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1[[quoteright:300:[[WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rhinoegg2.png]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:300:Aww, look, a newly-hatched baby rhi--hey, wait a minute...]]
3
4->'''Lisa:''' Wait. Rhinos don't come from eggs.\
5'''Homer:''' What did you just see, Lisa?\
6'''Lisa:''' I know, but--\
7'''Homer:''' ''What did you just see?''\
8'''Lisa:''' Hmph.
9-->-- ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS12E17SimpsonSafari Simpson Safari]]"
10
11In the natural world, living creatures have myriad ways of bringing more young into the world. Some produce thousands of eggs and young that grow quickly but only a few make it to adulthood. Others invest huge amounts of time and resources to develop and take care of only a few at a time.[[note]]These are called ''r'' and ''K''-type breeding styles, respectively. There is considerable debate on where humans fall on the scale,
12 as compared to animals like salmon, aphids, or rats, humans breed quite slowly and invest a lot of energy into each offspring, but compared to animals like whales, elephants, or other apes, which barely breed above replacement rate, we breed like rabbits.[[/note]]
13
14In fiction, it's often simplified into laying eggs, [[ArtisticLicenseBiology even if the biology of the creature in question should indicate otherwise]]. This is very useful in bypassing the complications of an InterspeciesRomance and the {{Squick}} of a live birth, which is also why it's a common implementation of GRatedSex.
15
16Popular {{Mon}}s trope, as pretty much every Mons series uses it. Especially the ones that originate in video games, where it also serves to simplify the breeding mechanics -- see HotSkittyOnWailordAction. May also overlap with CosmicEgg, if the egg in question produces or is laid by a deity. Compare EggLayingMale if the species has the ability to lay eggs, but is male. Contrast with PregnantReptile, in which a non-mammal reproduces the mammal way.
17
18[[DontExplainTheJoke Whales don't lay eggs; they're mammals that give live birth]].
19
20----
21!!Examples:
22
23[[foldercontrol]]
24
25[[folder:Advertising]]
26* An advertisement for the dog food [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0Kc5cRmCVY Nutro]] opens with a puppy hatching from an egg. They are also shown later in the ad [[GrowsOnTrees growing on trees]] and being found inside fruits and vegetables.
27* One cat food commercial in Thailand featured cats hatching from eggs.
28[[/folder]]
29
30[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
31* ''Anime/DigimonAdventure'': The Digimon are asexual so the eggs actually spawn ''from the remains of dead Digimon''. Since the Digimon that "spawn" from this act are actually the same individual Digimon that died, it works as a DisneyDeath and ResurrectiveImmortality. Though several cases could result in real death for good, such as fights taking place in the real world, or if someone manages to invent a device to get rid of that feature. Digimon can also be deleted, though the specifics are vague and might lead to CameBackWrong instead. The first season is the only one to address this specifically, with others either leaving it ambiguous or not addressing it at all.
32* ''Anime/{{Doraemon}}'':
33** ''Anime/DoraemonNobitaAndTheBirthOfJapan'' features Doraemon's Life Creation Set, a gadget that can create artificial life that's later hatched from eggs -- one of those constructs being a {{Pegasus}} named [[ADogNamedDog Pega]].
34** ''Anime/DoraemonNobitaAndTheSpiralCity'' have an Egg Factory in the titular city which creates eggs where their inhabitants - LivingToys -- are hatched from. Even toys of mammals, including two particularly intelligent stuffed pigs named Pibu and Popi, are created from these eggs. Justified since they're, well, toys.
35* The fifth chapter of ''[[Manga/TouhouSangetsusei Eastern and Little Nature Deity]]'' revolves around a giant mysterious egg. Most characters assume it's from a cat {{youkai}}.
36* ''Manga/FairyTail'': Happy hatched from an egg. Supposedly, so did his [[DistaffCounterpart Romantic Interest]] Carla. Their species, for reference, resemble bipedal cats. Their eggs are also larger than full-grown members of the species, in case the fact that they technically aren't cats made eggs seem plausible.
37* ''Anime/TenchiMuyo'' has Ryo-Ohki, a cat/rabbit creature who can turn into a spaceship and a [[LittleBitBeastly humanish]] girl, hatch from an egg. In addition, Ryoko joked that the egg was hers and that Tenchi was the father, but it later turns out that, in a really convoluted way, the egg came from [[MadScientist Washu]].
38* Although [[Anime/DomoTV Domo]] appears to be mammalian in nature, his first appearance was being hatched from an egg.
39* ''Franchise/{{Dragonball}}'': Namekians are asexual aliens that reproduce by spitting eggs infused with some of their life force.
40* ''Manga/PandemoniumWizardVillage'': [[MixAndMatchCritters Variants]] can be born out of eggs, even if the parents are mammalian. Domika was hatched from one and [[ArtisticLicenseBiology has a belly button]], though that sort of thing isn't the strangest thing [[{{Mutants}} variants]] can be born with.
