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You have a trope that you have seen a million times. It just needs a snappy name. Discuss it here! This is also a good place to call for examples.

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Everything Begins At Birth
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-22 00:16:59 by Assistant (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:33:17)
What better way to introduce the protagonist of the story than start at his/her birth?

Examples:

Do We Have This?
replies: 4

Beleaguered Bureaucrat
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-22 02:30:45 by Game Chainsaw (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:30:45)
I tried this once before, but it fell through.

Rolling Updates now in effect.

You get the Obstructive Bureaucrat, who is just being a bit of a jobsworth and stopping something crucial from happening. And then you get the Beleaguered Bureaucrat.

The Beleaguered Bureaucrat (God I'm going to get sick of spelling that soon.) would love to help you with your problems... if they weren't dealing with a dozen other equally important (in the bureaucrats eyes) matters at the same time, usually while being shouted at for not being able to do five things at once. Basically, this is a character who is swamped with too much work whose performance (and stress level) is clearly suffering for it. If its a main character, expect their stress at this to become a Running Gag. Can become a problem for heroes if they need something done by this character quickly.

Signs that you are dealing with this character are:

  • When told "This is serious!" they will snap "Yes, and so are the other dozen things I'm expected to do today."

  • They will typically be buried, sometimes literally, under waves of red tape and paper work. Expect every comic bureaucrat related trope to be in full force. If on the phone, they will either be talking very quickly or getting yelled at. Bonus points in animation if they are trying to answer two phones at once.

  • They will constantly look frazzled and will usually be short tempered even after work. This is often played quite seriously.

I had examples, but they've slipped my mind. Is This Tropeable?

Examples

Real Life
  • Many, many heads of state run into this problem. One indicator of a strong leader is how good an administrator they are.
  • Busy libraries can give this impression. If you see a long snake-like queue, its probably best not to bother the staff about that book you want to locate. They're probably praying for their next tea break

I'll add the non Real Life examples as soon as I work out where they all go.
replies: 9

Writing By The Seat of Your Pants
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-22 00:22:17 by Whoeverski (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:28:28)
Some authors plan meticulously. Before they even start to write, they have a detailed plot synopsis, character biographies, pages on setting, and a detailed backstory to the main tale... at the least.

Others just sit down at their word processor and type whatever comes into their head. This trope is dedicated to them.

This is not necessarily a trope about authors who simply write without a speck of planning at all (although it can be), but rather those who, overall, are improvising as they write. They may already have invented their characters, perhaps they have a vague plot bubbling in their head, even a few notes on backstory or setting. What separates this kind of writing from planned writing is that these writers are prepared to throw those notes in the trash the moment they come up with an idea that they prefer. Writing a hardboiled crime fiction novel? Remember that takeaway place you thought up on the spot to give your sleuth somewhere to eat his lunch? That would be perfect as a front for the Big Bad's drug-dealing business. Making a movie? That actor's take on that character is way better than what you originally had in mind. Why not rewrite half his part to take advantage of that vision?

Like most things, this can be done well, or badly. The Chris Carter Effect is what happens when Writing By The Seat Of Your Pants leaves too many loose plot threads.

Examples:

  • The Battlestar Galactica revival. A lot of things were admitted to not be planned to not shoehorn the work.
  • This is how Douglas Adams wrote the original radio scripts for The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy. Apparently, he'd often still be rewriting the ends of episodes as the cast were recording the beginning. In this case, of course, it worked.
  • According to the DVD Bonus Content, Freakazoid was written with very little planning because of time constraints.
  • Casablanca was being written as it was filmed.
  • Yellow Submarine began production without an ending. Which is why it doesn't have one.
  • Ray Bradbury wrote Fahrenheit 451 at a pay typewriter in 9 days.
    • To be fair, it was based on his previous short story The Fireman.
  • Ren And Stimpy episodes never had real scripts. The creators went straight to storyboards and improvised each next image.
  • Garth Nix says this is how he writes - all his worldbuilding is made up on the spot.
  • Stephen King falls into this category-- he never plans ahead, he just writes until he has a good idea and runs with it. TV Show, especially soaps, fall prey to this as well. It's essentially the nature of doing a work "live."
  • The original writers of Impulse admitted they were writing by the seat of their pants in the first trade.

Rolling Updates, Needs A Better Title?

Note: This is the mutated/evolved descendant of a trope originally proposed by Zero0.
replies: 38

Immortality IS a Good Thing
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-22 02:10:55 by Aurum-Femina (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:25:18)
Dying is a part of the circle of life. And because of this, death should be embraced.

Okay, let's face it. We all know dying sucks. Many writers know this and save you the aesop. Thus, their stories may embrace the idea of immortality. It's not necessarily wrong, because none of us will ever get the opporitunity, anyway.

Examples: - Atlantis: The Lost Empire features Atlanteans that live inhumanely long through the use of a blue crystal attached to their necklaces. Everyone on the crew gets one. - Twilight dabbles on it, but in the end, it's supported when Bella becomes a vampire.

replies: 1

The Future Will Run On Military Time
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 23:35:44 by Metalitia (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:25:16)
Seen It A Million Times, Needs More Examples. Up For Grabs.

Self-explanatory. In the future, the time system (ESPECIALLY in America, so to best illustrate the fact that it's, you know, THE FUTURE, since the present runs on the base-12 clock) will run on the 2400 hours style clock.

One example: The future (2032 AD) in Demolition Man runs on Military Time.
replies: 2

All There In The Gallery
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-22 02:23:33 by STUART (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:23:33)
Unlockable biographies for all of a game's Faceless Mooks, featuring things like their age, Home Town, Blood Type, their philosophy on life, how they actually come from the future and intend to kill their parents, and so forth.

Examples:

replies: 0

Face Stealer
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-13 11:08:38 by Alkthash (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:22:44)
Voluntary Shapeshifting is a really powerful and useful ability for a character to have. But occasionally they run into a problem of logistics(besides this one); how do they get the information to change shape? Sometimes it is just enough to look or touch whatever the character wants to change into.

Other times, nastier things have to be done. For whatever reason a face stealer often has to physically harm, usually fatally, their target in order to take their form. While sometimes almost any body part will do, bonus points for actually skinning of the other character's face. As you can expect, this sub-trope of voluntary shapeshifting is nearly exclusive to villains. This does have the added benefit of making it easier to pretend to be somebody else when they are no longer running around.

See Kill And Replace, which is what this trope often leads to.

Examples(Rolling Updates in effect):

  • The Trope Namer here is Koh, The Face Stealer in Avatar The Last Airbender. He would kill people by taking their faces, whilst keeping the appearances around to use as masks.
  • The Chameleon from Spider-man comics. Usually he uses a special gas to make a mask out of his target's sking, but some continuities have him actually eat the target.
  • Alex Mercer from Prototype eats people and uses this so often he starts body surfing.
  • Chriopterans in Blood Plus can take on the form of anybody whose blood they have drunk. Used for extra squick points when Diva walked around as Riku, the protagonists little brother who she had previously raped and killed
  • There also was a monster from Mighty Morphin Power Rangers with this name. Needless to say, the scene in which some of the Rangers had their faces stolen is Nightmare Fuel.
  • In Inu Yasha, one of Naraku's henchmen was a faceless man who wore the faces of people he'd killed.
  • The Agents in The Matrix have absorb people's data in order to mimic their forms.
  • Accidental usage. Their was a character in Heroes who had the ability to mimic people with just a small physical sample for their DNA. Then Sylar met him, stole his ability and became a Face Stealer in his own right.
  • The gingerbread... thing in the Brothers Grimm movie only got a face after she stole that of a girl, leaving her with a blank face.
  • The Chitauri in Marvel's The Ultimates needed to consume a human to take their shape.
  • Pavi Largo in Repo The Genetic Opera, a vain playboy whose own face was scarred horribly by some unseen accident, and who now wears the skinned-off flesh of women's faces bolted over his mutilated flesh like masks. (It's implied that he takes them from women he rapes- and that he possibly even stole them as trophies anyway even before he was disfigured. After all, we see a picture of him with a normal face cutting away a dead woman's skin in an alley...)
  • This is Batman villain Jane Doe's entire M.O.
  • An obscure Iron Man villain was a Japanese demon called the Face Thief, who was exactly that.
  • Another comic-book example: the Warwolves, creatures from Marvel's Excalibur series, could drain a living target's life force and then assume its form by wearing the empty skin that remained.
  • Marvel Universe Dire Wraiths
  • Invasion Of The Body Snatchers
  • The Thing
  • The Bug in Men In Black
  • The Zandozan assassin in The Last Starfighter
  • The Ganabe in Chill
  • In Thief III this is how Gamall, the main antagonist infiltrates the Keepers. This involves skinning people, so it's a very literal example.
  • Further literalism: Orlando, a minor demon from The Invisibles series skinned his victims' faces off and, pretending to be them, went on to kill their relatives.
replies: 21

Fight For The Low Ground
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 23:54:40 by serpenttailedangel (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:17:44)
In real life, you want the high ground. From the top of a hill you have a better view of your oponent. If you have a gun you can pick of enemies easier. And if you don't have a gun similar weapon, at least running down hill takes less energy.

