%%
%%
%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order.
%%
%%
%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=16976631090.18890900
%% Please do not replace or remove without starting a new thread.
%% Previous thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=16967268310.58967300
%%
[[quoteright:350:[[Webcomic/{{Floraverse}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/construction.png]]]]
->''"This is not for you."''
-->-- '''Creator/MarkZDanielewski''', ''Literature/HouseOfLeaves''

The ''New Weird'' movement is a post-modernist take on certain kinds of literary genre fiction. In a nutshell, it's a specific genre of Scifi/Fantasy/Horror literature that does not follow the conventions of derivative ScienceFiction, {{Fantasy}} or {{Horror}}, without being an [[DeconstructorFleet outright parody or deconstruction]]. Similar to the NewWaveScienceFiction movement of TheSixties, but it took off in the [[TheNineties mid-nineties]], and was at its peak in the early-to-mid TurnOfTheMillennium.

New Weird incorporates elements from certain genres, but tries to avoid being typecast as stereotypical examples of any of them. The purpose of the movement is partly as backlash against [[SciFiGhetto the lack of respect that sci-fi, fantasy and horror works get]]. Proponents of New Weird are of the not unreasonable belief that the reason genre fiction is held in such low regard is because it caters to a very specific audience who likes to read the same sorts of things. The word "Fantasy" becoming almost a [[{{Cliche}} brand name]] that invokes the idea of [[MedievalEuropeanFantasy pseudo-Europeans living in medieval times]] using sorcery while [[Creator/JRRTolkien Tolkienesque]] elves and/or dragons putter around somewhere in the background. Sci-fi and Horror share similar fates, just with different connotations (spaceships, aliens and explosions for the former; serial killers, monsters and the undead for the latter). Some writers in the genre are playing right into the SciFiGhetto themselves, with the belief that any ScienceFiction that does not involve spaceships, robots and lasers must be an entirely new genre, or that any ScienceFiction that ''does'' have such elements is bad by default.

Works in the ''New Weird'' genre are therefore heavy in their use of [[DeconstructorFleet Deconstructor Fleets]] and MindScrew. Some of them may even take on a disdainful stance against the genres they hailed from, with liberal amounts of TakeThat. New Weird fiction will often -- but does not have to -- take place in an UrbanFantasy setting. For some reason, the various "[[PunkPunk punk]]" subgenres are acceptable, if not downright embraced in New Weird fiction. For the most part, anything goes as long as it doesn't FollowTheLeader.[[note]]This includes leaders in the New Weird.[[/note]] Some discussion of the genre jumping off of a messageboard thread aimed at hashing out what the term means is [[https://web.archive.org/web/20120806063958/http://www.sfra.org/sf101newweird available here]]; the thread itself was started by M. John Harrison, whose Viriconium books are at least influential on the genre and are probably examples of it.

Genres such as {{Romance|Novel}} or HistoricalFiction normally do not lend themselves as well to the concept of New Weird, as merely writing characters in a non-mundane setting would end up with the work in question being recategorized as science fiction or fantasy. That said, the two are common blender-fodder as ways to put twists on other genres- say, for instance, the courtship of two {{Eldritch Abomination}}s as observed by villagers in 1500s China.

Overlaps, but is distinct from ScienceFantasy (which features blends or [[DoingInTheWizard oscillations]] [[DoingInTheScientist between]] those two genres) and BizarroFiction / {{Cult Classic}}s. Compare with {{Deconstruction}}, {{Mythpunk}} (which also involves PostModernism), MindScrew, NewWaveScienceFiction. Contrast with {{Zeerust}}. See also GenreBusting, SciFiGhetto, SpeculativeFiction, WeirdScience, and WeirdWest.

----
!!Examples
[[index]]
[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* ''Manga/ChainsawMan'' has one of the most [[EldritchAbomination bizarre interpretations]] of [[OurDemonsAreDifferent demons]] in Manga: Monsters born of and wielding powers themed around humanity's greatest fears. While the concept sounds simple at the surface, the setting's AlternateHistory means that most powerful Devils have fairly odd themes; the current most dangerous Devil in existence is Gun, a [[OurMonstersAreWeird massive, vaguely humanoid torso made from screaming human faces and rifles]] who killed hundreds of thousands of people the moment it emerged and left all of humanity so terrified of firearms that it rode a feedback loop to godlike power. This was not the divergence point that made it an alternate history — the world is different because [[spoiler:the Chainsaw Devil, the previous incarnation of the titular Chainsaw Man and itself a Devil of incredible power, made a name for itself slaying and eating other Devils, wiping not only them from existence but also the very concepts they represented. Many of humanity’s greatest horrors, such as nuclear weapons, World War 2 and the Nazi Party, and [=AIDs=] were among the consumed (alongside stranger things that [[TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou don’t exist in our world, either]]), have been utterly erased from history thanks to it.]]
* ''Manga/{{Dorohedoro}}'' features the interactions of three worlds each with their own rules. The Hole clings to post-apocalyptic science in a world that failed to defeat its invaders, Sorcerers who cast magic with smoke produced by their bodies, whose own world is run by a mafia don who uses mushroom magic, and then there's the demons from Hell. An amnesiac victim of sorcery with a resulting lizard head looking for revenge and a gyoza chef with a dark past are only the start of a large cast of characters.
* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure''. The powers of the setting are strange manifestations of PsychicPowers, often with niche and counterintuitive abilities that can still prove deadly in practice, backstory that involves [[ItMakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext Vampires]], ancient gods, [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs ancient gods who are vampires]], and SufficientlyAdvancedAliens, most of which are wholly irrelevant to the plot of any given part. The AlternateContinuity SBR Universe takes it up a notch, averting NoSuchThingAsWizardJesus by having his corpse able to grant specific psychic powers, rock formations and fruits that can fuse souls, and unexplained rock people as well as their pets.
* ''Manga/OnePiece'' is set in an utterly bizarre AdventureFriendlyWorld influenced by Myth/NauticalFolklore and filled to the brim with SchizoTech, WeirdWeather, strange magic [[MagicAIsMagicA treated like science]], and general weirdness.
* ''Manga/Samurai8TheTaleOfHachimaru'' by Creator/MasashiKishimoto is a line-blurring ScienceFantasy story about {{Cyborg}} {{Samurai}} who wield SoulPower and are empowered by a WarGod to defend the galaxy from the forces of evil.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* ''ComicBook/TheDepartmentOfTruth'' is a Supernatural-{{Thriller}} with elements of {{Cosmic Horror|Story}} thrown in. Set in a world where [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve if enough people believe something, it makes it so that it's true]], with conspiracy theories being the most prevalent danger to the Earth due to the sheer number of horrible things people believe exists or is happening. The titular Department is tasked with lessening the chances of this happening, as well as hunting down monsters and anomalies this creates.
