In RealLife, the world's largest corporations and government agencies often have a total annual cash flow that exceeds the Gross National Product of smaller nations, own fleets of multimillion-dollar vehicles, or enough office buildings to start their own city. But modern RealLife organizations like Wal-mart or the U.S. Defense Department would be on the ''bottom'' end of this scale at best.

Merely being an unusually successful MegaCorp is not enough to qualify for this list, nor is an ElaborateUndergroundBase (or more than one), as these assets may have been around for a while, acquired at a discount, or required to accomplish the organization's whole purpose for existence.

These organizations ''routinely'' accomplish feats whose mere existence in the setting could result in FridgeLogic or even straining WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief:
* Construction projects that normally require hundreds or thousands of workers laboring for months or years are often accomplished before the next episode.
* If the organization is responsible for a major national project, they will often build a spare just in case or for their own use.
* The organization funds projects which apparently break the laws of physics using only wealth and the RuleOfCool or the RuleOfFunny.
** If some other convenient fictional trope makes something possible, it doesn't count. You don't buy sound in space when SpaceIsNoisy. It's not impressive to have InfiniteSupplies when everyone else does. Building a HumongousMecha is not noteworthy when any random scientist can make five in a weekend.
** An example might be, in a setting TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture, while every other spacefaring organization is still working on commercial-manned flight to the ISS or missions to the Moon or Mars, this organization is already secretly operating multiple interstellar vessels that could carry the space shuttle in their secondary cargo holds.

It pretty much goes without saying that any investor who owns more than 1% or so of one of these organizations will be a member of the {{Fiction 500}}. If an organization is owned largely by one individual or a relatively small group, please file the example under {{Fiction 500}}, not here.

Compare MegaCorp, JustForFun/AbusingTheKardashevScaleForFunAndProfit, WhereDoesHeGetAllThoseWonderfulToys.

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!!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* The [[Manga/LiarGame Liar Game Tournament Office]] appears at one point to blow ten ''quintillion'' yen on the ''first round'' of their tournament. That's ''107.54 '''trillion''' U.S. dollars''.
** In fact, at the start of the story, the invitation read "...You are one of the 1 in 100000 people who have been entered..." which means, if it takes place all over the world, there's about 70 thousand people taking part, and since each of those people gets 100 million yen, the total amount for the first round is ''only 7 trillion yen'', or ''80 billion dollars'' (which to be fair, is still a '''lot''').
** As far as the Game's first round goes, they intended to recoup most of the money from the losers (whose debt is relatively low), and quite a lot of the rest of the money would remain in-game as players continued. They get 50% of the winning of dropouts; in effect, worst-case scenario for them, they can only lose 50% of what they put in. Which is "only" 40 billion dollars!
** As the characters point out, it's actually a scam. They give each player 100 million yen and require that each player pay back that amount at the end. Assuming no player goes bankrupt (which is a ridiculous assumption, but the company supposedly has hand-wavy powers to extract the money somehow), they'll never lose any money -- the loser just pays the winner 100 million, and the company neither gains nor loses anything. But then the company ''also'' charges 50% of your net winnings if you drop out, which is pure profit for them.
* ''Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion'' [[DeconstructedTrope deconstructs]] this trope, [[DeconstructorFleet like many others]]. NERV (a UN Special Agency)-- is able to replace entire cities within days, not to mention the upkeep and maintenance of ''three'' giant biomechanical weapons, each with a budget equivalent to a small country. NERV has funding in excess of what a UN agency can normally legally have, and required a special resolution to the funding regulations just to be chartered. Their monetary requirements are absolutely enormous, and they are given all the funding they need, but even so, they still run into financing issues because they take up so much of the budget that other programs end up gutted in order to meet their needs. As one member of the [[TheOmniscientCouncilOfVagueness SEELE council]] said, "Man cannot live on Eva alone," and fully funding all their operations can cripple other critical programs.
