->'''Solidus:''' I'll leave you alive, Jack, because you're still manipulable!
->'''Fortune:''' Speaking of manipulation, it's time for me to steal Arsenal since I've been manipulating you from the start!
->'''Solidus:''' Actually, I tricked Ocelot into manipulating you into manipulating me!
->'''Ocelot:''' Fools! I've been manipulating everything from behind the scenes!
->'''Magic Hand:''' But actually, ''I've'' been manipulating ''you''!
->'''Raiden:''' Alright, this has officially become a load of crap. \\
-- '''Toastyfrog''', ''MetalGearSolid 2 [[http://www.gamespite.net/toastywiki/index.php/Site/ThumbnailMetalGearSolid2-05 thumbnail theatre]]''
->What game is this? Where every player on the board claims the same pawn?
--> Raziel, LegacyOfKain Defiance.
The good guys' plan seems to be playing right into the hands of the BigBad. But TheHero realized that something was bound to go wrong, and secretly enlisted the aid of [[TheStarscream a secondary villain who would just love to take over as the Big Bad]]. But when the big moment comes, he sides with the Big Bad after all... oops! No, that's actually the hero's girlfriend in disguise, so she can get close enough to the Big Bad to finish him off. But then where is the other villain? Turns out he's off putting the real plan into action... but what's this? It would seem he's got more than one betrayal on his mind. Fortunately, the hero's best friend, who everyone thought was in a coma, was keeping a close eye on him the whole time...
Every once in a while, it seems like every character is trying to run a XanatosGambit at the same time, generally on everyone else, all while the SpannerInTheWorks [[DidntSeeThatComing messes it up more.]] When all these convoluted plans are put into motion at once, the storyline is thrown into chaos and even the most GenreSavvy fans can't predict how it will all end, resulting in a massive ThirtyXanatosPileup. Expect lots of IKnowYouKnowIKnow. Expect a lot of people to be OutGambitted.
A Thirty Xanatos Pileup always involves two or more people with completely separate agendas. Compare [[XanatosRoulette Xanatos Roulette]], where one person has an overly complex plan.
Be prepared to make a flow diagram to keep up with everyone's scheme.
Psychological thrillers are more likely to have these. Part of what makes them interesting are these "scheme battles."
The name of this trope comes from the inevitable result of a NASCAR race at [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talladega_Superspeedway Talladega]] or [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daytona_International_Speedway Daytona]]: someone puts a wheel wrong, then hits another car, producing a thirty car pileup, a scene of chaos only surpassed by a collision of Xanatos Gambits. (Note that neither version necessarily needs to involve anywhere near thirty units, but [[RuleOfCool it just sounds cooler to say it that way.]])
Compare IKnowYouKnowIKnow.
----
!!Examples
[[foldercontrol]]
[[folder: Anime and Manga]]
* ''DeathNote'', it's basically over 40 episodes of Xanatos [[ThisIsYourPremiseOnDrugs on crack]]. Despite being 37 episodes long.
* ''LiarGame'' is interesting with Akiyama vs Yokoya in the third round (the smuggling game). Expect future action between these two in the fourth round.
* ''GhostInTheShellStandAloneComplex'' probably counts, considering that [[ViewersAreGeniuses you have to keep up with what's going on all on your own]].
** The second season even more, considering that [[spoiler:towards the end the villain starts to accidentally play into his own fake roulette, the secondary antagonist turns his intended defeat at the hands of the BigBad into [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence Ascension To Higher Plane Of Existence]] and ''both'' are foiled by a bunch of [[SpannerInTheWorks Spanners In The Works]] doing their own thing against everybody's expectations.]] Whew.
* The storyline of ''TsubasaReservoirChronicle'' has driven so far past this point that it is approaching it a second time, to the point that one troper has actually started making a chart about who's plotting against whom to keep things straight- not that it helps much, given that 201 chapters in and ''its still not clear''. Here's a tip at how convoluted it is. [[spoiler: There is only one person in the initial party who is ''not'' a spy. That person is not Princess Sakura.]]
** The fans aren't the only ones who mess up trying to figure things out. By chapter 230, it begins to look like the villain wasn't exactly on top of things- it appears that his ludicrously complex XanatosRoulette to save a loved one's life from death by HeroicSacrifice is, in fact, what caused her to HeroicSacrifice. And it is entirely likely that ''somebody'' planned this.
* ''End of {{Evangelion}}'' features [[spoiler:Keel's plan to Instrumentality perfect mankind by fusing all human souls into one entity being hijacked by Gendo, whose plan to resurrect his dead wife is hijacked by Rei, who wants to give the person she cares for the most, Shinji control over whether or not to have TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt, ''all'' of which may have been planned by Yui and Fuyutsuki ten years earlier.(Or not.)]] Sheesh!
* There's rarely a major event in ''CodeGeass'' that doesn't involve several different groups or individuals trying to manipulate things.
** Example: the Chinese Federation arc from the second season. [[spoiler:Britannia wants to manipulate the CF for its own ends (which may include goals known only to the Emperor himself). The eunuchs who lead the CF want to gain more power and wealth by marrying their figurehead empress to a Britannian prince. Li Xingke, loyal to the Empress, wants to manipulate the Black Knights into helping him take down the eunuchs. And through all this, Lelouch/Zero wants to get the Empress and CF on his side in his battle with Britannia. Of course, Lelouch (and by extension, Xingke) win in the end.]]
** Example: During the next-to-last arc, [[spoiler: Schneizel's bid for the throne kicks off, while his father advances his decades-running RageAgainstTheHeavens plot into its final stages, while the Black Knights leadership turns on Zero (without telling the UFN or China) while Lelouch makes a last attempt on his immortal father, while ''Marianne'', who is ''dead'', [[BodySnatcher shows up in someone else's body]] to put her piece into the game. And they are already intefering with each other, since we have all three Britannian factions fighting.]]
** In fact, the conclusion of the show itself seems to be turning into a ThirtyXanatosPileup as the separate and intricate machinations of Lelouch, the Emperor, Schneizel, Suzaku, the Black Knights, and even C.C. and [[spoiler:Lelouch's dead mother Marianne]] all barrel towards each other at breakneck speeds.
** I've heard the plot of ''Code Geass'' described as a train wreck where they just keep sending more trains. It gets even more complicated due to the number of characters that switch sides over the course of the show and the underlying moral ambiguity of both sides, making it hard to distinguish between a HeelFaceTurn and a FaceHeelTurn at times.
** It doesn't help that a few characters [[spoiler: who apparently died return alive and well]], so you never know what to expect.
* ''LegendOfGalacticHeroes''. The whole damn thing. Yes, it's a bigger pile up than DeathNote. [[LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters All the characters]] have their own individual unique agenda which ''does'' come to fruition and ''does'' affect the rest of the story. And it goes on for ''110 episodes''.
* ''FullmetalAlchemist'' just gave 4 good guy chessmasters 6 months to plan against the BBEG's culmination of a Xanatos Roulette that began by founding an entire nation that is bigger than any other in the setting currently. The number of smart and powerful pieces and tools each side has boggles the mind.
* The various [[TheChessmaster Chessmasters]] in ''{{Gundam 00}}'' are locked in a covert struggle to determine who gets to mold the future of the world into their ideal design, with the constantly-unfolding [[MyDeathIsJustTheBeginning posthumous]] XanatosRoulette of their centuries-deceased predecessor (a plan several of the aforementioned schemers hijacked for their own ends, with mixed results) contributing to the already convoluted web of machinations for which the original planner may have already planned for. It doesn't make it any easier when several of the key characters on all sides of the conflict all believe themselves to be carrying out the original plan.
* ''DetectiveConan'', volume 26. [[spoiler:Dr. Araide's was to make out with Ran, which was ripped apart by Shinichi showing up. Heiji was planning on showing up, dressed as Shinichi, to help him out of Ran's suspicions. This was ruined by Kazuha, who ended up the SpannerInTheWorks. Haibara's was to have her dress up as his little kid identity, while he tried the prototype antidote, to allude suspicion. Sonoko's, which was spur of the moment, was to get Ran and Shinichi to hook up. This ended up being ruined by the murder. Ran's was using any occurrences to her advantage to get Shinichi to confess, though it wasn't planned out. This was ruined by Haibara's plan. Shinichi was, if you listen to the fans, going to propose to Ran, but this was ruined by the murder. And the second murderer's plans were ruined by Shinichi.]]
** Actually, Gosho Aoyama lives for this trope, it seems. Three of Aoyama's works that coincide seem to have a plot that goes like this: Yaiba comes in trying to learn to be a better swordsman, which earns him an oni-enemy out of the series' {{Big Bad}}, who is plotting to kill Yaiba, so Yaiba decides to get stronger, which involves a scene VS Kaitou KID in an epic {{It Was All A Dream}}, while KID [[spoiler: is trying to find a jewel that the Black Org killed his father over so he could destroy it,]] who are currently plotting to kill Shinichi, who is trying to get the antidote from Haibara, who wants to not be discovered by any more people. This only gets more complicated when you add in KID's Friendly Foes, [[spoiler: one purely curious about why KID does it and the other is {{The Zenigata}} and the father of KID's love interest, plus a witch who wants to take over the world by making all of its men fall in love with her, who seems to have connections to Yaiba's rival.]] There also might be future crossing over with Aoyama's baseball series, which will officially make this troper want to give Hakuba a magical get-a-clue stick. Or possibly give Heiji an auto-blocking sword.
* ''{{Demonbane}}'' has a surprising lack of Chessmasters, considering that there are no less than five different Xanatos Gambits going on throughout the series, some of which are so insane that one wonders how they even ''thought'' of their ultimate goals: [[spoiler:[[ManipulativeBastard Vespasianus]] does a lengthy Xanatos Gambit to take control of Cthulu that nobody's even aware of until it fails, which was undone as part of two Xanatos Gambits: One by a book to revive Cthulu, and one by [[TheChessmaster Augustus]] (really an avatar of Nyarlathotep) to ''become Cthulu's heart'' so that he would have absolute control over Cthulu. Then we have [[ArchEnemy Master]] [[OmnicidalManiac Therion]], who's powering up [[TheChosenOne Kurou]] (really an avatar of Nyarlathotep) so that he can kill him ''65 million years before he's born''. And of course, in the background, we have [[TheWoobie Ennea]] manipulating both sides so that the next time the universe is reborn so that the [[CrapsackWorld Crapsack Universe]] isn't quite so crapsack, and finally [[MagnificentBastard Nyarlathotep]], who's been manipulating ''everyone'' since ''before the dawn of time'' as part of a plan to unleash [[CosmicHorror Azathoth]], who will immediately undo all existence, including Nyarlathotep.]] Of all of them, only one manages to succeed, and it only manages to succeed in an alternate universe.