* Brandon Graham: Multiple works of his such as ''ComicBook/KingCity'', ''Multiple Warheads'', and ''ComicBook/{{Prophet}}'' have elements that defy explanation, but [[ItMakesSenseInContext make sense in context]].
** ''King City'' has a drug that slowly turns users' bodies into more of that drug.
** ''ComicBook/MultipleWarheads'' has characters use a water purity detector able to identify lingering radiation, war poisons, and black magic.
* ''ComicBook/TheNikopolTrilogy'' by Creator/EnkiBilal, of which ''Film/{{Immortal}}'' was partial film adaptation, has Egyptian gods showing up at a futuristic dystopian Paris, as experienced by HumanPopsicle Nikopol when he gets possessed by Horus.
* ''ComicBook/{{Saga}}'': The comic uses a blend of ScienceFantasy that blurs the lines of both, focusing on a couple on the run from their families, who are on opposites sides of a galactic war. It's never explained if the world has actual aliens, genetically engineered humans from a [[TheSingularity post-singularity]], or is an {{another dimension}}; as the Earth is never mentioned, despite obvious cultural trends, which could even be a form of {{Bowdleris|e}}ation for benefit of the audience.
* ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'' by Creator/NeilGaiman: A fantasy comic set not so much in any specific setting of fantasy, but within the realm of fantasy itself. The gods and fantasy races are bit players and the protagonist is the AnthropomorphicPersonification of dreams and stories themselves. The malleability of what we understand as 'reality' is a recurring theme.
* ''ComicBook/{{Shutter}}'': Written by Joe Keatinge and illustrated by Leila del Duca, the comic features a bizarre version of New York with an assortment of intelligent nonhuman species and strange technology, like [[ZeppelinsFromAnotherWorld airships]] and giant-eagle carried gondolas.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Creators]]
* Ann and Creator/JeffVanderMeer, the latter of whom wrote''Literature/TheSouthernReachTrilogy'' and much besides, have an online magazine ''[[http://weirdfictionreview.com Weird Fiction Review]]'' that only reviews works of this genre.
%%* Caitlin R. Kiernan
* Creator/ChinaMieville purposefully avoids writing [[Creator/JRRTolkien Tolkien-style]] fantasy, preferring to [[DeconstructorFleet invent his own sorts of worlds and fantasy creatures]] (along with a heavy [[AuthorTract Marxist]] bent). This has made him a leading figure in the New Weird movement.
* Creator/DanielPinkwater can be considered a kid's version of this. His books incorporate a blend of science fiction and supernatural elements in a way that's not defined by any of them, with aliens, werewolves, ghosts all interacting in a WorldOfWeirdness that's also filled with mundane yet eccentric characters. Plots are inspired by old WeirdScience radio, film and television, which are also frequently referenced.
* Creator/DanSimmons. His work can also fall into this, since he definitely blends and deconstructs and blends the types of speculative fiction in all of his works; on the other hand, the end result tends to end up looking enough like science fiction or horror that it can be put into one of those categories.
* Creator/FrancesHardinge veers into this territory, with some books (''Literature/AFaceLikeGlass'', ''Literature/CuckooSong'') more so than with the others.
%%* Creator/HarukiMurakami
* Creator/JasperFforde's books are a comedic take on the genre. They all involve {{metafiction}}al takes on the PoliceProcedural and mystery genres in which tropes are [[BetterThanABareBulb routinely discussed and manipulated]] by the characters. ''Literature/ThursdayNext'' takes place in a MundaneFantastic sci-fi dystopia in which the ability to travel in and out of books is the source of a great conspiracy, while ''Literature/NurseryCrime'' takes place in a FantasyKitchenSink in which fictional characters interact with "real" people.
%%* Jeff Noon
%%* Jeffrey Ford
%%* Johanna Sinisalo. at least occasionally
* Creator/MarkZDanielewski takes the PostModernism inherent to the genre to its logical conclusion with his Creator/DavidFosterWallace-esque textual experimentation.
%%* Ryogo Narita
* Creator/ThomasLigotti is often considered part of the New Weird, though his work is usually far less overtly post-modern than his contemporaries', [[MetaFiction with a few]] [[MindScrew exceptions]]. Ligotti's short story ''Vastarien'' is something of a TropeCodifier for the kinds of [[EldritchLocation odd settings]] popular in New Weird.
* Creator/WHPugmire, writer of prose poems, short stories, and novellas based on the Franchise/CthulhuMythos.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
* ''Film/Annihilation2018'' is loosely based on the 1st book of the New Weird ''[[Literature/TheSouthernReachTrilogy Southern Reach Trilogy]]'' and while it still features the alien altered "Area X", mutated life and strange phenomenon - there were elements missing from the novel such as the team needing to use obsolete equipment.
%%* ''Film/DaveMadeAMaze''
%%* ''Film/Mandy2018''
* ''Film/SorryToBotherYou'' is an {{afrofuturis|m}}t take on New Weird cinema. It's a movie predominantly about union agitation with socialist and racial themes and features a few elements from {{Cyberpunk}} and PostCyberpunk, overdubbed "white voices" that are [[MindScrew never explained]], and [[spoiler:horse mutants]]. Its GenreBusting, transgressive nature places it along an {{afrofuturis|m}}t axis of the New Weird.
* Creator/DavidLynch has had massive and undeniable influence over the genre, and his later works such as ''Film/InlandEmpire'' and ''Series/TwinPeaks: The Return''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]

%%* ''Literature/AlanMendelsohnTheBoyFromMars'' by Creator/DanielPinkwater
%%* ''Literature/{{Abarat}}'' series by Creator/CliveBarker
* Creator/JeffVanderMeer's Literature/{{Ambergris}} series mixes horror, ScienceFiction and, later, police procedural set after an invasion by [[PlantAliens fungoid aliens]], the Fanaarcensitii (aka Gray Cap). Once our mushroom overlords take over, society and law enforcement change.
* ''Literature/{{Atlan}}'' and its sequels' by Jane Gaskell. An ur-example. While not exactly postmodern, these novels, published between 1965 and 1977, paint a Theosophy-derived setting with a Gothic brush, resulting in a perilous journey through a [[EldritchLocation truly otherworldly]] LostWorld.
%%* ''Literature/{{Baccano}}''
* The ''Literature/BasLagCycle'' by Creator/ChinaMieville is seen as the TropeCodifier for New Weird, establishing New Weird's often heavy use of {{Steampunk}} or {{Clockpunk}}. The world of Bas-Lag is a setting where opening other dimensions is a common thing, alien creatures roam about, magic exists, humans can be made into steam-powered cyborgs and the tyrannical steampunk city of New Crobuzon looms over everything.
** ''Literature/PerdidoStreetStation'': Probably the most famous New Weird story ever written. A bird-man, whose wings have been removed, goes to a notorious alchemist (who's in relationship with a beetle-headed woman) to get his wings regrown. This will lead to an invasion of New Crobuzon by soul-sucking giant insects.