** ''Anime/RebuildOfEvangelion'' is a straighter use, with the budget mentioned less and crazier things done.
* Momoka Nishizawa from ''Manga/SgtFrog''. Even granted that her family has more than half the money on Earth she spends insane amounts of money, mostly on trying to get closer to her love interest, Fuyuki. This goes to the point that there's actually an episode dedicated to her trying to formulate an extremely low-budget plan as a change of strategy (really, she'd get a lot further just buying a marriage certificate).
* In the opening act of ''Manga/DanceInTheVampireBund'', the secret vampire nation gets Japan to authorize creating a semi-independent vampire state on a man-made island just off the coast of Tokyo. Mina Tepes gets the ruling party in the Diet to go along with this plan by forking over enough cash to retire Japan's national debt - stated to be roughly ten ''trillion'' dollars. And the vampire nation is ''still'' obscenely rich after doing so.
* One has to wonder how the MadScientist from ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaStrikers'' gets the required funds and materials to develop and build a huge army of highly advanced robots, revive and upgrade a dead research program for creating combat cyborgs, which had been explicitly stated to be scrapped due to high costs and low gain, and build a [[SupervillainLair standard secret lair]]. To further strain the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief, it was all done without anyone's notice, and his "Toys" were routinely destroyed en masse, necessitating extensive additional build orders. [[spoiler:It's eventually revealed that the people funding Jail Scaglietti and all of his illegal research and tech were [[GovernmentConspiracy the heads of the Administration Bureau themselves]], [[ArtificialHuman having created him]] as their pet MadScientist to keep the Bureau ahead of the Arms Race]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* In the ComicBook/UltimateMarvel universe, Nick Fury's reply to concerns about funding a weapon to fight off Galactus is: "I could have every human being on earth dressed in solid gold underwear. Tomorrow." S.H.I.E.L.D. doesn't appear to be hurting for capital, to put it mildly.
* In ''ComicBook/AllStarSuperman'', Project Cadmus director Dr. Leo Quintum explicitly states he has unlimited resources. Not surprising since as a good-aligned MadScientist his inventions must make millions (if not billions) in this non-ReedRichardsIsUseless world.
* While we never see them do complete absurdities, the ComicBook/{{Planetary}} Foundation never runs into money problems. Their founder is described as having more money than god, and "he funds everything we do without question."
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film]]
* ''Franchise/JamesBond''
** In ''Film/OnHerMajestysSecretService'' it's mentioned that Bond girl Tracy's father has ties to the most powerful crime organization on Earth. Bond replies that SPECTRE is larger, given that it operates worldwide.
** British Intelligence also fits this trope, having a worldwide network of elite jet-setting agents armed with expensive gadgets at a time when the real-life British government barely had the funds to operate "East of Suez".
** To have had a space station and fleet of rocket ships over 25 years before NASA and Russia finally got around to creating one, would have definitely been ambitious in ''Film/{{Moonraker}}''
** One notable exception occured in ''Film/TheWorldIsNotEnough'' when Renard has his men attack Bond with Parahawks, snowgliders with glider attachments allowing them to fly who end up all destroyed, and afterwards it's mentioned he had them rented from an extreme sports rental company who were already demanding for their return.
* The First Order from the ''Franchise/StarWars'' sequel trilogy commands massive fleets of ships and huge armies of Stormtroopers, as well as being able to construct their very own bigger copy of the Death Star inside a planet. In short, they are able to build up forces that equal and even surpass those of the Galactic Empire, but where the Empire was a ruling body that logically received tax revenue from the star systems under its control, the First Order is a fringe NGOSuperpower without an obvious means of funding itself; [[OffscreenVillainDarkMatter how they do it anyway is never explained]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* ''Literature/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy'' features a few, perhaps most notably Magrathea, the planet whose sole industry is building custom-made planets. Yes, artificial planets. It became so wealthy that the rest of the galaxy's economy collapsed, leading the Magratheans to put themselves into suspended animation until people could afford their services again.
* Being post-scarcity means every member of Literature/TheCulture has unlimited funds to do whatever they want.
