->'''Sisko:''' I have a son that I'm raising alone, Captain. This is not the ideal environment.\\
'''Picard:''' Unfortunately, Starfleet officers do not always have the luxury to serve in an ideal environment.
-->-- ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'', "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS01E01E02Emissary Emissary]]", promptly telling the audience that this ain't the starship ''Enterprise''

Some series have a really straightforward premise which they execute immediately. Others play it close to the chest until the very end of the first episode. Either way, most shows need to establish their tone, premise or both in their first episode, both to make the viewer feel comfortable and to filter out the people who wouldn't like the show.

Most of these moments are based on [[ShockingMoments giving the audience a shock]] or just showing us what either the premise or the execution would be. It's normally done in a straightforward way, with no anticipation or foreshadowing, to both overwhelm and surprise the audience and make them addicted to the show. Note that [[TrailersAlwaysSpoil promotional materials can spoil these moments]].

May involve beginning the story InMediasRes before cutting back to a slow-burning set-up once viewers know the kind of thing they're in for later on. May come with an EstablishingTeamShot when the premise of the series revolves around a team.

The RRatedOpening is a specific subtrope of this, used to establish early on that the work isn't suitable for sensitive audiences. Can overlap with FirstEpisodeTwist, but an Establishing Series Moment doesn't have to be a twist. Contrast with HalfwayPlotSwitch. Compare EstablishingCharacterMoment, where the purpose is to show us a character's personality in one single moment, and with GrowingTheBeard, where the ''quality'' of the show is established.

----

!!Example subpages:
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%%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct alphabetical order.
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[[index]]
* EstablishingSeriesMoment/AnimeAndManga
* EstablishingSeriesMoment/ComicBooks
* EstablishingSeriesMoment/FanWorks
* [[EstablishingSeriesMoment/LiveActionFilms Films — Live-Action]]
* EstablishingSeriesMoment/LiveActionTV
* EstablishingSeriesMoment/VideoGames
* EstablishingSeriesMoment/WesternAnimation
[[/index]]

!!Other examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Asian Animation]]
* The second episode of ''Animation/HappyHeroes'' (the second part of a [[FiveEpisodePilot two-part pilot]]) has the Supermen come to life from within their [[TransformingMecha Car Knights]] and using them to defeat the MonsterOfTheWeek for the first time. Many later episodes have climatic action scenes similar to this one.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Strips]]
* ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' famously sets the tone for its nearly 50-year run in [[https://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1950/10/02 its very first strip]], which introduces the strange mixture of respect and [[ButtMonkey inexplicable contempt]] the characters have for Charlie Brown.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films — Animated]]
* ''WesternAnimation/AtlantisTheLostEmpire'' lets audiences know [[DarkerAndEdgier what kind of]] Disney movie it is by setting off the FantasticNuke ''two seconds'' after the opening logos. Less than two minutes later, the entire city has sunk beneath the ocean waves and [[InferredHolocaust untold scores of people]] have died in the cataclysm.
* ''WesternAnimation/Shrek1'' starts with him reading a fairy tale book about a prince who rescues a princess who fall in love and live happily ever after... before he proceeds to tear the last page out and use it as toilet paper.
--> Yah, like ''that's'' ever gonna happen! What a load of ''[[SoundEffectBleep (flush!)]]'' ''[[Music/SmashMouth "Some-BODY once told me..."]]''.
* The very first thing we see in ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManIntoTheSpiderVerse'' is the Columbia Pictures and Marvel opening logos [[LogoJoke violently glitching out]], followed by the stamp " [[MediaNotes/TheComicsCode Approved by the Comics Code Authority]]", immediately establishing that this is going to be a ''deep'' dive into Spider-Man lore (and a very meta and trippy one at that.)
