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5->''"Bond just kind of groans. You see, it's not his lung that's been punctured, but rather his ego, because this was all just a training exercise. Ah yes, the training exercise, a reliable Bond fake-out...I can only conclude that James Bond actually murders people for training."''
6-->-- '''''Website/TheAgonyBooth''''' on ''Film/NeverSayNeverAgain''
7
8This is similar to the BatmanColdOpen, only it's used [[TheTeam for teams]], particularly the Comicbook/XMen. This trope usually shows a team undergoing combat training, using [[AttackPatternAlpha various strategies barked out]] by their [[StandardizedLeader Strait-Laced Leader]]. The scene is designed to have each member show off their particular abilities -- be they mutant powers, cool gadgets or weapons -- as well as [[EstablishingCharacterMoment reveal some aspect of each member's personality]] through short quips and pithy comments.
9
10A common variant is to begin [[FakeActionPrologue in the middle of a battle]], with our heroes fighting against a formidable foe. All seems normal until [[GoneHorriblyWrong everything suddenly goes wrong]] and [[AnyoneCanDie someone dies]]. [[ProsceniumReveal The simulated nature of the battle is then revealed]] as the team comes to terms with their CareerBuildingBlunder.
11
12Other variants include [[BaseballEpisode playing baseball]], wherein powers are out of bounds -- until somebody [[MundaneUtility uses them anyway]] -- and testing the mettle of a new member.
13
14A VirtualTrainingSimulation can be used for one of these, as can a DeadlyTrainingArea.
15
16----
17!!Examples:
18
19[[foldercontrol]]
20
21[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
22* ''Anime/GreatMazinger'': In the sequel to ''Anime/MazingerZ'', the [[HomeBase Fortress Of Science]] was equipped with one of these. It appeared for first time in episode 3, and the scene showed Jun dodging rounds of machine gun mounted on the walls as Tetsuya her training and gave -or better said, barked out- advice.
23* An episode of ''Anime/TigerAndBunny'' opens with the pair against a gun-wielding gang. The titular duo then starts arguing, at which point Tiger stands up, ranting... and a dozen red dots converge on his face. Cue gunfire, and [[MoodWhiplash cheery opening]].
24* An episode of ''Anime/BattleOfThePlanets'' (aka Gatchaman, G-Force, Eagle Riders, God knows..) Opens with the team demolishing their danger room, only it turns out ''not'' to be the team....
25* ''Literature/YakitoriSoldiersOfMisfortune'': An InUniverse version happens in "The Rear Guard" when a DropShip exercise has 80% casualties. It happens in flashback, so the audience is aware it's one of their training exercises, but the unit is surprised to find when the exercise ends that they never left the spacecraft and their comrades are still alive. Their recruiter then appears to tell them that their unit was the only one to 'survive' the exercise (contrasting with how their unit kept getting killed back on the Mars training ground, when everyone knew it wasn't real).
26[[/folder]]
27
28[[folder:Comic Books]]
29* ''ComicBook/XMen'': {{Trope Namer|s}}. In fact, it's how they were introduced back in 1963. Used in an issue of ''ComicBook/NewMutants'' in which Rahne re-fought the battle that got Doug Ramsey killed, and came up with over forty different ways in which she could have saved his life. Of course, Rahne wasn't allowing for the fact that the 'forty different ways' all required foreknowledge of what was coming...
30* At least one of the Creator/MarvWolfman-era ''ComicBook/TeenTitans'' comics opened with the Titans in the middle of combat training...
31* A couple of issues of ''[[ComicBook/AvengersTheInitiative Avengers: The Initiative]]'' opened with this.
32* ''ComicBook/XWingRogueSquadron'': The arc ''Battleground: Tatooine'' starts with Hobbie as Rogue Leader, other Rogues dying around him in an ambush. It's a simulator; Wedge and a few others are flying simulated [=TIEs=], Hobbie and so on are flying as X-Wings.
33* A Creator/ChrisClaremont ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'' issue started with Ronan the Accuser taking out a set of the foursome's robots.