* The hundreds (thousands?) of ''Literature/TheDarkHunters'' get paid every month with a wheelbarrow-sized pile of gold and precious gems by [[JerkassGod Artemis]], who doesn't seem to grasp the idea of direct deposit. Consider that this has been going on for over a thousand years, and you get quite a pump into the local economy (and the world economy at large).
* The Literature/TerranTradeAuthority, from the book series of that name, which manages the economies of multiple extrasolar systems and has managed the logistics for interstellar wars fought by its sister organization, the Terran Defense Authority. One branch of the TTA, the Central Administration, owns its own city, mainly to store records, which is surrounded by forests to supply the paper necessary to allow paper records to be maintained alongside its electronic files.
* In ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'', the Aes Sedai organisation of the White Tower has practically unlimited funds, able to offer each of its members (of which there are about a thousand) an annual stipend that easily puts them on a par with any medium-ranking noble or the most successful merchant, and they can ask for more with very little red tape. The Tower can get away with this because it is both the world's oldest surviving political institution, and earns rent on huge tracts of land, and also happens to be the world's oldest bank.
* The Raith family from ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' has emergency credit cards they give out to family members, good for 24 hours upon first use. When asked what the spending limit is on them, the response is "24 hours".
* In ''Literature/NightWatchSeries'', the titular organization initially appears to have a fairly small budget, and a Light character laments having to fly coach while his Dark counterpart can splurge for business class. Eventually, though, a new Night Watch employee points out that his company-issued ATM card has an unlisted cash withdrawal limit (it uses a foreign bank that doesn't disclose the amount). When the main character confronts his boss, he gives him an "are you serious?" look and asks if he really thinks that an organization that can predict the future to a reasonably high degree would have ''any'' trouble with cash flow, considering they'd be able to play the stock market and currency exchange rates. In fact, the boss is considering getting a company jet and even offers the main characters a Bentley. After a moment's pause, the main characters instead opts for a more practical SUV. The boss just shrugs.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Series/StargateSG1'': [[JustifiedTrope Justified]], since it is funded through the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks U.S. Department of Defense budget]]. It also operates Stargate Command, rents Russia's stargate whenever theirs goes missing, and built at least 5 starships that allegedly each cost more than the entire GNP of the state of New York, and presumably operate other secret projects as well. But then, keeping two galaxies safe ain't cheap. Later an oversight agency becomes a recurring pain in the protagonists' backside as other nations are brought onboard and corporations become involved in adapting found technology to Earth use.
** The follow-up books reveal that the financial crisis of 2008 has hit the program's budget hard. No new hulls have been laid down since the attack of the Super-Hive. The ''Sun Tzu'' is still floating in space, likely to be written off as a wreck. All in all, the Tau'ri only have 4 functioning starships, not counting the Atlantis.
* Torchwood One, of ''Series/DoctorWho'': They built One Canada Square/Canary Wharf/Torchwood Tower (construction costs: approximately £500 million) purely to investigate a weird rift at the top. Even allowing for the rental income, which in that district would have been considerable even by London standards, that's one hell of an up-front expenditure for a supposedly "black" government department.
* TheFederation in ''Franchise/StarTrek'' was able to recover from having its fleet annihilated in less than a year. Not just recover: 39 ships were lost at Wolf 359, which was considered to be a huge blow to the fleet. As of the Dominion War several years later, Starfleet consists of hundreds, if not thousands, of combat-capable starships. It's explicitly meant to be a post-scarcity future, but ''still''.
* A late first season episode of ''Series/QuantumLeap'' had Al appearing before a congressional committee to justify keeping the Project going at taxpayers' expense. [[MeanwhileInTheFuture Meanwhile, in the past]], Sam was helping a young woman pass the law school exam. When he was successful the head of the committee suddenly became the woman he had been helping, who approved the funding. Ever since then, there were no questions as to the budget of the Project.
* The Company from ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' fits this to varying degrees throughout the show's run, most closely when it was run by Bob Bishop (who had the power to turn anything into gold) during Volume Two, who identifies himself as the Company's "financial source."
