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14->'''Grandson:''' Grandpa, is this the same story?\
15'''Klaus:''' No, this is a little side-story. I'm using it to break up the main story so you don't get bored.\
16'''Grandson:''' Are ''we'' part of the story?\
17'''Klaus:''' Oh, no. We are a FramingDevice.
18-->-- ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad''
19
20[[PlotThreads Two narrative threads]]--or more--are woven together; two cases are prosecuted, two murders investigated, and so on. This allows a simple narrative structure to feel as if it has more variety. It gives the audience a break from one line and something to do in terms of recalling the events of the alternate line. The two stories may be about similar subjects, or one may be the usual fare (investigations, prosecutions) interleaved with character development that gives a sense of a StoryArc. Crime shows or films often feature parallel stories whose heroes turn out to be WorkingTheSameCase.
21
22Juggling two stories is common enough that writers frequently refer to the "A Story" and the "B Story". [[ThirdLineSomeWaiting Three]] or [[FourLinesAllWaiting more]] is quite a bit less common, at least in purely-episodic or limited-continuity shows.
23
24If the B Story is clearly subservient to the A Story, it will usually be described as the "subplot". A common pattern on many series--sitcoms in particular--is that the same sets of characters will usually be segregated into "main plot" and "subplot" every week.
25
26In {{arc}}-heavy fare, two or three recurring storylines may be hit along with one or two minor "breather" plotlines all at once. This just means less screen time for each plotline, which mean they all go on for more episodes, which means the viewers keep watching. This is common in Soaps, long-form dramas, and some SciFi series.
27
28If the A Story and B Story aren't juggled simultaneously, but are instead handled separately and tied together with an incredible chain of events, it's HalfwayPlotSwitch. If said chain of events is split over two time periods, it's MeanwhileInTheFuture or FlashbackBPlot. Often uses {{Plot Parallel}}s to set up a DoubleAesop.
29
30A lighter version involves the protagonist's investigation running parallel to something more innocent. While the detective mom investigates the grisly subway killings, her kids investigate the mystery of the missing pizza slice. This allows for a [[EverybodyLaughsEnding freeze-framed laugh]] at the end when it's discovered the [[TheDogWastheMastermind dog did it]].[[note]]Ate the pizza, not butchered the commuters.[[/note]]
31
32For a SoapOpera variation see SoapWheel and FourLinesAllWaiting. Contrast OffstageWaitingRoom. If one of the storylines seems utterly inconsequential compared to the other, you may have a case of TrappedByMountainLions. When a battle is starting in one storyline and the camera switches to another storyline, this is an example of a ChargeIntoCombatCut. See also SimultaneousArcs, when the entirety of one arc is told before the next one gets told, but each one happens at the same time.
33----
34!!Example subpages:
35[[index]]
36* TwoLinesNoWaiting/{{Literature}}
37* TwoLinesNoWaiting/LiveActionTV
38* TwoLinesNoWaiting/WesternAnimation
39[[/index]]
40
41!!Other examples:
42
43[[foldercontrol]]
44
45[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
46* ''Franchise/DotHack''. In ''[[Anime/DotHackSign SIGN]]'', there are a few characters who genuinely stick to a certain group. Sora and BT, Subaru and Silver Knight, and Mimiru and Bear (and later Tsukasa). The episode will shift focus between these groups, with some of the less trustworthy characters linking the stories.
47* ''Manga/AssassinationClassroom'': The main plot line of training and attempting to assassinate Koro-sensei is interwoven with the students dealing with various problems in their school and personal lives. Korosensei himself, aside from the whole "destroy the planet in a year" thing, does not kill or significantly injure anyone, at least onscreen. Other assassins have no such restrictions, so they often take advantage of Korosensei's inability to retaliate by mercilessly abusing his desire to protect his students.
48* The AnimatedAdaptation of ''Manga/AsteroidInLove'''s Ishigaki arc is structured as this. On one hand, Mira [[spoiler:and Ao]] participate at the Shiny Star Challenge on Ishigaki island, while the rest of the Earth Science Club plus its alumni goes to the club's annual summer camp, this time also at Tsukuba.
49* ''Literature/{{Baccano}}'': There are three main stories, each taking place a year apart (1930, 1931, 1932), as well as one in the 1700s. The clips from each of these are then mixed together throughout each episode, and you don't get to see the end of any of them until you finish the series. It's slightly less confusing than it sounds, as the clips usually begin by stating the year in which they occur. Usually. And those aren't even counting the flashbacks.
50* ''Literature/ACertainMagicalIndex'':
51** The novel has Touma, Accelerator, and Shiage having their own crazy adventures in Academy City and later Russia. Volume 1 of "New Testament" is the first time all three of them meet at the same time.
52** Volume 5 of has its first half being about Accelerator meeting and later saving Last Order, at the cost of most of his own power, and the other half being about Touma facing two different Magic side villains in one day, while also trying to finish his homework in time. Volumes 17-19 also does the same, With 17 and 18 being about Touma in Great Britain and 19 being about Accelerator and Hamazura Shiage. And then there are Volumes 20-22, which cover the last day of World War III, with the focus being split between Touma, Shiage and Accelerator.
53* ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'' is widely praised for this. Usually Ed and Al are followed in one plotline while Roy and his troops are followed in the second, but there are also tertiary plotlines about Scar, Winry and others.
54* The fourth and fifth episodes of ''Manga/LaidBackCamp'' (corresponding with chapters six to eight of the manga) sees Rin and the Outdoors Activity Club camping at different locations. They keep in touch by means of text messages and share their experiences with one another.
55* ''Literature/LegendOfTheGalacticHeroes'' switches rapidly between two interplanetary superpowers and how individuals from both interact and how those interactions influence other interactions and so on.
56* The plot in ''Literature/LogHorizon'' eventually split into two stories, with the "A Story" focusing mainly on Shiroe and his dealings with the macro aspects of the setting and the "B Story" focusing on the beginner players and the micro aspects of the setting.
57* Often done in ''Anime/LupinIII''. While a handful of TV episodes across all six series get these plots, the majority go to the [[Anime/LupinIIIYearlySpecials TV movies]] due to their longer running times, where Lupin will be involved with one main heist while another of the main characters will be involved in a secondary B-plot that ultimately coincides with his plans. It's often Fujiko being involved in a scheme of her own, but secondary plots involving figures from Jigen's hitman past, Goemon honing his ImplausibleFencingPowers, or Inspector Zenigata attempting to catch Lupin for good are also common.
58* Manga/{{MAR}}'s anime tried breaking up the War Game (read: TournamentArc) with various filler. The problem is, most of this was right after Snow's kidnapping so it just ended up annoyingly prolonging both the tournament and her rescue.
59* For a good chunk of the series, ''Anime/{{Madlax}}'''s journey through the war in the Southeast-Asian (fictional) country of Gazth-Sonika (and later, bonding with Vanessa) is depicted as its own separate story, alternating with the other protagonist Margaret, accompanied by her maid Eleanor, in her search through the European (also fictional) country of Nafrece for her father and the meaning behind a strange book she has. Connections between the two different protagonists, countries, and plot lines start appearing as the show goes on, but it's not until the ''eighteenth and nineteenth episodes'' (in a 26 episode series) that the four characters finally meet each other and the two plots truly become one. [[spoiler:And then TheReveal is that the two protagonists are a LiteralSplitPersonality.]]
60* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'' has an odd variation of this. It started as one plot, but when Sasuke [[FaceHeelTurn jumps ship]], the plot diverges into two main streams (with a [[ThirdLineSomeWaiting third one]] that's mostly disconnected until recently when they've decided to taper back into one.
61* ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'':
62** The ''Best Wishes'' anime series has done this, with the Team Rocket trio occasionally stopping their usual pursuit of Ash's group and instead operating a long-term mission elsewhere. Their plotline progresses while Ash's does, and eventually the two merge together for a finish.
63** Ash doesn't meet Dawn and Serena right away in the Sinnoh and Kalos arcs respectively. The first few episodes of each partially focus on the start of the girls' journeys.
64* ''Manga/SeigiNoMikata'' is the story of two sisters. The younger, Youko, is constantly tormented by the elder, Makiko, whose actions have been preventing Youko from hooking up with the boy she has a crush on. But then it turns out that ''all'' of Makiko's actions affect those around her in unexpected ways, which we see in detail, and all of which are far more interesting.
65* The first half of ''Anime/TransformersCybertron'' deftly juggled three plot threads at once, varying the focus each one received. The first introduced was the search for the Omega Lock on Earth. After a few episodes, they discovered the location of the first [[PlotCoupon Cyber Planet Key]] on Velocitron, which led to a secondary thread about Hot Shot and Red Alert competing in a series of races to try and win it. Some time later, a third thread was introduced when the second Key was traced to Jungle Planet, and Overhaul was sent to retrieve it from Scourge. Meanwhile, the Omega Lock was found, the race was won, and finally Scourge defeated, leading up to the more linear but still exciting second half of the series.
66* ''Anime/YuGiOh'':
67** An episode from early season 2 goes through this in the form of ADayInTheLimelight episode. The A Story focuses on [[TheRival Kaiba]] learning about his and Yugi's collective pasts in Ancient Egypt, while the B story focuses on [[BreakTheCutie Yugi lamenting about his near-death experience in the previous episode, fearing that he would lose his other self forever]] [[{{Bowdlerise}} (or in the dub, feeling anxious about facing Marik)]].
68** The rest of Season 2 has the A Story being Yugi facing the Rare Hunters and uncovering Marik's plan, while the B Story focuses on Jonouchi coming into his own as a duelist without Yugi's help. The two plots converge when Marik has Jonouchi kidnapped and [[BrainwashedAndCrazy mind-controlled]] to duel Yugi.
69[[/folder]]
70
71[[folder:Comic Books]]
72* ''ComicBook/FiftyTwo'' was an enormous critical and financial success as it utilized at least ''seven'' lines with no waiting. Featuring several different "main" characters, each character had their own plot throughout the series which would occasionally cross over into other characters' plot-lines. These stories ranged from personal, character-driven issues (such as [[ComicBook/ElongatedMan Ralph Dibny's]] personal quest to bring his wife back from the dead) to large-scale, grandiose events (like [[Characters/ShazamBlackMarvelFamily Black Adam]]'s alliance with, and then struggle against, superpowered groups throughout the world), and some were not connected to the other stories in any way (like Comicbook/AnimalMan, [[Characters/TeenTitansStarfire Starfire]], and ComicBook/AdamStrange struggling to get back to Earth from across the galaxy). One of the points credited to ''ComicBook/FiftyTwo'''s success was its ability to make all these unconnected stories mesh together and complement one another, avoiding FourLinesAllWaiting.
73* ''ComicBook/{{Annihilators}}'' follows both a main plot revolving around the titular team, and a side plot about the adventures of Rocket Raccoon and Groot. Its sequel series, ''Annihilators: Earthfall'', follows the same formula.
74* The ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'' storyline "Leaves of Grass" has an A-plot about Batman trying to stop [[{{plant person}} Floronic Man]] from getting everybody in Gotham high on super-marijuana (also [[Characters/BatmanPoisonIvy Poison Ivy]]'s there). The B-plot follows Tim Drake, the current ComicBook/{{Robin}}, as he tries to keep a friend of his from smoking marijuana and dealing with the fallout when his friend doesn't listen.
75* ''ComicBook/{{Infinity}}'' follows both an EnemyMine alliance including the bulk of the Avengers fighting off an invasion by the multidimensional Builders, and the remaining heroes defending Earth and the Infinity Gems from [[Characters/MarvelComicsThanos Thanos]].
76* In ''ComicBook/MightyMorphinPowerRangersShatteredGrid'', the storyline expertly uses both ''ComicBook/MightyMorphinPowerRangersBoomStudios'' and ''Go Go Power Rangers'' to use this trope as ''Mighty Morphin[='=]'' deals with the Rangers dealing with [[BigBad Lord Drakkon]]'s multiversal invasion of Ranger eras and the fallout of [[spoiler:Tommy Oliver's death]] while ''Go Go'' deals with the Rangers of an earlier point in history dealing with [[TheDragon Ranger Slayer]] while learning more of her backstory.
77** Similarly, the ''Unlimited Power'' sequel has ''ComicBook/MightyMorphin2020'' follow the Power Rangers on Earth as they deal with the return of Lord Zedd, while ''ComicBook/PowerRangers2020'' concurrently focuses on the Omega Rangers and their unlikely alliance with Lord Drakkon out in space. Both series provide hints and flashbacks focusing on Zordon's past and how the Empyreals came to be, before culminating in the ''Eltarian War'' crossover.
78* A Finnish comic novel named "OM" did this in a decidedly {{Mind Screw}}y way. The A Story (or at least the one it opened on), being the adventures of the eponymous samurai rabbit, was interrupted abruptly by the B-story of the surreal and {{pun}}ny adventures of "li'l Piggybear". The B-story, in turn, was ostensibly the dreams of one of the characters in the C Story, a real-world relationship drama. The connection (if any) between the stories was never in any adequate way explained, giving the comic an overarching "what the... ?" -kind of feel. Ostensibly, the C Story, which was introduced last, could be seen as the "main" story, but that is all open to interpretation... It could just as well have been AllJustADream of the samurai protagonist who was, if memory serves correctly, mortally wounded at the time.
79* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
80** ''Literature/ShadowsOfTheEmpire: Evolution'': The story follows Guri trying to reprogram away her nature as an assassin, Savan's efforts to take over the Black Sun, the Heroes of Yavin interacting with Savan and becoming suspicious of her manipulations, BountyHunter Kar Yang chasing Guri, and the Pike sisters and their employer trying to to reclaim a medical droid that Guri stole (after they stole it first) for her upcoming operation. The plots overlap some and come together, but the main characters don’t interact much early on.
81** ''ComicBook/VadersQuest'': The plot follows Darth Vader learning that his son is the pilot who destroyed the Death Star and seeking to suppress this knowledge and track Luke down, Luke undertaking his perilous first solo mission for the Rebellion to cash in on his new fame, a BountyHunter who knows Luke’s identity journeying to Coruscant to tell Palpatine, and a jealous Rebel pilot compromising Luke’s identity and location and then trying to make up for it by telling Luke before Vader can come.
