%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1620252990028552600
%% Please do not replace or remove without starting a new thread.
%%
[[quoteright:350:[[VideoGame/{{Miitopia}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/darkest_lord_pre_battlejpg.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:350:[[Music/AbbeyRoad Here comes the sun.]]]]
%%
We need to end the story with a bang. We need to really sell the GrandFinale. [[MoneyMakingShot We need to use up the rest of our budget]]. We need something big: bigger than a [[ChekhovsVolcano volcano]], bigger than {{humongous mecha}}, bigger than a battle royale with all the characters.

Well... There's nowhere to go now...but UP!

It's time to go to space, the final frontier! Nothing is bigger than space! Total [[{{Pun}} big bang]] right there folks!

Yes, space trumps almost any other environment, so it's a natural place to give an ending some style. It doesn't have to be deep space, though: the moon will do, since it gives everyone something to stand on and is still pretty spacy, what with no atmosphere. Once everyone's gotten up there, all the [[TropesInSpace space-related tropes]] apply, though since the action takes up a small portion of the overall runtime, don't expect to see [[ArtisticLicenseSpace the fruits of a lot of research]].

Obviously this doesn't apply in settings that start out in space, or go there fairly early. The transition shouldn't happen any earlier than the third act. However, some series that start out by travelling to other worlds may have the climax take place in the vacuum of space itself.

In videogames, this can easily overlap with AmazingTechnicolorBattlefield, and possibly with FinalBossNewDimension. The finale might constitute a HighAltitudeBattle.

Not to be confused with JustForFun/RecycledInSPACE, though that can happen if the creators are careless. Also not to be confused with an [[VideoGame/BlazBlue Astral Finish]].

This trope can be used by producers who are looking for a FinaleProductionUpgrade.

!!As this is an {{Ending Trope|s}}, [[Administrivia/SpoilersOff unmarked spoilers abound]]. [[Administrivia/YouHaveBeenWarned Beware]].
----
!!Examples:
[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Advertising]]
* Japan's mascot for the Platform/SegaSaturn, Advertising/SegataSanshiro, went into space in his final commercial. He redirected and rode a missile aimed at Sega's HQ by their competitors, making his voyage into the stars a HeroicSacrifice. Eventually it was revealed that [[PutOnABus he's busy]] on other planets, teaching them about the Sega Saturn.
* Similarly, Advertising/TheMostInterestingManInTheWorld ended his career by joining a Mars exploration mission.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
* ''Manga/BusoRenkin'': When the attempt to forcibly cure [[BigBad Victor]] failed, [[StockShonenHero Kazuki]] used the Sunlight Heart Plus' full power to blast the both of them to the moon, so that their WalkingWasteland powers would no longer threaten the Earth. With a cure finally complete, the series' {{Denouement}} has Kazuki's friends and comrades combining their powers to rescue the pair of them.
* ''Literature/ScrappedPrincess'': The final battle has Shanon team up with [[TomboyPrincess Princess Seness]], against the Peacemakers, which begins in the upper atmosphere, but soon escalates into an all-out battle royale in deep space!
* ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'', from the beginning of the third act onward, is set entirely in space, specifically the home pocket universe of the Anti-Spirals. Venturing further into the cosmos is a major theme of the story: at the start the heroes are huddled underground yearning for the surface and sky, and by the end they have the power and will to traverse outer space and hyperspace. So it's only appropriate that for the finale, the outer space imagery gets really over-the-top. The showdown with the FinalBoss is takes place in hyperspace, where galaxies are hurled like shuriken and the power of the Big Bang is wielded like [[EnergyWeapon Frickin' Laser Beams]].
* ''Anime/HeartcatchPrettyCure'''s final episodes are set in space, leading to the BigBad taking a OneWingedAngel form and the heroines taking up their own combined form of their own.
* ''Anime/PuellaMagiMadokaMagica'' has [[spoiler:Madoka herself]] one-shotting Kriemhild Gretchen to death and rewriting the law of the universe. While the universe is being rewritten, she and Homura have the now-memetic scene of "naked magical space lesbians". [[spoiler:Madoka]]'s final form might also be a ShoutOut to ''Heartcatch Pretty Cure'', above.
* ''Manga/ShamanKing'': Played with. While it doesn't take place literally in outer space, the powers of the Great Spirit are so immense, [[spoiler:Hao]] interprets his battle against the Five Grand Elemental Warriors as Earth vs the cosmos itself, so the battle inside the Great Spirit is set in a representation of outer space.
