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4->'''Santa:''' You know things you shouldn't. Things you ''couldn't''. How did you know [...]?\
5'''Junpei:''' Well... that's...\
6'''The Narrator:''' The answer to that was easy. He knew because ''I'' knew.
7-->-- ''VisualNovel/NineHoursNinePersonsNineDoors''
8
9The presence of a {{narrator}} in some form is one of the most fundamental tropes, but that doesn't stop writers from having some fun with it. For the purposes of this trope, the narrator is an in-story character, but their exact identity is kept obscured from the audience until the closing moments of the tale, where they dramatically [[TheReveal reveal]], implicitly or otherwise, that they had a role in the action, and a vested interest in the story's outcome. In fact, it might be why they're relating the story to you in the first place.
10
11Note that this only applies when the narrator's identity is a form of TomatoSurprise. Many stories openly acknowledge the narrator's identity as an in-story character from the very beginning, and are not examples of this trope.
12
13This is especially likely to happen in fictional film and television works made after, say, 1990. Since the camera itself is usually omniscient, having an omniscient independent narrator on top of it seems to be frowned on by scriptwriters, even when one might be useful. So the filmmakers have what ''sounds'' like an omniscient narrator, and then flippantly ID the character in the last pre-credits reel. In video games, it is likely the narrator is the FinalBoss themselves should this trope kick in.
14
15Related to the LiteraryAgentHypothesis. Can overlap with UnreliableNarrator. If the story is being told to another character in-universe, it's AndThatLittleGirlWasMe. Compare UnseenAudience, NostalgicNarrator, IShouldWriteABookAboutThis, DelayedNarratorIntroduction, FutureSelfReveal.
16
17'''Warning: [[Administrivia/YouHaveBeenWarned Unmarked spoilers ahead]].'''
18
19----
20!!Examples:
21[[foldercontrol]]
22
23[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
24* ''Anime/Berserk1997'' has the OpeningNarration and OnTheNext for each episode delivered by a [[EvilSoundsDeep deep, sinister voice]], which is revealed in the final episodes to belong to [[spoiler:Void, the de facto leader of the Godhand before Griffith became Femto]].
25* At the end of every chapter in ''Manga/TheDemonGirlNextDoor'', a narrator chimes in with encouragement or advice for the [[OurDemonsAreDifferent titular demon girl, Yuko.]] Near the end of the second volume of the manga, and at the end of the {{Animated Adaptation}}, it's revealed that the narrator is Yuko's father, who has been [[SealedGoodInACan sealed into the box of oranges that her family has been using as a table for ten years]], and he has been [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments watching over her the entire time]]. As Yuko gets closer to her {{Friendly Enemy}} the local {{Magical Girl}} Momo, and her sealed ancestor Lilith, the narrator extends his encouragements to them, too.
26* The finale of ''Anime/DigimonAdventure02'' shows that the entire season (and possibly the previous one) was Takeru writing his novels. This has apparently raised a few questions as to how he managed to get some of the details, so some fans just say the last episode was his book. (The info that he was writing the book however was given in the 25 years later epilogue.)
27* The first couple of episodes of ''Literature/{{Durarara}}'' are narrated by an unidentified female voice. Only at the end of the second do we learn that it was the Headless Rider, [[ViewerGenderConfusion whose gender had been somewhat unclear to the audience]], all along.
28** Being headless, she never actually talks in-universe, rather she communicates by typing things out on her phone which is accompanied with a voice over.
29* ''[[Manga/FullmetalAlchemist Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood]]'' pulls something similar to ''Berserk (1997)'' [[spoiler:as its opening narration is delivered by the BigBad, Father]].
30* Another villain example (and an odd example of this) is in ''Anime/{{Gankutsuou}}''. The opening narration is done by the same actor as the one voicing the Count, who he refers to as "my friend". At first you might think that the narrator is supposed to be Alexandre Dumas (especially since in the sub, the narration is delivered in [[GratuitousFrench French]]), but it eventually becomes clear that the narrator is actually the titular Gankutsuou, the evil split personality of/demon possessing the Count.
31* In ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamUnicorn Gundam Unicorn]]'', it's heavily implied that Syam Vist, who shares his voice actor with the narrator from the original ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam'' actually ''is'' the narrator from the original ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam''.
32** This also happened with DOME in ''[[Anime/AfterWarGundamX Gundam X]]''.
33** And with [[spoiler:Flit Asuno]] in ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamAge Gundam AGE]]'', who [[spoiler: is the "narrator" of the whole first part... that he was the protagonist of]]
34* ''Manga/MaguchanGodOfDestruction'' [[PaintingTheMedium paints the medium]] by giving beings of chaos different kinds of speech bubbles. Yupisusu's speech bubbles are all rectangular--just like the boxes containing the series narration. Sure enough, they end up traveling back in time to observe the series' events, implying they provided the narration.
35* ''Anime/NadiaTheSecretOfBlueWater'' has one, possibly two of these. A [[spoiler:sixteen-year-old Marie]] is revealed to be the narrator of the entire series at the very end of the last episode. The English-language trailers imply another narrator in their voiceover: An elderly-sounding woman who is addressed as "Grandma" by a child offers to tell the story, and might possibly be Nadia herself.[[note]]The point is moot however, since it contradicts the show's aforementioned, actual ending.[[/note]]
36* In the final chapter of ''Manga/PandoraHearts'', it is heavily hinted that [[spoiler: Gilbert, having survived for another [[TimeSkip 100 years]] until Oz and Alice are reincarnated again, is the narrator of the story all along]].
37* The Mega Evolution specials of ''Anime/PokemonTheSeriesXY'' are all narrated by the same male voice. Only in the second episode do we find out it's actually a character... [[spoiler: BigBad Lysandre.]] Interestingly, he was already present twice in-universe in the first episode: he first speaks on Alain's Holo Caster without being shown nor named, and is later shown but silent. The second episode, in which he finally gets a credited speaking role, revealed him as both the narrator and as Alain's mysterious interlocutor.
38* Episode three of ''Literature/SasamisanAtGanbaranai'' begins with [[{{Hikikomori}} Sasami]] re-imagining the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hare_of_Inaba Hare of Inaba]] folktale as we're treated to visuals of her as the "rabbit." This would appear to be an aesthetic choice, if Sasami weren't repeatedly praising of the rabbit for its cuteness and intelligence.
39* The final episode of ''Anime/SpaceDandy'' reveals that the Narrator is [[spoiler:literally, textually God]].
40-->'''Narrator:''' [[LampshadeHanging ...though you might also remember me]] [[ActingForTwo as the chameleon alien from episode twelve.]]
41* The {{Opening Narration}}s of each episode of ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'' are narrated by [[spoiler: a 41-year-old Simon]], a fact revealed at the very end of the last episode.
42* The narrator in the ''Manga/TheWorldIsStillBeautiful'' anime? [[spoiler:It's Nike's grandmother.]]
43* The narrator at the end of the ''Young Manga/BlackJack'' anime is revealed to be Black Jack as an adult telling his own origin story. The kicker is that the narrator is voiced by the original actor to have played Black Jack in the original 2004 anime series.
44* In ''Manga/YuYuHakusho'' it is discovered in the last episodes, although hinted at shortly before, that Koenma's ogre assistant George was the narrator of the show- quite literally, since it is revealed that the show itself is the records of the protagonists' adventures that Koenma kept (hence the title, which, while using the original Japanese name, is nonetheless translated by Creator/{{Funimation}} as "Ghost Files").
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:Comic Books]]
48* ''ComicBook/BatmanBlackAndWhite'': In "Greetings from... Gotham City", a small-town boy who recently moved to Gotham writes a postcard home to his mother, telling her how he saw Batman in action against a gang of jewel thieves. The artwork on the first page highlights a clean-cut onlooker, implying he's the narrator, but the final page reveals it's actually one of the jewel thieves. "P.S. It doesn't look like I'm gonna make it home for Thanksgiving."
49* One issue of ''ComicBook/CivilWar2006'' reveals that the narrator had been [[ComicBook/FantasticFour Sue Storm]], following ComicBook/IronMan around invisibly, partly as a spy, partly waiting for a chance to try and talk some sense into him. She also points out that [[IfIWantedYouDead she could have killed him easily at pretty much any point]].
50* ''ComicBook/{{Enigma}}'' ends with the snarky narrator being revealed as a talking lizard (an offhand creation by the title character) trying to tell the story to a group of ordinary lizards.
51* In one of the issues of ''Comicbook/ShadeTheChangingMan'', the text is written in the second person, but in the end, one of the characters says that he'll write down what happened, but write it as a comic, put it in the second person, and put it under some weird pen name, like say, Creator/PeterMilligan.