* The ''RomanceOfTheThreeKingdoms'' [[PerspectiveFlip reinterpretation]] ''The Ravages of Time'' outdoes just about every other example on this list, with the main characters coming up with incredibly complex, multilayered plans, that often predict each others steps with incredible accuracy, to the point where the characters seem literally psychic. Even the MINOR characters come up with what would normally be seen as competent strategies, but for the more important ones, it gets to the point where you swear that they have to be psychic or able to see into the future. You literally have whole arcs where it's completely a back and forth between plans, with one stategist predicting the other strategist predicting him predicting them etc. It eventually gets so confusing and hard to believe that ThisTroper finally gave up in dismay.
* The end of the Yellow Chapter of ''[[{{Pokemon}} Pokémon Special]]'' started with villainous {{Xanatos Gambit}}s, continued into some ''heroic'' {{Xanatos Roulette}}s, and after [[spoiler:Giovanni's apparent BigDamnHeroes moment]] actually turned out to be part of Lance's plan and Yellow somehow managing to outwit him, this troper finally asked, "Is there anyone in this manga ''not'' playing XanatosSpeedChess?!"
** Trust me, some of it gets crazier later on. Suffice it to say ''everyone'' gets to play XanatosSpeedChess at some point - even [[strike:Guile Hideout]] ''[[spoiler:[[IdiotHero GOLD]] disguised as Guile Hideout]]''!
* ''MiraiNikki''. When you've got 12 people, all armed with diaries that can predict the future, trying to kill each other to [[AGodAmI become a god]] and forming alliances with each other to acheive their goals, the story gets a little hard to follow.
* MahouSenseiNegima seems to have at ''least'' three separate large-scale conspiracies going on, with potential for several more to be present (and that's not counting the ones that existed in the flashbacks, and may still be present). Naturally, Negi and his family end up at the center of all of them, causing them to crash into each other.
* Bleach. Oh my GOD Bleach. To be fair, as of present only [[spoiler: Urahara and Aizen]] seem to be going all-out, but EVERYONE seems to have their fingers in a pie and a secret to keep, even [[spoiler: Ichigo's [[ObfuscatingStupidity secretly]] [[Really700YearsOld a shinigami]] [[BumblingDad father]]]]. And everyone does seem to be jumping in with an 'ah-hah, but you weren't expecting THIS!' This pileup first appeared in the Seireitei arc. And it's STILL GETTING WORSE.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Comics]]
* A storyline in ''{{Nodwick}}'', which started with the heroes' attempt to stop an Orc Invasion of two kingdoms, turned into one of these for comedic effect. Especially when revealed that every person in the palace was attempting to control the kingdom one way or another. [[http://nodwick.humor.gamespy.com/gamespyarchive/index.php?date=2008-08-20]]
-->'''Nodwick:''' Piffany, we'll have even ''more'' conspirators to add to the chart.\\
'''Piffany:''' Oh, I gave up when Jules arrived. I'm just going to draw some duckies and bunnies for a while.
** And that exchange came after our heroes learned that [[spoiler:everyone in the krutzing KINGDOM had some sort of plan in the works or in motion.]]
* This is most Silver Age ''Superman'' comics.
** Those Silver Age Superman's plots/hoaxes are probably really Super-style BatmanGambit.
* The comic of ''{{Transformers}}: BeastWars''. Not so much in the show (though certainly there too, to some degree), but if you add in the comics you've got probably about thirty people all scheming to their own ends. Looking at it as a whole, you've got Dinobot planning his stuff, mostly trying to keep the golden disks from Megatron, There's Megatron trying to flip the whole of Cybertronian history, there's Tarantulas, who, at the end, you're not entirely sure WHAT side he was on, there's Blackarachnia, who basically schemes whatever way suits her, there's Terrorsaur, who's basically this era's Starscream, only incompetent, Starscream himself comes in for an episode, and schemes as only he can, Ravage, in the end of the second and through most of the third season, The Tripredacus council, and you can bet each of them is a Xanatos on their own. Throwing in the comics, you add Magmatron, Ravage, again, a guy named Shokaract who unknowingly works for yet another Xanatos... I mean... holy hell, it's a wonder anyone's plan worked...
** I just counted, that's 15 Xanatos' and I'm pretty sure I missed someone... I think it's just an inherent part of Predacons to scheme and manipulate, so long as they're more intelligent than someone like Scorpinok.
*** It's all according to Primus's Grand Design... which he's executing in 15 quadraillion divergent universes ''in parallel'' while his arch-enemy battles him across the same 15 quadrillion universes by time-traveling therough them one-by-one ''in sequence''.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Film]]
* All there is to the film ''Heist''.
* The climax of ''{{Curse of the Golden Flower}}'' after a couple [[TheReveal Reveal-bombs]] are dropped ends up being something like this, with several different plots (sometimes literally) crashing into each other, including some that seemingly come out of nowhere.
* The first two ''{{Pirates of the Caribbean}}'' movies show signs of this. The third one simply explodes with it.
** This particular troper can follow the third movie only until the scene where ''The Black Pearl'' changes owners about five times in thirty seconds (where half the cast suddenly reveal they've been plotting against everyone else for the ''Pearl''). Beyond that, he has ''no'' hope of following who's manipulating who for what.
** This is probably why the third one is [[YourMileageMayVary so heavily debated]] -- people didn't expect to have to think about the plot.
** Summed up more or less by Will in the first one:
--->'''Elizabeth:''' Whose side is Jack on?\\
'''Will:''' At the moment?
*** Of course, it's quite easy to tell who's side Jack is on. [[ChaoticNeutral He's on Jack's side.]]
** All this, keep in mind, with several characters whose whole job is to explain the plot. The cutaway in the three-way duel where the pirates try to work out the various motivations was a high point of the series in this troper's opinion.
** This trooper saw [-PC3-] probably 10 times, without understanding it, but after seeing [-PC2-] once more, it all fit.
*** I guess {{YourMileageMayVary}}. I understood the third without seeing any of the first two.
** Not to mention Jack's little vote...pure brilliance.
* ''The Lady From Shanghai'' begins with a discussion of how there are no tough guys, only people with an edge and people without one. Everybody thinks they're playing everyone else. The lead curses himself throughout the movie for being such a XanatosSucker.
* ''TheBigLebowski''. A trophy wife and her nihilist friends stage a kidnapping to squeeze money out of her rich husband to pay off a porn kingpin. The titular husband gives Dude Lebowski an empty briefcase to give the "kidnappers" while he pockets the ransom money, expecting Dude to screw up to cover his tracks. Various other characters wander into the pileup, including a teenage car thief and Lebowski's angry ultra-feminist daughter, and HilarityEnsues.
** Pretty much any film by the Coen Brothers, the most recent being ''Burn After Reading'', fits this trope.
* ''{{Snatch}}''. Made particularly amusing by the fact that [[spoiler: the only two characters who had absolutely no idea about the existence of the diamond that prompted so many characters to try and come up with so many {{Xanatos Gambit}}s are the ones who end up with it at the end.]]
* ''TheCourtJester'' was noted by many critics then and now as having an incredibly complicated plot for a '50s comedy, with a bunch of people who all have their own agendas getting in the way of or accidentally assisting each other.
** To expand the example: During the bulk of the film, there are three to four {{Xanatos Gambit}}s going on at any given moment. The rebels want the key to the secret passage that will let them attack the castle, the princess wants to marry for love, several nobles want more power by having other nobles assassinated, and there's a witch with hypnotic powers who just wants to stay alive. Unfortunately, due to said hypnotic powers, the protagonist is unaware of all but one of these for most of the film.
*** Meanwhile, Griswold and the King are among the most straightforward: Griswold simply wants to marry the (allegedly) beautiful princess and the King want's his daughter to marry Griswold to gain a strong ally who'll help him cling on to the throne. Oh, and the King is also trying to get personal with Maid Jean who herself is trying to avoid this while keeping the baby heir safe as well as everyone else on track.
* ''What's Up Doc.'' Smith is chasing Jones, the hotel detective and the rich lady and the mobsters are chasing the jewels, Barbra Streisand (Judy) is chasing Ryan O'Neil (Howard), Howard and Hugh are competing for Austin Pendleton's fellowship, and it all culminates in a ChaseScene throughout SanFrancisco. Seriously, watch it.
* ''{{Primer}}''. The goals and plans of [[spoiler:5-6 iterations of]] Aaron and Abe are nearly impossible to keep track of.
* ''DownWithLove''.
* Not sure if this counts as film per se, but [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SB041MXW1Rw The Bloody Olive]].
* ''{{House of Flying Daggers}}'' is a tangled web of intrigue in which pretty much everyone is found to be secretly deceiving or plotting against pretty much everyone else.
**Zhang Yimou's previous movie, ''{{Hero}}'', was even worse about this.
* The plot of [[GetShorty Get Shorty]] rapidly escalates into a Thirty Xanatos Pileup, and remains one until the final resolution; that's really the whole appeal of the movie.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Literature ]]
* Every {{Raymond Chandler}} story. Ever.
* In ''{{Animorphs}}'' book 53: The Answer, [[spoiler: Jake uses the auxiliary Animorphs, and the U.S. National Guard to distract Visser Three, so he can sneak above the Pool Ship. Or so Visser Three thinks. ''Actually'', Jake is relying on him to believe that, so he doesn't realize that Jake and the other Animorphs are '''already''' aboard the ship, with help from Tom, who wants Visser Three dead himself, and plan on fighting him with the help of the free Taxxons. '''''But''''', Tom decides to betray Jake to Visser Three at the last moment, which Jake saw coming and avoided dying with help from the Chee, who Tom and Visser Three didn't even know existed.]] Yeah.