34* ''ComicBook/TheTransformersMarvel'': One issue of the UK series introduced a group called The Wreckers with them taking out 'facsimilie constructs' of prominent Decepticons in a training exercise.’
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
38* While not actually the opening, in ''WesternAnimation/KungFuPanda1'' we're introduced to the real Furious Five in a battle where they attempt to take out Shifu. They fail, badly.
39* The opening of ''WesternAnimation/StarshipTroopersTraitorOfMars'' has Rico leading a terrified squad of NewMeat Mobile Infantry into combat. Their ineptness manages to get half of them killed, then their EnsignNewbie finishes off the rest when he accidentally launches a [[TooDumbToLive nuclear weapon at close range]]. Cue to everyone waking up in the simulator, where Rico gives them a right earful.
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
43* The [[UnwinnableTrainingSimulation Kobayashi Maru]] scene from the beginning of ''Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan''. Once the ''Enterprise'' is done for and Saavik gives the abandon-ship call, the alarm slowly deflates and the main viewer opens for Admiral Kirk to walk in, revealing that it's actually the Starfleet Academy Bridge Simulator.
44* ''Film/TheSumOfAllFears'': The DEFCON 1 situation at the beginning [[ThisIsNotADrill is a drill]].
45* Appropriately enough, the beginning of ''Film/XMenTheLastStand'' turns out to be a Danger Room scenario.
46* [[PlayedForLaughs Played for]] [[BlackComedy (dark) laughs]] in ''Film/SpaceTruckers''. While the opening scene where a KillerRobot attacks a MegaCorp's base was just a demonstration for the boss, this particular [[CorruptCorporateExecutive executive is so corrupt]] they used real weapons and real {{Mooks}}, all of whom are gruesomely slaughtered by the KillerRobot.
47* ''Film/HeartOfDragon'' starts with a bunch of terrorists (one played by Creator/JackieChan ['''!!!''']) being hunted by a SWAT team, with Chan effortlessly killing half a dozen of them, before it's revealed that the prologue is part of a training exam - Chan is one of the police seniors tasked with testing a bunch of rookies, all whom failed their test.
48* ''Film/{{Mindhunters}}'': The film opens with two FBI agents investigating a serial killer's lair looking to save a girl he kidnapped, only to be killed in a firefight with the killer's accomplice. Turns out it was a training scenario by the academy when the lights turn on--which they failed completely, missing every clue that there was a second culprit.
49* The first ''Film/OperationDeltaForce'' begins with a HostageSituation in Jo'berg, where the titular team (then a bunch of rookies, save for their leader played by Jeff Fahey) guns down a small legion of terrorists while suffering ''one'' casualty in the process, before the diplomat they're tasked with rescuing checks his watch - "three minutes ahead of schedule". Cue the "dead" terrorists, security guards and Delta trooper getting back on their feet. [[spoiler:It is however a subtle bit of {{foreshadowing}} - the Delta member who gets "killed" in the simulation dies in a shootout halfway through against ''real'' terrorists, when they're already a close-knit team akin to a family]].
50* ''Film/EveOfDestruction'': A group of commandos storm a compound to save a group of hostages, only to get themselves all killed by a hostage taker who disguised himself as one of the hostages. The man who played the part, their instructor Col. [=McQuade=], reveals this to be a training scenario to prep his men for an ongoing real life hostage crisis, and his recruits abysmally failed the mission.
51* ''Film/JamesBond''
52** The pre-title sequence of ''Film/FromRussiaWithLove'' (the first ever for the Film/JamesBond franchise) shows Bond getting stalked and killed by [[TheBrute Donald "Red" Grant]] with [[ChekhovsGun his garrote wristwatch]] before it's revealed to be a [=SPECTRE=] training exercise for Grant, and "Bond" is actually a [=SPECTRE=] mook. Unlike other examples of this trope, the mook really was killed as [=SPECTRE=] was using a live target to ensure their assassin was properly tested.