In fighter games, especially side scrolling ones, this tends not to be the case. Characters are typically given attacks that can strike up, but not down. It's dificult to program the groun to be at the right angle for an attack to work like it would in real life. However, this often doesn't apply in the opposite dirrection. If you strike up while an enemy is on a platform above you it probably will hit. In such a game, the practical thing to do is get in the lowest spot and wait for an enemy to get down to your level or just above you. If not they can get below you and attack you while you have no chances of striking back.

Do We Have This One?
replies: 1

Call Girl
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 21:23:55 by Tzetze (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:15:27)
From the forum.

Anime trope but probably more general. Guy is living uninteresting life, then the Call To Adventure comes in the form of a pretty girl.

Trope, yes, no, etc.
replies: 10

At Least I'm Not A Hypocrite
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 07:58:37 by Unknown Troper @ 207.250.21.33 (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:11:33)
Seen this a Million times. The Hero has the Villain cornered and call him out on how his actions are evil, etc. But the villain doesn't care if their actions are evil or not, because at least they're aren't a hypocrite when it comes to their beliefs and/or philosophy. May be related to Villains Never Lie. Up for Grabs.
replies: 10

Gay Aesop
(permanent link) added: 2008-05-28 07:15:35 by UnknownTroper (last reply: 2009-11-22 02:07:19)
An aesop that was pretty common in the 90s when homosexuals started becoming more and more prominent in the media. Basically, a character will be introduced that is soon revealed to be a homosexual (or if they were gutsy enough, a previously known character would be outed). Then the rest of the episode would be spent on one of the main characters being bigoted and discriminating against him or fearing that he'll turn him gay or something.

Obviously by the end, the main character learns his lesson that "homosexuals are people, too" and should be treated equally just like everyone else.

Pretty much a Discredited Trope now as gays are now so prevalent that it's no longer a big deal. They can even be major characters now.

The only example I can think of is that one Simpsons episode where Homer befriended a guy and found out he was gay, then spent the rest of the episode fearing Bart was gay. My memory of this episode is very fuzzy, though, so a Simpsons buff will have to correct me if I'm wrong.
replies: 48

Collectivist Villain Individualist Hero
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 22:22:44 by Jordan (last reply: 2009-11-22 01:44:33)
Related to Order Versus Chaos, but with a political spin, this is a particular antagonism between villain and hero types. The villain is typically Affably Evil and has a Utopia Justifies The Means / Necessarily Evil type of plan. On the other hand, the hero is an individualist and often a jerk. This relationship gets into the idea of whether greater good should be favored over the individual. With some of these characters, there's a Strawman Political aspect, as people are likely to favor the villain or hero according to their political views (yes, I know you should favor the hero regardless, but this is like favoring the hero especially for philosophical reasons)

Examples:
  • Gun X Sword has the Claw and his minions as antagonists, and all are the nicest people you could imagine, and they have an Assimilation Plot in mind. They are opposed by the heroes, who include Vann and Roy both of whom can be real jerkasses.
  • Watchmen has affable villain Ozymandius who wants to bring world peace through killing millions and socially inept (and crazy) hero, Rorschach.
  • While kind of implied in the Firefly series, Serenity has an arguably well-intentioned Alliance opposed by Jerk With A Heart Of Gold hero, Mal.
  • Some interpretations of The Incredibles see this as an example. Because the villain, Syndrome makes a comment about wanting to make everyone super because "if everyone is super, no one is", the result is some viewers praising the film as an Objectivist parable, and others liking Syndrome out of a belief that he is a hero fighting about smug supers.
replies: 2

The Inexplicables
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 09:51:19 by ROBRAM89 (last reply: 2009-11-22 01:35:13)
There's definitely been a few of these, but I'm having trouble thinking of specific examples.

Basically, a team of characters who seem to be thrown together just for the hell of it. In The Verse, they're usually leftover characters who can't carry a title on their own and don't fit in anywhere else at the moment. Mostly seen in comics.

Examples:

  • The original Champions, a Marvel team consisting of Hercules, Black Widow, Ghost Rider, Angel and Iceman. Literally thrown together over lunch because Marvel needed three new titles by the close of the day and nobody was using them.
  • Next Wave seemed to have been built from whatever characters Warren Ellis wanted to make jokes about (and could get his hands on). One of them was an "original" character who may or may not have been dozens of obscure heroes.
  • The Defenders (Marvel again? wow) started out as one of these with Hulk, Namor, the Silver Surfer and Doctor Strange. Over time, though, they've developed an interesting dynamic together even though they're rarely used.
replies: 4

Walking Meme
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-22 01:03:18 by superfroggy (last reply: 2009-11-22 01:03:18)
Do We Have This? Should We Have This? Needs A Better Title.
Possible Laconic Wiki Article: Endless fountain of Memetic Mutation.
Show me yo' moves!
YESZ!

You know this guy. We all do. Ohhh yes. Even though you haven't even watched the show, even if you have no idea which video game he's from, you know this guy and have every one of their lines memorized. Their every word has a place in lulzy eternity.

This person, nay, this god(ess) of popular culture, can come in many forms, but they all are the same thing. They are the Walking Meme.

Be it due to Narm Charm, Large Ham-ness, or simply due to their own glorious Badassery, every sacred line this being spouts is an instant Memetic Mutation, to be repeated by the Internet-savvy throughout the ages.

For more information regarding these characters' holy exploits, see Memetic Badass, Memetic Sex God, and similar pages. See also Youtube Poop for practical applications of their blessed dictions.

When in doubt about examples, keep in mind the Rule Of Three. There's no specific cutoff point for awesomeness, but three Memetic Mutations is generally a good baseline. One probably won't cut it. It is also recommended, though not required, that you give us a sample of the character's works, so we too may revel in their awesomeness.

Show me yo' examples:

  • Captain Falcon says "YESZ!" to being shown some moves.
  • Luigi's lines in the Mario cartoons are hilariously over-the-top, particularly in the "Mama Luigi" episode. "That's Mama Luigi to you, Mario!" *wheeze*
  • The CD-i Zelda games are basically Walking Meme: The Game. The cutscene animation is so nightmarishly bad and the lines are so narmful that the cutscenes are basically 20 minutes of prime meme bait scattered throughout both games.
  • Mario in the CD-i Hotel Mario game is well known for, among other things, proudly proclaiming that All toastas toast toast and looking about 300 pounds overweight, leading to the nickname "Fat Mario".
  • Peppy Hare would like you to do a barrel roll. Additionally, Falco would like to inform Einsteinyou that he's on your side.
  • Dr Ivo Robotnik in the Sonic The Hedgehog cartoon is this. He really hates that PINGAS!hedgehog.
  • Chuck Norris was an example of this before it even existed.
replies: 16

Dagger Slide
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 23:36:00 by KJMackley (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:58:44)
You're standing on the edge of a balcony, you need to get down quickly but don't have time for the stairs. To your right is a long curtain and you happen to have a knife on you, so in classic swashbuckling action hero style you leap to the curtain and jam your knife into the fabric. Doing so slows your descent at least enough to survive the landing. It is likely to be one of the tricks used by a traceur.

There are many different variations to how this works including the impliment used to slow their fall, the material of the "curtain" and of course the exact situation they are in (whether it was on purpose or accidental, whether they slide a long distance or just stop, or it isn't a straight drop but still a steep surface).

As to how believable this is, it would require incredible grip strength to hold on to the knife. And many times the surface they use is not a curtain, but solid rock. Why? Because it's cool.

Examples:
  • Aladdin and the King Of Thieves had Aladdin do this when he was thrown off a cliff, using his father's dagger to drag into the rock side.
  • A gameplay mechanic of the 3D Prince Of Persia games uses this largely with the traditional curtain slide. The 2008 game gives the Prince a hand gauntlet that allows him to do the same thing but with solid rock again.
  • Batman's arm blades are used for this quite often. In Batman Begins Bruce saved himself and Ducard from falling off a cliff by slowing his slide down a steep hill. In some incarnations (at least in the DCAU as far as I know) he has deployable claws that he uses for the same effect, in addition to assisting with a Wall Cling.
  • Optimus Prime in the Transformers movie combined this with some Le Parkour moves to drop from a high roof to ground level, digging his feet into the wall and jumping back and forth between two buildings.
  • In the pilot episode of the 2002 He Man And The Masters Of The Universe, He-Man's father was thrown off a cliff and He-Man jumped after him. He-Man used his sword to slow their descent and stop, but they were both essentially stuck until someone could come and rescue them.
  • Mythbusters tested the variation used with pirates doing it with a sail. Their verdict was that it was busted, sails have little wood strips lining the fabric and that you would need an incredibly sharp knife (which would also increase your rate of falling) and incredible grip strength to hold the knife at a particular angle.
replies: 1

Gastrical Knock Out
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 23:46:11 by Henshin_Kiva (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:40:07)
Do We Have This One already?

Unfortunately for you, you're The Chick, and the bad guy has decided to kidnap you. He could just beat the crap out of you, but the Moral Guardians are much scarier than the hero. He could just carry you off unwillingly, but then he'd have to deal with all that kicking and screaming. So what does he do? POW! One shot to the stomach, and you are now limp and unconscious, ready to be carried off to the evil lair...