* ''Manga/DestinyOfTheShrineMaiden'': The final battle between Orochi [[spoiler:Chikane]] and Himeko takes place in a Shinto shrine on the moon.
* ''Anime/{{Symphogear}}'': The closing part of the first season FinalBattle has the three heroines going out to outer space to make a HeroicSacrifice.
* Naturally for a series heavily based around celestial bodies, ''Anime/SaintSeiyaOmega'''s GrandFinale takes place in space.
* ''Anime/KillLaKill'' has its final battle in low Earth orbit. Fitting, considering the show is something of a successor to ''Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann''.
* ''Anime/DragonBallZBattleOfGods'' and ''Anime/DragonBallSuper'': The last stretch of Goku and Beerus's battle takes place far, ''far'' above Earth.
* The final battle of season 1 of ''Anime/TanteiOperaMilkyHolmes'' takes place in space.
* Most ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'' series have discrete arcs in space or on Earth. The finale is usually in space, allowing a much larger scale of combat than shown terrestrially.
** ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam'' started in space, spent the middle half on Earth, and had the final arc back in space, ending with the White Base's joining the mass (counter-)invasion of Zeon's asteroid stronghold. This became the formula that was followed in ''[[Anime/MobileSuitZetaGundam Zeta]]'', ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamZZ ZZ]]'', ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED SEED Destiny]]'', and ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEEDDestiny SEED Destiny]]''.
** ''[[Anime/MobileSuitVictoryGundam Victory]]'', ''Anime/TurnAGundam'', and the first season of ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamIronBloodedOrphans Iron-Blooded Orphans]]'' reverse said formula by going Earth/Mars->space->Earth. The first two and the second season finale of ''Iron-Blooded Orphans'' are also subversions where it ''appears'' the final confrontation will be in space, but things end up being dragged planetside one way or the other.
** ''[[Anime/MobileFighterGGundam G Gundam]]'' is the straighest example in the franchise: The overwhelmingly majority of the series is CombatByChampion where [[EarthIsABattlefield "earth is the ring"]]. The fighting only goes into space in the last couple episodes [[spoiler:when Urube revives the Devil Gundam and makes Neo-Japan into its new body]].
** ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamWing Wing]]'' and ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundam00 00]]'' have events change between Earth and space regularly (or [[TwoLinesNoWaiting simultaneously]]), but their final arcs (and the first season finale for ''00'') take place in space.
** While the overwhelmingly majority of ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamTheWitchFromMercury The Witch from Mercury]]'' technically takes place in space, most mobile suit action occurs on Earth-like (simulated) battlefields in a MilitaryAcademy colony. The major space battles are limited to the prologue, the first cour finale, and the last couple episodes of the series as a whole.
** ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamThe08thMSTeam'' is an inversion: the series ''starts'' in space, where Shiro and Aina first meet, while the rest is all on Earth.
** Exceptions: Practially all combat in ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamCharsCounterattack Char's Counterattack]]'', ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundam0080WarInThePocket 0080]]'', ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamF91 F91]]'' occurs in space (within colonies in the latter case). The events of ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundam0083StardustMemory 0083]]'' go to Earth less than halfway through and stay there.
* The final episode of ''GO-GO Anime/{{Tamagotchi}}!'', which is the series finale for the ''Tamagotchi'' anime in general, has the characters traveling into space to [[spoiler:cheer up Tamagotchi Planet and allow the Tamagottsun which merged Tama Town and Dream Town together to end]].
* The final battle of ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaDetonation'' takes place in low Earth orbit, [[spoiler:with Nanoha having to stop a KillSat from destroying the city.]]
* ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureBattleTendency'' has a {{Downplayed}} example in the final battle between Joseph and [[BigBad Kars]], which ends with [[spoiler:[[ClimacticVolcanoBackdrop a volcanic eruption]] launching the large stone slab they're on all the way to the very edge of the Earth's atmosphere, to the point where stars become visible. Unfortunately for Kars, he gets hit by chunks of debris from the eruption that push him just a little bit further, outside of the Earth's gravitational pull, and [[AndIMustScream dooming him to float through outer space forever]]. Joseph, meanwhile, survives riding on top of that big piece of rock all the way back down to the sea]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fanfiction]]
* In [[Creator/PeterChimaera Peter Chimaera's]] ''Digimon 2: Return of Digimon'', Digimon and his evil clone Evil Digimon suddenly decide to fly into space for their final battle. Both of them are perfectly able [[BatmanCanBreatheInSpace to survive there without oxygen]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
* ''Film/ThingsToCome'' ends with a [[AdamAndEvePlot young man and woman being sent to start life on a new world]]; the [[PhallicWeapon seed of mankind shot into space]] from a [[NotCompensatingForAnything huge gun]].
