->''The sleep is still in my eyes, the dream is still in my head''\\
''I breathe a sigh, and sadly smile, and lie awhile in bed''\\
''I wish that it might come to pass, not fade like all my dreams''\\
''Just think of what my life might be in a world like I have seen!''
-->-- '''Music/{{Rush|Band}}''', ''2112''

Remember when you were a kid playing with your favourite action figures/video games/television shows and you would go, "I wish it was real!" Well, that's the basis of this trope: a well-trodden storyline where the favourite fictional elements of the main characters somehow materialise into the [[WelcomeToTheRealWorld real world]] (or the characters are transported into their home AlternateUniverse) through some AppliedPhlebotinum (frequently [[MakeAWish a wish]]). Depending on the mood of the story, Zany Antics or horrific {{Deconstruction}} follows as the characters deal with their new circumstances. Remember, BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor.

If the show/game is a member of a series, it will most likely use the RecursiveCanon trope and place the fantastic elements as a ShowWithinAShow.

By law, such storylines must include a WhatIf scene where the protagonists compare themselves to the fictional game, musing on what character class they would be or what superpowers they would have or what cute mascot monster they would train. This turns out to be some kind of highly accurate prophecy.

See also WelcomeToTheRealWorld, RefugeeFromTVLand, AscendedFanboy, LongingForFictionland. WantingIsBetterThanHaving might end up as an {{Aesop}}.

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!!Examples:
[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
* ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'': The story opens up with Kyon narrating how much he wished as a kid to meet aliens, time travelers and ESPers, but now he's left those fantasies behind. Then he meets Haruhi and all those fantasies he had as a kid become very real (and often dangerous).
* ''Anime/DigimonTamers'': In the ''Tamers'' universe, ''Digimon'' exists as a franchise that includes a collectible trading card game (much like in real life, though the card game is seemingly more popular in the ''Tamers'' universe than it was in ours). The main protagonists are huge ''Digimon'' fans and thanks to their devotion they become actual Tamers to real Digimon.
* ''Anime/MonsterRancher'': Genki is a fan of the ''Monster Rancher'' video game. He ends up getting sucked into the game's world.
* ''Manga/{{MAR}} Märchen Awakens Romance'' is based on the idea of its hero, Ginta, entering a fantasy world and living out his dream of being a hero.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* ''ComicBook/AstroCity'':
** Loony Leo was a cartoon character brought to life because of a mishap with the GoldenAge villain Professor Borzoi's Belief Ray. Leo stopped the villain and started to fade away, but The Gentleman convinces the crowd to save him by believing Leo was real.
** Beautie is an adult-sized manifestation of the popular Beautie doll for girls. [[spoiler:She is actually a robot invented by the [[ChildProdigy genius daughter]] of a GadgeteerGenius, who used the doll as a model.]]
** One day, the heroes of the popular Australian kids' TV show "Queenslaw" manifested in the real world, fighting crime to the delight of kids and adults nationwide. [[spoiler:They're actually a gang of criminals who used Professor Borzoi's Belief technology to commit robberies while impersonating the heroes.]]
* Any time a ''[[Franchise/TheDCU DC Universe]]'' super hero visits Earth Prime, the AlternateUniverse where super heroes only exist in comic books.
* In one issue of ''ComicBook/TheSimpsons'' comic book, aliens Kang and Kodos bring Itchy and Scratchy into the real world. Bart gets hold of the alien device and uses it to evoke Radioactive Man (his favorite ComicBook hero) to deal with the resulting mayhem.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Works]]
* Many a SelfInsertFic are along these lines, either of a character discovering the characters in their favorite fandom are real or somehow getting sucked into their world. They never seem to want to go home...
** Very, very early in ''Star Trek'' fandom [[note]]we're talking 1969-1972[[/note]] there were a number of ''humorous'' short stories about people from the 20th century (often but not always the author) accidentally getting beamed up, or meeting Kirk, Spock, etc. on a time-travel mission. They ranged from cute and witty to outright farces. One fanzine actually held a contest for writers to submit such stories.