The GKO is a staple in Kamen Rider and other tokusatsu series, possibly because a blow to the gut is less offensive than beating a helpless woman over the head or choking her into unconsciousness. If the hero does it, it's so he doesn't have to resort to more brutal measures. If the villain does it, however, it's probably either to keep the damsel quiet or to keep them alive.

  • Kamen Rider Kiva: Taiga puts one to Maya so that he can pretend he killed her and drive Wataru into a violent rage, all for the sake of a fair fight.

replies: 1

cree-py phone home
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-22 00:34:00 by Unknown Troper @ 62.0.34.136 (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:34:00)
The phone rings. you pick it up. "Hello! who's there? I can hear you breathing! stop calling this number!!!". usually happenes as part of one of two plots- Either a serial killer is after you and he wants to hear you squirm- or a guy is inlove with you and he doesn't have the guts to talk. It's almost always a woman picking up and a guy calling.

replies: 0

Kids Love The Beatles
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 23:04:59 by movie007 (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:30:03)
This would be a special form of Periphery Demographic, and similar to Germans Love David Hasselhoff.

Essentially, this is a trope where classic works continue to spawn a significant fandom amongst the younger generation.

Classic children's literature and Western Animation series would provide a specifically interesting case where, essentially, the whole current fanbase would be a Periphery Demographic - since there would be the usual Animation Age Ghetto, along with this trope.

Generally, it's works that are not Deader Than Disco that are likely to spawn this trope.
replies: 6

Protagonist Scrappy
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-11 13:29:35 by Nyktos (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:27:23)
Sometimes the audience really hates a character. When the character is minor, it usually isn't so bad. However, on occasion the main character of the show is hated. Fans may still watch a show because there's another character who's more interesting, or just because the premise is good.

Examples

Anime and Manga Film
Needs A Better Description. No doubt there are examples that can be stolen from some of the other Scrappy pages.
replies: 32

FandomPackageDeal
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-29 09:13:12 by movie007 (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:24:19)
Pretty much the inverse of Fandom Rivalry. Just like with how the belief often held in a Fandom Rivalry consist of if you like Show X, you can't also like Show Y - this one one deals with the belief that if you like Show X, then you also have to like Show Y.

Sometimes, this view may only have a one-sided consensus: i.e., the fandom consensus of Show X may act as if you also have to like Show Y - while the fandom consensus of Show Y may not hold the same view of Show X. In extreme cases, the fandom consensus of Show Y may actually hate Show X. This could result in a major Hype Backlash from fans of Show X who don't also like Show Y - because not only are they being pressured by their fellow Show X fans to also like Show Y, but it turns of that the inverse view is not even shared by fans of Show Y.

An example of the second variant:
replies: 9

Every Jamacian Is A Rasta
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-18 23:19:56 by SignOfTheDead (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:20:26)
Exactly What It Says On The Tin. Seen it a million times. Do We Have This? Every time a character comes from that particular island, or just has the accent, they will invariably wear the Rasta colors, the beanie, the dreadlocks, they will either listen too of play Reggie music (completely ignoring the various other genres of Jamaican music) and, depending on the age demographic of the work, will smoke copious amounts of Mary Jane. This is the common stereo type of a Jamaican, a Rastafarian, and might even extend to anyone of Afro-Carribean extraction.
replies: 15

Stalactites and icicles hate you.
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 12:24:11 by artman40 (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:18:47)
Quite widespread trope in video games, especially in platformers. Whenever a player approaches a stalactite or icicle (sometimes a chandelier), they fall down. I wonder do we have a trope for this already?
replies: 17

Checkhovs Pet
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 21:41:46 by Jordan (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:14:43)
A companion trope to Small Annoying Creature, this is where a character will have a pet, often a Ridiculously Cute Critter / borderline Intellectual Animal which will disappear from the story, only to reappear to do something useful. Typically, this is a pet small enough to fit in the character's clothing or cleavage or might even be "disguised" as an inanimate object (e.g. Wendy's turtle at first looks like a piece of jewelery).

Examples:
replies: 3

There is no X except Y
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 10:33:59 by bud0011 (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:10:14)
*24 Hour Launch Notice.* - will be launched around 2 PM EST if this is alright with everyone.

forum discussion on this

A given political and geographical division is often misrepresented in the eyes of those who are "close", but not near-by. For example:

  • This troper lives in New York. Without telling you much, would you assume New York City?
  • Or could you name a city other than Chicago in Illinois?

The basic premise of this trope is this:
  1. Take a socigeographic, and/or political division.
  2. Ask the natives about their neighboring regions?
  3. Now ask the natives of those regions.

Compare And Contrast the results. If the natives go by a Hollywood Atlas, or something similar, the results will be surprising: There's nothing in X except Y (where X is a major political division [like a US State] and Y is a corresponding City within X).

Subtorpe of Small Reference Pools & Hollywood Atlas. Related to Big Applesauce & Tokyo Is The Center Of The Universe, except those are more about "where the action is" instead of "what the neighbors call us". For national tropages, see Freestate Amsterdam & Britain Is Only London. For time related events in that location, see Its Always Mardi Gras In New Orleans.

(Thanks Troper Madrugada for help)

Examples:

North America

Eagleland
  • The best example I know of is New York State (will be a troper tale when launched).
    • Staying with in the State bounds, and going by the natives of New York City, you only have: NYC, everything north ("upstate"), and everything east (Long Island). This is too the annoyance of many natives in those NORTH-OF-NYC regions, whom could careless about the city; rather, they don't like being referred to as "upstate" since, to them, they are in the middle of the state and therefore New York City is down state. I've seen many a debate between two people (one a native, one a New Yorker; both attending a central New York college) in which one would include lines like: "I'm not upstate, you're downstate", "I don't know how it is here, upstate", etc.
    • Flip it around, a lot of People native (although not all) to the central regions of New York will believe that it's just New York City and the ocean. Long Island is either wrapped up into New York City, or none-existent. A friend of mine whose home was closer to Canada than to New York City automatically assumed I lived in Manhattan because I came from the "New York City" area. Another one was surprised to find out there were farms on Long Island.
  • Chicago is the only place in Illinois
  • Miami is the only place in Florida
  • St.Louis is the only place in Missouri.
  • New Orleans is the only place in Louisiana.

Canada
  • Canada is only... um...

Mexico

Middle East

UAE

Europe

[1] Freestate Amsterdam

[2]
  • Italy is only Rome.
  • Greece is only Athens, which is only the Acropolis.

United Kingom

Asia

Japan

Russia
  • Russia is only Moscow and Russia is only Siberia

South Armerica

  • Brazil is only Rio.

Africa

  • Africa is only jungle, with a few small tribal villages tossed in. And aliens.
  • The Philippines is only Manila - even to the locals.

  • Egypt is only pyramids.
  • Germany is only beer, sausages, and quaint little villages. Besides, you know...
  • Outside of Brazil, South America is just a big hill of cocaine.
  • India is only Sikhs.
  • Antarctica is only ice and penguins. This is somewhat valid.

Exceptions

In America

*24 Hour Launch Notice.* - will be launched around 2 PM EST if this is alright with everyone.
replies: 31

Thieves Accord
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 16:10:19 by Known Unknown (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:10:13)
Alt Title: Bargain Of Opportunity

A bargain that two or more parties enter for their own benefit, with mainly their own goals in mind, and in which one or all parties plan to double cross the others as soon as they have what they need.

These usually end with all parties benefiting, and all of them plotting when to betray their "allies" and/or waiting for someone to make the first move.

It's generally to be expected that villains will do this to each other, or to the heroes, if given the opportunity. Expect less Genre Savvy individuals to cry "but we had a deal!"

See also Thirty Xanatos Pileup. Between Genre Savvy alliances, expect a lot of I Know You Know I Know stalemates.
Examples:
  • Predictably happens a lot in Pirates Of The Caribbean, usually centered around Jack, who makes a lot of these in the first movie. A lot fewer of these, but still some prominent ones, happen in "Dead Man's Chest", and pretty much everyone is doing this in "At World's End," even breaking such deals and immediately entering a new one, or having more than one going at the same time with opposing sides.
  • In StarCraft: Brood War, the four way alliance against the UED is pretty much this, with both Arcturus Mengsk's Evil Empire and Kerrigan's Zerg swarm both planning on betraying and destroying the others when they succeed, while Zeratul and Raynor are more benevolent and plan to honor their agreements, but fully expect someone to pull a double cross eventually.
replies: 3

Crowning Moment
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 20:32:15 by Ronin (last reply: 2009-11-22 00:00:53)
The Crowning Moment Tropes, What It Says On The Tin

CM of Awesome Cm of Funny CM of Heart Warming Cm of Heart Breaking CM of Badass CM of Creepy

replies: 2

Four Legged Leaping Pest
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 16:08:09 by deuxhero (last reply: 2009-11-21 23:28:43)
I know I have seen this quite a bit. The "alien pest" on four legs that leaps at it's foes to attack them.

replies: 5

Young Entrepreneur
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 23:08:57 by Wacky Meets Practical (last reply: 2009-11-21 23:08:57)
Kids can be cute, whiny, mouthy, innocent, bratty, heroic, and even magical. But they can also be good businessmen too.

These children are great with money and are always looking for ways to make more. They always seem to be coming up with one Zany Scheme after another and will always try to cheat other children, and occasionally adults, from their cash. If they're good at it, they could also be a Child Prodigy or a Teen Genius. In shows with a particularly lax depiction of realism, these children could even have their own legitimate companies and firms with actual clients who take them seriously.