82* ''ComicBook/Rorschach2020'' features a localized instance of this in issue #8, which features the detective protagonist interrogating three suspects -- a lawyer, a therapist, and a handyman -- for their interactions with the late Wil Myerson. [[PaintingTheMedium The issue's visual formatting aligns the stories]] by having each interviewee expositing their respective tales with one third of each page ([[ColourCodedForYourConvenience each color-coded either red, blue, or green color washes]]), playing simultaneously and roughly at the same chronological pace.
83[[/folder]]
84
85[[folder:Fan Works]]
86* ''Webcomic/ComicBookSNAFU'' has two plots: one about Hawkeye and Batman battling Hawkeye's ArchEnemy Crossfire and his team of villains, and another about Aki Izayoi and Gajeel Redfox on the run from the 'World Counter-Terrorism Agency'.
87* ''Fanfic/WithStringsAttached'' tells two parallel stories: that of the four and their adventures on a variety of worlds, and that of the Fans who put them in this situation and who are watching/commenting on/empowering/manipulating them. The two lines are semi-separate (the Fans are aware of the four, but not vice-versa) until the end of the Second Movement, when the Fans speak directly to the four for the first time. The threads intersect a few more times in the book but mostly remain separate. There are also several chapters, notably the New Zork chapter, where the four get split up and have individual adventures, or which focus on only one of the four.
88* ''Fanfic/PinkPersonalHellAndAlteringFate'' alternates between an OddCouple story in our world and a SliceOfLife story in [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Ponyville]]. In fact, it's confirmed to be a ShoutOut to ''Literature/HardBoiledWonderlandAndTheEndOfTheWorld'' with different narratives using [[spoiler: the same protagonist and having different narratives. This way, it gives the impression of Nickel Steel mentally reliving the events of his "Pink Personal Hell."]]
89* The third ''FanFic/MyHostageNotYours'' story is split pretty evenly between Zim and Gaz's efforts to conquer Earth, and Dib (and later Tak)'s efforts to stop them.
90* [[http://crystalrobot.deviantart.com/ Crystal Robot's]] ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim'' fanfiction starts off with a simple LoveTriangle plot surrounding Zim, Dib, and Casie [[CousinOliver (Zim's OC sister)]]. The plots split when Dib becomes [[MisterSeahorse pregnant]] by [[HomosexualReproduction Zim]], and Casie becomes the {{Yandere}}. At that point, the major ark revolves around a [[SpotlightStealingSquad bunch of OC's]] ([[MyFriendsAndZoidberg and Gaz]]) trying to defeat [[spoiler: Casie and]] a group of evil {{Doppelganger}}s, while the the ark surrounding Dib's pregnancy and his developing relationship with Zim plays in the background.
91* Fanfic/GuiltySparks is a ''Franchise/{{Halo}}''/''Franchise/MassEffect'' crossover split between the Normandy crew getting involved in the events of ''VideoGame/HaloCombatEvolved'', while a major B plot involves Liara investigating Covenant infiltration of the ''Franchise/MassEffect'' universe.
92* The WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic fan fiction ''Fanfic/OurTrueColors'' uses this technique to simultaneously tell the story of Scootaloo's present and [[spoiler: Pinkie Pie's]] past.
93* The ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheWinterSoldier'' fanfic ''Fanfic/OutOfTheDeadLand'' intertwines the psychological drama of the Winter Soldier/Bucky's identity issues and relationship with Steve with the action/mystery drama of evil robot duplicates attempting to hijack the Avengers' identities, with a lot of thematic overlap between the two.
94* [=RainbowDoubleDash=] describes his work ''[[FanFic/RainbowDoubleDashsLunaverse Magic Tutor]]'' as having an "A" plot (Trixie's attempts to teach the foals of Ponyville magic) and an "E" plot (Twilight beginning her community service), which partway through merge into an AE plot (Twilight helps Trixie with the magic tutoring).
95* [[FanFic/DeathBecomesYou Zootopia: Death Becomes You]]: The story uses this device as its sole plot mechanic to flash back and forth between past and present timelines while throwing in a healthy dose of random timeline events to shake things up. This helps keep some light-heartedness intact within the story while still building the tension and suspense that leads up to the grim circumstances we find WesternAnimation/{{Zootopia}} at the end of chapter 1. It utilizes this style well to hold back on important plot twists and reveals until just the right moment in the story where it makes the most impact on both timelines.
96* ''Blog/ThePredespairKids'': There are a lot of story arcs going on at the same time, ranging from personal quests to investigations to just people goofing around. While there are times where they can feel like [[ThreeLinesSomeWaiting three]] or [[FourLinesAllWaiting four lines]], or just [[AbortedArc end abruptly]] [[note]] It really depends on whether or not the askers themselves continue their story lines or if the blog's ask box decides to be uncooperative[[/note]], the author, Mod J, is fortunately pretty good about keeping things moving and answering questions at the same time without everything devolving into a KudzuPlot.
97* ''Fanfic/ChildOfTheStorm'' does this during the ''Bloody Hell'' arc of the sequel, ''Ghosts of the Past''. It is evenly split between this verse's take on the ''[[Literature/TheDresdenFiles Dresden Files]]'' book ''Literature/DeadBeat'' (which sees [[TheStarscream Voldemort,]] [[TheAgeless Selene]], [[ReformedButNotTamed Magneto]] and [[BarrierMaiden Wanda Maximoff]] getting involved in the fight for control of [[GodhoodSeeker the]] [[PhysicalGod Darkhallow]]), and another plot line focused on Harry and a group of allies trying to stop Dracula and his Grey Court from [[spoiler: ritually draining Carol's blood]] in order to [[spoiler: become immune to sunlight]].
98* The WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic fan comic ''Webcomic/AgeInappropriate'' has two plots. One follows Spike's actions and the other one revolves around Luna trying to keep Twilight "busy".
99* ''Fanfic/OfState'', a {{Crossover}} between ''WesternAnimation/HowToTrainYourDragon'' and ''WesternAnimation/{{Frozen|2013}}'', alternates between telling two different stories that are happening simultaneously. Most of the chapters are split in half, with one half focusing on characters from HTTYD and the other half focusing on ''Frozen'''s characters:
100** Plot A is a dramatic [[DarkFic Dark]]/WarFic focusing on Hiccup as he establishes his new Viking kingdom and defeats the remnants of Drago's army. The storyline also focuses on Hiccup's inner struggles caused by the deaths of Astrid and his father.
101** Plot B is a comparatively lighthearted SliceOfLife which focuses on the day-to-day lives of Elsa, Anna, and Kristoff as Arendelle prepares for a possible war with the Vikings.
102* ''Fanfic/ANewWorldOnHerShoulders'' is divided into two stories, each one taking up half a chapter. The first half of each chapter is always centered on Atlas and team SCRP, while the second half focuses on Beacon and team VYBA.
103* In ''Fanfic/SparkToSparkDustToDust'', each chapter switches between Yang working with the Autobots and Team Rainbow (RWB+JNPR) investigating on their own.
104* In ''Fanfic/InfinityTrainBlossomingTrail'', Chloe's adventures throughout the Infinity Train are swapped with her friends and family worried about her sudden disappearance.
