-->'''{{Mook}} 1:''' ''There's no way he could have survived that fall.''\\
'''Seto Kaiba:''' ''Actually, I seem to be okay.''\\
'''Mook 2:''' ''Nope, he's definitely dead.''\\
'''Seto Kaiba:''' ''You guys are idiots.''\\
'''Mook 1:''' ''At least we're not dead, like you.''
-->-- ''{{Yu-Gi-Oh The Abridged Series}}''

-->''"You think he'll live?"''
-->''"He just fell out the third-story window, plummeting to certain doom. Of course he'll live!"''
-->-- ''{{Warbreaker}}''

Almost universally uttered after a character (usually a hero but sometimes a villain) [[SuicidalGotcha takes a wild leap into the unknown]] as a way to escape pursuit and otherwise-inevitable capture -- jumping off a high cliff or across a wide chasm, for instance. The pursuers then give up the chase, confident that their quarry has effectively committed suicide, and [[NeverFoundTheBody never go look for the body]] to make sure.

Of course, the moment someone says this, they've guaranteed that the person in question not only ''has'' survived, but will be coming back to spoil someone's day.

A frequent variation is "Nothing ''human'' could have survived that," which usually heralds or underscores the discovery that the "victim" is either non- or super-human.

Also may be a result of TheWorfBarrage or an attempt at TryAndFollow.

(This also frequently occurs with explosions and collapsing structures. When it's the hero caught in the explosion, it's possible that [[DeadAllAlong no one DID survive that]] if they weren't stalled by a DisneyDeath.)

Along with NothingCanStopUsNow and WhatCouldPossiblyGoWrong, this is one of the things a GenreSavvy character should '''[[TemptingFate never ever ever]]''' say. Infact, they should DopeSlap anyone who does...

If the trope is overused with one character, it's a case of HowManyTimesMustIKillYou.

See also LeftForDead, SoftWater, NotQuiteDead, MillionToOneChance.
----
!!Examples

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder: Anime ]]