* PlayedForLaughs in ''Film/MacheteKills'' which ends with the BigBad escaping into space. We then get a trailer for the sequel ''Machete Kills Again...InSpace!'' which is InTheStyleOf a 1970's ''Star Wars'' rip-off.
* During the climax of ''Film/{{F9}}'', the series finally [[AscendedMeme fulfills all of the jokes]] that people have made about where its constant SequelEscalation would end up, as they literally strap rocket boosters to a Pontiac Fiero and send it into outer space so that Tej and Roman can blow up the BigBad's satellite.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* In the last few paragraphs of ''Literature/TheIronDream'' by Creator/NormanSpinrad / UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler (More precisely: Norman Spinrad conceived the novel as something written by an AlternateUniverse Hitler who emigrated to the US and became a [=SF=] author), [[spoiler:a spaceship leaves Earth -- permanently polluted by radiation -- to start the colonization of the cosmos]].
* Literature/{{Animorphs}} certainly uses this. The books before the GrandFinale certainly have examples of both a spaceship setting and adventures on extrasolar planets (three times in 54 books), but the vast majority of the action simply takes place on the surface of the Earth. But the final battle with the Yeerks involves infiltrating a large mother ship and fighting a battle while in orbit outside the atmosphere, and then convincing a fleet of Andalite battleships with the message that "We know you have plans to [[EarthShatteringKaboom destroy the Earth]], now cancel those plans." This climactic battle isn't the last thing to happen in the series (it's complicated), and the series ends with a [[BolivianArmyEnding suspenseful battle]] between two starships, this time very far away from Earth's solar system.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* The last scene of the final episode of ''Series/TheAvengers1960s'' has Steed and Tara being launched into space aboard a rocket.
* The final episode of ''Series/FamilyMatters'' has Urkel going up to a space station.
* ''Series/PowerRangersInSpace'' was [[RealLifeWritesThePlot believed by the writers]] to be the last season of ''Franchise/PowerRangers'' after ''[[Series/PowerRangersTurbo Turbo's]]'' failure, so they turned it into the GrandFinale to the storyline they'd been telling thus far. It turned out so well that the whole franchise was UnCanceled.
* ''Series/SaulOfTheMoleMen'' ended with everyone going into space.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]
* Styx, "Come Sail Away"
--> I thought that they were angels; much to my surprise
--> We climbed aboard their starship, we headed to the skies
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Pinball]]
* ''Pinball/FooFighters2023'': The last stretch of "[[WizardMode The Final Battle]]" is devoted to a fight in space between the Foobot and the Overlord.
* The final Adventure mode in ''Pinball/JunkYard'' has the player riding his [[HomemadeInventions flying jalopy]] into space to combat Crazy Bob with fireworks.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'': The third and final set of the [[AncientGrome Theros]] block, Journey Into Nyx, is set mostly in the titular sub-plane, hanging in the upper atmosphere of the greater plane of Theros. Matter itself is fundamentally magical there, and the Gods call it home. [[spoiler: [[LadyOfWar Elspeth]] and [[CatPeople Ajani]] make the journey to kill the MadGod Xenagos]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''[[VideoGame/{{Cruisn}} Cruis'n World]]'' has a final/bonus stage on the moon.
* Both ''VideoGame/DeBlob'' games do this: In the first, [[BigBad Comrade Black]] is fleeing the planet with his store of stolen color, but Blob manages to get on the ship at the last minute and wreak havoc. In the second, Black flees to his orbital Hypno-Ray and absorbs all the color from the planet at once, but Blob manages to commandeer a rocket and catch up.
* The last region of ''VideoGame/DestroyAllHumans 2'' is a Russian Moon base.
* The area containing the last 19 levels in ''[[VideoGame/DigDug Dig Dug Arrangement]]'' is Area 6, the Moon's Surface.
* The final third of ''VideoGame/DisneysKimPossible3TeamPossible'' takes place on the space satellite Disco Station 9.
* The final level of ''VideoGame/{{Einhander}}'' takes place in space, pitting the Endymion/Astrea against [[spoiler:their own Selene forces, who have declared them [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness outliving their usefulness]].]] This culminates in a FinalBoss battle against [[spoiler:Hyperion, their own superior]].