105* After the Animorphs split up in ''Fanfic/WhatTomorrowBrings'', the [[SwitchingPOV various point-of-view characters]] have their own subplots that eventually converge with each other.
106* ''Fanfic/VowOfNudity'' frequently includes flashbacks to Haara's years as a slave. When this happens, the flashbacks often tell their own complete story, with some elements of it calling forward into the main storyline.
107* ''Fanfic/WithThisRing'' has two major timelines, referred to by the author as "Paragon" and "Renegade" based on the characterisations in ''VideoGame/MassEffect''. Initially they are almost identical, but the protagonists' choices increasingly push them down different paths, such as the Paragon [[spoiler:merging with the Ophidian and gaining EnlightenmentSuperpowers]] while the Renegade instead [[spoiler:acquires Apokoliptian technology that he uses to turn himself into a New God]]. Each episode tends to focus on one or the other, with a couple of dozen chapters about the primary protagonist and two or three from the secondary. 99% of the time, it's possible to completely ignore one of the timelines and just read the other one, but on rare occasions they have affected each other and demonstrated that they exist in parallel universes, such as [[spoiler:the Renegade injuring Krona, and the Paragon later fighting Krona in his resulting weakened state]].
108[[/folder]]
109
110[[folder:Films]]
111* ''Film/TwoThirtySeven'': The events of the school day—leading up to the suicide at 2:37 p.m.—are shown from the viewpoint of six different students, whose stories overlap and intersect fairly often.
112* Creator/WoodyAllen has done these a few times in two of his highest regarded movies. ''Film/CrimesAndMisdemeanors'' has a straight example with the two storylines being distinct and only crossing paths rarely, while ''Film/HannahAndHerSisters'' follows several character arcs with a lot of interaction between them.
113* ''Animation/BoBoiBoyTheMovie'': [=BoBoiBoy=] and his friends split from the others to save Ochobot when his watch detects his signal, because Papa Zola wouldn't wake up and Adu Du and Probe are tied up. This makes two simultaneous threads, one with the heroes reuniting with Ochobot and the other concerning Papa Zola, Adu Du and Probe looking for the heroes. Action sequences of both are switched with each other at times, with the heroes being pursued by [[BigBad Bora Ra]] and [[TheBrute Gaga Naz]] while the others are chased by the Tengkotak's [[LandShark J-Rex]]. They later become hostages that Bora Ra threatens to hurt should [=BoBoiBoy=] not meet his demands.
114* ''Film/CloudAtlas'' has '''six''' lines, across different eras in the past, present, and future.
115* ''Anime/DigimonTheMovie''. In Japan, it was two short [=OVA=]s about the original cast and one longer movie about the season two newcomers. To make it a theatrical feature after the first season and an introduction to said newcomers, a bit of narration was used for ArcWelding, and Diaboromon and Kokomon were said to be affected by the same virus, and given the same voice actor and a couple catchphrases in common. ("Don't interfere!" "[[ArcWords Go back to the beginning.]].") Connecting Diaboromon to the Willis thing actually made Diaboromon a much more sympathetic character than the original GiantSpaceFleaFromNowhere, but the longer ''Anime/DigimonAdventure02'' really [[CompressedAdaptation loses a great deal of plot]].
116* ''Film/TheFaceOfAnother'' has an A-story in which a man dons a LatexPerfection mask after is face is destroyed in an industrial accident, and a B-story in which a nurse suffers from loneliness and isolation due to a terrible scar on her face. The two stories never intersect. In the source novel, the nurse's story was a movie which the faceless man went to see.
117* ''Film/TheForgottenBattle'' has three protagonists — a British soldier, a Dutch collaborator, and a Dutchwoman becoming involved with [[LaResistance the Resistance]] — as they move through the events of the Battle of the Scheldt, only occasionally and briefly interacting.
118* ''Film/GangsOfNewYork'': Plot "A" is the whole bunch of ''Hamlet''-esque shenanigans involving Amsterdam Vallon and William Cutting, and the path to them getting in a climactic gang fight for the power of the Five Points and revenge. Plot "B" are the increasing societal disturbances involving the Civil War, Union Army drafting, and the haves stepping on the have-nots (mostly because the "haves" can dodge the draft). The climax is Plot "B" erupting in the 1863 New York Draft Riots and devastating a good chunk of the city while the gangs go to war finally... [[spoiler:and the "B" Plot pretty much overtakes the "A" Plot because the Army starts massacring people to try to placate the riot, including the aforementioned gangs. Amsterdam manages to get his revenge, but it is by giving Bill a MercyKill (because he's been fatally wounded by the aforementioned massacring), [[AntiClimax which leaves him feeling pretty empty]].]]
119* The first two thirds of ''Film/GIJoeRetaliation'' consists of two separate plots — Snake-Eyes and Jinx pursuing Storm Shadow, and the surviving Joes' attempt to figure out the circumstances of their ambush.
120* ''Film/TheGodfatherPartII'' does this by jumping between Vito Corleone fleeing Italy and building his empire in America in the past and his son Michael Corleone managing his Las Vegas empire in the present. However, this is subverted in the made-for-TV ''Godfather Saga,'' which simply showed all the scenes from both ''Film/TheGodfather'' and ''Film/TheGodfatherPartII'' in chronological order.
121* 2006's ''Film/TheHoliday'' stands out because either of the two plots could have stood alone as a mildly-amusing single-story film.
122* The ''WesternAnimation/IceAge'' movies typically feature two plotlines: the main plot starring Sid, Manny, Diego, and their friends, and the secondary plot featuring the squirrel Scrat's endless pursuit of the acorn. Scrat's plotline is typically more lighthearted and outlandish than the main story (as well as being entirely action-based without dialogue), and Scrat interacts less and less with the main characters as the sequels go on.
123* Creator/QuentinTarantino's ''Film/InglouriousBasterds'' actually follows two storylines, [[spoiler:Shosanna Dreyfus staging a massacre at her movie theater hoping to kill the nazi leader,]] and the Basterd's efforts in trying to assassinate Hitler. [[spoiler: The third act involves the Basterds attending said event and killing the nazi's before the bombs go off.]]
124* ''Film/TheKillerThatStalkedNewYork'', a 1950 film {{Very Loosely Based|OnATrueStory}} on the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1947_New_York_City_smallpox_outbreak 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak]]. The main plot focuses on the smallpox outbreak in New York City and the authorities trying to contain it, with a subplot focusing on (fictional) PatientZero Sheila Bennet's personal life, with diamond smuggling, infidelity, and revenge.
125* Most of ''Film/KingsmanTheSecretService'' is divided between the training for the next Lancelot and Harry's investigation on Valentine. The two storylines merge for the climax.
126* The [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheTwoTowers second]] and [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheReturnOfTheKing third]] movies in ''Film/TheLordOfTheRings'' trilogy. The original books involve two storylines in the first half of each volume, Creator/PeterJackson merges them, not always keeping time with when each happens in relation to the other.
127* ''WesternAnimation/TheNutJob'' has two plot threads: Surly the squirrel's attempts to steal from a nut store, and several human characters' attempts to break into a bank.
128* ''Film/PansLabyrinth'' had the "Ofelia's Tasks" plot and the "Resistance Against Fascists" plot, which intersected towards the end because the head of said fascists is Ofelia's step-father.