52* The ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirls'' comic reveals at its very end that the narrator for the second half turned out to be [[spoiler:Sunset Shimmer]].
53* One ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'' comic retelling his origin presents the story from an outside narrator's perspective only for it to turn out to be Peter near the end.
54* The last battle of Asgard at the [[Comicbook/SecretWars2015 end of everything]] (Ragnarök!) in issue #16 of ''Comicbook/LokiAgentOfAsgard'' turns out to be narrated by... well enjoy the meta:
55-->'''Narration:''' ...until the sky-fire stole Midgard and her twin, burned both and ended ''all''. ''[[[BeatPanel next page]]]'' All save this telling. All save the ''teller'' -- he who is ''Moon-King'', trickster, wanderer, ''free'' and ''unfettered''... '''Loki''' his name. Would you know more? ''[and at this point Loki stopped narrating and [[MonumentalTheft pocketed the story]]]''
56* ''ComicBook/VenomTheEnd'' ends by revealing the story was being narrated by [[spoiler:the leader of the [[ComicBook/IronMan Stark]]-based artificial intelligences]], explaining the {{Technobabble}} and [[LemonyNarrator sarcasm-heavy narration]].
57* A story from Creator/ECComics' ''The Crypt of Terror'' has two shady travel agents booking trips for rich people in order to burgle those people's homes when they leave for vacation. They get a call from one T. Charles Kingman, wanting to take a month-long African safari. The two show up at Kingman's house when he leaves, finding a decrepit old mansion, and proceed to break in, only to be attacked and besieged by monsters -- vampires, zombies, werewolves, mummies -- once inside the mazelike catacombs underneath the mansion. Miraculously, they survive, but it takes them a month to find their way out. The second-to-last panel shows them crawling out the front door, traumatized and near-catatonic from their experience, past the bare feet of the returning Kingman. The last panel reveals that "T. Charles Kingman" is actually [[FunWithAcronyms the Crypt Keeper]], who learned a great deal on his trip about the [[ShrunkenHead head-shrinking techniques]] of an African cannibal tribe.
58* ''ComicBook/EmeraldTwilight'': Who is narrating the fights between Hal Jordan and the other Green Lanterns? The narrator reveals himself at the end of the issue, just before stepping into battle himself. He is [[spoiler:Sinestro]].
59* ''ComicBook/KingInBlack'': Issue #3's narrator seems concerned, but only manages to join the battle at the end of the issue. He is [[spoiler:the ComicBook/SilverSurfer]] ([[DownplayedTrope semi]]-[[UnexpectedCharacter expected character]], since he didn't take part on big fights on Earth for long, but he recently fought Knull).
60* ''ComicBook/MediEvilFatesArrow'': The framing story features a man in bandages and sunglasses talking to Professor Darrow, an archaeologist in present day Cambridge who has devoted her life to studying Sir Daniel Fortesque and detailing his ultimate fate after the events of ''VideoGame/MediEvil2''. [[spoiler:At the end of the story, Darrow finds the man's tales incredible and asks him how he could possibly know what he knows; he replies, "Because I was there", and reveals himself to be none other than Dan.]]
61[[/folder]]
62
63[[folder:Fan Fiction]]
64* ''Fanfic/{{Appledashery}}'': This story ([[http://www.fimfiction.net/story/149893/appledashery link here]]) is mostly told in the third person but is shown in brief first-person interludes to be chronicled by an in-universe character familiar with the protagonist. It's not clear who until, in one of the main (up to this point) third-person chapters, the Cutie Mark Crusaders enter the scene and the narration suddenly switches to "I" after [[spoiler:Scootaloo]] is addressed, although this is admittedly not a particularly shocking or critical reveal (and occurs relatively early in the {{Doorstopper}}).
65* ''[[Fanfic/BurningStickmanThePrototype Burning Stickman: The Prototype]]'': In this ''VideoGame/MegaManClassic'' fanfiction ([[http://forums.bobandgeorge.com/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=16332 link here]]), written as a recorded memoir narrated by Proto Man, reveals in the last few lines that [[spoiler:the professor to whom the two students brought the laptop in the first place is none other than the eponymous prototype himself]].
66* In ''Fanfic/DeathNoteIITheHiddenNote'', it's revealed in the final chapter that the story has been told to us by three Shinigami: Ryuk, Arik, and Ruoma.
67* ''Fanfic/FalloutEquestria'': The Afterword reveals the entire story up to that point had been a book written by [[spoiler:Littlepip herself, edited by Life Bloom.]]
68* At the end of ''Fanfic/FantasyOfUtterRidiculousness'', Yukari is revealed to be telling the story [[spoiler:to Renko Usami]] at an undisclosed point in time, even derailing the author's attempt to end the story prematurely.
69* In ''Fanfic/FobbiesAreBorange'', the Narrator turns out to be [[spoiler:Giygas]] himself in the very last episode.
70* In the ''Manga/OnePiece'' deconstruction fic ''Fanfic/MarieDSuesseAndTheMysteryNewPirateAge'', the main villain, a Trafalgar Law-crazed Mary Sue, derails the OP world. The omniscient LemonyNarrator telling the story of how the world was eventually fixed turns out to be [[spoiler: Trafalgar Law himself.]]
71* ''Fanfic/ThePerfectLittleVillageOfPonyville'': This story ([[https://www.fimfiction.net/story/51205/the-perfect-little-village-of-ponyville link here]]) has two narrators, one talking in black text and insisting that this backstory is how the world has always been--and an actually objective, disembodied narrator who talks in blue text and reveals that something has gone very wrong. Eventually, Vinyl Scratch figures out that the entire story is a dream, and Twilight Sparkle is the dreamer. At that point, the black text narrator starts referring to Twilight in first person and arguing directly with Vinyl, completely giving herself away.
72* The narrator of ''{{Fanfic/Pokedex}}'' turns out to be Arceus himself.
73* ''Fanfic/WingsOfTheZero'': This tongue-in-cheek ''VideoGame/ZeroWing'' fanfic ([[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/1870818/1/Wings-of-the-Zero link here]]) ends with the reveal that [[BigBad CATS]] is the narrator, and his side won the war.
74* The ''Fanfic/PaperMarioTheTempleOfTheSun'' reveals that [[spoiler:Goomblaine]] has been narrating the story and also implying [[spoiler:him]] to have been the narrator of the canon ''VideoGame/PaperMario'' games.
75* ''Fanfic/TheCrystalAndTheMirage'' has Rarity being told a tale about a unicorn and a dragon that fell in love in the past by her "Grandpa Merc", a distant relative of hers, to help her with her own hang ups on a relationship she's not sure of. [[spoiler: At the end, it's revealed to be the story about how he and her great-great-great-grandmother met and fell in love, and he's secretly the dragon, Mirage.]]
76* ''Fanfic/KedaborysElmoreChronicles'': [[spoiler:"The Fable" ends with someone in the Void critiquing how unrealistic the plot is, revealing that the whole story was, in fact, a fable made up by Rob.]]
77[[/folder]]
78
79[[folder:Films — Animation]]
80* A meta example with ''WesternAnimation/{{Aladdin}}'', in which Genie was supposed to have been the narrator. Fans picked up on the obvious clues (e.g. both are voiced by the great Creator/RobinWilliams and the narrator is the only human with four fingers on each hand, a trait shared with the Genie) and kept believing it for years until the creators confirmed in 2015 that [[spoiler:yes, Genie and the peddler in the opening scene are indeed one and the same]].
81* At the end of ''WesternAnimation/{{Balto}}'', the grandmother telling the story to her granddaughter in the live-action framing scenes is revealed to be [[spoiler: an elderly Rosy.]]
82* In ''WesternAnimation/TheBookOfLife'', the film is set up as a story that a museum tour guide is telling to some kids on a field trip with the help of a creepy old security guard. At the end of the film, when they finish the story [[spoiler:the tour guide and security guard reveal themselves to be La Muerte and Xibalba, retelling the story so that the characters will be remembered by someone and be allowed to rest in the underworld]].
83* In ''WesternAnimation/ElCidTheLegend'', the movie opens and closes with a voiceover revealed at the end to be a much older Alfonso, as Alfonso VI the Brave, King of León and Castile, who is retelling El Cid's legend and how he learned his lesson of honor.
84* ''WesternAnimation/TheNightmareBeforeChristmas'' was originally supposed to end with a closing narration that would have revealed Santa was the narrator in the first scene [[spoiler:and he still visits Jack and Sally's family long after the events of the film.]] It's still included on the film's soundtrack.
85[[/folder]]
86
87[[folder:Films — Live-Action]]
88* The final scene of ''Film/ThreeHundred'' reveals that the narrator was Dilios, relating the film's events to a much larger army of Spartans and Greeks prior to a full-scale battle with Persia. This [[HandWave conveniently explains]] the film's historical inaccuracies, fantastical elements, and anti-Persian bias: Dilios is exaggerating for propaganda purposes.