* The entire oeuvre of FyodorDostoevsky. Dostoevsky is likely the most famous pioneer of the ThirtyXanatosPileup. The stupendously complex mindgames played by nearly every character in ''TheBrothersKaramazov'' require several readings and maybe a college course to comprehend at the basic level. ''[[Literature/CrimeAndPunishment Crime and Punishment]]'' plays similar games starring Porifiry Petrovich, whose mindbending "Ah, but [[IKnowYouKnowIKnow if you knew that I knew that one of us was to know"]] arguments drive Raskolnikov to confession and the reader "seven versts" (4½ miles) from St. Petersburg, to a mental institution referenced in the book.
* The [[strike:first three or so]] original ''{{Dune}}'' novels have this. Who is manipulating whom? Everyone and everyone, respectively.
* The philosophical themes of ''{{War and Peace}}'' suggest that history is not so clean, not specific causes and effects, because everyone is in on the massive ThirtyXanatosPileup that is the clusterfuck of history.
* ''SecondApocalypse'' has master manipulator Kellhus trying to outwit master manipulator Moënghus, while various lesser schemers and an AncientConspiracy make things even more complicated. More discreet schemers may turn up in later revelations.
* RobertAntonWilson and Robert Shea's ''{{Illuminatus}}!'' trilogy, whose whole ''point'' is a Twenty-Three Thousand Xanatos Pileup in the ConspiracyKitchenSink.
* James Clavell's ''{{Shogun}}'': Oh, where should we even ''begin?'' The five members of the Council of Regents are all scheming to displace one another and seize ultimate power as Shogun; Toranaga and Ishido are both trying to manipulate their fellow Councilors into doing the other in over a personal rivalry; the Regent Mother is trying to keep them all divided in order to ensure that her son Yaemon follows in the Taiko's footsteps; Kasigi Yabu is plotting against Toranaga in order to get his spot on the Council as a stepping-stone to his own road to the Shogunate; his nephew Kasigi Omi is, in turn, plotting to overthrow his uncle and take over leadership of the clan; the traditional ''daimyo'' are at odds with their Catholic counterparts who are backed by the Jesuits; and the Jesuits themselves are struggling to keep trade open between Japan and the Portuguese colonies and continue to permit their proselytizing while arming the Christian peasantry in preparation for an expected Catholic invasion from the Philippines. [[SpannerInTheWorks Enter John Blackthorne...]]
* ''ChroniclesOfAmber''. To the point where after any given ten pages of the book, the reader ends up realizing, "Wow! Everything I knew was wrong! Again!" (It doesn't help that they're ''all'' [[AGodAmI immortal demigods]] and most of them [[ScrewTheRulesIMakeThem play by their own rules.)]]
* The entire plot of ''[[LoisMcMasterBujold A Civil Campaign]]'' is basically one of these, as the back cover quote suggests.
-->Miles has a cunning plan... Unfortunately [[spoiler: his clone-brother Mark]] and his cousin Ivan also have cunning plans.
** The entirety of ''The Warrior's Apprentice'' is ''built'' out of [[XanatosGambit Xanatos Gambits]]. Miles [[spoiler:starts out by convincing, under the effect of what is called 'creme de meth', a desperate jumpship pilot that he's looking for a few desperate men for his (imaginary) mercenary outfit. From there he recruits a military deserter, his personal sergeant and sergeant's daughter, and an even more desperate man trying to get weapons through a blockade of ''real'' mercenaries to his warring government (who turns out to be broke). Through sheer insane, lying chutzpah and a lot of luck, Miles manages to take over the ''entire fleet'', all 3,000 people of them, reverse the war, and get out alive with a profit, though he has to use most of it to pay off the debts he incurred by this excursion in the first place.]] And keep in mind, he's ''seventeen''.
** ''The Vor Game'' deserves mention, too, for the way Cavilo gets into a Thirty Xanatos Pileup...with ''herself''.
* If you thought ''{{Dune}}'' was complicated, you really need to read ''The Dosadi Experiment''. You more or less have 800 million people, all of which are currently invovled in some form of XanatosRoulette against everyone else.
* The Ender and Shadow series by OrsonScottCard, especially the latter. Everyone is plotting for power or position or familial recognition or SOMETHING. Some plotters don't even seem to know what they're plotting for but they do know they're good at it!
* If you thought the movie adaptation of ''LAConfidential'' was complicated, it has nothing on James Ellroy's novel. All kinds of different schemes involving pornography, heroin, murder, and the mob all collide together, and meanwhile three cops are unknowingly all investigating the entire thing. ''White Jazz'' is pretty much the same, but squeezed into half the space by the removal of every single word Ellroy considered the slightest bit extraneous at the request of his publisher.
* Most of {{Isaac Asimov}}'s works can be considered big Xanatos Pileups. In fact, literally the entirety of his amalgamated universe (from ''The Complete Robot'' through the ''Empire'' series to ''Foundation and Earth'') tells the story of R. Daneel Olivaw's enormous plots to [[spoiler:aid humanity, going through planetary rebellions (a LOT of them), the foundation of an Empire that eventually collapses to make way for a Foundation plan, that itself makes way for a utopian Second Empire and the union of all minds in the galaxy. The entire timeline encompasses over 30,000 years of human history and requires more Xanatos Gambits than you can shake a stick at.]] Phew.
* The ''{{Malazan Book of the Fallen}}'' series. It would be simpler to list those major characters and groups that ''don't'' have some sort of master plan working.
* Scott Lynch's ''[[GentlemanBastard The Lies Of Locke Lamora]]'' and especially its sequel, ''Red Seas Under Red Skies''. Perhaps justified given that the main characters are highly-skilled con men and that the series has been described as a 'fantasy OceansEleven'.
* Every RobertLudlum novel (excluding posthumous and co-written works).
* ''HonorHarrington'' has this trope coming true now with the Star Empire of Manticore, the Andermanni Empire, minor allied partners the Haven Republic, the Solarian League, a dozen or so random neutralish planets and especially Mesa and each of them being subdivided into different factions. Mesa's plans really went off the rails when the Winton family was able to build up a large enough navy to fight off the Peoples of Haven preventing their original plan of Haven forming a pocket empire. Along the way the military technology of the Haven Sector combined with their economic clout mean the Solarian League can't expand too far in that direction without butting heads. Differing OFS Governors have different plans. Some of them in line with Mesa, some of them desperately trying to cut off Mesa. Let's not get started WMG on the Core Worlds of the SL like Beowulf...
* Also done to the extreme in ''{{A Conspiracy of Paper}}''. It's starting to get hard to figure out who ''isn't'' manipulating the main character...
* In the ''[[StarWars Corellian Trilogy]]'', [[spoiler:the Sacorrian Triad wants to take over the Corellian Sector, Thrackan Sal-Solo wants to do the same as well as make things unpleasant for Cousin Han]], New Republic Intelligence has its own schemes, the Hunchuzuc Den and the Overden are trying to take advantage of the situation to out-play each other, and Leia Solo simply wants to keep the New Republic together, for kriff's sake. And [[spoiler:keep Bovo Yagen's sun from going supernova]].
* The series ''{{A Song of Ice and Fire}}'' is nothing but one long ThirtyXanatosPileup, combining all of the characters' various {{Xanatos Gambit}}s and {{Xanatos Roulette}}s with an AnyoneCanDie setting.
* Used deliberately in the Mickey Spillane novel ''The Twisted Thing''. The killer knows that the murder of a wealthy scientist (done for simple revenge) will lead to everyone else plotting against each other to get their hands on his money, thus obscuring the original crime.
* If there are actually less than 30 different {{Xanatos Gambit}}s going by the various factions in the ''{{Wheel of Time}}'' series, this troper would be surprised.
* Larry Niven has written about entire alien species who do nothing but run Xanatos Gambits;
** In ''A Mote In God's Eye'', the Motie species has evolved into a social order of hive-like clans, where just running a city involves multitudes of contracts, non-aggression pacts and alliances to provide basic services like trash removal and road repair. Eventually, when the population increases to a critical mass, each clan betrays the other to grab the remaining resources, and war breaks out across the entire planet. This cycle has been occurring for over a million years so far.
** The Pak protectors are the smartest organic life in known space. But they are biologically compelled to protect their own bloodline at all cost. So again, any alliance between protectors will last only as long as it benefits all parties. Then they start throwing tailored viruses at each other to remove the competition. The Pak planet is also ravages with war. Protectors make plans that can span over thousands of years, and no 'breeder' minds can hope to follow the layers of plots and counter-plots of a protector's scheme.
** The 'Puppeteers' are a very well named race of self-interested cowards. Each puppeteer is very intelligent, and commonly uses plots and blackmail as legitimate business tools. Internally, their culture has two political parties constantly vying for domanance. Externally, puppeteer attempt to influence all other races found in known space; the Man-Kzin Wars were created to cull out all the more aggressive Kzin to produce a more 'meeker', reasonable population. Puppeteers influenced the human birth lotteries to produce a race of 'luckier' humans, so the puppeteers can 'borrow' human luck for their own purposes. And then there is the case where the core of the galaxy May or May Not be blowing up; it all might be a massive plot to make all the other known space species run away. Then the puppeteers could double back and claim all the life-sustaining worlds for themselves; they have a population of a trillion to think of.
** All three of these examples show off a trait that Niven considers essential for writing a super-human intelligence: they're all tremendously limited in their goals. This tends to make it harder for the aliens in question to TakeAThirdOption, so a plodding merely-human intellect can conceive the plan, since the author doesn't have to scheme in realtime.
* The first third of [[OutboundFlight Survivor's Quest]] has more than a few of these. Luke and Mara Jade Skywalker find that the Empire of the Hand sent a message to them, but the message was stolen and the thief, a mechanic, has disappeared. They track down the source, get it told to them, and fly out to a Chiss ship to be taken to Outbound Flight. There are factions among the Chiss. The "New Republic ambassador" is the mechanic who stole the message. Four stormtroopers and an officer from the Empire of the Hand are there, claiming they were sent as the Skywalkers' escort. A group of aliens show up, claiming to want to pay their respects to Outbound Flight. Then things start happening.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: LiveActionTV ]]
* ''{{Alias}}'' becomes a lot like this in its later seasons, when there's the conspiracy behind the conspiracy, and then there's another conspiracy running for x-ty years no-one else knew about, and so on. Also coupled with a few too many instances of the main characters' allegiances being questioned (in most instances even the ''same'' characters over and over again) in season 4.