129* ''Film/RequiemForADream'' does this. The four stories are initially linked as the girlfriend, friend, and mother of Harry Goldfarb, although they all eventually branch off into their own, primarily unrelated tales. They are still somewhat linked, but for the most part they've gone their own ways.
130* All of the ''Franchise/{{Saw}}'' installments after the [[Film/SawI first movie]] fit this plot structure. The A-storyline tends to focus on the plot (including the aftermath of most of the games featured), while the B one is usually centered around the movie's main game. The movie jumps to Line A whenever something {{Gorn}}[[{{Crunchtastic}} tastic]] happens in Line B, and to Line B after some plot development happens in Line A. Some of the movies spend more time in Line A (''[[Film/SawV V]]'', ''[[Film/Saw3D 3D]]'' and ''[[Film/Spiral2021 Spiral]]''), and others spend more in Line B (''[[Film/SawII II]]'', ''[[Film/SawIII III]]'', ''[[Film/SawIV IV]]'', ''[[Film/SawVI VI]]'' and ''[[Film/{{Jigsaw}} Jigsaw]]''), which often relates to how gory a given installment is. Most of these plots meet up in some fashion at the end.[[labelnote:Details]]''Saw II'' - Line A: Eric and Jigsaw, Line B: The Nerve Gas House. ''Saw III'' - Line A: Lynn, Amanda and Jigsaw, Line B: Jeff. ''Saw IV'' - Line A: Strahm and Perez, Line B: Rigg. ''Saw V'' - Line A: Hoffman and Strahm, Line B: The Fatal Five. ''Saw VI'' - Line A: Hoffman and Erickson, Line B: William. ''Saw 3D'' - Line A: Hoffman and Jill, Line B: Bobby. ''Jigsaw'' - Line A: Logan and Halloran, Line B: The barn game. ''Spiral'' - Line A: Zeke, Line B: The various individual tests.[[/labelnote]]
131* For most of ''Franchise/StarWars Episode V: Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack'', the film follows two separate storylines, one devoted to Luke learning the ways of the Jedi from Yoda and the other devoted to Han and Leia's attempts to evade the Empire. ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'', the second installment of the prequel trilogy, also followed this structure, focusing on Obi Wan in his search for the bounty hunter that hired an assassin to kill Amidala, as well as Anakin's mission to keep Amidala safe. [[RuleOfThree Finally]], ''Film/TheLastJedi'' followed Rey being trained in the ways of the Force by Luke Skywalker, while Poe, Finn, and newcomer Rose decide to go against the orders of the Resistance's seemingly ObstructiveBureaucrat by trying to defeat the First Order's fleet from the inside.
132* ''Film/Steam2007'': All three of the protagonist's stories are alternately shown, while the only connection is their meeting in a steam room, where they talk.
133* Creator/BusterKeaton did this with his first feature-length film ''Film/ThreeAges'', using three stories set in prehistoric times, during the Roman Empire, and in 1920s America, so in case it flopped as a feature, it could be edited into three short subjects.
134* ''Film/LionsForLambs'' features three separate plotlines happening at the same time, all focusing on UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror: a reporter interviewing a Republican senator about his plans for victory, two American soldiers in Afghanistan stuck on a mountain ridge waiting for rescue while being ambushed by the Taliban, and a political science professor at an unnamed university in California trying to get a bright but apathetic student to re-engage with his class again. The plotlines don't intersect but are tangentially related to each other.
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Music]]
138* "Anthrax" by Music/GangOfFour has Jon King singing the song in the left channel while Andy Gill talks about writing love songs in the right.
139* "Spoiler Alert" by Music/TheyMightBeGiants tells two stories, one sung by Flansburgh, playing a truck driver who, in a fit of exhausted delirium, believes their truck can drive itself, and one sung by Linnell, playing a writer distracted with writing a story who thinks they have more hands than they do. Presumably, the trucker and the writer collide at the end.
140* The music video for Music/{{REM}}'s "Imitation of Life" is set at an outdoor party with dozens of smaller events taking place, [[RewatchBonus some of which aren't apparent in the very first viewing]].
141[[/folder]]
142
143[[folder:Pinball]]
144* In Bally's ''Pinball/CreatureFromTheBlackLagoon'', the main game is about taking your girlfriend to a DriveInTheater to see the titular movie. Once multiball starts, however, you are placed into the movie, and must rescue Kay from the Creature.
145[[/folder]]
146
147[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
148* In Wrestling/{{ECW}} in 1995, Wrestling/{{Taz|z}} had suffered a broken neck due to Wrestling/DeanMalenko and Wrestling/TooColdScorpio botching a spike piledriver in a match against [=Taz=] and Wrestling/EddieGuerrero, which put him on the shelf for a time. [[Wrestling/JimFullington The Sandman]] defeated [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/us/ecw/ecw-h.html ECW World Heavyweight Champion]] Wrestling/ShaneDouglas for the title at ''ECW Hostile City Showdown'' on April 15. Douglas felt that there was a problem with the officiating[[note]]Douglas was on his back with Sandman face-up on top of him in a submission hold but the ref counted Shane's shoulders down.[[/note]] and was determined to do something about it. At ''ECW Enter Sandman,'' May 13th, he introduced [=Pennsylvania=] State Athletic Commission referee Wrestling/BillAlfonso, who would enforce the rules, in a promotion that prided itself on its lack of rules. Fonzie quickly became the most hated guy in ECW history. What do these two storylines have to do with each other? The answer came at ''ECW November to Remember 95'' on November 18th. Right before the match between Wrestling/{{Konnan}} and [[Characters/{{ECW}} Jason "The Sexiest Man On Earth"]], Taz walked down to the ring in a referee shirt. Taz explained to Wrestling/JoeyStyles, who was doing the in-ring introductions, that ECW would not let him wrestle that night because they considered him an insurance risk. Jason gets in Taz's face as Taz asks if both guys are ready. Taz then decked Jason and Konnan powerbombed and pinned him in about 14 seconds. Later that night, there was a match, such as it was, between Alfonso and ECW Commissioner Tod Gordon, with Wrestling/{{Beulah McGillicutty}}, then a {{Heel}} as Wrestling/{{Raven}}'s [[{{Kayfabe}} girlfriend]], as the special referee. Fonzie [[WouldHitAGirl attacked her]] and threw her out of the match. They sort-of brawl for a while, complete with Fonzie blading, with no referee. Taz comes down while Tod is attempting a pin, starts to count, then stops, beats up Tod, puts Alfonso on top and counts the pin, thus [[FaceHeelTurn turning himself heel]]. The crowd is shocked, and Taz explains that he did it because none of the fans called or wrote or made any attempt to contact him after his injury and that Alfonso was the only person who seemed to care about him. He also rips on the fans for being happy to see Wrestling/{{Sabu}}, who had returned earlier that night after seven months in self-imposed exile in Wrestling/{{WCW}}, Wrestling/NewJapanProWrestling and the indies,[[note]]Sabu had left ECW right before ''The Three-Way Dance'' on April 8th and the fans had chanted "FUCK SABU! FUCK SABU!"[[/note]], ECW booker [[Wrestling/PaulHeyman Paul E. Dangerously]] and whatever and whoever else comes to mind, finally saying to the fans, "I DON'T GIVE A FUCK ABOUT YOU!"
