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8[[quoteright:350:[[Website/{{Uncyclopedia}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tactical_flintlock.jpg]]]]
9[[caption-width-right:350:A Tactical Flintlock.]]
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11->''"Those're guns! Whoever heard of guns in a samurai flick!!?"''
12-->-- '''A movie director''', ''Manga/AstroBoy'', "The Invisible Giant" [[note]] Apparently he has never seen ''Film/{{Yojimbo}}'' or ''Film/TheSevenSamurai'', or [[AluminumChristmasTrees read a history book]]. [[/note]]
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14The setting and timeline may seem at first to be TheMiddleAges, [[UsefulNotes/TheThirteenAmericanColonies The Colonial Period]], or some FantasyCounterpartCulture thereof, but when you look closer, you find polyester, robots, or other high-tech toys in between the horse-drawn wagons and wattle-and-daub buildings. There's generally no rhyme or reason for ''which'' technologies are anachronistically present besides the RuleOfCool. Sometimes these may be leftovers from a [[LostTechnology lost technological civilization]], or perhaps it could be that science developed along a different path than ours, allowing for more advanced technology in one field, while stagnating in others, but most of the time there is no explanation whatsoever for the bizarre mix of medieval and futuristic.
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16Schizo Tech is a key component of PunkPunk. It's also the foundation for FantasyGunControl. Compare DecadeDissonance for when one side has all the cool toys. When a story nominally set in a real-life historical period has this problem, you've got yourself some tasty AnachronismStew. It may be because an [[HigherTechSpecies isolated branch of mankind]] created an AdvancedAncientAcropolis. AfterTheEnd is normally a good justification of this; often resulting in ScavengerWorld, especially when you have a faction with LowCultureHighTech.
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18When evaluating a candidate for this trope, try not to confuse anachronisms with non-western-isms. For example, a kimono can be just as modern as a three-piece suit, if not more so. Likewise, do not confuse anachronism for cosmetic purposes with anachronism of technological capability. For example, though you will see lots of ZeppelinsFromAnotherWorld at work in Schizo Tech, UsefulNotes/{{Airships}} themselves are not more or less advanced than airplanes or helicopters, just suited to different situations--namely, ones that value endurance, payload and fuel efficiency over speed and maneuverability. Alternatively, a judge wearing an eighteenth century robe and wig while judging cybercrime cases is not schizo tech, but simply a remnant of the GoodOldWays. And again, [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools Tropes Are Still Not Bad]]. It's also worth noting that in the alternate history of a candidate, the culture and style may simply be different, so while their older architecture may seem to jar with their higher levels of technology, it may be that that style of architecture is just "in" at that time. In dealing with other cultures, also remember that the concept of TechnologyLevels is flawed, and that [[AliensNeverInventedTheWheel real societies are not obliged to all invent the same things in the same order, and may miss some inventions entirely.]]
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20Most comic book universes have this trope as a natural consequence: the wondrous science held by the [[ReedRIchardsIsUseless heroes]] and [[CutLexLuthorACheck villains]] would, if even partially distributed, violate the surprisingly mundane world that divides the superhero genre from outright SpeculativeFiction. Examples and subversions are noted below.
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22This trope has frequently been TruthInTelevision depending on the circumstances, with historical works involving UsefulNotes/WorldWarI and other major events that were technological 'kitchen sink' like affairs (with cavalry charges co-existing with airplane bombing runs) one hundred percent qualifying. Beware: Many sci-fi settings that aren't harder than diamond can become this ''constantly'' if you think about it too hard.
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24Compare AdventureFriendlyWorld, AnachronismStew, CultureChopSuey, SufficientlyAdvancedBambooTechnology, WeaponsKitchenSink, and FantasyKitchenSink. TechnologyLevels is what this trope averts. As well as MedievalEuropeanFantasy, of course. If the old stuff proves as effective as the new stuff, you've also got an ArchaicWeaponForAnAdvancedAge. It may also be the byproduct of a RetroUniverse. Contrast DaysOfFuturePast. [[JustForFun/IThoughtItMeant Not to be confused with]] tech used by schizophrenics.
25
26----
27
28!!Examples
29[[index]]
30* SchizoTech/AnimeAndManga
31* [[SchizoTech/LiveActionFilms Film — Live-Action]]
32* SchizoTech/{{Literature}}
33* SchizoTech/LiveActionTV
34* SchizoTech/TabletopGames
35* SchizoTech/VideoGames
36* SchizoTech/WesternAnimation
37* SchizoTech/RealLife
38[[/index]]
39
40[[foldercontrol]]
41
42[[folder:Asian Animation]]
43* ''Animation/HappyHeroes'': In Season 6, planet Guling is entirely prehistoric in nature, complete with a lack of modern technology... save for the presence of Sad S., Sick S., and Oversensitive S., who are all robots like the main characters.
44[[/folder]]
45
46[[folder:Comic Books]]
47* ''ComicBook/AvatarTheLastAirbenderTheRift'' infamously introduced entirely generic-looking modern forklifts that clash rather jarringly with the setting's otherwise SteamPunk aesthetic.
48* Comic books seem to be JustForFun/{{egregious}} examples of this. Franchise/{{Batman}}'s nemesis Mr. Freeze has invented a freeze-ray; Lex Luthor currently waltzes around in a battlesuit full of crazy power and can probably fly; Firestorm can synthesize any material in any quantity (I'm looking at you, lithium); Thanagarian N-th metal is apparently capable of bestowing flight; Black Lightning is capable of generating mounds and mounds of electrical current, and... well, you get the idea. And yet, citizens of Earth are still using ''gasoline-fuelled cars''. This is usually either justified with the technology either being created by super geniuses and [[MagicPoweredPseudoscience only working for them]], or being in the domain of only aliens, magic-wielders or the very, very rich/military. Or maybe they just don't trust regular people with these wonderful toys -- after all, someone probably ''could'' mass-produce cars fueled by the Power Cosmic, but suppose someone back-engineers them into weapons?
49* ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'':
50** Lampshaded in the first Superman/Batman comic. Alfred is guarding the [[AbsurdlySpaciousSewer sewer entrance]] to the Batcave with a shotgun. Franchise/{{Superman}} remarks on it, telling Batman "You didn't have an extra freeze ray gun you could've given him?"
51** ComicBook/{{Batgirl}} tried to justify it back when she was the crippled hero Oracle. In theory, she could have the use of her legs back instantly with the tech that the JLA and Batman have available. She refuses to use it, however, [[ReedRichardsIsUseless until it is available to everyone]].
52* ComicBook/{{Darkseid}}'s world of Apokolips has space ships, teleportation technology, and many advanced weapons, while making the slaves use wooden pulleys, carts, and hand labor to build ''stone'' castles. Most likely, this is [[CrapsackWorld all intentional]].
53* ''ComicBook/DaysOfFuturePast:'' At one point in the Sentinel run BadFuture, we see a bus being pulled by horses. It helps indicate that everyone's suffering under their rule, not just Mutants.
54* In ''ComicBook/{{Lilith}}'' [[ButterflyOfDoom the alterations to the timeline caused by the protagonist's actions]] eventually start having this effect. Most notably, in the altered timeline Japanese small arms in 1783 were noted to have twice the range of their British equivalents, and a couple pages later it's shown they're breech-loading bolt action guns with rifled barrels, and their munitions are paper cartridges with spitzer bullets.
55* Creator/MarvelComics is guilty of this as well. [[ComicBook/IronMan Stark Industries]] have technology that really should have revolutionized the world by now, SHIELD have jetpacks and interstellar-capable spaceships (technically, SWORD has the spaceships, but whatever), [[Comicbook/XMen Charles Xavier]] has a global surveillance system (mutant only), Henry Pym has his shrinking particles, and of course, ReedRichardsIsUseless.
56** This huge waste of world changing technology is noted as one of Pym's "sins" in Paradise X since Pym could have saved many more lives by adapting his technology to industry or health technology rather than using it to beat up criminals.
57** Even before the ''ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}}'', [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark]] tried letting the U.S. government use some low-powered suits of PoweredArmor a few times. Inevitably, the armor ended up getting used for purposes that were evil or stupid and Tony ended up regretting the decision. That said, the U.S. government has Mandroids, [[note]](one of the above-mentioned evil-and-stupid uses of Stark Tech; have we ever seen the Mandroids used for anything ''good?'')[[/note]] Sentinels, portable energy weapons and all kinds of other ridiculous tech -- none of which they even bother to keep secret! Bizarrely, the general public never seems to question any of this, not even when 50 foot tall killer robots are standing guard at the White House!
58** Latveria is one of the most advanced nations on Earth, but most of the landscape ''looks'' quaint and medieval--because Doctor Doom ''likes'' the quaint medieval look.
59** Wakanda, home of the ComicBook/BlackPanther, goes even beyond Latveria in some versions. Someone might stumble on what looks like a harmless and primitive--at best Bronze Age--African village on the edge of the country and mistake it for an easy target only to discover the apparently decorative stone statues are shooting plasma bolts, armed flying drones are being launched from a wooden hut, and the spears those loincloth-wearing warriors are tossing? Rocket-boosted self-guided smart missiles with high explosive armour-piercing warheads. And in the late 2010s, it turns out that Wakanda has an interstellar empire on top of everything else.
60** Minor villain/heroic ally Arkon and his city Polemachus would count. Arkon is loincloth-wearing, sword-wielding barbarian who rides giant lizards, but carries thunderbolt-shaped energy spears that can open dimensional portals and be hurled for powerful energy bursts. The city he rules, Polemachus, is something out of a Frank Frazetta/Roger Dean album cover with such weirdtech as mind-controlling machines, but they somehow never develop atomic power (Arkon had to kidnap and brainwash Earth scientists to get the secret of developing nukes. The SchizoTech elements get furthered as Arkon often goes raiding Earth and other dimensions for the opportunity to steal what technology Polemachus doesn't have, and his people have a highly developed use of sorcery and magic besides their own native science.
61* Schizotech shows ups in the comic series ''Neozoic''. The comic is set in a contemporary Earth of an alternate history where the extinction of the dinosaurs never happened. Humans use animal-drawn wagons and large sailboats for travel and trade purposes. They also make extensive use of swords, longbows and crossbows (a heavy rifle does appear, ONCE! And it jammed without firing a single shot too). However they have television and camcorders as well as other electronics. Stockades using electrified fencing have also been shown. The main character of the story also carries a unique wrist-mounted acid sprayer that she uses with devastating effect.
62* ''ComicBook/NikolaiDante'' features this as part of its aesthetic. Swords and axes still have their place on the battlefield alongside highly advanced rifles with BottomlessMagazines, hover tanks, and gargantuan flying palaces bristling with [[{{BFG}} gargantuan fusion cannons]].
63* Nävis, the protagonist of the French comic series ''ComicBook/{{Sillage}}'', lives in a treehouse inside a sort of biosphere spaceship, presumably because she grew up in a jungle and likes her home feeling close to nature.
64* Lampshaded in ComicBook/{{Starman}}, when Jack Knight tells his father that when he invented an unlimited, clean source of power in the 1940s, he should have used it to make cosmic-powered cars instead of flying around fighting crime. Jack's father actually goes on to construct a cosmic power plant big enough to power the entire county, which hasn't been seen since in the DCU.