53** ''Film/NeverSayNeverAgain'' has Bond rescue a beautful woman being held hostage. Instead of RescueSex, she stabs him as she's suffering from UsefulNotes/StockholmSyndrome. Cut to Bond being chewed out by M, who sends him to a health clinic to get him back into shape after failing this training exercise.
54[[/folder]]
55
56[[folder:Literature]]
57* The first scene in the [[Literature/XWingSeries X-Wing novel series]] is Corran Horn and three others doing their simulator tryouts for a place in the reformed Rogue Squadron. The scenario used is a [[MythologyGag nod]] to a [[ThatOneLevel particularly infamous level]] of the ''VideoGame/XWing'' ''game'', and once again their opponents are their future squadmates. Except the last one, which singlehandedly mops the floor with them all; that's being flown by [[TheAce Tycho Celchu]].
58* In the Creator/NoraRoberts book ''Morrigan's Cross'', the heroine and her companions try out their various combat abilities while their makeshift instructor critiques their talents out loud.
59* The second ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' book, "The Visitor", begins with the group besides Tobias testing out their newly acquired flight morphs. Besides Marco and Cassie, who morph into ospreys, the group can all morph into different birds of prey.
60* ''Literature/{{Moonraker}}'' opens with Literature/JamesBond apparently exchanging gunfire in a dark alley. Turns out Bond is on a firing range, trying out a new target rigged with a blank-firing gun to better simulate combat conditions.
61* Played for laughs in ''Reach'' by Edward Gibson. A crew of astronauts are carrying out a simulated mission, which the reader only discovers when one of them looks out the porthole and sees his house about to crash into them. Turns out the people running the simulation are testing their ability to react to unpredictable events.
62[[/folder]]
63
64[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
65* ''Series/BurnNotice'': One episode opens with Mike on a motorbike being chased at speed by a pursuer. It turns out to be Fi although it may be more foreplay than a training exercise.
66* ''Series/{{Flashpoint}}'': In "The Element Of Surprise", the first time we see the team (notwithstanding the opener), they're rehearsing their entry plan. Somewhat unusually for this trope, the episode makes no secret of the fact that it's a drill.
67* The ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS5E15DarkFrontier Dark Frontier]]" used this trope pretty much exactly, with Tuvok, Janeway, Seven, and B'Elanna on the holodeck practicing a raid on a Borg cube.
68** "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS2E15Threshold Threshold]]" begins with Tom Paris trying to accelerate a shuttle to the [[LudicrousSpeed impossibly fast warp 10]]. It doesn't work and the shuttle tears itself apart, leaving Tom sitting on his ass on the holodeck as B'elanna Torres matter-of-factly informs him "you're dead".
69* ''Series/TheWire'': The second-to-last episode of Season 4, "[[Recap/TheWireS04E12ThatsGotHisOwn That's Got His Own]]", opens with an armed Michael Lee being chased through an abandoned warehouse by a similarly armed Chris Partlow and Snoop Pearson. Just when Michael gets the drop on Chris and shoots him in the chest, it's revealed that all three of them are actually carrying paintball guns, and that Chris and Snoop are training Michael for his new job as a soldier for the Stanfield Organization.
70* The first episode of' ''Series/TheSecretAdventuresOfJulesVerne'' features a scene early on in which we are introduced to Rebecca Fogg fighting a samurai in a room full of ice blocks. It is revealed to be merely a training session when her cousin Phileas interrupts by shooting a bullet past her head.
71-->'''Rebecca:''' Since when did we start using real ammunition?\
72'''Phileas:''' As you know, my dear cousin, you don't encounter blanks on missions for the British Secret Service.
73* ''Series/GenerationKill'' opens to an intense combat situation in the middle of a desert. The driver of one of the vehicles gets injured and the others are supposed to leave it behind and "get out of the killzone". Everyone it very intense, then it is all revealed to be a training exercise. Interesting because the exercise itself doesn't give a lot of characterization, but the debriefing scene directly after sets up character relationships and plot threads for the whole series.