* In ''Series/Numb3rs'', DARPA is mentioned several times as this, specifically using the words "unlimited funding". They end up throwing it at 5-year projects. One character, who tries to scam them with a fake AI, claims no one would suspect a thing, as 95% of DARPA-funded projects are failures. And then it turns out that the US government also has a detachment of people who are literally TheMenInBlack to go after people who are scamming them for research funds.
* ''Series/{{JAG}}'': Funding, provided by U.S. taxpayers through the defense budget, is never really an issue, and often in court-martials held in Virginia, foreign nationals as witnesses are flown in from across the world. Subverted though in "Father's Day" when Harm, Mac, and Bud had to conduct an investigation on a tight budget; due to Harm's tortious interference with the secret business of the Bradenhurst Corporation in a previous episode.
* There is a notable aversion in ''Series/TheFall2013''. DSU Stella Gibson, [[UsefulNotes/ScotlandYard a Metropolitan Police detective]], is brought into [[UsefulNotes/NorthernIreland Belfast]] to assist the PSNI in a 28-day review of a cold case in which the ex-daughter-in-law of an MLA of the Northern Ireland Assembly was murdered, and she eventually links the murder to two other murders. At the end of the first series, the Belfast Strangler has slipped off the radar. By the beginning of the second season, which is only ten days after the first series' finale, the PSNI's funding and resources have been stretched thin and DSU Gibson has to submit a request for a £1.8 million grant to continue the investigation.
* Averted in ''Series/UFO1970''. While SHADO has all the fancy toys expected of a Creator/GerryAnderson production (supersonic aircraft, flying submarines, a base on the Moon, a MasterComputer and an ElaborateUndergroundBase hidden under a working film studio), several episodes show Straker arguing with [[ObstructiveBureaucrat General Henderson of the International Astrophysical Committee]] over his budget allocation.
* Averted by the Baltimore Police Department in ''Series/TheWire''. In the early seasons, money and budgetary limitations are frequently mentioned as constraints on investigations (senior officers regularly warn that they only have so many days they can afford a wiretap; two cops fear the financial consequences of losing an expensive piece of surveillance equipment) but never with any actual effect. In the fourth season, the city discovers its school system is running a multimillion-dollar deficit and immediately imposes austerity measures on the police, severely limiting overtime and deferring car repair to the point that one officer has to take a city bus to a crime scene. It gets so bad that two detectives resort to [[spoiler:fabricating a serial killer]] to reopen the financial spigots for the case they're trying to make against a major local drug dealer.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Magazine Articles]]
* Forbes magazine lists [[https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaelnoer/2011/03/11/the-25-largest-fictional-companies/#1b7d66ad5d81 25 of the largest fictional corporations.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* Many, if not all, of the major factions in ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}''. As the Website/TVTropes entry states: "Entire planets with populations of billions are lost due to rounding errors in tax returns."
** ''You'', when playing ''TabletopGame/RogueTrader''. Okay, Rogue Traders don't literally have ''unlimited'' funding, but their financial capabilities are still enormous. (They have to be, to afford their obligatory MileLongShip.) Any given member of a Trader's senior crew has roughly a 50-50 chance of buying an incredibly rare piece of war equipment, or alternatively enough of the common stuff to fit out ''a regiment'' -- ''each session'', starting from the first -- without so much as denting their cash flow. If you want to risk your investment souring, by all means, spend more!
* According to ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}'' lore, by the year 2070 we can expect mega-corporations that literally have more money and military power than most actual countries. The headquarters of said mega-corps tend to span tens of city blocks and legitimately claim that the ground said buildings are upon as sovereign territory, and immune to the parent country's governing laws.
** Not that unbelievable, at least the money part. Wal-Mart's annual revenues are more than the GNP of all but about 25-30 countries.