** ''Literature/TheScar'': A rebel against New Crobuzon ends up with pirates on a sailing city dragged by an otherdimensional sea monster.
** ''Literature/IronCouncil'': Rebels against New Crobuzon ride a perpetually moving train that houses the leaders of the rebellion.
* ''Literature/{{Borne}}'', and its prequel short story "The Situation", by Creator/JeffVanderMeer are set in a city where the tropes of cyberpunk are given an organic twist with animal- and insect-based BioTech, such as censor slugs that filter their wearer's perceptions, rabbits that serve as employee files, and memory beetles.
* Rjurik Davidson's ''[[Literature/CaeliAmur Caeli-Amur]]'' stories feature philosopher-assassins, Minotaurs born from rocks, and an industrial society on the verge of exploding due to the exploitation of a BodyHorror other-dimensional sorcery.
* The ''Literature/CastleCycle'' series from Steph Swainston (which are collected in the ''Castle Omnibus'') features a society that's stuck between the Medieval and ClockPunk and humanlike races (the protagonist is a drug-addled hybrid of the two near-human races). There's an unending BugWar between the ageless champions of an ImmortalRuler and an army of giant insects who have even shown up in other dimensions. Additionally there's a plane of existence, where the dying may find a second life.
* In ''Literature/ChasingTheMoon'', Diana finds herself tricked into being the Warden of an EldritchAbomination with a bottomless appetite when she moves into a new apartment. After managing to escape from what would have been lifelong imprisonment in her new apartment, she finds that she is now between realities. This means she sees the world for what it really is, meaning she sees monsters of all kinds everywhere, learns how to [[RealityWarper temporarily alter reality to her own whims]], winds up collecting monsters as though they were Franchise/{{Pokemon}} and lives in an Apartment Complex that works as a CosmicKeystone opening portals to other worlds. While the novel has a lot of {{Cosmic Horror|Story}} elements to it, the book is ultimately a ComicFantasy that takes tropes associated with the genre -- {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, the {{Cult}}s that worship them, {{Eldritch Location}}s, [[GoMadFromTheRevelation mankind's inability to cope with the true unknowable scope of the universe]] -- and deconstructs them in a way that makes it more comically absurd than dread-inspiring.
** Set in the same continuity of ''Chasing the Moon'', "Literature/PizzaMadness" is about a pizza delivery boy who slowly goes insane during his time delivering pizzas, treating his job as though it were a holy mission and eventually killing a coworker for his "special orders". It's revealed that the "special orders" are pizza boxes with {{Eldritch Abomination}}s that Vom the Hungerer eats on a daily basis in order to keep balance in the universe.
%%* ''Literature/TheCityAndTheCity''
%%* ''Literature/TheDawnhounds''
* The ''Literature/DeepgateCodex'' by Alan Campbell involves a {{Steampunk}} world where Heaven has been locked off by the supreme goddess of the world, dooming everyone who dies to Hell or undeath. The city of Deepgate is suspended by three massive chains over a massive chasm and uses lobotomized assassins, angelic descendants of a renegade god and chemical weapons to wage war with tribes of a desert nation. Alan Campbell's other non-Deepgate stories also feature steampunk/fantasy New Weirdness.
%%* ''Literature/{{Durarara}}''
* ''Literature/{{Dusk}}'' and ''Literature/{{Dawn}}'' and subsequent other "Noreela" stories from Tim Lebbon is a mix of DarkFantasy and ScienceFantasy where magic has gone away leading to a new dark age before coming back. Besides the two main novels, there have been a number of short stories which features "mundane" lives of random inhabitants or the horrific situations that can occur in the strange and terrible land of Noreela and novels which include such things as a DarkFantasy AlienInvasion. His other books ''Echo City'' and ''The Heretic Land'' aren't Noreela stories but have a similar New Weird vibe.
%%* ''Literature/{{Embassytown}}''
%%* ''Literature/EnselUndKrete'' by Walter Mores
* K.J. Bishop's ''Literature/TheEtchedCity'' feature two ex-rebels who go on their separate paths to a place that's a mix of the Middle East and the Wild West, supernatural elements make their way in when one ex-rebel turned nurse trying to discover why her ward has an unusually high number of deformed births. The book features such oddities as meat sculptures coming to life and etc.
%%* ''Literature/TheFamiliar'' by Creator/MarkZDanielewski
%%* ''Literature/TheFiftyYearSword'' by Creator/MarkZDanielewski
* ''Literature/GoingBovine'' by Libby Bray. While the author might not have written in this genre on purpose, the book refuses to have a discernible spot on the [[Analysis/SpeculativeFiction Sliding Scale Of Science Fiction Vs Fantasy]] and makes mention of dark matter, multiple universes, angels, and gods.
* Mervyn Peake's Literature/{{Gormenghast}} sequence served as major inspiration and ur-example.
%%* ''Literature/HardBoiledWonderlandAndTheEndOfTheWorld''
* ''Literature/HisDarkMaterials'' trilogy by Philip Pullman is a realistic world where magic and CelestialBureaucracy has influenced history. Popular genre conceptions are challenged.
* ''Literature/HouseOfLeaves'' by Creator/MarkZDanielewski is about Johnny Truant, writing about the mysterious death of a film critic named Zampanò, reviewing a FoundFootage movie called ''The Navidson Record'', supposedly based on a true story about a family whose [[EldritchLocation house]] grows into a renegade labyrinth, which does not exist (and yet has a pernicious influence on every level of the narrative) and may or may not also be the World Tree and/or a book called ''[[RecursiveReality House of Leaves]]''.
* ''Literature/TheIronDragonsDaughter'' by Michael Swanwick, involves a little girl taken to Fairyland where she's put to work in a factory to make robot dragons. One of these dragons "adopts" her for purpose of eventually warring with the goddess of creation.
* ''Literature/JackelianSeries'' by Creator/StephenHunt takes place in a steampunk/pulp fantasy world with the focus involving the country of Jackals, an analogue to to Victorian England but one where a French Revolution-style uprising took place and has reduced to the monarchy to a scapegoat position complete with ceremonially mutilated rulers.
%%* ''Literature/KafkaOnTheShore''
%%* ''Literature/KingRat''
%%* ''Literature/{{Kraken}}''
* Bob Shaw's ''Literature/LandAndOverland'' trilogy is an odd mish-mash of sci-fi elements with the fantastical. It includes spaceships made by chopping down trees which have high explosive qualities to a HoldTheLine defense where archers on balloons are trying to shoot down disease-ridden mutants from dropping pestilence bombs on a near-Medieval society.
* The Literature/LegendsOfTheRedSun sequence by Mark Charan Newton was one of the final works in the genre before the genre's crash in the late 2000s. With a nod to the ''Literature/BookOfTheNewSun'' by Creator/GeneWolfe series, it's set on a [[FeudalFuture near-medieval]] far future Earth that's facing an apocalyptic Ice Age. It then faces an AlienInvasion and it's revealed that magic actually exists, as do ghosts.
