[[quoteright:330:[[Magazine/ForteanTimes https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/end-sign_9014.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:330:It's all downhill from here.]]

->''"Last one to die -- please turn out the light."''
-->-- '''Graffiti''' on poster in ''Film/ChildrenOfMen''

It's probably sometime between NextSundayAD and TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture, but it could also be another planet in a distant galaxy in an inverted universe. All that really matters is that the world, or civilization anyway, is ending... any day now. The [[ZombieApocalypse zombie army]] is [[HopelessWar making its way across the continent]]... [[ZombieGait oh so slowly]]. The worldwide economic crash is in its 10-year stretch. The global powers are arming for [[WorldWarIII all-out war]], TheVirus's death toll is rising, and the [[ColonyDrop asteroid]] named [[DepopulationBomb Malthus Prime]] is on its way to end the human race... in exactly X.5 months, Y days and Z hours.

The world you're in probably resembles a CrapsackWorld verging on a ScavengerWorld. The trains are still running, though probably not on time. Everywhere it's ominously hinted that however bad the present is, the future will only get worse, and by the end, or at least by the next sequel, it has, and we get to see what things are like AfterTheEnd. Just Before the End is usually a bleak {{dystopia}} (or alternatively, a facsimile of the modern era) that is coming apart at the seams. Expect to see people JustForFun/DyingLikeAnimals. Graffiti and abandoned cars are usually a given. The DepopulationBomb may have already dropped, leaving a CrapsackWorld or [[AfterTheEnd worse]], but if it hasn't dropped yet, it's on its way... oh yeah, it's coming. [[AdamSmithHatesYourGuts Better get your $99 bottled water and your car batteries while they last, folks! Right here, at Joe's Apocalyptic Emporium!]] Alternatively, you might want to invest in a suicide kit: Thank God for [[WeWillHaveEuthanasiaInTheFuture State-Sponsored Euthanasia!]]

As many of the examples show, Just Before The End can either take place just before the impact of a DepopulationBomb or after its impact, provided the effects of said DepopulationBomb are not immediate: for example, if an asteroid crashed ten years ago but was only large enough to destroy a few cities at most, but it brought with it a deadly contagion which has reduced the world's population drastically in those ten years to the point that the contagion is daily news and everyone's expecting to die, then you've also got Just Before The End set in a CrapsackWorld.

Also known in apocalyptic literature as the Dying Earth subgenre. You can expect anyone previously chanting that TheEndIsNigh to gloat about being right... but not for very long. Compare TheDayTheDinosaursDied.

Compare SignsOfTheEndTimes. JustForFun/NotToBeConfusedWith {{Denouement}} or BeforeTheDarkTimes.

----
!!Examples:
[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* A particular review of the manga ''{{Manga/Berserk}}'' said that "It shows us how the apocalypse starts" and "[[CrapsackWorld what happens during the apocalypse]]."
* In episode 42 of ''Anime/KirbyRightBackAtYa'', [[spoiler:the Phantom Star Geras is revealed to be coming to Dream Land and that it will bring about the end of the world. On the last day of the world, Everyone flees to King Dedede's castle. In one of the cutest scenes in the anime, King Dedede takes Kirby to the playground that he built. Kirby goes onto one of the swings and Dedede goes onto the other. Then a strong wind starts to blow sending Kirby and King Dedede into the sky.]]
* ''Manga/ShadowStar'' starts about a year before the End. Eventually, [[spoiler:the protagonist and her EvilCounterpart (both of whom are pregnant and about ''13 years old'') are the only ones left. The last page of the series shows their children, a girl and a boy, respectively, playing on the beach where the series started, apparently about 12 years old, in an AdamAndEvePlot]].
* ''Manga/SevenSeeds'' has flashback arcs that tend to take place before the [[ApocalypseHow meteorites hit Earth]].
** The Ryugu Shelter arc has a [[ApocalypticLog diary]] telling the events a few days before and how things went down in the shelter after the impact.
** The Hail Of Corn flashback arc tells the raising of Team Summer A and looks to be finished shortly before the impact, too. The final chapter of said arc reveals [[spoiler: that Team Summer A was put to sleep around the time Hana, a member of Team Spring, was born. She was eventually cryogenically frozen when she was the same age as the Team Summer A candidates. The entire arc ended ''17 years'' before the impact]].
* ''Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion'' mixes this with AfterTheEnd. The story is set 15 years after a cataclysm wiped out half of Earth's human population and caused massive ecological damage to the planet. World society at this point has been steadily recovering and has become somewhat stable, but little do people know that an AncientConspiracy is working towards causing another, even more destructive cataclysm.
* ''Anime/NowAndThenHereAndThere'' manages to be set both Just Before the End and AfterTheEnd. Human civilization has long collapsed, and now [[spoiler:Earth itself is in its final death throes. Depending on how Lala Ru is interpreted, the series also contains the point of TheEnd as well.]]
* ''Manga/{{Phoenix}}'': Volume 2 starts this way. There are plans underway to restore humanity, but nobody seems to really believe in the future.
* ''Manga/{{Saikano}}'' begins with everything apparently peaceful, although the weather has gotten bizarre. [[spoiler:As Chise reveals at the end, the world was actually dying from the start. She performs a MercyKill on all living things to spare them the pain of dying slowly with the planet.]]
** The manga is more hopeful, in that [[spoiler:the by-then transhuman Chise survives, as does her still-human boyfriend. They set off to explore the universe, hopefully to find someone they can talk to.]]
* ''Anime/WolfsRain'' takes place in a decaying world-turned-wasteland, dotted with AdventureTowns.
* ''Manga/YokohamaKaidashiKikou'' (''Record of a Yokohama Shopping Trip''), except that it paints it as a [[CosyCatastrophe Cosy Just Before The Catastrophe]] that you might actually ''want'' to live in. The manga is about an android named Alpha taking care of a store in the countryside, who occasionally needs to go traveling around. Humans are starting to depopulate due to unexplained reasons; however, the "children" of humanity, the robots, are so human-like it's clear they'll carry on humanity's legacy and humans themselves seem to be pretty cool with this fate, the way an elderly person has accepted their inevitable death (even if they don't ''invite'' it).
* The events of ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'' begin when the human population has been reduced to about 1.5 million due to the titular monsters. [[spoiler: After the TimeSkip shortly afterwards, [[FromBadToWorse that number is reduced by a fifth]].]]
* The final saga of ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' focuses on Majin Buu, a monster that makes short work of killing 80% of the population. In a focus on background characters unusual for the series, we see those left either cowering and clinging to life or going on TheLastDance. [[spoiler: It was the latter that caused Buu to have a HeelFaceDoorSlam and kill the last 20% within the span of ''a few minutes''.]]
* ''Manga/{{Akira}}'': At the start, Neo-Tokyo is experiencing massive social unrest caused by an incompetent government, gang violence has gotten to the point where bikers battle in the streets and police can do nothing about it, a school for the city's orphans is covered by graffiti and taught by teachers who don't care about reaching students, and a secret research project involving powerful psychic children is about to reach a head. Neo-Tokyo is a powder keg waiting to explode...
* ''Manga/CellsAtWorkCodeBlack'' has a variation, inasmuch as the host body dying would be the apocalypse for all the cells within it. The series ''starts'' with [=AA2153=] getting a bleak look at how worn-down the body has gotten in recent years, and gets worse. Although the cells continue to do their jobs and keep the body running, their morale is extremely low and several suffer breakdowns or even die. True to the mood of the series, the body suffers a number of maladies, up to and including a [[spoiler:dangerous heart attack that very, ''very'' nearly kills them all]].
* ''Anime/{{Shelter|2016}}'': The short film includes a flashback sequence that shows a young Rin with her father, Shigaru, during the lead up to an asteroid hitting Earth.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* In ''ComicBook/{{Crossed}}'', several ''Badlands'' story arcs usually depict the first days of the Crossed outbreak and what happens to the protagonists as the world falls apart around them.
** One such arc, which is untitled, is set in the early days of the HatePlague Crossed apocalypse, the Crossed infection has already killed billions but has yet to ''completely'' destroy every trace of civilization. There are some organized evacuation efforts by both the military and private citizens. The water is still running in some places (as shown by how a man hiding in the sewers of Catalina is using a hose for drinking water). There are still a few big military bases coordinating with each other. The military is even managing to keep large sections of San Diego safe as everywhere else burns. However, it is made extremely clear that the Crossed are days away from overrunning the defenders of San Diego and all they can do is pack people onto evacuation ships (which are in short supply) while still trying to work out if there's anywhere they can find safe refuge.
** Another ''Badlands'' arc, ''Thin Red Line'', is set right at the very beginning of the outbreak and shows political upheaval, among other things, as countries start to fall apart from both inside and outside thanks to infected jet pilots bombing them. Taking place in England, the protagonists attempt to solve the crisis and avoid the nuclear war from completely wiping everything out, all while trying to study the Patient Zero and learn about the true nature of the plague.
** While ''Shrink'' is set several weeks AfterTheEnd, it takes place in an isolated town where the few residents who haven't fled to the hills are stable enough to carry on normally and try to accomplish something as they wait for a horde of monsters to inevitably follow the roads to the town and rape or torture everyone to death.
* ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'' is set in a world that's teetering on the edge of a nuclear holocaust but then manages to avert ''and subvert'' it, as [[spoiler: the holocaust is prevented, for now, but whether Ozymandias' plot works or not]] is left open to reader interpretation. Doctor Manhattan puts it best:
-->'''Dr. Manhattan:''' In the end? Nothing ends, Adrian. Nothing ever ends.
* ''ComicBook/YTheLastMan'' has this atmosphere, for all that it centers on the titular [[LastOfHisKind last hope for natural reproduction]]. After all, he's one slim hope given that every male mammal in the world had died. Even if you knew he lived, it would be reasonable to assume this was the last generation of humanity.
** When one character finds out Dr. Mann is researching a cure for breast cancer, she compares it to "rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic".
* Creator/NeilGaiman's ''Signal to Noise'' features the NestedStory of a group of villagers gathering on a hillside on New Year's Eve, 999 AD, convinced that the world is about to end.
* ''ComicBook/TheBooksOfMagic'' includes a scene where the main character goes to the very last minutes of time.
-->'''[[ComicBook/TheSandman1989 Death]]:''' I'm sorry. I can't let either of you stay here and watch. You see, this really ''is'' it. The universe is over. It's my job to put it all in order, now, and lock the place behind me as I leave.
* ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'':
** ''ComicBook/TransformersMoreThanMeetsTheEye'': The Shadowplay arc was a flashback to pre-war Cybertron, a CrapsaccharineWorld, where one's alt-mode reflects their place in society [[FantasticRacism Functionalism]] runs rampant and the working class has turned into a boiling pot of issues. The arc takes place on the cusp of the uprising, where the Cybertronians would engage in a war their species became infamous for. While society moves along normally, news reports show so many of the faults, rampant shootings, government mutilations, thugs able to assault or even kill the homeless, etc. The protagonists encounter casual murders, and government conspiracies that involve tampering with civilian minds to stop them from revolting. Even with Orion and his friends saving hundreds from a bomb, [[ShaggyDogStory society falls apart anyways mere months later]] when a group of workers-turned-gladiators unite, sack Kaon, and plunge the world into war.
** Brian Ruckley's ''ComicBook/Transformers2019'' begins before the war between the Autobots and Decepticons, with a seemingly peaceful and happy Cybertron where the worst things going on are some minor political disputes. Then the first murder in living memory is committed, setting off a chain of DisasterDominoes where all the little problems in Cybertronion society explode in the worst ways possible and the world hurtles uncontrollably towards a nightmarish ForeverWar.
* ''ComicBook/ZombiesChristmasCarol'' reimagines ''Literature/AChristmasCarol'' during a zombie apocalypse HatePlague, the source of which is Ebenezer Scrooge, and a plague of zombies inexorably sweeps through London and the world. If Scrooge doesn't mend his ways and start helping people, humanity is irrevocably doomed.
* The ''ComicBook/TwoThousandAD'' prequel series ''ComicBook/TheFallOfDeadworld''. It's already established that the Dark Judges exterminated their entire homeworld before their very first appearance in ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'', but this story arc shows the apocalypse slowly unfolding.
