->"{{Touhou}}. [[XJustX Just...]] {{Touhou}}."

This is an extremely opaque and unhelpful example. I don't know enough about the ''{{Touhou}}'' franchise to edit it, though. Would someone who knows more please edit it into an example that's actually an example of something? --{{Epiblast}}

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I'm slightly confused by the phrase "doujin companies". Isn't that a contradiction in terms? --DocumentN

{{Gambrinus}}: Not if you read "company" as a "group." Doujin circles are pretty common.

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Just added a Simpsons quote to the page, largely because it was the first thing that came to mind when I read the page title. :) I'm not sure if it's ''entirely'' relevant to this page (it ''does'' feature people talking about something pop cultural which is then accepted with a cry of the title phrase... but they're not proposing any sort of fan theory). Also, not having access to the episode right now, I just copied it from [[http://www.tv.com/the-simpsons/marge-vs.-the-monorail/episode/1356/trivia.html here]], so apologies if it's wrong (amazingly, The Simpsons Archive doesn't feature the quote in its "Marge vs the Monorail" capsule). --NickR

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I removed this example, because it is an example of SureLetsGoWithThat rather than SureWhyNot, and put it on its proper trope.

* Like ''DarthsAndDroids'', ''GirlGenius'' has an in-story example [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20030903 here]].
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{{Ununnilium}}:
*** Some, more cynical, people (like this troper) suspect that she simply thought she hadn't had any press coverage for a while and thought a "startling revelation" about Dumbles would give her a week's worth of column inches...
****This troper has to agree; if Dumbledore was going to be gay to help highlight the books nearly {{anvilicious}} message against discrimination, it would probably have been a bit better if anyone ''had actually thought he was gay''. Besides crack pairers, I mean.
**** This troper thought she was giving the finger to the evangelical Christians attacking Harry Potter and just trying to send them into even ''more'' of a towering rage.
*** Or that she thought parents wouldn't buy it if she revealed that before it came out. Of course, those same parents probably wouldn't be buying anyway; they'd rather be [[BurnTheWitch burning it]].
** This troper thought it was a pun, and it meant both... The two screens ''are'' the most obvious new feature of the system.
*** That's the company line. The actual story is probably more akin to the first version.


ConversationInTheMainPage.

** Inverted in that fans who didn't like the Eighth Doctor have speculated that he was part of the ExpandedUniverse and not canon (as he only appeared in a TV movie, novels, audio plays, and comics). But a televised Tenth Doctor story shows [[spoiler:a sequence that flashes back to all nine of his past lives, including the Eighth as played by Paul McGann.]]

This isn't an inversion, it's just not using the trope.

* In a case of one hand of a company doing this with another, ''SuperMarioBros 2'' was really a different game in Japan that was modified into Mario characters. Nevertheless, many enemies from it have since become part of the "real" games.
**This is less of an example than it might seem, since all the games in question were made by {{Shigeru Miyamoto}}; he was just re-using his creations elsewhere (and, in fact, ''Doki Doki Panic'' -- the game that was modified into SuperMarioBros 2 -- already contained many elements from the Mario series before its conversion, such as invincibility stars, identical coins, and POW blocks.)
***Actually, they had originally turned it into a Mario game just so ''Doki Doki Panic'' would sell in the United States. Japanese fans were upset that the US would be getting a Mario game when they wouldn't and started complaining. This led Nintendo to re-release ''Doki Doki Panic'' in Japan as Super Mario USA. In other words, Nintendo got to sell ''the exact same game twice'' due to fan demand. (Well, not quite [[http://www.themushroomkingdom.net/smb2_ddp.shtml exactly]]...)

Not this at all. It's a DolledUpInstallment.

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'''Technically''' the company name in Asimov's series is "US Robotics and Mechanical Men", but USRMM -> USR doesn't seem quite as clever.
* '''''Technically''''' it's "U'''nited''' S'''tates''' Robo''ts'' and Mechanical Men." US Robotics was named in homage to the fictional company.

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RandomSurfer: Similarly to the ''{{Supernatural}}'' "Cas" mention in the article, I heard the gang from ''{{Buffy}}'' being called the "{{Scooby}} Gang" long before it showed up in the show.