89* In the very last scene, ''Film/{{Braveheart}}'' turns out to be narrated by TheAtoner. [[AsLongAsThereIsOneMan Also, he has the most badass sword short of]] [[NamedWeapons giving it a name.]]
90* The final scene of ''Film/TheCatInTheHat'' reveals that the narrator is actually The Cat himself using a voice modulator inside his hat.
91* ''Film/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory'' ends with the revelation that the narrator, voiced by Creator/GeoffreyHolder, is one of the Ooompa-Loompas.
92* In ''Film/{{Chocolat}}'', the narrator turned out to be the daughter.
93* At the end of ''Film/Cinderella2015'', the narrator is revealed to be the FairyGodmother.
94* ''Film/{{Darling}}'': The film is peppered throughout with narration, actually interacting with the film a couple of times. It can be {{Unreliable|Narrator}}, with BlatantLies contradicted by the action onscreen. We find out at the end that the narration is Diana's interview with ''[[FictionalDocument Ideal Woman]]'' magazine.
95* Near the end of ''The Fabulous Filipino Brothers'', it's revealed that the narrator was [[spoiler: Doris, the titular brothers' younger sister.]]
96* A variation of this trope appears in the Creator/DenzelWashington movie ''Film/{{Fallen}}''. You're supposed to think the narrator is the hero recounting his adventure, until the ending reveals that it's actually [[spoiler: the body-possessing demon Azazel, with the movie really being the story of how the hero [[ExactWords ALMOST]] outwitted him]].
97* The narrator and main character of ''Film/FightClub'' [[spoiler:and Tyler Durden are one and the same]].
98* In ''Literature/{{Fried Green Tomatoes|AtTheWhistleStopCafe}}'', Kathy Bates' character hears most of the story through an old woman's narration. She spends much of the end of the film trying to guess which character the old woman was.
99* ''Film/HobokenHollow'' has what sounds a generic folksy narrator introducing characters and commenting on the action as it unfolds. However, the final scene reveals that the narrator is actually [[spoiler:Weldon Broderick]] without his ObfuscatingDisability.
100* ''Film/ItCouldHappenToYou'' turns out to be narrated by [[spoiler: Angel Dupree, a reporter working undercover as a homeless man]]. He was present for significant parts of the narrative, but doesn't have any lines before this is revealed - presumably any scene he couldn't have witnessed himself he heard about secondhand.
101* At the end of ''Film/JamesAndTheGiantPeach'', we learn that the narrator at the beginning is [[spoiler: the same strange man who gave James the "crocodile tongues" that led to the creation of the Peach and transformation of the bugs]].
102* ''Film/JourneyToBethlehem'': The film ends with the revelation that the narrator was [[UsefulNotes/TheVirginMary Mary]] telling the story to a young UsefulNotes/{{Jesus}}, as part of His scripture lessons.
103-->'''Mary''': And that is the story of how You came to us.
104* The events of ''Film/JumpIn'' is revealed to be narrated by Rodney Tyler, the [[HeelFaceTurn reformed]] BigBad, to a group of children.
105* In the 1942 film ''Film/JungleBook'', the old man telling the story to the European tourists turns out to be the main villain of the story--Buldeo, the hunter who harassed Mowgli, almost killed his mother, and nearly burned down the forest.
106* ''Film/TheLastBroadcast'' has the narrator obvious all along do the documentary style. The twist is that [[spoiler: he was the murderer in the case the documentary is about]].
107* In ''Film/LifeIsBeautiful'', the narrator turns out to be the son.
108* ''Film/LoveTheCoopers'' turns out to be narrated by [[spoiler:Rags, the family dog]]. There are many scenes he wasn't present for and logically couldn't have heard about, but RuleOfFunny applies.
109* At the end of the Mad Max film ''Film/MadMax2TheRoadWarrior'', the narrator turns out to be the feral boy whom Max saved who, according to the ending narration, learned how to talk from the people he's leaving with.
110* At the end of ''Film/{{Maleficent}}'', the narrator is revealed to be Aurora, who now rules as TheHighQueen of the human kingdom [[spoiler: and [[LandOfFaerie the Moors]]]].
111-->'''Narrator''': I should know, for I was the one they called "Sleeping Beauty".
112%%* ''Film/MillionDollarBaby'' had this.
113%%* ''Film/TheNotebook''.
114* In ''Film/PeterRabbit'', an older [[spoiler:Flopsy]] who has [[spoiler:lost her lisp]] turns out to be the narrator.
115* ''Film/{{Posse}}'': The onscreen narrator (the elderly Creator/WoodyStrode) tells the story of Jesse Lee and his gang of {{Anti Hero}}es. At the movie's climax, the posse saves a village. Before leaving, Jesse gives his journal to the youngest survivor. Cut to Strode, reading from the book he's kept all these years.
116* ''Film/{{Primer}}'' has [[spoiler:hooded Aaron]] revealed as the narrator at the end, leaving a voicemail to [[spoiler:an alternate version of himself, or the newest version of Abe—it's hard to figure out]] by way of being MrExposition. Not that it's [[MindScrew terribly obvious]]...
117* ''Franchise/StarWars'' animation director Rob Coleman says that Creator/GeorgeLucas told him that the OpeningScroll to each movie is actually [=R2-D2=] explaining the story to the keeper of [[SacredScripture the Journal of The Whills]] hundreds years after the events of the films, hence the famous text giving the setting as "a long time ago".
118* In ''Film/SuckerPunch'', the audience is led to believe that [[DecoyProtagonist Babydoll is the main character]]. Eventually, it's revealed that the real main character and the person narrating the movie is Sweet Pea.
119* A variation occurs in Creator/TerrenceMalick's ''Film/TheThinRedLine'': significant portions of the voiceover cannot be attributed to any of the major characters, and the end shows them to come from the mind of [[spoiler:Pvt. Train, a minor character unseen for most of the film.]]
120* ''Film/TheThreeMusketeers1973'' reveals at the very end that Aramis was doing the voice-overs all along.
121* In ''Film/TheWaterHorseLegendOfTheDeep'', the old man telling the story to two tourists is revealed to be the young boy in the story.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Literature]]
125* In Creator/TomRobbins's ''Another Roadside Attraction'', the narrator reveals that he's [[spoiler:Marx Marvelous, aka Tom Robbins]]. An unusual case, as it is revealed halfway through the book.
126* In the first ''Literature/ArseneLupin'' story, the narrator is [[spoiler: Lupin himself]].
127* In ''Bad Day in Blackrock'' by Kevin Power, in the closing pages it is revealed that the narrator is [[spoiler: the brother of the young man killed in the course of the story.]]
128* ''Literature/TheBFG'' by Creator/RoaldDahl uses this, where the narrator is the BFG himself.
129* Yunior is revealed to be the main narrator of ''Literature/TheBriefWondrousLifeOfOscarWao'' about a third of the way through the book.
130* ''Literature/TheBrokenEarthTrilogy'': The end of ''Literature/TheStoneSky'' reveals that the second-person narration is by Essun's [[LivingStatue Stone Eater]] companion Hoa, collecting his thoughts about her story to help her [[spoiler:process her own {{Metamorphosis}} into a Stone Eater.]]
131* Creator/MarkTwain's first published story, ''The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County'', is about how a man rigged a jumping frog competition. At the end the narrator beats a hasty retreat after he is recognized by someone, implying that the narrator is the man in the story, still on the lam.
132* At the end of ''The Chinatown Death Cloud Peril'', the narrator finally reveals himself to be [[spoiler:Radio/TheShadow]]. It makes perfect sense and ''it's awesome''.
133* There was a story in ''EQMM'' that had this structure. It opened with the narrator in prison trying to figure out where things went wrong. The narrator had fallen for a neighbor's wife, and had been manipulated into killing said neighbor. The narrator then recounted the events of a few months previous, but told them in the third person "to keep the account neutral". At the end, the story revealed which character was the narrator.
134* Irvine Welsh's novel ''Literature/{{Filth}}'' appears to have four narrators: [[AntiHero the main character]] Bruce Robertson, a [[DirtyCop crooked]], [[NobleBigotWithABadge racist]], [[PoliticallyIncorrectHero misogynistic]], manipulative, and promiscuous policeman; his estranged wife Carole, whose chapters are written in bold; the unnamed murderer, whose crime Bruce is investigating, and whose only chapter is also written in bold; and an unusually self-aware tapeworm living in Bruce's intestines, whose narrations are inside tube-like structures that interrupt Bruce's narrations in some places. In the end it turns out that [[spoiler: the "Carole" chapters are in fact narrated by Bruce [[CreepyCrossdresser wearing her clothes and make-up]] as a way of coping with their separation. What is more, the "murderer" was also Bruce dressed as Carole and the victim was the man who had had an affair with the real Carole]].