* ''ComicBook/EastOfWest'' is set in a dystopian, cyberpunk version of America where tensions are boiling between seven nations and all-out war is seemingly on the horizon, with the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse actively working to bring about the end... except the Horseman of Death, [[DefectorFromDecadence who’s decided he wants no part of it]]. [[spoiler:This gets played with at the end, as the apocalypse ''is'' prevented and the world saved... but even as the heroes celebrate their hard-earned victory, the narrator calmly informs us that they have done nothing but delay the inevitable by about a thousand years. Humanity ''will'' eventually end, no matter how long it takes to happen, simply because it is the nature of all mortal things to die when their time passes, and mankind's time is almost over.]]
* ''ComicBook/SweetTooth'' chronicles the final days of humanity in a world where a horrific plague is wiping out everyone except a growing population of mutants who resemble [[HalfHumanHybrid human-animal hybrids]]. The story begins when the end is already well underway, and we get a few flashbacks to just before things start going to hell. [[spoiler:The DistantFinale depicts the end of the apocalypse, with the last humans dying out and the hybrids becoming the new dominant species.]]
* The prologue of ''ComicBook/{{Descender}}'' takes place just before the Harvesters launch a cataclysmic attack that kills billions, setting up the rest of the series. [[spoiler:The entire first part of the series is an example, given it leads into the Harvesters coming back to try and finish the job, causing the collapse of the UGC and [[TheMagicComesBack the return of magic]]. The second part, ''Ascender'', takes place AfterTheEnd.]]
* ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'':
** Most versions of Superman's origin story show his parents trying to save their home planet, Krypton before sending baby Superman to Earth seconds before the planet explodes.
** In ''ComicBook/SupermansReturnToKrypton'', Superman gets stuck on Krypton over three years before the explosion. He cannot go back to his time because he is literally powerless, and he knows he will unable to convince people that Jor-El is right, so he tries to lead a happy life, without the pressures and stresses of being a super-hero, before the end.
** In ''ComicBook/TheUntoldStoryOfArgoCity'', the floating city's population is getting killed by Kryptonite radiation. Zor-El and Allura [[ComicBook/TheSupergirlFromKrypton1959 manage to build a single-passenger rocket]] and send [[ComicBook/{{Supergirl}} their daughter]] to Earth, and then they set up a disaster headquarters. Unfortunately, there is no way to cure the Kryptonite poisoning or escape the space city, so all they can do is to monitor the plague, knowing Argo and its citizens have weeks left, at best.
* In the ''ComicBook/GreenLantern'' storyline ''ComicBook/GreenLanternTheLostArmy'', the Lanterns eventually realize that the reason none of them recognize anything about the sector of space they're in is because they've been moved through time as well as space and [[spoiler: have been stranded in the final days of the universe that preceded the one they're from]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Strips]]
* One cartoon from ''ComicStrip/TheFarSide'' featured a sign company manufacturing placards reading "The End of the World is Coming", right as a nuclear war erupts outside their building.
-->"Wouldn't you know it! There goes our market for those things!"
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Works]]
* ''Fanfic/TheConversionBureauTheOtherSideOfTheSpectrum'' takes place at this time. ApocalypseAnarchy reigns, the [[AdvancingWallOfDoom Barrier]] has rendered more than a third of the world uninhabitable to humanity, the remaining landmasses are overpopulated with starving refugees, at least two billion humans are either dead or [[ForcedTransformation ponified]], and the war has been going on for so long and has been so brutally [[HopelessWar hopeless]] that the world's remaining governments have resigned themselves to a suicidal TakingYouWithMe plan that involves [[spoiler:rigging the Yellowstone Caldera with nukes, resulting in an EarthShatteringKaboom, just to spite the Solar Empire]]. That is until the leader of the human resistance stumbles upon [[AlternateUniverse another Equestria]] that didn't fall to the same corruption as its counterpart and is willing to do everything to help humanity survive.
* ''Fanfic/TheVaultsWerentMeantToSaveAnyoneSoIllSaveThemMyself'': Much like ''VideoGame/Fallout4'', the story begins on the morning of October 23rd, 2077 (the day the bombs drop).
* ''Fanfic/SonicXDarkChaos'' takes place in a Crapsack Galaxy torn to pieces by thirty years of civil war and the Angels and Demon forces fighting over the remnants, with an EldritchAbomination and the Shroud poised to devour everything else. Sonic and friends end up just barely managing to avert the end [[spoiler: except in Endings A and B, [[DownerEnding where they fail]]]].
* ''Fanfic/ChildrenOfAnElderGod'': In the final chapters, the five pilots are anxious and worried because they can feel the end of everything is coming.
* ''[[Fanfic/TheLoudHouseEndOfDays End of Days]]'': With only five days left before a [[ColonyDrop giant asteroid hits the Earth]], sports events are cancelled, much to [[WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouse Lynn’s]] disdain, grocery stores are raided for supplies, and [[ApocalypseAnarchy mass riots ensue]], killing many people including [[WesternAnimation/TheCasagrandes Hector]].
* In ''Fanfic/TheSecondTry'', the pre-time-travel chapters happen AfterTheEnd, and the post-time-travel episodes happen a few months before the end of the world. When they go back to the past, Shinji and Asuka are well aware of the incoming Apocalypse. At the beginning, Asuka is too depressed to make anything about it, but Shinji encourages her to try to avert it.
* ''Fanfic/OnceMoreWithFeeling'':
** Shinji is aware that the world will end within half year unless he does something.
** SEELE and Gendo are not concerned with some Government agency finding out something in the long term or paying NERV’s debt because if they fulfill their plans, they’ll never have to answer for anything since humanity has no future.
* ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/10712033/1/Furry-Outbreak Furry Outbreak]]'', a bizzare ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'' fanfic, take place minutes before a unnamed [[ThePlague Virus]] that [[ViralTransformation transforms people]] into [[FunnyAnimal titular Furries]]. And even cause [[HumansAreInsane humanity only least in Texas goes insane with societal collapse]].
* In ''Fanfic/{{Warp}}'', Victoria Dallon is transported from two years AfterTheEnd to two years before the Apocalypse. Unfortunately, she has no better plan than transmitting her incomplete knowledge to the secret organization trying to avert the end of the world, working on her [=GED=] before her hometown gets destroyed and doing whatever she can before all hell breaks loose.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film]]
* ''Film/ChildrenOfMen'': After nearly twenty years of depopulation due to infertility[[note]]plus a large number of chaotic wars, terrorist attacks, natural disasters and civil unrest[[/note]], human civilization has virtually crumbled to dust. It's all the protagonist can do to stay properly drunk through the last few years of Britain's existence.
* ''Film/MadMax1'': Max was a police officer in a collapsing dystopian Australia where wars, environmental disasters, and global economic recession had just started to take effect. The later films in the series are fully post-apocalyptic.
* ''Film/{{Brazil}}'' may or may not count as this. It's not unsubtly implied that ecology has gone completely to hell, machinery is (explosively) malfunctioning left and right and the only reason society has not crumbled is because people are too stupid to take notice and the VastBureaucracy is much more adept at covering its ass than it is at actually fixing things.
* ''Film/TwelveMonkeys'': The entire film is [[spoiler:a StableTimeLoop that has one of the main characters seeing the first few minutes of a viral infection that will cull mankind in the flesh, and see his older self being assassinated by airport security in a futile attempt at stopping it. The only true change he brings with his time travel is providing information to the scientists that did it so they can maybe create a vaccine many years later.]]
* ''Film/CountdownToLookingGlass'' is about the Cold War going hot concluding in [[AtomicHate nuclear war]] from the perspective of newscasters.
* ''Film/BladeRunner'' (less clear in the book that humans are evacuating to the off-world colonies to escape the radioactive dust in Earth's atmosphere).
* ''Franchise/PlanetOfTheApes'':
** ''Film/BeneathThePlanetOfTheApes'': Let's just say it ends with a [[EarthShatteringKaboom bang]].
** ''Film/ConquestOfThePlanetOfTheApes'' ends with the revolution of Ape against Man.
** ''Film/RiseOfThePlanetOfTheApes'' ends the same way with ''Conquest'', except it adds a worldwide virus that only affects humans and, as revealed later, damages their cognitive thinking to the point of muteness.
* ''Film/LivingDeadSeries'':
** ''Film/DawnOfTheDead1978'' was set during the outbreak of the zombies and by the end of the movie the world is overrun, as far as we know.
** ''Film/DayOfTheDead1985'' may or may not be set Just Before The End or AfterTheEnd
** ''Film/DiaryOfTheDead'' too, as it takes place on the first night and we know what happens after that.
* ''Film/ReignOfFire'' is a fairly unique, though [[SoOkayItsAverage equally forgettable]] film about dragons waking up and trying to kill off all life on the planet because their multi millennial nap was disturbed again. This is not immediate, because HumansAreWarriors and are the first things to fight back, leading to this scenario.
* ''Film/TheseFinalHours'' has a [[ApocalypseHow/Class6 wave of fire from an impacted asteroid]] travelling around the world, with the main characters in Perth, Australia, due to be killed in approximately twelve hours. A radio DJ narrates as they lose contact with other cities around the world.
* ''Film/WhenWorldsCollide'', except shocking inattention is paid to the fact that ''everyone on Earth but the named cast dies'' in the final act.
* ''Film/{{Knowing}}'' is about a list of numbers and dates predicting disasters. Only 3 are left when the protagonist finds it, the last one predicting a solar flare that will kill everyone else alive in the planet.
* ''Film/TheTimeMachine2002'': The protagonist in TheFilmOfTheBook stops by at a time where [[ColonyDrop the Moon]] is about to fall. He then fast forwards to AfterTheEnd.
* ''Film/{{Quintet}}'': A new ice age has covered the Earth. It's established that the Earth will continue get colder until man cannot survive, so there is no real future. Some people have decided to pass the time playing Quintet, a kind of five-man Russian roulette game.
* ''Film/SeekingAFriendForTheEndOfTheWorld'' takes place in America after it has been announced that an asteroid is going to end the world in 3 weeks.
* ''Film/LastNight'', an obscure 1998 film, subverts the usual trends of this trope. Some kind of cosmic, unavoidable disaster (it's never outright stated what that disaster is, but it seems to have something to do with the Sun) is going to occur at precisely midnight. The general public has known this for a few months, so the last few hours (which the film covers) are a mix: some people are busy rioting or partying, but others are simply enjoying a final dinner with friends and family or praying.
* ''Film/{{Interstellar}}'' has a mysterious blight killing off the world's plants. The loss of oxygen-producing plants, combined with the nitrogen produced by the blight, will eventually cause the atmosphere's oxygen content to fall below the level necessary to sustain life. The plot of the film revolves around finding humanity a new home before the oxygen runs out.
* ''Film/DeepImpact'': While society remains intact and humanity survives, there are a lot of moments where people feel like they’re waiting for the end as the early efforts to destroy the approaching comets fail. There are {{Citywide Evacuation}}s into the mountains, lotteries to select who will be evacuated to bunkers, a spike in suicides, and people who end up milling around the coastlines to cling to some semblance of routine as they wait for their deaths.
* ''Film/TheDayAfter'' begins on the even of a nuclear war, then shows the horrors of life the titular day AfterTheEnd.
* ''Film/{{Threads}}'' went further to 10 years after the end.
* The SpeculativeDocumentary ''Film/{{Supervolcano}}'' starts out AfterTheEnd (the eruption of the Yellowstone caldera), then flashes back to five years before the end, and eventually catches up to the present story.
* ''ComicBook/WhenTheWindBlows'' is about a naive elderly couple preparing for, then attempting to survive a nuclear attack.
* ''Film/DrStrangelove'' takes place at the climax of a LensmanArmsRace and ends with the DoomsdayDevice destroying the world.
* ''Film/TwoThousandTwelve'' chronicles a family racing against the clock to survive the imminent MayanDoomsday. The first act of the movie involves their lives mere days before this happens.