%%* ''Literature/TheLastDaysOfNewParis''
%%* "Literature/LookingForJake"
* Jay Lake's ''Literature/{{Mainspring}}'' and subsequent novels in the Clockwork Earth setting, takes place on a clockpunk Earth where God and his angels have created the Earth as a giant clock that needs a bit of rewinding and other maintenance issues.
* Liz Williams's ''Literature/ThePoisonMaster'' has the lost colony of Roanoake kidnapped by corrupted angels and taken to a new planet. One member of the colony who had been practising alchemy, is rescued from the colony by an alien poisoner who seeks a unique poison to kill these angels.
* Jeffery Thomas's Literature/{{Punktown}} books are an odd mix of sci-fi and horror. Set in the future on another planet, often featuring {{Mutant}} private-eye Jeremy Stake, to deal with the fall-out by crazy Lovecraftian technology gone wrong.
%%* ''Literature/{{Railsea}}''
%%* ''Literature/{{Rainbow}}''
* Creator/ThomasLigotti's "Literature/TheRedTower" is about the hostile conflict between [[GeniusLoci a factory of unnatural kitsch, and the desolate wasteland surround it]] - or at least about an UnreliableNarrator who insists that everyone is talking about them and [[MindScrew just don't realise it]].
* ''Literature/{{Rollerskater}}'' borrows tropes from SliceOfLife, UrbanFantasy, ScienceFiction and {{Horror}}, set in a world similar to our own, but for the presence of chaotic powers, magical robots, talking motorcycles, [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]], and {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, all while taking various aesthetic influences from {{Surrealism}}, {{Postmodernism}} and [[EsotericMotifs Western esotericism]].
%%* ''Literature/ShiftingElements''
* ''Literature/TheSouthernReachTrilogy'' is a Lovecraftian or Lem-ish adventure series on the outside, but highly existential.
* ''Tales of the Talisman'' is a magazine that will only publish stories in this genre.
* M.Suddain's ''Literature/TheatreOfTheGods'' is a fever dream of a steampunk space opera. In an alien empire of steampunk cyborgs, there's a mad dash to find our the origins of a mysterious green-skinned little girl who seemingly came out of nowhere. Involves planet-sized aliens, godlike beings from another plane of existence, a world of carnivorous plants and a ReligionOfEvil involving a genocidal childish Pope and his space fleet.
* John Meaney's ''Literature/{{Tristopolis}}'' aka ''Donal Riordan'' police stories are set on a planet of another reality (the Earth of our reality only features as an "What If"-type comic book) which feels TwentyMinutesInTheFuture and has magic, biotech zombies, wraiths, hellhounds and other supernatural beings as part of everyday life. So it's FilmNoir with near={{Cyberpunk}} technology and a dose of ScienceFantasy rather than the standard UrbanFantasy tropes usually prevalent in stories with a similar premise.
%%* ''Literature/UnLunDun''
%%* ''Literature/VenissUnderground''
%%* ''Literature/{{Vurt}}''by Creator/JeffNoon.
* David Edison's ''Literature/TheWakingEngine'' features a city of deities and alien lifeforms, where every person who has ever died is reborn.
%%* ''Literature/TheWeirdness'' by Jeremy P. Bushnell
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Series/RussianDoll'': The series is a MindScrew-y BlackComedy / Drama following a woman trapped in a timeloop, reviving her birthday every time she dies. Reasons for why the time travelling shennanigans happen are never explained or given reason, they simply happen and characters have to deal with their existence. While the series relies on this high-concept for its premise, it's also a somber character study about a woman's struggle dealing with the trauma her mother left behind. Season 2 continues this premise with more unexplained time shenanigans (this time, she learns that taking a certain train transports her into her mother's consciousness in 1982), and she has to come to terms with her family's history.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Podcasts]]
* ''Podcast/WelcomeToNightVale'' is a SurrealHumor/[[SurrealHorror Horror]] {{Podcast}}/RadioDrama done in the format of a radio-news station for the fictional town of Night Vale. Its host Cecil reports the news in Night Vale, such news including government helicopters and agents doing suspicious, authoritarian things, doomsday cults, The Faceless Old Woman Who Secretly Lives in Your Home, angels that live with Old Woman Josie, various {{Eldritch Abomination}}s and portals to unseen horrors that spontaneously manifest, ominous flashing lights in the sky, imaginary corn crops, and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking a white-guy claiming to be Native America while wearing a racist feathered-hat]]. [[AndThatsTerrible What an asshole.]] Cecil and the rest of the town don't seem to find the supernatural stuff happening in the town all that strange, the only exception being Carlos, the out-of-town scientist that Cecil has a crush on.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/BladesInTheDark'' takes a lot of inspiration from ''VideoGame/{{Dishonored}}'' (below), and their aesthetics have much in common.
* Although the default ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' setting is the furthest thing imaginable from this, a few of its optional settings qualify:
** ''TabletopGame/DarkSun'' is set on a ruined desert world that mixes magic and psionics, with most traditional fantasy races dead and those that survive warped almost beyond recognition; most animals have twisted or mutated in ways that turn the setting into a DeathWorld, and it introduces several strange new races of its own, like sentient preying mantises as a playable race and extradimensional psychic worm-creatures.
** ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'', pioneer of the term "DungeonPunk", has a post-UsefulNotes/WorldWar1 StandardFantasySetting that is literally built around {{magitek}} of the "industrialized spellcasting" variety for its "default" continent, a lost continent ruled over by dragons who occasionally make spectacular interference with the outside world to enact what they perceive as the desires of a cosmic prophecy, a ''second'' lost continent where scorpion-worshipping dark elves battle against a VestigialEmpire of giants, and a fourth continent that is ruled by a PathOfInspiration created by a race of living nightmares seeking to conquer the mortal world to preserve the state of their own native dimension. Even the "normal" continent includes a blasted post-apocalyptic wasteland crawling with living, self-perpetuating spells, a race of magitek robots that were made as expendable warrior-slaves and now seek a new purpose in life, and a city that uses the energies emanating from a portal to another dimension to build towers that stretch miles into the sky as essentially magitek skyscrapers. And then there's the fledgling nation of traditional monsters, and the HollowEarth whose interior is basically a set of portals to Lovecraftian hell-dimensions.
** ''TabletopGame/NentirVale'' sits somewhere between this and StandardFantasySetting. Two of its most prominent races are the remnants of a pair of fallen empires; one of {{Draconic Humanoid}}s who were basically Romans ruled by clans of dragons, and another of {{Big Red Devil}}s whose ancestors forged a race-wide pact with the forces of hell to revitalize their own flagging empire, leading to them fighting a ForeverWar with the dragon empire that ended in what was basically a mutual kill. Lesser races include {{magitek}} robots created as soldiers only to outlive the empire that created them, humanoid masses of crystal that sprang from the shattered remnants of a living gate that used to prevent the invasion of the world by Lovecraftian monsters, tribal packs of mantis-people, {{Fallen Angel}}s who renounced their divine status and took up ResurrectiveImmortality to live amongst mortalkind, and humanoid plants from the land of faerie. Even classic races get a new spin here, including gnomes as traumatized ex-slaves escaped from the land of faerie, and minotaurs as a race struggling to cling to civilization and honor in the face of a GodOfEvil that wants to drag them down into mindless savagery. All of this in a world that has been through ''multiple'' high magic apocalypses and which continues to rebuild time and time again.