Examples:

Needs More Examples. Rolling Updates.
replies: 3

Drunken Gambit
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 23:06:30 by Discar (last reply: 2009-11-21 23:06:30)
Rolling Updates

Simply put, a plan that is conceived and put into motion while most (if not all) of the individuals involved are completely hammered. Thhe most common subversion is probably the (sober) Ditz or Cloud Cuckoo Lander coming up with a crazy plan that the drunks would normally never go along with.

Really Needs A Better Description

Examples

Comics
  • One strip in Krakow references this, with a panel showing that Japan's decision to bomb Pearl Harbor was initiated as a drunken dare.

Literature
  • Bored Of The Rings (a Lord Of The Rings parody). After the defeat of Sorhed's attack on Minas Troney, the victors have a drunken feast. When Arrowroot (AKA Stomper) is challenged to prove that he's worthy of being king, he decides to take an army to fight Sorhed, and the inebriated crowd agrees with him.
  • The flying party in Life The Universe And Everything was made to fly because it seemed like a good idea to a bunch of drunk rocket scientists.

Live Action TV

  • Of all people, Lois of Malcolm In The Middle tries this with a group of people from a book club. Yes, you read that right. A book club. The plan involved vandalizing the car of a very successful and popular woman whom the rest of the group were jealous of. Hilarity Ensues.

  • Many of the plots of That70s Show are set up like this, usually with the "while high" variation.

Webcomics
  • Questionable Content uses this on occasion, such as Sven hiring Lydia and not remembering it in the morning.
replies: 15

Fear Tropes
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 20:55:17 by Goldfritha (last reply: 2009-11-21 22:55:41)
replies: 4

Died Standing Up
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 20:23:02 by Generality (last reply: 2009-11-21 22:54:37)
Close to a launch here. Examples or objections, post 'em if you got 'em.

Congratulations, hero, you've finally done it. You've defeated the Big Bad. After an epic Sword Fight, you've managed to plunge your Cool Sword right through his evil heart. The lights in his eyes dim; he staggers; blood trickles from his mouth. You, being sure of victory, turn to make sure that the nearby Damsel In Distress is unhurt, and to accept her showers of grateful kisses. Looks like everything is settled.

But what's this? The bad guy flinches! Is he trying to take another step? Are his fingers making a grab for the sword that even now rests in his breastplate? Is he such a Determinator that he can endure so much damage and keep fighting?

No. He's dead. His body is just twitching a bit. And yet, he doesn't fall, his muscles so perfectly conditioned they can continue to function without any signals from his brain. So he just stands there like a morbid practice dummy. He's Died Standing Up.

This is a device used when a character is so utterly Bad Ass that even in death they refuse to accept utter defeat. The body continues to strive for victory even when its driving will has been extinguished. This goes hand in hand with a Badass Normal or any other absurdly strong character, especially one with a Charles Atlas Superpower. It may be mixed with Taken For Granite, when a villain's magical body has No Ontological Inertia and turns to stone at the moment of death. Despite the description above, this can happen to both heroic and villainous characters.

This is technically possible in Real Life (especially with the help of rigor mortis), though absurdly unlikely, and in any case a corpse's lack of balance control will cause it to topple sooner or later. The realms of fiction simply contrive to end the scene before this happens.

In deference to gravity, falling to one's knees also counts, so long as the final plunge into a prone state doesn't follow. Taking another step forward despite being clearly dead also counts.

Examples:

Anime and Manga
  • In an episode of Detective Conan, the victim had just finished an exacting workout and her muscles were tense enough to keep her standing after being murdered. Conan recognizes this after seeing a statue of a legendary Japanese warrior who had died the same way in a battle. (See Benkei, below)
  • A variant in Naruto: Rock Lee, after being completely and mercilessly thrashed by Gaara, pushing his body way past its limits, and suffering permanent damage to two limbs, manages to stand back up despite being unconscious at the time, presumably by sheer willpower.

Comics
  • Punisher MAX had a crazy mobster henchman who after having one of his eyes pulled out, getting cut, beaten, shot, impaled on an iron spiked fence and having Frank blow his head in half with a shotgun still took two more steps making even Frank panic a little.

Film
  • Glory. While Denzel Washington's character slumps forward after being shot dead he doesn't let go of the flag.

Mythology and History
  • Saito Musashibo Benkei is said to have died this way.
  • Rumor claimed that Blackbeard's headless body, after being thrown overboard, swam between 2 and 7 times around the Adventure before sinking.

Video Games
  • Ganon in two iterations of the Legend Of Zelda. In Wind Waker, he turns to stone after being stabbed in the head by the Master Sword. In Twilight Princess, he stays in the same position after being stabbed through the chest.
  • Possibly parodied in Mother 3 when a pigmask watches you get in a horrible hovercraft accident. If you examine him afterwards, it is revealed that he has passed out, presumably from fright, yet he's still standing up. With his arm raised.

replies: 9

Runs With Scissors
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 21:22:17 by Evalana (last reply: 2009-11-21 22:54:19)
Is This Tropable? One of the basic safety rules we learn as children is "never run with scissors." Thus, references to this rule and instances of characters running with scissors show up in the media all the time.

Examples:
replies: 5

Hamartia
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 18:47:24 by MetaFour (last reply: 2009-11-21 22:52:29)
Or Tragic Mistake.

In a formal Tragedy, there is be a specific scene where the Tragic Hero is given a clear choice, and they choose wrongly. Often this wrong choice can be blamed on the hero's Fatal Flaw, but sometimes they just get screwed over by fate. This moment may not be obvious at the time, but looking back, it becomes clear that this moment was crucial to the hero's tragic downfall. The results of this bad choice lead inexorably towards the hero's catastrophic end; this is also the last moment where, had the hero chosen correctly, the catastrophe could have been averted.

EDIT: To clarify, this is not supposed to be an event that gets the plot moving. It's a point after the plot is in motion, which serves at the point of no return for the Tragic Hero.

Structurally, this moment is the climax of the story, and everything afterwards is Denouement, though the emotional climax of the story frequently falls later.

BIG TIME SPOILERS AHOY
replies: 30

The MacBeth
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 21:02:53 by RichardAK (last reply: 2009-11-21 22:51:56)
"I am in blood Stepp'd in so far that, should I wade no more, Returning were as tedious as go o'er." -Mac Beth

This character is someone who believes with perfect faith that the universe is governed by an all-powerful and perfectly just supreme being, and that the righteous will be rewarded in heaven, while the wicked will be punished in hell. This character also knows that he has done something so terrible that he is in the latter category. It should be noted that while this character is obviously usually a villain, antiheroes can fall into this category as well. The trope-namer is obviously Mac Beth, as indicated by the quotation.

Is This Tropeable? Do We Have This?
replies: 5

Ahab
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 13:54:50 by jimmyThePipe (last reply: 2009-11-21 22:22:09)
I'm not sure if the term was coined in "Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon" but that's the first place I heard it. An Ahab is a character in a Slasher film who will go to any lengths to track down and stop the killer. Obviously based on the relationship between Ahab and Moby Dick.

The most obvious example is Samuel Loomis (Donald Pleasance) in the early Halloween movies.

Sometimes the Ahab is responsible for creating the killer, through negligence or error, a failed psychologist or mentor. Can also be parent of a former victim. Ahab is usually male, in his later years. Ahab will try to stop the killer and warn everyone who will listen about the invincible killing machine that's come back to life again, but they usually peg Ahab as stark raving mad. Ahab will track the killer across towns, states, sacrificing a normal life, career, at personal cost, and will not rest until the killer is gone once-and-for-all. Since killers resurrect themselves quite often, the dedicated Ahab may appear in sequels hunting the killer for years until the character is written out, killed off, or forgotten.

The main difference between a protagonist and Ahab's desire to stop the killer is Ahab will go looking for trouble, whereas trouble usually goes looking for the protagonist.

The Ahab has some control over the killer, and can talk them out of murder or at least slow them down with a good heart-to-heart. The killer almost never attacks or considers Ahab as a potential threat or victim, unless Ahab gets directly in the way of the killer's main target. The Ahab can usually sense where the killer might go or what they are thinking from years of study and close contact.

(I think this term should be specifically for the Slasher genre. Like the Final Girl, or Implacable Man. Because there are tons of Ahab-type characters in movies, like Dr. Frankenstein or Kahn. .. Or maybe it should include them as well? Not sure.)
replies: 3

Anger Tropes
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 20:30:17 by Goldfritha (last reply: 2009-11-21 22:02:09)
replies: 3

Information Desk
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 21:48:48 by Goldfritha (last reply: 2009-11-21 21:55:21)
replies: 1

Hidden Evil
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 17:19:40 by Vree (last reply: 2009-11-21 21:52:48)
Rolling Updates

Another sub-index for More Than Meets The Eye, and the Villain index this time.

