath, blowing off a large chunk of the first one's skin and revealing it to be a [[EvilKnockoff robotic doppleganger]]. The doppelganger sheds the disguise entirely, revealing it to be the alien-controlled [[EvilKnockoff Mechagodzilla]].
180* ''Film/HalloweenH20TwentyYearsLater'' ends with Michael Myers being decapitated by Laurie Strode. ''Film/HalloweenResurrection'' reveals that was actually an EMT who Michael dressed in his clothes to deceive Laurie.
181* ''Film/SpiderManFarFromHome'''s ending uses a unique form of this, revealing the Nick Fury and Maria Hill in the movie to be Skrulls shapeshifted to their image and put to work by the ''real'' Nick Fury, which explains their bad, bad decisions in trusting the villain throughout the entire movie in hindsight.
182* Appears in ''Franchise/StarWars'', ironically only by the good guys:
183** ''Film/ThePhantomMenace'': Padmé does this all the time as Queen of Naboo, disguising herself as one of the Queen's handmaidens while a bodyguard (Sabé) disguises herself as the Queen. And she's ''not'' the first Queen of Naboo to do this. Her head of security Captain Panaka designed the strategy, and it was used by her predecessor (and presumably, her successor).
184** ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'': Padmé uses the strategy again as a senator in this movie; sadly, her decoy must fulfill her true duty this time when an assassin strikes, and is killed taking a bullet meant for Padmé.
185** ''Film/TheLastJedi'': Luke uses an AstralProjection to face down Kylo Ren, cleverly avoiding interacting with him to maintain the illusion. Per the use of this trope, while Luke himself [[DangerousForbiddenTechnique dies after he uses it, it's considered a victory as it completely distracted Kylo and allowed the Rebels to escape]].
186[[/folder]]
187
188[[folder:Literature]]
189* Creator/IsaacAsimov:
190** ''Literature/FoundationAndChaos'' by Creator/GregBear: Dors shoots a {{Ridiculously Human Robot|s}} under the belief that said robot is fundamentally damaged. It turns out the robot she shot was a remote-controlled duplicate of the real robot.
191** "Literature/TheTercentenaryIncident": In 2076, the tricentennial of the United States, the country is ruled by a populist jerk, who is quickly losing support. He began to shake people's hands in the street, and suddenly explodes, becoming a pile of dust. Then he showed up at the balcony, and pointed that it was is a malfunction of his protocolar robot duplicate. He gave the "Tricentennial address" (much better than his usual style) and strengthened the unity of the federation. And two years later... a guy shows up with very sound reasons to suspect that the president has been murdered that day, and that the robot, posing as human, has been acting as president since then.
192* In order to maintain Cthulhu's aura of menace and mystery, some stories and fan theories say that the Cthulhu that was driven back to sleep in the original short story "Literature/TheCallOfCthulhu" was merely a Spawn of Cthulhu instead of the Real [=McCoy=].
193* ''Literature/{{Domina}}'': The fey do this as a standard practice. They use remote-controlled bodies called homunculi to interact with the world, and don't particularly care if one gets killed. At one point a changeling mentions that fighting a homunculus is more difficult than normal people, because the fey don't have to worry about staying alive. So they can make suicidal moves that no one sees coming.
194* Subverted in ''Literature/JohnDiesAtTheEnd''. Dave's enemies have been replacing people around him to mess with him. He eventually learns that Dave himself [[TomatoInTheMirror is the doombot,]] and the real men has been dead for a couple of days.
195* In the backstory of ''Literature/ShadowOfTheConqueror,'' Dayless the Conqueror faked his death by leaving a body double on his flagship, fooling everyone into believing that he was on it as it exploded, while he made a VillainExitStageLeft.
196* ''Literature/VillainsCode'': Doctor Mechanical often operates his PoweredArmor by remote when he needs it for something non-essential, such as giving instructions to new villains. The older villains often leave the suit behind, then walk up to a more comfortable lounge where the real Doctor Mechanical is waiting. Actually, the real one rarely appears at all; even out of his suit, most of his appearances are robotic duplicates. Even better, the neural nanites he uses to control the duplicates are so efficient that he can pilot multiple duplicates at once, allowing him to save a lot of time.
197[[/folder]]
198
199[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
200* In the finale to the fourth season of ''Series/AgentsOfSHIELD'', Simmons is seemingly killed, only to be revealed as an LMD.
201* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer''[=/=]''Series/{{Angel}}'':
202** Used with the Buffybot, a robot replica of the title heroine. A good example is "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS5E22TheGift The Gift]]", where Buffy apparently gets decapitated by the Big Bad, Glory. Lo and behold, the real Buffy then reveals herself, showing the first one to be a fake.
203** Season 9 opens with Buffy's arms feeling funny. Later in the series we see a shot of Andrew working on a robotic arm, then in a fight Buffy's arm is torn off to her horror. When it turns out that it's a robotic arm, remembering how upset she was when there was a robot version of her before, Buffyrobobuffy gets even more upset.
204*** Becomes ComicallyMissingThePoint when she finds out she's a robot after her arm is ripped off and goes to confront Andrew about it. Instead of explaining why she's a robot he seems to be only concerned about getting her a new arm. Later when Buffy and Spike are angry at him because what she's been through because of it, he still thinks they're referring to her having lost the arm.
205** In Season 6 of ''Buffy'' the Scoobies use the Buffybot to make the underworld think that the Slayer is still protecting Sunnydale. When a vampire accidentally discovers this, it provokes immediate RapePillageAndBurn by demon bikers.
206** The first time Willow gets her mitts on Warren in "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS6E20Villains Villains]]". Fizz crackle pop.
207** An instance of this appears on the ''Angel'' episode "[[Recap/AngelS05E07Lineage Lineage]]". A cyborg uses a {{Glamour}} to imitate Wesley's father. When the cyborg threatens Fred, Wesley shoots it dead, revealing its true nature. Unlike most cases of this trope, the duplicate was not operating on behalf of the original.
208* In Episode 8 of ''Series/DarkMatter2015'', Six (with the help of ExpendableClone service advertised four episodes prior) finally meets face-to-face with his treacherous former employer, The General. Turns out The General used the same trick to command his underlings in person.