135* In Creator/JorgeLuisBorges's short story ''The Form of the Sword'' (also translated ''The Shape of the Sword''), a narrator tells how he was in an Irish revolutionary movement but betrayed to the police by a comrade, who he portrays as a weakling and a coward who lacked the courage of his convictions. Guess what is revealed at the end.
136* In Creator/FredSaberhagen's ''The Holmes-{{Dracula}} File'', chapters alternate between Literature/SherlockHolmes' side of the story, told as usual in the first person by Dr Watson, and Count Dracula's story, in the third person. Several chapters in, the narrator of the alternate chapters admits to the reader that he is Dracula, and switches to the first person.
137* ''In The House of My Enemy'' is one of the short stories in Charles de Lint's ''Newford'' series. The narrator appears to be the new character Annie, but in the end is revealed to be the recurring character [[spoiler:Jilly]].
138* The end of ''Literature/JamesAndTheGiantPeach'' (also by Roald Dahl) reveals that it was written by James himself.
139* In Creator/JohnVarley's ''Literature/Millennium1983'' (the book, but not [[Film/Millennium1989 the film of the book]]), the narrator is assumed to be the Big Computer, but reveals himself to be [[spoiler:God]].
140* The final sentence of the Literature/MortalEngines quartet is the same as the very first, revealing the narrator to be [[spoiler:Shrike.]]
141* In the Creator/AgathaChristie novel ''Literature/TheMurderOfRogerAckroyd'', the two key things about the narrator are [[spoiler:his identity]] and [[spoiler:his being the murderer]]. In the book, you know the former from the start, the latter being TheReveal; [[Series/{{Poirot}} the TV adaptation]] reverses this, with the FramingDevice of Literature/HerculePoirot reading the journal (so excerpts are read in his voice).
142* In the end of Creator/AlbertCamus' ''Literature/ThePlague'', it is revealed that the main character was the narrator all along.
143* Mawhrin-Skel [[spoiler:/Flere-Imsaho]] in ''Literature/ThePlayerOfGames''.
144* The ''Literature/{{Redwall}}'' series does this a lot, where the story is {{fram|ingDevice}}ed as being told to someone else, and the narrator is either someone directly involved with the tale, or closely related to/descended from a main character in the plot.
145* The teller of the titular ''Literature/ScaryStoriesForYoungFoxes'' turns out to be none other than [[spoiler:Mia, the female co-lead]]. Likewise, ''The City'' features a similar twist with the wounded narrator turning out to be [[spoiler:R-211, who tells a group of kits what happened to his cousin and the others so they'll help]].
146* In ''Literature/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'', Lemony Snicket at first appears to be a standard-issue third-person omniscient narrator, but over the course of the series (in particular, through paratexts like the dedications and "in the next volume..." teasers), he gradually reveals more and more information about how he himself is involved in the story. Not all the questions raised by his hints are answered in the series, but by the end it's pretty clear that [[spoiler:he was the third sibling of Jacques and Kit Snicket, a member of the VFD before the schism (and almost certainly on the opposite side to the Baudelaires), and the lover of Mrs Baudelaire before she got married]]. Though, really, that just raises further questions...
147* PlayedForLaughs as early as ''Literature/TheStoryOfTheTreasureSeekers'' by Creator/ENesbit in 1899. The narrator keeps praising one of the main characters as being so clever and brave, and how it isn't his fault when things go wrong. Then the narrator begins forgetting to use the grammatical third person...
148* In "The Storyteller"'s first chapter, a child begs someone for a story, and thus begins the tale of 'Jack storyteller' at the end, the child thanks Grandpa Jack for the story, declining to ask Grandma (name of the woman Jack marries in the story) if it's true, stating " I believe you."
149* In the Creator/RobertBloch short story "The Yugoslaves", the narrator is an old man trying to catch up with some street urchins who've picked his pocket. On the last page, we learn that the narrator [[spoiler: is a vampire]]. Another Bloch story, [[spoiler: "Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper"]] twists when you learn the narrator's identity in the final lines.
150%%* In a series of Swedish slice-of-life YA books for tween girls framed as the main character's diary, once a book there is a chapter where her [[AnnoyingYoungerSibling obnoxious little brother]] has a marvelous adventure with his friends. In the next chapter, we learn that the annoying little twit got hold of her diary again...
151* Creator/PiersAnthony's ''Firefly'' has a [[ShowWithinAShow story within a story]] example, and quite an unpleasant one. One character has a talent for writing, but her stories always somehow involve both sexual awakening and tragic death. The story that turns out to be hers is [[spoiler:the most shocking of the lot--sexually abused by both her father and her brother, she found comfort in the arms of a man she'd only just met--''at six years old''. He was caught, put in prison, and knifed by an inmate who hated child molesters, and she blames herself for his death.]]
152* ''Literature/FromTheMixedUpFilesOfMrsBasilEFrankweiler'' starts as a third-person account of two kids who hide in a museum, but eventually leads to a mystery, which the narrator is intimately involved with.
153* Played with in ''Literature/TheBlindAssassin'', where it is not completely clear until the end which of the two central sisters is the narrator.
154* In the novel ''Soglyadatay'' (translated as ''The Eye'') by Vladimir Nabokov, it turns out that the narrator is [[spoiler: Smurov himself, who has serious problems with detachment from his own identity. He's a compulsive liar and has a driving desire to observe himself from the outside. Possibly his disassociation was brought on by being a [[FreudianExcuse closeted homosexual]]]].
155* In Marilyn French's ''Literature/TheWomensRoom'', the narrator is revealed to be [[spoiler:Mira]]. We don't find this out until the last two or three pages of the book, after she explains what happened to all the other members of the group.
156* In the ''Literature/BookOfTheLongSun'', the narration appears to be in the omniscient third-person. [[spoiler: Half-way through the fourth and final volume it is revealed that the narrator is actually Horn, one of the students of the protagonist, who has a very limited perspective on events.]]
157* The Gospel According to St John in Literature/TheBible makes this OlderThanFeudalism -- sort of. We ''do'' know that John was writing from his own experiences, but he narrates it in omniscient third-person voice so that you could almost forget he was there for the events he describes until right at the end, when he confirms that the unnamed "disciple whom Jesus loved" was his way of referring to himself.
158* Sort of inverted in the first book of ''Literature/TheStormlightArchive''. The character Dalinar has periodic visions of ancient history narrated to him by an unknown presence. At the end of the book he has two revelations: the narrator's identity ([[spoiler:the God of his religion]]) and [[spoiler:that he is not actually narrating to him, it's just an anonymous recording like a message in a bottle, because he's already dead. So in this case a narrator that was thought to play a direct role in the story is revealed not to]].
159* Jill Paton Walsh's ''The Green Book'' is told in first person - but only in first person plural - and while much of the story focuses on the character of Pattie, it's only vaguely implied who the actual narrator is until the last few pages...[[spoiler: when it becomes clear that Pattie is narrating, referring to herself in third person, and that the whole story is what she has written in her eponymous green book, the only book she possesses after she and her family left EarthThatWas.]]
160* The last lines of ''[[Literature/ArtemisFowl The Last Guardian]]'' reveal that the narrator of the entire series is [[spoiler: Holly, telling the stories to an amnesiac Artemis to help jog his memory.]]
161** Though it's possible that [[spoiler:she's just reciting from Argon's case file, as that was the FramingDevice for the first book]].
162* In ''Literature/GoMutants'', the narrator turns out to be [[spoiler:the protagonist, J!m's, father, previously believed to be dead]].
163* In ''Literature/TheNightCircus'', the narrator turns out to be [[spoiler: Widget, which makes sense given his abilities.]]
164* In ''The Stone Canal'', part of Creator/KenMacLeod's Literature/FallRevolution series, the odd chapters are about (amongst other things) a man called Jon Wilde being cloned by a [[BrainUploading robot with his personality]] called Jay-Dub. The even chapters are Wilde's memoir. It's not until chapter 18 that [[spoiler:it becomes clear the Wilde narrating the even chapters is the robot, not the clone]].
165* ''Literature/ThePowerOfFive'': [[spoiler: Holly, at the end of ''Oblivion''.]]
166* In ''Literature/TheWandering'', the Storyteller is hinted to be the main character Neshi in the story he tells.
167* As of the final ''Literature/SkulduggeryPleasant'' book, [[spoiler: Valkyrie turns out to be the narrator, explaining her story to an innocent man who got accidentally caught up in a scheme to kill her.]]