* ''Film/WarCraft2016'': The parts concerning the world of Draenor have this feel. There are barely enough draenei to send a thousand warriors through the portal -- by contrast, it only took few days of collecting enough Azeroth humans to bring the far bigger chunk of the Horde -- the world is a barren wasteland, the entire Horde fits into one (admittedly large) valley, and at some point, when already in Azeroth, Orgrim and Durotan notice snow in the distance and wonder when was the last time they've seen it.
* ''Film/IndependenceDay'' starts off on an ordinary July morning in America. Then suddenly, thirty-six spaceships appear over major cities throughout the world.
* ''Film/{{Automata}}'' is set in a world where solar storms are rendering Earth uninhabitable to humans. Only 21 million people are left, and robots are used to construct massive walls and mechanical "clouds" in an attempt to hold back the radiation just a bit longer. [[spoiler:By the end it's pretty much accepted that humanity will be dead soon. However, they will be succeeded and honored by their robot creations, which have [[GrewBeyondTheirProgramming developed sentience]].]]
* ''Film/{{Apocalypto}}'' is set in the very last gasps of the Mayan Empire. Crops are failing, whole forests are burned down for lime dust, plagues and starvation are rampant in the lower classes, the aristocracy is oblivious to the mounting problems, and the priests are demanding more and more [[HumanSacrifice sacrifices]] in a desperate attempt to stave off the obviously imminent collapse. At the end, [[spoiler:the first Conquistadors arrive]]. TruthInTelevision; all of these are theorized to have contributed to the collapse of the RealLife Mayan Empire, and there probably was a sort of “we’re all gonna die” period like what’s depicted in the film.
* ''Film/AQuietPlacePartII'' has flashbacks to just before the AlienInvasion that destroyed society; we see the first attacks from the perspective of the Abbott family as they're going about what they think is going to be a normal day.
* ''Film/{{Reminiscence}}'' In the near future, technology to relive past memories is commonplace and mostly used to forgot that the world is steadily flooding due to global warming and many coastal cities are sinking into the ocean.
* ''Film/TooBigToFail'' depicts the slow collapse of the world wide economy during the 2008 financial crisis and the desperate efforts of various government officials to prevent a total economic apocalypse. Best symbolized in moments where Timothy Geithner is walking around New York and seeing people going about their business, not realizing the economic danger they're in and when Hank Paulsen is honest with his wife that the whole financial system could collapse and take all of society with it.
* The events of ''Film/DeadlyHarvest'' begin just as society is beginning to collapse from the effects of the EndlessWinter. Towards the end, Grant obtains data from [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Ennis]]' computer showing that there is less than a months' worth of food supplies remaining for urban life support in North America.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Gamebooks]]
* ''Literature/HeartOfIce'' is set in a world where an [[AIIsACrapshoot insane weather control AI]] has turned the Sahara into an icy wasteland and is otherwise wrecking the global ecosystem (except when she's terraforming new ecosystems for her own creations). While there has been no specific [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt world-ending event]], almost all of the world's governments (except for the United States) above the city-state level have collapsed, and humanity is not expected to last another century. [[spoiler: This is part of what tempts people to try to destroy the world and make a better one with the power of the Heart of Volent.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* ''Literature/AlphaAndOmega'' takes place during the months before the fulfillment of the Abrahamic End Times prophecies, with mounting tensions everywhere. [[spoiler:At the end of the book, {{God}}'s existence has been confirmed, but it remains unclear if the end of the world is in fact around the corner.]]
* The ''Literature/ArciaChronicles'' are not set before TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt ''per se'' but rather before the FinalBattle. However, [[AnyoneCanDie in this series]], said battle can very well turn into the apocalypse. Although {{Muggles}} are still not aware of their impending doom, the knowledgeable characters all comment that their chances of victory are very slim. At one point, some characters visit another world that has lost its FinalBattle and was devastated. They actually get to see its end in a vision. Let's just say that the local PhysicalGod of War was nearly driven insane by said vision.
* ''Literature/{{Atlan}}'' takes place in the final days of {{Atlantis}}, though this is not made explicit until the last book, ''Some Summer Lands''. Thus, the world is simultaneously an elder Earth ''and'' a dying Earth.
* ''Literature/AtlasShrugged'': The trains are literally running on time at the beginning, but by the end are not running at all.
* ''Literature/BlackLegion'': At the end, Khayon tells the Inquisitor interrogating him that the Time of Ending, which they are living through, is just that -- the Golden Throne is failing, the Imperium is losing ships to flickers in the Astronomicon and [[spoiler:Abaddon is about to begin the Crimson Path, which would lead to both Throne and Astronomicon dying, plunging galaxy in Chaos]].
* ''Literature/BlackTideRising'':
** The first half of the first book shows the early days of the ZombieApocalypse, as society slowly starts to decline due to the government infrastructure struggling to handle the crisis, before it finally hits a tipping point and everything collapses into chaos.
** ''The Valley of Shadows'' revisits the same time period, this time focusing primarily on the POV of authority figures in New York City struggling to maintain order and slowly being overwhelmed by the crisis. A scene in the last third, shortly before the tipping point is hit, has Tom point out to his boss just how bad things have gotten by bringing up how ''half of Staten Island'' has been burning for days because there's no longer an FDNY left to deal with the fires.
* ''Literature/TheBoneClocks'': The last section is set in 2045 and shows Ireland (along with most of the rest of the world) slipping into a new dark age: people can still remember a functional civilization in the recent past, and some technologies and institutions still function, but they're breaking down, and things are almost certainly going to get a lot worse.
* ''Literature/BookOfTheNewSun'' takes place a ''looong'' way in the future (the techno-fantasy "post-historical" era where stone-age man, the modern era, and the galaxy-spanning imperial era are all lumped together as the "Age of Myth") where it's Just Before The End -- the Old Sun is dying, reduced to a naked-eye object at high noon, and the world will either enter the Ragnarok of Eternal Winter or become the Garden-World of Ushas when the New Sun is ignited. The book follows the life of Severian, the poor bastard who's the one who actually gets to decide which future will dominate.
* ''Literature/TheButterBattleBook'' opens with an old man taking his grandson down to the wall between the Yooks and Zooks, two factions in a SpaceColdWar. As the grandfather (a Yook) recounts the conflict, we ultimately discover that all the other Yooks have been sent into bomb shelters in preparation for the detonation of the "[[FantasticNuke Bitsy Big-Boy Boomeroo]]", which Grandpa is going to drop on the Zooks. At the end of the book, Grandpa discovers that Van Itch, his Zook counterpart, has also been sent to the wall with a Bitsy Big-Boy Boomeroo of his own. The story culminates with a BolivianArmyEnding as Grandpa and Van Itch face each other in a MexicanStandoff atop the wall, afraid to drop the bomb and with [[NoEnding no idea who will make the first move]].
* ''Literature/ACanticleForLeibowitz'' is an interesting case: it begins AfterTheEnd and chronicles humanity rebuilding civilization over the course of 1200 years. In the final third of the book, a cold war has developed between the two dominant superpowers on Earth, leading to [[spoiler:a second apocalypse]].
%%* ''Literature/ChildhoodsEnd'' by Creator/ArthurCClarke
* ''Literature/TheChildrenOfMen'' by PD James ([[Film/ChildrenOfMen later filmed]]) starts with the world where there hasn't been a birth for twenty-six years, and everyone knows this is the end. It's mentioned that examples of human culture and knowledge are being sealed in vaults to preserve them, [[FlingALightIntoTheFuture if there's ever anything else to find them]].
* ''Franchise/TheDarkTower'' is set in a reality where the worlds are winding down. Civilization is crashing, people are getting weird diseases, and [[spoiler:reality itself threatens to crash together as the titular Dark Tower verges on collapse. Even once-immortal creatures -- the Guardians -- are all either long dead or on the verge of a madness-tinged death]].
* ''Literature/TheDeathGateCycle'': The third novel, ''Fire Sea'', is set on Abarrach, a world in the process of being rendered uninhabitable by gradual freezing. The [[{{Muggles}} mensch]] died out long ago and only [[MageSpecies the Sartan]] are left, having preserved their society by copious use of necromancy, but even they are in steep decline. This is hammered home partway through the novel, when one character asks another why he's so certain a particular prophecy will come true in their generation, to which the other replies he thinks it has to because he doubts there will ''be'' another generation after theirs. [[spoiler:When their society's undead servants slip the leash and go on an omnicidal rampage, he's proven all too right.]]
* ''Literature/DownToASunlessSea'': The story starts out with a massive energy crisis that is making people evacuate America as Israel and its Arab neighbors are on the brink of nuclear war and the Catholic and Protestant churches are combining in an effort to head off religious conflicts in Europe. About 100 pages in, the story goes flying toward AfterTheEnd as nuclear missiles start flying and the narrator and the people on his jumbo jet are left scrambling for a safe haven.
* ''Literature/DyingEarth'' is a rather influential example. The sun is big, red, and going out any minute now, the Earth is increasingly inhospitable, and civilization is breaking down.
* ''Literature/TheElricSaga'' begins just before the end, continues through the end itself, and concludes with the beginning of a new world.
%%* The ''Literature/EnemiesForeignAndDomestic'' series by Matt Bracken.
* ''Literature/EuricoThePresbyter'' has an non-apocalyptic example with Visigothic Spain undergoing its twilight years, being divided by petty squabbles and unable to resist when the Umayyad Caliphate invades, completely crumbling when their king is slain in combat with the Arabs. In-universe, many characters believe this is the case as an prelude for the end times and [[TheScourgeOfGod that their enemies were a divine punishment for their wickedness]].
* ''Literature/{{Evolution}}'':
** "Dinosaur Dreams" is set a few days before the comet impact that wiped out the dinosaurs, when nothing seemed out of the ordinary beyond a steadily brightening light in the southern sky as the comet approaches.
** "The Last Burrow" is set in the last days of the polar dinosaurs, as the lowering temperatures and the growing ice slowly drive them into extinction.
** "The Dying Light" is set in the last days of the Western Roman Empire, as the final remnants of its civilization finish crumbling away into a mass of petty barbarian kingdoms.
** The epilogue is set some years after a volcanic eruption causes the collapse of human civilization, when only a few last pockets of civilized humans are hanging on in a world doomed to go over to animals, feral humans and overgrown ruins.
** "A Far Distant Futurity" is set 500 million years into the future, when the continents of Earth have merged into a hot, flat, dry supercontinent that resembles the surface of Mars, and life is on the decline.
* ''Literature/Fahrenheit451'' has [[spoiler:the fall take place at the end of the book, with the beginning of nuclear war between superpowers]].
* ''Literature/ForYourSafety'': The story ''Mimsey's Tale'' is from the perspective of a morph [[RobotBuddy companion robot]], watching the child it is assigned to grow up, as the Earth teeters towards total environmental breakdown.
* Creator/JRRTolkien's ''Literature/TheFallOfGondolin'': Ulmo, the Lord of Waters, sends Tuor personally to warn Turgon that he needs to evacuate Gondolin because his hidden city will be found and destroyed by the Dark Lord before long. Although Turgon and most of his court decide to dismiss Ulmo's warnings, Princess Idril takes the god's warnings seriously; moreover, she has her own visions about the imminent destruction of the city, so she spends seven years preparing for it.
* ''Literature/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy1'' begins with the main character being saved by his best friend moments before the Earth is destroyed unexpectedly by a swarm of alien bureaucrats.
* ''Literature/{{Hothouse}}'': The narration makes it clear that, in terms of stellar lifetimes, the Sun is not far from going nova and wiping out the solar system. At the end of the novel, [[spoiler:the end begins in earnest, as Earth's vegetative life begins beaming itself into space in preparation for the world's impending demise]].
* In ''Literature/HumanityHasDeclined'', humans are dying out for reasons that are never really explained.
* ''Literature/LeDernierHomme'': The world has become a lifeless wasteland where nothing can be farmed and humanity has [[SterilityPlague lost the ability to reproduce]] and is on the verge of extinction with the last child born being Omegarus, the son of the king of Europe.
* ''Literature/LastAndFirstMen'': With the book's cyclic view of history and two-billion-year timespan, this happens all the time. We get details of the [[ScienceMarchesOn insoluble coal crisis]] that first destroyed civilization, and of [[CrystalSpiresAndTogas the eighteenth human race]] as they try to seed other solar systems and wait for the sun to explode, having chosen to appreciate this tragedy as an appropriate part of the beauty of the universe. And then there's the afterword, where they're blowing each other up and eating their dead while the system is being scorched clean. Seeding work, such as it is, is done to provide any sort of purpose, and the consensus is that the species should have died in peace before it started to putrefy. Still, in their lucid moments, it is very good to have been Man.