*In ''GundamWing'', Trowa's temporarily-borrowed mobile suit, the Veyate, [[spoiler: explodes after a fight with Quatre and his newly-constructed monster, the Gundam Wing Zero. He survives that, only to float in space alone.]]
** [[spoiler: Mu La Flaga]] in ''GundamSEED''. [[spoiler: Strike Gundam's cockpit is blown to bits, and everyone's been pretty sure he DIDN'T ESCAPE. Yet, SEED Destiny makes him survive and [[IGotBetter never gives an explanation.]]]]
*** Another strike against DESTINY: The ending of the original SEED had Mwu's ''broken'' helmet floating through space to show that, yes, he was really dead. Fan demand had them ''edit out the helmet footage'' from the Special Edition to let them revive him. This didn't go down well with everyone, obviously.
**"{{Gundam 00}}" features one of the most brilliant subversions of this trope ever done in their treatment of the infamous "Immortal Colasour" in the final episodes. Showing how DangerouslyGenreSavvy they can be the writers played a half dozen tricks that had the audience saying this. To sum it up, in episode 23 of the second season, [[spoiler: [[RedemptionEqualsDeath he and his beloved Colonel switch sides in order to help Celestial Being Fight Against the Innovators.]] In the heat of battle, [[HeroicSacrifice he then throws himself in front of three kamikaze mobile suits to protect her]] [[FinalSpeech while confessing his love for her at the top of his lungs.]] As this happens, Kati [[SayMyName shouts his full name for the first time in the series.]] With all of these strikes against him, it seems that our beloved Patrick was down for the count and not coming back, especially since around this time in the series [[KillEmAll important characters had been dying by the bucketload.]] And yet, in the final episode, who should show up but Patrick, not only having survived without a scratch, but [[HappilyEverAfter revealing that he was about to be married to Kati.]]]]
*** This troper think there should be a difference between someone who survived against the odd, and somebody who only didn't died because they wanted to continue the running gag. It could be the application of {{FirstLawOfResurrection}}, {{BackFromTheDead}}, after all the series have two {{BackupTwin}}
* In ''SailorMoon S'', when Usagi is surprised to see Kaolinite again after she was frozen and thrown off a cliff, Artemis reminds her that they NeverFoundTheBody.
** During this same seasoon, Neptune knowingly walks down a path lined with Machine guns that trigger each time she takes a step. She keeps going until the guns run out of ammo. No blood is shown but each time she takes a step it shows her getting filled with bullets each step (Albit in silhouette). The villan who rigged the trap is confounded that she managed to make it over to her let alone live. She dies moments later from an entirely different source though.
** Later, at the end of ''[=SuperS=]'', Nehellenia throws Chibiusa off the zeppelin of the Dead Moon Circus, and Super Sailor Moon dives off of it without a second thought. Nehellenia returns to her seal, confident that she's killed Princess Serenity. She is later understandably upset in ''Stars'' when Galaxia reveals that Serenity survived.
* This happens in ''{{Yu-Gi-Oh}}'': Seto Kaiba [[TryAndFollow jumps out a window]] to escape from pursuing thugs, who deliver the line. In a slight twist, a character who is supposedly Kaiba's ghost appears after this, making it seem as if the thugs were right: of course, it [[DoubleSubversion later turns out]] that he did survive and that the ghost is a fake.
** The ''{{Yu-Gi-Oh The Abridged Series}}'' quote at the top of the page parodies this.
** This also happens when Malik uses the Dragon of Ra to attack Joey, which shouldn't physically harm him, but instead causes him so much pain that he should be vaporized. Thankfully, Joey's an anime character, so he manages to survive, and is up and walking around several episodes later.
*** Don't forget the duel was a Shadow Game, meaning the attacks inflicted on the players have real effects, including the possibility of death.
* In ''CodeGeass'', protagonist Lelouch lures [[spoiler:PsychopathicManchild Mao]] into a trap where a squad of [[MindControl Mind Controlled]] police officers gun him down. When the villain returns in the next episode, he remarks that Lelouch really should have told them to "shoot to kill" not just "shoot", and also compliments the Britannian health care system.
** Late in the second season, [[spoiler:Princess Cornelia]] is gunned down by a machine gun turret. The next episode, [[spoiler:she]] is seen lying in a hospital bed, injured but recovering. Whether this constitutes a WallBanger or not seems to depend upon how much you like the character.
** C.C. may be the grand champion of "being able to survive anything". In the first episode she was shot in the head, and returned in episode five like nothing happened. Later, shrapnel ended up embedded in her chest but she was just fine a few hours later. [[spoiler: Not only that, but she was stabbed in the chest by the nun who gave her the Immortality Code which is the reason she survives all these things. This isn't even mentioning the stuff V.V. and later Charles pulls off.]] Then we have [[spoiler: Jeremiah Gottwald]] who returned in R2 [[spoiler:after seemingly sinking into the bottom of the ocean]]. What's more, back during the first season, he was supposed to be KilledOffForReal in a radiation attack by Kallen's hand (literally) but because he was already [[Main/EnsembleDarkhorse so popular]] the writers changed that, making him visibly eject and show up several episodes later [[spoiler: as a Cyborg]].
*** A meta-example occurred in Episode 18 of ''R2'', where [[spoiler:a [[NuclearWeaponsTaboo FLEIJA tactical warhead]] obliterated a good section of Tokyo, including (apparently) Asahina, Miss Rohmeyer, Guilford, Sayoko, and most importantly Nunnally; in truth, only the first two actually died.]] When the supposedly dead characters returned, the fandom was divided between those who felt it was an AssPull, and those who argued that the elements of their survival were in the episode and required good observation skills to notice.
* Broly from ''DragonballZ'' takes this trope to the logical extreme and beyond.
** So does Cooler. And Frieza. And Cell. And Buu...it's probably easier to list those DBZ villains who ''don't'' do this at least once.
* The villain Gauron from the anime ''FullMetalPanic'' also takes this trope and runs with it... about 4 or 5 times. This includes being shot in the head before the series starts, two Arm Slaves exploding around him and a self-detonation sequence of a third. However, he comes out of that last one as a quadruple amputee with a missing eye. [[TooKinkyToTorture It doesn't seem to dampen his spirits much.]]
* Saitou Hajime from ''RurouniKenshin'' is so great at this, he practically lampshades it to Sagara Sanosuke as he walked and smoked nonchalantly to seemingly-certain death at the climax of the Kyoto arc. He lampshades it again when he makes his return during the Jinchuu arc to the disbelief of the Kenshingumi, even going so far as to refer to himself as the Shinsengumi's sole immortal.
** Another example. Kenshin jumps into a river to save a stupid rich kid. The man who's goons he'd been fighting at the time proceeded to say, "I hear the water runs quite fast around here," and leaves him for dead. Never mind the fact that he just kicked the stuffing out of the villain's top four lieutenants, and, having jumped voluntarily, the hero thought that he could take it.
* Subverted in ''{{Claymore}}'' when Clare, to throw the insane Ophelia off her trail, deliberately gets herself [[GoodThingYouCanHeal severely wounded]] and knocked off a cliff into a rushing river. Unfortunately for her, Ophelia is DangerouslyGenreSavvy...
** But apparently not DangerouslyGenreSavvy enough to know better than to attack a [[RetiredBadass mysterious cloaked stranger]].
* The third {{Detective Conan}} 2-hour special has a man fall off a cliff as he is shot, a scene with his comrades deciding that he is dead because there's no way he survived, [[NeverFoundTheBody the information that only his jacket was ever recovered]] and all the characters in the episode believe he is really alive. [[spoiler:And in a subversion, it was all a misleading tactic. Apparently, he really didn't survive that.]]
* Akito experiences the DisneyDeath version at least twice in ''MartianSuccessorNadesico''.
* In ''{{Akira}}'' Colonel Shikishima exclaims "He must be dead!" after Tetsuo is directly hit by the SOL.
* Kurotsuchi Nemu in ''{{Bleach}}'', [[spoiler:impregnated by Szayel Apollo Grantz and then as she struggles in extreme pain, and then her belly explodes, her body devoured and Szayel came out forcefully from her mouth. Bear in mind that Szayel describes the process as [[DeaderThanDead destroying the victim's]] ''[[DeaderThanDead soul]]''. Any normal people would be killed, but fortunately Nemu is somehow MadeOfIron as Mayuri built her (and her soul being an artificial construct just like her body, is somehow equally durable), so that only leaves her in a withered husk of a body. And then she still came back to her old self of a body because Mayuri ''had sex'' on her (or so Uryu & Renji's reacitons indicate; Mayuri insists they must be perverts to think that)]]. Needless to say, this is one instance where this trope can be [[{{Squick}} squicky to the max]].
** Her Captain Kurotsuchi Mayuri is not free from this trope either, especially when he fought [[TheLancer Ishida Uryu]] and took a full brunt of his arrow, leaving his body blown up, partially. If he didn't have that ability to turn himself into a liquid, he's as good as dead.
*** An arrow, it should be noted, that tore through Mayuri's bankai as if it were made of paper, and minor energy leakage from it completely disintegrated surrounding buildings ''that weren't actually even hit''. Ishida was at the time utilizing a form at the time that would burn out his power shortly afterward but temporarily made him [[StoryBreakerPower one of the most powerful beings in existence]]. At least half of Mayuri's body no longer existed after he was hit. But then he turned himself to liquid and took a week or two to be back to what passes for normal in his case.
**What about Ichigo? He's been stabbed, sliced almost in half (except for his spine), had [[spoiler:Ulquiorra's ''arm'' through his chest, and was shot through the same spot (albeit more of it) by the same Arrancar's cero]]. In the last, he's apparently back on his feet [[spoiler:without even being healed first.]] However, that's probably because of his [[spoiler:[[SuperPoweredEvilSide Inner Hollow]]]].
* Happens a couple of times in ''{{One Piece}}'', usually to side characters. So far almost nobody's actually died outside of flashbacks.
** The strongest Royal Soldier of Alabasta, [[HeroicSacrifice sacrified himself to grab a bomb and fly it into the stratosphere]]. The bomb, had a kill radius of five miles, and exploded narrowing avoiding damage to the city, and leaving everyone from harm, except himself. His sacrifice was mourned. However, ''he managed to survive'', and this is [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] by him seeing his own gravestone, [[spoiler: and in Movie 8, which is a retelling of the stroyline, he meets up with the princess in the end, to receive a giant emotional hug]].
* In ''{{Naruto}}'' [[spoiler:both Itachi and Sasuke use jutsus that supposedly no-one can live through in their fight against each other - Amaterasu and Kirin respectively. However, even though Sasuke gleefully believes he finally killed Itachi with Kirin...Itachi uses another jutsu to protect himself.]]
* [[spoiler:Tomoe]] from ''{{Mai-Otome}}'' takes a thousand-or-more-feet drop from the sky (head first!) after her [[PhlebotinumBreakdown armor was shattered]] during her final fight against Arika. Just as the castle guards discover her and prepare to pronounce her DOA, she springs back up from the gurney and yells at one of them, and then walks away as if she had simply fallen out of a tree.
** The same thing happens to [[spoiler:Arika and Nina]], who survive their final battle after having their Robes break down ''in outer space''!
* In ''[[AllThereInTheManual Sound Stage X]]'' of ''MagicalGirlLyricalNanoha'', the head [[NightOfTheLivingMooks Mariage]] fires a [[ArmCannon high-explosive howitzer-style cannon]] at [[spoiler: Subaru]], and pronounces her dead, telling [[MysteriousWaif Ixpellia]] that "[[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill That was a shell that could destroy a tank in one blow]]. [[TemptingFate It's not something a normal body could withstand]]." Of course, [[spoiler:Subaru's body [[HollywoodCyborg isn't exactly normal]]]]...
* ''FullMetalAlchemist'' has the Homunculi. Just...the homunculi.
* In ''SaintSeiya'', Phoenix Ikki has been thrown into Hades and into a timelss "Another Dimension". Places from which no one returns. But it's not like something like that would ever stop him, right?
*Gamlin Kizaki in Macross 7 probably deserves mention, for his crash in one of the later episodes. Here's what went down: his jet crashes headlong into an enemy mech. The two are traveling toward each other, at a very high combined speed. The impact crushes the front half of the jet like a tin can and shears the wings off. The impact alone would pulp a human body. The two craft then explode in a massive fireball. Gamlin has no time to eject and the impact is shown from INSIDE the cockpit. Yet next episode, he's perfectly fine, not even a scratch. Seriously, how the hell did he survive that?
* One episode of ''{{Pokemon}}'' has a rampaging Regigigas apparently crushed under a large pile of rubble. Brock tries to say the line but he doesn't even get to finish the sentence before Regigigas pops out and restarts the destruction.
*Subverted somewhat in One Piece movie 4. [[spoiler:: The boiler room operator on Gasparde's ship sets the boiler to explode, stating that he's going to see it to the end. After the Luffy vs. Gasparde battle, he shows up alive and well. When asked about why he's alive, he replies with something to the effect of "I said I was going to watch it to the end, not be in the explosion."]]