* With characters like the Doctor and the Master facing off against one another, it's inevitable that ''DoctorWho'' would have this happen now and then. An early example is "The Evil of the Daleks", which is largely made up of a series of interlocking Xanatos Gambits by the Doctor, Professor Waterfield, and the Dalek Emperor. Upon learning about that last one, a stunned Waterfield summarizes the basic idea in a sentence:
-->'''Waterfield''': While you were doing one thing, they were really making you do another.
** Parodied till it snapped by "The Curse of the Fatal Death". To the point where the first part is nothing but [[XanatosGambit Xanatos Gambits]] being revealed. "I bribed the architect!"
** In ''The Trial of a Time Lord'', [[spoiler:The High Council wanted to cover their tracks, the [[strike:Boneyard]] Valeyard wanted to take over, the Master wanted the [[strike:Farmyard]]Valeyard out of the way, and the Doctor wanted justice to prevail.]]
** The Doctor Who novel ''The Doctor Trap'' has the single greatest ThirtyXanatosPileup in human history.
** Don't forget the 2008 season finale...
* They're slightly less Xanatosy than most examples here, but ''[[BabylonFive Babylon 5]]'' definitely tries. Every major character has at least one major scheme going on that the other races (hell, often the other members of their own race) don't know about.
-->'''G'Kar''': Let me pass on to you the one thing I've learned about this place: No one here is exactly what he appears. Not Mollari, not Delenn, not Sinclair... and not me.
** To give a stab at it, every ambassador has their personal agenda, a possible house/clan agenda and then their government's agenda. Then two SufficientlyAdvancedAliens species show up and use these against each other. The episode ''Signs and Portents'' starts to show the various plans and goals people are working towards with flashbacks 3 seasons later to this episode showing how the plans come to fruition.
** Also note that said SufficientlyAdvancedAliens have likely spent literally [[spoiler:''millions of years'' enacting [[XanatosGambit Xanatos Gambits]] against one another, using what by now probably amounts to hundreds of less advanced species as proxies in a war of ideas that essentially boils down to a dick-waving contest]].
** This actually leads to a rather brilliant WhamEpisode, culminating with [[spoiler:the less advanced races playing their ''own'' XanatosGambit against said SufficientlyAdvancedAliens, luring the two into a massive but pointless engagement to essentially prove the point that the galaxy would be better off without them]].
* Happens once in a while on ''{{Hustle}}''.
* Made fun of in the MontyPython skit about "[[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l6tAW7bbnAU Lemming of the BDA]]".
* ''TheSarahConnorChronicles'' is becoming increasingly complicated, with various players showing up. So far there is: Cameron, the reprogrammed Terminator who is more advanced than others [[spoiler:and may have some hidden programming and/or be defective]]; Cromartie, whose mission is the most straightforward, to kill John Connor; Catherine Weaver, CEO of [=ZieraCorp=] and [[spoiler:a liquid metal Terminator]] who recruits Agent Ellison to find ''another'' Terminator; as well as Sarah and John, who simply want to stop [=SkyNet=] from being made, and then you have the running temporal war between future John Connor's human resistance and [=SkyNet's=] time-hopping Terminators as they each try to foil, subvert, or eliminate each other. Each character seems to have their own plans for the future and we don't even know what most of them are.
** Add ''yet another'' [[spoiler:machine intelligence, hinted to be the ''real'' [=SkyNet=]]], to the mix, and any doubt of this trope being in effect is gone.
**One gambit was actually in play for most of the second season without anyone knowing about it: [[spoiler: Jessie and Riley's gambit to make John distrust Cameron.]] This gambit in turn ''splits'' into two when [[spoiler: Riley realizes that Jessie was trying to get Cameron to kill Riley to force the division between John and Cameon.]]
*** And then splits into three [[spoiler: when it turns out John knew]].
* This pretty much sums up Volumes 3 and 4 of ''Series/{{Heroes}}.''
* ''{{Survivor}}'' has become a veritable ''junkyard'' for this trope, with new players and alliances contributing to the ever-growing heap of wreckage.
** ''Survivor'' is all about the Thirty Xanatos Pileup. When you have 16 or 24 people are competing against one another for a million dollars it's bound to happen, since everyone has their own plan. While in the original seasons there wasn't a lot of it (one player voted people alphabetically and others decided to just use that to their advantage), in later seasons the art of manipulation has changed to the point where you can't get anywhere without lying, backstabbing or plotting. For example:
--> ''Male A'' is in the dominant alliance, but doesn't like ''Male B'' so creates a secret alliance to vote him out.
--> ''Female A'' catches on and tries to warn ''Male B'', but ''Male A'' convinces ''Male B'' that ''Female A'' is trying to tear them apart in order to win
--> ''Male A'' feels more secure with ''Male B'' after they both joined together to vote out''Female A'', leaving his secret alliance in the dust.
-->''Male C'' and ''Female B'' of the secret alliance decide to take out ''Male A'' in revenge, who enlist the help of ''Female C'' who is close to ''Male B''.
-->''Female C'' betrays ''Male B'' and votes out ''Male A'', then turns traitor on ''Male C'' and ''Female B'' and joins with ''Male B'' again, but then ''Male B'' is voted out and ''Female C'' reveals she was only spying on ''Male A'' to learn more about ''Male D'' who was plotting to take them all out.
*** And so on and so on until there is only two of them left and everyone is pissed off and have had their feelings hurt. But...a million dollars, right?
** Survivor Samoa merger. 'Nuff said.
* ''PrisonBreak'' tends to do this at times. [[strike:Especially season 3]] Season 3 and 4 go on a rampage with this trope.
* An episode in the third season of ''{{Arrested Development}}'' has each of the characters in the family teaching each other lessons in the form of elaborate scenes they set up using Latino painters who moonlight as actors, sound effects CDs, and two different amputees.
* ''KamenRiderKabuto''. A group of sociopaths with powers, a large organization and the bad guys generally have their plans collide several times over the course of the series. Then there's Tendou, who's one step ahead of all ''that''. And meanwhile, poor Kagami finds himself the target or casualty of nearly all of them. Even AFTER he TookALevelInBadass.
* Essentially the driving force of every ''{{Lost}}'' season since [[MagnificentBastard Ben Linus]] showed up. Somehow, it hasn't completely collapsed, mainly because it's more of a 10-Xanatos Pileup than a 30.
* Found to a certain extent in ''TheShield'', especially when you get to Season 5 where you have Vic Mackey, Lt Kavanagh, David Aceveda and Shane Vendrell all working their own agendas.
* {{Euraka}} contains this trope quite often - the episode with the dreams that killed, and Martha the drone are examples. Martha, for one, was [[spoiler: made near-invincible by her creator's wife, and then remote controlled by Larry, causing 'her' to lose control, turn invisible, and terrorize the town]].
* A two-part episode of ''{{Star Trek The Next Generation}}'', appropriately titled "Gambit", gets convoluted to the point where Picard admits to Riker, "I have difficulty remembering whose side I'm on".
*The ThirtyXanatosPileUp is basically the sum total of ''AlloAllo''. It's nine seasons of at least four groups trying to steal ''one'' painting and several other plot {{MacGuffin}}s.
* Played for laughs in an episode of BattlestarGalactica in the episode "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Downn," one of the few times ''anything'' was played for laughs on that show. Roslin suspects Adama of being a Cylon, Adama has brought back Tigh's wife Ellen, whom he suspects is a Cylon. Both of them order Baltar to immediately test their suspect without the other knowing, causing tests to be stopped and restarted multiple times. To top it all off, it isn't long before Tigh suspects Adama of sleeping with Ellen. When it all finally comes to a head, HilarityEnsues as one of the darkest and most depressing shows in recent memory degenerates into pure domestic farce.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: TabletopGames ]]
* Most multiplayer strategy board games end up like this; particularly RISK is very prone to them, where Green pretends to be trying to take all of North America, but that's only to catch Blue off his guard so that he can be invaded from the south by Red, who he though was his ally... But then Red decides to betray Green as well, as she'd rather have Africa for herself. Luckily, Green foresaw this and made a deal with Purple.
** Or rather, this is what RISK would be like if it was possible to have hidden conversations across a table.
*** This can and will happen often when players use SMS during games. "Pardon me, gotta take this"
** It can be even more fun if you have a player who is enough of a {{Magnificent Bastard}} to pull this off in plain view of the other players! [To one player]: "Go ahead, attack him, I'll back you up". [To player being attacked]: "Don't worry, I'm just lying to him so he'll attack you" [To the first player] " ... or AM I??".
* Risk is ''nothing'' compared with ''{{Diplomacy}}'', which is designed to eliminate chance and rule manipulation in favor of seven players running {{Xanatos Gambit}}s of varying depth and complexity on each other at the same time, making for a mind-blowing maximum potential of a [[ThirtyXanatosPileup Forty Two Xanatos Pileup]]. Not surprising, since the game is meant to reflect the RealLife ThirtyXanatosPileup that led to WorldWarOne (see below).
** This troper fondly remembers a game of ''Diplomacy'' in which he not only had plots going on with all the other players, but in several cases had multiple plots going on with and against several players and groups of players. It got so convoluted that eventually this troper gave up trying to keep track and just started adding plots for the hell of it to confuse people. It might not have ended well, but it sure was fun.
** [[GregoryHayes This troper]] has equally fond memories of a game of ''Diplomacy'' where he, as Germany, had manipulated Austria and Italy into attacking Turkey, while ostensibly being allied with France against Russia and England. As the game took place over several days, he also had the opportunity to conduct strategy meetings with France, in which he carefully orchestrated the movements of both countries in such a way that he could then give England the exact sequence of moves needed to ensure Germany was far more successful in England than France was. This culminated in a sequence where Germany went from a vestigal state already half occupied by Russia into the largest empire on the board in the space of a year, including the French assisting Germany in capturing Norway on the very same turn Germany claimed Paris. Unfortunately, it later turned out Austria had not been quite so foolish after all, and the game ultimately ended in an Austro-Italian victory. A beautiful game.
* ''Fluxx'', a card game where the rules are part of playing the game. There are four types of cards: ''rules'' that dictate how the game is played at that particular moment, ''goals'' that describe how a player might win, ''keepers'' that are usually collected to fulfill a goal, and ''actions'' that do things like allow played rules and goals to be revoked. Gameplay is thus a crapshoot involving either attempts to arrive at the current goal, or attempts to change the system. Depending on the goal, winning can be as simple a matter as having ten cards in your hand, to ''making toast'' by having the Bread card and the Toaster card. Winning is also a matter of making sure that cards that you play don't immediately benefit another player.