149[[/folder]]
150
151[[folder:Theatre]]
152* Creator/WilliamShakespeare's got some examples:
153** ''Theatre/KingLear'' has the plot about the King, and the plot about the Duke and his two sons.
154** ''Theatre/AMidsummerNightsDream'' has the "lovers from Athens" and the Oberon-Titania plots.
155** ''Theatre/MuchAdoAboutNothing'' has two love plots -- Claudio and Hero, and Beatrice and Benedick.
156[[/folder]]
157
158[[folder:Video Games]]
159* ''VideoGame/ArcTheLadTwilightOfTheSpirits'' has this happen, and eventually, both the narratives become one.
160* Disk 3 of ''VideoGame/LostOdyssey'' has the party forced to split up. The plot then follows: Cooke and Mack as they attempt to follow the Aurora Borealis, Kaim and Sarah as they try to stop the kids from getting in too much trouble, Seth and [[spoiler: Tolten]] being warped to Uhra and meeting up with [[spoiler: Sed]], Jansen and Ming stuck on a train that's becoming an icy coffin. Despite being split four ways, the story doesn't suffer. Every party member gets their moment in the limelight. They are all [[spoiler: reunited at the end of Disk 3]].
161* ''{{VideoGame/Bayonetta 2}}'' starts off with a plot ToHellAndBack for the titular character in order to reclaim the soul of her friend, Jeanne, but gets sidetracked by a secondary plot involving a TagalongKid named Loki who just so happens to [[AmnesiacHero have amnesia]] about who he is, other than he just to happens to be trying to get to the same holy mountain as Bayonetta. The plots clash more than a few time, but end up being more intertwined once the BigBad [[spoiler:Loptr/Aesir]] is revealed, since [[spoiler:he was the one who caused Jeanne's soul to be sent to hell, and also happens to be Loki's evil half]].
162* In the bonus chapter of ''Cadenza 4: Fame, Theft and Murder'' Michael is [[TakenForGranite turned into a statue]] and Martha and Big Jim split up to find the halves of an artifact which can reverse the curse. The chapter switches between them at several points.
163* The newer ''VideoGame/CallOfDuty'' games have this, with the game switching between the viewpoint of two main characters (and occasionally a third character for a single mission).
164** In the ''VideoGame/ModernWarfare'' games, the American character is usually engaging in some big urban battle while the British character is doing some kind of special ops raid, more or less at the same time. Though [[spoiler:the American plotline usually finishes up partway through the game while the British one goes all the way up to the end]].
165** In ''[[VideoGame/CallOfDutyWorldAtWar World at War]]'', there are two sides to the story; one in the Eastern Front from the siege of Stalingrad to the Soviets taking over Berlin and one in the Pacific Front as the Marines push closer to Japan. There is no connection between both stories, the plot just switches between them every few missions presumably for a change of pace.
166** ''[[VideoGame/CallOfDutyBlackOps Black Ops]]'' does this with Hudson and Mason's roles in the story, Hudson having adventures in other locations from Kowloon to Russia while Mason is focused on Vietnam, and even once going through the same level from different starting points, Mason sneaking into a Soviet island base to kill Steiner, Hudson and a group of American soldiers loudly shooting their way into the facility from another direction to rescue Steiner. The two plots join up in the end, the final cutscene of both being the same scene from different points of view, which is also the final clue that [[spoiler:Reznov isn't there; in Mason's portion, once he reaches Steiner, Reznov appears to punch him out a few times before drawing a pistol, declaring "[[MyNameIsInigoMontoya My name is Viktor Reznov!]]", and shooting him dead - then, in Hudson's portion, Reznov isn't there and ''Mason'' is declaring himself to be Viktor Reznov before killing Steiner]].
167* ''VideoGame/DragonQuestIV'' has five chapters. Chapter 1 follows Ragnar, a knight trying to find missing children. Chapter 2 follows Alena, a RebelliousPrincess who wants to fight in a tournament, and her advisers Clift (the healer) and Brey (the wizard). Chapter 3 follows a merchant named Torneko who wants to start his own shop in the kingdom of [[ShoutOut Endor]]. Chapter 4 follows Manya and Minea, two magical sisters (a GlassCannon and a healer) trying to avenge their father's death. Finally, chapter 5 follows you, the hero, and you get the entire party together, but you can only control yourself directly. In the new DS version, there's a sixth chapter where the BigBad joins your party.
168* ''VideoGame/DreamfallTheLongestJourney'' was originally planned to have three full-weight storylines, one for each main character, however, only Zoe's actually counts as such. April's line is limited to two significant events ([[spoiler:Chamber of Dreams and talk with the Guardian]]), while Kian's consists effectively of a single dialogue and its consequences. Nevertheless, the lines are there.
169* ''VideoGame/DreamfallChapters'' does a lot better, with narrative time split near equally between Zoe in Stark and Kian in Arcadia, both poking at the same interdimensional conspiracy that they didn't quite unravel in the first game.
170* ''VideoGame/DUSK12'' tells two stories at a time, between two protagonists who doesn't interact for majority of the game (until the final stage. The first storyline focuses on Gorin, a failed SuperSoldier project from the "Dusk-12" research and an AmnesiacHero trying to regain his identity, while the second focuses on the Special Forces Operative Lieutenant Andrey on his mission to recover the "Dusk-12" samples. Their respective stories converges in the final stage.
171* ''VideoGame/{{Fahrenheit}}'' had two interwoven plotlines: one about [[WronglyAccused Lucas]] trying to find explanation for what's happening to him and evade the police, and the other about [[InspectorJavert Carla and Tyler]] trying to catch up with Lucas and understand what's going on.
172* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
173** At one point in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'', the characters [[LetsSplitUpGang split up into three groups]], and the player plays [[ArbitrarilySerializedSimultaneousAdventures through each of their stories in turn]], before they all reunite in Narshe.
174** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIX'', the party members split up halfway through Disk 1 to comply with the game's ArbitraryHeadcountLimit, and the story shifts back and forth between them until they reunite halfway through Disk 2.
175** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIII'' does this for most of the game - it's only 25 hours in where you finally get all six party members together.
176** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyTactics'' follows the story of Ramza as he is forced into conflict with the manipulative church and aristocracy, while the B Plot is Delita trying to become King, and a third plot is the extended flashback that explains their connection. Their stories occasionally interact, but most of the time, Ramza is unaware of what Delita is doing. Not so much in reverse. There are also occasional small plots such as what happens to the leader of the rebellion from the flashback chapter.
177** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIVTheAfterYears'' begins with mostly optional stories that involve just one or two of the main cast of characters before they each unite later on.
178* ''VideoGame/FireEmblemAwakening:'' Lucina's arc happens simultaneously along with the other 3, shifting in and out of focus as the events of the BadFuture they come from become relevant.
179* ''Front Mission'' shows this through ''2'' and ''4''.
180** In ''VideoGame/FrontMission2'', the story begins under the eyes of Ash Faruk, an OCU corporal belonging to the Muddy Otters battalion in Alordesh. Shortly after the coup outbreak in the country, the story switches focus to Thomas Norland, an OCU captain from the Dull Stags battalion. After doing some operations with Thomas, the story switches to a third party - the OCU military intelligence through officer Lisa Stanley's eyes. The three groups take their turns in the spotlight and even when they merge late in the game, the focus equally distributed among them.