65* Though ''Franchise/StarWars'' is already slightly Schizo Tech because of a monastic order of sword-wielding monks in a highly advanced futuristic society, many of the comic books in the Expanded Universe that detail events that take place thousands of years before the movie have people wielding conventional swords and spears and bows and arrows alongside blasters, starships, and laser weaponry, such as the ''Jedi vs Sith'' comics having the Battle of Ruusan being fought by Jedi that use lightsabers, blasters, and ships alongside spears, swords, shields, bows, and other medieval-era weapons, while the Sith do the same thing. One Sith [[{{Mooks}} Mook]] in the same comic even uses a ''slingshot.''
66* ''Franchise/{{Superman}}'': Pre-[[ComicBook/CrisisOnInfiniteEarths Crisis]] Krypton had all manner of advanced tech, with the single, sometimes-lampshaded exception of a ''space program.'' Krypton only started developing space flight within a single generation before its destruction, and largely abandoned it after a catastrophe destroyed one of their moons (oops! This is what got Jax-Ur exiled to the PhantomZone). But the reason for this lack of space tech is simple: In Pre-Crisis days, Krypton was freaking ''huge,'' with monstrous gravity that any rocket would have to fight. The breakthrough that finally allowed them to have spaceflight at all was Jor-El's invention of ''antigravity.'' All this meant that Jor-El was never able to build the evacuation fleet he wanted, and only had one little home-made rocket for baby Kal-El.
67** This mostly just justifies why the Kryptonians didn't travel the galaxy as Supermen once they escaped the light of their red sun. In theory, if they had gotten far enough away, they could simply continue travelling without the need for spaceships.
68** Post-Crisis stories like ''ComicBook/TheThirdKryptonian'' often explain this as a cultural shift; Kryptonians did at some point attempt to develop space travel, and even had a short-lived intergalactic colonial empire, but abandoned it as the people became more xenophobic. The same was true of on of their colonies, Daxam. In both cases the influence of a device intended to preserve Kryptonian cultural purity messing with their genetics was used to provide an explanation. The reason Jor-El and Zor-El could conceive of a way to leave Krypton was because their house originally ''built'' said device and they knew how to undo its effects.
69* ''ComicBook/TheTriganEmpire'' has supersonic planes, HoverTank and heat guns (a hybrid projectile/energy weapon) that wouldn't be out of place from ComicStrip/BuckRogers, but due to tradition - the Trigan Empire (which was initially made mostly from the BarbarianHero Vorg tribe plus refugees of the highly advanced Tharv people) - they also use AncientGrome technology like horse-drawn carts, cavalry, spatha short swords and spears. While there are other advanced civilizations, there are also people who are at Stone Age tech level and anywhere between.
70* ''ComicBook/TwoThousandAD'' strip ''ComicBook/NemesisTheWarlock'', intergalactic spacecraft, HumongousMecha and swords and battle axes.
71* In ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'', Dr. Manhattan and others actually invent a ton of things that change the world. Cars are now electric, eliminating the need for gasoline powered vehicles, and among other things Rorschach's constantly shifting mask is an invention of Dr. Manhattan's designed originally as just an ornate dress.
72* Tech level in ''ComicBook/WhiteSand'' is pretty hard to nail down. On one hand, Darksiders have flintlocks and dynamite, while Daysiders seem to be more on spears-and-swords level of technology - yet there's something akin to a radio or DVD player visible behind Kenton in one panel.
73* In ''Franchise/WonderWoman'', Paradise Island is an interesting case. In [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Pre-]]ComicBook/{{Crisis|OnInfiniteEarths}}, despite a [[SufficientlyAdvancedBambooTechnology love of ancient Greek aesthetics]], the Amazons had both magic ''and'' advanced technology -- for instance, they built the [[HealingShiv Purple Healing Ray]] and the [[CoolPlane Invisible Jet]]. Since they had a magic scrying device that let them observe developments on the outside world at will, and they were a scholarly culture with nothing but time on their hands to invent things, [[JustifiedTrope this actually makes perfect sense.]] However, [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 Post-Crisis]], this was [[ViewersAreMorons deemed confusing,]] and the Amazons were cast solidly back into the Bronze Age.
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder:Comic Strips]]
77* ''ComicStrip/BeetleBailey'''s been going since TheFifties and the Korean War, so Beetle and his unit wear Korea-era uniforms, drive Jeeps, and use old-fashioned rifles. In more recent strips, there are computers, microphone headsets, modern-style golf, and other modern technology, but the 50s tech has never gone away.
78* ''ComicStrip/FlashGordon'' joyously lives on this trope. [[PlanetaryRomance Mongo]] has swords and rayguns and riding beasts and rocket ships and [[RuleOfCool anything that would be cool]].
79[[/folder]]
80
81[[folder:Fan Works]]
82* In ''FanFic/WorldwarWarOfEquals'', Humans are actually surprised that the aliens have tanks, aircraft, and technology that are somewhat weaker than theirs but yet they have starships and have cold sleep tech.
83* ''FanFic/SonicXDarkChaos'': Technology is all over the place, depending on the planet and aliens involved. The Demons (minus Astorath and the Nephilim) and Angels are consistently portrayed as SufficientlyAdvancedAliens, but the Jewish forces range from [[FuturePrimitive flying pieces of welded scrap with machine guns]] to [[YouCannotGraspTheTrueForm secret tech so advanced that it cannot be physically understood]]. Some races that Sonic and his friends encounter have little to no technology at all, using old wooden sailing ships (the Zeko natives) or straight up satanic BlackMagic (the Marmolims). The Muslims may be the king of this trope, combining fanatical spearmen and suicide bombers with golden nuke-flinging battleships and BodyHorror-filled genetic engineering. It helps that its a totalitarian theocracy that considers many common pieces of technology to be ''haraam''.
84* ''FanFic/ShieldedUnderTheRaptorsWings'': [[Series/BabylonFive The Earth Alliance's case]] is {{Lampshaded}} when a ground battle between [=EarthForce=] and the Minbari is shown and the list of human weapons include both 'primitive' but effective firearms and [[DeadlyGas mustard gas]] and more advanced [=PPGs=], [[EnergyWeapon laser cannons]] to shoot enemy aircrafts and artillery shells out of the sky, and railguns.