** ''TabletopGame/{{Planescape}}'' is set in Sigil, a strange Gothic city of doors filled with portals to unusual realms, with factions divided by philosophical concepts and full of strange creatures that don't fit any fantasy archetypes.
** ''TabletopGame/{{Spelljammer}}'' has players flying around through space in bizarre jury-rigged magical spaceships, using a Ptolemaic view of the cosmos in which worlds are set within enormous crystal spheres.
* ''TabletopGame/ElectricBastionland'' doesn't fit comfortably in any established speculative fiction genre. Like many touchstones of New Weird its focus is placed into titular [[{{MegaCity}} Mega City]] - Bastion - which is meant to invoke aesthetic and technology level of early XX century, but couldn't be reduced to it. Underground is run by sentient machines which defy laws of spacetime. Deep Country represents the past and can be a place of rural horror. Living Stars - last part of the setting is not described explicitly in any way, but invoked by bizarre aliens and mindbending ways to travel there through physics-defying routes of Underground.
* ''TabletopGame/InvisibleSun'' puts an emphasis on surreal fantasy; a character's discovery of magic powers allow them to access a new realm of existence where the eldritch and dream-like are the new normal. And since the human imagination can create both beautiful dreams and twisted nightmares, the Actuality reflects those ideas to an absolute.
* Games within the TabletopGame/WorldOfDarkness fall up and down this scale depending on which game line you're playing and the direction set by the Storyteller. Perhaps the most mundane games are Vampire the Masquerade/Requiem, mostly focusing on the personal horror of being among the living dead and trying to survive. Settings with relatively easy access to [[AnotherDimension alternate realms of existence]] - such as the various incarnations of Mage, Werewolf, and Changeling - can go either way. By far the most New Weird of all the World of Darkness is TabletopGame/DemonTheDescent, with its tagline of 'techgnostic espionage' and re-imagining the conventional HeavenVersusHell conflict into [[AngelicAbomination rogue inhuman biomechanical entities]] that escape from the control of a [[DeusEstMachina enormously powerful impartial machine]] [[SentientCosmicForce with reality-spanning powers]].
* Part of the mission statement for ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'' was to "burn down the generic fantasy warehouse." It has elements of a GenreDeconstruction of HighFantasy, but even more so, it involves a GenreThrowback to the time when Franchise/ConanTheBarbarian could meet SufficientlyAdvancedAliens, and mixes in Asian mysticism and anime {{Magitek}} to taste. There's elements of CosmicHorrorStory as well, but the writers [[LovecraftLite mostly used it for setting dressing]].
* ''TabletopGame/MechanicalDream'' is set in an alien world of only nonhuman races, titanic trees, a giant swinging pendulum that ushers in day and a nighttime of reality altering dreams. The old monarchy of long-lived plant people has fallen to a new order of SteamPunk-style industrialization and the green-skinned entrepreneurs who lead it have really fast reflexes but are cursed with constant pain. And oh yeah every living thing is dependent on an energy-producing fruit, with death coming in a few days if you don't have a bite.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Numenera}}'' is a bizarre blend of epic fantasy, science fiction, ScienceFantasy, and post-apocalyptic, all powered by SufficientlyAdvancedTechnology. [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane There might be]] some actual psychics and cosmic horrors, nobody really knows for sure. It's been nine apocalypses and a billion years, and not every age was one of Humanity.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Nobilis}}'' has the everyday "prosaic" world and features a "mythic world" that is [[AnotherDimension part-another-dimension]] and part-old-cartoon where ''everything'' is alive, meaning it's possible to talk a lock into opening itself or ask how it feels about the weather. This starts [[GenreBuster busting genres]] when a character can hack a computer network by intimidating its central server. There are also enemies that can permanently remove aspects from reality as we knew it, with only a people who were off-world (or protected) remembering what the world was like before: with things like airships, child-protection robots, powdered-light, and who knows what else. Also, players collectively create a home base and a leader-type NPC during character creation, based on their [=PCs=], adding more weirdness if there's no overall theme.
* In ''TabletopGame/{{Noumenon}}'' all the {{player character}}s are bipedal insects trapped in a {{bizarrchitecture}} mansion called the "Silhouette Rouge". It might be {{xenofiction}} except that humans (or possibly {{humanoid abomination}}s) show up in the various rooms. And every room is different, stretching the definition with instances like a tent's interior or nightclub dance hall or mine-shaft; each with a surreal twist on the expected contents.
* The ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'' campaign setting Golarion verges on this with source-books now including things like interplanetary travel (and the requisite aliens), a crashed alien ship guarded by barbarian hordes, spellcasters who can turn themselves into AI, "occult" monsters more common to GothicHorror, etc. added to a HighFantasy world that initially only stood out for avoiding FantasyGunControl.
* The OSR adventure ''Deep Carbon Observatory'' (normally for TabletopGame/LamentationsOfTheFlamePrincess) and its companion ''Veins of the Earth'' is a surrealistic, alien take on drow (later changed to elf-like humanoids ''spawned from nightmares'') and ''Dungeons & Dragons''' own Underdark setting. For starters, an abandoned drow observatory was made to scry on worlds within worlds (be they literally further down in the Earth or... ''elsewhere'') but also contains creature comforts such as dryad hostesses made of salt and a chamber made to communicate (and then feed) a emissary of slime. Among the artefacts the drow managed to steal are psychically-bound tablets detailing a dinosaur civilisation trying to actively erase evidence of itself from this timeline, starting with spawning in psychic deinonychus trying to kill you. ''Veins of the Earth'' features things ranging from alkaline shaped into a lion to the possibly-deific manifestation of ''not wanting to be underground'' stalking your characters to drive them to suicide or murderous madness.
* ''Tribe 8'' is set in a post-apocalypse CozyCatastrophe island called Vimary which is located in the ruins of Montreal, Canada. The hockey-stick and shotgun totting Montrealers were liberated from the EldritchAbomination invaders, the Z'bri by the Goddess's 8 avatars the Fatima, so their worshippers formed 7 tribes while the outcasts and criminals had their own tribe dedicated to the slain Fatima, Joshua the Ravager. Meanwhile the Z'bri rampage to the north and savage Americans act like jerks in the south while the tribes mess around with magic formed from dreams. Tribe 8 has the same artists as the ones on ''TabletopGame/MechanicalDream'' and shares much of the French-Canadian fantastical attitude of that game.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* A lot of Creator/{{Atlus}} games are this; especially the ''Franchise/{{Persona}}'' series.