* ''[[VideoGame/{{Excite}} Excite Truck]]'' and ''Excite Bots'' both have Nebula, a bizarre spacy realm, as their final track.
* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIV'', Cecil's journey to the moon fulfills a prophecy. There he learns about the identity of the BigBad [[spoiler:and himself]], and enters the VeryDefinitelyFinalDungeon.
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI'' is a massive fan of the AmazingTechnicolorBattlefield for the FinalBoss of expansions. The vast majority of which are very spacey, but none more so than the battlefield ''Empyreal Paradox'' where the god Promathia is fought at the end of Chains of Promathia (and later Shinryu[[note]]Who is Promathia from an alternate universe where he won the final battle and absorbed Selh'teus.[[/note]] at the end of the Abyssea battle packs). You're literally in space standing on an invisible "floor" with the planet Vana'diel clearly visible below you.
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' has done this for several expansion final bosses starting from Stormblood, with each one pushing out further beyond than the last. In your fight with Shinryu, the boss carries your party into the upper reaches of the atmosphere, starting phase 2 of the fight high in the sky. Shadowbringers takes your party fighting far, far above in orbit, with a somber view of [[spoiler: the representation of the dying moments of the planet before its sundering]]. And Endwalker one-ups the stakes once again by having you face off against your greatest foes at [[spoiler:the very furthest reaches of all existence, the far edge of the universe]].
* PlayedForLaughs in ''VideoGame/FreakyFlyers''. Every single character's story mode, without fail, ends with Pilot X revealing himself to "challenge you to a battle in outer space!"
* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfDragoon'' ends on the setting's resident WeirdMoon, specifically on the inside, which is a strange dimension that apes various environments previously visited on the surface.
* ''VideoGame/GrandiaII'' has an [[BadMoonRising evil moon]] that has to be visited in the end and destroyed, although its interior is more of a WombLevel.
* ''VideoGame/LittleBigPlanet2'': The Negativatron is fought in the outer reaches of the Cosmos. The final part of his final battle is in front of a Space arcade game.
* ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'':
** ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy'': Inverted. While most of the game is set in space, the final galaxy, appropriately called "Grand Finale Galaxy", takes place in the Mushroom Kingdom, not featuring the crazy-shaped {{Baby Planet}}s and {{Unrealistic Black Hole}}s which are otherwise common.
** ''VideoGame/SuperMarioOdyssey'': The final level [[spoiler:takes place on the moon, in a region called [[PunnyName Honeylune Ridge.]]]] There's also [[spoiler:the BrutalBonusLevel Dark Side of the Moon and the NintendoHard Darker Side of the Moon.]]
** ''VideoGame/PaperMario64'': The final battle of the game is set in the stars above the Mushroom Kingdom, where Peach's castle is hoisted into space with Bowser's castle underneath.
** ''VideoGame/MarioKart'': Rainbow Road, the final track in every game, is in space or at least the upper atmosphere. In ''Mario Kart Wii'' your character will catch fire and appear burned up on re-entry if they fell off the track. In terms of the [[NostalgiaLevel Retro GP tracks]] in later installments, however, ''VideoGame/MarioKartDS'' and ''Mario Kart Wii'' avert it by using [[VideoGame/MarioKartDoubleDash GCN Yoshi Circuit]] and [[VideoGame/MarioKart64 N64 Bowser's Castle]], but ''VideoGame/MarioKart7'' and ''[[VideoGame/MarioKart8 8]]'' finally play it straight with [[VideoGame/SuperMarioKart SNES Rainbow Road]] and [[VideoGame/MarioKart64 N64 Rainbow Road]], respectively.
** ''VideoGame/MarioParty9'': The final board in Solo mode is Bowser Station, a space station where Bowser has taken all of the Mini-Stars. The players [[SpaceZone fly through space in a flying saucer]], and make stops at various space colonies to take part in different Captain Events.
** ''VideoGame/MarioPartyStarRush'': The final board of each world in Toad Scramble always ends with a boss fight against Bowser, and all three of his fights take place in space, with Bowser attacking from a flying saucer that transforms into a Bowser mecha, and the player characters moving around atop floating space stations.
* ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot'': The three racing games all end with racetracks set in space - Oxide Station in ''VideoGame/CrashTeamRacing'', Hyper Spaceway in ''VideoGame/CrashNitroKart'' and Craters on Uranus in ''VideoGame/CrashTagTeamRacing''. ''VideoGame/CrashTeamRacingNitroFueled'', being a remake of ''Team Racing'' with most of the content from ''Nitro Kart'' thrown in for good measure, sees both Oxide Station and Hyper Spaceway make an appearance, albeit the latter comes in a more compressed form due to the lack of anti-gravity. The Gasmoxia Grand Prix, being the final limited-time event, also caps off the post-release tracks with Drive-Thru Danger, a track set high up in the stratosphere of Gasmoxia.
* The ''Crash'' platformers sometimes get in on this, too: ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot2CortexStrikesBack'', ''VideoGame/CrashBandicootTheWrathOfCortex'', and ''VideoGame/CrashBandicootTheHugeAdventure'' all have final levels and {{final boss}}es taking place on space stations.
* ''Franchise/MegaMan'':
** Most of the ''Videogame/MegaManClassic'' Platform/GameBoy series have their final levels take place in space (the fifth game does not count due to half the boss roster residing in space levels, and the only game to completely avert the space setting is the third one). As for the main games, ''VideoGame/MegaMan10'' saves its very last stage for this trope, right after the usual four stages of a traditional endgame castle. ''VideoGame/MegaMan2'''s final battle appears to take place in space, but it's just a holographic illusion.
** For ''VideoGame/MegaManX'', ''X4'' has its final two stages set on the Repliforce's Final Weapon space station. The finale of ''X8'' involves traveling to the moon, where Sigma's base is located.
** ''VideoGame/MegaManZero4'''s final stages is set in the space cannon Ragnarok that is used by the villain Dr. Weil to destroy Area Zero that contains the last bit of nature in the ruined world to keep the citizens of Neo Arcadia under his tyrannical rule. The very final stage has Zero going back to the station as [[spoiler:it is falling down to Earth straight to Area Zero that will destroy what's left of life on the planet. The final battle between Zero and Weil is on a time limit that tells how long until Ragnarok enters orbit and its a life lost if time's up. Zero ended up killing Weil which leads to Ragnarok splitting into debris that falls harmlessly on Earth, likely taking Zero with it.]]
** ''VideoGame/MegaManStarForce''[='s=] final stage is set in a space station, and ''3'''s is [[spoiler:within a meteor that's [[ColonyDrop headed for Earth]].]]
** ''VideoGame/MegaManLegends'' second game has the final battle take place in Elysium all the way in space [[spoiler:where the last true humans lived for centuries until they went extinct with the death of "The Master" and Sera, Yuna and Mega Man Volnutt remain trapped due to the death of Gats.]]
* In ''VideoGame/{{Miitopia}}'', the FinalBoss is fought in low orbit. [[spoiler:Fittingly, it took the appearance of a miniature golden sun]]. It provides the page image.
* Done to great effect in the classic Creator/{{Infocom}} TextAdventure game ''VideoGame/AMindForeverVoyaging''; the epilogue has the protagonist and his family enter a rocket as part of the first space colonization efforts.
* ''VideoGame/Portal2'' ends with [[spoiler:the player using portals to go to the moon; Chell is rescued before the portal closes, but the villain is stranded in space.]]
* Played with in ''VideoGame/SaintsRowTheThird'' if you go to rescue your friends in the final story mission. The mission after that is "Gangsters in Space" where you fight Killbane on Mars. [[spoiler:You're actually filming a movie.]]
* In the last level of ''[[VideoGame/{{Scribblenauts}} Super Scribblenauts]]'', Maxwell's EvilTwin Llewxam steals the [[PlotCoupon Starite]] in a UFO, then absconds to space; Maxwell must follow in the vehicle of his choice, [[UnexpectedShmupLevel shooting Starites at his twin]] until the latter crashes to earth.
* The last two levels of ''VideoGame/GunstarHeroes'' take place in space, starting with a [[GenreShift side-scrolling space shooter]] stage as the player pursues TheEmpire's flagship, then fighting their way through said flagship.
* The last area in ''VideoGame/SoulBlazer'' is the World of Evil, which resembles space with a ground and walls made of some transparent matter. The room just before the BigBad's shrine is even called "Dazzling Space"!
* In the classic arcade game ''VideoGame/TimePilot'' the final level is in space in the future. If/when you beat the Boss you go back to the first level again, only it's harder this time.
* The first ''VideoGame/{{XCOM}}'' game mostly involves fending off alien attacks on Earth. However, the grand finale is humanity's first manned mission to Mars, armed with alien technology and the biggest guns X-COM has to offer.
