http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/thefallenrocks.jpg
[[caption-width:435:[[GenreBlind Who could have predicted it?]]]]
->''AGH! GRARGH! And... he died somehow.''
-> The fate of Tompkins in ''TeenGirlSquad Issue 7'', ''HomestarRunner''
->''"It basically means you completely screw yourself and your entire party by overreaching."''
-> Steff, ''TalesOfMU''
->''"Just for that, your entire party falls into hell. Roll to see how painfully you die."''
--> Comic Book Guy, ''TheSimpsons''.
What happens in [[TabletopGames Tabletop [=RPGs=]]] when the GameMaster gets utterly fed up with the players: he kills them all spectacularly and briefly, in a rain of rocks, a deluge of dragons, a torrent of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarrasque_%28Dungeons_%26_Dragons%29 tarrasques]], or a [[MemeticMutation gaggle of gazebos]].
Precisely what drives a GM to this extreme varies. Perhaps somebody was a RulesLawyer once too often. Perhaps the gaming [[http://www.shamusyoung.com/twentysidedtale/?p=1165 group mocked your plotting skills a bit too much]]. The players might spend all their time going anywhere [[OffTheRails except where the plot is going]]. Maybe the group consists entirely of {{Munchkin}}s. Maybe they didn't like that [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotAwesome "totally awesome"]] {{GMPC}} as much as the GM did and tried to kill him in his sleep. Or maybe the players are just TooDumbToLive.
Or maybe, just maybe, the GM is a [[KillerGameMaster sadistic bastard]] who's determined to see the players fail ''at any cost''.
Regardless of the cause, if the GM goes as far as RocksFallEveryoneDies, the campaign has failed on a grand scale. Maybe it's time to stop the metagaming, or to let somebody else GM, or just to find a new gaming group.
A lesser form of this trope can target just one particularly annoying player, [[BoltOfDivineRetribution often with a bolt of lightning]]. Since the GM is the local god, this works even if the target character is underground, in a Faraday cage and wearing a static discharge bracelet. Merely threatening players with lightning can also be effective in controlling players. The first edition Advanced DungeonsAndDragons Dungeon Masters' Guide even suggested, in a roundabout sort of way, using "blue bolts from the heavens" in order to keep players in line.
The trope name may have originated in ''{{Tomb of Horrors}}'', where this can actually happen if you use the wrong entrance. Of course, this one is not from an especially pissed DM, but from a particularly vicious DeathTrap.
This ending is a TabletopGames form of ShootTheShaggyDog, or KillEmAll when premeditated. Compare and contrast with TotalPartyKill. When the players decide to detonate the game instead of the GM, it's OffTheRails.
[[DethroningMomentOfSuck Usually the direct inverse of]] [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome "Dice fall, everybody rocks."]]
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!!Examples
[[foldercontrol]]
[[folder:{{Anime}} and {{Manga}}]]
* Averted in ''{{Yu-Gi-Oh}}!''... kinda. KillerGameMaster Bakura springs a collapsing spike trap on the party but proclaims that it's not instant death, saying that that is "a tactic of weak [=DMs=]". So it's not instant death... unless they fail to roll a specific number on two ten-sided dice within four rolls [[spoiler:(specifically, 33)]], so each of the four rolls is a one-in-100 chance.
** Technically, he could also have rolled [[spoiler: 00, 66, or 99]], but the odds are still pretty bad.
* Unless the author comes back from hiatus, this is seems to be the ending for the series Gambling Emperor Legend Zero.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:ComicBooks]]
* Comic book example: B.A. from ''KnightsOfTheDinnerTable'' finds himself forced to do this to his players constantly, just to keep them in line -- two are dedicated HackAndSlash types, another is a RulesLawyer. (All the same, this may be only an outgrowth of his philosophy that the players and the GM are inherently enemies).
**Every GM who isn't Patty Gauzwieler will pull this at one point or another in the comic. The most infamous is Weird Pete's Temple of Horrendous Doom, an obvious jab at the Tomb of Horrors.
**One nice storyline, after the group pulled off some particularly annoying feat of munchkinry, rather than declaring a RFED, B.A. manipulates the characters that the same players play in his ''other'', science fiction campaign, into nuking his fantasy world (and thus, their fantasy characters) into oblivion.
** Averted when Weird Pete gets into a battle of wills with Sara over whether he can manage to kill off her player-character. After he arbitrarily declares the entire dungeon falls on her PC, Sara simply invokes a magical debt to survive it and then uses class level skills to begin digging her way out. When Bob asks Brian, "So who's losing?", Brian answers, "The architecture."