** The series started in pretty typical UrbanFantasy spaces, but by the time of ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiIIINocturne'', the plots truly fell into this genre. From the opening sequence, where the main cast watches the world end, to its ending, wherein the demonic main character fights the godly force of pure creation at the center of the bubbled Vortex world in order to bring Reason into existence, New Weird barely covers it.
** In the same console generation, the ''VideoGame/DigitalDevilSaga'' features the reincarnating warriors of Purgatory being transformed into cannibalistic monsters by a mysterious EGG shaped pod containing a bizarre amnesiac girl, while an all encompassing eye orders them all to devour each other in order to reach Nirvana. [[spoiler:And then it's revealed that all of the events were actually inside a computer system, an advanced military AI testing ground. And the real world is somehow worse, between the demon virus spreading havoc and the sun turning those not infected by it to stone.]]
* ''VideoGame/{{Control}}'', heavily inspired by [[Website/SCPFoundation The SCP Foundation]], Literature/HouseOfLeaves and Literature/TheSouthernReachTrilogy, takes place in a shadowy government agency located in a shifting, seemingly infinite brutalist office building that can't be seen unless you are specifically looking for it. The player is appointed Director of said organization by a gigantic black pyramid that exists outside conventional reality, and things only get stranger from there.
* ''VideoGame/DeathStranding'' fits into the realm of new weird quite nicely, following the story of Sam Porter Bridges, a courier in a post-apocalyptic United States following "the Death Stranding", a [[BizarroApocalypse cataclysmic event that altered the rules of life and death]]. Some of the things this game features are: ghost babies, other special babies kept in pods designed to detect said ghost babies, people with really on the nose names, a Conan O'Brian cameo, a man who dies every 21 minutes, transporting snuggly packed people (and corpses) on your back, metaphysical time travel to [=WW1=], a woman who uses death itself to run a transportation busness via teleportation, a cult of mad delivery people who are addicted to the high of delivering packages, mechanical autonomous cargo delivering legs, in-game peeing mechanics, and many other things.
* ''VideoGame/DiscoElysium'' takes place in a mostly-modern (TheSeventies' idea of modern) but distinctly fantastic world that definitely isn't our earth, with its own history, on a planet where various continent-sized ''isolas'', each made up of separate oceans, islands, and nations, are divided by growing regions of ''pale'', patches of nonexistence which can only be traversed by specially-designed airships. [[CallARabbitASmeerp Animals and plants are not all as we know them]], and technology is both [[SchizoTech ahead of and behind]] where we were at roughly the same point culturally -- though despite resembling a post-Cold War version of the '70s in the wake of a brutal CivilWar in which a communist uprising was put down by an outside invasion by Moralintern (Moralism International, [[UnitedNationsIsASuperpower the loose equivalent of the UN]]), civilization is said to be over eight thousand years old. While much of the game takes place firmly in MaybeMagicMaybeMundane territory, there is a distinct undercurrent of mysticism to your dreams, including an odd connection to Dolores Dei, a {{messianic|Archetype}} figure who apparently had glowing lungs and [[JoanOfArchetype waged a war]] to unite the world under her church. [[spoiler:Then, near the end of the game, there's the [[OurCryptidsAreMoreMysterious giant, possibly sentient stick insect]] you discover...]]
* The ''Franchise/{{Dishonored}}'' series takes places in an [[BoldExplorer age of exploration]] setting, with things like {{steampunk}} technology powered by whale-oil, an invasive species of rats, and cut-throat politics ''as well as'' magical powers, witches, and a mysterious immortal being empowering a series of special beings with magical powers to use and abuse as they (and the player) choose. Its aesthetics are hard to describe and it can best be described as Creator/TerryPratchett's ''Franchise/{{Discworld}}'' mixed with ''VideoGame/{{Thief}}'' and Creator/NeilGaiman with LovecraftLite elements.
* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'':
** On the surface, the series seems like a generic [[/index]]HighFantasy[[index]] series, but if you start digging into the lore (especially anything written by Creator/MichaelKirkbride) you find things like a [[TimeTravel time-traveling]] {{cyborg}} who is the [[GodInHumanForm manifestation of the spirit]] of a [[GodIsDead dead god]]; a DepravedBisexual {{hermaphrodite}} PhysicalGod who may be aware that [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall the true nature of the world that he's in is a video game]]; a HumongousMecha powered by the heart of a dead god with an alarming tendency to [[TimeCrash break time]] and [[RealityWarper warp reality]]; and an AI from the far future who got caught in the crossfire of a war, was driven insane and sent back to the late Merethic era where she then acted as a soothsayer for a while; a ''[[SomethingNauts space race]]'' between two rival empires who, respectively, used ships ''made of the sun'' and [[BigCreepyCrawlies giant]], hollowed-out ''[[LivingShip moths]]'' to explore the void outside the physical world, and much, ''much'' more...
** ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'' in particular provides an excellent example of this style, with plentiful {{Bizarrchitecture}}, including an entire city district within a hollowed-out [[GiantEnemyCrab giant crab shell]] and a feudal [[TheMagocracy Magocracy]] who grow [[FungusHumongous giant mushroom]] {{Mage Tower}}s to [[MushroomHouse live in]]; an [[BeneficialDisease incurable disease]] that makes you TheAgeless, and [[OrganicTechnology giant arthropods]] as the main form of overland travel.
** Other standard tropes are twisted in strange directions. Both the Orcs (Orsimer) and Dwarves (Dwemer) are types of Elves. The former are the followers of the elven god Trinimac who were transformed when Trinimac was consumed and excreted by the Daedric Prince Boethia. The latter are elves who preferred to live underground and devoted themselves to logic and reason, and vanished when they built and activated their brass god Numidium.
* ''VideoGame/FallenLondon'': The setting is a Victorian-era London that was "stolen by bats" decades previous and sent to a place BeneathTheEarth. It initially seems to have the kind of {{Steampunk}} and GaslampFantasy trappings you would expect of that setup, but the more you play, the weirder things get. Mirrors are portals to a BizarroUniverse called Parabola where dreams and abstract concepts are given physical form, hallucinations brought on by "Prisoner's Honey" and other substances can directly affect the real world, the [[RockMonster "Clay Men"]] hail from an island called Polythreme where clothes and other inanimate objects can come to life, talking rats and cephalopod-like people wander about, an empire of talking tigers far to the south has semi-regular contact with London, and so on.
* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'' varies between this and ScienceFantasy; the earlier installments tend towards ScienceFantasy, though with increasingly nonstandard races as the series progresses. Later ones (especially the bizarre and genre-defying world of VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIII) increasingly approach this trope.
* ''VideoGame/HeavensVault'' takes place in a world of islands floating in a vast void, with an endless flow of water in the space between them that can be navigated using ships that are part spaceship, part yacht. Schizotech teleporters and robots are used alongside a tech level that is closer to the bronze age in other ways.