209* ''Series/{{Doctor Who}}'': An interesting variant occurs in "A Good Man Goes to War" when it is revealed that the baby Melody Pond the Doctor and his allies have just rescued is a [[DoppelGanger Ganger]].
210** Ultimately, this trope is the driving force behind the entirety of new Season 6, as the over-arcing plot concerns the Doctor dying at River's hand being a fixed point in time. Fortunately, at the half-season mark they meet a group of people who specialize in robots that can imitate people...
211* ''Series/{{Farscape}}'': Unbeknown to the audience, Aeryn Sun is swapped with a biomechnical replica to hide the real one's abduction. John Crichton doesn't awaken to the situation until the "bioloid" inadvertently fails at a TrustPassword. Crichton draws a gun on her and, during an increasingly-agitated round of questioning, the faker tries to draw hers as well. Crichton blasts the side of her head off, [[RoboticReveal revealing her inner components]] for all to see.
212* In the first episode of the 4th season of ''Series/TheFlash2014'', Clifford De Voe/The Thinker uses an android warrior, Samuroid, to lure Team Flash into pulling Barry out of the Speed Force. The robot also provides a neat way to cover the tracks. De Voe utilizes the Samuroid a few more times in the season, mainly as a means of distraction.
213* On ''Series/GilligansIsland'', when Gilligan dreamed he was a spy, he was shot by Mr. Howell (the BigBad of the dream, playing an Expy of Blofeld), and was revealed to be a robot. Then the "real" Gilligan walked in, saying he suspected something was amiss and so, sent his robot double in first.
214* ''Series/TheMentalist'': Protagonist Patrick Jane tracks down and kills his almost-lifelong nemesis, serial superkiller "Red John", season ends. The next season begins, and, hey, what do you know: that guy Jane shot? He was actually just a boring minion of Red John's.
215* ''Series/{{Smallville}}'': Lana Lang is caught in a car bombing, with enough DNA evidence to confirm the death, in Season 6 finale. In the next season, it is revealed that it was actually her clone created by Lex.
216* ''Series/StargateSG1'': System Lord Ba'al inherited Asgard Cloning Technology from his old master, Anubis. This let the writers kill him at least once almost every time he appeared after that. One episode revolved around SG-1 tracking down the lot of them. Or did they? Turns out, they didn't. Either that, or he just made more clones afterward.
217** Also on ''Stargate SG-1'', in the Season 4 episode ''Double Jeopardy'', SG-1 finds out that their robot clones from Season 1's ''Tin Man'' have been going on their own adventures. The second indication that SG-1 isn't really SG-1 is when Carter was surprised to be referred to as a Major rather than a Captain.
218* In the ''Series/StarTrekDiscovery'' short "Escape Artist", Harry Mudd ends up in the hands of a Tellarite bounty hunter, who plans to turn him over to a Federation ship for a reward. Mudd spends most of the video unsuccessfully trying to trick the Tellarite, but the bounty hunter is far too clever for that. He transports with Mudd to a Starfleet ship, only for the captain to take them to a room, where they're holding half a dozen other Mudds. Apparently, someone's been selling android copies of Mudd to bounty hunters for half the reward money. The culprit turns out to be the real Mudd, who's making a fortune on the scam. The androids he's selling are completely unaware that they're not the real deal.
219* ''Franchise/SuperSentai'':
220** ''Series/HimitsuSentaiGorenger'': The Gorangers attempt to attack or take hostage the Black Cross Fuhrer in a few episodes only for it to be revealed to be a disguised {{mook|s}} or an illusion when the cloak is removed. One time they actually did attack the real Fuhrer only for him to blind them with a flash of light and escape when the cloak was ripped off. Although the final episode reveals that it wouldn't have mattered if they had successfully attacked the real Fuhrer because he is insanely strong and nearly immortal to everything except his one WeaksauceWeakness.
221** Don Armage, the BigBad of ''Series/UchuuSentaiKyuranger'' is killed several times with no effect. Tsurugi claims that he killed Don Armage in the past and is confused when he hears that Don Armage is still the leader of Jark Matter in the present. To solve the mystery of how he is still alive The Kyurangers travel back in time and kill him again in the past but find that the present hasn't changed when they return. They later kill him again in the present and guess that he must have the ability to make copies of himself. It turns out that he not only can make copies of himself, but can also revive himself by possessing other people's bodies if his real body is destroyed. The version that Tsurugi killed actually was the real Don Armage but he revived himself by possessing Quervo, and the others the Kyurangers fought were copies. In the present, the real Don Armage in Quervo's body is at Jark Matter's base in the Crux system.
222** Carantula is killed in episode 36 of ''Series/MashinSentaiKiramager'', only to turn up alive in the next episode where it is revealed that Yodonna had earlier used her power to split people into 5 parts on him so only one aspect of Carantula actually died while the rest merged back together. This ends up having consequences later in the series as it made him less cruel and he found it more difficult to design new monsters, which leads to him betraying Yodon later.
223[[/folder]]
224
225[[folder:Music]]
226* When Music/PinkFloyd performed Music/TheWall live, the backing musicians went on first to perform "In The Flesh?", all of them wearing masks to look like the members of the band. Once the song was over, the real band came onstage.
227* The late Music/MFDoom, appropriately enough, given he was styled after Doctor Doom, used to use stand-in performers, sometimes in secret, at his concerts.
228[[/folder]]
229
230[[folder:Roleplay]]
231* In Roleplay/DinoAttackRPG, [[Toys/LEGOAlphaTeam Ogel]] was killed [[RuleOfThree three times]] during the FinalBattle and yet ''still'' managed to survive. Wondering how? Each time Ogel apparently died, it was actually one of his Skeleton Drones in disguise, as a reference to the March/April 2001 issue of LEGO Mania.
232[[/folder]]
233
234[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
235* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'': The high-level spell ''Simulacrum'' can be used to make a quasi-real copy of any creature that even has some of the powers of the original, so it's perfect for this.
236* In ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'', this is one of the powers available to the Solar Exalted who focus in crafting; they can ''retroactively'' reveal that the person their enemy just killed was actually an artificial simulacrum.
237* ''TabletopGame/GoldenHeroes'', ''Magazine/WhiteDwarf'' magazine #73 adventure "The American Dream". When the supervillain Jackson Stone is finally captured, he gives a defiant speech and then explodes, revealing that he's a booby-trapped android replica of the real Stone.
238* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering''
239** Gerrard thinks he has defeated Volrath, but it turns out to be a shapeshifter, as depicted on the card [[http://www.magiccards.info/query?q=!Scapegoat Scapegoat]]. (Volrath later turned out to be a shapeshifter himself, so you have a [[ShapedLikeItself shapeshifter pretending to be a shapeshifter]].)
240** Nicol Bolas pulls this trick at the end of ''Literature/TestOfMetal''.
241* The ''TabletopGame/SentinelsOfTheMultiverse'' villain Biomancer is fond of pulling this trick - as he specializes in creating "fleshchildren" (alchemical clones of people, usually superheroes), it's not much harder for him to make one of ''himself''. His Incapacitated side shows the heroes discovering that the Biomancer they just defeated is actually another fleshchild.
242* In ''[[TabletopGame/{{Warhammer40000}} Warhammer 40,000]]'', famous Necron Trazyn the Infinite almost never walks onto a battlefield himself, preferring to set up a small team of body doubles in his stead. The body doubles [[{{Troll}} are rarely willing volunteers]], we should mention, [[InvoluntaryShapeshifting often not even aware that Trazyn has uploaded himself inside them until his previous double has been felled]].
243** ''[[TabletopGame/{{Warhammer40000}} Warhammer 40,000]]'' also has the Warlord trait of the Alpha Legion, a [[Literature/{{HorusHeresy}} Heretic army]], 'I Am Alpharius'. If your Warlord is killed, you can immediately designate a different Alpha Legion character in your army as the True Alpharius, and this can be repeated until there is no longer anyone from Alpha Legion left alive.
244*** The rationale being that Alpha Legion is so secretive that even they don't know what their plans are meant to achieve, and their primarch can blend in perfectly with any unit.
245[[/folder]]
246
247[[folder:Video Games]]
248* ''VideoGame/AquaJack'' ends with you storming into the main villain's office and shooting him to shreds, only to realize it's a robot double. The villain then appears on a video screen to taunt you, and the game suddenly ends.
249* ''VideoGame/AdvanceWarsDaysOfRuin'': The very end reveals that the Caulder who has been orchestrating the entire game's events is actually a clone... one that murdered the real Caulder some time ago.
250* ''VideoGame/BaldursGateIII'': When you come across Elminster, the most famous wizard in all of Faerun, his level is stated to be merely 1 (and creature type construct rather than humanoid). Of course, he is much more powerful than that in reality. If you actually attempt to fight him then it will dissolve into water upon defeat, revealing that it's actually a simulacrum that Elminster sent in his place.
251* ''VideoGame/BattleForWesnoth'': Upon destroying a lich for the first time in ''The South Guard'', the heroes assume that they have destroyed the one behind the undead menace, but whatever the branch you choose, their ally will tell them that the defeated lich is just a phantom of the real one.
252* ''VideoGame/ChronoCross'' pulls this early on, when building up Lynx as the BigBad, before the party finally fights him...a third of the way through Disc One? Don't worry, after you beat him, he turns into a strange mix between a cat and a [[TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons Displacer Beast]], and the ''real'' Lynx reveals that it was Actually A Shadow. There was no way he was going to risk fighting against Kid, who was so hell-bent on finding him.
253* ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'' lets you [[TrickedOutTime do this retroactively]]. When Crono gets killed by Lavos, the death was very much for real, but there's a minigame [[ChekhovsGun you may have already played at this point]] that lets you win clones of your characters, and with the Time Egg, you can go back to the event and swap the killed character with a clone. Famously, this is an optional sidequest, despite the killed character being the ''main'' character.
254* Lord Nemesis in ''VideoGame/CityOfHeroes'' has so many mechanical duplicates of himself running around that when fighting his minions, it's not uncommon to find multiple enemies named Fake Nemesis in the same building, or even in the same ''patrol''.
255** There's even a bug that can occasionally result in a group of enemies composed solely of a half dozen or so Fake Nemesis.
256* ''VideoGame/CrashFever:'' The Jeong Dojeons fought in other Gun Long Clan quests were fakes. The real one is killed during the events of Below Morning Glories in a last-ditch attempt to take down the opposing forces.
257* ''VideoGame/Destiny2'': During the Leviathan raid, you confront Emperor Calus, mighty leader of the Cabal Empire! Then you damage him a bit and ''his skin and body parts flake off'', revealing you're actually fighting a robot duplicate of Calus. After the battle's over, the real Calus speaks through the duplicate to praise your combat skill and encourage you to use the Leviathan to keep training, at which point it's shown that he has a ''massive'' storeroom filled with nothing but Calus Doombots, hence [[SlidingScaleOfGameplayAndStoryIntegration the weekly raid reset]].
258* ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry4'': His interactions with Nero, Agnus and Dante in cutscenes imply that Sanctus is wearing the one specific Alto Angelo armor that's leading all of the other Angelos and The Savior. But when Dante blasts said armor with his handgun, it's revealed to be [[AnimatedArmor completely hollow]] just like the rest of the Angelo armors. Dante then figures this out and [[LampshadeHanging lampshades it]]. Soon enough, it's revealed that Sanctus is indeed not in the armor itself, but inside the gigantic Savior.
259-->'''Dante:''' The true form must be inside...
260* The GameOver sequence in ''VideoGame/EvilGenius'' opens with your avatar being wheeled into the morgue... and then their face slides open, revealing a bomb with its timer rapidly approaching zero. Your plans may be foiled, but you've still got one last surprise for the Forces of Justice!
261* At one point in ''VideoGame/FarCry4'' you kill [[BigBad Pagan Min]], only to almost immediately be chastised over the radio by the man himself for killing his BodyDouble Eric.
262* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
263** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVIII'' the [=SeeD=] and their clients the Timber Resistance get the opportunity to kidnap the President of Galbadia (who at this point is thought to be the BigBad) and do so. However, this "president" is not just a decoy, but an undead construct created by [[TheManBehindTheMan the Sorceress Edea]] to trick the Timber Resistance.
264** In 'VideoGame/DissidiaFinalFantasy'', if you play as [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI Shantotto]] and lose a battle, she will disappear, leaving behind one of her enchanted dolls in her wake. The implication is that you were merely controlling one of her simulacra while the real deal was presumably off performing research elsewhere.