[[/folder]]
[[folder:{{Film}}]]
* ''Dracula 3000'' abruptly ends when the spaceship just explodes for no apparent reason, just as you're fooled into expecting a sex-scene. Yes, it's SoBadItsHorrible, why do you ask?
* ''The FinalDestination'' also ends this way, when [[spoiler:the last survivors of all of the accidents over the course of the movie are brutally killed by a truck.]]
* ''GangsOfNewYork'' pretty much ends this way. [[spoiler: The Natives are just about to square off with the newly resurrected Dead Rabbits at the climax of the film when the New York Draft Riots break out and the US military invades the city, bombing it and pretty much killing almost everyone involved except for Amsterdam and Jenny.]]
*''[[SeltzerAndFriedberg Epic Movie]]'' has the 4 main characters get out of Gnarnia (like Narnia but much, much stupider.) after living there for 70 or so years, having them turn into their original ages at the start of the movie, and being greeted by Borat who tells them "You make story have happy ending!" Everything is perfectly fine... Until Jack Swallows runs them over with a giant wheel he ended up riding in the final battle. How did it get in the real world? Where has it been for 70 Gnarnia years? Who cares! Cue "NOT!" from Borat, followed by the credits.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:FolkLore]]
* A [[http://www.duke.edu/web/DRAGO/humor/gazebo.html story passed around the Internet]] for about two decades now about a GM who killed a player character because of his player's architectural ignorance: Not knowing what a "gazebo" was, the player decided to ''attack'' it rather than, say, ''ask'' what it was. After numerous attacks with no effect, the player decided to leave, at which point the GM announced, "It's too late. You have awakened the gazebo. It catches you and eats you."
** This story was widely popularized in the gaming community by the comic ''Knights of the Dinner Table.''
** Referenced in the Steve Jackson card game ''Munchkin'', where a Gazebo really is an enemy monster that players may encounter. A rather scary one, too. And if you try to run away from it and fail, it really will pounce and kill you.
*** "You must face the Gazebo -- ALONE."
** I wonder if that's what they were referencing in {{Unforgotten Realms}}
** Also referenced in ''{{Nodwick}}'' at one point; in one of the last few issues, a gazebo was the location of a fault in space-time which an evil god planned to exploit.
** The comical D&D supplement ''Portable Hole Full of Beer'' actually includes monster stats for "The Dread Gazebo".
** As well as in the ''OrderOfTheStick'' board game, where you can accidentally land on the Gazebo and wake it up, if you're not careful.
** This troper once ran a game of ''ChangelingTheDreaming'' where the motley went into an area of the Dreaming created by D&D tropes. ''No one'' touched the Gazebo.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:{{Literature}}]]
* Used as a plot point in ''BimbosOfTheDeathSun'', where the main character, a guest of honor at a sci-fi convention, uses a rigged DungeonsAndDragons game to expose the murderer of the other author/guest of honor by [[spoiler:killing off the author's most famous character in-game, enraging said character's biggest fan into confessing to the murder, done to "save" the hero from being killed off by his creator.]]
* Robert Fulghum describes telling a story to his children. He thought he had finished conclusively and the kids were asleep, only to hear them ask for "the rest of the story." He would resort to apocalypse. "Suddenly a comet hit the earth and blew everything to pieces." A moment of silence, and someone would ask "What happened to the pieces?"
* The StephenKing short story "Graduation Afternoon" (included in the ''Just After Sunset'' anthology) is only six pages long. The first four pages introduce us to Janice, a graduating high-schooler who is spending the day at the suburban New York estate owned by the family of her rich boyfriend, even as she calmly realizes that their relationship is likely soon coming to an end. On the fifth page, an enormous nuclear bomb goes off in Manhattan, obliterating the city; the rocks are still falling as the story ends.
* In the children's-book series ''Diary of a Wimpy kid'' the mother of the protagonist, Gregory, forces his big brother Roderick to play "Dungeons&Dragons" with Gregory.(Long story) Gregory is prepared for the worst game-session of all time, when Roderick, who happens to be player AND GM in this session, just decides that all the adventurers fall into a hole filled with dynamite and die in the very first turn. Gregory is relieved.
* In TheBible, God kills everyone except Noah, his wife, his son, and his son's wives with a worldwide flood because they had transgressed.