74* At the start of ''The Heavy Water War'', Norwegian SOE commandoes burst into a room and take several German soldiers prisoner, then on planting their explosive charges [[FailedASpotCheck realise they've left the blasting caps behind]]. Fortunately they're in a training camp in Scotland, not on the actual mission.
75* The ''Series/PowerRangersNinjaStorm'' episode "There's No I in Team" opens with a holographic training simulation, which the Rangers fail at.
76* ''Fleming: The Man Who Would Be Bond''.
77** Episode 3 opens with Ian Fleming prowling down a corridor at night, pistol at the ready. Suddenly an alarm sounds and bullets fly! Fleming races down the corridor, opens a metal canister and has to defuse the time bomb inside. He succeeds, then the lights come on to reveal he's at Camp X, the secret commando training area in Canada. Oh and while he successfully defused the bomb, he got shot while running down the corridor.
78** Episode 4 opens with Fleming showing his SassySecretary his new fountain pen, which sprays KnockoutGas in her face. He then uses a SpyCam hidden inside his cigarette lighter to photograph the documents on her table, placing the film inside a hollow golf ball. Has the creator of Literature/JamesBond turned traitor? No, it's just a demonstration on the future of espionage for some American bigwigs. Except he really did knock out his secretary, who's not amused when she wakes up.
79* An episode of ''Series/TheEqualizer'' has some gangsters beating up a youth. Turns out it's the initiation for their gang, in which the initiate shows he can put up with [[PoliceBrutality anything the police might dish out]].
80* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}''. The episode "Goodbye Stranger" has a nasty one where a {{brainwashed}} Castiel is shown apparently killing Dean Winchester, which doesn't get any less shocking after the ProsceniumReveal when we see he's in a warehouse [[ExpendableClone full of murdered Dean simulations]].
81* ''Series/MajorCrimes'': "Heart Failure" opens with the squad dealing with a hostage situation and storming the building. It ends with Provenza getting shot. It is then revealed that this is a live shooter training exercise (and that Provenza just cheated by shouting out advice to the squad after he was 'dead').
82* Done in the ''Series/StargateSG1'' episode "Proving Ground", using a real location and enemies but nonlethal weapons.
83* ''Series/{{Pandora}}'' has a variant in the first episode, not used as a cold open, but as a CommercialBreakCliffhanger fakeout.
84* ''Series/TheProfessionals''
85** Subverted in episode "Rogue", which opens with the VillainOfTheWeek assassinating an organised crime witness with a silent pistol. After the title sequence we're shown Bodie and Doyle trying and failing to subdue this assassin, until Doyle calls for time out and it's revealed he's their [=CI5=] unarmed combat instructor. Neither of them know at this stage that he's also a RogueAgent.
86** Played straight in "Wild Justice" which opens with [=CI5=] agents storming a building that's been seized by terrorists. Bodie ends up with a [[ClickHello gun at the back of his head]], whereupon Doyle shouts at him for messing up the exercise again.
87
88[[/folder]]
89
90[[folder:Video Games]]
91* Quite a few games with a first stage JustifiedTutorial fit this trope.
92* The Training level in ''VideoGame/HitmanCodename47'' is a fake cityscape filled with pop-up cutouts to shoot ("Red is for ''baaaaad'' guys!"). There is also a shooting gallery and a stationary doll to strangle. In the updated ''VideoGame/HitmanContracts'' training level, there are SWAT officers to sneak up on and kill.
93* The training courses at the beginning of ''VideoGame/ModernWarfare'' and its sequel.
94* ''VideoGame/StarTrekEliteForce'' begins with this trope. Pre-mission narration tell us that an away team is on a Borg ship on a rescue mission. Only when the player-character gets impatient, shoots a terminal and kills the team in a fiery explosion do we cut to the Voyager holodeck where we are told it was all a test.
95* ''VideoGame/SpaceQuest V: The Next Mutation'' starts with [[AlmightyJanitor Roger]] in the command chair of a starship about to lose a battle. Everything then pauses, and Captain Raemes T. Quirk appears on the screen to yell at Roger for screwing around instead of taking his final exam at the [=StarCon=] Academy. The whole thing was an UnwinnableTrainingSimulation.