41[[/folder]]
42
43[[folder:Comic Books]]
44* Skrulls lay eggs. [[ComicBook/FantasticFour Johnny Storm,]] who was briefly married to a Skrull named Lyja (long story), was greatly disconcerted when she... well, laid an egg. It turns out it wasn't his, though. Which was... good news and bad news at the same time, kinda.
45* This was {{subverted|Trope}} in an ''ComicBook/ArchieComics'' story, where Jughead had to take care of what he thought was a kangaroo egg in Professor Flutesnoot's laboratory, until Mr. Weatherbee showed up and informed Jughead that kangaroos don't lay eggs. [[spoiler:When the egg did hatch in the end, it turned out to actually be an ostrich egg.]]
46* One of Toph's disciples in the ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' comics was surprised to learn Toph had human parents. Up to then, she'd assumed Toph had [[MemeticBadass willed herself into existence from a boulder.]]
47[[/folder]]
48
49[[folder:Fan Works]]
50* ''Fanfic/{{Contraptionology}}'': According to Fluttershy, she made her "butter-bee-bats" by crossing butterfly eggs, bee eggs, and bat eggs. Applejack protests that bats don't lay eggs; Fluttershy disagrees.
51* A [[FandomSpecificPlot popular]] ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'' AlternateUniverse, affectionately nicknamed "Gem Egg Hell", involves [[StarfishAliens Gems]] reproducing by laying eggs. Said eggs usually hatch into either clones of the parents or their [[FusionDance Fusion]].
52* PlayedForLaughs in ''[[https://www.fimfiction.net/story/350807/twilight-sparkle-lays-an-egg Twilight Sparkle Lays An Egg]]''. Twilight wakes up one morning to find out she's mysteriously laid an egg. She comes to the belief that [[WingedUnicorn alicorns]] can reproduce asexually and that they lay eggs. However, it turns out to be a prank by Celestia and Luna. [[spoiler:Twilight, being Twilight, somehow manages to make the infertile egg actually hatch]].
53* The ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders'' doujinshi ''[=JoJo=]'s Bizarre Married Life'', also known as ''1993 Summer Wonderland'', by Creator/{{CLAMP}}, featured Noriaki Kakyoin, [[MisterSeahorse a male]], laying an egg [[https://66.media.tumblr.com/378fcaf4ae7777b4dc1dca9097c2cd7a/tumblr_inline_n6er2alCCt1s8lloa.png the size of Polnareff's torso]] in his sleep. It hatches almost immediately into a ThreeMonthOldNewborn who [[RapidAging grows into a kindergartner within a week and looks sixteen at ten years old]].
54* In the ''WesternAnimation/TheSecretShow'' fanfic ''Fanfic/BackForGood'', Sherry (a human woman) and Zaydorii (a Mombi) welcomed a clutch of six eggs together during the two-year timeskip. Strangely enough, it's ''Sherry'' who laid the eggs.
55* Played with in the ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' fanfic ''Fanfic/LoveCanSurpriseYouAtAnyTimeInYourLife''. As a CallBack to "[[Recap/FuturamaS7E22LeelaAndTheGenestalk Leela and the Genestalk]]," it's mentioned that Leela sometimes lays a small egg in lieu of normal menstruation, but she sometimes has a normal period as well. According to her parents (who are more visibly mutated than Leela), Leela herself hatched from an egg, and when she announces her pregnancy, they expect the same of her baby. However, her baby on the ultrasound appears to be mammalian, as it has an umbilical cord.
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
59* When Mary asks Max how babies are made in ''WesternAnimation/MaryAndMax'', he says his mother told him that babies hatch from eggs laid by a rabbi.
60[[/folder]]
61
62[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
63* In ''[[Film/SuperMarioBros1993 Super Mario Bros.]]'', Daisy hatches from an egg. [[HumanAliens Despite appearances]], she's the child of a [[BeastMan dinosaur-person]] and the dinosaur-people are still oviparous.
64[[/folder]]
65
66[[folder:Folklore]]
67* The EasterBunny, according to some. They're not all chocolate, you know. Mythologically, the bunny [[ForcedTransformation originated as an egg-laying animal]]; being able to lay eggs once a year was a form of consolation (the day was only later {{retcon}}ned to Easter). Of course, in the original myths the bunny wasn't [[ShesAManInJapan Peter Cottontail]]. While most modern versions of the character don't actually produce the eggs from their own body, this hasn't stopped the tradition from confusing kids for centuries anyway.
68* In Myth/ClassicalMythology, Leda, the human queen of Sparta, has sex with Zeus in the form of a swan, and later with her human husband Tyndareus. She lays two eggs, one containing Castor (usually the son of Tyndareus) and Polydeuces (son of Zeus), the other containing Helen (usually daughter of Zeus), later of Troy, and Clytemnestra (daughter of Tyndareus). The parentage and pairing of these children [[ContinuitySnarl is not consistent]], but the story always involves two completely normal human children hatching from eggs.