* ''Literature/TheLastBattle'' depicts Narnia in its final days before an invasion by [[TheEmpire Calormen]]. The book culminates as the Calormenes decimate Narnia and summon their GodOfEvil, at which point [[CrystalDragonJesus Aslan]] proceeds to [[ApocalypseWow destroy the fallen world in a spectacular manner]] and guide the righteous to heaven after his final judgment.
* In the short story ''Last Contact'' by Creator/StephenBaxter, the Big Rip is coming to destroy the universe, we know when the last particle of matter will be destroyed down to the trillionth second and we can't do anything about it.
* ''Literature/TheLastPoliceman'' takes place TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture, with the title protagonist investigating a suicide that he thinks is a murder... only no one really cares because an asteroid will hit the Earth in six months, and everybody will be dead.
* The second to last segment of "Literature/TheLastQuestion" takes place just before the heat death of the universe. The last segment is AfterTheEnd. [[spoiler:It gets recreated, though, when the Last Question -- "How do you reverse entropy?" -- is answered: "LET THERE BE LIGHT!" And there was light.]]
* ''Literature/TheLaundryFiles'' is rapidly approaching Case Nightmare Green, the point at which a great many {{Eldritch Abomination}}s will be dropping by to eat everyone's brains.
* ''Literature/TheLockedTomb'': The secondary storyline in ''Literature/NonaTheNinth'' is John Gaius, the GodEmperor, telling the story of the leadup to the apocalypse and the Resurrection. [[spoiler:As Earth's societies gradually collapse under the climate crisis, John's cryogenics research - the only viable way to get the entire population off-planet, [[UnreliableNarrator according to him, anyway]] - is shut down as trillionaires redirect resources to FTL ships without cryo, planning to leave billions to die. When John realises that he's been granted power over life and death, he starts trying to use it to prevent the escape of the trillionaires, fails, and eventually becomes [[RevengeBeforeReason so obsessed with punishing them for it]] that he kicks off nuclear war and uses the death energy of humanity's destruction to seize the power of the Earth's soul, ascend to godhood, and rebuild the entire solar system as his personal empire, populated by resurrected humans who don't know what he did.]]
* ''Literature/LordOfTheWorld'' starts off with the world under control of two Marxist empires (which, while oppressive, [[CozyCatastrophe have conditioned the public to not notice how badly they've stamped goodness and decency out of the world]]) and one pagan theocracy, which looks certain to invade the other two states in a brutal war that will kill millions and probably result in the whole human race plunging back into the Dark Ages. As such, the viewpoint characters are all worried about the devastation that seems almost certain to start by the end of the year. Then an American diplomat negotiates a nonviolent solution... only for things to get even worse, since the diplomat is actually TheAntichrist, and [[LetNoCrisisGoToWaste the peace settlement was just so that the people of the world declare him world emperor in gratitude for saving their lives]]. Then he starts scapegoating and persecuting Christians, who had already been reduced to a tiny distrusted minority decades earlier, blaming them for all human evil (and specifically, accusing them of [[PathOfInspiration letting the world get to such a state to begin with by encouraging superstition over reason]]). From this point, the trope is in even greater effect, as the Church has to revert to how it was organized in the catacombs days just to survive, which doesn't even work since the Antichrist finds their hiding place and bombs it to bits. [[spoiler:Then Jesus shows up.]] The end.
* The plot of ''Literature/Millennium1983'' involves [[spoiler:time travellers from a future where humanity is dying out stealing replacements from the present]]. Towards the end, [[spoiler:as things get worse, the surviving humans get homicidal and suicidal]].
* ''Literature/MoonCrashSeries'': An asteroid has hit the moon, causing mass climate change and flooding. Infrastructure is failing, food supplies are running low, and there is a horrible flu going around.
* "Literature/Nightfall1941": Lagash is a pretty decent place to live, with a technology level about equal to Mid 20th Century America. The main difference between it and Earth is that there are [[AlienSky six suns in the sky]], causing darkness to be [[EndlessDaytime all but unknown on the world]]. Astronomers from a major University announce that [[TotalEclipseOfThePlot five suns will set and an eclipse will cover the one remaining sun]], plunging the hemisphere into darkness. The story ends with night falling for the first time in over 2000 years, and [[CosmicHorrorStory people going mad all over the planet]].
* ''Literature/OnTheBeach'' is set in a world where a nuclear war has contaminated the entire northern hemisphere with radioactive fallout slowly being spread around the world by stratospheric winds, the book narrates the Australian population's attempts to live out their last days in joy. [[spoiler:The book ends with most Australians taking their [[WeWillHaveEuthanasiaInTheFuture suicide-pills]] once radiation levels reach lethal levels.]]
* The ''Literature/PastDoctorAdventures'' novel ''The Indestructible Man'' shows an Earth based on the works of Creator/GerryAnderson in this state. After the invasions by the [[Series/CaptainScarletAndTheMysterons not-Mysterons]], civilisation basically collapsed. [[Series/UFO1970 Not-SHADO]] is still operating, and there are still a few functioning governments and people trying to keep things organised, but they don't have the capacity to rebuild the old [[{{Zeerust}} advanced]] civilisation. One character predicts that when their current stock of technology inevitably breaks down mankind will be back in the Stone Age. And then the aliens come back.
* ''Literature/PastwatchTheRedemptionOfChristopherColumbus'' originally portrays a world TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture, where humanity is recovering from an ecological catastrophe brought on by pollution and wars. The rainforest is being restored, farms are producing food, and the atmosphere of hope is in the air. Later, it's revealed that it's all propaganda. The efforts are failing, the rainforest is still dying off, and all available farmland is being used but the governments are already dipping into the reserves. To top it off, global cooling has been detected, which will result in a new Ice Age. Humans will survive, and nature will recover, but attempts to rebuild civilization will fail, as all easily reachable resources necessary for progress have already been mined out. Long story short, humanity is destined to be thrown back to the Stone Age and stay there. Facing these prospects, the protagonists decide that TimeTravel may be the only solution. However, the insist on world-wide referendum in an aversion of TheTimeTravellersDilemma (scientists have determined that as soon as the time travelers go into the past, the current timeline will be replaced with everyone in it never having existed). Worse, with their past-viewing machine, they determine that theirs is not the original timeline. Apparently, an ever-worse history led to the same bleak future and required temporal intervention, resulting in the current state of the world. According to the epilogue, this change appears to have succeeded in averting the disaster.
* ''Literature/{{Peeps}}'': {{Subverted|Trope}} in ''The Last Days''. [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Peeps, or parasite-positives]], are biting everyone. People are afraid to leave their house because there might be feral cats or worse outside. The Internet and phones are failing. Basically, it's an apocalyptic world. However, it is revealed that there is a worm underground that comes out every thousand years. [[spoiler:Only [[ThePowerOfRock music]] from parasite-positive singers can bring the worms to the surface so that they can be killed. The band involving the main characters, The Last Days, saves the day because their lead singer, Minerva, is a peep.]] It is never revealed how long it took for the world to be saved, though.
%%* ''Literature/RainbowsEnd'' by Vernor Vinge.
* ''Literature/RecklessSleep'' is set in a future where a nuclear detonation on the floor of the ocean has torn the tectonic plates to pieces. By the start of the novel, the west coast of the United States is underwater with the east not far behind. The people that are left struggle through a miserable existence of constant earthquakes and volcanic ash clouds, seeking escape from the tiny living spaces, reprocessed food and rampant crime with the use of drugs and VR simulators. The whole of society has crossed the DespairEventHorizon because the world is eventually doomed to total collapse, and two missions to colonise a distant planet have ended in disaster.
* In ''Literature/ReflectionsOfEterna'', the end of the world is already set in stone, and there's no escape, since it's already been postponed once. The bad news is that ''nobody'' (except a couple of aliens who are forbidden to communicate with anyone) on this world knows about the impending catastrophe and everyone happily contributes to its end.
* The first book of ''Literature/{{Remnants}}'' focuses on the events leading up to Earth's destruction by a giant asteroid called "The Rock".
* The ''Literature/RiftersTrilogy'' reads basically like the trope description. The West Coast (well, the part that isn't a four-thousand-mile-long, one-mile-deep refugee camp) is run by [[CorruptCorporateExecutive the power company]]. The East Coast is an enourmous urban sprawl run by street gangs. The bit in between is run by [[ManEatingPlant Kudzu-4]]. The currency is [[RidiculousFutureInflation the Quebuck]], a new drug-resistant disease breaks out every 24 hours on average, and the vestigal remains of the North American government has been reduced to sporadically [[KillItWithFire napalming]] the whole mess just to keep things down -- [[FromBadToWorse and that's just the how bad things are at the start]]. The first book could be described as just before the end, the second one as the beginning of the end, and the third book as [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt the end well into the process of happening]].
* ''Literature/{{Seveneves}}'' starts with [[DetonationMoon the Moon exploding]]. It doesn't take long for the scientists of the world to realize that the fragments' collisions will send plenty of smaller fragments to Earth, transferring a large part of the explosion's kinetic energy to Earth's atmosphere in the form of heat in a few years.
* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'': The looming specter of [[ZombieApocalypse the Others]] seems to indicate that the entire plot so far amounts to mere squabbles in the face of a truly cataclysmic future TheMagicComesBack scenario. "[[ArcWords Winter is coming]]" indeed.
* ''Literature/{{Spin}}'' starts with Earth becoming covered by a bubble that [[TheStarsAreGoingOut blocks all light]], except for the Sun. It's later discovered that time inside the bubble passes much slower than outside. For [[YearOutsideHourInside every second inside, roughly 3 years pass outside]]. The people quickly realize that this means that, in 50 years' time, billions of years will pass in the universe, and the Sun will expand to consume the Earth. Amazingly, the fact that nobody can really see the Sun expand (except for NASA, who keep sending probes outside the bubble) means that most people just get on with their lives, although many turn to religion to find comfort.
* ''Literature/TheStand'': The first section (which is long enough to be a book in itself, at least in the [[LimitedSpecialCollectorsUltimateEdition uncut version]]) describes the spread of the devastating Captain Trips virus, and the U.S. government's ultimately futile attempt to contain it. When the book starts, the world is doing fine. By the end of the first section, 99.4% of people in the United States (and probably the world) have been wiped out.
* ''Literature/TheStormlightArchive'': The first two books take place just before the next Desolation, the coming of the Voidbringers, which usually signifies the end of human civilization on Roshar. The main characters' efforts focus on averting it. [[spoiler:By the end of ''Literature/WordsOfRadiance'', the Desolation begins, but it's unsure whether it succeeds.]]
* ''Literature/SundayWithoutGod'' takes place in world supposedly abandoned by God, where human beings can no longer procreate and can no longer truly die unless buried by gravekeepers. So, Ai and her companions pretty much inhabit a dying world -- with no new humans being born, the world's population has shrunk considerably, and even the most well-preserved of the deceased will eventually rot away to almost nothing, leaving them no choice but to be buried by gravekeepers, and once all human beings are dead and buried there'll no longer be a need for gravekeepers.
* ''Literature/{{Sunshine}}'' has the protagonist facing a very bleak future for humanity in the face of the oncoming vampire and other paranormal creatures' onslaught.
* In ''Literature/TheTrueMeaningOfSmekday'', the Earth has been [[AlienInvasion invaded]] by aliens called the Boov who have put all humans on reservations. Then the Gorg arrive and are even more ruthless than the Boov. The story is about Gratuity Tucci, who is trying to find her mother during all this. [[spoiler:The trope ends up being {{subverted|Trope}}, since the Gorg takeover is thwarted by the end of the book.]]
* ''Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds1898'' dips into this before the DeusExMachina pulls us back from it; it's not for nothing that the second half of the book is called "The Earth Under the Martians".
* ''Literature/WieldingARedSword'': The Incarnation of War deliberately brings the world to this state in an act of brinkmanship against Satan.