** Rain falls, everybody dies.
* In the first story of ''TheStinkyCheeseMan'', "Chicken Licken," the reason the fox doesn't get to eat everyone else is not that the sky really is falling. Rather, the Table of Contents, with NoFourthWall to slow its descent, squashes everyone.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:LiveActionTV]]
* The short-lived, live-action ''MortalKombat: Conquest'' ended its tale with a group of godly hooded priests up and slaughtering the heroes, and Shao Kahn is allowed to gloat over a list of the dead to the last remaining good guy. Evil wins. Had the series continued, some save would likely have been made, but due to the series' cancellation, it instead comes over as a falling rocks scenario.
* Played for laughs in the French Canadian Series ''Le Coeur A Ses Raisons'' (The Heart Has Its Reasons)'s first season finale. When the main character Brett curses God for allowing his beloved Criquette to die, a terrible earthquake hits the town, causing beams to fall and kill every single character... even the ones outside. Even Becky, who was on the hospital's roof. To add to the absurdity, an alarm clock goes off moments later, awakening Criquette. Her chirpy mood turns to horror when she realizes that everyone died. And then a beam falls on her. They (almost) all got better.
* The first-season finale of ''{{Supernatural}}''. Unfortunately, [[DeathIsCheap death is not cheap]], but fortunately the show does have [[IGotBetter four more seasons.]]
* ''{{Frasier}}''. In a variation on this, Niles got so upset at Frasier's over-directing a radio play in ''Ham Radio'', he decided to take action.
-->'''Niles:''' Dr. Niles Crane: Okay, that's it. Never mind all that. I'm just going to take this gun off the table. ''(fake gunshot)'' So long, O'Toole; I guess we'll never get to hear your fascinating piece of the puzzle. ''(two fake gunshots)'' Or yours, Kragan and Peppo! Could the Mc Callister sisters stand back to back? I'm a little short on bullets. ''(fake gunshot)'' Thank you. ''(to Roz)'' What was your name again, dear?
-->'''Roz:''' Mithuth Thorndyke. ''(fake gunshot)''
-->'''Niles:''' Thank you. Oh, and also Mr. Wing. ''(fake gunshot, and sound of muted bell on Mr. Wing's hat)'' And, of course, one final bullet for myself, so the mystery will die with me. ''(fake gunshot. Niles taunts Frasier)'' HA.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:{{Music}}]]
* The Trees by Rush
** At the end of the song, both factions (the Oaks and the Maples) have been literally cut down by hatchet, axe, and saw, leaving no tree standing.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:NewMedia]]
* [[http://albruno3.com Ab3]]'s "Binder of Shame" includes an anecdote entitled "The Day I Killed The Entire Party Before The First Combat Encounter", involving an incident with a character's motorcycle.
* [[DragonballZAbridged Stupid monkeys hit by falling rocks. Hahahaha! PS Frieza rules.]] It's actually not too far off from what really happened in the show...
[[/folder]]
[[folder:NewspaperComics]]
* Jason does this to Paige in one ''FoxTrot'' strip, purely to annoy her. After a week's worth of strips setting up the game, Jason causes the cave to collapse and kill the entire party after Paige's ''very first turn''.
-->'''Jason''': Their bodies will remain buried for ''[rolls dice]'' ''84 centuries!''
** This could also be a reference to the classical adventure "TombOfHorrors" where yes, the very first door in the beginning paragraph has a collapsing trap that can kill you. And Bill Amend is [[OneOfUs very definitely enough of a geek]] to reference it.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:TabletopGames]]
* Steve Jackson Games's ''{{Toon}}'' actually has a table of 'Apocalyptic Big Finishes', for when the characters don't quite make it to the end and you need a quick way to end things. Of course, no-one dies, but the principle's the same.
** Steve Jackson Games's ''Munchkin'' card game features a card that's actually called [[RocksFallEveryoneDies Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies]]. It can cause [[TotalPartyKill every player in the game to be killed]] if played at the right time.
* Years ago, TSR (then-owner of D&D) published ''The Apocalypse Stone'', a module ''deliberately designed for [=DMs=] that want to do this.'' In it, the players steal a [[MacGuffin MacGuffin]] that triggers the end of the world. They can undertake quests to prove they are worthy to [[HeroicSacrifice die heroically]], but in the canonical ending, can't really do anything to prevent the world from imploding. However, the book included several cop-out scenarios to save things at the last minute in case the DM gets cold feet (or is being threatened with death himself...)
** The express purpose of this was to clean up everybody's campaigns for Third Edition. Likewise the wonderfully named ''Die Vecna Die.''
*** TombOfHorrors! This can happen ''when you first open the door to enter the tomb!'' (And is probably the trope-namer...)