85* The ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'', in the city of Ankh-Morpork as seen by the visiting Californians in crossover fic with ''Series/TheBigBangTheory'', ''Fanfic/TheManyWorldsInterpretation''. It has a supercomputer (HEX) way in advance of anything on Earth but no electricity, TV, petrol engines... meanwhile visiting Discworlders in Pasadena/Los Angeles find technological sophistication - but no awareness of magic. The visiting Assassin realises how reliance on machinery to do the work has rendered the people largely less muscular and physically able than on her own world.
86* C'hou is loaded with this in ''Fanfic/TheKeysStandAlone: The Soft World'', as the G'heddi'onians use both magic and technology, and the outworlders have brought in a huge variety of stuff.
87** The four immediately note the wide variety of styles and materials used in clothing stores, and how unlikely it would be for everything to be produced locally. When George asks a salesperson where all the stuff comes from, the woman handwaves it by saying that “The gods lined up various suppliers.”
88** Ringo notes that the civilians of the Guardians-run Central City are essentially peasants who sell heavy ordnance from what look like fruit stands and ox carts.
89** The G'heddi'onians are divided into the urbanized “Urb Geddies” and the Luddite “Nat Geddies,” who eschew both technology and most magic. However, the Urb Geddies use both happily, though at least one (Lotisa) was very startled by John's [[TouchTelepathy touch-telepathy]] because she “grew up with tech.”
90* In ''Fanfic/IncompatibleSystem'', one of the main reasons humanity initially assumed that the Mass Relay had to be meant as a bomb was that any real research into the properties of planium would inevitably lead to WIMP theory, which would both let you realize how horrifically dangerous planium is and let you do anything planium can do (other than make stupidly big explosions) much more effectively and safely. So the only way a species could end up using planium for non-destructive purposes would be if they were given planium-based tech as a BlackBox from some other race, and then never did more than the most cursory research into what it was or how it worked.
91* ''Fanfic/NotTheIntendedUseZantetsukenReverse'':
92** Hector made an electric chair during what appears to be somewhere in the 1300's or earlier, and he also made a foot-powered generator (think a bicycle) to power it.
93** In the same era, Isaac was the proud owner of, and we quote: "anachronistic laser cannon".
94** The Belmont family had arguments over whether or not they should install an elevator in their house during the Renaincance.
95[[/folder]]
96
97[[folder:Film -- Animated]]
98* ''WesternAnimation/DragonHill'' is mostly set in a medieval setting, with a character trying to improve technological advance (such as the use of television); in the end, it turns out that [[spoiler:dragons have developed a ''supercomputer'']].
99* ''WesternAnimation/TheEmperorsNewGroove'' is largely set in an ancient Incan kingdom, although a floor waxer inexplicably appears for a one-shot gag.
100%%* ''WesternAnimation/HeavyMetal'' and ''WesternAnimation/HeavyMetal2000'': Features rather heavily.
101* ''Franchise/HowToTrainYourDragon'' is apparently set in TheLowMiddleAges, but due to SerialEscalation more and more advanced tech shows up:
102** [[WesternAnimation/HowToTrainYourDragon The first movie]] has [[https://howtotrainyourdragon.fandom.com/wiki/The_Mangler the Mangler]] - essentially a humongous shnapper[[labelnote:note]]An arbalet with a barrel to shoot bullets instead of arrows[[/labelnote]] that shoots bolas.
103** ''WesternAnimation/DragonsRidersOfBerk'': Hiccup creates a [[https://howtotrainyourdragon.fandom.com/wiki/Hiccup%27s_Shield shield-bow-harpoon]], a [[https://howtotrainyourdragon.fandom.com/wiki/Inferno flaming sword]], a [[https://howtotrainyourdragon.fandom.com/wiki/Hiccup%27s_Flightsuit flight suit]] and some diving equipment including a helmet. Also there are a lot of arbalets (while there was not even a simple bow in the movie) and Dagur's mooks wear helmets that look like great helms from TheHighMiddleAges.
104** ''WesternAnimation/HowToTrainYourDragon2'': There are [[https://howtotrainyourdragon.fandom.com/wiki/Drago%27s_Traps very complicated traps]] and some things on Berk like giant metal gates for the dragon stables.
105** ''WesternAnimation/HowToTrainYourDragonTheHiddenWorld'': While the Berkians' equipment becomes more and more advanced to the point of gas grenades, the antagonists have a [[https://howtotrainyourdragon.fandom.com/wiki/Grimmel%27s_Airship dragon-propelled quadrocopter]].
106* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyANewGeneration'': ''Friendship is Magic'' tends to rely mainly on the ponies using steampunk or non-electronic technologies. However, the centuries that passed between the series and the movie have seen considerable, but uneven, advances. The biggest business in Maretime Bay is [=CanterLogic=], an electronics company similar to Apple. Meanwhile, giant plasma screens adorn the walls of buildings in Zephyr Heights and nearly every pegasus owns smartphones. However, in Bridlewood, the unicorns still rely on the steampunk hoof-cranked or even literally HamsterWheelPower tech.
107* ''WesternAnimation/Nimona2023'': The film's world is initially presented as a classic fairytale kingdom with princesses and knights, but it also has more contemporary and futuristic elements such as lasers, flying vehicles, holographic displays, television sets, and wireless headphones.
108[[/folder]]
109
110[[folder:Interactive Fiction]]
111* VideoGame/{{Zork}} contains mostly World War 2ish-era technology that is augmented by magic, some of which uses devices that strike accord with pre-industrial paradigms.