Those...THINGS over there...No, don't look! They'll see you! OK, can you see them now? Well the thing about them is that they are EVIL. Of course they don't look evil, you think they wanna let everybody find out? But they can't fool me. I know them for what they truly are. But nobody would just believe me because they are...

replies: 4

Surprise Tropes
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 21:48:14 by Goldfritha (last reply: 2009-11-21 21:48:14)
replies: 1

Verne Punk
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 08:01:57 by Unknown Troper @ 207.250.21.33 (last reply: 2009-11-21 21:45:51)
Also known as Art Nouveau Punk. Discoveryland at Disneyland Paris is probably the Ur-Example of this. Up For Grabs.
replies: 4

A Wise Man Once Said
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 12:27:51 by johnnye (last reply: 2009-11-21 21:35:01)
Stock Phrase - Do We Have This One?

Variations include:
replies: 6

Gaylians
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 20:08:48 by Unknown Troper @ 98.218.104.64 (last reply: 2009-11-21 21:21:16)
The strange coincidences in having alien/foreign creatures having alternate sexualities. Whether this is to make them”foreign"' or to highlight their differences it has mixed results

Laconic: When Have You Tried Not Being a Monster has two meanings.

Examples:

Quasar and Mondragon from Annihilation: Conquest A vast majority of The Runaways/Young Avengers Including the Gay half Kree half Skrull Hulkling (coincidentally Quasar’s brother) the gay magician Wiccan and the lesbian alien Karolina (not to mention her TG Skrull Girlfriend) Wild storm’s Jenny Sparx, who is some kind of sub consciously created deified planetary immune system And then there’s Torchwood, which is Torchwood. So Yeah

replies: 4

These Tropes Are Made For Walking
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 18:41:28 by DragonQuestZ (last reply: 2009-11-21 21:07:49)
replies: 2

Boobie Ditz
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-13 17:17:05 by ChrisX (last reply: 2009-11-21 20:57:00)
A subtrope of The Ditz. May overlap with Genius Ditz.

There has been some tendencies that in anime/manga, girls with big boobs act very ditzy or clueless. There's no explanation why, but fans have taken this to a joke level of this: "All the nutritions she ate go to her boobs, not her brains."

Examples of this trope:
  • Inoue Orihime from Bleach. This is subverted that she's actually a top scorer in her class, she just had weird imaginations.
  • Both incarnations of Ryuubi Gentoku (Ikki Tousen and Koihime Musou), both with tendencies of trusting the wrong people and being the Distressed Damsel.
  • In Super Robot Wars, this is greatly subverted by Lamia Loveless. She displays herself as calm, composed and analytical, anything a Boobie Ditz isn't. However, considering she's just created recently, thus having the mentality of a 1-3 years old girl when it comes to anything not about strategy and war, she has shades of a Boobie Ditz when it comes to daily human life activities (as seen in the early parts of OG Gaiden).
  • On the other hand, Kaguya Nanbu from Endless Frontier plays this completely straight.
replies: 16

Barely Relevant Hyperbole
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 20:40:09 by fireangel-99 (last reply: 2009-11-21 20:40:09)
"...Don't blowtorch a badger or gang rape a toad Or fist a gorilla 'till he cries..." Russell Howard on teaching pupils not to kill insects

The result of a character trying to illustrate a point using an example that is hanging on to relevance by a thread. The audience is rarely aware of this until afterwards and it invariably provokes a WTF? reaction when spotted. Usually done for comedic effect or by politicians.
replies: 0

Follower Needs Blessing Badly!
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 20:20:28 by Earnest (last reply: 2009-11-21 20:20:28)
So, Gods Need Prayer Badly to fuel their divine might, but what do the worshippers get out of it? A God Of Evil may promise power and riches... or just not smite them. Crystal Dragon Jesus though will probably work miracles. Both will at times use Super Empowering to give their Clerics, Priests, and prophets the kind of divine mojo that will attract followers and lay the smack down on the servants of their enemies.

Unlike wizards, or mages, there is a duality about the power a cleric of a god wields. On the one hand, the strength of their god will echo in the follower: a strong god will have powerful followers, and a weak, dying or dead deity will have such pitifully weak priests they can't even cure a cold. On the other, how faithful the priest is also makes his or her powers stronger, and possibly even their deity in a weird positively reinforcing loop.
replies: 0

Skin Color Does Not Necessarily Equal Race
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 13:51:24 by Unknown Troper @ 72.208.230.226 (last reply: 2009-11-21 20:08:23)
Exactly What It Says On The Tin

As an example, for the most part, the term "Caucasian" describes a smattering of peoples spread throughout the world, such as Europe, North Africa, India, and the Middle East whose origins can be traced to the Caucasus region. The term doesn't necessarily depend on skin color, as dark skinned people located in the Indus Valley region have been classified as Caucasian.

This is usually ignored or not known by people, as you'll find examples of people in both fiction and real life using the term exclusively for people of European descent.
replies: 14

I Needed The Money
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 18:52:57 by TerminusEst13 (last reply: 2009-11-21 19:12:10)
Do We Have This?

Ah-hah. Here's the villain that you've been chasing down all month. He's left a wake of bodies and decimated banks all across the world. He's a terrible monster, a beast of beasts, and now you finally have him cornered. You've got all of his gadgets disabled, his mumbo-jumbo nullified, and his strength is ebbed. Now you just slap the cuffs on him and haul him away, but one question nags at you.

Why, Baron Von McNastyguy? Why did you crumble Fort Knox and haul away with all the gold bars in there? How could you be so heartless?

He answers in four simple words: "I needed the money."

This is a Freudian Excuse dealing specifically with primal needs instead of psychological trauma. The villain was still doing villainous things and villainizing things intentionally, it's just that...well, he kinda had a daughter to feed. Or he wanted to get his boy a bike for his birthday. Or his cherished pet is suffering terribly, and the surgery is expensive. Or he wanted to get his wife that prosthetic leg that could finally let her walk again. Unfortunately, legitimate work was difficult to come by, and sometimes lead to only more problems. So, they pick up a gun and do what comes naturally...

Of course, this doesn't justify his atrocities at all--destruction is still destruction. But in that moment, you understand his motivations, and now you have a little bit of doubt as to what will happen once you put him away.

Compare Good All Along and I Was Young And Needed The Money.


Examples:

Film
  • Sandman in the third Spider Man film needs the money for his daughter.
  • In The Love Bug (the original 1968 movie, not the 1997 remake), Jim agrees (temporarily) to sell Herbie to Peter Thorndyke, which shocks Tennessee and Carol. Jim asserts this decision, saying "Don't make a fuss. I need the money."

Live Action TV
  • In an episode of 3rd Rock From The Sun where Dick was a Rogue Juror, he tried to define "reasonable doubt" as assuming the culprit stole the money to pay for his daughter's life-threatening operation, prompting the response "It's not reasonable doubt if you just make things up!"
  • The Unusuals episode "Boorland Day": the Boorland crime family (try to) pull off a string of robberies to get the father a kidney transplant.
replies: 10

Vasectomy Plot
(permanent link) added: 2009-09-05 04:07:45 by RossN (last reply: 2009-11-21 19:01:51)
When talk of a vasectomy crops up in a show it generally falls under one of three ways:

1. A wife (almost always already a mother) wants her husband to have a vasectomy.

This is generally played somewhat humourously with the husband usually being portrayed as being in the wrong for freaking out. Eventually he will either go through with it or pretend to go through with it and, well, Hilarity Ensues.

Can come across as a Double Standard if the wife seems totally insensitive to the husband's feelings yet is still intended to come across as the rational one.

Examples: Coronation Street

2. Wife wants the dog to get neutered.

As above only played entirely for comedy with the man transfering his anxiety over to his dog getting the snip.

Examples: Married With Children

3. Voluntary vasectomy 'reverses' itself.

Rare, self explanatory.

Examples: Scrubs

replies: 11

Unreqeyered Lenses
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 14:01:30 by Unknown Troper @ 77.100.98.232 (last reply: 2009-11-21 18:59:22)
Needs A Better Title

Lenses are cool. They are sunglasses combined with a helmet, it's no wonder they're so common in media.

Unfortunately, designers seem to forget that humans use lenses to see. particularly in science fiction, helmets have an unnecessary amount of visors, goggles, eyeholes, etc. just to look cool. (or not so cool). Or the visors are in the right place, but there's an unnecessary amount of visor, and sometimes the visor is just in places where eyes really have no business being.

(Now with Rolling Updates!)


Examples

Film
  • At the beginning of Outlander, the soldiers seem to be wearing helmets with six glowing dots for their eyes. (may be wrong, just thinking from memory)

Videogames
  • Isaac has three glowing visors on his helmet. One allows him to see, the other two are only there to make his forehead and mouth glow.
  • Sam Fisher is iconic for his three glowing goggle lenses. The three different vision modes are supposed to justify it, but then, why doesn't he wear three pairs of goggles?
  • The Krogan armor manufacturers in Mass Effect don't seem to know where the eyes actually belong on the Krogan's face.
  • Visor, a playable character of Quake III Arena, has a massive visor that covers his entire face. Weirdly enough he isn't actually wearing a helmet.
    • His alternate skin, Gorre, adds to this by seperating his visor into smaller shapes that are mostly unnecessary.
  • The helmets of the Sith troopers in Ko Tor 1 and 2 seem to be designed to remove the wearer's ability to look up while giving them complete sight of their feet.
    • The helmets of the clone troopers likewise give their mouths and noses a great view of the battlefield. (Though the later stormtrooper armor only has eyeholes)
  • Godot in Ace Attorney has three panels on his visor, for some reason.