* ''WesternAnimation/TheLEGOMovie'' opens with a fairly dramatic zoom through a field of lava to an ArtifactOfDoom being guarded by a WizardClassic, who turns to the camera and dramatically intones "[[VaguenessIsComing He's coming...]] [[MoodWhiplash cover your butts]]". Then the [[BigBad bad guy]] [[DynamicEntry busts in]], steals the artifact, and incapacitates the wizard, who then foretells a prophecy about the villain's defeat...which [[GenreSavvy they know will come true]] [[PropheciesRhymeAllTheTime because it rhymes]], showing us that the fantasy elements of this movie are going to be ''very'' meta. A little while later, the [[CrapsaccharineWorld dystopian nature]] of life in Bricksburg is cleverly established through an upbeat montage of Emmet and his fellow construction workers assembling buildings, following the instructions, [[BreadAndCircuses happily singing along]] to popular music (or rather, to the ''exact same song'') and [[BreadEggsMilkSquick blowing up anything that's old or doesn't fit in]], complete with billboards of a smiling [[MegaCorp Octan]] [[PresidentEvil President]] [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Business]] that read "[[BigBrotherIsWatching I've got my eye on you!]]"
* ''WesternAnimation/SnowWhiteAndTheSevenDwarfs'': The opening scenes of Disney's first full-length feature depict richly-detailed scenery, intricately-drawn human figures, and intense, emotional plotlines, showing audiences that this endeavor is far cry from the world of WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse, or even the most elaborate [[WesternAnimation/SillySymphonies Silly Symphony]].
* ''WesternAnimation/ArthurChristmas'' opens with a little girl writing a letter to SantaClaus asking a series of practical questions about how Santa actually does his job (e.g. "How does he reach every house on Earth in a single night?", "How has he been delivering presents for centuries?", "How does he keep up with population growth?"). The film immediately cuts to Santa's high-tech MissionControl at the North Pole and his cloaked [[CoolAirship "S-1" airship]] (and a series of family photos establishing that [[LegacyCharacter "Santa Claus" is a title passed from one generation to the next]]), showing that the movie actually has ''answers'' to all of these questions--establishing it as a completely earnest {{Reconstruction}} of the SantaClaus myth.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' starts with the standard "five special kids are given powers by an alien" scene. Then the alien gets gruesomely EatenAlive right in front of them. Then the BodyHorror of morphing. Then the realization that they can trust no one, the failed mission, and the permanent transformation of one member into a hawk, and it becomes clear that this book is actually going to be an incredibly dark deconstruction of its genre.
* The Village Elders voting on Rob's fate in ''Literature/AnOutcastInAnotherWorld'' sets the tone for much of the series going forward. It shows the reader that much of the story will be about overcoming societal exclusion.
* ''Literature/ArtemisFowl'' begins with the twelve-year-old protagonist conning a decrepit, half-mad fairy out of her Book, which is basically the fairy Bible.
* The first page of Christopher Buckley's political satire ''Boomsday'' starts with a fictional news report describing the crisis caused rising social security taxes that will form the backbone of its plot (resulting in angry teenagers vandalizing a retirement home), before ''offhandedly mentioning'', as if it's barely newsworthy, that the Vice-President has "[[BreadEggsMilkSquick shot another lawyer]]".
* The first chapter of ''Literature/TheCuriousIncidentOfTheDogInTheNighttime'' is numbered 2, and features the autistic protagonist describing the dead dog in the title in his usual fashion, describing things he observes in great, and often unnecessary detail ("I decided that the dog was probably killed with the fork because I could not see any other wounds on the dog and I do not think you would stick a garden fork in a dog after it had died for some other reason.")
* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'': It's either the first time Harry opened his mouth, or blowing up the toad demon and breaking into the Varsity.
* ''Literature/FearAndLoathingInLasVegas'' begins with the main character being attacked by bees, then remarking that [[ThisIsYourPremiseOnDrugs the drugs he took are taking effect]].