265* ''Franchise/FireEmblem:''
266** In the first game, ''Videogame/FireEmblemShadowDragonAndTheBladeOfLight,'' BigBad Gharnef creates two clones of himself during his chapter. Stat-wise, the clones look identical to the real Gharnef, and the game ''acts'' as though they're immune to non-starlight damage, but they really aren't. The real one could be any of the three (it's random, and changes every time), but the player will know a clone when they kill it because they don't have death quotes. They also all appear to be carrying the [[InfinityPlusOneSword Falchion]], but two of them are fakes... which, interestingly enough, also follow this trope: their stats show up the same as the real one, but when dropped they turn out to be just an ordinary Steel Sword.
267** In ''[[Videogame/FireEmblemMysteryOfTheEmblem New Mystery]]'', the [[MeaningfulName Legion]] fought as the boss of Chapter 6x turns out to be just a clone. Marth and Co. won't fight the ''real'' Legion until 12x... where he's accompanied by an entire army of Legions. There are three 'boss' Roros with slightly higher stats, and a whole bunch of {{mook|s}} Legions. The mooks spawn constantly until the real one does, which could be any of the three 'boss' versions. (like Gharnef, it's random) This trope is also discussed in-story, it's implied Legion has taken this to such extremes even ''he'' doesn't know which of his clones is the real one anymore.
268** The Japanese version of ''VideoGame/FireEmblemRadiantDawn'' also says that The Black Knight that Ike defeated in ''Videogame/FireEmblemPathOfRadiance'' was a "ghost" created by malfunctioning warp powder. The English localization, however, thinking that was ridiculous, changed it to an instance of ILetYouWin using existing canon and characterization.
269** ''VideoGame/FireEmblemGaiden'' and its remake, ''Echoes: Shadows of Valentia'', also use this, but in the "HandWave for the player winning what's supposed to be a HopelessBossFight" form. Desaix, the game's StarterVillain, appears on the map in an early chapter with stats normally too high for you to beat at that point. If the cast somehow ''does'' manage to defeat him, his NumberTwo Slayde reveals he was actually a BodyDouble. [[SchrodingersGun It's likely this is only true if the player beat him]], since the body double isn't mentioned anywhere else.
270* In the ''VideoGame/GIJoe'' arcade shooter, the first battle with Cobra Commander is really a robot knockoff.
271* Used frequently by [[BigBad Arfoire/Magiquone]] in ''VideoGame/HyperdimensionNeptunia''. After learning the truth about their RecurringBoss ArchEnemy (whose [[MyNameIsQuestionMarks name]] had been unknown to them up until TheReveal), Neptune and her friends learn that she had been using clones to distract them while her plan to TakeOverTheWorld went into motion.
272* In ''[[VideoGame/JetSetRadio Jet Set Radio Future]]'', a story arc has team member [=YoYo=] betray the entire group. Or so the Golden Rhinos would have you think, as they kidnapped [=YoYo=] and built a robot clone and loosed him on Tokyo to wreak havok.
273* In the Platform/GameBoy version of ''VideoGame/KidDracula'', the first Garamoth you fight turns out to be a robot being piloted by an alien.
274* ''VideoGame/KlonoaHeroesDensetsuNoStarMedal'': Joka in his first boss fight is revealed to be a clone. Klonoa and Pango promptly lose to his true form in the following cutscene.
275* In ''VideoGame/GuiltyGearStrive'', this is how That Man, aka Asuka R. Kreutz operates in psychical tasks, creating stand-in clones called "bits" to do his bidding since he's too tired to do most things. This even extends to his playable version, Asuka R#.
276* The BigBad of ''VideoGame/TheKingOfFighters2000'' is Zero, an utter bastard who [[KillAndReplace murdered a man to steal his identity]], nuked a city to oblivion with his KillSat, and did this [[TheStarscream all to overthrow his employers and become a tyrant in his own right]], thankfully getting killed off by K' and co. in the end. Sounds like a nasty piece of work, right? Here's the catch - that was ''Clone'' Zero. Original Zero, who debuts in [[VideoGame/TheKingOfFighters2001 the following game]], is a far more nobler person, even if he is working for [[NebulousEvilOrganisation NESTS]].
277* The first fight with King Dedede and Meta Knight in ''VideoGame/KirbyFighters2''. It turns out that they were just a pair of shapeshifting Waddle Dees, most likely sent by King Dedede and Meta Knight to test Kirby and his buddy's skills.
278* This ends up becoming a plot point in ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrailsIntoReverie'' where clones of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrailsFromZeroAndTrailsToAzure Arios [=MacLaine=]]], [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrailsOfColdSteel McBurn, and Rufus Albarea]] are running around wrecking havoc while their true selves are trying to fix things. All three are actually playable with Rufus being the BreakoutCharacter of the game.
279* ''VideoGame/LuigisMansion'': The "Bowser" towards the end of the game is clearly a mechanical decoy (though fairly accurate/lifelike) used by King Boo with his magitek on it. Therefore, King Boo is a ''boss'' in disguise here. This idea may very well be based on the fake Bowsers from the mainline ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'' platformers.
280* The Magic Emperor's first boss battle in the various remakes of ''VideoGame/LunarTheSilverStar''. Actually not the case in the original; you fight the real thing in your first fight with him and then leave him for dead, then one scene later and reveals he's alive and [[OneWingedAngel turns into a monster]] for the final fight.
281* In ''VideoGame/MarvelAvengersAlliance'', Mission 3-5's Epic Boss is not just one, but ''three'' Doombots. And the trope gets lampshaded by the characters, to boot.
282* In ''VideoGame/MarvelVsCapcom2'', one of Dr. Doom's {{Victory Pose}}s is of five Doombots swooping down from the sky to partake in some evil chortling. Obviously, this calls into question whether the victorious Doom was even the real one.
283* The arcade LightGunGame, ''VideoGame/MechanizedAttack'' has a difficult battle where you fight the terrorist leader (in an armoured vehicle, and then a JetPack) and after you defeat him, the game informs you that's the ''wrong'' villain. The true terrorist mastermind is currently a BrainInAJar controlling a series of turrets you'll confront at the end of the next level.
284* ''Franchise/MegaMan''
285** ''VideoGame/MegaManClassic''
286*** Dr. Wily has in pulled this on multiple occasions, to the point that ''VideoGame/MegaMan9'' lampshades it.