** ''XCOM: Apocalypse'' [[SerialEscalation ups the ante]] with a whole series of endgame missions where your soldiers turn the tables on the aliens and raid ''their'' military installations, all set on an alien planet ''in AnotherDimension''.
* The latter half of the final stage of ''VideoGame/MetalSlug 3'' entails [[EnemyMine the player and the Rebel Army teaming up]] after the Mars People abduct Morden and your previous playable character. With the Martians escaping into space, the heroes climb into rockets and chase them into the cosmos.
* In ''VideoGame/CityOfHeroes'', the final battle of the "Who Will Die" story arc takes place on an island the villain has levitated into Earth orbit.
* In ''WesternAnimation/CodenameKidsNextDoor - VideoGame/OperationVIDEOGAME'', the FinalBoss fight takes place on the Moon.
* ''VideoGame/IllusionOfGaia'': The hero Will ascends to the surface of the rapidly-approaching Chaos Comet for the final confrontation.
* The final battle with Vlitra in ''VideoGame/AsurasWrath'' ends with this. [[spoiler: The True Final boss fight with Chakravartin in ''Part IV: Nirvana'' takes this further, with Asura becoming bigger then any other planet sized character in the game, only to fight against Chakravartin's practically ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'' sized fortress in space, leading to an awesome final battle that needs to be seen to be believed.]]
* In ''VideoGame/{{Glider}} PRO'', it's common for the last {{star|ShapedCoupon}} in a house to be somewhere up in space.
* ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles1'' has the party just plain walking(!) right out into space, going past planets from our solar system, on their way to confront the final boss.
** ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles2'': [[spoiler:The final chapter takes place in a SpaceStation just above the atmosphere of the Earth, the same space station where Klaus undertook his experiment that led to the creation of the universe of the original ''Xenoblade Chronicles''.]]
* ''VideoGame/TheWonderful101'' takes this premise and absolutely ''[[AwesomeBosses/VideoGames blows the roof off with it]]'', with the final battle against Jergingha taking place just over Earth.
* The climatic fight against [[spoiler:Jubileus, the Creator]] in ''VideoGame/{{Bayonetta}}'' takes at the confines of the solar system. [[spoiler:After you defeat her, you need to punch her soul from Pluto to the Sun]].
* The final boss battle in the original ''VideoGame/SinAndPunishment'' has Saki go OneWingedAngel and growing about as tall as the country of Japan is large, in order to fight against a false planet Earth.
** The final level of ''VideoGame/SinAndPunishment2'', a BossRush level takes place in space.
* A recurring element in ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'' games is the finale taking place in space.
** The trend started with ''VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog2'', with its final stage taking place on Eggman's SpaceStation, the Death Egg. The final boss fight features a view of the Earth from orbit.
** ''[[VideoGame/Sonic3AndKnuckles Sonic & Knuckles]]'': The final zone of the game, where the first act takes place inside the Death Egg space station, with its second act being outside of it. The Earth is even visible from view in the latter act. If the player collected all the Chaos[=/=]Super Emeralds, then the TrueFinalBoss takes place in The Doomsday Zone, where Super Sonic flies through space to pursue a fleeing Eggman carrying the Master Emerald.
** ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure2'': The final stretch of the story and final bosses take place on the Space Colony ARK, which is an abandoned space station. This includes levels that take place inside and outside of the ARK, with both Sonic and Shadow fighting the TrueFinalBoss outside the colony, that is hurtling on a crash course to Earth.
** ''VideoGame/SonicFrontiers'': [[spoiler:The TrueFinalBoss, has Super Sonic and Sage piloting [[HumongousMecha THE SUPREME Titan]] fighting together against [[EldritchAbomination THE END]], who takes the form of a giant moon as it leaves Earth. If the player is playing on Hard difficulty, they even get to fight THE END in a shoot-em-up sequence that orbits around the Earth]].
* The hidden track of the first ''VideoGame/{{Wipeout}}'' is set on Mars. The bonus track in ''Wipeout Fusion'' is set on an alien planet. In ''Pure'' it's levitating in the upper atmosphere.
* The various final stages of the ''VideoGame/AeroFighters'' series take place off Earth; the first two games take place in the Earth's orbit, while one of the third game's final stages is set on Mars. This is despite [[BatmanCanBreatheInSpace the player ships not being suited for flight outside of the Earth's atmosphere]].