* Averted for the Task Force: Valkyrie, TheMenInBlack [[AncientConspiracy Conspiracy]] of ''TabletopGame/HunterTheVigil'', in the ''TabletopGame/NewWorldOfDarkness''. They are a national, FBI-sized agency, with bleeding-edge technology, flat-out said to have the impressively low annual budget of US$875,000. [[WhereDoesHeGetAllThoseWonderfulToys How can they fund all those marvelous gadgets?]] [[DarkSecret Being secretly funded by ancient vampires, that's how.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''VideoGame/{{Control}}'': Discussed. A memo from the previous Director states that thanks to the WeirdnessCensor that surrounds the FBC and the Oldest House, the FBC has an effectively unlimited budget, since any line item they choose to insert into any government budget will pass through without comment. He also warns employees against abusing this, since the censor isn't infallible, and the Bureau does ''not'' want to answer questions.
* ''VideoGame/EXTRAPOWERAttackOfDarkforce'': The Kinreikan is an ancient and secretive organization of martial arts exorcists and mystics who control an inordinate amount of wealth, providing a state of the art jet plane to the team to help them repel the Dark Force invasion of the Earth, providing facilities for Platinum to fabricate a magic detector, and hiring SPICA to rescue and escort the team in Europe, all on short notice. Fei has grown disillusioned with the Kinreikan because they reached this point by using every single opportunity, disaster or otherwise, to make a turnaround on profit, but he also isn't opposed to squeezing out as much from them as they can while under the Kinreikan's employment.
* In ''[[VideoGame/FirstEncounterAssaultRecon FEAR]]'', the MegaCorp Armacham Technology Corporation [[SerialEscalation plays it increasingly straight as the series went on]]. In the first game, it's more {{downplayed|Trope}}: ATC has a corporate security force, but they're simply well-equipped security employees, rather than the private army they are shown as in later titles. The army of Replica troops -- which comes complete with their own customized battle armor, infiltrator units, super-heavy combat soldiers, Hind attack helicopters, armored personnel carriers, and powered armor units -- is a ''product'' that they were getting ready to sell in their capacity as an arms manufacturer. Even the ElaborateUndergroundBase seen near the end of the game was not something that they actually ''built'', rather it was something that they bought from the government, being a UsefulNotes/ColdWar base that got decommissioned after the fall of the USSR. In later games, they're shown to have built several major underground facilities, including one underneath an elementary school, a full-size hospital (as in, they built the ''actual hospital building'' underground, inside a cavern complex), multiple underground storage facilities for the whole Replica army, and an equally huge underground tram system connecting these facilities together. They also operate an army of private mercenaries with their own armor and air support. They're also able to field ''orbital'' assets, including orbit-dropped walking tanks. The third game even shows them having enough military power to openly operate on the streets of a Third-World South American city and enough troops to maintain a nine-month-long containment operation in Fairport, all the while fighting Alma's monstrous creations. The resources they have access to are ''tremendous''.
* ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'': Reliable Excavation Demolition (RED) and Builders League United (BLU) each control half the Earth, utilize armies of paper-pushers to solve problems, and have enough money to finance {{Death Ray}}s, bombs, and rockets and outfit their mercenaries with guns that would be impossible today - in particular, they can [[DeathIsCheap resurrect the dead]] and build ammunition and health dispensers that defy the laws of thermodynamics, cloaking devices, and teleporters, on a whim. In the sixties.
* The Umbrella Corporation from the ''Franchise/ResidentEvil'' series is so absurdly rich and powerful that they own several islands, as well as research bases in Antarctica, on a cruise ship, and basically the entirety of Raccoon City. All in secret, mind you. However, they're not omnipotently wealthy, as after Raccoon City gets vaporized by a nuclear strike, the US Government declares a business embargo that crashes Umbrella's stocks and eventually kills the company.
* Pretty much any of the major megacorps in the ''VideoGame/ArmoredCore'' universe. Seems like every game at least two of them are pulling out as many harebrained superweapons and hail mary military actions as ThoseWackyNazis or worse. They probably have different megacorps in each numerical sequel simply due to them going bankrupt! And of course EVERYONE has a supersoldier program running. And the sheer sizes of some of their facilities and spaceships are obscene.
