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1'''Basic Trope''': A mental disorder that causes inventiveness.
2* '''Straight''': Supercognitive Antisocial Disorder ([[FunWithAcronyms SAD]]) causes bizarre thought processes that lead to amazing inventions and superhuman intellectual achievement. On the other hand, these same thought processes cause its sufferers to lose their grip on reality.
3* '''Exaggerated''': SAD causes its users to be completely absorbed with their work and hardly notice the real world.
4* '''Downplayed''': SAD is merely an obsessive focus. It doesn't make them any more talented, it merely makes them determined enough to get more done.
5* '''Justified''': SAD causes its sufferers to compulsively hyperfocus on things. It makes day-to-day life hard for its sufferers, but when they concentrate on one thing at the expense of everything else, it becomes a little easier to manage.
6* '''Inverted''': SAD causes its users to be hyper-sane but terrible with technology.
7* '''Subverted''':
8** A MadScientist just turns out to have an already-established mental disorder.
9** It turns out that the mad scientist is not actually insane. It is just that [[TheConspiracy certain groups]] would rather have things go [[ModernStasis unchanged]]. TheWorldIsNotReady or so they claim but it is clear they're just afraid of losing their grip on power. [[CassandraTruth The scientists' explanations of what is really going on]] [[HeroWithBadPublicity just make them look crazier.]]
10* '''Double Subverted''': Which turns out to be interacting strangely with his previously unnoticed SAD...
11* '''Parodied''': SAD causes all the usual mad science tropes, including being surrounded by equipment, but none of the expertise.
12* '''Zig Zagged''': It's hinted that an SRMD might be in play, and its stated just as often that it's not.
13* '''Averted''': Mad science isn't explained, or there are no mad scientists.
14* '''Enforced''': Alex, the previously heroic protagonist [[JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope began engaging in some *very* questionable actions.]] ExecutiveMeddling forced them to have a good excuse for it or RetCon it. The authors went with mental instability.
15* '''Lampshaded''': "Geez, what's up with mad scientists? Is there a medical condition that causes intelligent megalomania or something?" "Actually..."
16* '''Invoked''': A mad scientist operates on his son's brain, trying to induce SRMD.
17* '''Exploited''': A group looking for technological advancement hires a bunch of people with SAD, because they know that these people are ''very'' good at inventing.
18* '''Implied''': A case file on a defeated mad scientist is seen on a desk. It has "new condition?" scrawled across it but it is never confirmed.
19* '''Defied''': A mad scientist specifically hires a psychologist to explain his mental condition doesn't relate to his technical skills.
20* '''Discussed''': ???
21* '''Conversed''': ???
22* '''Deconstructed''': SAD causes some technical expertise, but its nature causes its sufferers to neglect safety protocols, waste their talents on trivial pursuits, blow themselves up, or turn their creations on the rest of humanity.
23* '''Reconstructed''': When medicated properly, a mad scientist can retain some of his edge while still maintaining something of a grip on sanity. In the story, it becomes a plot point of how long a character needed for their technical expertise can go without trying to turn his companions into hats.
24* '''Played For Laughs''': A character with SAD is used for cheap jokes the way conditions like Down Syndrome and Aspergers sometimes are.
25* '''Played For Drama''': A couple discovers that their kid has SAD, and the story revolves around the parents trying to get along with their lives and raise their kid.
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27Back to ScienceRelatedMemeticDisorder
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29%% Optional items, added after Conversed, at your discretion:

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