** Some players positively revel in the Xanatos gambit aspects and play a dizzying array of contradictory and/or complicated rules to cover what they're actually trying to get done.
* The original ''{{World of Darkness}}'' took this almost to the point of parody. The Jyhad in ''Vampire: The Masquerade'' is run, depending on your sourcebook, by one of about thirty different sources ranging from Caine to Tzimisce to {{God}}, or it may just be a giant practical joke pulled by Malkav through his HiveMind descendants, or... The New World of Darkness takes a giant step away from this - now there's only a giant chain of conspiracies if the Storyteller says there is.
* The various BoardGame and CollectibleCardGame versions of ''Illuminati'', by SteveJacksonGames, is the ThirtyXanatosPileup as BeerAndPretzels entertainment. It's inspired by the aforementioned trilogy, so that's not surprising.
* ''{{Warhammer 40000}}'s'' [[EldritchAbomination Chaos God]] Tzeentch is unique in that he ''deliberately'' creates {{Thirty Xanatos Pileup}}s. Being a god of change and fundamental disorder, Tzeentch literally engineers his plots and plans to the point where they will outright conflict with one another. Not only is foiling one of his plans probably what he wanted you to do all along, but it probably also set in motion different aspects of seventeen other plans at the same time, any of which might in turn be derailing a dozen ''other'' plots by Tzeentch. But mostly he just does it to gleefully watch the pieces go flying everywhere when they crash into each other.
** In fact, considering his [[OddJobGods portfolio]], Tzeentch would be royally screwed if his Roulettes ever came to fruition. Ah, [[MemeticMutation The Irony Is Strong In This One]].
*** Not really. If anything ever stops him, that's exactly what he WANTS to happen. He ultimately has won the game before the game began just by existing.
*** Indeed, Tzeentch literally has no goals. If there comes a point in time where his schemes succeed, he's technically failed because change would be no longer taking place. Don't think about that one for too long.
**** Ow! My brain.
** And you have to take into account that in addition to Tzeentch, the Farseers, the Deceiver, and quite possibly the dead-but-dreaming God Emperor of Humankind are all manipulating each other into Thirty Xanatos Pileups lasting millions of years, which adds a whole new level of WTF-ness.
*** That, or they're all the same person. Unlikely, but I wouldn't put it passed those bastards at Games Workshop. But either way, since Tzeentch outdates them all, it's highly probable he created the others to give powerful faces for each respective race in the future.
*** Not the Deciever, he is both both older than Tzeentch and completely divorced from the Warp.
**** That what '''he''' says, [[AlternatecharacterInterpretation are we so sure he's not lying about *his* warp presence?]]
** The SoulDrinkers chapter were involved in one of these right before their rebellion. An Administratum bureaucrat wanted a space station secured quickly, the Soul Drinkers wanted to reclaim their Chapter's holiest relic, the Adeptus Mechanicus wanted that same relic for back-engineering, and [[spoiler: Abraxes, Architect of Fate, Engineer of Time, Daemon Prince of Tzeentch, wanted someone to kill the Daemon Prince Ve'Meth for him]] -- and pretty much everyone was carrying the IdiotBall in the belief that everyone else was afraid of them. The fact that the Soul Drinkers were shortly declared Excommunicate Traitoris (which includes a shoot-on-sight mandate and the complete deletion of all records pertaining to them) demonstrates how arch-cosmologically it ''sucks'' to be in a position where all thirty of the {{Xanatos Gambit}}s are at your expense.
* ''{{Paranoia}}'' is designed to be this.
* ''[[DungeonsAndDragons Dungeons & Dragons]]'' examples:
** As a general rule of thumb, any creature that has a lifespan greater than that of an average human being in ''{{Eberron}}'' is a {{Chessmaster}}. You have at least five entire organisations made up ''entirely'' of these. They don't get along. At least three of them are practically immortal and pull {{Xanatos Gambit}}s that can take ''centuries'' to unfold. One of them exists on another plane of existence where time is greatly slowed relative to the Material Plane, a fact they frequently use to spend ''weeks'' planning their next move while only a few hours pass in the real world. And if that's not bad enough, you've got the ''mortal'' {{Magnificent Bastard}}s to deal with, who may not have goals as lofty as complete cosmic domination but are still spinning their dangerous schemes none the less.
** ''{{Planescape}}'': More mysteries than you can shake a stick at, more conspiracies than you can imagine. We have demon lords of all shapes and sizes all plotting against each other and their celestial counterparts. We have the Factions and the Lady of Pain and well, basically everyone is plotting against everyone else, or claiming to manipulate everyone else. The module ''Faction War'' is a spectacular example of what happens when these collide...
** Similarily the ''{{Ravenloft}}'' campaign setting. The ''Grand Conjuction'' series ended up in a three-way Xanatos pileup between Azalin, Strahd and Inajira, all of this possibly orchestrated by the mad seer Hyksosa...
** This is the soul and essence of ''ForgottenRealms''. Everyone and their mother is running all kinds of incredibly complicated plots: Elminster, the Harpers, the Seven Sisters, Zhentil Keep, the Red Wizards, the Shades, the dark elves, etc., etc., etc., up to and including the gods themselves.
* ''{{Shadowrun}}''. You've got the AAA megacorps scheming to consolidate and expand their power, the AA corps scheming to become AAAs, and the governments of the world trying desperately to hold on to whatever power they have left. And then there's the dragons... and the insect spirits... and a million other entities all trying to control everything. And you're a rag-tag group of freelance covert-ops mercenaries caught in the middle of it all, offering your services to the highest bidder. Sound like fun? You don't know the half of it, chummer.
* ''Mafia / Werewolf'' is built on this trope. The simplest level of play is a "ignorant majority vs. hidden minority" paranoia game where the minority team switches between killing the opposing team and tricking them into offing themselves. What happens when the moderator starts introducing third-party and double-agent roles? [[http://www.epicmafia.com/instruction/characters It starts getting epic.]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder: VideoGames ]]
* ''{{Xenogears}}''.
** ''Xenosaga'', ''Xenogears' '' "sister series," may at first appear to follow this formula as both [[spoiler: Wilhem and Yuriev]] are running Xanatos gambits, but it's ultimately the former who is the beginning and the ending of everything going on (and pretty clear of it relatively early on).
* An attempt to explain ''ChronoCross'': Essentially, all the kingdoms fighting are either [[spoiler:being manipulated by Lynx]] (who is the representation of [[spoiler:Fate, the [[AIIsACrapShoot Insane Computer]]]]), or the [[spoiler:Dragon Gods]], who are GaiasVengeance. But wait! It turns out that the power they are attempting to control is manipulating ''both'' of them. But wait again! The original cast of ''ChronoTrigger'' (knowing that they would have to [[spoiler:''appear'' that they were manipulated to the point of ''dying'']]), working with the [[spoiler:spirit of Schala (who is manipulating ''her [[{{Reincarnation}} reincarnated self]]'')]], and the Guru of Time were manipulating '''''everyone''''' in order to create a situation where the [[spoiler:{{Cosmic Keystone}}s of two different {{Alternate Universe}}s]] break and then fuse, thus creating the weapon to kill the ''real'' [[spoiler:Time Devourer, [[EldritchAbomination Lavos]]]], DeaderThanDead. Whew!
** In short, in order to create a "weapon" to defeat Lavos; a force of Science and a force of Nature had to be allowed to take power (which required countless multiverse mix and matching) and then ''fail'' in such a way that they shatter the CosmicKeystone in two different timelines. Then these two CosmicKeystone are fused together. By using it and the "Song of Time", the unkillable Time Devourer who threatens to erase all of reality is neutralized; and the soul that it imprisoned/was powered by was freed. Entire timelines and civilizations had to rise and fall to bring the specific set of circumstances to enable this; given the ghosts dialogue, it seems apparent that the ''ChronoTrigger'' cast had been told that they had to die in order to set up the circumstances.
* The ending of ''MetalGearSolid 2''. Some of the characters may have been manipulated by others, and don't even get us ''started'' on where Revolver Ocelot falls.
** Even then, they may all have been manipulated (and are possibly still being manipulated) by the Patriots, the Philosophers, [[spoiler: EVA]], or [[spoiler: Big Boss himself, in a posthumous XanatosGambit beginning in the very first MetalGear for the MSX.]] And one or several of these parties might even be manipulating the others into manipulating them.
** ''MetalGear Solid 4'' explains everything [[spoiler: by retconning the backstory of one master manipulator, Major Zero (the "colonel" role from [=MGS3=]), and revealing Revolver Ocelot's motivation: to free the world from The Patriots from within.]].
* Half the named characters in ''FinalFantasyTactics'' are trying to manipulate the other half, and each other. By the end of the game, the pileup has been cleaned as they start killing each other off [[spoiler:and Delita tricks Ramza into killing off his remaining rivals]].
** Let's see if I can write this one out:
** [[spoiler:The king's son and the vassal are duking it out to see who succeeds, as the king is on his deathbed.]]
** [[spoiler:The Church wants the royal armies to equally waste each other so the Church can claim supremacy and "save" the populace from war.]]
** [[spoiler:DemonicInvaders are passing MineralMacGuffin to each army, corrupting their members and hoping to resurrect their dark god.]]
** [[spoiler:Vormav is supposedly working for the church, but is actually infiltrating it on behalf of the demonic invaders they unknowingly worship.]]
** [[spoiler:Delita is a triple agent within both successor's armies and the church. He wants them all dead so he can become the new king. He may or may not know about the demons, but he's sure to let Ramza handle the rest.]]
** [[spoiler:Ramza's goal is simple: keep kicking ass until he gets his sister back. Oh, and repel demons, that's a nice idea too.]]
* The {{Marathon}} series has a few, [[spoiler: With Durandal playing Tycho to get his mits on the main Pfhor ship, Tycho messing with the Pfhor for revenge, and Thoth trying to balance all the factions out. And you get to be every single one of their errand boys. Until the end...]]