Tabletop Games
  • The Tau of Warhammer 40 K invert this by only having one visible lens despite their two eyes.

Comic Books
  • Justified in Sillage, most easily seen in book 5. The number of lenses on the commandos' helmets range from one to six, but that's because it's a mixed species squad. Anybody shown with open helmet has the number of eyes to match their helmet.

Live Action TV

Real Life
  • It's probably worth mentioning that an "unnecessary amount of visor" might have to be an awful lot of visor. Look at how much they put on NASA space suits.
replies: 23

Subject 99
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 11:04:07 by HazardousWaster (last reply: 2009-11-21 18:53:40)
You know that thing where you find out during the story that many many people have done this all before you, and you're just following their footsteps? Haven't found a trope for it yet, but I've got a few examples to get started:

Examples:

  • The Matrix: During Reloaded the architect reveals (or maybe he's lying) that The One, is not The Only One, and every time One reaches the architect, he selects a few citizens of Zion to survive the machines' attack and found a new city. Neo chooses to break the cycle.

  • In Portal, it's clear from the graffiti that you are nowhere near the first person to run the course, and implied that all previous test subjects were clones of you.

  • In the Assassin's Creed series, Desmond is Subject 17 (I think), and spends part of the second game reading clues left to him by his predecessor, subject 16

  • Chuck Palahniuk's novel Diary: the protagonist gradually discovers that her life is entirely mapped out for her by her mother, who knows that, like her ancestors, she will cause an incident that drives all the unwelcome tourists away from their island.

  • Absolutely years since I've played it, but I think this was broadly the whole point of the game Expendable.

I'm sure there are quite a few films which fit this trope, but they're not springing to mind.

Sorry these examples are all so spoilertastic, but that's kind of the point with this budding trope.

Also, examples of this trope fall into two broad categories: Sometimes Subject 99 manages to break this endless cycle, sometimes he/she does not. Subtrope potential?
replies: 3

Main And Central West 48
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 12:10:52 by SignOfTheDead (last reply: 2009-11-21 18:50:39)
You know those scenes in the movies where the police cars are surrounding a building? During said scenes you will hear something coming over the police radio, it will always be "Main and central west 48". Even in movies where this doesn't make sense like in The Devils Rejects where the police are swarming a farm house in rural Texas, the radio still says "Main and Central West 48". It's just the generic thing the police say over the radio. It's in EVERY movie that has a scene with the police standing outside their cars.
replies: 3

Moh's Scale Of Rock/Metal Hardness
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 16:19:34 by BlackHumor (last reply: 2009-11-21 18:46:25)
Not to be confused with Mohs Scale Of Sci Fi Hardness.

Basically, a scale for ranking the "hardness" of music, "hardness" being the quality that separates metal from rock, or hard rock from soft rock, or death metal from other metal.

UPDATED Vague outline (I'd really like to give specific songs for each level eventually):
  1. Verges on pop: Need examples.
  2. Soft rock:Early songs by The Beatles, a lot of 50's rock.
  3. Rock sans intensifier: Most songs by The Beatles.
  4. Still rock sans intensifier (punk starts here): The Rolling Stones or occasionally The Beatles
  5. Hard rock that is definitely still rock: AC/DC, where Led Zeppelin ends up on average.
  6. Difficult to tell if it's rock or metal: Guns And Roses, Avenged Sevenfold
  7. Classic metal (punk ends here). Also, most power metal: Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest
  8. Most thrash metal: Metallica, Megadeth
  9. Lighter death metal or harder thrash metal: Slayer is a good example, also In Flames.
  10. Most death metal: Cannibal Corpse, say.
  11. And Beyond: Anal Cunt is here.

Notes:
  • Lower hardnesses are not bad. Remember, The Beatles come in at 2-3, and 10 is usually unlistenable.
  • As time goes on, those metal bands at the top of this chart go to increasingly silly lengths to top one another, which causes the chart to compress itself to accommodate the new hardness. So a 6 now could be a 4 or 5 ten years from now.
  • The reason some of the metal Fan Dumb hates power metal is that it is a rare exception to the above rule that metal bands tend to get harder over time.
replies: 29

Horned Hairdo
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-08 10:41:38 by Eddie Valiant, Jr. (last reply: 2009-11-21 18:39:57)
This is an easy one, we've all Seen It A Million Times. Someone's hairdo (most frequently a female's) is styled in such a way as to resemble horns. Almost invariably, this is a surefire way to clue the audience in to the character's evil nature, but sometimes it's just a sign of extravagance.

Comics

Film

Western Animation

Any more examples?
replies: 25

Glad You Thought Of It
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 16:08:41 by Evalana (last reply: 2009-11-21 18:31:40)
Glad I Thought Of It is when one character suggests a plan, and the other scoffs, but then claims it as their own. This trope, however, is when a character is trying to guide another character toward an idea or plan while making it seem like that character thought of it themselves.

Seen It A Million Times, but the only example I can think of right now comes from Xanadu On Broadway
Kira: If only there were a book, a magic book, that listed all the locations in Los Angeles, and had their phones numbers next to it.
Sonny: Yeah...
Kira: ...and if the book had pages the color of amber.
Sonny: I know! I'll look it up in the phone book!
Kira: My god, you're brilliant!

Needs A Better Title?
replies: 3

Challenger Approaching
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 16:16:32 by deuxhero (last reply: 2009-11-21 18:00:39)
There was a YKTTW that launched but got no article known as "To be the man, you gotta beat the man ". Fairly sure the launch was in error and can't figure out how to restore, so making a manual note.
replies: 2

Gayness Equals Pedophilia
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-26 07:06:39 by Unknown Troper @ 72.208.230.226 (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:48:01)
As the title says, the basic idea that the only people who have sexual attractions to people below a certain age are homosexual men. This is in spite of their being enough examples in real life to suggest this isn't the case, namely that a large amount of pedophiles actually classify themselves as heterosexual. Not to mention women pedophiles.

Could be considered a form of Unfortunate Implications.

Is Up For Grabs.

Examples:

  • The 1961 short film Boys Beware.
  • Parodied in Monkey Dust when one of the Paedofinder General's victims were a couple of Camp Gays based on "What some bloke in the pub told me".
  • Subverted twice in South Park: Once in the episode "Cripple Fight", where Big Gay Al is fired from the Brand X Boy Scouts and replaced with an aggressive pedophile, and in the episode "Miss Teacher Bangs A Boy", in which a young blonde kindergarten teacher gets involved in a relationship with Kyle's baby brother Ike.
replies: 36

Velvet Revolution
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 17:38:55 by Frodo Goofball CoTV (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:38:55)
Do We Have This? Should We Have This? Needs A Better Title, Needs A Better Description, all likely.... Rolling Updates underway.
Got this idea for a trope here; see also here. We have The Revolution Will Not Be Civilized and The Revolution Will Not Be Vilified, but what about this:

The revolution is underway, radicals and revolutionaries spill out into the streets. Blocking their path, imperial internal security forces gather. But what's this? They are deploying a gigantic... television? The revolutionary leaders are calling for peaceful resistance? The Emperor is ordering his troops to stand down? Hours ago it looked like only a long and bloody war could end this, and it is over with only minor casualties!

A subtrope of Happy Ending. Can be a Deus Ex Machina.

Subtropes:
  1. It's peaceful now, but a standoff is taking place, and violence is expected. It never comes. The conflict just... ends. Perhaps a few were hurt in the confusion, but a bloodbath is averted.
  2. A bloody war is underway, but a relatively bloodless internal coup or unexpected surrender ends the war suddenly.

maybe need to split this?

Examples of Case 1:

Film
  • In V For Vendetta (the movie): The government's troops end up joining the revolting populace.

Literature
  • In The Bible, some of Jesus' followers explect a bloody revolution; instead Jesus surrenders peacefully. The whole thing is, of course, all part of God's plan....

Live Action TV
  • On Babylon Five, the dockworkers threaten to go on strike, the senior staff has been kicked out of their own quarters due to a legal technicality, and the nightwatch is running amuck. A reallocation of funds solves the legal issues, and life returns to normal... for a few episodes.

Real Life
  • The end of the Cold War, in comparison to the cataclysm many had expected the cold war to end in, was nearly bloodless.
    • The trope namer is Chechoslovakia, where the transition from one communist state in 1989 to two non-communist ones in 1993 was accomplished bloodlessly.
    • The collapse of the Berlin Wall and reunification of Germany.
    • In Romania, the leadership ordered the army and secret police to put down the revolution. The army commanders refused to fire on unarmed civilians.
  • South Africa's elimination of the Apartheid system.
  • The People Power Revolution in the Philippines.
  • Subverted in China in Tiananmen Square: students had hoped to stage a Velvet Revolution, but the army didn't back down.

Examples of Case 2:

Anime and Manga
  • In Robotech, after years of bloody conflict, the Invid Regis just... left.
  • In Code Geass, Lelouch arranges things so that Britannia ends up letting the Black Knights go.
    • Later, The Britanians revolt against now Emperor Lelouch ends successfully with only one death - allowing Britannia, Japan, and China an Earn Your Happy Ending.

Comic Books

Literature

Live Action TV
  • On Babylon Five, the Earth - Minbari War ends when the Minbari, who had been winning, inexplicably surrendered.