* A very common subgenre of ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' fanfiction involve [[FanCommunityNickname bronies]] somehow winding up in Equestria. {{Deconstruct|ion}}ed and {{inverted|Trope}} in FanFic/TheNonBronyverse where the one who ended up in Equestria is anything but a brony, and wants nothing to do with Equestria and makes getting home his main priority.
* Deconstructed in ''[[Fanfic/MarieDSuesseAndTheMysteryNewPirateAge Marie D Suesse And The Mystery New Pirate Age!]]''. The main character does not have a happy home life and [[MakeAWish wishes she could go on adventures]] in the world of her favorite manga. Too bad for her, the world of Franchise/OnePiece is actually a CrapSaccharineWorld, [[FromBadToWorse made worse]] by events in the fanfic, which makes her wish coming true [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor a very bad thing]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
* Played with slightly in ''Film/SpyKids1'' ("I wish I could go away to your world, Floop. You'd be my friend."). Floop turns out to be the villain, [[spoiler: but as it happens, not the BigBad. In fact, he makes a HeelFaceTurn by the end of the movie.]]
* Subverted in ''Film/{{Pleasantville}}'', in which the protagonists are drawn into an idealized-1950s TV-show universe, and introduce various forms of personal and sexual liberation that shake up the stereotypically stodgy inhabitants.
* This is one interpretation of ''Film/PansLabyrinth''. The film starts with Ofelia reading a fairy tale about the lost princess of the Underworld. That night, she meets a Faun who tells her that ''she'' is the princess in the story. As the film goes on, the fantasy becomes more real and starts having tangible effects in the "real" world.
* Creator/WoodyAllen's 1985 film ''Film/ThePurpleRoseOfCairo'' invokes, inverts and generally messes with this trope.
* ''Film/LastActionHero'' subverts this trope by showing how the "real" and "fictional" worlds may be entirely too different from each other for their inhabitants to cope. Though Danny has issues of his own.
-->'''Jack:''' In my world [[CriminalMindGames they just leave clues]].\\
'''Danny:''' But we're not in your world.\\
'''Jack:''' [[ChandlersLaw Or they show up and kidnap me.]]\\
'''Danny:''' That kind of stuff doesn't happen here, Jack. Because ''this world stinks!''
* In ''Film/GalaxyQuest'', the washed up actors of an old sci-fi show learn that aliens have been watching the show and modeled their entire technology and culture around it. At one point, they have to get in touch with the obsessed fans of the show, whose obscure knowledge saves their lives.
* In ''Film/TheLastStarfighter'', Alex Rogan is really good at a video game -- and it turns out the video game is a training simulator for a galaxy-spanning space war.
* ''Film/{{Ted}}'' shows a young boy that wishes his teddy bear was real. He gets exactly what he wants, but the charm wears off as the two of them grow up and the bear becomes a lazy womanizing slob.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* The fantasy series ''Literature/GuardiansOfTheFlame'' has the college professor DM of a gaming group turn out to be a wizard from a fantasy world who sends his players through to try and set things right there. Some benefit from the immigration (one guy, who's disabled in real life, became his able-bodied dwarf character), but there is a ''high'' body count once the characters find out that this DM's world is much harsher than their usual 'game', with one of them dying almost immediately.
* The ''[[VideoGame/CastlevaniaIISimonsQuest Simon's Quest]]'' and ''[[VideoGame/WizardsAndWarriors Wizards & Warriors]]'' books in the ''Literature/WorldsOfPower'' series begin this way.
* Creator/TerryPratchett's ''[[Literature/JohnnyMaxwellTrilogy Only You Can Save Mankind]]'', although the titular video game comes to life without any actual wishes being involved. It's partially a parody of ''The Last Starfighter'', mentioned above.