* ''Literature/TheLastAdventureOfConstanceVerity'' opens with Constance Verity trying to get a job interview and what she thinks is a normal job firm. She reluctantly admits that yes, she is ''that'' Constance Verity to an interviewer that recognizes her, lists off a bunch of impressive skills she has and that while she might be overqualified for the job she's signing up for, she really wants a normal desk-job just for the change of pace. She voices disappointment (but not surprise) when she finds out that the business is actually a {{Cult}} that wants to sacrifice her to the Earth (which, turns out is an EldritchAbomination) and she defeats them easily ([[GenreSavvy while listing off the various predictable story beats before they happen]]) and casually leaves the cleanup to a government agency that was formed specifically to clean up after her adventures. On top of being an EstablishingCharacterMoment for the main character (Connie being TheChosenOne and WeirdnessMagnet who's SeenItAll, done it all and finds it all redundant), it also establishes the WorldOfWeirdness and FantasticallyIndifferent sense of humor the ''Literature/ConstanceVerity'' Trilogy runs on.
* The 1907 dystopian novel ''Literature/LordoftheWorld'' starts with a prologue depicting two Catholic priests meeting in secret with an old man, who tells them the history of the past ninety years or so, in which the Labour Party (which had yet to govern in real life at the time of publication) established a dictatorship, silenced opposition, and fervently persecuted Christians for decades, hence the reason the priests are in hiding. If that's not enough to show the book is a [[GoodOldWays pro-traditionalist]], [[GoodIsOldFashioned anti-modernist]] AuthorTract, the first real chapter has a terrorist attack, to which the government response is to euthanize the injured instead of giving them medical treatment.
* ''Literature/TheSalvationWar'' begins with Satan declaring his dominion of Earth, and a human commander promptly telling him to piss off.
* The first chapter of ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' is told from the viewpoint of a seven-year-old excited to be going to [[DeliberateValuesDissonance his first beheading]].
** Not to mention that even before that, the prologue features the sudden death of several characters, [[DecoyProtagonist including the point-of-view character.]]
** Then of course there's the death of Ned Stark, establishing this is a CrapsackWorld where no, the good guys are not always going to triumph, and AnyoneCanDie including main leads.
* In the first part of ''Literature/{{Worm}}'', we follow a teenage girl who's gained superpowers and is for the first time going out to pursue her childhood dream of being a superhero...and she almost gets killed in her first fight and every other super she meets mistakes her for a villain because she has a [[BadPowersGoodPeople villainous-looking power]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Podcasts]]
* The very first line of the pilot of ''Podcast/WelcomeToNightVale'' establishes the show's bizarre mix of the comedic and the disturbing: "A friendly desert community, where the sun is hot, the moon is beautiful, [[BreadEggsMilkSquick and mysterious lights pass overhead]] [[StepfordSmiler while we all pretend to sleep]]. [[TitleDrop Welcome to Night Vale.]]"
* Nothing sets the tone for ''Podcast/TheAdventureZoneBalance'' as much as in episode 1, when Griffin reads the name "Sildar Hallwinter", the brothers riff that it's too over-the-top fantasy for the campaign, and rename the character ''Barry Bluejeans''.
** Similarly, in the same episode when Justin tells everyone his character's name.
* ''Podcast/InterstitialActualPlay'' begins with the players discussing how the game is both about the relationships between people and creating {{Weird Crossover}}s, though they clarify that they're sticking to things owned by Disney and Square Enix. Then they mention that Encino Man is a valid character. But the true establishing moment is when Wheels announces their player character as Criss Angel.
--> '''Jo:''' How is it so much better ''and'' worse than I could've possibly imagined?!
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Roleplay]]
* The first several pages of ''Roleplay/RubyQuest'' have the adorable bunny girl protagonist waking up in a box and exploring the clean and empty building she's in...and then she opens a closet door and a flayed body falls out.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Theatre]]
* ''Theatre/{{Elisabeth}}'': Many people went to the premiere expecting a musical similar to the romantic, heart-warming, and extremely inaccurate ''Sissi'' trilogy. To a lesser extent people unfamiliar with the musical still have that expectation when they watch it for the first time. The musical disabuses them of that notion as soon as the curtain rises; the prologue has Elisabeth's murderer posthumously defending himself, followed immediately by the ghosts of her relatives rising to sing about Elisabeth and [[TheGrimReaper Death himself]] declaring his love for her.