* ''TheWorldEndsWithYou'': Joshua, Hanekoma, Minamimoto, Konishi, and Kitaniji all have their own respective gambits. The ending [[GainaxEnding doesn't even make it very clear whose gambits succeeded or failed]]. [[spoiler: Konishi definitely failed, due to being erased by Neku; Kitaniji got erased but partially succeeded, as Shibuya still exists; Minamimoto was found [[DeathByIrony under a pile of his own garbage]] (inverting NeverFoundTheBody, the fact that his body stayed while everyone else that died [[EverythingFades disappeared]] has lead plenty to think he ''survived'') and there's not even a footnote giving any more information, though he was still alive prior to Konishi's erasure (which probably means he'll be back in a sequel); Joshua's plan to get the ultimate proxy in his game with Kitaniji worked (i.e. Neku), though whether he had any plan beyond that is unknown, and Mr. Hanekoma... He's obviously saving the results of his for the sequel, as this troper didn't even realize Hanekoma had a gambit going until he read this page...]]
** The [[OneHundredPercentCompletion Secret Reports]] clarify some things: [[spoiler:Hanekoma came out on top. He played Minamimato as a total XanatosSucker (so Zetta stupid), mentions he achieves his goals, that everyone was necessary for his schemes (apparently he somehow knew Beat would Heel Face back to Neku), and he managed to educate Neku, change Joshua's mind and avoid Shibuya being destroyed. Kitanjii achieved his goal of saving Shibuya, but his actual plan of brainwashing everyone and killing Joshua's proxy failed (although he came damn close). Joshua succeeded in getting his ultimate proxy, but did not anticipate Neku's change in character]]. For everyone, something they failed to anticipate happened and messed up their plans, though some of them still got their wishes in the end. Except for [[spoiler:Hanekoma]], for whom everything went just as planned.
***Actually, he lost his status as an [[spoiler:Angel, due to teaching Minamimoto to create Taboo Noise]], but he decided it was worth it.
* ''CityOfHeroes'' and its sister game, ''CityOfVillains''. Trying to figure out the alignment and sponsors of the various villain groups can require a multipage ''org chart''. [[SteamPunk Nemesis]] is behind a ''lot'' of it in the end, but the lower rankings have so much [[EnemyCivilWar intergroup conflict]] that figuring this out can be tricky. The [[AlienInvasion Rikti]], [[StupidJetpackHitler Council]], [[NebulousEvilOrganization Arachnos]], [[CircusOfFear Carnies]], [[GovernmentConspiracy Malta]], hero groups, and a dozen other villains also have their own complicated plans, although more often than not they all originate or react to the same plans.
** Lampshaded when the devs added "tips" in the loading screens, including one which reads "It's all a Nemesis plot," and another which states "It's not all a Nemesis plot."
*** And then: "If it's not already a Nemesis Plot, you can use the Mission Architect to make it one."
* The final cases in each of the games in the ''[[PhoenixWrightAceAttorney Ace Attorney]]'' series tend to be more complicated than the three or four that precede them, but the third game's went far enough that this troper burst out in a lamentation borrowed from [[ZeroPunctuation Yahtzee's review]] of ''MetalGearSolid'' 4: "Oh Christ, I can't go on! This shit is bananas!" - when he was only about three-quarters of the way through.
* ''LegacyOfKain''... Where do you start? When Kain comments that "Nosgoth's great manipulator" is himself just a plaything, he's barely scratching the surface.
** To quote Raziel in Legacy of Kain Defiance: "What game is this, where every player on the board claims the same pawn?"
** Raziel is literally the only person who isn't manipulating anyone.
*** Except maybe himself.
** To try and summarize: Over the course of the series, the protagonists have been manipulated by:
*** Moebius the Timestreamer, who first manipulates Kain into murdering King William the Just and triggering the Sarafan vampire hunts, and then attempts to manipulate Raziel into killing Kain.
*** Mortanius the Necromancer, who resurrects Kain as a vampire and, along with Ariel, misleads Kain into thinking that killing the Circle of Nine will free him from his vampirism.
*** The Elder God, who manipulates Raziel into killing Kain to eradicate the vampire menace and feed his Wheel of Fate.
*** Kain, who manipulates Raziel into changing the course of history by begging him to choose for himself instead of being manipulated by others.
*** The Hylden, who originally posessed Mortanius to kill Ariel, drive Nupraptor to madness and corrupt the rest of the Circle, weakening the Pillars' binding on their prison, and then manipulated Raziel into killing Kain, the prophecised Scion of Balance, and delivering Janos Audron to them as a vessel for their leader to use.
* ''FinalFantasyXII'': Ashe is plotting to take her kingdom back, [[spoiler: Vossler seems to be helping her, but is in fact plotting with Vayne while hoping that Vayne's little brother Larsa will eventually help Ashe's ambitions]], Balthier is helping her in order [[spoiler: to settle the score with his father]], Ba'Gamnan is plotting to kill Balthier, Vayne is plotting to [[spoiler: become the next emperor, dissolve the senate, destroy the the resistance led by Ashe and start a war against Rosaria]], Gabranth is used by [[spoiler: GenreSavvy Emperor Gramis against Vayne, then used by Vayne against Judge Magister Drace, who did not like all the plotting]], The Arcadian senate is plotting against Vayne, Cid is plotting with Vayne [[spoiler: and Venat]] in order to fulfill his ambitions and [[spoiler: screw the Occurias along the way]], then we have [[spoiler: Occuria's king Gerrun who's plotting against everyone and who tries to turn Ashe into his willing puppet]], Ondore who is playing the role of a DoubleAgent from the beginning of the game, Al-Cid who is plotting [[spoiler: against his own family plotting against Arcadia while being in fact manipulated by Vayne's [[TheChessmaster Unnatural cunning]] ]] and finally Larsa who by the end of the game [[spoiler: has outsmarted everyone and everyTHING]]. Made by the creators of FinalFantasyTactics and VagrantStory: no kidding.
* ''VagrantStory'', for that matter. The game starts out with three different factions (very roughly: the Church, the Government, and the Müllenkamp Sect), in addition to Duke Bardorba's personal interest in the main plot. ''All'' of them are manipulating both Ashley Riot and some aspect of the Forces Of Evil. At least half the characters end up going rogue, one character (Rosencrantz) is already a professional traitor, another [[spoiler: is murdered by Ashley and ends up possessing his own dead body by pure chance]], and a third one (Guildenstern) appears to be working for the Church and against the Sect, but is really after [[spoiler: the godlike powers that Sydney's skin can give him]]. Things get more complicated still when the entire city turns out to be [[spoiler: a Grimoire, and possibly conscious on some level]], and an entire plotline about four Fiends from ancient times is added only by mention in their respective ''bestiary entries''.
* ''Yakuza 2'' goes outright nuts about this at the end, with just about everyone manipulating each other. Ironicly the SmugSnake OrcusOnHisThrone mastermind who had happily sat out the whole game runs in, declares himself the winner and gets taken out in under a minute by a SpannerInTheWorks who [[LampshadeHanging Lampshades]] his role by mentioning that he really hates whimpy masterminds who think they control everything. The winner on the other hand turns out to be a totally unexpected MyDeathIsJustTheBeginning that made everything the villains tried to do pointless from the start.
* ''SoulNomadAndTheWorldEaters''... Oh boy... The main character and Gig are saving the world due to manipulations by [[spoiler:Virtous]], who is ''really'' setting them up to [[spoiler:cross over into Drazil and destroy it]], having previously manipulated [[spoiler:Layna]] into going ahead to [[spoiler:act as your support once you get there]]. While at the same time you are being manipulated by [[spoiler:Raksha]] who is really [[spoiler:Levin]] and is at the same time setting up [[spoiler:Thuris]] ''and'' [[spoiler:Virtious]] in order to [[spoiler:kill them]] and [[AGodAmI become a god]]. This, of course, opposes [[spoiler:Dio]]'s manipulation of [[spoiler:Raksha]] (who, in return, is manipulating ''him'') to set up [[spoiler:the zombified Median]] to destroy [[spoiler:Drazil]] and reclaim his former glory... Oh yes, and [[spoiler:Drazil]] was the one who manipulated [[spoiler:Median]] into destroying [[spoiler:Vigilance]] in the first place and then manipulated [[spoiler:Gig]] into destroying [[spoiler:most of Haephnes]]. And that's about, oh, ''half'' of it.
* The situation that the [[PlayerCharacter Jedi Exile]] wakes up to at beginning of ''KnightsOfTheOldRepublic II: The Sith Lords'' is the direct result of the collision of two or three {{Xanatos Gambit}}s and a number of other people's plans and agendas. The Exile spends most of the rest of the game sorting some of these out.
* The plot of SuperRobotWars Z essentially comes down to this, as Gilbert Durandal, Lord Djibril, Paptimus Scirocco, The Frost Brothers, Gym Ghingham, Dewey Novak, Alex Rosewater, The Gaizok, Zeo Gattler, The Vegans, The Elda, The Zeravire, The Shadow Angels, The Chirams, The Hundred Demon Clan, The Chimera Corps and The Black Charisma are all engaged in a massive contest of who is EvilerThanThou for control of the world and the dimensional power. The heroes of ZEUTH of course play the SpannerInTheWorks who wrecks all their plans by blowing them all to kingdom come.
** [[spoiler: Everything was, in fact, a huge XanatosRoulette by Black Charisma/The Edel. His reason? Cause he though it'd be ''fun''.]]
* The {{Touhou}} manga ''Silent Sinner in Blue '' is basically this. [[spoiler: Unfortunately, crippled by bad writings.]] Let's see...
** [[spoiler: Someone]] is manipulating the unrest in the Moon.
** [[spoiler: Yukari Yakumo plan to use Remillia Scarlet as decoy while she's infiltrating the moon from somewhere else]] for, probably, revenge. [[spoiler: The plan backfired spectacularly.]]
** Remillia Scarlet plan to conquer the Moon, team-up with Reimu and Marisa. [[spoiler: She doesn't realize that ''everyone are using her''.]]
** [[spoiler: Eirin Yagokoro know that she must intervene again with the politics of the Moon lest it will threaten her who is in hiding. Thus she motivate her former-disciples, the Watatsuki sisters, to foil both Yukari's and Remillia's plan. Also a good chance to clear her name.]]
** [[spoiler: Patchouli Knowledge get a sense of what Eirin is planning, and is waiting for the right time to make a move for her ally Remillia.]]
** And finally, Yuyuko Saigyouji is the only one with clarity to see this vexing web of conspiracy, and is [[ObfuscatingStupidity feigning innocence]].