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Comic Books ]]

* Subverted twice in an issue of ''Tom Strong'', in which the eponymous hero learns from his arch-nemesis that one of his other enemies actually died from breaking her neck in a fall into the Niagara Falls at the conclusion of their last battle; this foreshadows the revelation that the arch-nemesis ''himself'' is also actually dead, a body having previously been found and identified as him, and is present here through use of a shape-shifting stand-in.
* Lampshaded in an old issue of ''NewMutants'' after Sunspot hurled the ancient mutant Selene into a lava pit and caved it in behind her to the horror of his teammates. Admittedly he was not particularly GenreSavvy, but after seeing a sword plunged into her chest without slowing her down, he was inclined to take her claim that [[NighInvulnerability she could not die by mortal means]] at face value.
* In ''{{Runaways}}'' the team saw a missile go off near Chase and counted him as dead. In a case of desperate [[GenreSavvy genre savviness]] Molly guessed ''exactly'' how Chase survived and hadn't come back yet.
* The villainous cyborg Dekko in Scott [=McCloud=]'s ''{{Zot}}!''. The first time was a subversion: Dekko seemed to have shot himself dead while foolishly playing with a gun thought to be empty. But Zot never bought it at all, because he knew that the gun ''was'' empty, and that Dekko must've deliberately recharged it. He also notes that no body was found, and that Dekko's walking ocean fortress receded beneath the waves as if controlled remotely. As it turns out, the Dekko that shot himself was a remotely controlled robot. It happens again when Dekko is crushed by a collapsing wall and trapped as his fortress sinks, only to rise from the sea (without any legs) and rave about his immortality to seagulls before [[NoFourthWall yelling at the reader]].
* A recent Comicbook/{{X-Men}} comic features someone telling Siryn this about Banshee (her father). Her response is basically [[GenreSavvy that this is an X-Men Comic]] without the glaring hole in the fourth wall. So far, she is wrong.
** A much older X-Men comic has Cyclops recounting how Jean Grey became Phoenix.
--->'''Cyclops:''' ''Certainly nothing even remotely human could have survived. Nothing remotely human did.''
*** In ''X-Men'' #3, the audience is supposed to say that as Magneto's asteroid hurtles through the atmosphere, presumably killing him. Guess what happens a few issues later...
**** And subverted in the Alternate Universe ''X-Men Forever'', which picks up right where said issue leaves off, and establishes what [[WordOfGod Word of Claremont]] had intended all along, that no one could ''indeed'' survive that.
* Herman Von Klempt from ''{{Hellboy}}'' is pretty good at this. In 1939 (shown at the beginning of ''Conqueror Worm'') he was at ground zero of an explosion involving [[StupidJetpackHitler the Nazi space program]] and was the only survivor. However, he was reduced to a [[BrainInAJar Head In A Jar]]. Later, Hellboy blew up Von Klempt's lab, with Von Klempt inside, yet Robert Zinco and Karl Ruprect Kroenen were able to find and revive him again. Then ''their'' laboratory exploded, and Von Klempt was again the only survivor. [[spoiler:At the end of ''Conqueror Worm'', Roger breaks Von Klempt's head jar, so he may be dead for real now.]]
*In an issue of [[MarvelUniverse Marvel comic's]] ''NewWarriors'', the eponymous teen heroes have a moment like this after the villain is defeated. [[Comicbook/SpiderMan Spider-Man]], who happens to be teaming up with them at the time, isn't so sure, and begins to tell the story of how Doctor Octopus survived a ground-zero nuclear bomb explosion...
* BlakeAndMortimer: in ''The Francis Blake Affair'', the guards chasing after Mortimer stop looking for him when he jumps off a cliff and they see something hit the water below. [[spoiler: Of course it's revealed a few pages later that Mortimer isn't dead: he just managed to land on a platform and push a giant stone into the sea in less than one minute.]]
* {{Tintin}}: every time Tintin is involved in a gruesome car accident, the people trying to kill or capture him go check the burning wreckage in an unusual display of genre savviness. Unfortunately for them, Tintin always escapes those accidents by jumping from the car right before it goes off the road, so he generally ends up stealing his pursuers' car (and in one case ''tank'') while they're looking for his body.
* {{Lampshaded}} in an issue of ''TheOutsiders'' in TheDCU. When bad guy the Duke of Oil falls off an oil rig (after ''having a sword put through his head''), Metamorpho (himself a master of BackFromTheDead) remarks that "If you don't find a body, they aren't dead".
* This really happened to author of Persepolis 1 and 2 (Marjane Satrapi), which is depicted in Persepolis 2, "The Story of A Return". Suffering from deep depression, Satrapi takes all of her meds at once. This knocks her out cold a few days before subjecting her to hours of bizarre hallucinations... However, according to her then-psychiatrist, what she took was enough to kill a small elephant. Satrapi took this as a sign that she was not meant to die.
* During the first storyarc of Grant Morrison's JLA: the [[MonsterOfTheWeek Villains of the month]] have shot down Batman's plane. They don't even bother to check the wreckage, since "[[UnderestimatingBadassery He doesn't have any]] [[BadassNormal powers."]] Somewhat justified in that [[spoiler: they turn out to be martians, who would be vulnerable to the fire coming off the crashed plane.]]
* In the first issue of ''BigBangComics'' published by Image, Mighty Man faces off against a superintelligent mind controlling Nazi caterpillar who is cut in half at the end of the story while Mighty Man opines on how he's probably not going to hear from him again. [[spoiler:A later story shows ''two'' worms as part of a LegionOfDoom plotting against the Round Table of America, implied to be the two halves regenerated.]]

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Film ]]