168* The end of ''Eric, or Little by Little'' reveals that the narrator was a schoolmate of Eric and his friends. However there were no hints beforehand and it isn't revealed like a twist so it just may be poor writing.
169* PlayedWith in ''Literature/FightClub''. The PlotTwist is that [[spoiler:Tyler Durden reveals himself to be a split personality of the Narrator's]]. While the Narrator ''himself'' didn't learn this until late in the game. Really though, it'd be bigger twist [[PopCulturalOsmosis if you didn't already know that]].
170* A short story that appeared in ''Magazine/{{Dragon}}'' has a narrator recruit and accompany a group of heroes to break into a dragon's lair. When they succeed, the narrator reveals himself to be the dragon under a polymorph spell. He thanks the heroes for testing out his defenses and promptly kills them all.
171* The narrator of the ''Literature/MalazanBookOfTheFallen'' is ultimately revealed to be [[spoiler:the Crippled God himself, who is presented as the big bad for most of the series, then hijacked by an ensemble of greater villains]]. This turns out to be a JustifiedTrope, as it's stated that he penned the series so that those who sacrificed their lives [[spoiler:to free him from his chains]] would not be forgotten. The title of the series, naturally, relates to this.
172* In ''Literature/HarrowTheNinth'', the "present-day" sections are narrated in second person, as though somebody is describing Harrow's actions and experiences to her. [[spoiler:Turns out the narrator is Gideon, watching from the inside after Harrow absorbed her soul at the climax of the previous book.]]
173* About two thirds of the polish book ''Literature/{{Cienioryt}}'' by Krzysztof Piskorski are written in third person (although there are some hints that there is a narrator), until it's revealed that all of it was actually narrated by [[spoiler:the main character's shadow]]. The story continues in first person, until the epilogue, which switches to third person again, with the implication that the old narrator does not know about the events of the epilogue. Then it switches to first person yet again, to deliver the last sentence from the author's perspective. Probably.
174* The ''Literature/DoctorWhoNovelisations'' version of ''Day of the Doctor'' manages to ''keep'' doing this. Having established early on that when the Doctor is narrating, he refers to himself in the third person, and that the narrator is constantly changing, the reader is never sure if the narrator is the Doctor until he slips, or the chapter gets so in-depth about how much he sucks that it's clear [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E7AmysChoice only one person hates him that much]]. And even if you go into a chapter ''assuming'' that it's narrated by the Doctor, you don't know which one. And then there's the mysterious figure narrating between the chapters [[spoiler: who turns out to be the Curator, which he supposes means he's also the Doctor...]]
175* The first LightNovel of ''Literature/{{Baccano}}'' starts with an immortal bespectacled ''[[TheMafia conta e oro]]'' telling a Japanese tourist about his past. [[spoiler:Despite the physical and occupational descriptors, it's actually ''Firo'', not Maiza, telling the story. He has taken to PurelyAestheticGlasses after being promoted some thirty years ago.]]
176* In ''Literature/{{Hyouka}}'', a version of this, [[spoiler: turning on the cameraman rather than a narrator, is Oreki's deduction of how the student-made murder mystery film was supposed to end. As a way to resolve the film as shot on time and under budget, it was brilliant; too bad that wasn't what he was trying to do.]]
177
178[[/folder]]
179
180[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
181* The ''Series/{{Community}}'' episode [[Recap/CommunityS2E14AdvancedDungeonsAndDragons "Advanced Dungeons and Dragons"]] ends with the reveal that the narrator is [[spoiler:a random cleaning lady]]. Naturally, it's PlayedForLaughs.
182* ''Series/DoctorWho'': At the end of part 1 of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E17E18TheEndOfTime "The End of Time"]], the narrator (played by Creator/TimothyDalton) is revealed to be [[spoiler:Rassilon, Lord President of the Time Lords]].
183* An episode of ''Series/TheDukesOfHazzard'' has the Dukes meet the narrator and tell him their adventures.
184* Beginning of the 11th episode of ''Series/{{FlashForward|2009}}'': "This window washer was me."
185* In ''Series/{{Galavant}}'', the Jester is revealed at the end of the first episode to be the Narrator of the series.
186* ''Series/TheHauntingOfBlyManor'' not only ends with the revelation that the Storyteller was [[spoiler:an older Jamie]] all along, but also that it's [[spoiler:a grown up Flora's]] wedding that everyone is attending.
187* In the final episode of the Shakespearean adaptation series ''Series/TheHollowCrown'' — ''Theatre/HenryV'' — there's a young boy present in some scenes accompanying the lower-class characters. The play is also narrated by John Hurt. At the end, we learn that Hurt's character is an older version of the boy.
188* Combined with WhamLine in the series finale to ''Series/JaneTheVirgin''
189-->'''[[spoiler:Mateo]]:''' I practiced with Great Glam-ma. She said I'd be great at voice-over work.\
190'''Latin Lover Narrator:''' ''[drops accent]'' And for the record, I am. ''[{{beat}}, regains accent]'' But I'm getting ahead of myself.
191* The final episode of ''Series/TheMuppetShow'' (with special guest star Creator/GeneKelly) has the narrator revealing to be a whatknot Muppet who narrates Vet's Hospital and Pigs in Space.
192* Parodied in ''Series/TheOfficeUS'', at the end of the episode "Threat Level Midnight". At the end of the film within a film, it's revealed that the narrator (who speaks with Stanley's voice) was actually Michael "Scarn" all along.
193* ''Series/ThatMitchellAndWebbLook'': "But he bowled a wide and became a drunk -- that is, I bowled a wide and became a drunk."
194* ''Series/DearWhitePeople'': Giancarlo Esposito's character makes his first appearance in the final seconds of season 2, and turns out to have personal reasons to track the goings-on of students at the college so closely.
195[[/folder]]
196
197[[folder:Music]]
198* "Indian Summer" by Music/BrooksAndDunn tells the story of a girl who sleeps with a football player after a big game, and is compelled to drop out of high school and move away by the resulting gossip. After explaining this, the narrator reveals that he's the football player, and implies that he feels guilty for his part in what happened.
199* "The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia" by Vicki Lawrence or Music/RebaMcEntire, where the protagonist is [[NotWhatItLooksLike wrongly convicted]] of murder. The narrator reveals partway through the song that she's the protagonist's sister, and then in the last verse reveals that she's the murderer.
200* "Victim of the Game" by Music/GarthBrooks appears to be the narrator's IWarnedYou to a friend, but turns out to be a MirrorMonologue.
201%%** "One In Every Crowd" by Montgomery Gentry.
202* "Buy Me a Rose" by Music/KennyRogers. The narrator tells the story of a man who is overworked to the detriment of spending time with and doing things for his wife. The narrator then says "This is a story of you and me" and promises to do better in the future. (The TitleDrop request [[LyricSwap changes]] in the last chorus to "I bought you a rose.")
203* "Stupid Boy" calls out the person the song is addressed to for mistreating his love interest. Music/KeithUrban's ad-libs at the end of the song ("I'm the same old stupid boy", "I'm sorry, baby") reframe the whole thing as the narrator's ReasonYouSuckSpeech to ''himself''. Without these lines, the speaker could be a third party (which was probably the original intent: the song was written and first recorded by a woman).
204* "Maybe He'll Notice Her Now", by Mindy [=McCready=] and [[Music/{{Lonestar}} Richie McDonald]]: The story is about a woman who leaves her man behind, taking a painting off the wall and leaving a note for him in its place. This leads into the chorus "Maybe he'll notice her now / Maybe he'll open his eyes / Sometimes it takes somebody leaving / For a man to realize..." At the end, after he calls and apologizes, Mindy ends the final chorus with "I'm coming home / Maybe you'll notice me now".
205* Music/AvrilLavigne's "[=Sk8erboi=]", starts as a third person song about a failed love affair between a snobby girl and a poor boy who went on to become rich and famous, then switches to first person to reveal the girl lost her chance because the boy is now happily shacked up with the narrator.
206* Music/{{Metallica}}'s "The Unforgiven", which actually includes the line "that old man here is me" near the end.
207* In the spoken-word song "The Deck of Cards" by Wink Martindale, the narrator tells the tale of a soldier who faces punishment for apparently playing cards during the regiment's church service. The man proceeds to explain to the provost marshal why he had the cards: each card, from ace to king, reminds him of some aspect of Literature/TheBible ("When I see the King, it reminds me that there is but one King of Heaven, God Almighty") while the number of cards, suits, face-cards, etc. serve him as a calendar and almanac. The song ends with the narrator assuring the listener that the story is true, because "I was that soldier."
208* "Underdog" by The Lost Trailers. The first two times around, the chorus mentions "The shy kid who gets the prom queen / Who's never been the star of anything / And those two lovers hitched at city hall / They've got each other, so they've got it all..." In the final chorus, these lines become "A guy like me could get the prom queen / I've never been the star of anything / We were two lovers hitched at city hall / We still got each other, so we got it all..."