* ''VideoGame/{{Oddworld}}'': The setting of the games is a varied mix of heavy industrial aspects of DieselPunk and the cultural spirituality of Native Americans and/or Australian Aborigines overtones. With ''VideoGame/OddworldStrangersWrath'' being an obvious [[WeirdWest weird western]] inspired story based in the most furthest western part of the Mudos continent.
* ''VideoGame/{{Oxenfree}}'': The story is a mix of supernatural thriller and coming of age story about a group of friends that go to an island to party, but ends up involved with strange ghosts with powers related to manipulating electricity and waves. The plot develops to have time travels, multiple dimensions and even a degree of fourth wall breaking interpretations to it.
* ''VideoGame/PacificDrive'' centres around exploring the [[ForbiddenZone Olympic Exclusion Zone]] in [[UsefulNotes/{{Washington}} Washington State]] where experiments into [[TheseAreThingsManWasNotMeantToKnow revolutionary new technology]] mean that RealityIsOutToLunch throughout the surrounding area, spawning strange anomalies and devastating Abnormality Storms. While being set in TheNineties, the experiments mean that the place is full of SchizoTech to boot as well.
* ''VideoGame/PlanescapeTorment'' qualifies, being set in Planescape's multiversal Gothic-themed city of Sigil rather than any sort of traditional fantasy setting, and focused heavily on questions of philosophy and identity.
* ''VideoGame/{{Psychonauts}}'' is an ActionAdventure platforming game about a psychic kid who [[CircusBrat runs away from the circus]] to a summer camp for psychic kids where they can learn how to become super-spies. People literally sneeze their brains out with a special powder (and their bodies remain functional afterwards), there's a tiny door that can let you enter people's minds, a mentor that lives in your brain that can be coaxed with the presence of bacon, there's a mutant lungfish who's mind is a metropolis populated by other lungfish who sees the main character as a giant monster, a paranoid security guard who's mind is a SuburbanGothic Red-Scare nightmare with a warped sense of gravity, Napoleon Bonapart playing a board game against his descendant with Dissociative identity disorder, bears that can fly, mountain lions that set things on fire, rats that self-destruct, and this all ties back to an EvilPlan involving the camper's brains being used to make an army of psychic death-tanks for world-domination at the hands of a crazy dentist.
* The ''{{VideoGame/Thief}}'' series mixes medieval clockpunk and Edwardian steampunk with everything from ghosts and zombies to ancient magic from a god hostile to humanity. It is also thoroughly FantasticNoir.
* The setting of ''VideoGame/{{Zenoclash}}'' and ''VideoGame/Zenoclash2'' fits this in a highly surrealist way. No standard FantasyCounterpartCulture anywhere, bizarre beings and societies, art direction inspired by surrealist art and omnipresent odd {{Magitek}} (e.g. Stone Age-esque semi-auto pistols ''made from seashells'')...
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* ''Webcomic/{{FAMIB}}'' is set in an strange world where super-powers can be granted through the crystallized souls of the dead, alongside modern fire-arms and paramilitary organizations. There's also many strange species, like psychic dragons and unicorns, that are treated as normal species part of the natural world.
* ''Webcomic/{{Floraverse}}'' takes place in a bizarre UrbanFantasy setting where there are no StandardFantasyRaces, the majority of the species are inexplicably themed after everyday objects, the aesthetic varies wildly, occasionally almost resembling science fiction, and the other side of the world is constantly under attack from [[AngelicAbomination "angels"]] with [[MindScrew confusing symbolism]] and [[CosmicHorrorStory cosmic horror implications.]]
* ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'' is set in a world where game mechanics such as people having inventories are commonplace, and centers around a reality-bending game linked to an apocalypse. There is a heavy mix of fantasy elements and present-day technology. The more advanced troll society dips heavier in to science-fiction, having a backstory involving galactic conquering. It is also a RunningGag for the comic to call magic "fake," yet there are several explicitly supernatural elements up to and including a form of godhood.
* ''Webcomic/KillSixBillionDemons'' has an... ''unusual'' take on fantasy elements and biblical/mythological lore. Set mostly in [[CultureChopSuey Throne]], built upon [[DeathOfTheOldGods the decaying corpses of gods long dead]] and seat of power of the [[PhysicalGod Demiurges]], it [[PortalCrossroadWorld contains access]] to the [[ArcNumber 777,777]] universes of [[TheMultiverse the Wheel]]. Among the lesser oddities are the physical manifestations of [[OurAngelsAreDifferent angels]] being living nuclear explosions contained within suits of stone or metal armor, mostly harmless liquor that can bestow demonic attributes and rather strict "don't feed the dead" city ordnances.
* ''Webcomic/MountainTime'' merges fantasy (main characters include a pixie and a talking hamster) with sci-fi (robots, time travel, and space exploration abound) with normal urban life (most of the characters are human). However, no one aspect is particularly dominant, as most of the usual genre archetypes end up being subverted by absurdist storytelling.
* The ''Webcomic/{{Overside}}'' webcomic series have an enormous variety of species and technology with plots that defy conventions of many genres, except perhaps Adventure.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]
* WebOriginal/TheBackrooms is a New Weird take on the AscendedGlitch, being an EldritchLocation anyone can wind up in if they noclip out of proper reality. Depending on the interpretation, it's comprised entirely of a single "building" reminiscent of an empty office space or it's a series of "levels", each with [[RealityIsOutToLunch their own twist on reality]] and full of {{Humanoid Abomination}}s.
* ''WebOriginal/TheClockworkRaven'' is set amid the decaying ruins of the more traditional fantasy setting of the prosperous castle in the air, and focuses on two characters more interested in surviving and escaping than in following any grand destiny. It's also a genre mashup typical of the New Weird, sitting halfway between ''Literature/TheMartian'' and ''Anime/CastleInTheSky'', with a healthy dose of ClockPunk to boot. Even the dragons, which in a typical setting would be majestic beasts, are [[OurDragonsAreDifferent scavengers]] [[{{Dracolich}} reduced to their own skeletal remains.]]
* ''Literature/DeeperUpTheTower '' begins with a HighFantasy aesthetic, but quickly includes otherworldly elements. There’s is a decidedly dream-like tone that allows for stranger, weirder events and characters. Florian, a mysterious knight seeking an uncertain fate, travels through the Tower, a place of porous realities and fevered notions. They encounter all kinds of colorful strange denizens as they learn the ways of the Tower amid a raucous crowd of adventurers taking their lives in their hands for sport.
* ''Literature/EncryptionStraffe'' is a {{Cyberpunk}} novel with stream-of-consciousness narration. Thesurreal second and third arcs depicted the feats of cognition technology as indistinguishable from magic for people immersed in it, while a major character is a digitalized vengeful spirit.