* In the film ''Grease II'', Michael (as the masked "Cool Rider") disappears for almost the last fifth of the film after Johnny and his gang chase him into jumping his motorcycle off one edge of a wide chasm; it's unclear whether he survived or not until almost the very end of the film.
* Subverted in ''Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid''. The two heroes [[TryAndFollow jump off a cliff to escape pursuit.]] Sundance says that he can't swim, and Butch laughs, saying "The fall will prob'ly kill ya!" (See also AsymmetricDilemma.)
* In ''TheGodfather'', the eponymous character miraculously survives being shot eight times. At the later assassination of Santino, the hit men [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill take no chances]].
* In ''The Fugitive'', Dr. Richard Kimball (Harrison Ford) [[TryAndFollow jumps off a spillway on a dam]] into the rushing water below. U.S. Marshal Gerard (Tommy Lee Jones) wants to make sure they see his dead body, despite claims by everyone else that he couldn't possibly survive the fall.
* In the ''LordOfTheRings'', Aragorn falls off a rather steep cliff with his arm still caught in a warg's bridle. River or not, there were quite a few rocks below the cliff...
* ''StarWars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith'': When [[spoiler:Commander Cody turns on Obi-Wan]], he says the line out loud even as [[spoiler:Obi-Wan is ''climbing up behind him'']]. On the other hand, [[spoiler:Mace Windu]] almost certainly ''didn't'' survive that. Probably.
** Averted when [[spoiler:Yoda falls to the floor of the Senate after losing his battle with Emperor Palpatine. When his body isn't found, Palpatine, Genre Savvy as ever, insists he's not dead and to look again.]]
*** Of course, [[spoiler:Obi-Wan]] fell outdoors into a body of water, and searching for his body would be difficult, and if they didn't find it, there's a number of things that could've happened to it (washed away, eaten by some scavenger, etc.). Whereas [[spoiler:Yoda]] fell inside. Only place his body could've been if he was dead was on the floor below.
**** And, to be fair, the clone troopers at least sent out seeker droids to check.
** Anakin Skywalker. After getting sliced up by [[ItWasHisSled Obi-Wan]], he falls near the lava and incinerates. Obi-Wan figures Anakin will never survive having all his limbs sliced off and his skin burned, and so leaves him to die. Palpatine saves him. One would think Obi-Wan would've given at least a MercyKill, as it seems uncharacterically cruel to leave him to burn like that, but then we wouldn't have Episodes IV, V, and VI.
* Subverted in ''TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles II: The Secret of the Ooze'': [[spoiler: Super Shredder wrecks a pier, bringing the whole structure down on himself. The Turtles see his hand emerge from the wreckage, and Raphael exclaims, "Nobody coulda survived that!" The hand then falls, indicating that Shredder has, in fact, died.]]
** Keeping in mind that, in the first movie, ''regular'' Shredder survived [[spoiler:being crushed in a trash compactor]].
* The ''{{Terminator}}'' series (particularly ''Terminator 2'') seems to be mostly built around this trope.
* In the 2008 movie adaptation of ''Film/IronMan'', Big Bad [[spoiler:Stane]] seemingly falls to his death from over 85,000 feet. The next scene shows protagonist [[IronMan Stark]] barely making it back alive, seemingly setting it up like [[spoiler:Stane]] DID die. However, [[spoiler:he was perfectly fine, and only died when the arc reactor he was over blew up in a classic example of [[PillarOfLight power glowing]].]]
* In ''{{Serenity}}'', River seals herself away inside a room full of Reavers to protect her fellow crew members. Since she's locked herself up with a hundred of the killer AxCrazy space pirates, the rest of the shocked and wounded crew are left apparently believing she's dead. Then the doors open, and she's [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome waist-deep in enemy dead]].
* IndianaJones.
* The first ''{{Hellboy}}'' film has the Nazi clockwork assassin dropped into a pit of spikes, but he is still twitching even after having been impaled. So Hellboy drops a... cog? on him, burying him. If he's still alive, we don't know.
* Subverted in ''Apocalypto'', where Jaguar Paw [[spoiler: jumps off a high waterfall and Zero Wolf orders the Holcane warriors after him]] rather than assume he's dead. The way the scene is set up really suggests the screenwriter anticipated this trope.
* John Carpenter's original ''{{Halloween}}'' ends with Michael Myers taking multiple gunshots to the chest from Dr. Loomis, then falling from a second-story balcony. When Loomis makes it to the window and looks out, Michael's body has [[NeverFoundTheBody vanished]].

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Literature ]]

* Subverted in the ''StarWars'' novel ''Sacrifice''. [[spoiler:Lumiya starts falling off a ledge during her duel with Luke Skywalker; he grabs her hand, says "I'd never let you fall", and decapitates her.]]
** [[spoiler:Done straight earlier in the same novel, with [[ActionMom Mara Jade]] (in a MamaBear/quasi UnstoppableRage moment) stabbing Lumiya, only to be tripped and throttled by a sentient Sith ship and see Lumiya escape in it (both ladies end up severely injured, by the way).]]
**[[spoiler:Boba Fett has also escaped the Sarlaac pit in at least one short story.]]
***Well, that's not really a spoiler, it falls under YouShouldKnowThisAlready in all later material (including the ''Legacy of the Force'' books). If you count the Marvel comics (which were made before a more-or-less rigid canon system was set up for ''Star Wars''), Boba Fett escapes the Sarlacc ''twice'', only the first time he falls into the same Sarlacc at the end, but second time's the charm.
* In the novel ''{{Dune}}'', Paul Atreides and his mother are able to escape their hated enemies by piloting an aircraft into a sandstorm which has winds of 400 mph. The main villain is told that they "are certainly dead"; naturally, with their superhuman reflexes, they are able not only to flee, but also to build an army on a practically uninhabitable desert planet which is described as being able to conquer the galaxy.
** To be fair to the Baron Harkonnen, he immediately smacks his minion in the mouth for doing something so stupid as to assume his enemies are dead without actually seeing their bodies, and then sends his forces back out to find the bodies. Naturally, they don't. But he did at least try!
** Paul also appeared dead at the end of the second book after he walked blind and alone into the desert. His men refused to search for him because of their old tradition. Sure enough he survived.
* In MatthewReilly's books, AnyoneCanDie. Gena "Mother" Newman of the ''Shane Schofield'' series appears to die once per book, but always manages to survive. After the third time, she declares herself "f***ing indestructible".
** The protagonist in each of MatthewReilly's books always goes through this (at least) once per book.
* In the HarryPotter series, this trope could also apply to Lord Voldemort, as the Avada Kedavra spell he had tried to kill Harry with hit him instead. We learn in ''Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire'' that no one (aside from Harry himself) had ever survived being hit with Avada Kedavra. His followers certainly seemed to think NoOneCouldSurviveThat, as many (though not all) of them didn't bother to search for him, instead opting to lead lives of lesser evil. [[spoiler:Subverted slightly as Voldemort actually was, for all intents and purposes, dead. He managed to cling to life as some sort of spirit, and would eventually return to his body in ''The Goblet of Fire''.]]
** Subverted in ''Deathly Hallows''. When Voldemort [[spoiler:finally does manage to kill Harry, but Harry survives again,]] Voldemort is careful (and GenreSavvy) enough ''not'' to assume that NoOneCouldSurviveThat, even in the case of Avada Kedavra. So he sends someone to check he's been KilledOffForReal. [[spoiler:Unfortunately he chooses Narcissa Malfoy, who's only concerned about whether Draco's safe and doesn't care that Harry's still around, so she lies to Voldemort.]]
* Subverted in ''{{Catch-22}}''. [[spoiler: Doc Daneeka doesn't like flying but is required to fly a certain number of hours so he gets people to put his name on the flight manifest. One of these flights he's not on crashes killing everyone on board and everyone refuses to believe he's alive after that despite his protestations to the contrary.]]
* In ''LordOfTheRings'' Pippin kills a large troll, only to be squashed under it when it goes down. Pippin did actually die, but CS Lewis complained to Tolkien that he couldn't kill him off, and Tolkien ended up letting Gimli save the Hobbit.
* In just about any book of the {{Discworld}} series where he appears, Rincewind is able to survive against impossible odds (like falling off the Disc, facing the Sourcerer, and going through Dungeon Dimensions AND Hell). Being the favourite (favourite [[CosmicPlaything plaything]], at least) of Lady Luck does help.
* Lampshaded in ''{{Warbreaker}}'': when one character falls out a third-story window, mercenary Tonk Fah asks "You think he'll live?" His partner, Denth, responds that since the man fell out the window to certain doom, "of course he'll live!"
* In JamesSwallow's {{Warhammer 40000}} BloodAngels novel ''Deus Sanguinius'', Sachiel [[TalkingToTheDead gloats]] after hearing that Rafen was caught in an exploding factory, telling him he's dead. When Rafen appears alive, he sputters that it was impossible, he could not have survived.
* In the seventh book of ''TheWheelOfTime'', the main character has a villain at his mercy: the fellow is trapped between a semi-sentient DeathGas on one side and Rand is shooting DeaderThanDead-causing DeathRay beams down the other. Rand lets up before actually ''hitting'' the villain, sure that NoOneCouldSurviveThat. At this point, author RobertJordan discovered the problem with overusing ChekhovsArmy: Sammael was meant to be dead, but because they NeverFoundTheBody, the fandom began to insist HesJustHiding. RJ had to have a fellow villain [[{{Jossed}} Joss]] the idea before readers would move on.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Live Action TV ]]