Real Life
  • The invasion of Japan in WWII, which never happened. The emperor and his staff had to defy their own army to surrender.

Unsorted

Literature
replies: 6

Rich Are Clueless About Everyday Things
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 15:41:42 by DragonQuestZ (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:27:22)
So a mink coat, cigarette, and chilled wine don't count as roughing it in the woods?

Needs A Better Title. Please go to this crowner to vote on the suggestions.

Basically when wealthy people have trouble grasping concepts that people without money take for granted. These people have been spoiled all their lives, so they have had all these things taken care of for them. So when they try to do these things (by choice or not), they just don't get them.

Usually this is Played For Laughs, since it's a form of saying "Money can't buy common sense". Yet it can be Played For Drama.

Can overlap with Upper Class Twit (if this character doesn't really do much even by upper class standards), and Valley Girl (if this character is fashion conscious and inarticulate), a Rich Bitch (if this character is also malicious), even King Incognito (if the royal is doing a poor job of blending in). Conversely, a Rich Idiot With No Day Job would pretend to be like this, to make his masquerade more convincing.

This does apply in Real Life, but no specific examples will be put here to avoid Natter.

City Mouse is a Sub Trope.

Compare Fish Out Of Water.

Contrast Country Mouse, Non Idle Rich.

Examples:

  • Picture comes from Troop Beverly Hills. The main character is leading a troop of ersatz Girl Scounts, and at first treats it like lounging by the pool.
  • Mr. Pewterschmidt from Family Guy turns out to be like this when he temporarily loses his fortune. He can't even go to the bathroom properly.
  • London Tipton from The Suite Life Of Zack And Cody.
  • On the Animaniacs, the Hip Hippos tried to do all their own chores when their maid quit, and failed miserably.
  • The boys of the Ouran High School Host Club can't grasp normal 'commoner' things like the supermarket. Haruhi, in the meantime, feels her blood pressure rising.
  • That's the topic of the Pulp song Common People: a ditzy rich girl asks a lower-class guy to introduce her to his world.
    Rent a flat above a shop
    Cut your hair and get a job
    Smoke some fags and play some pool
    Pretend you never went to school
    But still you'll never get it right
    'Cause when you're laid in bed at night
    Watching roaches climb the wall
    If you call your Dad he could stop it all
    You'll never live like common people
    You'll never do what common people do
    You'll never fail like common people
    You'll never watch your life slide out of view
    And dance and drink and screw
    Because there's nothing else to do.
  • Dethklock had trouble shopping at supermarket, or "food library", as they thought it was called. In fact, most episodes are about them trying to do things outside their comfort zone. This despite the fact that their music isn't exactly the kind clueless rich people would play.
  • Largely the point of the movie Arthur.
  • Most of the Bluth family in Arrested Development.
  • Absolutely Fabulous
  • Veronica Lodge of the Archie Comics doesn't know that camping =/= telling your butler to bring you a first class dinner by helicopter to the woods.
  • Bianca Dupree of Beverly Hills Teens is forced to drive herself one episode, and she's horrible at it.
  • Used in The Parent Trap: the twins and their millionaire rancher dad are used to camping, but his Gold Digger girlfriend isn't.
  • Played For Laughs in Overboard - Joanna, the Rich Bitch, finds herself a Princess In Rags.
  • In Drowtales, when the drow search party reaches the surface:
    • It's played straight with The Ojou, Ariel, who gets agoraphobia (fear of open spaces), and Liriel, her pampered slave, who doesn't know grass =/= marijuana.
    • Subverted in that Kyo, probably the wealthiest member of the group, has been to the surface before and likes it.
replies: 79

"Dere" tropes
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-18 13:15:25 by Frodo Goofball CoTV (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:23:21)
Do We Have This? Should We Have This? DEFINATELY Needs A Better Name. Needs A Better Description. Rolling Updates.

More Than Meets The Eye is similar. Merge or launch as a separate index?
Supertrope / Index about characters who alternate between nice and difficult.

Examples:

replies: 16

G-rated necktie
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-22 22:56:47 by Giant Space Chinchilla (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:22:37)
Is This Tropable? Seen It A Million Times

a variant of G Rated Sex in which one person knots another's necktie as a sign of intimacy or just to add a little personality to an informed relationship

Does it Needs A Better Title?

Example:
  • Minority Report: Director Lamar Burgess has a very touching scene with his wife where she helps him knot up his bowtie
replies: 18

Rolling Pin of Doom
(permanent link) added: 2008-11-10 23:51:52 by Mr Initial Man (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:19:09)
Another Improbable Weapon, like the Frying Pan Of Doom. And, like Frying Pan Of Doom, can do some actual damage.
replies: 15

If Bob Accepts You
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-07 01:49:22 by Kilyle (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:18:15)
...we will, too.

I don't know how I'd go about searching for this one, so I'm not gonna try. If you know it, point it out.

So say there's this newfangled flying machine, the Whirlybird. (I'm borrowing this example from a favorite kids' book, though I don't think that plotline actually falls under this trope.) Anyway, this thing scares the common folk because it's just not right for man to fly. Honestly, if God wanted us to fly, he'd have made gravity a little softer, right?

So when the inventor (from inside or outside the community) tries to get the community to give this a try, everyone seems to be against him.

That is, until Bob Smith, that salt o' the earth miller from the edge of town - never known a more conservative man! - he steps forward and declares that he's willing to take a ride.

Bob rides. Bob lives. The community gets past the hump of "it's newfangled!" and is willing to at least give the thing a try. All because one of the regular Joes was willing to step up and be the first customer (not counting the crazy guy who tried to get people involved in the first place).

I've been aware of some version of this trope for years now, but up till now I've called it "The Second Man principle": To get the people in general to break inertia and do something, it's not enough to have Steven Ulysses Perhero step forward and try to persuade people to follow him; people know he's a little eccentric and not exactly one of the community. But if Bob Smith steps in, people are going to be willing to follow him, because they know he's a little more level-headed and not prone to irrational behavior.

This trope exists in several different variants: accept the outcast; accept the new technology; c'mon we need to go help those guys; and so forth. It also works in any sort of community, not just a small town but say inside a gang or a group of businessmen or whatever.

There may be a darker variant, where it takes the "Bob Smith" character to let a mutiny get really underway; without his support, the initial guy who tried to start the mutiny just gets killed or cast out.

Examples:

  • In Twelve Angry Men, when it looks like the whole room is against the main character and he's going to have to just give up, the old man juror decides to throw him a little support; this breaks the tide enough for them to start analyzing the case.

I had thought that this was found in Cats, but looking at the clip on You Tube, I guess I'm mistaken: Once Victoria accepts the outcast Grizabella, everyone else quickly piles on (some more reluctantly than others). Victoria is young and her wishes get overridden by the adults earlier in the story, so she doesn't count as the "Bob Smith" character here. But if she had started trying to advocate for acceptance, and it took Munkustrap or Mr. Mistoffelees to get everyone else moving, that would have been this trope.

Anyway. Assuming we don't have this one: Up For Grabs.
replies: 22

Heroes Act Villains Hinder
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 13:34:48 by ProserpinaFC (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:15:58)
I'm suggesting the opposite Metatrope to Villains Act Heroes React, to restore balance to the Tropes Universe.

The "exceptions" list on that trope already are:

Now, there is another one which is so hard to explain that you know that it's the heart of this opposite trope:

When the hero wants to somehow right a wrong or help people, but that interferes or undoes the villain's successful crime business or it just plain bugs them. See, e.g., most of the plots in Lazy Town. (Note that this tends to result in a woobiefied or otherwise sympathetic villain, if said villain appears more than once; and that if the villain has a ongoing scheme going, rather than a fully settled evil order, this doesn't count as a subversion.)

When a hero has an objective in mind already and the only villains are people that hinder him, it is usually isn't Heroic Fantasy or Action Adventure. It's comedy, romance, Slice Of Life, voyages, Rags To Riches....

Examples:
  • The Odyssey: Odysseus wants to get home. Every monster and god on the Great Sea is hindering him.
  • The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz: Dorothy wants to get home. The Wicked Witch stalking her for her shoes is hindering her.
  • Alice In Wonderland: Alice wants to get home. The sheer craziness of the world she's in is hindering her.
  • Most Romantic and Tragic Comedies are boy and girl wants each other and their jobs, jealous rivals and social statuses are keeping them apart.
  • Most Shojo comics, being a mix of Slice Of Life and Romance are about the heroine finding love while becoming a model/mangaka/gangster/singer/club president/businesswoman and there are a shitload of mean students/coworkers, Libbys, JerkJocks, love rivals and school rivals keeping her from doing it. Really, I get kinda paranoid reading these stories.
  • Fairy tales where the child had a goal at the beginning: I'd say Little Red Riding Hood, Mufaro's Beautiful Daughters, Aladdin
  • The protagonist of an "escape plot" gets their own ball rolling by trying to escape
  • Rags To Riches which specifically invoke Self Made Man
    • The Pursuit Of Happyness
replies: 1

Timeshare Hero
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-01 17:58:52 by Giant Space Chinchilla (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:13:48)
The Symbiote meets Super Empowering

I was reminiscing about critters adding superpowers to people they were "permanently" attached to and was wondering if this was distinct enough to make a sub-trope or a daughter trope about.