* Terry Pratchett and Creator/NeilGaiman's ''Literature/GoodOmens'' addresses this. As [[TheAntichrist Adam]] prepares to remake the world to his liking his friends become acutely aware that the best thing about pirates and cowboys and the other fantastic things in their imaginations is that you can stop being them when you want to.
* This is what Pamela Dean's ''Literature/TheSecretCountry'' books are all about. Five children have spent their lives playing a sustained imaginary game inside a detailed paracosm of their own making -- only to find out it's not of their own making. The reality is often very beautiful, but because it's a real place, it's filled with complications and tragedies they never dreamed of.
* This is also where Greer Gilman's ''Literature/{{Moonwise}}'' takes off. Sylvie, who has spent her life creating elaborate fantasy worlds, meets Ariane at university and lets her in. They end up with nine planets and reams of heartfelt work dedicated to their legends. At Midwinter's Eve, Sylvie vanishes before Ariane's eyes, and it's up to Ariane to find her. The clue she unwinds draws her into the world they called Cloud, but again it's a real place, beautiful but complex and often painful. Gilman has written many other stories about Cloud.
* In ''Literature/TheIndianInTheCupboard'', the toys appearing to come to life are people being brought forth from the past and existing in the present on a different scale, while entering the cupboard transports one to that era.
* ''Literature/TheNeverendingStory'' is in a sense, an in-depth analysis of the idea of WishFulfillment, playing it straight in the first half of the novel, then deconstructing it and rebuilding it at the end. The story itself even comments on this:
-->''You wish for something, you've wanted it for years, and you're sure you want it, as long as you know you can't have it. But if all at once it looks as though your wish might come true, you suddenly find yourself wishing you had never wished for any such thing.''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* ''Series/{{Beetleborgs}}'': Three kids who free Flabber wish to become their favorite comic heroes, and he happily obliges. Unfortunately, this also brings the villains to life as a side-effect.
%%* ''Series/DenjiSentaiMegaranger''
%%* ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' - "If Wishes were Horses".
%%* ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' - "Shore Leave"
%%* ''Series/AceLightning.''
* ''Series/PowerRangersNinjaStorm'' suggested this was the case when the Power Rangers were compared to comic books and described as an urban legend, but it was later subverted when the next season established that it was set in the same universe where Power Rangers had existed for ten years already.
* ''Series/TheTwilightZone2002'': "Azoth The Avenger Is A Friend Of Mine". A little boy meets his favorite BarbarianHero.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]
* The Leslie Fish FilkSong "Valhalla" is about a Viking who died in battle, but couldn't reach Valhalla because Christianity had his Gods under siege. Odin reincarnated him as a "bookish, lonely lad" who immersed himself in Scandanavian lore. "Sigurd" then stumbles into the Society for Creative Anachronism, and while it's not perfect, it fits a ''lot'' of the bill - including drinking, boasting, wenching, and fighting!
-->''Be careful of what paradise you deal\\
What hope you make other dreamers feel\\
For if too many hear it\\
they will struggle to draw near it\\
And in the search they just might make it real!''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* Played with in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyTacticsAdvance''. The main characters wish they could live in the worlds of video games they play. Then they actually manage to enter such a world. The plot of the game, however, is about trying to get ''out'' of that world, since in the end, one has to live in reality. Many fans, however, ended up longing for Ivalice themselves, and [[AlternativeCharacterInterpretation ended up despising the game's protagonist for trying to "destroy" it]].
** The funny thing is that, [[AllThereInTheManual according to at least some versions of the]] BackStory, their "real world" actually ''is'' the same Ivalice that the other ''FFT'', ''FFXII'' and ''VideoGame/VagrantStory'' take place in, only thousands of years in their future. It just looks like late 20th/early 21st century Earth because the [[TheMagicGoesAway magic crystals that used to power everything have all been used up]] so people have moved on to electricity and fossil fuels.