69* In Myth/KoreanMythology, many founding heroes of ancient kingdoms (three kingdoms) were born from an egg. Here are examples:
70** Go-Jumong (King Dongmyeong), founder of Goguryeo Kingdom, was born as a large egg that his mother (Lady Yuwha) laid. His stepfather (King Geumwha) took this as bad omen and tried to get rid of it, but all attempts failed (when it was thrown into wilderness, fierce animals and birds kept it warm; and even the strongest warrior couldn't break its shell open). Finally Jumong was born, and he soon grew up to be a master archer and charismatic hero (which is not surprising, given that his father is the ''[[DivineParentage Sun god Haemosu]]'').
71** There's also Pakhyeokkeose, Seoktalhae and Kimalji, three founders of Silla Kingdom. Plus there's King Kim Suro, founder of Gaya (a minor kingdom that was later absorbed into Silla).
72* Myth/ChineseMythology: Pan-Ku, the first living being, hatched from an egg that became the sky and the ground.
73* In Myth/PacificMythology, the Earth goddess Papa laid an egg on [[TheOldCountry an island or archipelago known as "Kahiki"]]. It contained the goddess Hi'iaka, who was carried to Hawaii [[EggMacGuffin in the egg]] by her older sister, Pele, and BornAsAnAdult.
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder:Literature]]
77* The humanoid Red Martians in Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs ''Literature/JohnCarterOfMars'' novels lay eggs that are then hatched in incubators. They are somehow cross-fertile with humans. (Biologist and SF consultant Jack Cohen has speculated about Carter's shock when he encounters Dejah Thoris's eggshell-producing apparatus.)
78* Happens as a (disturbing) twist at the end of the ''Literature/{{Goosebumps}}'' book ''Literature/EggMonstersFromMars''. [[spoiler:The protagonist, a 12-year-old boy, is impregnated by the titular monster and lays an enormous egg in the last page]].
79* Subverted in Creator/TamoraPierce's short story ''[[Literature/TortallUniverse Nawat]]''. The titular character's wife does ''not'' lay eggs, despite her fears. Instead, one of the babies takes after her crow-to-human shapeshifter father by eventually growing some feathers.
80* At least two of the races (namely, the [[WingedHumanoid chiropteran]] Aeries and the [[RubberForeheadAliens near]]-[[AmbiguouslyHuman human]] [[HumansByAnyOtherName Walkers]]) in Laurie J. Marks's ''Children of Triad'' trilogy seem to be monotremes.
81* [[PlayingWithATrope Played with]] in Creator/DrSeuss' ''Literature/HortonHatchesTheEgg'': Everybody flocks to see the (male) elephant sitting on an egg, but it was actually laid by a bird who asked Horton to egg-sit (though it's unclear if the mother planned to come back). At the end, this trope turns out to be a case of [[spoiler:LamarckWasRight, as the egg hatches into a winged elephant]].
82* ''Literature/JourneyToTheWest'': Sun Wukong technically hatched from a rock, but it's often referred to as the Great Stone Egg.
83* ''Literature/TheLastDragonChronicles'': Descendants of Guinivere hatch from eggs. ItMakesSenseInContext.
84* Discussed and played for laughs in ''Literature/TheLastDogs''. In the final book, [[CloudCuckooLander Tiffany]] the [[RascallyRaccoon raccoon]] boasts about how she'd snuck up on bobcats laying eggs, and about how she knows about bears laying eggs and the baby bears swim immediately after "hatching". Rocky is very skeptical about this and calls her out on it several times.
85* In ''Literature/ASwiftlyTiltingPlanet,'' {{Winged Unicorn}}s hatch from eggs--but only the ones who are also {{Time Travel}}ers.
86* In the ''Literature/{{Leviathan}}'' Trilogy, the [[spoiler:perspicacious loris]] is hatched from an egg and, judging from what one character says, many [[LEGOGenetics fabricated]] beasts are "born" this way.
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
90* The atom bomb that appears in the lads' house on ''Series/TheYoungOnes'' turned out to be an ''airplane'' egg, which hatched a tiny balsa-and-rubber-band toy plane at the end of the episode.
91* When kobold Franchise/{{Pumuckl}} and his "owner" (for the lack of a better word) were in the zoo, Pumuckl found an ostrich's egg and thought it was an elephant's egg.
92* ''Series/MorkAndMindy'': MisterSeahorse himself, Mork from Ork. Because Orkans [[MerlinSickness age backwards]] they're born resembling middle-aged humans, so the eggs they emerge from are ''huge'' by the time they hatch.
93* ''Series/PrehistoricPlanet'' features the ''Adalatherium'', a badger-like Mesozoic mammal. It's first introduced inspecting a clutch of eggs in a burrow, [[BaitAndSwitch with the narration implying and suggesting that it is raiding a dinosaur nest]] as early mammals are stereotyped to do, but as it turns out... ''they are her own eggs.'' ''Adelatherium'', like most non-eutherian Mesozoic mammals, were egg-layers. Egg-laying used to be far more common in Mesozoic mammals.