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Magazines]]
115* ''Magazine/{{Analog}}'': One very representative example is a short story in an issue of ''Analog'', in which the most advanced two species in the universe can use black holes as a source of energy and have more {{Wave Motion Gun}}s than you can imagine, but are surprised and, for one of the two species (both flew around in gigantic spaceships), destroyed by a lucky shot from a device consisting of a long tube, a titanium coated projectile, and an explosive, i.e., a gun. Apparently, [[HumansAreBastards only humans are brutish enough]] to come up with the idea.
116[[/folder]]
117
118[[folder:Music Videos]]
119* Music/{{Muse}}'s ''Music/KnightsOfCydonia''. [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knights_of_Cydonia#Music_video A thematic smorgasbord: a spaghetti western film with post-apocalyptic influence, livened with the occasional kung-fu cowboy or metal-clad maiden astride a unicorn.]]
120* In Music/AdamAnt's video for "Stand and Delver", supposedly set in 18th century England one of the "dandy highwayman's" victims is listening to a Walkman.
121* In Music/OfMonstersAndMen's music video for "King and Lionheart", the airships and war machines don't seem too out of place in the fantasy setting, but the stone temple [[spoiler:that launches into the air like a spacecraft]] comes as a surprise.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Podcasts]]
125* ''Podcast/TheAdventureZoneBalance'': Magic can explain its use to some extent, but the setting is ''somewhat'' medieval but includes elevators, steam trains, spacecraft, powerful computers, and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking styrofoam]]. And despite all that, apparently a safe method of curdling milk to make cheese hasn't been discovered at the beginning of the game.
126[[/folder]]
127
128[[folder:Pinball]]
129* In ''Pinball/TheFlintstones,'' not only does Fred invent concrete several million years early, there's the Dictabird, the Bronto Crane, and a push mower with a giant lobster on the front.
130[[/folder]]
131
132[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
133* The L.O.U.I.S. Wrestling board communicated with partner enterprises like Wrestling/{{CZW}} and their own appointed officials like Sozio by telegraph. In 2012, when fax machines, email and cell phones were not only common place, but in most cases much cheaper. When the company itself relied on social networking services like Facebook and video streaming sites like Youtube to promote their product. This mostly went without comment but their first singles champion, Sienna Duvall, didn't even know what a telegraph was.[[/folder]]
134
135[[folder:Role-Playing Games]]
136* ''Roleplay/DinoAttackRPG'': The entire LEGO Universe. We have knights and pirates shooting crossbows and flintlock pistols alongside astronauts and cyborgs shooting lasers and sonic weapons as all sorts of technology levels coexist in this world. The Space Knights are a specific example, since their entire culture is based on MedievalStasis enhanced by futuristic technology.
137[[/folder]]
138
139[[folder:Toys]]
140* ''Toys/{{Bionicle}}'' has this in spades, as the series revolved around advanced, artificial semi-MechanicalLifeforms who used to live inside a [[HumongousMecha space-faring giant robot]] before it crashed on a planet, forcing them to evacuate and live under primitive, tribal conditions in huts and shacks on a tropical island.
141** In its first three sagas, only the six Turaga elders, the translator Matoro and [[BigBad Makuta]] were aware of their origin. The rest of the islanders, having lost their memories, lived in a world mixing BambooTechnology with various engines powered by water, steam, [[PowerCrystal crystals]] or the remnants of [[LostTechnology forgotten, ancient tech]]. Nuparu the engineer used advanced power tools to repair things, while combat was done by throwing bamboo disks, rocks or [[EdibleAmmunition volatile fruit]] at the enemy. Only by examining and taking apart fully robotic creatures like the Bohrok were they able to invent high-tech PoweredArmor, but their battle tactics still boiled down to hitting and punching.
142** In the expanded universe inside the crashed robot, full of futuristic tech, certain places like Zakaz were still stuck in medieval conditions due to constant wars that halted progress. The island Xia meanwhile was a polluted industrial complex despite loads of clean energy being available. While {{Teleportation}} and advanced chute systems connecting islands existed, most travel was still done with primitive boats. In the literal capital city Metru Nui (located in the robot's head) large projector screens and all manner of flying or floating craft were commonplace, some people even owned handheld, touch-screen devices, yet carving text into stone was the accepted form of communication and robots were built using [[ClockworkCreature clockwork systems]].
143** One of the main "rules" introduced by franchise co-creator Bob Thompson was the lack of wheeled craft. Some actual living animals had wheels or tank treads in place of feet and almost every character had some sort of gear mechanism inside, but carts and vehicles all walked on insect-legs. When the ancient guardian Umbra is introduced, with [[RollerBladeGood wheels on his feet]], other characters are taken aback at the concept of using leg-mounted gears for travel. Later on, Antroz is shown owning a genuine motorcycle with wheels, allegedly the only one in its universe.
144** When doing tasks left by the [[{{Precursors}} ancient Great Beings]], the Toa Nuva are utterly confused at the strange material their to-do list is written on, which none of them have ever seen before. What is that substance? ''Paper''.
145---> Pohatu: “Why use this when there are perfectly good rocks everywhere you look?”
146** Long-distance communication devices are practically nonexistent, despite the technological advancement in almost all other areas. Messages between lands are carried by people, flying animals or via a PsychicLink. This leads to situations like Makuta cutting off Metru Nui from the universe simply by blocking seaways or entire lands like Karzahni sinking into legend after people stopped going there. [[TheAlcatraz The Pit]] is a stranger example. It's a top security prison mostly guarded by highly advanced robots, yet when it got breached, its prisoners escaped and its one living jailer got killed during the Great Cataclysm, the place's owners didn't notice this for over a thousand years because no one could contact them.
147[[/folder]]
148
149[[folder:Web Animation]]
150* ''WebAnimation/{{Audience}}'' They have a feudalistic monarchy complete with peasants and castles in one location and space traveling robot engineers in the next. Not to mention magic.
151* ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'': Remnant is a world where fantasy monster-slayers and sword-wielding nobility co-exist with portable music players and tablets with holographic displays. At least one country has developed humanoid combat robots, tiltjet aircraft and [[spoiler:a HumongousMecha]]. It's mentioned that, even though Remnant's level of technology is far beyond that of our world, they have never developed a space program because [[{{Unobtainium}} Dust]] doesn't work the moment it leaves the planet, and the people of Remnant have never bothered to look for an alternative fuel source. While they have an Internet on Remnant, it's not based on satellites and instead is based on four massive terrestrial communications towers. This eventually bites everyone in the ass: [[spoiler:when one of these towers is knocked out in the finale of Volume 3, the resulting communications blackout combined with the last images being relayed from Vale being those of Beacon's Huntresses inflicting grave harm on their fellows and Atlesian robots attacking innocent people, it's enough to discredit both Beacon and Atlas in one swoop and drive the Kingdoms to the brink of war. [[AllAccordingToPlan Just as Cinder planned]]. During Volume 7, General James Ironwood comes up with a plan to restore communications and warn the world about Cinder's boss [[BigBad Salem]]. However, he abandons this plan and turns against the heroes before it can be completed and forces them to finish it in Volume 8.]]
152[[/folder]]
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154[[folder:Web Comics]]
155* ''Webcomic/{{Aecast}}'': The setting looks like somewhere in medieval [[MysticalIndia India]] or [[ArabianNightsDays the Middle East]], yet humanity clearly has access to things like teleporters, holograms, and proximity sensors.
156* ''Webcomic/BladeOfToshubi'': While the setting is mainly feudal Japanese, there have been instances of higher level technology, such as Reiko's training taking place in a chamber with ''nuclear waste barrels.''
157* The world of ''Webcomic/BlondeSunrise'' is a downplayed example. Creston and its surrounding environs have a tech level mostly comparable to the modern day, but they appear to lack computers or the Internet, and melee weapons are used alongside modern firearms by hunters.
158* ''Webcomic/BrunoTheBandit'' is set in a basic "middle ages" fantasy setting, but still has vacuum cleaners, television (complete with every TV trope in the book) and cellphones. The author Creator/IanMcDonald [[WordOfGod has said]] he originally intended the Schizo Tech to be the main source of humour in the comic, but soon realised it couldn't carry jokes by itself and it was left as TheArtifact. There are still occasional gags such as their version of Youtube being called "[[YeOldeButcheredeEnglishe Thoutube]]".
159* ''Webcomic/CucumberQuest'': [[WordOfGod "Well, the people of Dreamside have television, electric lighting and space travel, but they're still fighting with swords. I probably decided on this because I've always liked cartoons and comics that blend old-timey fantasy stuff with modern technology for the sake of humor or whimsy or whatever."]]
160* ''Webcomic/CwynhildsLoom'': The small mining settlement of Prosperity resembles a Wild West town in look and feel, however robots, aircraft, high-speed maglev trains and powered land vehicles are all seen.
161* ''[[Webcomic/DanAndMabsFurryAdventures DMFA]]'' has everyone using swords yet guns also apparently exist. Modern appliances and things like video games exist but the only known transportation is gryphon drawn carts. Also Giant Robots. Granted most of the tech is credited to be invented by the same character and some, like the guns, aren't in the hands of the general public and magical versions seemed to be the standard until recently
162** [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] by the world description, which states that it's not uncommon for 21st century cities to exist a short walk away from medieval villages in Furrae.
163** With the world dominated by magic creatures with scrying orbs, teleportation, and pocket dimensions; it never occured to Dragon Lord Hizell that Cyra was [[spoiler:hiding on a '''space station'''.]]
164* ''Webcomic/DemonsMirror'' has swords, cyborgs, and carriages pulled by robots.
165* ''Webcomic/DominicDeegan'', set in a medieval-type world of magic, has plenty of modern-day luxuries. Casting a lighting bolt onto a guitar will make it an "electric guitar", a voice-amplifying spell on a crystal turns it into a microphone ... yeah, they had a full-fledged rock concert. They also have newspapers. And comic-book superheroes.
166* In ''Webcomic/{{Endstone}}'', [[http://endstone.net/2011/01/19/5-02/ Rosie's Beauty Salon and Blacksmith]] is perhaps the clearest example of how this is a SwordAndSorcery United States of America.
167* ''Webcomic/TheFourth'' is mostly a Zelda-esque fantasy world, but the authors are not afraid to throw in a Victorian-era haunted house, or phone when the plot beckons.
168* ''Webcomic/{{Gaia}}'': what starts out looking like a standard Renaissance-stasis swords-and-sorcery fantasy setting is soon revealed to have most of the trappings of a modern industrial society, like spiral-bound notebooks, electricity, and modern clothes and fabrics. We later see a HiddenElfVillage that displays a science-fiction level of {{MagiTek}}, which may explain why a society that can produce indoor plumbing, fountain pens, light bulbs, zippers and brassieres can't also make firearms, telephones or automobiles.
169* ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'' has numerous instances of technological disconnects, mainly because {{mad scientist}}s have specialized talents and are more inclined to fight each other than to build something profitable. They have autonomous robots with advanced AI but no computers. Airships the size of cities cruise the skies, but no fixed or rotary wing aircraft. Energy weapons abound but no radio or telephonic communications. Probably because lighter-than-air crafts rarely crash on their own. For that matter, instead of parachutes they have "lifegliders"--hang-gliders looking like a [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20040526 bastard child of blimp and bat]].