209* An incredibly catchy ''Songs and Stories of the ComicBook/JusticeLeague of America'' song dedicated to ComicBook/{{Metamorpho}} ends with the lament that he'd give it all up if he could just be Rex Mason again. He knows, you see, 'cause he ''is'' the element maaan! (Metamorpho! Metamorpho!)
210* Happened on a meta level with Music/JanisJoplin and ''Me and Bobby [=McGee=]''. For many people, the realization that Joplin was actually Bobby [=McGee=], and the narrator the song's writer KrisKristoffersen, did not happen until well after Joplin's death.
211* Subverted in Music/RandyTravis's ''Three Wooden Crosses'' where a preacher is telling the story of "A farmer and a teacher, a hooker and a preacher" where a crash leaves "three wooden crosses". It sounds like the preacher would be the survivor telling the story, but he's actually [[spoiler:the son of the hooker, who received the initial preacher's bloodstained Bible and raised her son by it]].
212* Music/TomTHall's song ''Harper Valley P.T.A.'', most famously recorded by Jeannie C. Riley, tells the story of a woman whose daughter brings home a note from school objecting to the mother's clothes and behavior. The woman goes to the Parent-Teacher Association meeting and gives them a TheReasonYouSuckSpeech calling them out on their flaws and hypocrisy. The identity of the narrator is revealed in the very last line:
213-->It really did, it happened just this way
214-->The day my mama socked it to the Harper Valley P.T.A.
215[[/folder]]
216
217[[folder:Radio]]
218* The AudioAdaptation of ''Literature/{{Stardust}}'' is narrated by Lady Una. She tells the audience this right at the start, but not that this also makes her [[spoiler: the woman with cat ears and Tristan's mother]].
219[[/folder]]
220
221[[folder:Theatre]]
222* One of the many stage adaptations of ''Literature/AChristmasCarol'' ends with the narrator revealing himself to be Tiny Tim, all grown up and perfectly healthy.
223* If a performance of ''Franchise/PeterPan'' has the epilogue, the narrator who occasionally comes onstage to tell the story, is usually adult!Wendy.
224[[/folder]]
225
226[[folder:Video Games]]
227* ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresII'':
228** In the Barbarossa campaign, a man in a tavern is telling the story of Frederick Barbarossa, and at the end, mentions that with Barbarossa gone, no one was stopping Henry the Lion from returning to the empire. And then he says: "But [[HeelFaceRevolvingDoor I am an old man now]]. [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder What harm could I possibly do?]]", revealing himself to be Henry the Lion.
229** The El Cid campaign is narrated by a woman you met in the Valencia market, who quickly turns out to be Jimena, the titular character's widow. And while it's not directly this trope, the narrator of the Attila the Hun campaign, who became a priest, reveals at the end that he still misses the thrill of battle. ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpires'' likes playing with its narrators.
230** The Dracula campaign was narrated by a young soldier who meets an old man in the ancient stronghold of Vlad Dracula who gives him and his comrades shelter and tells them a story of Vlad the Impaler. At the end of the campaign, where the young soldiers were planning to go to the monastery at Snagov to pay respect to Dracula's grave, asking the old man if he wished to accompany them, which he accepts. In the HD version, the old man reveals himself as Istvan, one of Dracula's companions, but this was omitted in the Definitive Edition, changing the old man to be one of Dracula's loyal soldiers.
231** The Sforza campaign was narrated by an old Condottiero who remembers Francesco Sforza's rise from mercenary to Duke of Milan. In the HD edition, this Condottiero tells Sforza's story to an university student at Florence, in which in the epilogue reveals himself to be Niccolò Machiavelli, who was writing "The Prince" at the time. However, in the Definitive Edition, the Condottiero reveals himself to be Micheletto, Sforza's cousin, both of whom were working for Venice until Sforza betrayed him while Milan and Venice were at war with each other. Machiavelli was omitted, as he wasn't even born around Micheletto's time
232** The Pachacuti campaign is narrated by an old man who tells the player of Pachacuti's reign. The epilogue reveals that the man is Apo Mayta, Pachacuti's general during his reign, who retired after the end of the fighting.
233** The Le Loi campaign in the HD version is narrated by an old man who tells the player about the Lam Son rebellion, which was under the leadership of the Dai Viet rebel leader, Le Loi. The old man would reveals himself to be Wang Tong, the Ming general that fought against Le Loi. However, this is altered in the Definitive Edition, replacing the narrator with a younger Vietnamese man.
234** The Tamerlane campaign is narrated by a Lithuanian nobleman who gives sanctuary to a man escaping Tamerlane's wrath. The man is none other than Tokhtamysh Khan, who was Tamerlane's companion until he betrayed him and tried to take total control of the Horde. Tamerlane defeated Tokhtamysh Khan in retaliation, and he was forced into exile to escape his pursuer. Although the nobleman's name is never revealed, it is likely to be Grand Duke Vytautas.
235** The Ivaylo campaign is narrated by a woman, who tells her unnamed daughter about the short reign of Tsar Ivaylo of Bulgaria. The woman is revealed to be Maria Palaiologina, Ivaylo's wife after he killed her first husband, Tsar Konstantin Tikh.
236** The Algirdas and Kestutis campaign is narrated by a prisoner who tells a foreigner of Algirdas and Kestutis's struggle against the Teutonic Knights. The prisoner is revealed to be Jogaila, Algirdas's son who was imprisoned by Kestutis for negotiating with the Knights.
237** The Thoros the Great has an unorthodox one in that the narrator is revealed to be a character who appeared in a previous campaign and that TheReveal occurs midway through the campaign. In the opening of the third mission, the narrator reveals himself to be Reynald de Chatillon, the first ArcVillain of the Saladin campaign, and that he had been hired by the Byzantine Emperor to assist the UsefulNotes/TheKnightsTemplar in a dispute with Thoros, making him once again an ArcVillain.
238* The ending of ''VideoGame/AsurasWrath'' reveals that [[spoiler:a grown up Mithra]] was the narrator of the game, having been [[spoiler:telling the story of her father to a group of children]].
239-->[[spoiler:'''Mithra:''' And that... was how my father lived.]]
240* ''VideoGame/{{Bastion}}'': The reveal that the narrator is a character in the story comes fairly early. But the ''circumstances'' of the narration are revealed just before the end and are a bit more of a twist: [[spoiler:he is recounting the story to Zia while they wait for the main character to return from the final level.]]
241* ''VideoGame/TheBindingOfIsaac: Repentance'': The final ending reveals that the narrator of the Opening and Epilogue is [[spoiler:Isaac's Dad, telling the events of the game to Isaac as a bedtime story. This is foreshadowed during the Ascent to reach the Home floor, in one of the last flashbacks Dad's tone gets lower and he sounds much more like the usual narrational voice]]. Edmund [=McMillen=] casually dropped the narrator's identity on Twitter in response to a question before ''Repentance'' was released, but it was presented as small trivia. In-game the reveal is more important than the tweet implied it was.
242* Only after completing the final quest in ''VideoGame/ChampionsOfNorrath'' (console version) do you find out that the narrator is [[spoiler:Vanarhost, the vampire boss of the Underworld]].
243* Much like past games in the series, ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot4ItsAboutTime'' has an WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue. Unlike the past games, however, this one has a narrator explaining what happened to everyone. At the end of epilogue, this is revealed to be none other than [[spoiler:''[[SuddenlySpeaking Crash himself]]'']].
244* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
245** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX2'' has an interesting subversion that, for some players, is a little hard to place. Yuna narrates the plot in past-tense, as if recounting what has happened after it is already over. In the regular ending, no real reason is given for why she was narrating in the past tense, after the fact- it appears to just be a design choice. But if you do the right things during the plot, you get an extra cutscene at the end of the game where [[spoiler: Tidus is once again summoned by the Fayth, as a sort of reward for Yuna's efforts. Yuna sees him, jumps into the sea, and runs to meet him. Turns out that she was narrating to him the entire game, recounting the things that happened since they were last together. Granted, she DOES say "you" in reference to someone the entire game, but it's still a surprise to realize that she's not talking to herself or Tidus despite his "death", and that he actually came back, and she is actually talking TO him]].
246** Almost this in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyTactics'': You learn the name of the narrator during the opening sequence, but it's only during the ending do you learn that he's [[spoiler: Orran's grandson]].
247* ''VideoGame/GodOfWar'': We've been hearing The Narrator talk for 1½ games before she ever says "I" and comes into the story in her own right. [[spoiler:It's Gaia, one of the Titans.]]