94* ''Series/OddSquad'': In "O is for Opposite", Delivery Doug has a goat assistant named Randall, who lays eggs that Doug then uses to make the egg salad used in his sandwiches. When he tells Olympia and Otis this and explains that Randall laying a single egg takes a long time, Olympia asks him why he doesn't just use chicken eggs, which causes him to have a realization as he lays Randall off from his job.
95* In ''Series/OnceUponATime'', [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame Dwarfs]] are a OneGenderRace who hatch from eggs, fully grown and clothed.
96* In ''Series/TheOrville'', [[OneGenderRace Moclans]] reproduce by laying eggs.
97* ''Series/That70sShow'': In "Hyde's Birthday", [[TheDitz Kelso]] sneaks into the Formans' garage to get a saw, and when he gets caught by Red, [[BadLiar he tries to bluff his way out, and that goes about as well as you'd expect]], leading to this amazing line:
98-->'''Kelso:''' There's a rabbit stuck in a tree and I want to return that rabbit to the wild, so it can lay its eggs.
99* In the ''Franchise/UltraSeries'', some kaijus, despite being hatched from eggs, have mammalian traits. Such as the elephant-like Sartan from ''Series/ReturnOfUltraman'' and the lion-based Gora from ''Series/UltramanEighty''.
100* In the second episode of ''Series/TheMandalorian'', the titular hero is sent to a cave to retrieve an egg for some Jawas. He is confronted by a huge woolly rhinoceros-like creature. With an equally-woolly egg, as it turns out.
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Puppet Shows]]
104* ''Series/TheWubbulousWorldOfDrSeuss'': In the prologue to "The Song of The Zubble-Wump", the Cat in the Hat is seen incubating some eggs that house mammal-like creatures, including a cow (which he describes as "udderly" ridiculous), [[MixAndMatchCritters a cross between a cat and a dog]], and a tiger, whom he names "Benjamin" when he hatches after the commercial break. In the epilogue, the Cat ships out eggs that have cat tails protruding out of them and wear tall red and white striped hats, not unlike his own.
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
108* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
109** Gith are a humanoid race with no ouward reptilian or avian traits and who, in some editions, explictly descended from human ancestors within historic times. They reproduce by laying eggs.
110** A sylph is an AlwaysFemale fey who looks like a beautiful elf woman with dragonfly wings. To bear a daughter, she has to seek a mortal suitor, usually elf, human, or Halfling. Despite this, the child, described as a "baby girl with wing buds", hatches from an egg that the sylph keeps in a special nest, guarded by an air elemental.
111** The game also gives this trait to pretty much any beast that has bird-like wings, no matter how much it resembles a mammal otherwise. Griffons, hippogriffs, and pegasi all hatch from eggs, although 5th edition describes pegasi as giving live birth instead. It's mentioned in the description for avorials, or winged elves, that there's an in-universe belief that this is true for them, but it is not.
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Toys]]
115* The ''Toys/{{Hatchimals}}'' line revolves solely around this trope. As such, all the animals, regardless of appearance, hatch from eggs. This even includes [[OurPixiesAreDifferent pixies]].
116* ''Toys/{{Furby}}'': Furbies also hatch from eggs. Appearance wise, they're like if you [[MixAndMatchCritters crossed a koala with a penguin]].
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:Video Games]]
120* ''VideoGame/{{Bomberman}}'': Blowing up a soft block in later games will sometimes yield a giant egg. Touch this egg, and an [[RidiculouslyCuteCritter adorable]] ''[[KangaroosRepresentAustralia kangaroo]]'' hatches. ({{Averted|Trope}} in ''Saturn Bomberman'', because they're dinosaur eggs instead.)
121* ''VideoGame/BillyHatcherAndTheGiantEgg'' has them all over the place, generally used as [[ImprobableWeaponUser weapons]] and movement aids. Things that can hatch from these eggs include tigers, butterflies, winged fire-breathing hippos, and Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog himself, among who knows what else. It's even {{lampshade|Hanging}}d when an NPC chick wonders who or what laid all of these eggs to begin with.
122* ''VideoGame/{{Spore}}'': Every single creature hatches from an egg, even those who are well past gaining sentience.
123* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyTactics'': Every monster that joins you reproduces asexually by laying eggs. Makes sense for the Chocobos, gets strange for the cats, skeletons, trees, and pigs.
124* ''VideoGame/LightningReturnsFinalFantasyXIII'': Fuzzy Sheep are discovered to lay eggs. An [=NPC=] who is a biologist reminds us about the platypus.