170** Prototypes are more advanced than mass-produced stuff, though. Gilgamesh Wulfenbach actually does invent a gas powered fixed-wing aircraft early in the comic archive (HilarityEnsues). The chapter is aptly called "[[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20030620 The Infamous Falling Machine!]]". There's a [[strike:jetpack]] [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20110110 jetsuit]]--Mk II, ''of course'' ("dangerous, but amusing"). Castle Heterodyne has a holographic map updated in real time. The Master of Paris built a city-wide telepresence system, and keeps the Autonomous Library, based on a scribing engine made by Voltaire.
171* ''Webcomic/GuildedAge'': When the Champions are attacked by the corrupting beast, several of the Peacemakers have just tracked it to them. They find themselves up on a cliff overlooking Penk and Magda's attempts to fight it. Sundar is all for leaving them for it, but everyone else insists on intervening. Even Frigg points out that no one deserves that fate.
172* In ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'' we see the warring kingdoms, who both have lots of crazy gadgets like flying warships, giant mechas, and high-tech facilities for genetic manipulation. However, right next to a squad of soldiers wielding assault rifles, we see soldiers wielding swords and ''bows''.
173** [[TimeAbyss Doc Scratch]] uses a ''typewriter'' to communicate with the trolls' ''instant messenger client'' through a time gap of almost a thousand years.
174** There is also ancient Alternia, which features sailing ships, swords, bows, cybernetics, and interstellar travel. Modern Alternia, meanwhile, has mastered robotics and biotechnology, but has yet to invent the airplane.
175* In ''Webcomic/{{Inhuman}}'', the technology level of the planet Hekshano is that of 1970s Earth - but with spaceships.
176* ''Webcomic/MegaTokyo'' appears to take place in a normal analog of the modern world. Except when the Tokyo PD breaks out the giant mecha.
177* ''{{Webcomic/Sarilho}}'': some people use regular guns and there's these guys with [[RayGun Microwave Guns]].
178* ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'' is set in a MedievalEuropeanFantasy setting much like a typical campaign setting for ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons''. However, in various strips it has featured coffee machines, indoor plumbing, stethoscopes, bug zappers, cell phones, and even a desktop computer (the last one was admittedly owned by an angel). The TechnologyLevels appears to be [[RuleOfFunny whatever inspires the best jokes]].
179** V [[LampshadeHanging calls the strip out on it]] once:
180--->'''V:''' I'm simply saying that the architectural motifs here in Cliffport are inconsistent with the medieval time period... I grasp the premise that [[{{Magitek}} any sufficiently advanced--and in particular, reliable--magic would be indistinguishable from technology]], I merely find the implementation here haphazard, at best.\
181'''Durkon:''' Meh. It could be worse, ye know.... [[TabletopGame/{{Eberron}} They could have magic trains]].
182** In a later strip, Redcloak mentions that magical, lightning-powered trains actually do exist in the OOTS-verse (and complains that he's the one who has to [[RepressiveButEfficient make sure they run on time]]).
183* The Tieke from ''Webcomic/ProphecyOfTheCircle'' possess a number of hi-tech devices which were granted to them by a being known as Teyka, along with the means of replicating them. In all other aspects, their own technology is early iron age at best.
184* ''Webcomic/QuestionableContent'' is set in PresentDay western Massachusetts, but features sentient robots sold at retail, various Transformer-style mecha (Vespa-Bot FTW), and a major character spent her childhood on a space station. This seems to go forgotten for large stretches of time.
185** [[WebcomicTime Also note that every indie pop and post-rock album since 2003 seems to have come out within a span of under two years]].
186** And in early 2010, TheSingularity occurred; apart from the existence of strong AI (which is only even commented on once), everything seems to be the same as it was before.
187* In ''Webcomic/TheRifters'', modern combat fatigues and plate armor are worn by two different main characters, and no one thinks this odd. Then again, the other main characters are wearing modern clothes, a martial arts gi, or no shirt at all.
188* ''Webcomic/RustyAndCo'': Electric guitars and soda machines accompany your traditional fantasy fare.
189* ''Webcomic/SleeplessDomain'': The City's technology seems to be at an unspecified point behind the real-world present day -- they have a tram system but no cars, personal computers don't seem to exist, and characters call each other on corded landline phones. The most advanced technology seen in the setting are the {{magitek}} items produced by a magical girl named Techno Blitz with her powers, including a SurveillanceDrone and a [[ArtificialLimbs prosthetic arm]].
190* ''WebComic/StandStillStaySilent'': The AfterTheEnd setting has this. For starters, the five nations of the Known World have lost their infrastructure to different extents. Mechanical vehicles are still around, but have become very expensive to use and maintain compared to horse-drawn carriages, thus making their use mostly military. Those that ''do'' exist are however more advanced than in present times. An Icelandic genetics program intended to boost the country's immunity rate hints that they at the very least have sperm and ovum preservation, as well as artificial insemination equipment up and running. By contrast, a Swedish character, whose country is just getting around having public radio again and has a few trains built specifically to go through PlagueZombie territory, genuinely believed that Finland didn't have electricity at all (they do, "but not very much" according to an actual Finn).
191* ''Webcomic/StarslipCrisis''' ShowWithinAShow ''Concrete Jungle'' (supposedly an [[FutureImperfect accurate portrayal]] of the early 21st century) has, well, [[http://starslip.com/2008/10/20/starslip-number-895/ just look at it]].
192* ''Webcomic/{{Tellurion}}'', for the most part, takes place in something like an Iron-Age Caribbean adventurer's fantasy world. That is, if you look past the fact that the [[AlienSky sun and moon are giant mechanical apparatuses]], and one of the Heroes is a [[RobotBuddy robot]].
193* In ''Webcomic/TwoKinds'', a character orders a pizza. This seemingly innocuous act soon becomes FridgeLogic when one realizes that the setting doesn't have the communications, rapid non-magical transport, or agricultural tech for food delivery, being just into Iron Age. Could just be [[RuleOfFunny a throwaway joke]] by way of anachronism.