**** This troper remembers a module for Ravenloft designed to be played by fist-level characters, where the first place in the plot has a splintery front door... knocking, opening, closing, or even passing through the door (which is necessary for the plot) can do 1-4 points of damage to a character. This is only notable since magic-user characters have 1-4 hit points at level one. This was rumored once to have Total Party Killed a gaming group who entirely liked playing mages.
* In the ''CallOfCthulhu'' boardgame ''Arkham Horror'', the players race to seal gates opening in the town of Arkham before a Great Old One (randomly decided at the start of the game) awakens and they have to fight it. If the Great Old One threatening to awaken is Azathoth, however, the players ''[[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt automatically and instantly lose]]'' if he awakens.
* The magnificently awful (except [[SoBadItsHorrible without the "magnificent"]]) tabletop RPG ''{{FATAL}}'' has for the highest level caster [[strike:class]] ''job'' the spell F.A.T.A.L., which kills everything on whichever horrible planet the game is set... obviously including the caster and his fellow party members. Now, if only all their campaigns started that way...
** But ''{{FATAL}}'' is also a real-world example. By including spells like that game-breaking one -- or other spells giving one the abilities to substitute acid or poison for delicate bodily fluids, or rules regarding anal circumference, or horrifically the possibility for a character with an Intelligence statistic below a certain score to have "retard strength" -- it basically IS the rocks falling on its own playability.
* This is the typical ending of many ''{{Paranoia}}'' missions where the players have somehow managed against all odds to squeak through with some of their backup clones intact. Actually, speaking of those clones, sometimes this is how the mission ''starts''.
* Board Game example: Risk. With its complicated rules, long playtime, and quirky mechanics, more often than not the players will get fed up and put the game up, possibly to never be attempted again. Nick-named "Arm-ageddon" since this usually involves one particularly irate player sweeping the pieces off the board in anger.
* The CollectibleCardGame version of ''OverTheEdge'' had a card called the "Rain Of Walrus", which was ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin. Walruses fall, almost everyone dies.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:VideoGames]]
* The NES game ''Advanced Dungeons & Dragons: Heroes of the Lance.'' It can happen randomly to whatever character you're playing (except Tasslehoff, who can disarm the rock traps). Also, after you defeat the final boss, well... it turns out that it was a LoadBearingBoss, and instead of a single rock trap, there are enough giant hunks of stone falling from the ceiling to easily invoke this trope.
* The ending to ''NeverwinterNights2'', not counting the expansion pack.
**At least the expansion explained that ''some'' of the party survived... But alas, not the best one, [[spoiler:''Grobnar''. Not for his combat skills (minimal) or his spellcasting (minimal) or even his charming, oblivious humor, (abundant). No, he earns the title of best for one reason: He dies because he tries to save a ''seven-and-a-half foot tall solid iron Blade Golem'' from a falling pillar by shielding it with his own ''4-foot tall body''. BEST. DEATH. EVER.]]
**Likewise ''Gothic I''. On defeating the [[LoadBearingBoss Load Bearing Demon]], the underground temple collapses on top of you. The magical shield around the valley vanishes and everyone is free - but you don't care, because you're ''lying dead under a pile of rocks!'' (Of course, in the sequel it's revealed that a combination of magical armour and a helpful necromancer fixed this for you shortly afterward.)
**Icewind Dale 1 ''starts'' the game this way (although a bit subverted): The characters are traveling in a caravan. Then RocksFallEveryoneDies - except for the characters.
* If ''[[NetHack NetHack]]'' encounters a fatal bug, the last message it gives you is "Suddenly, the dungeon collapses..."
** This is also used in (if memory serves) the "screen" terminal emulator. [[{{}} Try it next time you boot Slackware.]]
***[[http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=screen.git;a=blob;f=src/attacher.c#l609 Here it is in screen]] - there's a whole pile of [=NetHack=]-inspired messages [[http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=screen.git;a=blob;f=src/nethack.c;h=585dc4376c68caec50fccd8c42da5422faf0dafb;hb=HEAD here]], but the dungeon collapsing one is used even if the rest are not enabled. [[http://nethack.wikia.com/wiki/End.c#line271 And here it is in [=NetHack=].]] Isn't open source great?
** In a straightforward example, attempting to exploit now fixed bugs (such as item duping) will result in the players death, for "trickery".
* In {{ADOM}}, kicking a staircase can train your strength stat. Or cause the whole dungeon to collapse on you.
* The ending to [[MegaMan Mega Man 3]]. Sorta.