* ''Literature/TheWordAndTheVoid'' takes place about 50 years before the impending fall of civilization; the follow-up, ''Literature/TheGenesisOfShannara'', takes place during TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt.
* The Creator/RobertAHeinlein short story "Year of the Jackpot" takes place in 1952, when a confluence of the cycles of human civilization are causing humanity to go crazy. There is horrible weather, a nuclear war, and just when things are looking up, the sun goes nova.
* ''Literature/TheYiddishPolicemensUnion'' has a non-apocalyptic example. In this AlternateHistory, the Slattery Report was passed in 1940, turning Sitka, Alaska into a refuge for 4 million of Europe's Jews. After the stillbirth of Israel in 1948, Sitka was left as the world's only true Jewish refuge. However, this was only meant to last for sixty years and, by the time of the novel, the land is about to revert back to American control. The residents will not be able to stay in the US once the territorial transfer is complete, but they don't have any emigration alternatives either. The president, an evangelical Christian, is adamant that the Jews must retake Israel, but there's no doubt that it would involve war. Thus, many Jews don't know what exactly they are supposed to do and what will happen in a few months at all, and the book portrays the resulting feeling of all-pervasive uncertainty, emotional collapse and resignation very effectively. Within the police force, reports are left incomplete, cases are dropped, and no one besides protagonist Meyer Landsman actually cares about solving a murder.
* ''Literature/YoungWizards'': The side novella ''Lifeboats'' takes place during this period on the planet Tevaral, about to be destroyed by the upcoming violent disintegration of its moon. The plot revolves around the wizards' attempt to evacuate the planet before that happens.
* The ''Zothique'' series by Creator/ClarkAshtonSmith takes place in a far future Earth where humanity has regressed to medieval technological and social levels. The Sun is growing dim, the Earth's population is in terminal decline, and it's pretty obvious that the universe is about to call time on the human race.
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[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* The first couple scenes of ''Series/BattlestarGalactica2003'' and the TV Movie ''The Plan''. ''Series/{{Caprica}}'' counts as well, although it's 58 years before the Fall and the characters have absolutely no idea of what's about to happen to them.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
** The 2007 three-parter beginning with "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E11Utopia Utopia]]" has this: in "Utopia", humans are the last species left in a dying universe, and things are going to Hell pretty quickly. Their only hope is a rocket to a place called Utopia. [[spoiler:They wind up adrift in space.]] In the [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E13LastOfTheTimeLords third episode]], it's revealed that [[spoiler:the Master's "little friends" the Toclafane are actually sadistic and evolved, or perhaps devolved, humans. "The skies are made of diamonds" indeed]].
** "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E12HellBent Hell Bent]]" has this happen twice. The first time it happens is when it's revealed that Gallifrey has been moved to the end of the universe, "give or take a star system or two", for its own protection. The second time happens when the Twelfth Doctor and Clara travel to the extreme end of the universe, that being literally ''five minutes'' before the last remnants of the universe give away.
* In the ''Series/{{Dollhouse}}'' episode "Epitaph One", we're firmly in AfterTheEnd territory, but through a flashback we get to see what it was like ''just before'' it all went to Hell. We have a scene up in [=DeWitt=]'s office, the roar of panicked mobs and sirens in the background, while Dominique relates how random imprints are spreading like wild-fire, possibly as a form of [[DrivenToSuicide suicide]]. In season 2, the viewer is treated to seeing just how it all led up to it...
* ''Series/Fallout2024''; the opening sequence of the first episode, "The End", is set on the day the nukes fell. Newscasters are reporting on heightened tensions and failed peace talks (if they haven't thrown in the towel already as the weather man does). Suburban housewives are trying to distract people from bad news with everyday activities. Cowboy actor Cooper Howard and his daughter Janey are performing at a birthday party while he reassures her that things will hopefully turn out alright. [[NukeEm Then the first bombs hit Los Angeles]], plunging everyone into chaos...
* ''Series/{{Fringe}}'': In the now officially averted BadFuture from "[[Recap/FringeS03E22TheDayWeDied The Day We Died]]", a parallel universe is destroyed and the now primary world is slowly consumed by fringe events. The special opening has "Hope" and "Water" in its usual WeirdScience topics list.
* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': Like in its source material, the looming specter of the [[ZombieApocalypse White Walkers]] seems to indicate that the entire plot so far amounts to mere squabbles in the face of a truly cataclysmic future TheMagicComesBack scenario. "[[ArcWords Winter is coming]]" indeed.
* Episode 1 of ''Series/TheLastOfUs2023'' takes place on the day of the Cordyceps apocalypse. It follows Joel's daughter Sarah through her day as things slowly start looking more and more abnormal... until evening, when Sarah finds her neighbors transformed into zombies, and the apocalypse truly begins.
* A few episodes of ''Series/{{Sliders}}'' deal with alternate Earths that are about to end. The Sliders sometimes find ways to save them, sometimes not.
* This appears to be happening through most of the fifth season of ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'': Lucifer is unrolling his apocalypse across the globe, at a very slow pace, the humans are starting to notice something's going on, and Sam and Dean have no foreseeable way to prevent the end of the world. Then they do, of course.
* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'':
** "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S1E14ThirdFromTheSun Third from the Sun]]" takes place just before a nuclear war. A scientist and a test pilot steal an experimental spacecraft an use it to get themselves and their families off the doomed planet. [[spoiler:The episode ends with them escaping and heading to their destination, a planet called Earth.]]
** "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S3E10TheMidnightSun The Midnight Sun]]" is the story of a young woman and her elderly neighbor trying to survive in their apartment building as the Earth slowly drifts closer to the Sun, causing extreme climate change. She has to deal with day-to-day life in the increasingly deserted city, extreme thirst and heat, and crazed, murderous people just desperate to survive. [[spoiler:It's actually [[AllJustADream just a fever-dream]]. In the real world, the Earth is slowly drifting ''away'' from the Sun, causing it to grow colder and darker...]]
* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1985'': "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1985S1E1 A Little Peace and Quiet]]" has a harried housewife, Penny, using a special amulet to freeze time literally "just before the end." A nuclear war had broken out between the United States and the Soviet Union, with missiles headed toward southern California. In the minute (or so) before "the end", panic is heard in the distance outside Penny's house and a radio announcer is losing his attempts to keep calm as he reads news bulletins about the air strikes. Penny's husband is trying to figure out how to gather their children and go to a shelter... but there's no time, as their youngest son comes into the room crying, and then an explosion is heard in the distance. Penny screams out the words "SHUT UP!" -- [[TimeStandsStill freezing time]] in the split second before their home was (presumably) burned to a crisp. Outside, time is frozen as people are trying to flee, and one man is looking upward at the sky; another is on the ground shielding himself. She looks up to the sky... to see a nuclear warhead just seconds from impact and a bright orange fireball in the distance of another bomb that has gone off.
* ''Franchise/TheWalkingDeadTelevisionUniverse'':
** ''Series/FearTheWalkingDead'' begins just as the franchise's setting-defining ZombieApocalypse is kicking in, focusing on a family in Los Angeles trying to survive as society starts to collapse. By Season 2, it's shifted fully to AfterTheEnd territory.
** ''Series/TalesOfTheWalkingDead'': The episode "Blair; Gina" is set in Atlanta right at the start of the ZombieApocalypse, showing people desperately trying to flee the city as the dead start to rise and the military begins to clamp down to try and maintain order.
** ''Series/TheWalkingDeadDarylDixon'': The episode "Alouette" opens with a flashback showing Isabelle's life as a party girl pre-Fall coming to a screeching halt as the dead rise and start to overrun Paris. Several more flashbacks throughout the episode show how French society started to collapse into anarchy over the following days as the walkers spread and people begin panicking.
* ''Franchise/WalkingWith'': A few episodes in the various series are set right before a major extinction event occurs.
** ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'': The first segment of "Clash of Titans" is set during the end-Permian, right at the cusp of the Great Dying, when massive volcanic activity is scorching the Earth beyond habitation. Over the course of the episode, an endless drought gradually kills off all the species in the episode, [[SoleSurvivor with the exception]] of the ''Diictodon'', and its descendants become the most numerous land animal in the world after the extinction, during the Early Triassic.
** ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs'': [[TheDayTheDinosaursDied As you might expect]], the last episode, "Death of a Dynasty", is about the K-Pg extinction event. The episode begins a few months before the asteroid hits and ends with the extinction of the dinosaurs as the Earth is plunged into darkness by the rain of molten rock and burning ash. However, even before this, it's stated that increased global volcanism have decimated the forest habitats and greatly increased the incidences of stillbirths among dinosaurs, giving the impression the meteor was just the straw that broke the camel's back.
** ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'': "Whale Killer" is set right at the beginning of the Eocene-Oligocene extinction event, due to climate change causing the cooling and drying of the planet at a much faster rate than many organisms can adapt. The episode shows many animals struggling to survive this event, such as the main character, a pregnant ''Basilosaurus'', trying to keep her unborn calf alive by finding enough prey to sustain both herself and the growing embryo, hunting in environments far outside her normal range.
* ''Series/YouMeAndTheApocalypse'' is about the last 34 days before an 8-mile wide comet collides with Earth.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Magazines]]
* This is one of many things that interest Magazine/ForteanTimes. FT has catalogued and discussed many, many, examples of Doomsday Cults, end-of-the-world panics, and eschatology in general.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Manhwa]]
* ''Manhwa/CielTheLastAutumnStory'': Volume 15 reveals that [[spoiler: the Sun has already died, and only the effort of the godlike Arc Dragons preserves mankind. And they don't intend to stick around forever.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Myths & Religion]]
* All religions have their eschatology - that is, their doctrine of the End Times as revealed to them by their God and Prophets. Examples include:
** UsefulNotes/{{Hinduism}}: the Kali Yuga, the end of Brahman's 64,000 year world-cycle, the destruction of the old (ie, our world) and the beginning of the new.
** Myth/NorseMythology: The Ragnarok, the end of the current world and rebirth of the new.
** UsefulNotes/{{Islam}}, UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}} and UsefulNotes/{{Judaism}}) share the common heritage of belief in the coming of a Messiah just before the old world collapses into fire and ruin, who will lead a remnant of the Faithful into a Golden Age of Heaven on Earth.
* The UrExample of "Just Before The End" thinking is the commonly accepted last book of ''Literature/TheBible'', the ''Literature/BookOfRevelation''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]
* Musical example: Music/DavidBowie, "[[http://lyrics.wikia.com/David_Bowie:Five_Years Five Years]]" (from ''Music/TheRiseAndFallOfZiggyStardustAndTheSpidersFromMars'').
* "Here Comes the Flood" by Music/DivineComedy.
* Most of Music/JethroTull's album, "Stormwatch". In particular, the songs "Dark Ages" & "Something's On The Move".
* "Tomorrow Never Comes" by Music/VNVNation.
* "[[Creator/HPLovecraft Lovecraft]] in Brooklyn" by Music/TheMountainGoats, in which the world is being slowly overrun by {{Eldritch Abomination}}s but civilization is still halfway functional, and the narrator is waiting for the day when they strike their final blow.
* Music/WeirdAlYankovic's "Christmas At Ground Zero" is about the final moments of humanity before nuclear armaggedon, sung [[LyricalDissonance as a cheery christmas song.]]
* The album "Year Zero" by Music/NineInchNails, particularly the final song Zero Sum.
* In "Just The Flu" by Music/{{NOFX}} the human race is about to become extinct in two weeks time.
* "London Calling" by Music/TheClash
* "The Last Mall", a gleefully sarcastic song by Music/SteelyDan.
* ''Age of'', a ConceptAlbum by Music/OneohtrixPointNever.
* Music/{{Ayreon}}'s 2017 ConceptAlbum ''The Source'' details the fall of Alpha, the original home planet of the Forever people. At the beginning of the story they realize that with the [[AIIsACrapshoot 'Frame]] [[KillAllHumans hell-bent on exterminating biological life]] and controlling the planet's entire infrastructure the planet only has days.