* ''VideoGame/BlastCorps'' has an entire set of stages set away from Earth as the finale, taking you to the Earth's moon and several other planets in the Solar System, including planets that in-game are solid planets yet are gas giants in real life.
* ''VideoGame/ViewtifulJoe'':
** Both games have a final stage in space. Since they take place in Movieland, they are beyond over the top and awesome because of that. The first game's finale, "Joe & Sylvia", is a ''Franchise/StarWars'' homage, culminating in a battle with space mecha atop the Earth, and you punch out ''the Moon'' at Mach Speed to make yourself go [[HotBlooded red hot]] with a flaming BattleAura! Followed up by a duel with the FinalBoss outside of his mecha in a one-on-one brawl. In a space station with lowered gravity, no less.
** The second game's finale, "Starship Viewties", takes place on Cimmerian Planet Gedow, paying tribute to ''Franchise/{{Alien}}'' with robots that look like the titular creature and then going wild with the difficulty curve with everything from a cyborg dino tank to a giant cyborg robo ''Buddha statue''. But all that is topped when SerialEscalation kicks since the last game and the obligatory mecha battle, thanks to starship-class CombiningMecha, rises to the scale of the ''whole solar system''. And now you get to punch out ''the Earth'' to cast your battle aura while fighting giant, blazing space dragons! However, the actual final battle takes place on Earth. And it is genuinely brutal. However, it boasts a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b2ZH3n37uTM&list=PLDA20A3B94603BF14 joyously awesome final battle theme]].
* ''VideoGame/SnakeRattleNRoll'' has the final level on the moon, for no discernable reason. With an appropriate change in gravity, which doesn't exactly make it easier, since it's a BossBattle.
* ''VideoGame/LEGOMarvelSuperHeroes'' has the third-to- and second-to-last levels take place on Asteroid M in deep space, including one part in the penultimate level where you fly through the vacuum unprotected to reach another area, but the final level itself is a HighAltitudeBattle on the deck of the S.H.I.E.L.D. Hellicarrier.
* In ''VideoGame/LEGOCityUndercover'', the final level takes Chase to the moon.
* The last level of Classic Mode in the ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros'' series is always a battle against Master Hand (and occasionally Crazy Hand) on Final Destination, a flat platform in a background that was basic black in earlier installments (and even ''Melee'' even had a digital feel to it), but in ''Brawl'' and ''4'' had become a deep space setting as stars and galaxies drift by the battlefield in the background.
** This was also the case in Adventure Mode on ''Melee''.
* In ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarOnline2'', Dark Falz Elder and the final boss of Episode 3 [[spoiler:Profound Darkness]] are fought in space. The final boss of Episode 4 [[spoiler:ESC-A Falz Mother]] is fought on Earth's moon.
* A number of ''Franchise/{{Kirby}}'' games end in this way, such as ''[[VideoGame/KirbySuperStar Super Star]]/[[DubNameChange Fun Pak]]'', ''[[VideoGame/KirbySqueakSquad Squeak Squad]]'' and ''[[VideoGame/KirbyPlanetRobobot Planet Robobot]]''. Some of the ones that don't incorporate FinalBossNewDimension instead, since the franchise generally makes good use of its deep space setting.
* ''VideoGame/{{Rampage}}'':
** ''World Tour'' has its final stage set on the moon, where Luna Tech is stationed.
** Accounting for the "Universal" part of ''Universal Tour'', its final segment is set across the planets of the solar system, a few moons (Earth's is the first stop), and various cities on the aliens' home planet.
* The final battle in ''VideoGame/MarvelVsCapcom3'' takes place in space with the Earth in the background slowly decaying as ComicBook/{{Galactus}} starts to devour it.
* The final battle of ''VideoGame/TransformersDevastation'' has Optimus and Megatron squaring off in space.
* In the UsefulNotes/ArcadeGame ''Sky Soldiers'', the player ship is launched into space for the final stage, set in "AD 2110."
* In the last levels of ''Slide the Shakes'', as of now, is set in a spaceship. And this is a game about sliding shakes (or any random desserts and sweet drinks) into targets.
* The race against [[spoiler:Iceman]] in ''[[VideoGame/StreetpassMiiPlaza Slot Car Racer]]'' takes place in space.
* The final and hardest minigame in ''VideoGame/WiiPlayMotion'' has the Miis navigate a space shuttle to assemble a giant space station.