* The villain Murdoc from ''{{MacGyver}}'' had at least five of these, including a fall down a mine shaft, a nosedive off a cliff, being electrocuted then falling into a deep pool of water, being blown up by dynamite and having a skyscraper dropped on him. Invariably, he would shout "MACGYVER!" when he met his apparent doom, and someone would afterward remark that he could not possibly have survived (quite reasonable in all cases). But he would nevertheless return, without explanation beyond the fact that they NeverFoundTheBody.
* The ''DoctorWho'' story "Remembrance of the Daleks" makes use of the "nothing ''human''" variant for exposition. After their attack leaves a Dalek buried in rubble, a soldier remarks that "nothing even remotely human could have survived that"; the Doctor just has time to point out that a Dalek is not even remotely human before the creature emerges unharmed and the battle resumes.
**The Doctor also frequently claims that the Master couldn't have survived being HoistByHisOwnPetard.
* Captain Jack of ''{{Torchwood}}'' has this happen to him a lot. He's been shot, electrocuted, and had the life drained out of him, only to keep coming back.
** Well duh, he's immortal.
* The Borg Queen, of ''StarTrek'' fame, ''loves'' this trope. ''[[StarTrekTheNextGeneration First Contact]]'' actually [[RetCon retconned]] her right off the bat into having been on a early Cube when it was destroyed, but surviving (she tells Picard that "You think in such three-dimensional terms"). It looks like she's had it when [[spoiler:Picard breaks her spine at the end of the movie]], but she went on to have a healthy career in ''StarTrekVoyager'', which found her in three more deep-space explosions, one of which she herself initiated. (The jury's still out on whether or not she survived the GrandFinale, where [[spoiler:she seemed to actually die on-camera before everything exploded]].)
** This is likely explainable by assuming the Borg Queen ''does'' "die," or rather, get destroyed each time. She seems to be assembled at the start of each of her appearances so each one may be a newly constructed queen, likely with a download of the previous one's memories. Hence, thinking in such three-dimensional terms.
*** Given that the Borg Queen is the personification of an enormous HiveMind, it stands to reason that she cannot be "killed" so long as the Collective still exists. The destruction of her physical body would, then, hardly even count as a minor setback.
* In {{Heroes}}, during the third season half-finale, Sylar is taken down with a peice of glass in the back of the neck, which inhibits his HealingFactor. The entire building goes up in a massive fireball, and even as of the half-season premiere some of those people who were present are assuming he's dead, even reassuring each other that he couldn't have survived it. This is, of course, ignoring that the very thing that would allow him to die would have ''melted in the fire'' letting him get out safely.
** Subverted with Meridith, who was the cause of the above fire. She's KilledOffForReal as far as we know. She's immune to fire, but not rubble falling on her head.
*** Her brother, Flint, was apparantly able to get out of the fire in his building alive though. Only to be shot in the head in the comics.
** Happened to Claude in a flashback during "Company Man" in Season 1 when HRG shoots him on a bridge and he starts to fall, but becomes {{invisible}} as he does so, so we never see him hit the ground.
* Big Smith, in TheAdventuresOfBriscoCountyJr, falls a loooooong way from a train, shows up in a later episode, alive. Handwaved by him falling out carrying the artifact.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Tabletop Games ]]

* The Tyranids of ''Warhammer 40000'' are so resilient that they can survive (individually, in rare instances) exterminatus. In other words, not even converting everything on a planet to ash can kill them, as they can just burrow into the bedrock.
** The ''lesser'' Tyranids need to burrow in. Certain variations of the Carnifex have [[HealingFactor regenerative abilities]] and bodies that are even more resilient to damage than normal. In the 3rd/4th edition it mentions on one page that the guys examining a planet that had undergone Exterminatus found what looked like a strange rock formation; it was actually a Carnifex trying to heal the damage it had taken.
* ''SpiritoftheCentury'', with its focus on [[TwoFistedTales pulp action narrative]], allowes players to [[InvokedTrope invoke]] this trope with the Death Defiance stunt. It allows any character who has it to avoid death if it happens "offscreen" (falling off a cliff, failing to escape the collapsing building, etc.) by spending half of their fate points and citing some explanation (including bizzare and improbable coincidences) of how they survived.
* Extra Life in ''{{GURPS}}'' is summarized as "No matter how sure your foes were that they killed you, you didn't ''really'' die."

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Video Games ]]