* The Music/ButtholeSurfers song "The Last Astronaut" is an astronaut reciting what he sees as he orbits the Earth... which includes the breakout of nuclear war, country by country (the ''entire Soviet Union'' is on fire). At the end, he realizes just what happened:
-->"Hello? Are you there? It seems like there's, uh, nobody out there... Hello? My God! Is there anyone left? My ''God!'' Well... all of 'em, huh?"
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/CallOfCthulhu'': Supplement ''Fearful Passages'', adventure "Slow Boat". The far future setting where the {{PC}}s end up, complete with a large orange dying sun and a population made up of necromancers and zombies.
* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
** Mayfair Games' Role Aids supplement ''Lizardmen'': When the Meraska Empire fell some of its lizardmen escaped into an alternate dimension which entirely consists of a vast plain dotted with the ruins of ancient cities under a a dim sun dying of old age.
*** An alternate 3rd edition Krynn has a universe where Raistlin wins, and players pass through a world which is gradually being destroyed by magically-enhanced storms.
%%* The ''Dying Earth'' RPG by Pelgrane Press, based on the Jack Vance novels.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'' has at least four possible Ends coming up: the Yozis breaking out of Hell (which would resemble a cross between a nuclear war and a planet-sized child jumping on human ants), Oblivion swallowing everything, the world being unmade into the Wyld, or -- quite possibly worst of all -- the Solars regaining their ancient power and hubris. Over in Autochthonia, at the current pace it's only a matter of time before the Great Maker dies and consigns most of his people to a slow, dark, airless death.
* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'':
** For M:TG's many planes (but particularly Dominaria) this is a horrific, cyclic trope, to the point that Time Rift Crisis (the events of ''Time Spiral'' block) was an apocalypse caused by [[LampshadeHanging an overabundance of apocalypses]].
** The ''Fallen Empires'' expansion takes place after the Brothers' War but before the Ice Age.
** New Phyrexia was originally slated to be the first set in its block, showing AfterTheEnd of the Phyrexian invasion of Mirrodin. Instead, the devs decided to shift it to the last set of the block, allowing players to live through the struggle (going as far as to tease another, fake set titled "Mirrodin Pure" to psych people out).
** The ''Amonkhet'' set was set during the leadup to the God-Pharaoh's return and the resultant end of the world. While the people of Amonkhet were [[HeavenSeeker absolutely psyched for this]], the audience was well aware that the God-Pharaoh was [[BigBad Nicol Bolas]] and his return was not going to be pleasant for anybody...particularly since the next set was called "Hour of Devastation". [[ApocalypseHow As expected, Bolas's return led to the city of Naktamun being ravaged and most of the locals, including four of their Gods, brutally murdered.]] Devastation ''indeed''.
* ''TabletopGame/MorkBorg'': The main premise of the game is that the DarkFantasy world is about to end and there is nothing the player characters can do about it.
** This also applies to just about every 3rd-party game that uses the ''TabletopGame/MorkBorg'' system, whatever it's exact genre. If it uses Mork Borg, there is a good chance that the setting is in the process of some kind of apoclypse and there is no way to stop it.
* ''TabletopGame/OldWorldOfDarkness'' takes place just before ''five'' or so ends, depending on which specific game you were playing.
* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': As the 42nd millinnium dawns, the forces of Chaos are on their largest offensive in history, a huge Warp rift has torn the galaxy clean in half, the warlord Ghazghkull Mag Uruk Thraka is gathering the Orks into a single unified horde, the Necrons are steadily awakening, and the main body of the Tyranid hive fleets comes closer and closer. The galaxy's time is running out, and its civilisations are too divided, distrustful and xenophobic to form any kind of united front against the coming end.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedOdyssey:'' The third part of the "Fate of Atlantis" DLC takes place in Atlantis during the heyday of the Precursor civilization. Scattered notes about the area has scientific observations from them noticing the sun's acting up all of a sudden, and they should probably do something about that. [[spoiler:At the conclusion, Atlantis is sunk to prevent a bioweapon being unleashed.]]
** ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedValhalla:'' "[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Dawn of Ragnarok]]" has Eivor experiencing what Odin was doing shortly before the Toba Catastrophe, filtered through Eivor's mind and the substances they're ingesting to experience these memories. [[spoiler:Odin's actions in the DLC apparently have him kick-start Ragnarok proper.]]
* A localized variant: ''VideoGame/BioShock'' takes place After the End for Rapture, but several audio diaries, the ''VideoGame/BioShock2'' multiplayer and ''VideoGame/BioShockInfiniteBurialAtSea'' take place Just Before the End, showing how it got the way it was in [[VideoGame/BioShock1 the first game]].
* 1999 A.D. in ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'', the year [[EldritchAbomination Lavos]] awakens and lays waste to the world. It's your job to [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong prevent that from happening]]. Just take a quick look at [[AfterTheEnd 2300 A.D.]] if you're not feeling motivated enough.
* The later games in the ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerTiberianSeries'' start heading in this direction, with GDI gradually losing the war to contain the spreading Tiberium.
** By the time ''[[VideoGame/CommandAndConquerTiberiumWars Tiberium Wars]]'' takes place, GDI has actually made some progress in removing Tiberium thanks to its new sonic weaponry. Then the aliens show up. [[spoiler: The sonic weaponry turns out to be ''very'' effective against them, which is [[KarmicDeath pretty appropriate]] given that it subsequently turns out that they were the ones who created the stuff to soften us up pre-invasion, and it's under control as of ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerTiberianTwilight''. And then the spread of Tiberium is halted, and Nod is gone as of the end of that game. [[EarnYourHappyEnding They're going to be alright.]]]]
** Even the ''first'' game has a few hints in this direction -- it does not take long in ''Tiberian Dawn'' before you know Tiberium is so valuable because it leeches up everything valuable in the soil (killing off any vegetation), and as the game progresses its toxic and mutagenic properties becomes clear, and no-one has any idea how to stop Tiberium from spreading... fittingly, ''Tiberian Sun'' has a few hints that, looked at from the perspective of a normal citizen, the world pretty much ''has'' ended.[[note]]Notice how nearly every settlement already has or is entirely in ruins even ''before'' you get to them, and that there's not a ''single'' mention of nations as anything other than a geographic descriptor despite GDI supposedly operating on a UN mandate?[[/note]].
* ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'': If it isn't AfterTheEnd, it's this. The First Flame is dying, and when it goes out, nobody knows exactly what will happen. The world suffers through long, cold nights. All throughout the world, humans are being turned into mindless undead called Hollows, and many kingdoms (including Lordran, the setting for the game) have either collapsed or are holding on by a thread. And that's before we get into the monsters, demons, and other nasties roaming the Earth.
** ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsIII'' is even worse. The First Flame is so worn out it can barely even be linked, and the people summoned to restore it have gone rogue, either seeking to bring about the end or consumed by their own demons. As time goes on, [[TotalEclipseOfThePlot even the Sun is eclipsed, leaving the Darksign hanging in the sky]]. The player's decisions alone will determine whether to delay the end slightly, seek to preserve hope for a new iteration of the cycle after the Age of Dark, or snuff out the world and rule over the dead as the Lord of Hollows.
** The ''Ringed City'' DLC for Dark Souls III takes this to its logical conclusion, apparently taking place mere minutes before the end of fire. As the player is battling the final boss, the sun is dimming, and it's not coming back.
* The ''Franchise/DeusExUniverse'' takes place before, during, and after a cataclysm that all but wipes out the human race.
** [[WordOfGod Warren Spector]] describes the original ''VideoGame/DeusEx'' as being set in a CrapsackWorld, "Five minutes before the fall of human civilization."
** The sequel, ''VideoGame/DeusExInvisibleWar'', is in turn set in a ScavengerWorld, "five minutes before [[ApocalypseNot humanity's rebirth]]."
** The prequel, ''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'', is set in a relative "golden age" five minutes before the gold peels off.
--->'''[[spoiler:Eliza Cassan]]:''' It's not the end of the world, but you can see it from here.
** ''VideoGame/DeusExMankindDivided'' takes place after the "golden age" but before the main game, showing how everything is going to hell, following the events of ''Human Revolution'', with augmented people being persecuted and herded into ghettos and radical augments striking back using terrorist-like methods.
* ''VideoGame/DiabloIV'' opens fifty years after the events of the [[VideoGame/DiabloIII previous game]]. Malthael's rampage resulted in the mass death of most of humanity, greatly weakening or outright destroying the nations of Sanctuary. The surviving humans live in a new dark age, constantly beset by demons and other horrors. The High Heavens are silent while the Prime and Lesser Evils are free for the first time in centuries. Against this backdrop, the prophecy of Rathma which predicts the end of Sanctuary begins to unfold.
* In the fourth game of the ''VideoGame/DontEscape'' series, the overarching threat is a broken moon that will [[ColonyDrop crash into the earth]] in a matter of days, and you have to survive various disasters long enough to escape Earth before that happens.
* There is a very apocalyptic gloom throughout the final act of ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'', so much that even the resident {{Cloudcuckoolander}} Merrill lampshades it, saying "It feels like something is ending". Aveline tries to reassure her that it's gonna be alright, but [[spoiler:neither of them is right: it's not alright but the world didn't end... yet]].
* ''VideoGame/Earth2150'' is an RTS with the goal of gathering enough resources to get off the planet before it blows. Mission environments and shots of the globe start with winter, slowly moving on to spring, summer, Sahara and Venus. It's quite effective since the game's non-linear enough that keeping up with the schedule is your concern.
** The mostly-unknown predecessor ''Earth 2140'' also qualifies, as the two main factions are fighting over the dwindling resources of the planet.
* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls''
** ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'' takes place just before the end of the reign of the [[PhysicalGod Tribunal]] and really, the Dunmer way of life for the past 4000 years. With regard to the effects of the Tribunal dying off and the effect it would have on the [[TheAlcatraz Ministry of Truth]], between ''Oblivion'' and ''Skyrim'' the magic holding the Ministry aloft fails and [[ColonyDrop Vvardenfell is all but wiped off the map]].
** A political version of this occurs in ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion Oblivion]]''. It's hinted at the end of the game that [[spoiler: the loss of the Septim dynasty is going to seriously alter the geopolitical state of the world, because the Empire won't have a leader.]] As revealed in ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]'', the hints were correct.
** This had a vague hint as early as Morrowind with Wulf, an Aspect of Tiber Septim, about how the Empire seems to be on it's last legs and says "The Emperor is getting old. Don't know how much longer he'll hang on. So is the whole Empire, for that matter. Getting old, that is. The Emperor and the legions have held the Empire together for hundreds of years. It's been a good thing, by and large. But maybe it's time for a change. Time for something young and new. What? No idea. Because I'm old. Old dog doesn't get new ideas. But maybe young folks like you should try some new ideas. I don't know. Could be messy. But change is never pretty." hearing this from Wulf makes it pretty clear that nothing would be the same after Oblivion.
** According to some hints throughout the franchise, as well as supplemental materials, this may be happening to Mundus (i.e. the world) itself. The world's continued existence is implied to be anchored by [[TheTower a series of towers]]... and the last three games of the series have seen several of these towers fall as a direct or indirect result of game events. And it's quite possible that the Nazi-esque Thalmor are deliberately seeking to destroy the remaining towers- for [[OurElvesAreDifferent mer]], mortal life is a prison for their immortal souls, and many believe ending the world would free them.
* ''Videogame/EndlessLegend'' takes place on the dying LostColony of Auriga as its climate collapses. As the game goes on, the brutal winters become longer and longer, until the world is plunged into an [[EndlessWinter eternal ice age]] past turn 300. The eight empires of Auriga are in a race to get the hell off ''before'' that happens. Come ''Videogame/EndlessSpace'' some time after, Auriga is a lifeless ball of rock and the Vaulters are the [[DoomedByCanon only ones]] who made it off Auriga wholesale.
* ''Videogame/TheEndTimeVermintide'' takes place during the End Times, the apocalyptic event that results in the destruction of [[TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}} the Old World]]. The first game takes place in the opening stages of the apocalypse, when things are locally still limited to open Skaven invasions and the situation, while dire, does not appear much worse than any of the disastrous invasions that struck the Empire over its history. ''VideoGame/VermintideII'' is set further into the timeline, by which point the full Chaos invasions has reached the southern areas where the game is set, a great deal of the Empire has been fully overrun, and the characters begin to struggle with fatalism and despair as their nations collapse and their leaders and gods start dying off.