* You know ''Theatre/JesusChristSuperstar'' is a different kind of Bible story when the first song you hear starts with eight or so utterances of "What's the buzz? Tell me what's a-happening!"
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Visual Novels]]
* The ''Franchise/AceAttorney'' series begins with Phoenix getting a case to defend one of his old friends. Upon his introduction, the friend, Larry Butz, has a comically melodramatic reaction to his girlfriend's death and proceeds to not do a very good job of testifying about his actions when called to the stand. This gives you some idea of what kind of people you'll be dealing with in the series.
** Not long after this, the actual culprit [[ReverseWhodunnit Frank Sahwit]] takes the stand. What follows gives an indication of the CourtroomAntics the series has become well known for, from Phoenix using ThePerryMasonMethod to Sahwit undergoing a ''ridiculous'' VillainousBreakdown involving throwing his toupee at Phoenix.
* In ''VisualNovel/DanganronpaTriggerHappyHavoc'', there are three moments that sum up the series, all in the first chapter.
** First comes the first deaths, of [[spoiler:Sayaka Maizono, the girl who has taken the role of your {{Player Character}}'s assistant/LoveInterest, and Mukuro-as-Junko, who is killed for defying the game]]. This establishes that AnyoneCanDie, [[SacrificialLion even a seemingly important character whom you've devoted your time into getting to know]].
** Second, TheReveal behind the first murder: [[spoiler:Sayaka Maizono, your cute, bubbly, stereotypical-female-lead-and-LoveInterest, [[LoveInterestTraitor was actually setting you up to take the fall for a murder she'd commit]], only to be [[AssholeVictim killed by her would-be victim]], Leon Kuwata.]] This establishes that [[BitchInSheepsClothing no one can be fully trusted]], but it also shows that decent people can be driven to do terrible things like murder as a result of their circumstances, and even truly bad people [[PetTheDog can still having redeeming traits]], as [[spoiler:Leon is wracked with guilt afterwards and it's hinted Sayaka left a DyingClue out of penance as much as revenge]]. This sets the stage for the many {{Sympathetic Murderer}}s of the series.
** Finally, the first execution. In a show of ironic and outlandish brutality, [[spoiler:Leon Kuwata is stoned to death with baseballs fired out of a pitching machine at mach speeds]]. This establishes to the audience and rest of the characters what's at stake if they fail, and [[BlackComedy what to]] [[NightmareFuel expect]] from the [[CruelAndUnusualDeath executions]]. In fact, [[OnceAnEpisode the first execution of every game ends with a shot of the surviving students staring]] at the [[VisualNovel/DanganronpaTriggerHappyHavoc broken]]/[[VisualNovel/Danganronpa2GoodbyeDespair fried]]/[[VisualNovel/DanganronpaV3KillingHarmony liquified]] remains of the first murderer.
* ''VisualNovel/DanganronpaV3KillingHarmony'' gets its own moment midway through the first trial. Much of the prologue and first chapter are similar to the first game in their setup, but then you realize that [[spoiler:the character you're playing as, Kaede Akamatsu, is actually the killer, which results in her being executed and you playing as Shuichi Saihara for the rest of the game]]. This is only the first indication of how far the game goes to troll the player.
* The first diner scene in ''VisualNovel/DaughterForDessert'' shows the protagonist running his diner, helped by Amanda and Kathy, with Mortelli eating his toast and drinking his coffee. It also introduces, through "Kathy's" stories, the idea that the protagonist and Amanda could end up in a relationship.
* ''VisualNovel/DontTakeItPersonallyBabeItJustAintYourStory'': the first scene involves John Rook introducing himself to his class, while his students discuss him online.
* ''VisualNovel/HeartOfTheWoods'' begins with Madison Raines and her best friend Tara Bryck on a train to the town of Eysenfeld, establishing that they're far from home and giving some idea of what Eysenfeld is like. Tara gets annoyed when Madison wakes her up, and passive-aggressively reminds her of her decision to quit, showing that things are tense between them, and establishing a subplot. The fact that the scene sets the tone for the game is especially important, as [[WhatCouldHaveBeen the game would have started with]] a ''Taranormal'' broadcast, but while the creators thought it did a good job of [[EstablishingCharacterMoment establishing Madison and Tara's characters]], they felt it set the wrong tone.
* ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'' does this on several levels:
** The very first scene in the game has the protagonist, within the span of literally less than a minute, meeting with his high school crush on a beautiful snowy morning, getting confessed, [[BreadEggsMilkSquick and suffering a nearly lethal heart attack, which ends up taking him out for four months and resulting in basically his entire life falling apart.]]
** The game proper than begins with Hisao entering his new school, a special school for disabled kids, being astounded by how utterly ''normal'' and ''inviting'' it it looks... then opening the door to his classroom and finding it full of crippled freaks... which turn out, seconds later, to be completely normal, mostly friendly teenagers.
** His very first serious conversation in the new school (and the game) is between him and the student(s) showing him around, one of which happens to be deaf - but nevertheless charming, helpful and cordial. When he's asked whether there's anything he doesn't understand, one option is to immediately ask her about her deafness, which suddenly turns the discussion far more awkward. This sets up the main theme of the game: that people with disabilities are people first and foremost.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Animation]]
* The first animation clip in the first ''WebAnimation/ASDFMovie'' has a man "take" a nose from a toddler when a police officer suddenly kicks in the door, yells "Look out! He's got a nose!" and guns the man down. The animations that follow are all just as absurd and many of them are just as violent, too.
* ''WebAnimation/CampCamp'' has an overly cheery camp counselor gushing about how two new campers will be joining the summer camp that day, before asking a young boy named Max standing next to him why he's outside. Said boy proceeds to not-so-subtly proclaim his newest escape attempt, casually dropping the word "fucking" in the process. When admonished for swearing, [[SirSwearsALot Max tells him to eat a dick]] and, by proxy, tells the audience that this isn't a cute kids' cartoon about summer camp.
* The very first line of ''WebAnimation/TheFrolloShow'' is, "Beata Maria, you know I will mindfuck the viewer." He ain't kidding.
* The ''WebAnimation/HappyTreeFriends'' premiere "Spin Fun Knowin' Ya" starts off looking like a cutesy kids' show, with Lumpy spinning a merry-go-round that Cuddles, Giggles, and Toothy are riding. Then Toothy bloodily splatters against a tree. [[SubvertedKidsShow Things go downhill from there]].
* ''WebAnimation/IfTheEmperorHadATextToSpeechDevice'' opens up with a Custodian announcing that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin a text-to-speech device]] has been successfully implemented into the Golden Throne, allowing the God-Emperor of Mankind to speak for the first time in 10,000 years. The first things he says? [[foldercontrol]]

[[folder: About fucking time. I have so many things to complain about. ]]
As the Emperor learns just how far his once mighty Imperium of Man has fallen and how much of the mess the galaxy has become, he sets forth trying to "unfuck" things. It sets the stage for many colorful critiques on the multiple [[{{Retcon}} retcons]] and odd choices {{TabletopGame/Warhammer40000}}.
* ''WebAnimation/HazbinHotel'': The pilot opens with PrincessClassic Charlie singing a mournful song over the deaths of her people, juxtaposed with sumptuously detailed backgrounds displaying the [[SceneryGorn horrors of the most recent Purge]], further juxtaposed with images of how little the surviving denizens of Hell actually care about it. The ColdOpen then ends with a rather comedic death of a small demon at the claws of a larger one. This establishes the show being a [[SillyRabbitIdealismIsForKids cynical]] and [[BlackComedy darkly comedic]] adult musical animated series with elaborate art.