** And then you have to remember it was Yukari who left the portal open for Yuyuko, knowing that she would go to the moon to steal a treasure despite her only saying she 'might be interested'.
*** And that's just from the manga, as there's also the parallel novel, ''Cage in Lunatic Runagate''.
** It is parodied in [[http://dizzy.pestermom.com/?p=thcomic5 this]] installment of fancomic ''[[TroperWorks/TouhouNekokayou Scarlet Weather Archive in Japanese Red]]'', which spoofs the above by having all the major players claim to be manipulating each other and everyone else (including the Watatsuki sisters, who had no actual contact with anyone else until recently in the canonical story), and Reimu upends all their plans by ''[[SpannerInTheWorks noticing Reisen II]]''. In the end, though, it's revealed by [[GreekChorus Yuyuko]] that [[spoiler:they were all just making it up as they went along]].
** In the end, [[spoiler:Yukari comes up on top, after being captured by the Watatsuki sisters, by sending Yuyuko to the moon, where she successfully steals a valuable treasure: 1000-year-old sake. The SDM crew, Reimu, and Marisa then have [[ a pool party in the Scarlet Devil Mansion's library (this is in the middle of winter)]]]].
* The ''Starcraft'' addon ''Brood War'' had ''at least'' Kerrigan, Mengsk, Fenix, Zeratul, Duran, Daggoth and the UED all play various [[{{XanatosGambit}} Xanatos Gambits]] against each other. The only ones who seem to be not playing XanatosGambit are Stukov and Raszhagal, and Stukov [[spoiler: subsequently gets killed as a result of Duran's first XanatosGambit against ''him'']], while Raszhagal [[spoiler:[[{{XanatosSucker}} turns out to have been a victim of Kerrigan's manipulation and later mind-control from the very beginning]]]]. But to be fair, Stukov at least had some potential, he just didn't live long enough to play it off.
* ''TalesOfSymphonia''. At the start of the game, we have the Church of Martel and the Desians in opposition. Then we learn that some of the Desians we faced were actually Renegades, who are in direct opposition to the Desians. The Renegades are led by Yuan. Then a mysterious assassin shows up, who turns out to have been sent to Sylvarant from Tethe'alla to stop the Regeneration, because when one world is regenerated, the other world suffers. Before we find that out, but after the first time we meet the assassin, we end up in Palmacosta, where the Governor-General is making a deal with the Desians, not realizing that he's actually just the pawn of the monster pretending to be his daughter. Then [[spoiler:Kratos]] betrays you, because he's really been working for the Desians--maybe. Wait, the Church of Martel and the Desians were actually working together? Then everyone ends up in Tethe'alla, where three new party members join up in a short amount of time. Two of them have their own agendas and the third one is a {{Tykebomb}}. Also, the Pope is scheming to usurp the throne of Meltokio. Later, the party joins up with the Renegades, and, oddly enough [[spoiler:Kratos]] again, because apparently he's really ''against'' the Desians. Then the BigBad shows up in disguise and ends up helping you. He's been [[TheChessmaster running this whole thing]] in an attempt to revive his [[DeadLittleSister dead older sister]]. Then [[spoiler:Kratos]] turns out to be the main character's real father, which means he's back on your side--or not. Kuchinawa, one of the ninja of Mizuho, then joins up with the Pope. Then [[spoiler:Zelos]] either betrays you or pretends to betray you and then betrays your enemies instead. If he did betray you, [[spoiler:Kratos]] will join you again, but you'll have to fight him one more time before he'll join you for good. Before that, however, the BigBad's plan is put into play, and the older sister returns from the dead--except she's got her ''own'' ideas, of course. Then the whole ruse from earlier is revealed, leading your best friend to start making his own plans. By the end, even the hero has his own ideas, and the only character to have ''not'' been involved in a Xanatos Gambit of some sort (unless you count the numerous successive non-fatal {{Heroic Sacrifice}}s to each be {{Xanatos Gambit}}s) is Raine. (Yes, Colette had at least one. Throughout much of Disc 1, actually.) The second game is considerably more confusing.
* Rumored to be constantly at work in the MMORPG ''UrbanDead''; it's anyone's guess how real or imaginary said plots are.
* ''VandalHearts 2'' features a civil war in the country of Natra that in the end proves to have been the result of multiple distinct factions with their own separate goals. Early on, it appears to have three factions. East Natra, led by the exiled son of the former king, and supported by the republic of Vernantze. West Natra, led by the Queen Mother, and supported by the Zora-Archeo empire, with their puppet king on the throne. And the heroic faction, seeking to unify the country by defeating both sides, founds Central Natra. However, as it goes on, it becomes apparent that the truth is far more complicated. East Natra was, in part, set up by [[spoiler:Cardinal Ladorak, on orders from the Pope, to try and unify Natra with the Church state of Nirvadia]]. Meanwhile, the Queen Mother's true goal was [[spoiler:to get Zora-Archeo to commit enough troops to the Natran Civil War to allow her homeland of Archeo to rise up in rebellion against Zora]]. Meanwhile, both East and Central are being manipulated by the Kudur Cult, trying to bring about a "cleansing of the world" [[spoiler:which itself is a setup by their leader, who is seeking to ''become God'']]. To say the pile-up results in a bloodbath would be putting it mildly.
* In most of the ''TheElderScrolls'' games, each faction leader or otherwise plot-important NPC has a scheme or two in the works. Whether its a good or evil scheme depends on the person.
* WildArms3 turns into this. Between [[spoiler: Beatrice who is manipulating almost all the good guys and later some of the bad guys, The Prophets, Janus, Seigfried, Werner and the Schrodingers as the spanner in all the works.]] it gets rather messy.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: WebComics ]]
* ''DominicDeegan'' is famous for his [[XanatosRoulette overly-elaborate schemes]], but during the Storm of Souls arc, and again during the War in Hell, he was only one [[TheChessmaster chessmaster]] among many.
* ''GirlGenius'' pulls this off quite well, especially in the tangled web that was [[TownWithADarkSecret Sturmhalten]]. And now Mechanicsburg appears to be headed in this direction, now that we've got Agatha's group, the Knights of Jove, the Baron's army, whoever runs Zola's operation, and [[spoiler:Tarvek again, Gil in the castle with Zeetha, and Othar back on the scene]].
** Oh Good GOD, Sturmhalten. If Agatha blows that family off the map in frustration, [[spoiler: Given that the town is overrun by revenants due to the machinations necessary for this trope]], I would be right behind her, cheering. Starting with Tarvek. Think of the possibilities... tantalizing cause of death: impalement by a [[HeelFaceRevolvingDoor Revolving Door]].
* ''{{Girly}}'' parodies this in ''The Big Mix-Up'' -- [[spoiler:The Shadowy Guy]] was manipulating [[spoiler:the adorable men]] and [[spoiler:the CutePD]], [[spoiler: Mitchroney]] was also manipulating them, but in a different way, and they were both pretending to be manipulated by the other in order to manipulate the other, which had the effect of manipulating the main cast.
* ''SchlockMercenary'''s overarching plot goes here; the main players are the Gatekeepers, Xinchub, the UNS government in general, [[spoiler:dark-matter beasties from Andromeda, and the god-like AI Petey]]. Most of the episodic arcs look like this too. The focus characters are just regular joes trying to do a job, so they're usually used as pawns in one plot or another.
* ''DoctorWho'' fancomic ''[[http://www.shipsinker.com/wordpress/category/drwho/ The Ten Doctors]]'' is all over this trope, with seemingly every villain attempting their own grand scheme. Fortunately, there are 10 Doctors to confront them. They don't have a hope in hell.
* ''TwoKinds'' has the games of gods (Ephemural's comic-starting gambit to start), [[EvilTowerOfOminousness Evil Towers Of Ominousness]] (The Templars), the backroom scheming of a paranoid military culture (The Bastians), the war plans of the two Kedrian tribes, plus whatever the motivations are of a dozen secondary characters (three-quarters of whom are looking for Trace, either to help him or kill him)
* ''TheLastDaysOfFOXHOUND'' has a lot of these (understandable, considering [[MetalGearSolid its source]]), although given the ending most of them don't come to fruition. For extra fun, you could consider the author's plot having gotten into a pile-up with Kojima's as one of these.
** ThisTroper thought it only made the comic more fitting. There was more than one occasion where the author introduced retroactive, massive [[XanatosRoulette Xanatos Roulettes]] just to explain the gulf between how ''he'' wrote the story and the new elements Kojima introduced. And the result was so convoluted it actually fit ''perfectly'' with the MGS universe, hilariously so.
* ''PennyAndAggie'' takes it to ridiculous levels, considering that the goals are mostly some variant of "become party queen." The consequences of intermediate steps have become more interesting than the plans themselves.
* The Gallimaufry arc in ''BuckGodotZapGunForHire'' is somewhere between this and a Thirty Dark Secret Pileup. Seen in a more literal form [[http://www.airshipentertainment.com/buckcomic.php?date=20080617 here]], and seen as a MacGuffinDeliveryService pileup [[http://www.airshipentertainment.com/buckcomic.php?date=20080410 here]].
* ''{{Terinu}}'' runs on this, what with Terinu being pursued by the Varn Gene mage, who is allied with Princess Titalia, who is plotting the overthrow of her queen mother. The pirate Mavra Chan is also allied with the Gene Mage, but only to grab as much power as she can while she pursues Terinu herself to make him her slave/assassin. Meanwhile Admiral Blake is trying to ''murder'' Terinu to keep him out of the Gene Mage's hands while jailing his own daughter in an attempt to suppress the history of humanity's genocide of the ferin.
*''LastRes0rt'' is about to run headlong into this with most (if not all) of its players, and it's all compounded by the sheer chutzpah that ''the results are all being broadcast as entertainment''. If only real reality shows had this sort of thought put into them.
* ''{{Order of the Stick}}'' appears to be heading for a massive multiplot collision. LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters have accumulated (and very few have been killed off), most everyone has plans they haven't explained to their allies (or in a few cases, they're just psychotically unpredictable), a couple brand-new political factions were just added to the deck ... suffice to say, if the story's going to end in two more months of in-world time, they're going to have a ''very busy'' two months.
* [[http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=1582#comic This]] Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal.