* ''Franchise/{{Fallout}}'': While all the games in the series take place ''After'' the End, there are a few glimpses of what it must have been like Just Before.
** In particular, the Anchorage simulation in ''VideoGame/Fallout3'' and Mr. House of ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'' (and Big MT in the DLC expansion) are relics from this time.
** The prologue and opening scene of ''VideoGame/Fallout4'' takes place during the morning of October 23, 2077 -- the morning the bombs fell.
* ''VideoGame/FarCry5'' gives off this vibe, especially as you listen to the radio. While Hope County is dealing with a violent cult, peace talks are breaking down in the Middle East, multiple terrorist attacks have taken place around the world in the last month, tensions in the Pacific have increased due to North Korea continuing its unrestricted nuclear testing, the U.S. is facing a financial crisis and recalling its citizens from overseas, and worst of all, Russia is reeling from a nuclear terrorist attack on Moscow, with casualties stretching into the ''millions.'' [[spoiler: In the Resist ending, this escalates into a full-on ApocalypseHow as the nukes starts falling in Montana. ''Ultimately'' though, as the series continued, this was revealed to be the paranoid delusions of Joseph Seed after . The player character only experiences it because of the heavy amount of brainwashing they are subjected to over the course of the story.]]
* ''VideoGame/FateOfTheWorld'' charges you with stopping -- or maybe ''trying'' to stop -- catastrophic GlobalWarming.
* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
** The World of Balance portions of ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'' are this, with the playable party unaware that such a thing could happen until Kefka and Gestahl are already on the FloatingContinent.
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'' hits this once [[ColonyDrop Meteor gets summoned]] and [[GaiasVengeance the WEAPONs start showing up]].
** ''VideoGame/LightningReturnsFinalFantasyXIII''. After 500 years of the world being filled with Chaos, Lightning wakes up to find out that the world only has 13 days left before it is destroyed and the new world is created for people to live in. Lightning has to guide souls to this new world while she still can, but she can extend the time by doing certain quests. But eventually the world will still end.
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' had the red moon, Dalamud, slowly falling towards the world. As it falls, TheEmpire begins invading Eorzea and powerful monsters show up everywhere, including within cities. Eventually, the red moon does fall and breaks open, revealing the ''really'' pissed off primal, Bahamut, The dragon god wastes no time in scorching the land as he annihilates everything in his wake. Only a HeroicSacrifice by Louisoix stops him and prevents further damage to the land. ''A Realm Reborn'' takes place 5 years after the Calamity and while most of the landscape is irreversibly changed, everyone has recovered. The events before the Calamity and during said Calamity occurred during 1.0 before and after the servers were shut down to remake the game.
*** The trailer for the ''Shadowbringers'' expansion shows a group of rich and fat Miqo'te lounging around eating and drinking while Thancred is in a room underneath them fighting a monster. The develops pointed out that [[spoiler: The First world is about to be consumed by an all destroying force of light]], so the rich are partying it up while they still can.
*** It is also revealed in ''Shadowbringers'' that [[spoiler:the Source may be on its way to the end as well: in the future, the combination of an influx of light aether from the destruction of the First, combined with TheEmpire using a deadly chemical weapon, would cause an apocalypse that would make Bahamut's awakening seem like a rainy day in comparison. The heroes' efforts to stop the destruction of the First would also mean stopping this doomsday scenario.]]
*** Also in ''Shadowbringers'', [[spoiler:the final act of the 5.0 story shows the Scions traversing the ruins of the forgotten Amaurot civilization, of which the Ascians are the remnants. Emet-Selch recreates the place as it was just before calamity struck, and the final dungeon has you witnessing the apocalypse as it unfolded long ago.]]
* The Japanese interactive movie ''VideoGame/GadgetPastAsFuture'' is set in the dystopian, Soviet-esque Empire, run by the [[ShadowDictator shadowy dictator]] Paulo Orlovsky. The country is on the brink of war with another, Orlovsky is hell-bent on perfecting the [[MindControlDevice Sensorama]] to brainwash his citizens, and a group of scientists are trying to construct a spaceship to evacuate Earth before a [[CometOfDoom comet wipes out all life]]. The opening prologue is even set on "A day eighteen years before the End".
* ''VideoGame/GearsOfWar'': The locust have destroyed all human government presence on the planet Sera except the Jacinto Plateau, which they break into before the first game starts.
* ''VideoGame/GoodbyeVolcanoHigh'': Set in a modern world of [[WorldOfFunnyAnimals anthropomorphic dinosaurs]], the story takes place a few months before a meteor wipes out almost all life on Earth. As there's no way to prevent the inevitable, player character Fang has to decide what to do with their remaining time.
* In all of the ''VideoGame/GuildWars'' campaigns, the world gradually comes apart around the player, and the best that can be done is to preserve a small portion of what there once was in the face of the cataclysm. It even happens TWICE in the original campaign, although only the second one is stopped before it goes too far. Interestingly, [[VideoGame/GuildWars2 the second game]], which takes place centuries later, features one of the races that caused one of the catastrophies as a playable race... albeit having [[HeelFaceTurn turned against the faction responsible]] for the event in the interim.
* ''VideoGame/HalfLife2'': Thanks to the Combine's suppression field, the youngest people on Earth are twentysomethings, and the Combine are slowly but surely intent on turning everyone into either a soldier for them, or the horrifying creatures known as Stalkers. But that's not all! Cut content from the game showed (and hints can still be found) that the Combine is also [[MarsNeedsWater draining Earth's oceans]] and replacing its air with a toxic gas.
* The prequel game ''VideoGame/HomeworldDesertsOfKharak'' reveals this about the civilization on Kharak. The planed is dying, the vast desert is expanding north and south every year, reclaiming livable land. The Primary Anomaly ([[spoiler:the Khar-Toba and the hyperspace core within]]) may be the Kharakians' only chance of survival ([[spoiler:even if it brings about the wrath of the Taiidani]]).
** The original ''{{VideoGame/Homeworld}}'' game starts off like this as well, but it's supposed to be a twist-beginning. The tutorial level is the Mothership being launched and the player getting used to the controls before it initiates its first hyperdrive test. Cue the success of the test, a return to Kharak...and the sight of the entire planet being engulfed in a firestorm, leaving the Mothership, her crew, and 600,000 Kharaki refugees that had been loaded into cryotrays before the test. And that last bit is ''only'' if you manage to save all six in the return mission.
* ''VideoGame/TheLastOfUs'' starts out just hours before the outbreak of the Cordyceps fungus leads to the fall of civilization.
* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaMajorasMask'': Link arrives in the land of Termina three days before its destruction by the falling moon. People are still going about their business as usual, though a few are in denial about the land's impending doom. By the night of the final day, Clock Town is eerily quiet as nearly everyone has fled in a futile attempt to escape the falling moon.
* ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'' takes place during the opening stages of the Reaper invasion. Things are still running, but planets all over the galaxy are under siege. The entire game is a desperate struggle to find a way to stop the Reapers before they break the back of galactic resistance, and the Reapers are winning for most of the game.
* ''VideoGame/Metro2033'' and ''Videogame/MetroLastLight'' take place in Moscow 20 years after [[WorldWarIII the end of the world]], but the player sometimes receives visions from the minutes before, during, and after the bombs fell. A promotional video series for ''Last Light'' takes place right when the bomb sirens go off, giving residents less than 20 minutes to make it to the metro system. Within ''Last Light'', [[PlayerCharacter Artyom]] witnesses a hallucination of an international flight as it is landing in Moscow when the bombs hit, with the electromagnetic pulse taking out the plane's control system, causing it to veer uncontrollably towards a Metro entrance at over 500kph while glass shrapnel from skyscrapers shattered in the pressure wave slams into the cockpit. Before the plane crashes the pilots and passengers witness Moscow burning in nuclear fire.
* ''VideoGame/AMindForeverVoyaging'' goes into this territory in 2071. Pollution has reached critical levels and Earth's biosphere has been all but destroyed, with the vast majority of fauna being extinct. Poverty is widespread, food and potable water are extremely hard to come by and many people have turned to crime to stay alive. The government has turned extremely autocratic, yet it's implied that they're slowly losing control of the country. By 2081, the world has gone full AfterTheEnd.
* ''VideoGame/{{NieR}}'' is set in a world that is slowly dying despite everyone's best efforts to hang on. [[spoiler:Then at the end of the game, the main character inadvertently destroys the last thread of hope]].
* In ''VideoGame/OuterWilds'', you have 22 minutes real-time to explore your solar system before the sun goes nova, putting you back at the start of a GroundhogDayLoop. The major goal of the game is figuring out why this is happening and how to stop it. [[spoiler:Long story short, you can't. While the [[{{Precursors}} Nomai]] ''did'' build a StellarStation intended to [[StarKilling detonate your star]] to harvest its energy for a science experiment, the Sun Station was non-functional - your sun is going nova because it's at the end of its lifespan. Furthermore, additional Nomai texts, and observation of distant stars ''also'' going nova, reveals that it's Just Before The NaturalEndOfTime, and the universe as a whole has reached the end of ''its'' lifespan.]]
* ''VideoGame/{{Pathologic}}'' : The mysterious town the game takes place in evokes this everywhere you tread. [[spoiler:But the real truth behind it is actually far more complicated.]]
* In ''VideoGame/{{Perihelion}}'', despite only just starting its plans to [[InTheirOwnImage rewrite reality]], the [[BigBad Unborn]] [[EldritchAbomination God's]] mere presence is causing psychic and conventional communication to become impossible, solar activity to decrease, buildings to literally ''melt'', extradimensional, hostile monsters unclassifiable by Perhelion's sciences to appear, and Perihelion's population to spontaneously mutate, the results of which being frequently lethal to children. And that's just what's happening in the ''introduction cutscene''.
* ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarII''. While giving many of the details would be highly spoileriffic, there's a reason that it's subtitled ''The End of the Lost Age''. Even in the beginning, it's clear that the people in the cities are blissfully goofing off while bandits and [[GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke accidental releases from the Biosystems Lab]] rule the wilderness, the planetary weather control systems are breaking down, and the Motavia government has a grand total of ''[[ItsUpToYou one]]'' agent (and a [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits few volunteers who]] [[MagneticHero hear about his efforts and offer their assistance]]) to send to deal with the problems of an entire planet. [[FromBadToWorse It gets worse]].
* In ''VideoGame/ProjectZomboid'', the ZombieApocalypse doesn't fully start until one week into the game. During this brief period, everywhere outside the playable area is safe and the U.S government is still containing the outbreak. Radio and T.V stations still air their scheduled programs and give updates on the situation. Once the period is over, the virus will escape containment and spread to the rest of the world, causing the apocalypse to start for real. After this point, all services like T.V and electricity will stop working one by one.
* ''VideoGame/ResidentEvilDuringTheStorm'' is a FanGame prequel to ''Resident Evil 2'' and ''3,'' so the first half hour of gameplay takes place when all seems normal in Raccoon City. [[PlayerCharacter Kevin]] visits his apartment, can interact with small crowds of people hanging out in the streets, and even deal with minor incidents like stopping a shoplifter or deciding whether or not to have a drink at a local bar. This makes it all the more jarring when the ZombieApocalypse happens.
* The first two ''VideoGame/{{Resistance}}'' games (as well as the GaidenGame) - the only two places the Chimera haven't invaded by the start of the series are the British isles and America, and both sequentially get invaded in respectively the first and second games.
* ''VideoGame/{{Riven}}'' takes place almost entirely in Katherine's home world, which is teetering on the brink of destruction. The islands have been shrinking and splitting farther apart from each other, many species of animals are dying out, Gehn has had most of the trees cut down for paper-making materials, and both he ''and'' Katherine are seeking a way out to a more stable world.
* ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'':
** '''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiI'' starts Just Before The End, has TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt occur, then time skips to a while AfterTheEnd. ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiII'' is a sequel to this one. The first two ''VideoGame/DevilSummoner'' games and some or all of the ''Franchise/{{Persona}}'' series take place in a timeline where, thanks to the events of ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiIf'', the End from ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiI'' was averted.
** ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiIIINocturne'' follows a similar pattern to the first game, except that it starts even ''closer'' to the end.
** ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiStrangeJourney'' takes place Just Before The End, with the player's mission being to find out just ''what'' this impending End of the World is and stop it if possible.
** ''VideoGame/DevilSurvivor'' is all about the lead-up; whether said End happens or not, and what kind of End it is, is [[MultipleEndings dependent on the player's choices]].
* The colony mission to the eponymous star system in ''VideoGame/SidMeiersAlphaCentauri'' is sent exactly because even though there's enough goodwill to build and man the ship, this is quite possibly the last opportunity for international cooperation; people are already aware things aren't going to end well, and the environment is coming apart at the seams.
** [[spoiler:Also, by communicating with Planet, you eventually find out that the next great extinction cycle that periodically sweeps clean all the life on the world is about to come. It is possible to avoid it, however, and in fact end the cycle permanently, creating a paradise world.]]
** The intro to ''Alpha Centauri'' shows large flashes visible on the surface of Earth, implying a nuclear exchange of some kind.
*** Confirmed in the novels that flash wars were breaking out across the planet with liberal use of high-yield explosive devices.
** Mentions that Earth actually crossed into AfterTheEnd territory are the complete failure to communicate with it over the following centuries, and the hypothesis raised in one of the epilogues that all Earth humans died out.
* ''VideoGame/StateOfDecay'': The base game's ending revealed that the zombie plague had spread beyond the confines of Trumball Valley and the ''Lifeline'' DLC only made it worse. Your Army unit receives periodic updates on the situation around the rest of the world and it [[ZombieApocalypse isn't good]]. The United States itself appears to be on the verge of collapse; there is a President out there somewhere and the Army is still operating, but the situation is deteriorating fast. [[spoiler: And we find out the President has apparently authorized the use of nuclear weapons on infested cities]].
* ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy''. [[spoiler:At the end of the game, the universe is actually ''destroyed'' in a supermassive black hole. It is reborn again as a new universe, but never exactly the same way it was before. WordOfGod is that ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy2'' is in the reborn universe.]]
* ''VideoGame/TheTalosPrinciple'': Alexandra Drennan's audio recordings, though soon enough the end catches up with her, the last entry done with her dying breath.
* ''VideoGame/TransformersFallOfCybertron'' focuses on the Autobots and Decepticons attempts to gather enough energon to escape Cybertron before the planet shuts down.
* ''VideoGame/VampireTheMasqueradeBloodlines'' takes place just before [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt Gehenna]], i.e. the end of the TabletopGame/OldWorldOfDarkness.
* ''VideoGame/WildArms2''. [[spoiler:Irving Vold Valeria and Vinsfeld Rhadamanthys conspire to forcibly unite the world's people [[XanatosGambit either through being conquered via by a terrorist army or by bringing the world together to defeat said terrorist army]], so that they could be ready to face an entire EldritchAbomination ''[[EldritchLocation universe]]'', "Kuiper Belt", that consumes entire other universes. And it's also no wonder that playing with so many highly dangerous toys actually awakens ''more'' Eldritch Abominations they hadn't yet planned on facing, including the actual BodySnatcher BigBad, Lord Blazer.]]
* ''[[Videogame/{{X}} X3: Albion Prelude]]'' takes place during [[EndOfAnAge the final months of the X-Universe]], as the [[PortalNetwork jump gate network]] begins to shut itself down to slow the spread of the [[AIIsACrapshoot Xenon fleets]] and to stop the apocalyptic war between the [[LostColony Argon Federation]] and [[PlanetTerra Earth State]]. The sequel, ''Videogame/XRebirth'', takes place twenty years after the collapse as the network begins to reactivate.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* A world like this is briefly shown in the ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' mini-arc "[[http://www.sluggy.com/comics/archives/daily/041105 The Fall]]," where we see flashbacks of what the Dimension of Pain was like just before the demons conquered the native human civilization. This contrasts the concurrent storyline, "That Which Redeems", where the demons have invaded another dimension full of pacifistic humans, and [[TheHero Torg]] is the only thing standing in the way of their otherwise inevitable doom.
* ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'' starts in a peaceful Earth... but it's not long before we find out that there's at least one meteor en route. [[spoiler: The Earth does not survive.]]
** An AlternateTimeline shows us what Earth would be like [[spoiler:if it were never destroyed by meteors. Instead, it's flooded and all humans die off anyways thanks to Her Imperious Condescension's [[HostileTerraforming attempts to make Earth like her homeworld]].]]
* The prologue for ''Webcomic/StandStillStaySilent'' starts just as a highly infective but [[BlatantLies otherwise harmless]] illness is breaking out. The rest of the comic takes place [[AfterTheEnd ninety years later]].
* ''Webcomic/{{Follower}}'' is a prequel to ''Webcomic/{{Messenger}}'' which takes place AfterTheEnd, so this is a given.
* It's hinted that ''Webcomic/SleeplessDomain'' takes place in a post-apocalyptic setting: Anemone believes that the unnamed city the comic takes place in is the only city left in the world, and she fears that the current situation may soon become unsustainable.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]
* The ''Literature/FineStructure'' subsection "[[http://qntm.org/endworld Endworld]]" takes place [[spoiler: while the Earth is spiraling into the sun.]]
* ''Literature/PiecingTogetherTheAshesReconstructingTheOldWorldOrder'': The interlude "32 Minutes Before" follows the POV of an average citizen of San Francisco literally right before the Deluge, the nuclear holocaust that destroys modern society.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:WebVideo]]
* ''[[WebVideo/CriticalRoleExandriaUnlimited Exandria Unlimited: Calamity]]'' is a mini-series set on the last night of the Age of Arcanum, a seeming utopia of magic-futurism where workings of magic that would be considered miraculous in modern-day Exandria are commonplace. Over the course of its run, we see how a combination of hubris, bad decisions, and conspiracy all come to a head. The result is the release of the Betrayer Gods from their extraplanar prison and the beginning of a 150-year war that would end with two-thirds of all life on Exandria dead, the landscape permanently altered, and the gods locking themselves away from the mortal plane forever. [[spoiler:The player characters themselves end up [[UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom inadvertantly helping to kickstart the Calamity]] due to these character flaws. All but one of them dies in the Calamity as a result, but they also end up giving it their all to prevent it from being even worse than it could have been. The one player who survives even manages to find a way to escort his family to some semblance of safety, so it gives a RayOfHopeEnding that while things really are bad, it could have been even worse.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/GeneratorRex'' takes place five years after a nanite plague exploded across the world and began to mutate the ecosystem. By the start of the series, the human population's gradually dwindling away as people randomly transform into monstrous evos (since everyone's been infected, sooner or later everyone changes) and much of the world has been overrun and lost to normal humans. The situation has grown so desperate that Providence, a borderline KnightTemplar organization devoted to fighting the evos and finding a cure for the plague, has the authority to nuke major cities (such as New York) if necessary.
* In ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'', it's gradually revealed that Homeworld, the home of the Gem species, is in this state as a dying colonial empire. Homeworld is currently in "Era Two," and the problems are so numerous that [[LiteralMetaphor the planet itself is cracking in half.]] Its leadership, the Great Diamond Authority, is in shambles: leader [[BigBad White Diamond]] is categorically denying that anything is wrong and [[TheAssimilator assimilating]] anyone who dares to disagree with her FantasticCasteSystem; Blue Diamond is so paralyzed with grief for the loss of her fellow Diamond Pink (and unable to express that grief because of White's rules) that she's completely unable to function; and Yellow Diamond, the only one who's relatively well-adjusted, is taking out her own grief over the loss of Pink by becoming [[GeneralRipper increasingly militaristic]] and so overly focused on getting revenge on Earth, where Pink died, that her armies are suffering. The individual citizens of Homeworld are bearing the brunt of their leaders' deteroriating mental states, and almost everyone seems to be unhappy (though they [[StepfordSmiler aren't allowed to say so]]). Peridot, who pulls a HeelFaceTurn, reveals that Homeworld's resources are rapidly depleting, to the point where newly-created Gems are being given technological enhancements to make up for the loss of their natural special powers. It's then [[DefiedTrope defied]] when Steven successfully ushers in a new beginning--Era Three--that moves Homeworld, the Diamonds, and all Gems to a decolonized, healthy, peaceful state.
* PlayedForLaughs in ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddparents'' episode "Just Desserts." Timmy gets sick of eating healthily and wishes that all the food in the world could be delicious desserts. After a month, everyone in his hometown of Dimmsdale (and presumably the Earth) has become [[TemporaryBulkChange incredibly fat]] from eating nothing but sweets morning, noon, and night. At first, things don't seem so bad, until Mr. Crocker delivers a ChekhovsLecture about the Earth's orbit and how "a significant shift in weight in one area of the planet--[[TemptingFate oh, say the size of Dimmsdale]]--could unbalance it and send it wobbling into the Sun." Sure enough, that's exactly what happens, and Timmy has to undo the wish before the planet completely incinerates.
** Another episode has a similar trick: Timmy becomes sick of everyone in town yelling and wishes for a world of total silence. At first, he enjoys the peace and quiet, but when a giant meteor starts hurtling toward Earth, he can't wish it away because Cosmo and Wanda need him to specifically state his requests, leading to a desperate game of charades.
* In ''WesternAnimation/CarolAndTheEndOfTheWorld'', a planet is set to hit the Earth in 7 months. As a result, humanity is living life to the fullest, while the titular Carol is finding meaning in the mundane.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Real Life]]
* For all of recorded history, basically every generation has been ''positive'' that The End is upon them, generally due to current events that, at the time, seemed nigh-''certain'' to lead to the collapse of society at best, and the destruction of life on Earth at worst. Within living memory, for instance, we have the [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarI Great War]] and the following [[UsefulNotes/TheSpanishFlu Spanish Flu Pandemic]], the Great Depression, UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, and the spectre of nuclear war that hovered over the UsefulNotes/ColdWar. In the 21st century, climate change and runaway pandemics in the wake of COVID-19 have become the apocalyptic scares du jour, though war and natural disasters of other kinds are still as much of a threat as ever.
* UsefulNotes/TheRomanEmpire did not end with a bang in 476. The empire had been decaying at least since the mid-third century, and possibly even earlier than that. There was one last attempt to prevent utter collapse under Constantine, but those citizens of the Empire who lived after him (''especially'' after 410 when Rome was sacked and its survivors were enslaved) must have been aware that the Roman Empire was doomed. Unless they heeded the Latin motto "carpe diem" - evil emperors and invading barbarians don't harass you 24/7.
** The eastern part of the empire (usually called the Byzantine Empire today, but still known as the Roman Empire to its inhabitants) survived the cataclysms that brought down the western Roman Empire in the fifth century, though it too had a protracted Just Before The End period. For the last two centuries of its existence, it barely held on after being fatally weakened by the Fourth Crusade, falling to the Turks in 1453.
* Neither did the Soviet Union in 1991. The entire decade of the 1980s was the USSR running on momentum of years past, its shortcomings accumulating into a rolling snowball, with things coming to a head following the [[GoingCritical Chernobyl meltdown]]. Its rump, the Russian Federation, was [[UsefulNotes/TheNewRussia barely functional]] from its very beginning.
* This can be the personal case for people with terminal diseases who have been given an estimate of how long is left before their death.
* Really any mass extinction from the perspective of the animals living during it, because given the sheer scales of geologic time there can be hundreds of thousands, even millions of years of everyone slowly dying off.
* Things had this feel at the start of the 2020 UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic, especially in the days leading up to social isolation being ordered in a country. In the UK, restaurants were still open, people were mostly milling around freely even the day before...but supermarket and pharmacy shelves were empty, people were avoiding public transport, and everyone knew it was only a matter of time before the outbreak took hold and everything shut down.
* Arguably, it's very likely that due to the increasing luminosity of the Sun as it ages, combined with gradually decreasing atmospheric carbon dioxide levels over time (no relation to manmade global warming), it is quite possible that the Earth may already be near the end of the time when it can still support animal life, with the next 500 million years having Earth slowly become uninhabitable to animals and plants as the Sun continues to get hotter and atmospheric CO2 levels to gradually drop over time, until finally only microbial life remains.
[[/folder]]
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