96* ''VideoGame/PerfectDark Zero'''s first mission is a VirtualTrainingSimulation of the Trinity Research Platform, which is actually visited in Missions 7 and 8.
97* ''VideoGame/CrisisCore'' opens this way with Zack performing a mission [[CallForward very similar to the opening of the original]] ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII''. The simulation ends when Zack has a surprise encounter with a digital Sephiroth and is handily defeated, foreshadowing the opponent's turn by the end of the game.
98[[/folder]]
99
100[[folder:Web Original]]
101* Inevitably, the ''Literature/WhateleyUniverse'' has finally done this. The opening of "Ayla and the Birthday Brawl" has this scene in one of the holographic simulators, but it's the Vindicators who get the coverage, and the villain in the simulation turns out to be... Ayla, playing the 'red team' as part of a training exercise for a class.
102** The main story thread of "Parkour Jam Hooligans"[[https://whateley.academy/index.php/story/parkour-jam-hooligans]] opens with BadassNormal [[DrillSergeantNasty firearms instructor]] Erik Mahren being chased by someone vastly more powerful. This turns out to be a simulation, used as a demonstration of CombatParkour for a Survival class.
103[[/folder]]
104
105[[folder:Western Animation]]
106* The Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles do this often, with Splinter watching them sweat. Sometimes he's involved in the training too, and manages to kick all their shells. The [[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2012 2012 series]] episode "Panic in the Sewers"​ starts with the Turtles taking on the Shredder and getting killed. It then turns out Splinter was having a nightmare.
107* ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheBraveAndTheBold'' "Duel Of The Double Crossers!" has Batman training The Outsiders in such a simulation.
108* The ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003'' cartoon, in an interesting variation, introduces the bad guys Mammoth, Gizmo, and Jinx this way.
109* The ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'' episode "Terry's Friend Dates a Robot" opens with him training against robotic versions of classic Batman villains.
110* ''WesternAnimation/DefendersOfTheEarth'' did this several times.
111* The [[WesternAnimation/LegionOfSuperHeroes2006 Legion of Super Heroes]] cartoon used this for the first season finale's cold open.
112* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice2010'' has one of these as the plot of the whole episode. The team (and therefore the viewer) doesn't know that it's fake due to the emotional distress of their psychic teammate.
113* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers'' begins with the Monarch and his flunkies doing one of these, although a screw up cut the clip from the aired episode (although it's on the DVD and appeared on the online 'broadcast' version).
114* ''WesternAnimation/TimeSquad'' did this with a simulation where they were fighting an evil UsefulNotes/GeorgeWashington in their satellite.
115* ''WesternAnimation/XMenEvolution'' has a love affair with this trope even by the standards set by its comic-book counterpart. Season 2, especially with the New Mutants, who were mostly background characters, getting into antics in the B-plot revolving around using their powers for mundane activities (playing baseball, as mentioned above, was from this show... and was the second time it was done... they tried volleyball to similar issues). One instance even had Scott and Jean planning their escape from the horror that is... [[DrivesLikeCrazy teaching Kitty]] [[LethalChef and testing her latest experiments in cooking.]]
116* ''WesternAnimation/{{Archer}}'' begins with Archer screwing around in an ElectricTorture training scenario. [[spoiler: Used for a BrickJoke when Archer is in a ''real'' torture scenario and regrets not paying attention to his training.]]
117* ''WesternAnimation/BigHero6TheSeries'':
118** "[[Recap/BigHero6TheSeriesS2E10LieDetector Lie Detector]]" opens with the team in pursuit of a monster ... which turns out to be Fred in a ''Kentucky Kaiju'' costume, because he thought they needed "monster-hunting drills".
119** "[[Recap/BigHero6TheSeriesS3E01TheHyperPotamusPizzaPartyTorium The Hyper-Potamus Pizza-Party-Torium]]" opens like this as well, this time with an actual [[{{Holodeck}} Danger Room]].
120[[/folder]]

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