* [[VideoGame/MetalGear The Patriots]], who've managed to build what can only be described as a world-domination AI supercomputer which has its hooks in nearly every military on the planet by ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid4GunsOfThePatriots''. And just in case it's destroyed, there are 4 identical backup AIs ready to take over. They also funded the Les Enfants Terrible project, which covertly perfected human cloning in the 1970s.
** The Patriots acquired these funds from the similarly-funded Philosophers, who covertly bankrolled the allies in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII and had a massive surplus once it was finished. The implication being that they have lots of income streams coming from many different countries and companies, kept hidden even from those sources of funding, and laundered through many different bank accounts in many different places.
** Technically the Patriots' funding does have a given upper limit, but double the total budget of the US military is enough to stretch a very long way for a comparatively small organisation.
* Hideously averted in ''VideoGame/XCom'', the man in Washington will happily cut your funding even when the flying saucers are tearing up the White House.
** Carried over into ''VideoGame/XComEnemyUnknown'', where your funding depends on getting results. If the terror level in any given nation gets too high, that nation will consider the XCOM project a lost cause and pull its funding. There's also a "War Weariness" optional modifier, where your funding gradually decreases as the game goes on.
* ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'' has Cerberus, a secretive organization with its own paramilitary forces and unclear goals about "protecting the interests of humans in the Galaxy", which is regarded as a terrorist group in [[TheFederation Citadel Space]]. They secretly fund research projects and perform information gathering all over the galaxy. Many of the major human corporations are actually owned by fake identities of its leader and their profits allow Cerberus to get virtually anything they need. In ''Mass Effect 2'', they build a highly upgraded version of one of the galaxy's most advanced spaceships since they own the companies that designed the prototype for the human and Turian governments, and even run a project to bring a dead person back to life after having fallen out of an exploding spaceship.
--> '''Scientist:''' It can't be done. And this is not a matter of resources.
--> '''The Illusive Man:''' It is '''always''' a matter of resources!
** One of the scientists on the Lazarus project (the aforesaid bring-the-dead-back-to-life operation) mentions irritably that the project is ''billions'' of credits over its budget. That's not the cost -- just the overrun! It's not even ''done yet''.
** By ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'', Cerberus has enough resources to wage open war with the Alliance and the Citadel with some degree of success, including an outright invasion of the Citadel itself. [[spoiler: Their sudden massive increase in manpower is explained by their semi-forcibly recruiting troops using implanted Reaper tech.]]
** The Shadow Broker's resources are somewhat less liquid (most of its power comes from its galaxy-wide network of informants), but its base of operations is a custom-built starship, large enough to operate independently for years at a time, that is cloaked by perpetually flying inside a thunderstorm. During the construction of the Crucible, Broker agents casually drop by with million-metric-ton shipments of vital raw materials.
** Subverted with ''Andromeda'''s Andromeda Initiative, which apparently has the funding to build six massive sleeper ships capable of carrying ten thousand people from multiple species to another galaxy, along with all the bleeding-edge tech for exploring it. Everyone assumes the whole thing was paid largely by Jien Garson's money. [[spoiler:Partway through the game it turns out actually she'd nearly run entirely out of money before the thing had ever gotten off the ground. It took the intervention of an unknown backer, prompted by Shepard's discovery of imminent Reaper apocalypse, to give them enough money to finish the project before everything went to hell. And Garson herself is every bit as suspicious of their mysterious backer as you'd expect.]]
* [[EvilArmy BlackWatch]] seems to have this in both ''VideoGame/{{Prototype}}'' games. In the first game, it even keeps track of how much money it has cost them from the destruction you have caused. No matter the Billions you cost them, they never seem to ever run low on resources. FridgeHorror sets in when you realize that ''you'' might be responsible for that - considering that they're affiliated with the US Government ([[TheConspiracy although who reports to who is unclear at times]]), the massive amounts of damage the player characters cause [[NiceJobBreakingItHero may be used as justification for a larger budget.]]
* The Illuminati and Majestic Twelve in the ''VideoGame/DeusEx'' setting, and for good reason: they've been behind most governments and international institutions in history, and arose from the Templars, who were the original founders of the global banking system. They have cash to burn, and they spend it on some incredibly expensive and expansive holdings.