125* ''VideoGame/{{Creatures}}'': The Norns and Ettins look mammalian (and one popular [[GameMod third-party breed]] for the second game was able to nurse their young,) but all three creature types lay eggs (of course, they were all genetically engineered by an entire ''species'' of extremely absent-minded scientists, so they don't necessarily have to make that much natural sense). The scientists were also so squeamish (canonically!) as to have to invent [[GRatedSex kisspopping]], so whatever process results in the eggs, they likely found it more emotionally palatable than seeing a miniature version of the Norns (et. al.) being shoved out of an orifice of another.
126* In earlier ''VideoGame/DragonQuestMonsters'' games, your monsters laid eggs, regardless of what they were.
127* ''VideoGame/IWasATeenageExocolonist'': Hopeyes lay eggs despite being the FantasticFaunaCounterpart to various rodents. However, Vertumnan wildlife has quite porous lines between plant, fungus, animal and mineral, so a being analogous to a mammal laying eggs is nowhere near the strangest thing the planet is harboring.
128* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'':
129** Every single Pokémon ever. Including the [[HotSkittyOnWailordAction whales.]] And the plants. And the ''rocks''. And the ''ghosts''. And the ''robots''. And the ''eggs''. [[CosmicEgg And the god too. Apparently, the first thing to ever exist was the egg of Arceus! And the age-old question is put to rest.]]
130** A diary entry in the Cinnabar laboratory states that "Mew gave birth," making it seemingly the sole exception. Mew is also among a [[OlympusMons subset]] of Pokémon that are functionally genderless and never lay eggs. On the other hand, the birth may or may not have happened, as every piece of information on Mewtwo's origins are [[ContinuitySnarl contradicted somewhere else]]. It could have been just a metaphor, since it is said that Mew's genes were used in the creation of Mewtwo. The journal explaining Mew giving birth was also during a time where [[EarlyInstallmentWeirdness there were no breeding mechanics at all]] until ''VideoGame/PokemonGoldAndSilver''. ''VideoGame/PokemonLetsGoPikachuAndEevee'' retcons the journal to say Mewtwo was created in an artificial growth chamber.
131** The question of how any particular mon couple mates and lays eggs is [[GRatedSex sidestepped]]. To breed two creatures, you leave them at "daycare" together; eventually one of the daycare-takers will give you an egg, saying that they "don't know where it came from, but your Pokémon had it." There's a trainer class of "Pokémon Breeders," but somehow no one in-universe seems to know how the eggs are produced. Considering [[HotSkittyOnWailordAction some of the Pokémon that can breed together]], [[BrainBleach this may be a good thing]]. ''Pokémon [=HeartGold=] and [=SoulSilver=]'' finally seem to address this issue in a scene involving Arceus at the Sinjoh Ruins: [[spoiler:every time a Pokémon egg comes into the world, it's literally because Arceus created it.]]
132** And finally subverted by an NPC in Coumarine City in ''VideoGame/PokemonXAndY'': according to him, Pokémon eggs aren't really eggs at all, and instead are sort of like a "cradle" for newborn Pokémon to develop in until they're strong enough to survive in the world. This is also why a majority of them are BornAsAnAdult. That said, it brings up questions about how [[HotSkittyOnWailordAction different species can breed]] since some would logically lay eggs and others would give birth, but can reproduce together anyway.
133* The Facebook game ''Fish World'' lets you gain new creatures for your virtual aquarium by buying "Fish Eggs". The, err, "Fish" include everything from crabs to turtles to squid to, yes, Whale Eggs.
134* Collecting chicken-style eggs that will hatch out into all sorts of creatures -- birds, mammals, frogs, fish, bugs, ''trees'', ''VAMPIRES'' -- is the whole point of the Facebook game ''Hatchlings''.
135* The plot of ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaLinksAwakening'' is to break the ostentatious egg of the Wind Fish, which is essentially a gigantic, telepathic whale with disproportionately tiny wings (Also to fight evil Franchise/{{Kirby}} clones, but that's irrelevant at the moment). How the egg was actually laid by the (seemingly male) Wind Fish and why it [[spoiler:houses a mysterious labyrinth can both likely be explained by the whole adventure being AllJustADream. Specifically, the ''Wind Fish's'' dream, which Link is trapped in]].
136* ''VideoGame/TheSapling'': Starting with the Flight and Flight update, players are capable of choosing whether or not individual species lay eggs or give birth. Since this is a variable independent of all other factors, there's nothing keeping you from making mammal like creatures that lay eggs.
137* ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'':
138** Ever wonder how Bowser got his kids in the first place? Now we know why, considering if [[OverlordJr Bowser Jr's]] theory of how he was born was true...
139** ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy'' has Dino Piranha, a plant-dinosaur hybrid that is born from an egg, and ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy2'' has Peewee Piranha, another plant-dinosaur hybrid born from an egg.
140* In ''VideoGame/{{Minecraft}}'', in creative mode, any and all of the mobs can be spawned with eggs, even piglins and ghasts and ''villagers''.