287*** Wily's first instance of this is in ''VideoGame/MegaMan2'', where he appears to morph into an alien, [[ScoobyDooHoax but it's just a holographic projection.]]
288*** In ''VideoGame/MegaMan3'', after you defeat the SpiderTank boss in the penultimate stage, Wily is thrown from the machine as usual, but it turns out to be a decoy.
289** ''VideoGame/MegaManX''
290*** Sigma has also done this frequently, coming back inexplicably in an arsenal of different forms -- until his current defeat in ''VideoGame/MegaManX8''. Justified by the fact he is a living virus and can exist as a digital entity, then integrate into a new body at will. In ''X8'' Lumine, a seemingly gentle Reploid director, forcefully states at the Sigma is gone for good, standing over his broken remains -- only to reveal his [[FaceHeelTurn true]] intentions a half-second later. Some time in the distant future, this is disproven: Sigma still lives on in viral form. However, with the end of the Maverick Wars, his programming was forcefully and permanently deleted by the antivirus program of the Mother Elf.
291*** Also from ''X8'', the justification for the traditional BossRush this time around is that they are New Generation Reploids mimicking the eight main Bosses, transforming back into generic humanoid forms once defeated. Sigma himself at the end of the same level is also a New Gen Reploid, with the real one waiting at the Moon instead.
292** In ''VideoGame/MegaManZX Advent'', Prometheus betrays and seemingly murders Master Albert for all the suffering he put him and his sister Pandora through in the penultimate level. After Grey/Ashe fight Prometheus and Pandora, however, it's revealed "Albert" was all along just a dummy body the real one worked through his entire time as both a member of the Sage Trinity and with all his interactions with his creations. There's actually {{Foreshadowing}} for this in one of the earlier levels, where Grey/Ashe are in a lab where they find Prometheus and Pandora's capsules (labelled DAN-001 and DAN-002), and then find another capsule further in labeled "Prototype" (DAN-000), which Albert reveals is ''his'' serial number and himself the genuine article.
293* ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidV'' seems to have retconned ''VideoGame/MetalGear'' into this: The Big Boss you kill in the first game is Venom Snake.
294* ''VideoGame/MetalSlug'':
295** In ''Metal Slug 3'', it's revealed that General Morden was actually a disguised alien and that the ''real'' Morden has been kidnapped by the Martians.
296** In ''Metal Slug 4'', it's revealed that the Morden and Allen O'Neil you've been fighting are robots created by the Amadeus Syndicate, presumably to trick the Rebel Army into fighting for them. The last level has you fighting a small army of Morden robots.
297* ''VideoGame/MilonsSecretCastle'': In the final level, you have to defeat Maharito. However, there are several rooms. One has the real Maharito and the others have fakes. You have to defeat the real one to win the game, and which room has the real one is randomized. The fakes are actually lesser enemies disguised as him. Making it worse is that all of them can harm you.
298* ''Franchise/MortalKombat'':
299** The [[Platform/NintendoGameCube GameCube]] version of ''VideoGame/MortalKombatDeception'' retcons Shao Kahn's apparent death at the beginning of ''VideoGame/MortalKombatDeadlyAlliance'' into that being a clone in order to explain his canonical [=GameCube=]-exclusive playable appearance. (Additionally, the other exclusive character, Goro, was then rescued by Kahn in the battlefield where he was left for dead -- in the [=PS2=] Xbox version, he only cameos in Konquest mode).
300** A trick that Shinnok also uses in ''VideoGame/MortalKombatArmageddon'' to survive Armageddon. Not that it matters, because the last act of Armageddon is an in-universe ContinuityReboot into ''VideoGame/MortalKombat9''.
301* ''VideoGame/NeoContra'': Once [[BigBad Master Contra is defeated, he turns out to be a machine. The real Master Contra is actually the facility itself, Project C]].
302* ''VideoGame/Persona5'': After learning that Akechi is planning to betray them and kill Joker, the Phantom Thieves quietly create a counter-plot by tricking Sae into taking Joker's phone and showing it to Akechi, Futaba then activates the [=MetaNav=], bringing both to Sae's Palace, around the identical-looking police station next to the casino. In the end, Akechi unknowingly ends up killing Sae's cognitions of the guard in the interrogation room and Joker.
303* In Chapter 8 of ''VideoGame/SakuraWars2ThouShaltNotDie'', Keigo Kyogoku's death during the failed coup at the Great Imperial Theater actually turned out to be a body double so he can resurrect Musashi.
304* In ''VideoGame/ScottPilgrimVsTheWorldTheGame'', the final fight with Gideon turns out to be an example. Overlaps with ClippedWingAngel in that after beating the robot, the real Gideon goes down in a single hit.
305* ''VideoGame/SekiroShadowsDieTwice'': The boss fight with Lady Butterfly starts with you fighting an illusion of her. Once you kill it she reveals herself for real.
306* In ''VideoGame/SonicHeroes'', the Egg Albatross and Egg Emperor boss fights for all four teams end with the reveal that the Dr. Eggman piloting them was just a duplicate, which breaks or melts into goo. It ''would'' be a subtle hint that Eggman isn't the BigBad, except that in one of those cutscenes, Metal Sonic is seen forming from the puddle of goo that "Eggman" left behind, making it a subversion of the trope and also spoiling the surprise a bit.
307* ''VideoGame/SpiderManAndTheXMenInArcadesRevenge'': Since everything past the introduction level takes places in Murderworld, the bosses (Apocalypse, Juggernaut, etc) are all just robotic impostors built by Arcade.
308* In ''VideoGame/SpiderManTheVideoGame'', all battles with Dr. Doom turn out to be against Doom's robot duplicates.
309* ''VideoGame/StarFox64'' has this happen during the standard ending: the BigBad you just killed was actually his robot duplicate. The true ending has you battle the real BigBad.
310* In ''VideoGame/StreetsOfRage 3'', at the end of stage 5, you fight [[BigBad Mr. X]] much like you did in the previous two games, but he is revealed to be a robot. Given that the back story of the Western version is about robots replacing important public figures, you already fought a robot Axel in stage 3, and there are three more stages after stage 5, it didn't come as a huge surprise.
311* ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'': In [[VideoGame/SuperMarioBros1 the original game]] you beat [[Characters/SuperMarioBrosBowser Bowser]] every four levels. However, each time but the last "Bowser" just turns out to be a different mook in disguise.