* In ''KnightsOfTheOldRepublic'', Calo Nord is LeftForDead. Buried under rubble. In a collapsing building. On a doomed planet undergoing heavy bombardment. With no chance to escape had he even not been buried, as the player has just stolen his CoolShip. Later in the game, he emerges on the BigBad's flagship with barely a scratch; it is never explained how he survived, although they do [[LampshadeHanging hang a lampshade]] on this.
* In ''MetalGearSolid'', main character Solid Snake shoots down BigBad Liquid's Hind helicopter, in a boss battle on the top of a tower. The chopper plummets, Liquid screams, and Snake leans over the edge of the railing, stares into the flaming mass, and utters a BondOneLiner. Snake gets slightly suspicious later on when finding a parachute caught in a tree ("No way, he'd be sliced up faster than an onion in an infomercial..."), and, sure enough...
** A helicopter with an ejection system would obviously have a way to allow a pilot to eject without being cut up. Why doesn't Snake know that?
** He actually dies for real at the end of the game. First his HumongousMecha explodes, then he's kicked off the top of it, then the room caves in on top of him, then he's in a car crash, before an assassination virus gives him a heart attack. At each turn, characters treat it as a a certain, irrevocable death (it helps that these things are meant to be fatal to the player as well). Remarkably death hasn't kept him from taking major roles in ''[=MGS2=]'' and ''MGS4''.
** Let's not forget that Naked Snake managed to survive getting THROWN OFF A BRIDGE.
** Let's also not forget that Naked Snake managed to survive being ridiculously close to a nuclear blast. Seriously, he should have been GLOWING after that.
** Later on in the game, Snake [[spoiler: jumps off a waterfall escaping the BigBad's military prison, and actually does die. He gets better, though. I'm not sure if that's playing it straight or subverting it. Or both.]]
* Subverted in ''NoOneLivesForever'': [[spoiler:one of the main characters is introduced as having last been seen during an escape that, were he not such a super agent, surely would have killed him. Well, turns out that it did, and the man who claims to be him is in fact an impostor working with the bad guys.]]
* In ''Overlord'' [[spoiler: It's revealed towards the end of the game that the main character is a former hero who was left for dead by his companions because "No one could have survived that fall." He, of course, did, and it's how he got drafted into the previous Overlord's XanatosGambit.]]
* ''SuikodenII'' [[spoiler:Luca Blight is killed as follows: Riddled with arrows (killing his horse), fought three times (all three of them six-on-one beatdowns), riddled with arrows, riddled with arrows ''again'', and then fought in a duel. Only then does he die.]]
* Zero from the ''MegaManX'' series, he can die, turn evil, be put into stasis, and STILL be a playable character in the next game.
** Not quite. Zero does ''NOT'' come back from [[BolivianArmyEnding the destruction of Ragnarok]] in ''Zero 4''.
** He does come back in form of Biometals in ''MegaManZX''... sort of...
** His nemesis from ''MegaManZero'', Dr. Weil, deserves a mention, seeing as he [[spoiler:was the target of ''a KillSat that completely leveled TheEmpire (!)'']]. TheReveal of [[spoiler:his being immortal]] [[JustifiedTrope might have something to do with it]]...
* Yes, this happens to the hero in ''GrandTheftAuto: San Andreas'', during the Whirlybird mission. Carl plays door gunner for a Triad mission, but his chopper is shot down. One bad guy asks about survivors, and a nearer gunman says that no, No One Could Survive That. Properly played, CJ would then sneak up on the gunman and slit his throat.
** After shooting down [[spoiler:Mike Toreno]]s helicopter during one mission, you're told that "there's no way he could have survived that fireball". Guess who you talk to later.
* This also happens in ''SuperRobotWars Original Generation'' saga. Lamia Loveless was forcefully pulled out from a Bartoll pod using Alt Eisen Riese's Revolving Bunker, all while naked, already damaged, and bound with the cables inside, anyone can say ThatsGottaHurt at that point. To make things worse, she got shot down while laying down in Alt Eisen Riese's arm without recovering from the previous damage, not by a mere gun, but with a dangerous HumongousMecha, all while NAKED AND DEFENSELESS. People think that she wouldn't survive at all... except that she survived just by a very small margin, because the game's [[TheDragon Dragon]] made it in time to reprogram her and turn her against her allies. And the scene of her ultimate rescue was just as brutal, Axel uses his strongest attack only to plug her out of the machine that kept here, yet she still survives for the ultimate repair. If you call Code Kirin weaker than Revolving Bunker, well that's just ridiculous... But then again, she was in a bigger mecha so a way stronger attack may be necessary to plug her out.
** And it was actually PRECEDED, when she self destructs to save the team from the Shadow Mirror, and she got Lemon to haul her in the last minute and repair her and let her off...
** Axel Almer also adheres this trope fully, probably in a far more impossible odds than Lamia. Let's see... he got blasted into pieces, almost all limbs said to be broken, had his death speech and all, and his place of death was merged into an alien body (and supposedly his body too)... Banpresto's answer? Have a quirky mercenary squadron haul his machine remnants in the last minutes, JUST BEFORE THE MERGING, and have ANOTHER DEAD character (Alfimi) possess his soul briefly so he can wake up in the future time. And bear in mind that he has no body modifications before, he's just a human that [[MadeOfIron happens to be too tough for his own good]]. Maybe his [[EnsembleDarkhorse popularity]] ever since he played the villain part ultimately causes this...
** Speaking of which, even Kyosuke Nanbu fell to this trope several times. Before the game timeline, he suffered a plane crash that could've killed him... yet he came out with just some scratches and bruises. Next, when he was trying a test run of a TransformingMecha, it malfunctioned, exploded with him inside, and the mech sank to the water... yet he came out with just a few broken ribs. In ''Original Generation 2'', Axel Almer proceeds to use his strongest attack to rip Kyosuke's mech to shreds, which Kyosuke not only survives, but promptly gets a [[TookALevelInBadass massive update to his mech]] so it doesn't happen again. And where does that credit to? His luck. What a lucky bastard.
** Oh, and Excellen Browning also got it a bit worse. She was supposedly dead at the plane crash with Kyosuke, but the Einst hauled her in the last minute so they can partially put their parts on her, and that ensured her survival.
* ''FinalFantasyIV'' has multiple examples, which all appear to be PlotlineDeath until the characters show up alive later on. They may be injured, but no explanation is given as to [[IGotBetter how they survived at all.]] Only one playable character is ''actually'' KilledOffForReal. The most egregious example is Cid, who leaps from a speeding airship hundreds of feet (at least) above the ground. He then sets off a [[WeaponOfMassDestruction bomb powerful enough to collapse a mountain.]] Which it ''does''. On top of him. Oh, and the bomb is in his ''hand'' at the time. Yang isn't much better; it's implied that he stops a city-destroying super-cannon by ''stuffing himself in the barrel and causing it to misfire''.
* The first half of ''FinalFantasyVI'' concludes with the entire party packed into an airship and fleeing from a newly [[AGodAmI divine]] OmnicidalManiac. It doesn't go well, and the airship gets sliced in half and falls to Earth from a height of thousands of feet. It initially looks like a subversion, as the viewpoint shifts to a character who spent a year in a coma after the crash, and when she finally wakes up assumes that she was the only survivor. It takes about half an hour to discover otherwise.
* ''FinalFantasyVII'' killed off Rufus Shinra while having him trapped in a building which was then blown up - this was played entirely as a KilledOffForReal scenario. But, to resurrect him for TheMovie, he turned out to be a victim of this trope instead. It was salvaged by a subtle and very good LampshadeHanging - Rufus starts to explain to Cloud how he survived, and Cloud cuts him off before he can, leaving it a mistery until Dirge of Cerberus, where it is revealed in a flashback that he was rescued and put on a helicopter.
* ''FinalFantasyVIII'' where, judging by the cutscene, the party gets practically nuked at the Galbadia Missile Base. Somehow they walk away from it just fine.
** And then, [[spoiler: they come back with the wrecked carcass of the robot boss of the base as both shield and escape tool.]]
* {{Tekken}} 3, Bryan Fury's ending. [[http://youtube.com/watch?v=8q2OCza3O1A Nuff said]].
** And in {{Tekken}} 4, Kazuya Mishima got into this. So he was thrown into a volcano, and probably was immolated there... But he still manages to get BackFromTheDead, because some scientists hauled off his ashes just in time and resurrected him.
** And in {{Tekken}} 5, Heihachi Mishima takes this to a new level. Surrounded with robots, pinned down with no chance to escape, and all the robot self destructed, destroying him and the temple where he's located. An observer confirms ''"Heihachi Mishima is dead"''... Is it? Bzzt! Wrong! He NeverFoundTheBody. So it turns out that Heihachi managed to survive the near-impossible odds, [[BadassNormal being no ordinary man]].
* ''[[{{Counterstrike}} Counter-Strike]]'': I'm sure anyone who's played the game for a decent amount of time gets quite annoyed when they fired at the head of an opponent from long range with the [=AK47=] only to see the guy at the other end not [[BlownAcrossTheRoom fall/fly backwards]], assuming they've missed. Eventually they'll find out that they actually did hit... for 99 damage. Thankfully this is very long-range only, [[MillionToOneChance rare to begin with]], and easily rectified by just hitting one more shot or just getting a grenade close enough.
* [[ResidentEvil Albert Wesker]] got impaled by Tyrant, LeftForDead, and has the building he was in self-destruct, and comes out of it NighInvulnerable, as shown in his next appearance when he takes a pile of I-beams and then a small explosion to the face and yet is still mocking Chris as the place self-destructs around him. Also tends to happen with most of the BigBad monsters... until the [[{{BFG}} rocket launcher]] shows up.
** Not to mention how Krauser actually seemed to have made it off Sadler's island before it exploded in ''RE4'', in spite of having been seemingly killed in single combat '''''twice''''' (once by Ada, once by Leon), judging by his "mission complete" screen in the Mercenaries minigame.
** This also happens to be HUNK's entire gimmick, too.
* ''TalesOfTheAbyss'' has one of its antagonists, [[spoiler:Dist]], live up to the phrase 'tenacious as a cockroach.' Near the end of the game, [[spoiler:Dist, in a desperate attempt to kill the party, jumps on top of the damaged robot he sent to kill them and tries to blow it up along with him, only to be sent flying in the air by Luke along with the robot, where it explodes in midair.]] However in the Nebilim sidequest, [[spoiler:Dist comes back, unharmed with no explanation, only to get blasted by Nebilim's energy beam. After the battle, though, he's still alive.]] He is [[spoiler:the only God General to survive.]]
** The we have [[NietzscheWannabe Sync]], who was ''thrown into a volcano''.
* ''ArmyOfTwo'' winds up using this for pretty much the central premise of the money-making objectives of the last level. [[spoiler:Philip Clyde is on the wrong end of a grenade explosion that rips a cargo plane in two, and free-falls to the flooded Miami streets. Guess who the last boss pre-expansions is?]]
* Mr. [[AceAttorney Phoenix Wright]] himself. Not only is he lucky in winning trials, but he's also damn lucky in surviving. In the final case of ''Trials and Tribulations'', Phoenix attempts to cross a burning bridge, which breaks apart, causing to fall 40 feet below into a river. Now the river is very well known for sweeping bodies away without anyone surviving. If that didn't kill him, the freezing cold water (since it was winter at the time) would have, right? WRONG! Phoenix gets away with only a few bruises and a nasty cold. Also, during ''Apollo Justice'', Phoenix gets hit by a car that causes him to go flying 30 feet into the air and smacks his head into a telephone pole. Crazily enough, his head is fine and he only suffers a sprained ankle!
** The river in question is only an InformedAbility: two people actually fall into the river in the course of the game. And they both survive.
* In the early missions of ''SyphonFilter 2'', Logan makes a leap of faith to dodge a helicopter-launched missile not once, but twice, first diving ''headfirst'' off a cliff of unknown height, then later off a 100-foot or so high bridge ''onto a moving train''. There's no way these leaps could be survived in real life, at least not without crippling injuries. In fact jumping onto a speeding train from a stationary object would cause one to slide backwards and sustain severe lacerations or broken bones, maybe fall between the cars and be shredded under the wheels. Apparently the designers disregarded Newton's third law. Don't think the snow in the first case would do much to cushion the impact, either(see SoftWater).
** And during the Agency Biolab Escape mission, he jumps a hundred feet or so down a large ventilation shaft and grabs onto a ledge a few feet above a gigantic fan, DieHard style. If this were realistic, his fingers/wrists would snap on impact and he'd be shredded by the fan "like an onion in an infomercial". See NotTheFallThatKillsYou
* ''LegendOfZelda: Twilight Princess'' comes to mind. During a cutscene, it is shown that [[spoiler:Ganondorf has a huge sword STABBED THROUGH HIS GUT. He goes on to kill a sage, making them panic, as they didn't know he had the Triforce of Power. Basically, they were expecting the sword to be fatal, but he survives through an almost literal Deus Ex Machina.]]
* ''FireEmblem: Radiant Dawn'': It's assumed that the Black Knight was killed in ''Path of Radiance'' when Nasir [[strike:[[DroppedABridgeOnHim drops a bridge]]]] [[DroppedABridgeOnHim collapses Nados Castle on him]], although they NeverFoundTheBody when they examined the ruins. He comes back in ''Radiant Dawn'', revealing that [[HesJustHiding he was just hiding]] for the past three years.
** The {{Canon}} is actually that Ike beats him in the sword fight, then the Black Knight's mooks drop the castle trying to kill Ike. The Japanese version also gives a cheesy explanation to how he survived that was SoBadItsAwful that was thankfully cut from the American version.
** Also a closer look at the picture of the castle collapsing on the mooks if you look in the doorway the black knight is just standing there not seeming to be bothered by the collapsing castle. Combined with the fact that the player doesn't find out his identity he meant he was coming back in the sequel.
* ''Saints Row 2'' - The Ronin Leader is left, stabbed through with his own katana, on the deck of a burning junk ship that explodes when your character leaves. How much do you want to bet he'll be back for the sequel?
* Peppy in StarFox Assault has [[spoiler: an Apparoid infection on his right arm, receives a a few explosions in the face and has the Great Fox blow up with him in it]] and he [[spoiler: appears in the end with only an injury in the face.]]
* Every time before Bowser has to turn giant and fight a boss in MarioAndLuigiBowsersInsideStory, this is either explicitly said or at least somehow mentioned. Sure, he gets crushed under his own castle, a giant tower shaped like a person, a clown and a castle gone HumongousMecha, but it's very definitely TemptingFate here.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Web Comics ]]