141* Played with in the ''VideoGame/AdventureIsland'' series, where you can get items from eggs, as well as dinosaurs (predictably). Who, or what, lays item eggs? Oviparous mammals, oviparous robots, and oviparous slime creatures in ''Pokémon'' figure into [[Website/{{Cracked}} Cracked's]] #27 [[http://www.cracked.com/photoplasty_388_27-science-lessons-as-taught-by-famous-video-games/ Science Lesson As Taught by Famous Video Games.]]
142* There is an entire genre of games for tablets and mobile devices where the player builds some type of haven, fills it with decorations and/or enclosures, then breeds and/or feeds various monsters and critters. These frequently show the monsters hatching from eggs, even when the monsters look mammalian, such as in ''My Singing Monsters''.
143* In the ''VideoGame/GuiltyGear'' series, newborn Gears apparently hatch from eggs. This explains how Justice's daughter Dizzy was born years after her mother's demise.
144* ''VideoGame/{{Putty}}'' has a Mutant Chinese Chicken which lays sumo wrestler eggs.
145* ''VideoGame/LegendOfMana'' lets the player raise and train their own pets, all of which hatch from eggs, even sentient wooden toys and mimic chests.
146* In ''VideoGame/MapleStory'', one quest has you collect eggs from Chronos, Tick-Tocks, and Timers, and a related quest has you raise a baby Timer from an egg. While the last one resembles a bird, it and Tick-Tocks are {{Clockwork Creature}}s, and Chronos are ''undead'' beings; how any of them can even reproduce, much less from eggs, is a mystery. (Making it even weirder, the quest where you raise the baby Timer requires you to feed it [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Springy Toy Worms]], and it's unlikely most living beings could eat such things.)
147* The ''Facebook'' game ''Ovipets,'' where you breed horses, cats, and wolves, among other animals, all subsequently lay a egg. This is probably so it can have the game mechanic of turning other people's eggs to collect coins, and also give them a way to encourage you to keep coming back to the game; you have to turn the egg every so many hours by clicking on it for it to hatch, or have someone else do it.
148* ''VideoGame/MoshiMonsters'' has a species called Silly Snufflers, which are basically like miniature, yellow, polka dot elephants, yet they come from eggs.
149* All the animals in ''VideoGame/{{Parkasaurus}}'' hatch from eggs, including the fully-aquatic reptiles in ''Sea Monsters'' and the mammals in ''Prehistoric Wonders'', who gave live birth in real life.
150* In ''VideoGame/{{Elona}}'', any follower you have can be put in a ranch, where it will create eggs ''and'' milk regardless of species or gender. Even humans, machines and undead will produce these items. Newly-created ranches have a book that {{Handwave}}s this:
151--> Any animal assigned to be a "breeder" will stay on the ranch, and, in time, produce milk, eggs, shit, and other bits. And no, I am not going to try to explain how mammals will lay eggs or how exactly you milk a twenty-ton firebreathing lizard. I don't rightly try to answer those sort of questions and frankly, neither should you. Just accept the fact and move on.
152* ''VideoGame/{{Warframe}}'': Kubrows on Earth are shown to hatch from eggs, despite looking like canines. There is a justification in that the Kubrow were genetically engineered by the Orokin.
153* The titular dogs in ''VideoGame/{{Wobbledogs}}'' hatch from eggs.
154* In ''VideoGame/FallenLondon'', the FictionalHoliday of Whitsun involves collecting eggs and hatching them. Aside from the London-typical unsettling pets, bizarre companions, and freaks of nature, [[ExaggeratedTrope you can also hatch items of clothing.]]
155[[/folder]]
156
157[[folder:Visual Novels]]
158* ''VisualNovel/SouthScrimshaw'': Played with. The Brillo Whale calf that the documentary focuses on is shown being born from what initially appears to be an egg, but is in fact a kind of external placenta attached to his mother. Presumably this is an adaptation to prevent the birth from being impeded by whatever external organisms are growing on the mother while still allowing her to keep her unborn baby with her.
159[[/folder]]
160
161[[folder:Web Animation]]
162* ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner'': The WebAnimation/StrongBadEmail [[Recap/StrongBadEmailE100Flashback "flashback"]] tells the story of Homestar and Strong Bad meeting during a quarrel over a giant egg, which turns out to contain "a lifetime supply of fish sticks...and a The Cheat!" For reference, The Cheat is some kind of furry, vaguely rodent-like creature that serves as Strong Bad's lackey.