* ''WebAnimation/MinilifeTV'' establishes itself as a rather comedic show in the opening of the first episode. Chris randomly gets an idea for a brand new TV show from reading a book, so he calls Ian on his phone to come over and he does that by simply walking into another room, establishing that they're close friends who live together. Ian makes Chris say his idea in several different ways and a voice from the heavens helps them come up with the name of the show.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pYW2GmHB5xs A little red-hooded girl serenely walks through empty forest,]] accompanied by [[SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic beautiful music]], until a horde of shadow monsters surround her. Then she whips out a [[ImpossiblyCoolWeapon a sniper-scythe]] and slaughters them all. Ladies and gentleman, welcome to ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'', a series [[WorldOfActionGirls about badass girls]] based on fairy tales swinging around ridiculously cool weapons with ''style.'' Discounting the trailers, the first episode has that very same red-hooded girl beat up group of would-be robbers and unveiling her sniper-scythe all set to [[SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic the first opening]] [[LeftTheBackgroundMusicOn that was blaring from her headphones]].
* ''WebAnimation/ZeroPunctuation'': Yahtzee's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWS9_nrKOPA review of]] ''VideoGame/TheDarkness'' demo has him speaking rapidly and cynically while using still images that at best teleport between poses and explaining his insistence on not parroting popular opinions and how he'll only buy the game if it was cheaper and came with a better game and some cake and Belgium, readily establishing Yahtzee as a MotorMouth CausticCritic with high expectations for games.
* ''WebAnimation/UnbiasedHistory'' has this as the opening line: "There Once Was a Dream....A Dream To PURGE this Rotten World of the Barbarians that Infested it! A Dream Called Rome...."
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Comics]]
* ''Webcomic/EightBitTheater'' takes a while to really find its feet, with the first few comics being fairly bland and generic jokes. [[http://www.nuklearpower.com/2001/03/26/episode-009-what-the-thief-says/ This strip]] contains the first use of distressingly logical stupidity that the strip would become known for.
* The first story arc of ''WebComic/TheAdventuresOfDrMcNinja'' involves Doc fighting to save a child who has turned into a giant lumberjack. It only gets crazier from there...
* The very first strip of ''Webcomic/AnsemRetort'' had [[VillainProtagonist Axel]] ''[[HarmfulToMinors torching an orphanage]]''. It went downhill from there.
* The first thing that happens in ''Webcomic/HoovesOfDeath'' is a cute, sparkly, elegant unicorn using her colorful magic powers to pick up and fasten on ''a bandolier of grenades.'' After she leaves the tent and walks through a fairly modern-looking military encampment, exchanging a few words with both her fellow unicorns and some humans, she passes through the [[DomedHometown massive energy shield]] protecting the camp and tosses the grenade into a [[ZombieApocalypse charging mob of zombies]]. Yes, this comic's premise can in fact be summed up in three words: "[[CoolVsAwesome unicorns versus zombies.]]"
* ''[[http://beatrizoverseer.tumblr.com Beatriz Overseer]]'': We begin with some lighthearted banter between two vaguely medieval, adorable [[FunnyAnimal mice]] as they escort the title character in her coach... and then within the first three pages they are brutally mowed down by a hail of crossbow bolts as they are ambushed. Then, Beatriz proceeds to brutally destroy her attackers in a rather [[AlasPoorVillain unnecessarily horrible way]]. Yeah, it's [[MatureAnimalStory that kind of comic]].
* ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'':
** The comic starts out slow, with the reader slugging through walls of texts and a few flashes with nothing eventful really happening. Then, a meteor starts falling towards the protagonist's house. [[SerialEscalation It only gets crazier]] from that point.
** A much earlier contender, though much lighter in spirit, comes after the command "John: Quickly retrieve arms from drawer." Within the first few pages, ''the comic itself is actively {{Gaslighting}} the readers''. Welcome to Homestuck, [[MindScrew leave your sanity at the door]].
** And shortly after that, you get the line, "You CAPTCHALOGUE them in your SYLLADEX. You have no idea what that actually means though." This is the first of many, many times you will encounter ridiculous portmanteaus used to describe events, actions, and items in the comic, usually with little explanation at first.
* [[http://kevinandkell.com/1995/kk0906.html This strip]] of ''Webcomic/KevinAndKell'' is the first indicator that animals in that world act out their natural roles as predator and prey, as well as proof of how taboo the eponymous couple's marriage is.