* Quite amazingly, ''VideoGame/PizzaFrenzy'' manages to pull this out: you think the Strombolis would be satisfied after implementing their restaurants in every town on Earth? WRONG! They manage to open pizzerias on the Moon and even Mars in the final levels.
* ''VideoGame/LostSphear'''s final boss fight takes place on the moon.
* Subverted by ''VideoGame/DuckTales''. The game does have a Moon stage, which would usually be the final destination for a world-spanning treasure adventure, and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KF32DRg9opA the background music]] is fitting for an example of this trope. However, it's just a regular stage out of 5 that can be selected from the beginning.
* The FinalDungeon of ''VideoGame/WonderBoyIIIMonsterLair'' is the alien invaders' spaceship, and the FinalBoss battle is [-[[JustForFun/RecycledInSpace IN SPACE!]]-]
* Developer Quintet, known for ''VideoGame/ActRaiser'' and ''VideoGame/IllusionOfGaia'', had a fondness of having the final boss battle take place in space or at the very least, have some sort of space-looking backdrop. It's known as the "Quintet background" in fan circles.
* ''VideoGame/ChromaSquad'': No matter [[MultipleEndings which way you get there]], the final battle takes place aboard [[GreaterScopeVillain Villain X's starship]], complete with a HumongousMecha battle on the top of said starship.
* ''VideoGame/PartTimeUFO'''s last three levels take place on the moon, as you're trying to stop another group of aliens from invasing Earth.
* In ''[[VideoGame/{{Bonk}} Bonk's Revenge]]'', TheVeryDefinitelyFinalDungeon is a temple on the moon.
* The finale of ''VideoGame/BeyondGoodAndEvil'' is set within the [=DomZ=] base on the moon.
* Both ''VideoGame/{{Overcooked}}'' games have a space world as their final world. In the first game, it's more of a space station; in the sequel, it's an alien planet.
* ''VideoGame/{{Civilization}}'': One of the recurring VariablePlayerGoals is the Science Victory, where you become the first nation in the world to colonise another planet, though most of the games don't feature gameplay within space itself.
* The last few boss fights of ''VideoGame/KlonoaHeroesDensetsuNoStarMedal'' take place on the moon... then transition to [[FinalBossNewDimension inside a separate dimension forming on the moon]].
* The final stages of ''VideoGame/NeoContra'' has you taking the fight to [[BigBad Master Contra]] on his space station.
* The finale of ''VideoGame/Splatoon3'' takes place in space as the player and their allies fight to prevent the BigBad from mutating all non-mammalian life on Earth.
* ''VideoGame/{{Raiden}}'':
** In the first two games, after completing stage 5, the player's ship takes off into space for the remaining three stages.
** The arcade release of ''Raiden IV'' features a straighter example, in which the player only reaches space in stage 5, the last stage of the game. In the console-exclusive modes, stage 5 is split into three stages, with stage 5 spent leaving the Earth's atmosphere and then the last two being in space.
** ''VideoGame/RaidenV'' has the player going into space in stage 7 and then commencing an assault on the crystals' home planet in stage 8.
* ''VideoGame/Persona3'' has its FinalBattle take place within the WeirdMoon.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]
* ''WebVideo/FranceFive'': After realizing that they're putting the city at risk by battling in it, the France Five take their final fight against Glou Man Chou to space.
* The final act of the 200th episode special of ''WebVideo/ScottTheWoz'', "Borderline Forever", involves Scott and his friends travelling to outer space [[ItMakesSenseInContext in a rocket built from shovelware Wii games, to defeat the blue border that encases every single one of Scott's videos once and for all]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* The [[FinalBattle Final Battle]] of ''WesternAnimation/{{Amphibia}}'' occurs in space between the girls in their [[SuperMode Calamity Forms]] and [[BigBad The Core]] while trying to prevent it from [[ColonyDrop crashing Amphibia's moon into the planet's surface]].
* ''WesternAnimation/BlazeAndTheMonsterMachines'': The last episode of the "Robot Riders" miniseries, "Robots in Space", involved the Monster Machines turning into space robots and going to space to rescue Commander Megan after she crash-lands on Pluto.
* The final season of ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'' takes place in space, with the GrandFinale involving [[spoiler:a battle between Pops and his EvilTwin for nothing less than the end of the entire universe.]]
* The ''WesternAnimation/TeamUmizoomi'' episode, "Umi Space Heroes", involves Team Umizoomi going to space to repair the moon after The [=TroubleMakers=] have destroyed it by sending Trouble Bubbles.
[[/folder]]
----