163[[/folder]]
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165[[folder:Webcomics]]
166* ''Webcomic/SlightlyDamned''
167** The Jackai are race of {{hobbit|s}}-sized humanoids that somewhat resemble a cross between a cat, ferret, and rodent, but they lay eggs in communal hatcheries.[[labelnote:fun fact]] The comic's creator based the Jackai child rearing method off that of the titular creatures from the show ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}'' of which she is a fan. [[/labelnote]]
168** The [[OurDemonsAreDifferent demons]] are shown to be egg-layers but a good deal of them [[BeastMan resemble mammals of some kind]]. However, this trope is still in play even for the ones who look like [[BirdPeople birds]] or [[LizardFolk reptiles]] as [[http://vignette4.wikia.nocookie.net/slightlydamned/images/3/35/BuwaroEgg_SD295.png/revision/latest?cb=20130118014628 their eggs]] are round, slimy and transparent like that of a fish or amphibian rather than shelled.
169** [[https://www.sdamned.com/comic/847 And then there's this kicker:]]
170--->'''Buwaro:''' '''[[spoiler:Angels]] hatch from EGGS?!'''
171* The Uryuoms of ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'' zigzag this trope: they can create eggs despite being a OneGenderRace but do so using unspecified "secretions" (which usually requires two Uryuoms to get enough). Once created, [[https://www.egscomics.com/comic/2003-09-09 these eggs will accept DNA from any combination of genders and species]] and produce a viable chimeric offspring which hatches after an incubation period. Despite being entirely biologically derived, a Uryuom egg is more like a {{Magitek}} UterineReplicator than anything else and so is an egg [[CallASmeerpARabbit in name only]].
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174[[folder:Websites]]
175* In ''Website/SpecWorld'', a parallel universe where dinosaurs survived and the Cretaceous extinction never happened, many of the lineages of egg-laying mammals survived as well. There are creatures resembling rats or mice but lay eggs, as well as many platypus relatives filling niches of badgers, weasels and raccoons. A strange aversion is the whale-like platypus called the [[PunnyName Moby Duck,]] which independently evolved live birth from the placental mammals.
176* In ''Blog/HamstersParadise'', the original sketches [[spoiler:depict a species of bird-like hamster that had re-evolved the ability to lay pseudo-eggs. Starting off by producing undeveloped young like a marsupial, it eventually evolves the ability to contain the newborns within an amniotic sac where they can develop further outside the mother's body, and emerge as a fully-developed fledgeling.]]
177* ''Website/NobodyHere'': At the end of the animation in "[[https://nobodyhere.com/justme/dodo.here Dodo]]", Jogchem (the author, [[MostWritersAreHuman a human]]) hatches out of an egg fully grown.
178* ''Website/{{Sylestia}}'': ExaggeratedTrope. Every female Sylesti lays eggs, even if it's based off of a species that doesn't lay eggs, like the wolf.
179* Yahoo Answers is amusingly filled with many, ''many'' asks on which animals lay eggs. Expect plenty of entries on "Do monkeys lay eggs?" "Do whales lay eggs?" "Do hippos lay eggs?" and so on.
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182[[folder:Web Videos]]
183* According to his mother, Little One of ''WebVideo/TalesFromMyDDCampaign'' hatched from an egg (he's half-dragon). Made even weirder by the fact that she also claims to have spent the entire pregnancy in her human form, which is why Little One manifests so few visible marks of draconic heritage.
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185
186[[folder:Western Animation]]
187* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/DinosaurTrain'', Mr. ''Pteranodon'', Tiny, Buddy, and Cindy ''Cimolestes'' met an amphibious mammaliaform called ''Castorocauda''. Cindy (who's a stem-placental mammal) is so shocked to see baby ''Castorocauda''s hatch from eggs that she almost faints.
188* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
189** In "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS12E17SimpsonSafari Simpson Safari]]", a baby Rhinoceros is seen breaking out of its egg. Lisa points out that rhinos ''don't'' do that. Homer points out that they obviously ''do'', since they just saw it happen.
190** [[ThisIndexIsNotAnExample The scene the trope name comes from isn't an example]] as it's not an egg but an isolation chamber that Ralph just ''thinks'' is an egg.
191* ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}'' hatch from eggs roughly the size and shape of watermelons. [[WordOfGod According to]] creator Creator/GregWeisman, the egg shells are malleable and leathery at first, but soon harden.
192* In ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'', Peter mentions that he thought dogs came from eggs.
193* In ''[[WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague Justice League Unlimited]]'', when referencing [[WingedHumanoid Shayera's]] pregnancy with his son Warhawk, ComicBook/{{Static}} tells Franchise/GreenLantern, "Shayera was one cranky pregnant lady. Though to be fair, if I laid an egg ''that'' big..." Luckily, he was just kidding.
194* ''WesternAnimation/RockosModernLife'' gives an InterspeciesRomance example, when Dr. Hutchinson, a cat married to a turtle, lays an egg. Apparently justified as turtles lay eggs and not only is she married to a turtle but her father is a turtle. Even weirder though, ''four'' kids come out of it, and since Heffer was the primary "[[{{Pun}} egg-sitter]]," [[LamarckWasRight one of them is a cow]] ''already wearing glasses''.