312** This returns in ''VideoGame/SuperMario3DLand'', with the fake Bowsers being a Goomba (World 1) and a Magikoopa (World 5) with Tanooki Suits.
313** In the fangame ''VideoGame/SuperMario63'', the Bowser in the Koopa Clown Car you fight before ascending the Meteor Tower is a robot.
314* The Hell King Gordon fought in ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsBX'' was an illusion created by Viscount Pygman.
315* In ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'', the Dead Ringer allows the Spy to create a fake corpse to fool the enemy team.
316* During the fourth ''VideoGame/TyTheTasmanianTiger'' installment, Ty comes across Fluffy, who was apparently brought back to life after the third installment and is now evil again. Ty is even shocked about this. But, after the boss fight, it turns out that this is not the same Fluffy that sacrificed herself at the end of the third game, but rather a robot of Fluffy.
317* In ''VideoGame/UnleashTheLight'', [[spoiler:the Squaridot who's threatening to take back George turns out to be a Squari''bot'' that the AI of Hessonite's Warship programmed while holding the real Squaridot captive. After the Crystal Gems defeat it, [[TrickBoss the AI takes over as the real boss of the Peridot DLC]]]].
318* In ''VideoGame/{{Vanquish}}'', you fight with seemingly ''two'' Victor Zaitsevs, one red and the other blue. After killing the first one, no matter which, Zaitsev will say you killed the wrong one. Unfortunately, Zaitsev was never there to begin with; they are both just doombots.
319* ''VideoGame/WatchDogs'': The ''Bad Blood'' DLC pack reveals that the Music/{{deadmau5}}[=-style=] DJ/hacker Defalt that Aiden chased down and potentially killed in the main story was really a double, hired by the real Defalt while he worked behind the scenes.
320* In ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'', [[MadScientist Mekgineer Thermaplugg]] was [[{{Retcon}} revealed]] to have done this (Zalazane too, with HollywoodVoodoo), but after a final assault, Thermaplugg is still alive. Zalazane is DraggedOffToHell, killing him for real.
321[[/folder]]
322
323[[folder:Web Animation]]
324* ''WebAnimation/DeathBattle'':
325** During the fight between [[Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog Dr. Eggman]] and [[Franchise/MegaMan Dr. Wily]], after Metal Sonic knocks the latter out of his Wily Machine, [[ISurrenderSuckers Wily begs for mercy]], but Eggman simply stomps on him with his Death Egg Robot. That "Wily" appeared to be a mere dummy, with the real Wily in a new Wily Machine.
326** Doctor Doom himself does this during his fight against [[Franchise/StarWars Darth Vader]]. It should not surprise anyone that Vader defeats the Doombot, thus prompting the real Doom to show up and fight.
327** When Lex Luthor returned, he actually invokes this trope with one of his Lexbots to buy himself time to don the Warsuit. It becomes funny in a meta sense when you consider the fact that the guy who he uses this is against is none other than the above-mentioned, {{Trope Namer|s}} ''Doctor Doom''. Even Doom himself remarks on it.
328--->'''Doctor Doom''': A mechanical replica?\
329'''Lex Luthor''': It's called a Lexbot, you knuckle-dragging buffoon.\
330'''Doctor Doom''': Its design is rather ingenious. Not as ingenious as mine, of course.
331** During the fight between Batman and Iron Man, Batman (in the Hellbat suit) manages to easily overpower Tony's Model Prime armor and tears him in half... revealing that it was empty and AI-controlled, with the real Tony Stark greeting him with the Godslayer Armor and his Iron Legion.
332* ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'': Cinder and Neo have a fight in a bar, mostly evenly matched, until Cinder takes the fight outside and "Neo" shatters on the street. Neo's Semblance allows her to make solid illusions that shatter like glass. Then Cinder spots the real Neo, sporting a different outfit and scars.
333[[/folder]]
334
335[[folder:Web Comics]]
336* Parodied in ''Webcomic/TheAdventuresOfDrMcNinja''. Dr. McNinja is fighting {{Dracula}} on Dracula's moon base (don't worry, [[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext it makes even less sense in context]]), and after setting up a decoy of himself to fool Dracula grabs him and is about to destroy him by exposing him to sunlight. Then, of course, it turns out it's actually a Draculabot -- goodness knows when the switch was made, and going back in the story to look for a likely spot only makes it look less plausible. Oh, and since he [[CharlesAtlasSuperpower jumped off]] [[ExaggeratedTrope the moon]] in a spacesuit while holding on to the Draculabot, he then has to surf it down to Earth, which counts as kind of [[RuleOfCool extreme]] even by his standards.
337* Towards the end of ''Webcomic/BobAndGeorge'', [[http://www.bobandgeorge.com/archives/070702c Bob kills Dr. Wily]]. Or rather, he kills one of the many robotic clones Wily leaves scattered around his fortress on the off chance a deranged psychopath breaks in and attempts to kill him.
338-->'''Wily''': It worked, didn't it?
339* ''Webcomic/DragonBallMultiverse'': Pretty much anytime something really bad happens to a Buu, there are more fragments of it lying about.
340* ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'': Abraham would NeverHurtAnInnocent, so when he faces Fox, he is careful to use a powerful but rare non-lethal item... at which point she dissolves into nothingness, because she's just a summon. Abraham sighs. The problem is that when he faces Nanase in her Guardian form, he assumes she's another summon, and therefore sees nothing wrong with immediately resorting to lethal force.
341* ''Webcomic/LeastICouldDo'' mocked the ''hell'' out of this trope during their CrisisCrossover parody arc: Rayne gets killed off more than once, and every time, "It's cool. Was a clone."; after a while, his roommate decides to give it a try by snapping Rayne's neck; turns out he was the ''real'' Rayne, who gets quickly replaced by a clone who spent a year [[ComicBook/FinalCrisis in a prehistoric cave with Batman]].
342* In ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' Dr. Schlock has had inflatable, robot decoys deal with dangerous people in his place many times, particularly as he's become more paranoid over the years.
343--> "How ''do'' you know if it's the real him or not?"
344--> "If he's brave and bold, he's an inflatable decoy. If he's scared? Could be him."