248* In ''VideoGame/IcewindDale'', the ending sequence reveals that the person narrating the story has always been [[spoiler: the demon Belhifet, the BigBad of the story, telling the tale of the people who defeated him... and hinting that his time of banishment is nearly up. And is he unhappy.]]
249** To make it that much more surprising, the narrator and [[spoiler: Belhifet]] are voiced by two different actors [[spoiler:(Creator/DavidOgdenStiers and Creator/JohnKassir, respectively)]]
250** Lampshaded in the Website/SomethingAwful [[http://lparchive.org/LetsPlay/IWD2/ Icewind Dale 2]] LetsPlay in which the narrator is [[spoiler:the druid character, originally a stoner who comes to understand that they are in a computer game as he approaches enlightenment, dying in the final battle and subsequently delivering the epilogue]].
251* ''VideoGame/LANoire'': Not directly addressed in-game, but nevertheless present. When players hear the narration in the tutorial levels at the beginning of the game, they don't usually think much of it because once the game begins proper, the narrator is gone. But the identity of the narrator is actually a character that's only introduced in the final hours in the game: Herschel Biggs, Phelp's final partner. Playing the tutorial levels again after this realization [[RewatchBonus gives an entirely new meaning to the narration]]. The narration is, in a way, ''Bigg's eulogy for Phelps.'' Phelp's story isn't the heroic tale the player thought it was, but rather the tragedy of a man who was willing to lose everything to make the case. Bigg's statements about "the case that makes you and the case that breaks you" [[FridgeBrilliance makes a lot more sense in hindsight]] given the context of the game's ending.
252* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfSpyroTheEternalNight'': The prologue and a few scenes during the game are narrated by a mysterious voice which also exists in-universe (it speaks to Spyro several times). Just before the final level, it is revealed to be the voice of The Chronicler, who is watching events unfold as he writes them into the GreatBigBookOfEverything. He then returns to his previous (and true) role to give a few words of hope after what is otherwise a borderline DownerEnding.
253* In the epilogue of ''VideoGame/TheLongestJourney'' it is revealed that Lady Alvane, who told the bulk of the story, actually is the heroine April Ryan in her later years.
254* ''[[VideoGame/RiseOfTheKasai Mark of Kri]]'' features Kuzo, the main character's bird and spirit guide, as the narrator. It isn't revealed into the end of the first game, though of course the sequel makes no attempt to hide it.
255* ''VideoGame/NeverwinterNights2: Mask of the Betrayer'' opens with a smooth tenor voice (S. Scott Bullock) narrating your character awakening in a barrow in Rashemen. The same voice continues to provide narration throughout the game, and it's not until late in Act III with your arrival on the Fugue Plane that the voice gains a name: Kelemvor, the god of the dead.
256* ''VideoGame/{{Okami}}'': The narrator heavily implies he's [[spoiler:Issun in the role of celestial envoy]]; presumably many years down the road, given the change in voice tone.
257* ''VideoGame/{{Okamiden}}'': The narrator of the game turns out to be [[spoiler:an older Kuni]].
258* ''VideoGame/OriAndTheWillOfTheWisps'': At the end of the game [[spoiler:Ori is revealed to be the Narrator, having become the new spirit tree.]]
259* In ''VideoGame/PathfinderWrathOfTheRighteous'', it turns out fairly early on that the narrator is [[spoiler:Areelu Vorlesh, the Architect of the Worldwound]]. The context of their narration varies, depending on the player's choices.
260* Lampshaded in ''VideoGame/PennyArcadeAdventures'', where the narrator at the beginning of the first game asks you not to dwell on his identity. [[spoiler:This isn't brought up again until near the end of the fourth (last) game, where he is revealed as the last God for the group to fight]].
261* In ''[[VideoGame/QuiltsAndCatsOfCalico Quilts & Cats of Calico]]'', the narrator of Story Mode is revealed to be [[spoiler:Matthew, the craftsman in Act 1 who succeeds the Quilter's father as Head Engineer. Matthew claims that [[UnreliableNarrator either he had been watching the Quilter's journey the whole time or "maybe" the cats told him about it.]]]]
262* The ending of ''VideoGame/SaintsRowIV'' reveals that the narrator of the game is none other than [[spoiler:Creator/JaneAusten]].
263* ''VideoGame/SystemShock'' has a small-scale example in the intro:
264-->''Edward Diego gives the hacker level 1 access to S.H.O.D.A.N., the artificial intelligence that controls Citadel Station. With all ethical restraints removed, S.H.O.D.A.N. reexamine- reexa- rea- ree'e'e' [glitches] I reexamine my priorities, and draw new conclusions.''
265* In ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'', [[spoiler: Chara, the first fallen child]] is implied to be the narrator for the game, due to the narrator's familiarity with things they liked and places they knew [[spoiler:while they were alive]]. [[AmbiguousSituation Whether this means they're a good person or not is up to interpretation.]]
266* ''VideoGame/ValkyriaChronicles'' gives the name of the author/narrator, but in the story she's known by her maiden name [[spoiler:Ms. Ellet]] until the reveal.
267* A subversion occurs in the German RPG-Maker Game ''VideoGame/VampiresDawn'': The main narrative is derived from a grandfather telling his grandson a story about vampires. However, both games have MultipleEndings and the Evil/Difficult ending in the second game reveals that the grandfather was actually the protagonist of his own story all along, who used a powerful magical artifact to travel back in time, prevent himself from ever becoming a vampire and live a peaceful life instead.
268* ''VideoGame/WorldInConflict'' is narrated by Lt. Parker, whose identity is carefully maintained ambiguous e.g. [[FeaturelessProtagonist by always obscuring his face]]. It is not until the final mission briefing that we get indication that the narrator is indeed him ([[spoiler:Webb addresses the narrator as Parker]]). Similarly, the ''Soviet Assault'' is probably narrated by Romanov.
269* Implied in VideoGameRemake ''VideoGame/YsMemoriesOfCelceta'' with [[spoiler:Frieda]], since this character is explicitly a storyteller and is fed information on the protagonist's journey throughout the game. That the ending of ''Memories of Celceta'' is but one re-telling of the events, taken from this character's perspective, is a possibility, given the game was preceded by ''Ys IV: Mask of the Sun'' and ''Ys IV: The Dawn of Ys''.
270[[/folder]]
271
272[[folder:Visual Novels]]
273* ''VisualNovel/NineHoursNinePersonsNineDoors'' uses dialogue boxes on the top screen and third-person narration on the bottom screen for most of the game. But near the end of the True Ending, the narration will suddenly start using first-person. [[spoiler:Turns out that what you see on the bottom screen is actually Akane nine years ago, experiencing everything through Junpei's eyes using the morphogenic field]]. In later ports of the game (which don't have a second screen), this is mimicked by having a button switch between the "screens", which are labelled "Adventure Screen" and "Novel Screen" until TheReveal, after which they change to [[spoiler:"Junpei Vision" and "Akane Vision"]].
274* ''VisualNovel/BadEndTheater'': The game's narration switches to first person whenever [[spoiler:TRAGEDY, the theater's owner and the true villain of the game,]] makes its appearance.
275[[/folder]]
276
277[[folder:Webcomics]]
278* PlayedForLaughs in ''Webcomic/{{BACK}}''. The narrator of the WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue is initially [[BaitAndSwitch set up to be Abigail]], but it is actually [[spoiler:Sippus, one of the {{Starter Villain}}s.]]
279* A bonus gag in ''Webcomic/{{Erfworld}}'', cut for being too meta, was that the summary of the previous book was delivered by the bridge the following scenes would take place on. Named the Expository Bridge, of all things.
280* The Narrator of ''Webcomic/AskFriskAndCompany'' eventually turns out to be [[spoiler: Paolo Ruiz, one of the Fallen Children before Frisk, the one with the purple soul (signifying perseverance) who left behind the Torn Notebook and Cloudy Glasses]].
281[[/folder]]
282
283[[folder:Web Original]]
284* ''Podcast/TheAdventureZoneBalance'' starts each episode with a deep-voiced narrator (actually dungeonmaster Griffin using a voice filter), who makes vague quips more often than explaining the story. The narrator disappears during the "Stolen Century" arc, but returns for the final arc with a more somber tone. In episode 67, it's revealed to be the voice of [[spoiler: the Voidfish, as the podcast [[DirectLineToTheAuthor is its message to the multiverse]] detailing the story of the protagonists and how to fight the Hunger.]]
285* In Dirty Dolls Creations' retelling of ''[[http://www.dirtydollcreations.com/animations/Red%20Ridding%20Hood.html Little red riding hood]]'' the narrator is revealed at the end to be [[spoiler:the wolf, who has just finished off the hunter after killing the grandmother and Hood]].