* The "story" of the ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros'' series: a kid playing with his toys, who happen to all be Nintendo characters.
* ''VideoGame/MegaManZX'' and ''VideoGame/MegaManStarForce'' are about kids who get the ability to transform into Mega Man.
** Of course, being that these are sequels to previous ''Megaman'' games, from their point of view their heroes are historical, rather than fictional. Think ''Manga/IkkiTousen''.
* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants: Battle for Bikini Bottom,'' does this when [=SpongeBob=] and Patrick wish for "Real Robots to play with". Guess who the mooks of this game are!
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Comics]]
* In ''Webcomic/{{Erfworld}}'', moments after Parson declares he would gladly trade his current life for life in a game world, he is summoned into a [[RPGMechanicsVerse turn-based strategy wargame universe]]. This turns out to be [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor less desirable than he'd thought]] when he finds himself on the badly outnumbered side of a war, under threat of [[BadBoss having his existence ended]] if he doesn't follow orders.
-->"Over the years, Parson's had a lot of big ideas. But this is the first one I've ever seen him follow through on."
--> "Dibs on his dice."
** Later, when he complains that "this isn't what [he] wished for", it's pointed out that in this case it was Erfworld that wished for ''[[TheChosenOne him]]''.
* In ''Webcomic/{{XKCD}}'', [[http://xkcd.com/240/ it turns out wanting something doesn't make it real.]]
** [[https://thephoenix.com/article_ektid48208.aspx "Maybe wanting something does make it real. Clearly, the comic needs to be corrected."]]
* In ''Webcomic/TheInexplicableAdventuresOfBob,'' after watching a VHS tape of ''Anime/{{Voltron}},'' Molly is inspired to build a [[MechanicalMonster giant robot lion.]] Naturally, it runs amok and starts a panic. Later, she builds a steam-powered WesternAnimation/FrostyTheSnowman. He melts because, well, he's steam-powered.
* ''Webcomic/PennyArcade'' [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2013/02/01 has proposed]] that this should be the plot of the ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' movie.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Chaotic}}'' [[spoiler:creatures from Perim [[WelcomeToTheRealWorld invade Chaotic and Earth]]]], but it turns out to be AllJustADream.
** Played straight with any newly-introduced characters. Until they receive an official invitation and password from a Codemaster, the "real" worlds of Chaotic and Perim are nothing but the crazy ramblings of others.
%%* ''WesternAnimation/DungeonsAndDragons1983''
%%* ''WesternAnimation/CaptainNTheGameMaster''
* This trope is played straight in the ''WesternAnimation/DragonTales'' episode entitled "Quetzal's Magic Pop-Up Book" in which the protagonists enter a magical book that brings imagined stories to life.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddparents'': At least one of Timmy Turner's wishes has been like this.
** To elaborate: In one episode, Timmy wishes to meet the Crimson Chin, his favorite superhero. The Chin suffers a HeroicBSOD after learning that he's a fictional character, and Timmy has to try and convince him to return to action. Another episode involves Timmy leaving the portal open and enabling a supervillain to escape into the real world.
** In another episode, he wishes his life were like an action movie, and the next day it is.
* In ''WesternAnimation/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy'' episode "Wishbones" a minor and recurring character of the series, Pud'n, wishes his toy bunny were real. An extra-dimensional skull grants his wish, but being a case of BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor, the newly animated bunny turns out to be a complete psychopath who does everything in his power to kill Pud'n.
--> "Love hurts, Pud'n, and I love you... to death."
* The ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' episode "Power Ponies" have the main characters pulled into a magic ComicBook, where they end up becoming the heroes of the comic.
* In the ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' episode "Once Upon A Star", Elmyra wishes on a star that her [[Franchise/{{Barbie}} Barbette]] doll was real so they could play together. The wish brings Barbette to life, but Barbette turns out to be [[ItsAllAboutMe very selfish, rude, and arrogant]].
[[/folder]]
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