195* Played with on ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDragonJakeLong''. Jake spends an entire episode protecting a griffin egg, finally returning it to its mother. It then hatches...and the mother ''eats the baby.'' While Jake is horrified, Fu Dog calmly explains that since griffins are half-bird and half-lion, the mother just needs to carry the baby the mammalian way for a bit. Oddly, we have to presume the dragons actually ''don't'' come from eggs, since Jake's dad still doesn't know what's going on. Then again, these dragons are [[{{Weredragon}} human most of the time anyway]].
196* In the ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' episode "Luna Eclipsed", Pinkie Pie is dressed up as a chicken for Nightmare Night. At one point she get so spooked she lays an egg. A [[RandomSpeciesOffspring dragon egg]]. Somehow.
197* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'': Leela, a mutated human assumed to be mammalian, mentions in "Leela and the Genestalk" that she occasionally lays an egg. [[JustifiedTrope This same episode establishes that her mutant DNA includes some non-mammalian elements, however, such as squid tentacles.]]
198* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/ThePenguinsOfMadagascar'', King Julien believes that he had laid an egg. Kowalski points out that's biologically impossible... unless if Julien happens to be part-platypus.
199* ''WesternAnimation/TheOwlHouse'': "Echoes of the Past" reveals that [[spoiler:despite his canine-like appearance, King hatched from an egg]].
200* ''WesternAnimation/TotalDrama Revenge of the Island'': The goats that live on Camp Wawanakwa lay eggs... and also have bat wings and breathe fire, as a result of all the toxic waste that Chris dumped on the island.
201* ''WesternAnimation/{{Superfriends}}'': The Wonder Twins' pet Gleek is an alien monkey, but it is implied in the lost season segment "Invasion of the Space Dolls" that his species reproduces by laying eggs, as Jayna mentions that he was hatched when the Super Friends are celebrating his sixth birthday.
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204[[folder:Real Life]]
205* The Duck-Billed Platypus and Echidnas are the only living mammals to lay eggs. As an ancestral trait, egg-laying was probably much more common among mammals in the past, but by stroke of luck only a few lineages have survived to present day... and particularly aberrant ones at that, which don't fully represent what the rest of the now-extinct egg-laying mammals were even like.
206** In fact, egg-laying as an ancestral mammalian trait may have existed almost exclusively among Mesozoic mammals. In which case, there would be animals superficially looking nearly identical to badgers, otters, beavers, or possums... except that they laid eggs. The otter/beaver-like ''Castorocauda'' is probably one such example.
207** And further back millions of years before there were true mammals, there were the cynodonts: early therapsids that ranged in size from rat-size to large dog-size. Evidence has been found suggesting that cynodonts possessed fur and whiskers and thus would superficially resemble a modern mammal save for semi-sprawled front legs and a lack of external ears: however, like all therapsids outside the common ancestor of placentals and marsupials, the cynodonts were egg-layers: such as the beaver-sized ''Kayentatherium'', which laid clutches of as many as ''thirty-eight eggs'' that the parent watched over until they hatched into tiny and fully independent young. And to drive home how odd that would look, [[https://www.deviantart.com/eurwentala/art/Jurassic-Parent-794809807 here's a reconstruction of the visually rodent-like animal and its clutch of tiny eggs.]]
208* Beluga caviar sounds like this trope, as most people are familiar with beluga whales, but it's actually eggs from a fish called the Beluga Sturgeon. The word "beluga" comes from a Russian word meaning "white", so it's not terribly surprising that it appears in the names of unrelated species.
209* It could be argued that every species that doesn't reproduce asexually do come from fertilized eggs, with most mammals incubating in the mother's womb instead of in a shell. As the outer layer of a fertilized mammalian ovum becomes a placenta rather than a shell, whether this trope genuinely applies or not depends on how you look at it.
210* Similarly, plant seeds could be considered a kind of egg. (Alton Brown invokes this trope on ''Series/GoodEats'' when discussing what wheat germ is. He also compares an avocado to an egg, because of both its shape and its high fat content.)
211* Here's some weirdness for ya. A good portion of mammalian DNA is non-sequencing, or "junk" DNA. That doesn't mean it doesn't do anything, though. For example, some of that is very important in allowing a fertilized egg to attach itself to the uterus. Some of that comes from [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endogenous_retrovirus Endogenous Retroviruses]] which basically means that an ancestor was infected with a virus that incorporated itself into their genetic code and passed it on to all future generations. Putting all that together has led scientists to theorize that it was a viral infection that allowed modern fetuses to bypass the mother's immune system and necessitate live births as opposed to eggs, splitting placentals and marsupials from other mammals.
212* While human fetuses don't have eggshells surrounding them, they ''do'' have an amniotic sac, which corresponds to the clear membrane just inside an egg's shell. Usually this splits apart and peels cleanly away from the infant before the latter emerges from the birth canal, but occasionally the sac (called a "caul") will still be completely or partially wrapped around the newborn after parturition. The caul is traditionally considered good luck.
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