* [[http://www.megatokyo.com/strip/1124 This]] {{Megatokyo}} ''two-page spread''. Especially with the "disturbance in the force" next page.
* Played with in ''CaptainSNES'' where an explosion is set up for the sole purpose of killing a character named Bob. The person who made the explosion, who was GenreSavvy and realized the heroes would just be blown away, mentions that only a Chocobo would have the reflexes to survive said explosion. Guess what Bob happens to be at the moment.
* Satirized in [[http://www.sluggy.com/daily.php?date=000528 This]] ''SluggyFreelance'' comic upon the seeming death of Oasis. "A dynamic character with the ability to survive certain death and a questionable death scene leaving no corpse? Face it, we'll never see HER again."
* [[http://www.reallifecomics.com/archive/081023.html This strip]] from ''RealLifeComics'' details the various hazards to surviving the coming explosion of EvilGenius Tony's space station. The payoff is three strips later with [[spoiler: Tony crashing into Greg's front yard, brushing off the inevitable "How the hell did you survive?" with a simple "Don't ask stupid questions."]]
* [[http://www.nuklearpower.com/2009/09/01/episode-1167-what-goes-up/ This strip]] from ''EightBitTheatre'' {{lampshades}} the trope when Black Mage notes that they survived after Red Mage comments about Sarda surviving the explosion.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Western Animation ]]