* Gaming Guardians, a large part of it swiftly becomes irretrievably and at times painfully convoluted. This troper struggles to find a defined point in which to place the beginning and end of the occurrence, but it all lasts far too long to be comfortable.
* The ''NeverwinterNights 2'' expansion ''Mysteries of Westgate'' is like this, and ends with a successive series of bad guys all claiming to be the master villain, and gloating how they were secretly manipulating the previous master villain, who was secretly manipulating the previous previous master villain, etc.
* ''GrimTalesFromDownBelow'' has several being pulled at the same time - in the past [[TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy Mandy]] pulled several to cause major disasters and later exploit her immortality. Even if Grim killed her, she had plans to take over hell. Then [[TheNightmareBeforeChristmas Oogie Boogie]] tried to get Junior to come to his lair so he could steal his reaper powers. After a bunch of crap happens, [[SuperpoweredEvilSide the]] [[NaughtyTentacles Nergal]] [[TheVirus parasite]] [[BodyHorror demons]] take over Junior's body, leading to [[DannyPhantom Clockwerk]] pulling several Gambits at a time (seeing as how he's Clockwerk, this isn't surprising). Even later than that, [[ThePowerpuffGirls Him]] pulls one of the [[BrotherSisterIncest most]] [[{{Squick}} disturbing]] [[GirlWithPsychoWeapon Gambits]] [[IfICantHaveYou ever]] [[NightmareFuel pulled]]. And those are just the major ones - pretty much the only people who don't pull a gambit of some kind throughout the webcomic are the citizens of Halloween Town, [[HeyArnold Helga (on account of her never actually appearing)]], the people shown under Mandy's regime, the Raven narrator, {{Spawn}}, the demons Spawn faces, [[AndZoidberg and]] [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Fred Fredburger.]] [[ParanoiaFuel But they just might be planning something...]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder: WebOriginal ]]
* In the RoosterTeeth Short Lunch Bunch, the office constantly has problems with people stealing other people's lunches. When Burnie tries to steal Matt's lunch, he starts choking, and Matt reveals he had put salt in his sandwich. But then, it turns out that he had stolen Gus' salt, which Gus replaced with rat poison in case someone tried to steal it. But ''[[CrossesTheLineTwice then]]'' it turns out Gus had stolen Geoff's rat poison, who, forseeing this, had replaced it with Nathan's protein powder, and dumped the real poison into the coffee pot. All three of them realize they are drinking poison and fall to the floor. [[KillEmAll Burnie stops choking, gets off the floor, steals the poisoned coffee and walks away.]]
* In the ''WhateleyUniverse'', Ayla 5: "Ayla and the Networks" is one of these. It shifts perspective to show each person setting up their gambits. Also, the characters actually REFER to them as capitalized Xanatos Gambits! And to top it all off...[[spoiler: Thuban and Ayla had actually won before the first move was drawn. Thuban, in fact, had purposely leaked the very blackmail conversation that STARTED this mess, solely to make sure everything happened just as planned.]]
** Even more complicated, [[spoiler: Phase set the whole thing up several novels earlier with a ChekhovsGun that he patiently waited a couple months for someone running their own gambit to trigger it.]] And then several new groups step in, trying to pull off their own gambits in the middle of the story. HilarityEnsues. Literally. The big multi-way fight scene is a CrowningMomentOfFunny.
* Very much parodied in [[http://uncyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/Game:Pick_Up_the_Phone_Booth_and_Aisle/xwoman this]] PickUpThePhoneBoothAndAisle ending on {{Uncyclopedia}}.
* Faced with a dearth of actual gameplay, the players in ''Nationstates'' have spent the last seven years turning the site into one of these.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: WesternAnimation ]]
* Done to death in ''{{Duckman}}''. In one episode, while it is revealed that Duckman and Cornfed have been the unwitting pawns of a Xanatos Gambit by an ominous secret organization, the episode ends with one secret society after another viewing the events taking place in the previous organization's Evil Lair and declaring gleefully that "everything went just as planned". Cue evil laughter.
** Ending, ultimately, with Mom, Dad, Sis, and Bro watching the events on TV.
* ''FairlyOddParents'', "Remy Rides Again".
** "NOT. SO. FAST!!!"
* The second-season of ''{{WITCH}}'' ends with everybody trying to put the screws on everybody else. Nerissa is trying to get the Heart of Earth by killing Lillian's cat familiar Napoleon at the same time that the girls have [[spoiler: let Phobos out of prison to take ''her'' two hearts. Phobos]] decides to screw the girls over by using the power of Nerissa's hearts once he takes them, but the girls planned for this by [[spoiler: convincing Raythor to do a HeelFaceTurn. Raythor tricks Phobos]] into invading Kandrakar, which would cause him to relinquish control of the hearts he took, but just before [[spoiler: Phobos]] crosses the plane into Kandrakar, [[spoiler: Cedric eats him and gains his powers AND Nerissa's]]. Also, Raphael Sylla and the government, who watched the final battle, planned to discover the girls' secret identities by registering Sylla as a teacher at the girls' school, but [[ScrewedByTheNetwork we probably won't get to see that]].
** Note that, while most of this Xanatos Gambits weren't there in the original comic, the started Sylla-Gambit was eventually pulled of in it and even worked - until the oracle pulls a literal DeusExMachina (it's even {{Lampshaded}}) and hits the reset button.
* The major plot developments of season 4 and the entirety of season 5 of the 2003 ''[[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2003 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]]'' gets into this territory, involving three distinct active factions (government agent Bishop, demi-god quartet the Ninja Tribunal, and the quintet of schemers collectively known as the Shredder’s heralds), and three passive factions (the turtles, the Foot, and a quartet of kidnapped martial artists). It all ends up being a XanatosRoulette involving most of the events of the series up until then.
* ''[[XMenEvolution X-Men: Evolution’s]]'' season two finale, “Day of Reckoning”, has one of these involving three different factions: Magneto and his acolytes; Mystique; and Bolivar Trask, with the X-Men and Brotherhood being stringed across for good measure.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: RealLife ]]
* WorldWarOne. The entire conflict is essentially the result of a ThirtyXanatosPileup, with some of the plans having been in motion for several ''centuries'' beforehand.
** Otto von {{Bismarck}} arguably was the biggest manipulator of the bunch in Europe. Though he wasn't around for the pileup that was World War I, he was very accurate as to its root cause. In December 1897 he stated:
--->"One day the great European War will come out of some damned foolish thing in the Balkans."
*** ThisTroper sees Bismarck as the [[{{Foundation}} Hari Seldon]] to Adolf Hitler's Mule. (Bismarck just forgot to leave a [[strike:DeusExMachina]] Second Foundation lying around.)
*** Or not; Hitler was bound to happen after WWI (Foch said "This is not a peace. It is an armistice for 20 years." and was only off by one). Bismarck is really to blame for not planning ahead. His gambits were too complicated for anybody but himself to understand, let alone keep up.
*** Bismarck himself wasn't nearly as much to blame as Kaiser Wilhelm II, the one who derailed all of Bismarck's plans simply by being a complete moron and giving Austria-Hungary a blank check. Wilhelm took the carefully crafted schemes Bismarck set up to keep Russia friendly, France isolated, and Austria-Hungary defensive and threw all those out the window because they were too complicated for him. If anyone was Bismarck's Mule it was Wilhelm.
*** Historians have argued that the constitution of the German Empire was perfectly designed for Bismarck (a dynamic Chancellor) and his Emperor, an amiable underachiever. When those roles were reversed and a dynamic (though hardly brilliant) Emperor was paired with a clueless Chancellor, the whole system blew up.
* WorldWarTwo was also largely a result of such Gambits. Most prominent were the English one by Chamberlain (who wanted to use Hitler against USSR) and Hitler's, but Finland, USSR, Poland, and even Hungary (and Italy, and Spain) had their own plans. Needless to say all this pileup crashed down... with ''[[{{Understatement}} very]]'' bad results.
** WorldWarTwo ''as such'' was largely a result of Hitler's world conquest ambitions. Of course, there were some Xanatos Gambits by other countries (and arguably even some private organizations) involved in the concrete development of the conflict.
** Wars in general tend to be [[ThirtyXanatosPileup Thirty Xanatos Pileups]].
* RealLife in general is probably this.
* TVTropes
* When you put enough {{troll}}s in [[ImageBoard a small enough area]], this happens quite frequently. The {{troll}}s, all convinced they're the only actual {{troll}} (aside from painfully obvious ones) will each do everything in their power to hijack a thread inhabited ''entirely'' by other {{troll}}s.
** Actually, it's worse than that. Those painfully obvious trolls? Sometimes they're meta-trolls, trolling the trolls by trolling poorly. Not to mention the fact that even when people know everyone else is a troll, they still do it. 4chan is a good example of this. The level of trolling there reaches meta factorial levels. Sometimes you even get people who change things up by trolling through not trolling. As they say, trolling is a art.
*** You mean 'an art'
**** No... no, he doesn't.
* LSD, The Kennedy assassinations, the civil rights movement, The Cuban missile crisis, basically everything in the sixties can be explained as a ThirtyXanatosPileup of the Mafia, the CIA, J. Edgar Hover, and revolutionaries of both the Cuban and American leftist variety. To further explain:
**LSD used by CIA in mind control experiments.
**JFK was being spied on J. Edgar Hover.
**J. Edgar Hover was spying on Martin Luther King.
**JFK appointed brother Robert Attorney General to watch J. Edgar Hover.
**Attorney General Robert Kennedy goes to war against Mafia.
**Mafia held interest in Cuba before revolution.
**CIA screwed up Bay of Pigs.
**Students using LSD inspired by Martin Luther King to become radicals.
**Mafia finds new money source with LSD.
**Black Panthers arise from Martin Luther King assassination.
**CIA and FBI under J. Edgar Hover shut down Black Panthers.
**I could ''literally'' go on for ''hours'' here.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: Opera ]]
* TheMarriageOfFigaro is a stage comedy and a comic opera. The valet Figaro wants to marry the maid Susanna. Count Almaviva wants use his purported feudal right of a lord to bed a servant girl on her wedding night before her husband can sleep with her. Figaro schemes to prevent this. The play gets more and more confusing as more people join the conflict. Countess Almaviva desires her husband, who neglects her. Marcellina claims that Figaro promised to marry her. The page Cherubino is after every women and music master Basilio is gossiping around.
[[/folder]]
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