* The '''U'''nion '''A'''erospace '''C'''orporation of ''{{VideoGame/Doom}} 3'' built a research outpost on Mars the size of a small city. Unlimited funding is even mentioned in [[OpeningScroll the game opening]].
* ''VideoGame/HalfLife'' / ''VideoGame/{{Portal}}'' series:
** Simultaneously averted ''and'' played straight with Aperture Science. They compete with (and lose out to) Black Mesa for government funding and apparently operate on an ever-shrinking budget, but the [[ElaborateUndergroundBase facilities we see]] in-game are so large they stretch the point of physical plausibility (several literal kilometres into the crust), and the company would apparently rather build whole new wings than ever actually redecorate an office in fifty years of operation.
** Black Mesa has a much higher official budget, and then spends it on multiple redundant facilities, "abandoned sectors", independent ''space launch capability'' (at multiple sites, no less), separate backup copies of their secret technology, their own private nuclear arsenal, [[WebVideo/FreemansMind a box-smashing room]], and so on. Much like Aperture, Black Mesa uses secret advanced technology ''just to develop'' other advanced technology.
* The Brotherhood of Nod in ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerTiberianDawn'' (by the later games both sides effectively ''are'' nations, each controlling a significant fraction of Earth and humanity). With a dominance of Tiberium harvesting and a massive black market presence, the Brotherhood never suffers for lack of money (though they sometimes find themselves unable to buy things for other reasons). GDI, on the other hand, explicitly has a limited, if massive, budget, and actually gets it ''pulled'' at one point in the GDI campaign, forcing GDI forces to bunker down and rely on Tiberium harvesting just to hold out. [[spoiler: Then General Sheppard returns with an [[DoubleSubverted enlarged]] budget and several new toys funded by it..]].
* [[Franchise/JamesBond SPEC]]--sorry, [[WritingAroundTrademarks The Organization]]--in ''VideoGame/GoldeneyeRogueAgent''. Their vast wealth is best illustrated by their elaborate and opulent underwater base. However, their funding ''is'' finite: Goldfinger routinely chides Goldeneye for spending too much money during that level.
* Defied in ''VideoGame/RatchetAndClankFutureToolsOfDestruction''. Although [[ANaziByAnyOtherName Tachyon]] is TheUnfettered in regards to bringing back [[TheHeartless the Cragmites]] and [[OmnicidalManiac destroying the multiverse]], he tells his army in Stratus City that his money is not unlimited.
* Morgan Industries in ''VideoGame/SidMeiersAlphaCentauri'' has enough money under it to be its own nation-state. When Russia defaulted during the construction of the colony ship ''Unity'', Nwabudike Morgan, CEO of Morgan Industries, stepped in and footed the ''entire bill'' in exchange for a cabin aboard it. Naturally, their game style is best suited to winning by cornering Planet's economy. While they technically don't have ''infinite'' money, they start with the most funds out of any faction, have an innate bonus to Economy, and any deals they make are automatically weighed in their favor.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]
* The apparently unlimited resources of the Website/SCPFoundation have been commented on even by its own writing community. Somewhat [[JustifiedTrope justified]] in that they control paranormal artifacts that actually ''can'' produce infinite resources, although often with unpleasant side-effects. They do occasionally complain about needless or excessive expenditures, be it [[RedShirt D-Class fodder]] or actual resources. Note that the primary objection to the wasting of D-Class is that there are a finite number of unlikely-to-be-missed life sentence and death row inmates available, not the Foundation's difficulties with obtaining the ones that exist.
* The WebOriginal/ProtectorsOfThePlotContinuum are able to finance a multiverse spanning organization and have an HQ able to supply any of the needs of their agents as needed. The only real hints we get as to how they're able to run this is the fact that agents are paid at barely what qualifies as a minimum wage and they supply their own electricity via [[HamsterWheelPower authors literally spinning in their graves]].
[[/folder]]
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