* When people first starting raiding Gruul the Dragonkiller in ''{{World of Warcraft}}: The Burning Crusade'', the most commonly repeated strategy in regards to the fight was "Rocks fall, everyone dies," which many discovered was a surprisingly accurate descriptor whilst still learning the encounter.
* GuildWars: ''Eye of the North'': In some places in the Far Shiverpeaks, avalanches can happen that can kill your whole party. Luckily, you don't get Death Penalty for death by environment.
* ''CallOfDuty 4'': Shock and Awe.
** Following that, in Modern Warfare 2, a 25 kill streak grants you a Tactical Nuke that is essentially: "Guy using nuke wins"
[[/folder]]
[[folder:{{Webcomics}}]]
* A wonderful ''[[SomethingPositive Something*Positive]]'' strip that illustrates a proper usage of the idea, and is often misbelieved to be the trope namer. [[http://www.somethingpositive.net/sp05032002.shtml She had it coming]].
* In the ''VGCats'' comic [[http://www.vgcats.com/comics/?strip_id=110 Skittles]], a game-mastering Aeris performs what could be considered justifiable RocksFallEveryoneDies.
* The [[GameMaster Dungeon Master]] decides that RocksFallEveryoneDies in [[http://www.shamusyoung.com/twentysidedtale/?p=1165 this strip]] of ''The DM of the Rings''. He apparently changes his mind though, as they're all fine in the next page.
** "Rocks fall, everyone dies" [[MemeticMutation has become]] GM shorthand for "stop whatever it is you're doing before I lose my last shred of patience and kill you all" over the years.
*** Similarly, if a lone player/character is the cause of the problems, the GM may threaten him with "Purple Lightning form the Heavens" rather than doom everybody.
**** This troper has always used a "bolt from the blue", as inspired by the time Doctor Doom gained godlike power and basically used it to kill off two dozen super-heroes with a single massive lightning bolt ([[IGotBetter they got better]]).
* Used as a response to... let's call it "criticism", of 4th edition D&D in [[http://www.ctrlaltdel-online.com/comic.php?d=20080609 this strip]] of ''CtrlAltDel''.
--> '''GM:''' An illithid appears and forces the cleric to tear out his own spine. The illithid then feasts on the cleric's brain. The cleric is dead. Forever. Rest of the party is fine.
* Long explanation: in the ''{{Hellsing}}'' fan webcomic ''AndShineHeavenNow'', there is an explanation on why a sequel to a certain piece of classic fantasy/fairy-tale literature should not be read, unlike thie first one (The Princess and the Goblin). The reason given is this trope's name. The second character assumes that merely there are {{Wall Banger}}s aplenty... but the Bookworm Vampire says that this is a literal description.
*A ''DarthsAndDroids'' alternate strip in which the GM finally has enough of Qui-Gon's continual attempts to "cast SummonBiggerFish". [[http://www.darthsanddroids.net/episodes/0208.html Fish fall. Everyone dies]].
* In a storyline of ''IrregularWebcomic'', everyone died, due to a multiple catastrophic universal collapse. ''Everyone''. Luckily, [[IGotBetter they got better]].
* [[http://www.thewotch.com/?epDate=2008-10-21 This]] strip from TheWotch features the individual variant.
* [[http://www.galactanet.com/comic/view.php?strip=440 This]] strip of Casey And Andy also features the individual variant.
** See also [[http://www.galactanet.com/comic/view.php?strip=513 this]] strip.
* [[InvokedTrope Invoked]] by [[SignificantAnagram Parson Gotti]] of ''{{Erfworld}}'' in [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/erf0149.html this page]] and the pages preceding it. He wins a game that he has deduced to be basically [[TheKobayashiMaru unwinnable]] by [[UnusualEuphemism uncroaking]] an extinct volcano causing... well, you know the rest.
* That's how many people think that EightBitTheater will end.
* ''AbsurdNotions'' shows a genuine [[TotalPartyKill party-killing]] deathtrap in [[http://www.absurdnotions.org/page38.html this strip]].
*EmergencyExit has one when [[http://eecomics.net/?strip_id=504 the final boss of the RPG is killed in one hit.]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:RealLife]]
* Pompeii.
* Alberta's Frank Slide
* The Cretaceous. Any - and I mean any - documentary on dinosaurs is guaranteed to end like this:
** TyrannosaurusRex looks up.
** Meteor falls.
** Everyone dies. (Except the mammals. And the birds.) (And the blue-green algae)
***And don't forget the obligatory shot of a mouse climbing out of a T-Rex skull.
[[/folder]]
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