181** In ''VideoGame/FrontMission4'', the story begins under the eyes of former French Army pilot Elsa Eliane, who now is in the employ of the multinational research organization known as Durandal. Several missions after the Durandal are sent to investigate an attack on a German base, the story switches to USN sergeant Darril Traubel in Venezuela. Both of these stories interact with each other explicitly only once and never directly merge at any point in the game.
182* ''VideoGame/GameOfThrones'': Protagonists Alester and Mors are two narrative perspectives about events in Westeros happening before the events of the HBO show. Alester is in the South and Mors in the North for much of the game despite both being from the Westlands.
183* ''VideoGame/GeminiRue'' jumps back and forth between two seemingly-unconnected plotlines, one about a HardboiledDetective searching for his brother and the other about a hapless prisoner escaping a strange rehabilitation facility. The twist is [[spoiler:it is actually a [[SubvertedTrope subversion]]; you are not playing two disparate storylines, you're playing one story in AnachronicOrder. The prisoner segments are actually the detective's flashbacks to his DarkAndTroubledPast, and the aforementioned prisoner is his younger self]].
184* ''VideoGame/GirlsFrontline'': The events ''Fixed Point'', ''Longitudinal Strain'', and ''Eclipses and Saros'' are all mostly self enclosed, with the Commander linking the three together, but only tangentially. ''Slow Shock'' finally ties them all together - [[spoiler:the Dolls from ''Strain'' give G&K the communication system they were transmitting, allowing them to break through the jamming that paralyzed Operation Aeneas at the end of ''Fixed Point''. Aliana from ''Saros'', meanwhile, is needed to traverse the Sea of Cognition, as its similarity to the Dogtag system allows her to enter it without becoming lost]].
185* The mission system from the ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAuto'' series is a version of this. The missions come in multiple chains, with certain bottleneck events that bring threads together that must have all their prerequisites met. There's an internal mini-story to each line, but they are for the most part order-independent.
186* ''Franchise/{{Halo}}'':
187** ''VideoGame/Halo2'' does this with the Master Chief and the Arbiter.
188** ''VideoGame/Halo5Guardians'' does this with Master Chief's Blue Team and Jameson Locke's Fireteam Osiris.
189* ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'':
190** In ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsBirthBySleep'', each of the three playable characters' stories happen at the same time, and meet up on occasion.
191** In ''[[VideoGame/KingdomHeartsChainOfMemories Chain of Memories]]'', [[TheHero Sora]] and [[TheLancer Riku]] run two unrelated plots that happen to take place in the same castle.
192** In ''VideoGame/KingdomHearts3DDreamDropDistance'', the jump to the other line is able to occur in the middle of a battle. [[AcceptableBreaksFromReality Thankfully you don't need to worry about the other one getting knocked out while you were forced to drop.]]
193* ''VideoGame/KingsQuestVIIThePrincelessBride'' had the player alternate each chapter between playing as Valanice and playing as Rosella, each trying to find each other. This was the only King's Quest game with two playable characters (and oddly enough, the only one where King Graham makes no appearance).
194* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrailsIntoReverie'' has three separate plot arcs that ultimately converge together in the final chapter. [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrailsFromZeroAndTrailsToAzure Lloyd's route]] has him trying to win Crossbell's freedom, [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrailsOfColdSteel Rean's route]] has him cleaning up the mess left behind [[LateArrivalSpoiler by the world war in the previous game]], and new character "C"'s route has him going undercover of why there's a Rosenburg doll sent to him. The routes do meet up with one another and at one point, the players can fight characters in the other route with the players actually controlling both teams with the perspectives switched mid fight.
195* ''VideoGame/LeisureSuitLarry5PassionatePattiDoesALittleUndercoverWork'' frequently switches between two protagonists at certain points: Larry as he scouts for models for "America's Sexiest Home Videos'' and Patti trying to find backmasked pro-pornography messages in music from des Revers Records and K-RAP Studios. Both plots get concluded at the ending.
196* ''VideoGame/LiveALive'' at first appears to just have 7 stories which don't have any direct relation to each other, until the player figures out that [[spoiler:each chapter's main antagonist is a variant on "Odio", suggesting a connection. Then after the completion of the secret [[WhamEpisode Middle Ages]] chapter, a TimeCrash occurs, bringing all 7 main protagonists together to discover that they were fighting incarnations of the Lord of Dark, Odio]].
197* ''VideoGame/{{Lyrica}}'''s story arcs shift between the historical drama of Li Bai and Du Fu--renown poets from the Tang Dynasty as they try to make their voices heard over the rampant corruption and ever-growing state of chaos that plagued their kingdom; and the modern tale of Chun and Yang, a pair of music prodigies who wants to pursue their dreams of sharing their music to the world.
198* ''VideoGame/PillarsOfDust'': The game features two protagonists, Carlton and Gregg, who start their journey at around the same time, but in different locations. Their paths will occasionally intersect, but they won't team up until the final chapter.
199* ''VideoGame/SaintsRow'' and ''VideoGame/SaintsRow2'' have the separate gang storylines entirely independent, which lead to characters involved in them only appearing in one of the three, as [[spoiler:they frequently get injured or even killed]] and the game has no way to determine in which order you've completed missions up until the final stretch. ''[[VideoGame/SaintsRowTheThird The Third]]'' changed this around a bit, where missions overall follow one plotline, and most times where you have a choice of two or more missions they're just one of your lieutenants asking you to play an activity, while also typically restricting you from continuing to the "proper" next mission until you've done them all.
200* ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':
201** Done twice in ''VideoGame/SonicChronicles''. First, Chapter 5 has Sonic, Knuckles, and two other characters make their way to Angel Island, while simultaneously Tails and [[spoiler:Eggman]] head up another team trying to gather pieces to build a weapon. Chapter 10 has Sonic and Tails lead a team after one of Ix's CoDragons while Knuckles and [[spoiler:Shade]] go after the other.
202** ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure2'' has two (three if you count Knuckles' subplot) intertwining stories, and ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure'' has ''six'' (seven if you count Tikal's subplot), that all come together in the end.
203* ''VideoGame/SuikodenIII'' makes use of this trope through the Trinity Site System, allowing the player to tackle the story of three to [[spoiler:five]] different protagonists that happen roughly at the same time. [[spoiler:Up until you finish chapter 3 with the original three, at which point one must be chosen to become the true protagonist and their stories converge from there.]] Originally there was going to be a [[spoiler:sixth]] storyline included, but the developers decided it would have revealed information they wanted to keep secret.
204* The first act of ''VideoGame/SyphonFilter 2'' alternates control between Gabe and Lian at the same point in time. Likewise for ''Dark Mirror''. The bonus missions in ''The Omega Strain'' have you play as major characters at the same time that Cobra is undertaking his/her missions.
205* ''Videogame/TalesFromTheBorderlands'' entire story unfolds this way, switching between the two main protagonists Rhys and Fiona as both tell their sides of the story to a captor, often to humorous effect.
206* ''VideoGame/WinBack 2'' has you play each mission from the POV of two different operatives.