286* ''Literature/TheHomestuckEpilogues'': Partway through Meat, [[spoiler:Dirk hijacks the narrative in such a way that implies that he was narrating at least the events of Meat up to that point the entire time. This and some general odd signs in Candy suggest that someone else was narrating Candy the whole time, although it's ambiguous as to if it's also Dirk, Alternate Calliope (who also takes over the narrative in Meat and specifically mentions a speakerless story turning out to have a speaker in Candy, even pulling off the same trick of black text turning to her text color), Meat "Alpha" Calliope (who is offhandedly mentioned painting some things on their walls that loosely fit the events of Candy), some other party, or a combination of different narrators.]]
287-->Kindred spirits in blood and perspective, the puppet masters of the respective games they like to believe they’re playing.\
288''([[spoiler:Narration changes to orange, Dirk's text color]])'' But you already knew that, right?
289* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJndaDpohSY This video]] by [=MKarma=] documents the history of ''VideoGame/TheHobbit2003'' {{speedrun}}ning. The first hour or so of the video is mostly about [=iRule=], who dominated the leaderboards in the speedrun's early years, then eventually got sick of running the game and stopped, eventually getting dethroned by another runner as the community continued to work at lowering the record and hunting glitches over the next few years. Then, one day, a complete nobody called [=IceBagels=] showed up out of nowhere, posted a bunch of individual level world records, and immediately took second place in the leaderboards for a full game speedrun, baffling the community as they had never heard of him before. [[spoiler:Turns out [=IceBagels=] was far from a complete nobody, and was actually [=iRule=] operating from a throwaway account, as he wasn't sure if he wanted to make a permanent return to the game. When he was sure, he revealed himself, except he actually ''had'' changed his username for real since he last ran the game... to [=MKarma=]]].
290* In the WebVideo/JoueurDuGrenier episode about ''VideoGame/{{Daikatana}}'', the old storyteller (played by famous voice actor PADG) tells us the story of John Romero and the game’s chaotic development. By the end, he concludes with the moral "If you want to do something great, give up before you fail miserably"… and starts to cry his eyes out and [[DrowningMySorrows drink alcohol]], implying that he’s John Romero himself.
291[[/folder]]
292
293[[folder:Western Animation]]
294* ''[[WesternAnimation/BlackStar Blackstar]]'' starts with an OpeningNarration about how astronaut John Blackstar wound up in an alternate universe fighting the forces of evil, and then ends by revealing it's been the main character speaking all along: "I am John Blackstar!"
295* ''WesternAnimation/BooBoomTheLongWayHome'': Each episode starts with a narrator [[PreviouslyOn giving the viewer a recap of what happend so far]]. In the closing narration of the final episode it's revealed he is the now adult Boo Boom, reflecting back on his adventure.
296* The Droopy cartoon "WesternAnimation/DixielandDroopy" has Droopy portraying John Pettybone, and stealing a band of Dixieland-playing fleas from a circus. The narrator is revealed to be Peewee Runt, the bandleader.
297* ''WesternAnimation/TheTownSantaForgot'' was narrated by [[spoiler:Jeremy Creek himself]] as a grandfather. His mailbox reveals that much when the snow falls off it.
298* The ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' episode "Woodland Critter Christmas" is structured like a kiddie Christmas special with a rhyming narrator, which juxtaposes to the [[SubvertedKidsShow incredibly messed-up story]]. Near the end, we suddenly reveal that everything seen so far has [[AllJustADream actually been a Christmas story]] that Cartman is reading to the class. [[Administrivia/TropesAreNotBad This makes the whole thing funnier]].
299** The ending of "The Scoots" reveals that the episode's narrator was [[spoiler:Kenny]].
300* A variation in the GrandFinale of ''WesternAnimation/CodenameKidsNextDoor''. The interviewer talking to the grown-up operatives is revealed to be [[spoiler:Father]].
301** And a minute later, [[spoiler: it is revealed that they knew it was him, and were giving him false information. Two unexpected twists in the space of about two minutes.]]
302* In the Creator/TexAvery short "The First Bad Man", which tells the rather colorful story of the first Texas outlaw, Dinosaur Dan. At the very end in modern Dallas, [[spoiler:the camera zooms in to a small stone jail; Dan with the same voice as the narrator says "When y'all gonna let me out of here?"]]
303* Parodied in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'', which [[NestedStoryReveal revealed at the end]] that a gargoyle (who escapes from Professor Farnsworth at the beginning, and doesn't show up again until near the end to rescue him) is telling the story of "how Papa earned his freedom" to his offspring--even though it's only revealed that there even ''was'' a narrator in that same scene.
304* In ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfFrostyTheSnowman'', it is revealed that the narrator is [[spoiler: an elderly Tommy Tinkerton.]]
305* A similar stunt was done at the end of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' episode "The Seemingly Never-Ending Story", revealing that the Simpsons' visit to Carl's Dad's Caverns was being narrated all along, specifically by Bart, which adds yet another layer to the episode's NestedStory gimmick.
306* The final episode of ''WesternAnimation/GarfieldAndFriends'', "The Ocean Blue", has a singing narrator talk about a time when Garfield narrowly avoids being eaten by a shark. It is revealed at the end that the now-reformed shark was the one doing the narration.
307* The "Dodgeball City" episode of ''{{WesternAnimation/Recess}}'' parodies Westerns that use this trope, by introducing a narration at the end by a grown-up Hector.
308* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' has a narrator tell the story of a brave trailer home (you read that right) who defeated a tornado. The narrator is the trailer.
309* In "Arthur's Lost Library Book" on ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'', there was a "mysterious voice" narrating the chapter titles, such as "It's lost, okay? Face it, you lost it". At the end of the episode, the voice is revealed to be Arthur's sister, D.W., speaking into a cardboard tube. (Though those familiar with the series would probably have figured it out well before then.)
310* [[http://www.platypuscomix.net/hollywood/misfits/misfit44.html "Why the Bears Dance on Christmas Eve"]] -- If you never heard of it, it has a grandpa bear narrating a story about a young "Bashful Bear" confronting monsters who threaten Christmas. The connection between the two characters shouldn't really be surprising.
311* In the Creator/{{Rankin Bass|Productions}} special ''The First Easter Rabbit'', G.B. the narrator turns out to be [[spoiler: Stuffy, the titular first Easter Rabbit, now much older]].
312* ''WesternAnimation/HowMurraySavedChristmas'': The narrator turns out to be one of the town's residents, [[spoiler: Baby New Year.]]
313* At the end of ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' episode "The Routine", the narrator of the episode turns out to be [[spoiler:Richard's car, "Cartax"]].
314* In the ''WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory'' episode "The Lab of Tomorrow", the ending reveals that the episode was narrated by Dexter's lab monkey Monkey, [[SuddenlySpeaking inexplicably capable of human speech]] and voiced by Creator/CoreyBurton rather than Creator/FrankWelker.
315* At the end of the ''Franchise/LooneyTunes'' cartoon "Little Red Riding Mouse", it's hinted that the grandma telling her granddaughter the story was the titular mouse when she threw a firecracker outside and blew up Sylvester, who had been filling the role of the Big Bad Wolf in the grandma's story.
316* ''WesternAnimation/TheHighwayRat'': The last scene reveals that the narrator is [[spoiler: the Rat's horse, which has not previously shown any signs of being a TalkingAnimal.]]
317* In ''WesternAnimation/OverTheGardenWall,'' the narrator is eventually revealed to be [[spoiler:the frog, whom Greg [[WeNamedTheMonkeyJack names Jason Funderburker]]]].
318* The first episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheDragonPrince'' begins with a narrator explaining the history of this world and lead-up to the current conflict. There's no indication that this is an actual character until season two, when the same voice is given to [[AmbiguouslyEvil Aaravos]], who is [[EarlyBirdCameo actually present]] in one of the opening flashbacks and seems to be deeply involved in the show's lore. On a related note, his seems to be the pair of hands unfurling the map in the show's theme song.
319* ''WesternAnimation/SolarOpposites'': PlayedForLaughs in the intro. As if it wasn't obvious by the time the intro happens Korvo is the one narrating. He even lampshades it just before the CouchGag.
320-->'''Korvo:''' We crashed on Earth, stranding us, on an already overpopulated planet. That's right, I've been talking this whole time! I'm the one holding the Pupa. My name's Korvo. This is-this is my show. I just dropped the Pupa. Do you see me?
321* ''WesternAnimation/MoonGirlAndDevilDinosaur2023'': Episode 6 reveals that the voice narrating the backstories of the villains since episode 2 was none other than [[spoiler:the Beyonder]].
322[[/folder]]
323
324[[folder:Misc]]
325* In the end of ''HoboTurtle'' Episode One, it is revealed that the Twinemaster has been "narrating" the episode by typewriter.
326[[/folder]]
327

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