* The first two pages of ''Webcomic/{{minus}}'' feature surreal and inexplicable happenings, but it isn't until the third page, when the eponymous character turns a balloon vendor into a balloon after he upsets her, that the viewers know it's about an [[LittleMissAlmighty omnipotent child]] who [[AmbiguousInnocence has the immaturity to match]].
* ''Webcomic/PrincessPi'' begins with the eponymous character dueling Franchise/{{Godzilla}}. Soon, the Statue of Liberty shows up and vanquishes the monster, and the series' weirdness truly begins.
* ''Webcomic/{{Remus}}'' features a suicide attack on the White House ''[[RRatedOpening on the first page.]]'' [[{{Dystopia}} Things deteriorate considerably from there.]]
* ''Webcomic/RosiannaRabbit'' begins with the titular character being humiliated from [[SplittingPants tearing her panties]] and attempting to kill herself by jumping off a building, only to receive further embarrassment when [[BungledSuicide she's left hanging from a corner of the building by her torn panties as more people laugh at her]]. This starting point makes it clear that a major part of the webcomic's premise is Rosianna being [[ButtMonkey very unfortunate]].
* The first joke of ''Webcomic/SomethingPositive'' involves the lead protagonist sending his ex-girlfriend a coat hanger as a baby shower gift.
* Although its terrible artwork and [[RougeAnglesOfSatin abuse of the English language]] is obvious from the very first panel, ''Webcomic/TailsGetsTrolled'' comes across like just another godawful Sonic fan-comic right up until the point where, eight pages into the first chapter, Shadow responds to two trolls verbally harassing him and Tails by [[MoodWhiplash whipping out a knife]] [[DisproportionateRetribution and brutally stabbing them both to death.]] After that, it's [[CerebusRollercoaster off to the races.]]
* ''Webcomic/KillSixBillionDemons'': A mysterious armored man appears from nowhere, holding an artifact of mass power before Allison, chased by a group of skeleton-beast-riding, dimension-breaking angels, who proceed to kill him and kidnap Allison's boyfriend. The man then proceeds to shove said artifact into Allison's head through sheer willpower, ''despite being decapitated'', and it only gets more metal from there on in.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Video]]
* ''LetsPlay/AchievementHunterMinecraftSeries'''s first episode is fairly tame, with the 5 guys learning the ropes of ''VideoGame/{{Minecraft}}''. Then [[{{Troll}} Gavin]] sets fire to their base with a bucket of lava. Cue [[LongRunners 400 (and counting)]] episodes of the guys screwing each other over.
* ''WebVideo/CorridorDigital'': The first complete animation shown in "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZXpETSoNWxY We Made Slightly Offensive Bowling Animations]]" is one depicting a gutter ball as an AddledAddict which eventually [[VomitIndiscretionShot profusely vomits on-screen]]. This sets the tone for the "We Made Slightly Offensive" series, which is based entirely around [[CrossesTheLineTwice the hilariously flippant treatment of disturbing subject matter]].
* ''WebVideo/DaisyBrown'''s first upload is her casually showing how she feeds Alan, [[ConditionedToAcceptHorror apparently not realizing that most people haven't even seen a monster before]].
* ''WebVideo/RealTimeFandub'': The ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure2'' dub sets up the series' irreverent and comedic tone with Sonic's first line, which is "I'm gonna kill ''all'' of you!" in a chipper tone of voice.
* The first episode of ''WebVideo/SatelliteCity'' is a fairly low-key example, featuring a seemingly ordinary young British man in a [[UrbanFantasy modern house]] casually discussing the order of business and dinner plans with his house guests. It's just that his "house guests" happen to be multiple small [[AnimalisticAbomination bizarre-looking bestial demon creatures]], and his [[UnusuallyUninterestingSight biggest point of concern]] [[UnfazedEveryman about this]] is that one of them shedding her fangs everywhere is [[MundaneFantastic a pain to clear up with the vacuum cleaner.]]
* The very first scene of the first episode of ''WebVideo/ScottTheWoz'' is Scott's [[Platform/WiiU Wii U]] [[TakeThat getting tossed out of a window.]]
[[/folder]]

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