194* The [[http://vigil.crimsonflagcomic.com/comic.php?comicID=23 medical terminology]] in ''Webcomic/{{Vigil}}'' is a couple centuries more advanced than anything else they have. The flintlocks at least are explained by an [[FantasyGunControl international ban on all guns]].
195* The Clan of the Hawk in ''Webcomic/TheWanderingOnes'' eschew most forms of technology, preferring to live as part of the land. However, their allies in the Alliance and the Yakama Nation are under no such restrictions, and [[TankGoodness embrace]] [[HoverTank more]] [[EnergyWeapon advanced]] [[InstantAwesomeJustAddMecha technology]].
196* ''Webcomic/TheWayOfTheMetagamer'' is set in the Medieval time period of ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons''. There are skyscrapers in towns. With ''elevators''.
197[[/folder]]
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199[[folder:Web Original]]
200* In ''WebVideo/AtopTheFourthWall'', Linkara lives in a typical 21st century home. He also has a RobotBuddy, working tricorders, sonic screwdrivers, cybermats, and power morphers. He also has a spaceship so advanced that sometimes the government asks HIM to check things out. Most of the devices are actually replicas he's made work via magic, while the ship was taken from an interdimensional villain. His other tech is provided by a MadScientist version of himself from a AlternateUniverse. His trademark weapon, the Magic Gun, takes the cake as it closely resembles a flintlock but fires lasers.
201* ''Script/C0DA'', written by former ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'' series writer/designer Creator/MichaelKirkbride, takes place in the far distant future of ''TES'' universe. To note some instances of the trope:
202** Refugees from a HighFantasy world have traveled to and settled on a moon. A MechanicalAbomination HumongousMecha terrorizes them. They also have MechaMook "servitors" and there are significant SteamPunk[=/=]ClockPunk technologies. Despite this, armor made from bone and insect chitin is still in use, as are melee weapons like spears and swords.
203** Pulse Plaza, a "Neo-Victorian" version of Times Square being invaded by The Intellective. [[MindScrew It's best just to let the text describe it]]:
204--> ''"More than half of the people have TELEVISION SETS for heads, and these are chasing the others. The TELEVISION SET HEADS are only unified in their strange, replaced heads; otherwise, they are people from all walks of life: businessmer, construction workers, tourists of all stripes and races, vagrants. The speaking TELEVISION SET HEADS are spaced around the panel, each one chasing an uninfected CITIZEN. Their SPEECH BALLOONS are static-laden and jagged at the edges."''
205* ''Toys/EverAfterHigh'' the setting is fantasy fairy tale world mixed with modern day elements. The school is a huge castle / high school, and uses {{magic mirror}}s as TV screens, and students use them as iPads or iPhones.
206* ''Roleplay/FireEmblemOnForums'' has a few examples dotted about the roleplays:
207** ''[[Roleplay/FireEmblemOnForumsWonderfulBlessing Wonderful Blessing]]'': While castles still are the largest buildings and horseback is still a major form of transport, a tram system exists in Ishim, the capital of Midgardia, ''gacha'' games exist on the crystal tablets (which operate as a magical equivalent to a smartphone and a television), while firearms are still being created. And that's not even getting into the oddness of Kaisei, which has a culture and aesthetic influenced by a combination of Generia and the half-remembered dreams of Revivians, who are almost exclusively drawn from {{Otaku}} from modern Japan.
208** ''Solrise Academy'': While Parvain is mentioned to have tech roughly equivalent to the 1930s, the protagonists still prefer to use swords and bows, with firearms absent from the setting. Cars are mentioned and the characters board a bus to ride into the city, but horses are still heavily used in battle. Justified to some extent, as some areas are very rural, with Mordecai in particular coming from a rural area where most of the urban technological advances are uncommon.
209* ''WebVideo/TheMercuryMen'''s story is set in the mid-[[TheSeventies Seventies]]. But the lighting -- and the monsters -- looks like ''Series/TheOuterLimits1963'', Edward's and Grace's outfits look [[TheFifties Fifties]]-ish, and Jack's outfit evokes TheThirties. And it mixes {{Dieselpunk}}, RaygunGothic, Atomic Punk, horror and other genres seamlessly.
210* ''Website/{{Neopets}}'': The world of Neopia is based in a [[http://www.neopets.com/ntimes/index.phtml?section=editorial&issue=527 "pre-industrial period"]], where this trope is dependent on region. There's sticks and stones in Tyrannia, the various {{Fantasy Counterpart Culture}}s have the tech level you'd expect, Moltara is SteamPunk, while Neopia Central is closest to real life but has nothing like computers, cars, or any sort of electronic technology. And orbiting the planet, there's the Virtupets Space Station and moon colony on Kreludor, although they were created by a scientist from outer space.
211* Though mostly sticking to its mid 17th-century flavor, ''Roleplay/OpenBlue'' has the occasional [[KillItWithFire incendiary bullet]] (WWI), Minie-Ball (19th century), and swords coated with ''diamond'' (???) to make cutting easier. This of course, ''does not'' count the myriad of weird things left behind by the {{precursors}}.
212* ''WebVideo/RyanGeorge'''s "The First Guy to Ever" videos take place in a world where many modern things exist, but other things both new and ancient are being created for the first time. For example, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqPdEw1cOho in this video]] restaurants (albeit by the name "food place" as a result of having been invented in a previous video) and ''Yelp'' are both established, but eating eggs is a new idea.
213* ''WebVideo/VaguelyRecallingJoJo'':
214** Jonathan uses a laser blaster (Metal Silver Overdrive) during the 19th century.
215** Straizo uses a pineapple grenade as an attack.
216** Kakyoin carries around a [[Platform/PlayStationPortable PSP]] and [[Platform/NintendoDS DS]] during the 1980s. They both break.
217** Cursed Devo uses a clamshell phone during the 1980s.
218[[/folder]]

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