207* ''VideoGame/Yakuza0'' regularly flips between Kiryu and Majima. Despite both plots centering on Makoto, the two have entirely separate stories and never meet until post-credits.
208[[/folder]]
209
210[[folder:Visual Novels]]
211* ''VisualNovel/{{Infinity}}'' series:
212** ''VisualNovel/Ever17'' does this during the prologue of the game, switching between Takeshi and [[NoNameGiven The Kid]]. It drops this shortly into the game, at which point the player is locked into one of the two characters. [[spoiler: This trope returns during [[GoldenEnding Coco's path]], which begins switching back and forth between the two characters again]]
213** ''VisualNovel/Remember11'' has its prologue set up the same way, with Kokoro and Satoru being the viewpoint characters. While this game does force the player into one of the two characters after the prologue finishes, it continues to use this trope throughout its entirety during the [[FreakyFridayFlip personality transfer phenomena]], resulting in part of each story being seen no matter which character the player is.
214[[/folder]]
215
216[[folder:Web Animation]]
217* ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlue'' employs it often. First, it was Red Team and Blue Team. Season 3, after a brief [[FourLinesAllWaiting fragmentation]], eventually split between the Reds and Blues and villain O'Malley. Season 4 returns to Reds and Blues (though there, for a short while a Blue was actually in the Red plot), and it remains that way until the mostly single plot Season 6. Season 7 started with Reds and Blues, but then split into those who went to the desert and those who stayed. Season 8 went for protagonistsantagonists once those that travelled returned. [[WebAnimation/RedVsBlueTheProjectFreelancerSaga The Project Freelancer Saga]] had flashbacks with Project Freelancer sharing time with the Epsilon recreation of the Reds and Blues (season 9) and the present day events (season 10). Season 11 started with RedsBlues again, merged them in the final episodes, and Season 12 started with a single plot that got more fragmented as time went on.
218[[/folder]]
219
220[[folder:Webcomics]]
221* In ''Webcomic/TheAdventuresOfDrMcNinja'' #6, #7, and #8, the doctor is searching for Dracula in the A Story while his sidekick and family train and fight a ghost wizard in the B-story. [[spoiler:Eventually it's revealed that the ghost wizard is a slave of Dracula, who grants the wizard [[GrandTheftMe a deadly new power]] when the Doctor pisses him off too much.]]
222* Each chapter of ''Webcomic/MegaTokyo'' (with the exception of Chapter 0) usually follows three plots, with the A Story focusing on [[OfficialCouple Piro and Kimiko]], the B-story focusing on [[BetaCouple Largo and Erika]] and the C Story featuring [[DarkMagicalGirl Miho]], [[MagicalGirl Yuki]], [[RobotGirl Ping]], or any combination thereof; although they nearly always intersect.
223* ''Webcomic/QuestionableContent'' usually juggles several storylines, with new ones picking up and old ones ending fairly regularly, along with occasional one-off gags unrelated to any of them.
224* The basic ''Webcomic/MSPaintAdventures'' structure is to start with something very simplistic, then introducing more and more characters, each with their own different storylines and plots, and becoming incredibly convoluted and ridiculous, then slowly but surely dragging those plots together and suddenly, before the reader even knows it, it's all one story.
225* ''Webcomic/CaptainSNES'' has several storylines all running semi-simultaneously, which are hinted to tie together in the end. Between the length spent on any given storyline and the ScheduleSlip problems, threads can be dropped and picked up again quite literally ''years'' later.
226* ''Webcomic/RumorsOfWar'' begins its first StoryArc with the cast assembling, then follows two characters as they go about separate, unrelated activities. The first is an information-gathering trip that gets [[MysteryMagnet hijacked by a mystery]] and the other is a [[JustForFun/HowToGatherCharacters recruitment plot]] in the style of a [[TheCon con]].
227* ''Webcomic/BobAndGeorge'' habitually cut between storylines.
228* ''Webcomic/IrregularWebcomic'' has no main plot, except for crossover between plots, so at any given moment there's seventeen different stories going on simultaneously (plus the Miscellaneous theme, which doesn't have a coherent plot or characters), although of late the primary ones are Steve & Terry, Fantasy, Space, and Cliffhangers, with secondary (but still important!) ones being Series/MythBusters and Scientific Revolution. And something's happening with the Shakespeare theme, and the Nigerian Finance Minister and Pirates are still out there somewhere, and so on. With so many themes, there are frequent crossovers; at one time, ''fourteen'' of the different themes converged for the destruction of the universe (not included were Miscellaneous, which doesn't have a storyline; Supers and Espionage, which exist in a totally separate continuity). Oddly enough, the Me theme was originally self-contained, dealing with the author living his life, producing the webcomic, or making very meta gags. That was, until he [[ItMakesSenseInContext kills himself off]] and finds himself actually involved with the characters themselves (mainly the Deaths and the Scientific Revolution characters).
229* Used in ''Webcomic/OurLittleAdventure''. Julie and her group's adventures to collect the Magicant and solve their world's problems is the A Plot. Zaedalkaah/Umbria's release, meeting with Trevoricus and Jason and joining with Angelo's kids as part of her quest to get her body back is the B Plot.
230* In ''Webcomic/AmericanBarbarian'', [[https://web.archive.org/web/20160313110909/http://www.ambarb.com/?p=20 Two Tank Omen's advance and Yoosamon's talking with the king parallel in every strip for a while]].
231* ''Tides of Change'' switches between ''Tides of Change'' set in the past and ''The Dragon Rider'', set several thousand years later in the present. Only recently in the story have connections between the two started appearing in the stories.
232* In ''WebComic/YokokasQuest'', Yokoka and Mao are protagonist and deuteragonist, who the comics follow separately aside from when their paths occasionally intersect.
233[[/folder]]
234
235[[folder:Web Original]]
236* The ''Literature/BraveNewWorldUniverse'' has this in almost every story.
237** The original ''Brave New World'' has this for nearly every character, which resulted in a lot of SwitchingPOV Later in the story, it tended to focus mainly on Charlie's story.
238** In ''Tech Adventures'', Sasha and Tech's storylines dance together throughout the overall plot.
239** ''Swarm Rising'' has this to such a degree that Bladedancer and Swarm's stories might as well have been split into different stories.
240* ''WebVideo/{{Kickassia}}'' splits into two plot threads after the group takes over Molossia; the first focuses on the Nostalgia Critic's attempts to reign over the country and the second focuses on the other contributors trying to figure out how to overthrow him.
241* ''Roleplay/SurvivalOfTheFittest''. One for every. Last. Character. Of course, there are intersections, but essentially every character has their own story. Some of the time, these stories are ''part'' of ''another'' character's story.
242* When WebVideo/TheUnluckyTug describes how he'd rewrite ''WesternAnimation/ThomasAndFriends: Big World! Big Adventures!'' in his review of it, he says he'd have the Sodor and international episodes take place at the same time.
243* ''AudioPlay/WereAlive'' usually confines its storylines into separate chapters. But occasionally it will show two storylines within the same chapter or the same episode. For instance in chapters 17 and 18: Michael, Pegs and Kelly travelling to The Colony was split with Angel and Kalani going to the Army Reserve base to secure [=MREs=].
244[[/folder]]

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