345** It also works to his disadvantage at one point when he loses control of such an artificial RemoteBody just when it was supposed to do something vitally important.
346* In ''Webcomic/TriggerStar'' after defeating [[BigBad Black Licorice,]] Avocado convinces the others that it was a Doombot since it was way too easy. [[SubvertedTrope It]] [[http://www.triggerstar.com/index.php?strip_id=1030 wasn't.]]
347[[/folder]]
348
349[[folder:Web Original]]
350* The LetsPlay/MarioPartyTV group joke that, after all players survive a Bowser minigame in ''VideoGame/MarioParty6'' and Bowser himself acts shocked upon realizing that nobody lost, the players must have fought a 'Bowser bot' instead.
351* PlayedForLaughs in ''WebVideo/TheNostalgiaChick'': [[MadScientist Dr. Tease]] has an encounter with [[SuperpoweredEvilSide Dark Nella]] that presumably results in her death. When she sees the Chick an episode or two later, she explains that that was actually her "robot clone."
352-->'''Chick:''' Robot, or clone?
353-->'''Dr. Tease:''' [[MathematiciansAnswer Exactly]]!
354* In the ''WebAnimation/OneMinuteMelee'' between Samus and Mega Man, the Samus that Mega Man fights is actually [[VideoGame/MetroidFusion SA-X. The real Samus lends Mega Man a hand in finishing it off]].
355* ''Literature/WhateleyUniverse'': At the end of the Dark Phase scenario, it is revealed that Phase wasn't even on the battlefield, but was using holograms to seem like he was there. Chaka even [[InvokedTrope refers to this as a Doombot]]. however, it then turns out that it wasn't even Phase at all -- he'd refused to go through the simulation, so Admiral Everhart stepped in to play his role.
356* The [[SoBadItsGood infamous]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UqgMPTSz91E RP snippet]] of [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII Sephiroth]] fighting [[Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog Tails]] ends on this gem:
357-->'''Tails''': [[spoiler:''*It's a hologram*'']]
358[[/folder]]
359
360[[folder:Western Animation]]
361* Used and then inverted in the Season 7 finale of ''WesternAnimation/{{Archer}}''. Archer and his robot double head off to confront Veronica Dean, and one is shot and left to drown in her pool -- but due to the fact that Archer and Robot-Archer were wearing identical clothing, and only one Archer is in the scene, it's unclear which it is. When the police and ISIS show up to the scene, the "real" Archer appears, claiming that the Archer in the pool is merely his robot double. However, when he tries to propose to Lana, he (Robot-Archer) malfunctions due to his programming not being able to understand love, and it's revealed that the Archer in the pool is, in fact, the real Archer.
362* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheBraveAndTheBold'', Superman and Batman captured Lex Luthor early in the episode. It turns out that Lex Luthor is actually a Lexbot.
363* ''WesternAnimation/TheBotsMaster'': BigBad Paradim is the CorruptCorporateExecutive of a robot-making megacorp who is more often than not CrazyPrepared, so of course during one moment when he seems to be cornered, his skin melts off to reveal it was just a robot double... [[ActionBomb set to explode]].
364* In the first season finale to Creator/{{Filmation}}'s ''WesternAnimation/{{Flash Gordon|1979}}'', Ming appears to die in classic DisneyVillainDeath fashion, but the corpse is revealed as a Ming-bot, and the real Ming flies away cackling that he will regain his throne and have revenge. The implication, at least, is that it was the real Ming who had lost a fight with Flash a few minutes earlier, but that he had pulled the switch when he and Flash were briefly separated.
365* Used in ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}'' by the primary antagonist, David Xanatos, who loves a MindScrew. Not content with the basic disposable-robot fake out, he invented variations. In one, the robot was provided with a full-face helmet and assumed identity (in other words, first the other characters thought TheReveal was that it was Xanatos, and then it turned out not to be.) In the other, the robot wasn't of Xanatos but of one of the gargoyles' other regular adversaries, to throw them entirely off the scent as to who was behind an abduction. MindScrew, remember.
366* ''WesternAnimation/GeorgeOfTheJungle'': One episode started with [[MonsterOfTheWeek Villain of the Week]] Dr. Gizmo being taken to prison but it turns out it was a machine. In the end, he tried the trick again but the Super Chicken distracted capturing him was another one. The real Dr. Gizmo was captured by the real Super Chicken.
367* Two episodes of ''WesternAnimation/InchHighPrivateEye'' featured a mad dollmaker as a villain. In the first, sold clockwork manikins to department stores that would rob them. In the end, he's arrested but a failed escape attempt reveals that they only caught a robotic duplicate. Due to the prevalence in RoboticReveal in the cartoons of the era the [[WrongGenreSavvy main characters]] never even consider the possibility that the real guy is still at large... until he comes back with robotic duplicates of the main character and his boss, and successfully ruins their reputation.
368* ''WesternAnimation/LoonaticsUnleashed'': Otto the Odd utilized plenty of these in his second appearance, enough to fall well into the realm of CrazyPrepared and some IKnowYouKnowIKnow.
369** This trope is flat-out ''abused'' by Tweetums in the series finale.
370* ''WesternAnimation/RickAndMorty'': The end of season 3 seemed to suggest (though not confirm) that [[Characters/RickAndMortyBethSmith Beth Smith]] had abandoned her family to travel the world/universe/multiverse to find herself while Rick created a clone of her programmed with all her memories and personality to take her place so no one would be the wiser and allow Beth the option to return to the family if she so desired. See AIIsACrapshoot for more.
371** Later [[spoiler:the season 4 finale reveals that Rick ''did'' end up cloning Beth resulting in two versions of her, one that stayed behind to raise her family and one that went off to have adventures. However, both Beths believe they're the original and both of them have bombs implanted in their necks, which Rick claims would transmit the memories of the Clone Beth into the original before vaporizing the clone. The end of the episode reveals not even Rick knows which one's the original. The decision Beth made in "[[Recap/RickAndMortyS3E9TheABCsOfBeth The ABC's of Beth]]" was her forcing Rick to choose whether he wanted her to go or stay and be a part of his life. Rick intentionally removed the labels from the clone and the original then randomized them, leaving it up to chance so he wouldn't have to make the decision. Then he deleted the memory of him doing it. It's now impossible to know which is the clone and which is the original, and everyone in the family left before Rick replayed the memory because none of them care which is which]].