* ''Literature/MirrorWorld'' takes place in a DarkFantasy world on the other side of the titular mirror in which those trapped within slowly lose their humanity within the gaze of an EldritchAbomination and became not-quite-human beings engaged in a war of conspiracies. The more the protagonist goes in, the stranger, more disturbing, and ''weirder'' it gets.
* The Website/RPCAuthority is along the same lines as the SCP Foundation. It was created by a number of the Foundation’s original members who wished to create an 'apolitical' version of the Foundation.
* ''WebVideo/SatelliteCity'' is an [[GenreBusting unlikely fusion]] of RoommateCom, UrbanFantasy, BlackComedy, CosmicHorrorStory, BritCom, and MundaneFantastic, following the exploits of a [[UnfazedEveryman somewhat hapless British man]] who hosts a large clan of Kivouackians, [[AnimalisticAbomination freaky interdimensional animal beings]] from a dead dimension that predated our own...who live at his [[AliensInCardiff modest house in rural England.]] Shot in live action with [[RogerRabbitEffect CGI Kivouackians]], it oscillates between domestic comedy about the petty (albeit witty and often [[SophisticatedAsHell creatively and]] [[ClusterFBomb colorfully vulgar]]) spats that they get into with one another, delicate character drama drawing on the [[TimeAbyss literal billions of years]] of personal history they share, slow, elaborate world-building, and even borderline horror. Not to mention that the [[CastOfSnowflakes unique and colorful designs]] of the Kivouackian cast really don't fit with one thinks of for "classic fantasy creatures", {{xenofiction}}, ''or'' your typical [[EldritchAbomination Lovecraftian night terrors]] from which they draw quite a bit of influence. And perhaps most importantly, the vast majority of them (sometimes in a [[CreepyCute scary way]], sometimes in the regular way) are ''adorable'', and you ''will'' wish you had plushies of at least one if not most of the regular cast after watching.
* The Website/SCPFoundation is about building an entire [[TheVerse 'Verse]] at the intersection of MagicalRealism, UrbanFantasy, Hard Science Fiction, BizarroFiction, and CosmicHorror. The community is especially fond of inverting and deconstructing even the most [[SacredCow sacred]] of classic genre tropes... but also reconstructs those same tropes with a fresh spin that makes the reader see them in an entirely new light.
* ''Literature/UrbanReverie'' is a story focusing on two social outcasts trying to survive within a CityOfAdventure filled to the brim with morally ambiguous Knights, plotting Archmages and several other planes of reality. They walk around using Cyberpunk level tech powered by magical engines that burn the very fabric of the universe as an infinite power source.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'' is set AfterTheEnd where TheMagicComesBack and it takes the form of an RPGMechanicsVerse that constantly outdone itself in weirdness in order to create cool adventures. Both radiation and magic have managed to shape a large part of Earth into the Land of Ooo -- a mostly HeroicFantasy setting with several gimmicks and some bits of advanced technology here and there. Fantastic Sapient Species include people made of food, anthropomorphized animals, gnomes, goblins, vampires, and ghosts as well as a variety of monsters such as dragons and {{Eldritch Abomination}}s. Humans are functionally extinct, though. ([[spoiler:At least until it's revealed that they have taken refuge on a distant archipelago where they created technologically advanced societies.]]) Races are organized in kingdoms (usually ruled by [[GratuitousPrincess princesses]]), cities/towns (ruled by mayors), or [[TheHorde hordes]] (in the case of some monsters). Magic is functional but there's no established system more than the fact the whole setting draws inspiration from ''Franchise/DungeonsAndDragons''. And, of course, the primary method of fighting is with swords. A huge variety of them.
* ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'' involves twin siblings, Dipper and Mabel Pines spending their summer vacation in the titular town. During their stay, the twins stumble upon various supernatural occurrences. Such as [[OurGnomesAreWeirder Living Lawn Gnomes]], [[OurMinotaursAreDifferent Manotaurs]], Ghosts, cursed wax statues, time travelers, and dinosaurs. However, Dipper and Mabel also have to deal with a bizarre triangle demon named Bill Cipher. Adding to this, they also confront both family secrets and growing up, making it a ComingOfAgeStory as well.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Hilda}}'' has a blend of several conventional fantasy tropes used in various unconventional ways. [[CantArgueWithElves Elves]] are invisible, paperwork-obsessed LilliputianWarriors, giants are mostly gone ([[spoiler:presumably to space]]) to avoid stepping on people, and the Nisse are gnomes that live in the [[PocketDimension Nowhere Space]] of houses. [[OurSpiritsAreDifferent Spirits]] in particular take all sorts of forms: there's your basic ghosts, then there are the Marra (AmbiguouslyHuman teenage {{Nightmare Weaver}}s), some spirits inhabit and shift bodies of water, and some influence the weather. The most notable trait of the show, however, is the way ''people'' view them. While they are mostly not ignorant of them, modern society tends to isolate themselves from magical creatures; Trollberg has a wall around it to keep out the rock trolls, and its denizens are mostly averse to the presence of the supernatural (with the exception of [[FishOutOfWater Hilda]]).
* ''WesternAnimation/InfinityTrain'': Tulip, a teenage girl struggling to cope with her parents' divorce, runs away from home and is transported to another world where giant burrowing bugs scavenge across the scorched landscape, and the only safe place is inside a giant train that stretches from horizon to horizon and beyond. The cars of the train are several stories tall, and each contain a strange pocket dimension, which range from the benign (such as a car filled to the brim with talking ducks) to the deadly (such as a car that recreates the iconic IndyEscape). Aside from the train itself are the inhabitants, which range from talking animals to sentient globs of water to the terrifying bundle of wires that is the Steward. Tulip has a glowing number on the palm of her hand that seems to be going down as she gets closer to the train's engine, and every so often, the train stops and another passenger is sucked out of the train by a glowing orange portal in the sky. The series also averts YearInsideHourOutside, as any time spent in the Train is the same amount of time they go missing in the real world.
* ''WesternAnimation/WelcomeToTheWayne'': The series is about Ansi Molina and his best friends the Timbers siblings Olly and Saraline and their adventures in The Wayne, an apartment building in New York with all kinds of supernatural phenomena from standard (like vampires and werewolves but with unusual traits like the [[FriendlyNeighbourhoodVampire vampires]] being [[AbsurdPhobia afraid of spoons]] and having contact with werewolf saliva can turn someone into one and using a specific lip gloss trademark on the lips to cure them) to some even stranger (like a [[HiddenElfVillage hidden village of living pipes and their washing machine pharaoh]], [[BatOutOfHell bat-like]] monsters with enormous heads afraid of their own reflection and hidden mechanical [[TubeTravel portals]] that go throughout the building that can lead anywhere). They protect The Wayne building and its residents from the strange phenomena that is InvisibleToNormals and can inflict GoMadFromTheRevelation on them and also a NebulousEvilOrganisation trying to use those secrets to control the world, with help from their friends they were [[TheChosenMany chosen]] to protect The Wayne and the world.
[[/folder]]

[[/index]]
----