* The villain Slade from ''TeenTitans'' used this very same trope to return from ''Hell'':
-->'''Cyborg''': I don't get it. The dude fell into a [[LavaPit pit of lava]]. Who lives through something like that?
-->'''Raven''': Apparently, Slade.
** However, it's sort of a subversion as there was a huge lead-up for him to be NotQuiteDead, but ''he really was'' and was instead [[BackFromTheDead brought back]] in a later episode. (In the episode quoted above... long story.)
**There's another subversion in an earlier episode. In "Haunted" Robin spends the whole episode either worrying that he's come back or convinced he has. It turns out he really was dead.
* BigBad Darkseid was practically guaranteed to return on a future episode of ''JusticeLeague'' because Batman foolishly declared "Nothing could have survived that, not even Darkseid" after the villain's apparent death by atomic-sized explosion. Superman provided a little LampshadeHanging by immediately quipping "You know something Bruce? You're not always right." The ''JusticeLeague Unlimited'' episode "Alive!" provided the shocking twist that [[spoiler: Darkseid '''''didn't''''' survive. But since he came BackFromTheDead, the end result is the same regardless]].
** In the finale, after Darkseid dies ''again'', this time it's Superman who declares that he's really most sincerely dead, since "We saw it this time." The Flash gets GenreSavvy, noting, "You saw it last time, too."
** At least Batman's smarter this time: "I doubt either of them (Darkseid or Luthor) died. They'll be back."
* ''AvatarTheLastAirbender'':
-->'''Azula''': The Avatar's dead... unless you think he somehow, miraculously... survived?\\
([[DramaticPause pregnant pause]] while Zuko recalls the [[ChekhovsGun healing water]] Katara showed him)\\
'''Zuko''': ''(lying)'' No. There's no way he could have survived.
**This is all the assurance Azula needs that he ''did'' survive. Good thing the DangerouslyGenreSavvy [[TheChessmaster Chessmaster]] has a contingency plan for this...
** This scene from 'The Southern Raiders' may be the fastest fulfillment of this trope's prophecy ''ever'':
--->'''Zuko:''' (watching Azula falling to her death) She's... not going to make it... (one miraculous escape for Azula and ten seconds later) Of ''course'' she did.
* This was a common trope in various cartoons of the 1980s:
** In ''TransformersGeneration1'', Megatron "died" at the end of a major storyline, only to turn out to be alive at the end, ''three times'' in the first season alone. Spike Witwicky could be counted on to deliver the NoOneCouldSurviveThat line, but Optimus Prime was always good about [[GenreSavvy predicting his return]].
** Mumm-Ra, of ''{{Thundercats}}'' fame, "died" with similar frequency. He's called The Ever-Living [[AsLongAsThereIsEvil for a reason]].
** In ''{{Dungeons And Dragons}}'', Venger didn't even need a major story as an excuse. Any building he walked into had about an even chance of collapsing on him, but you could always count on seeing his image rise forebodingly from the wreckage.
* Bob was hit with the DisneyDeath version just before the second season finale of ''ReBoot'', although they managed to make it more believable by showing him shooting the explosive away from himself at the last second.
* Comicbook/{{Batman}} survived a similar incident in an episode of ''JusticeLeagueUnlimited'', in a scene that more than one viewer has admitted to believing for a moment that he had really died.
* {{Batman The Animated Series}} had a moment like this for Batman, in the aptly-named episode "The Man Who Killed Batman".
* Throughout the {{DCAU}}, Joker ended about half of his appearances like this.
** And a good number of other villains. Some call it the "[[JokerImmunity Batman Villain Ending]]."
* The two-part [[{{Pilot}} series premiere]] of ''DarkwingDuck'' relies on the DisneyDeath version (natch.) As Taurus Bulba's Ram Rod, a gravity gun, explodes violently in a gigantic fireball (large enough to engulf the top of Canard Tower, which is taller than the city is wide), both the villain and Darkwing are caught at ground zero. Gosalyn and Launchpad both believe that Darkwing has died, until he appears at the orphanage a few days later, having decided to adopt Gosalyn as his daughter.
** Surprisingly, Taurus Bulba did in fact die. However, his remains were subsequently stolen by the criminal organization F.O.W.L., and made into a nigh-unstoppable cyborg.
* Parodied in one episode of DrawnTogether, some OAPs cut the brakes of Toot's wheeled zimmer frame, causing her to (slowly walk) out of control and plummet off a balcony. They remark something like "Nobody could survive a 10 foot fall into the trampoline garden" or something similar.
* In the ''SpiderMan'' 60's animated series, Doctor Octopus throws Spider-Man out of a ''window'' and immediately declares that ''he's finally rid of him''. In a rare moment of sanity for the series, Spider-Man immediately comes back in through the window, although it makes Doctor Octopus look like he should have failed his dissertation.
* Early ''{{Gargoyles}}'' episodes had something along these lines after fighting with Demona. They stopped doing this when it is revealed that she is immortal.
** Even after it was revealed that Demona and Macbeth were immortal, they are still led to believe that Macbeth is dead after he explodes messily in a hovercraft accident. Of course, it turned out to be a robot double commissioned by Xanatos to trick the clan, but they should know better.
* On an episode of ''TheSimpsons'': Mona (Homer's mother) [[PutOnABus drives a bus]] off a cliff and into a lake. At first Chief Wiggum subverts this by noting, "There's still air in that bus, so for the next thirty minutes, this is a rescue mission." But then the bus [[EveryCarIsAPinto explodes]]. And then the cliffside collapses and the rubble ''fills the entire lake.'' But before the episode even ends, we discover Mona didn't die because she jumped clear before the bus even left the ground.
* In the ''SuperMarioBrosSuperShow'', episode "Toad Warriors", Kar-Krazy Koopa blasts a fortress where the heroes are hiding. Though he immediately jeers like he assumes he's defeated his opponents, in the very next scene he refuses Mouser's insistence on the same outcome, thinking that the heroes might be lying low as a trick. It takes a couple more potshots and more urging from Mouser until Koopa finally agrees to move in, which is also when Mario & Co. initiate the plan they had just developed. Yep, Koopa was GenreSavvy for just one moment, in contrast to the other 99% of the series.
* Most every episode of the old ''Birdman'' cartoon ended with Birdman or Birdboy uttering something to this effect so the writers had a way out if they felt like reusing a Villain of the Week.
* In TheMovie of ''KimPossible'' Shego is kicked from the roof of a high building, into an electrical signal tower, which not only electrocutes her but also collapses right on top of her. And she survives.
** In fact, the creators put her in an extra scene just to prove that she actually survived.
* In the 2003 ''[[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2003 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]]'' this happens a lot with the Shredder. In the first two seasons, he survives 1) falling approximately five floors after being caught in the water stream from a broken water tower, and then having the water tower fall on him 2) apparent decapitation, and 3) being at the epicenter of an explosion that vaporized an entire building. Even after all that, they're still surprised when Cyber Shredder survives electrocution.
* Scorponok in ''BeastWars'' gives exactly this line when he blows up a pile of energon next to the Maximals. Megatron, however, is GenreSavvy enough to demand he bring back some wreckage.
** Much later, in the GrandFinale of ''BeastMachines'', the Grand Mal crashes to Cybertron with Optimus Primal, Cheetor, and Rattrap inside. Obsidian thinks that they must be dead but Megatron, once again, orders them to find the bodies to be sure.

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[[folder: Truth In Television ]]

* A NASCAR wreck would qualify, but since the driver in question was wearing a neck restraint, he ''walked away with only a minor bruise.''
** Same with FormulaOne, there are wrecks that would have been fatal, had it not been for his helmet/quick emergency surgery/what have you.
* [[RasputinianDeath The story of Rasputin]]. According to sources, he was poisoned, stabbed repeatedly, shot, and thrown into a lake before he finally kicked the bucket. The ultimate cause of death was drowning, though not for lack of trying ''everything'' else.
** And castrated. Don't forget castrated.
** I've heard someone say that he was also bound by iron chains, and when his body was discovered, he had been able to get free from the chains but hadn't made it to the surface of the lake before drowning.
**Some historians claim that he actually sat up during his cremation.
***Because the cremation was botched, not because he was still alive.
**This seems to be a case of MemeticBadass
**Or a case of enemies exaggerating his durability to make him seem more monstrous.
**Incidentally, the poison was a literal example of NoOneCouldSurviveThat: it was more than enough to kill him several times over. It's thought that it evaporated when they baked the cake it was in.
* Most cases of CosmicLotteryWinner.
* Rebel commander (and general badass) Hadji Murat flung himself over the edge of a narrow mountain pass to escape capture by the Russians. The Russians figured him for dead, but in reality the snow had broken his fall, and he lived to fight against the Russian Empire's absorption of the Caucasus.
* ''Touching the Void''. On their way down from the 21,000 foot Siula Grande peak, Simpson broke his leg in three places. He and Yates improvised a way to get down the mountain that went horribly wrong leaving Simpson dangling over a cliff edge and slowly dragging Yates after him. When Yates cut the rope Simpson couldn't possibly have survived either the fall or the return to civilisation with a broken leg. [[spoiler:He did though.]]
* [[http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200505/s1357179.htm A venomous Brazilian wandering spider that somehow made its way to Britain]]. It fell in the freezer after biting a man and was stunned by the cold. The man who got bitten poured boiling water over it, put it in a jar, and later ''microwaved'' it. You'd think nothing could survive that. However, by the time the man made it to the hospital, the spider had shaken off the ill treatment and was up and moving again, struggling to get out of the jar. Mr. Stevens, the man who was bitten, took the jar with him to the hospital. Of course, it was inadvertently released ''within hospital grounds''.
* Ever heard of World Most amazing videos? This trope appears many times per episode.
* [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_Alkemade This guy]] baled out parachuteless from 18,000 feet rather than burn to death. He survived in very near walk-away condition. And he doesn't even hold the altitude record.
* In the 90s a Yugoslavian stewardess fell from about 32 000 feet when the airplane was shot down. The plane cracked in half so that mean she survived the oxygen deprivation, fast temperature and pressure drop and the fall itself. She broke all her limbs, spine and skull and got severe internal bleedings, but she still survived and made a full recovery
* Gary Busey
* [[{{Metallica}} James Hetfield]]. Montreal. 1992. Stage pyrotechnic gone wrong, for those not with me yet.
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