372* In ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'', whenever Quentin Beck/Mysterio is captured or defeated, it always turns out to be an illusion or a robotic double.
373* Fittingly enough, Doctor Doom used this trick on ''WesternAnimation/SpiderMan1981'' in the episode "The Doctor Prescribes Doom", where Spidey confronts Doom at the end of the episode, only for it to turn out to be a robot double that explodes.
374* On ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'', several of Plankton's schemes to steal the Krabby Patty formula involve this:
375** In "Frozen Face-Off", his plan to distract [=SpongeBob=] and Mr. Krabs with a ski race had him build a robot of himself to compete while the real Plankton snuck into the Krusty Krab uncontested.
376** His huge assault on the Krusty Krab at the beginning of ''WesternAnimation/TheSpongebobMovieSpongeOutOfWater'' ends with him giving Mr. Krabs his last penny and sulking near the Krusty Krab sign for 20 minutes. Mr. Krabs then finds that the Plankton outside was a robot and the real Plankton was inside the penny, which Mr. Krabs put in the wall safe with the formula. Upon Krabs realizing he's been had, the robot does a victory dance.
377** In "Plankton Retires", he reveals that his claim to retire was another plan to get the formula and that the Plankton at the retirement home was a robot to distract [=SpongeBob=] and Mr. Krabs while he breaks into the Krusty Krab. As it turns out, the [=SpongeBob=] and Mr. Krabs at the retirement home were ''also'' robots and the real ones were still at the Krusty Krab as well. The episode ends with [[DoAndroidsDream the robots deciding to live their own lives instead of helping in Krabs and Plankton's pointless war]], then they hang out together until they [[StuffBlowingUp explode]].
378* Used on more than one occasion in episodes of ''WesternAnimation/SuperFriends'' to explain how the latest scheme by [[Characters/SupermanLexLuthor Lex Luthor]] didn't actually work, since the heroes were being represented by robotic duplicates. [[FridgeLogic Raises the question]] of why the Legion of Doom doesn't bother with autopsies, or why they throw away their latest superweapon the minute the Super Friends "appear" to be dead.
379** ''Challenge Of The Superfriends'' had another example of good guys using this trick. The Legion of Doom found out about a sealed away weapon that could act as a lethal death ray to the heroes and tricked Superman into breaking the vault open. (That's right, this episode suspended the show's NeverSayDie policy.) The Legion of Doom was apparently then able to decimate the heroes mercilessly, often in front of terrified citizens. When it seemed all the heroes had perished and the villains had achieved complete victory, Luthor saw no further need for the thing, and casually threw it away. A ''terrible'' mistake. A day later, the Superfriends reappeared, and after pulping the villains, revealed that they had been hiding in their satellite base (presumably a sort of precursor to the Watchtower) while using android duplicates created by Superman in the Fortress of Solitude to make the Legion believe they had been killed. Once Luthor threw it away, the Apache Chief went into the sewer in protective clothing and destroyed it, permanently. (Of course, [[FridgeLogic when you think about it]], the Legion of Doom should have been suspicious when they seemed to win so easily...)
380* Seeing as Doom himself is the BigBad of ''WesternAnimation/TheSuperHeroSquadShow'', Doombots appear on the show rather often.
381* Slade used this trick a lot in ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003'', using an android duplicate of himself to both fight the Titans and deliver the occasional taunt from a remote location. The episode "Haunted" is the most dangerous example, proving that Slade could be a downright deadly threat to a hero's life ''and'' sanity without being there at all (''This'' time it was a drug-induced hallucination, ''not'' a robot). At least one is rigged to explode if defeated, and most have monitors behind their masks to facilitate last-minute megalomaniacal gloating.
382* ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBros'':
383** In "O.S.I. Love You" it's revealed that the Sovereign is not really David Bowie, but rather a shapeshifter acquaintance of his.
384** In "Past Tense", several characters are abducted from the funeral of a friend from college. The friend reveals that he faked his death just so he could nab them all at once and take revenge for past slights. After they get free and attack him, they discover that it was a robot double. The trope is subverted by the twist ending when it turns out that the original had actually died before the plot kicked off.
385--->'''Dr. Venture:''' So, what, he programmed his robots to hate us too? ... Well, that makes about as much sense as anything else today.
386* In the ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice2010'' episode "Welcome to Happy Harbor", Miss Martian [[WhatTheHellHero shockingly executes Bromwell Stikk]], the pilot of the Mister Twister mecha. We quickly discover that Stikk himself was an android built to resemble the real pilot, and that he had a built-in camera meant to spy on the kids. She guessed it was an android because she couldn't read its mind.
387** The young T.O.Morrow seen was actually a robot, the real one was an old man who's hooked on life support.
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390[[folder:Real Life]]
391* Dictators usually have an array of body doubles and impersonators working as the target of assassination attempts. Hitler himself managed to survive 42 assassination attempts through a combination of this trope and a ridiculous amount of luck (due to the number of {{Contrived Coincidence}}s that managed to thwart an attempt in one way or another).
392* Minor league British actor, and wartime Army Pay Corps Lieutenant, M. E. Clifton James, who bore an uncanny resemblance to General Montgomery, was used by British intelligence to pose as the General (he was recruited by ''Creator/DavidNiven'', no less) and spread false information about the impending D-Day landings. In ''I Was Monty's Double'', the 1958 movie made about the story (known as ''Hell, Heaven Or Hoboken'' in the US) there are several attempts made by the Germans to kill or kidnap James whilst he was in Gibraltar and North Africa. In reality, Hitler vetoed such plans until he could be sure that the information "Monty" was spilling was accurate.
393* Most actors generally do not jump off of cliffs or allow themselves to be run over by cars -- that is what {{Stunt Double}}s are for. [[NoStuntDouble Usually.]]
394* American rapper Music/{{MF Doom}} has been known to send impostors to concert events for which he is on the bill.
395* German electronic musicians {{Music/Kraftwerk}} allegedly had concerts done by robotic doubles. No doubt it would have been most easy with this band, but more probably it's a legend.
396* Frank Dux, [[BasedOnAGreatBigLie inspiration]] for ''Film/{{Bloodsport}}'', has claimed that the reason his stories sometimes contradict each other or cannot be verified is that he often uses doubles for public appearances, and sometimes they don't get the story straight.
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