Examples:

  • vermiform invertabrates causing vamperism seems popular
  • Parasyte
  • one theory of the origin of mitochondria

Is This Tropable?
replies: 6

Dethroning Moment of Jerkass
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 13:11:07 by gyrobot (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:10:18)
The obvious counter trope to Crowning Moment Of Heartwarming, Dethroning Moment Of Jerkass is the counter trope of feeling good. Tear Jerker? Too much of a stone heart to cry. Moral Event Horizon? Faith in Humanity already reach dastardly low levels. Yet somehow, This moment actually gives you unspeakable rage. How for once someone managed to use these trope all together to make one big bad moment where you really feel like crap every time you remember this scene.

The Dethroning Moment of Jerkass is when through a series of unfortunate events, that moment triggers a thing inside you that makes you feel both sad and angry at the same time at how some writers or actors can just show bad things can get and how they not need tears, only reactions...


  • Keep Moments of Cruelty to the absolute ends, don't use smaller real life examples as an DMOC.
  • DMO Cs are usually Tear Jerker, Player Punch, Moral Event Horizon, Darkest Hour. However to mark this as a moment that damages your faith in humanity (or show the damaged faith the writer has, they should have something distinctly depressing or cruel to belong here and should at least have 2 of the mentioned tropes.
  • It has got to fit the story's narrative and tone. It can't come out of the blue as something tacked on.
  • It has to be original; cliched bad things happening would induce more "yawn" than "damn".
  • It has to feel sincere, like the writer and/or director wanted it there to make a real point for the story, not just for a coldblooded audience appeal.

Rolling Updates

  • Two Live Action TV series came into mind, Nanny911 and Kitchen Nightmares, for the first one. The Longairc Green Family had the first case where the mother was deemed as crossing the Moral Event Horizon and was unaffected. Gordon' first attempt to help save a restaurant goes sour as the business goes under and of all responses, the owner sues Ramsay for it. Some other restaurants will fall upon the same fate as this one
  • ISA's struggle in Killzone is one long D Mo C, fighting amongst themselves and a seemingly Implacable Army. The cracks finally poured when you realized what was the effect of treason amongst your ranks in Killzone2.
  • Far Cry 2 is designed to make you feel this, little bit by little bit, until hopefully about 4/5ths of the way through the game you hate yourself completely. The ending attempts to give you a teeny bit of hope.
  • In Code Geass R2, Zero/Lelouch has finally won the day... and then he turns out to be an utter Jerk Ass of an Emperor. No, that's not the DMoC. In the end, after achieving a Zero Percent Approval Rating, Suzaku dons Zero's attire and kills Emperor Lelouch. (You should know THAT already, too.) Still not the DMoC. The true DMoC comes when you realise that he did all of that, made sure he would be hated worldwide, to bring everyone together in peace. All because he wanted peace on Earth for his little sister. And now that peace is here, he's gone, meaning that not only was he screwed over ENTIRELY in everything he ever did, and his sister has to live with people seeing her brother as the worst villain EVER!, she's left alone in the world. And that really sucks. Also a Tear Jerker, perhaps.
    • Also, in the original Code Geass, it looks as if everything's going well, and Lelouch's goal of peace and freedom for the "Elevens" is going to be achieved. ...Until his Geass permanently activates, resulting in Euphemia going all genocidal on them. Ouch.
  • Fable 2 has the player-punching moment when Lucien shoots your dog and tells you that he has killed your partner and children. Many players will have felt their efforts up to that point to have been rendered completely and utterly futile. Its the closest a game can come to pushing the player over the Despair Event Horizon.
  • Manfred Von Karma Kills Edgeworth's father. In an elevator, where an incident happened which gave Edgeworth his [[Why Did It Have To Be Sn
replies: 27

Recursive Time Loop
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 07:13:19 by Fighteer (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:01:40)
How many As are there?

There's a type of time loop that appears in fiction that appears to be a Stable Time Loop, but unlike that kind of loop, creates a Temporal Paradox by having no definite beginning or end. This is called a Recursive Time Loop. In contrast to a Groundhog Day Loop, a recursive loop is explicitly Time Travel, not simply a Snap Back, and there is no escape clause - once you're stuck in it, you're there forever.

Let's take Alice ('A') in the page image as an example.
  1. Alice lives her life, moving forward normally in time.
  2. An event occurs that sends Alice back in time, but instead of creating a duplicate of her, Alice becomes her past self, losing all memory of her "future".
  3. Alice then repeats the sequence of events leading her to be sent back, ad infinitum.

The result is a paradox. At no point in the loop are there ever two Alices. Either the entity that is "future" Alice disappears, or the entity that is "past" Alice disappears. Whichever is the case, nothing comes out the other end. For all intents and purposes, Alice is gone from reality once she enters the loop.

The other version is an object that gets looped back on itself. Consider a common pair of glasses that Bob buys. Later, Bob goes back in time and sells the glasses. Those glasses then become the same ones that Bob bought in the future. Now ask yourself: where did the glasses come from? How old are they? There's no discrete point in time when they were created or destroyed -- thus, a paradox.

This type of time loop, when seen in science fiction, is often a sign that the work is on the softer side, or that the author Did Not Do The Research about Time Travel. Alternatively, it can simply be given a Hand Wave as A Wizard Did It, if the work is not intended to be taken seriously. Either way, it's a guaranteed Mind Screw for anyone who thinks about it too long.

Note that a Groundhog Day Loop can be a type of Recursive Time Loop, but the participant(s) retain some memory of previous iterations, sufficient to eventually alter the outcome.

YKTTW Note: This trope is intended to split off examples from Stable Time Loop. Please examine examples from that trope to see whether they might fit better here.

Examples:

Film

Literature
  • Used in the Discworld novel Pyramids, where a major character, Dios, through a method of semi-immortality, has been trapped in an 8000 year loop for an unknown number of go-rounds.
  • Robert A Heinlein's short story By His Bootstraps illustrates elements of both a Stable Time Loop and a Recursive Time Loop. The character who participates in the loop observes a straightforward progression from his point of view. However, in doing so he steals a notebook from his future self containing a full dictionary of a foreign language. During the loop, he finds that the book is wearing out so he copies it to a new one (thus solving the entropy paradox). What is the paradox? The information contained in the notebook -- where did it come from?

Live Action TV

Webcomics
  • In The Adventures of Dr. McNinja, this is the ultimate fate of the villainous unicorn-turned-motorcycle Sparklelord, sent back in time to the moment when he first entered the protagonist's world with no memories of what happened, thus being forced to live out the same sequence of events for eternity.

replies: 21

Nasty Grace
(permanent link) added: 2009-09-01 18:50:53 by alliterator (last reply: 2009-11-21 17:01:24)
She's a shrewish selfish syndicated news commentator who accuses completely innocent people of vile crimes. She's the No Celebrities Were Harmed version of Nancy Grace.

Examples:
  • A prime one in the Leverage episode "The Three Days of the Hunter Job."
  • From Law And Order Criminal Intent, there's Faith Yancy.
  • Mark Waid's excellent Potter's Field comic has the main character, John Doe, blackmailing one to becomes his agent.
replies: 6

"Oh I want this and this and-"
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 16:53:22 by MiserableGerm (last reply: 2009-11-21 16:53:22)
Fixing This As Time Goes On. Please Help With Changes Of Your Own.

Also See: Big Eater

In a restaurant setting, characters generally in a animated or sitcom, give their orders. Certain events however affect one or several persons to order more than usual. Some examples are:

1. The date in particular (usually the male) asks a stupid question (to the female) and it sours their mood. Thus leading to a bigger bill

2. A long discussion about certain events that have occured

3. The token glutton getting their fill after a long journey

4. Somebody trying out the foreign menu

Specific Situations:

  • Chie in Persona 4 always wants steak, so she annoys Yusuke about it whenever at Junes.
  • Lina Inverse in Slayers usually for gluttony, but after a battle it takes alot out of her. So restaurants are generally screwed.
  • A recent TV commercial for a credit card was POV of a man on a date with a lovely woman, who seemed to have ordered the lobster dinner, a whole fish, a rack of lamb, several side dishes, and then asks the waiter if she can also have the duck.
  • An episode of Hey Arnold had Helga continually buying more and more dishes at a restaurant to put off paying the bill, which she couldn't quite pay.

replies: 2

Bunnies are scary
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 06:46:56 by Marshmello (last reply: 2009-11-21 16:34:55)
Needs A Better Title. Rolling Updates. Up For Grabs.

Simply, when rabbits are depicted in such a way as to induce nightmares, or are otherwise used or considered as objects of fear, either by the characters or audience.

Compare to Killer Rabbit.

Examples:
replies: 44

Kids These Days Haven't Seen Every Classic
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 12:33:28 by Shrikesnest (last reply: 2009-11-21 16:31:13)
A trope for when one character is shocked and appalled by another character's not being familiar with something that should be required, dammit!

This can be played a number of different ways. Sometimes the person who's shocked is portrayed as an old fogey, trying to enforce their old-timey tastes on a hip new generation. Sometimes, especially with an author of middle-age or older, the person who's shocked is portrayed as being right, and the person who isn't familiar with Shakespeare, The Bible, Sherlock Holmes, etc. is portrayed as woefully lacking. Although the trope is often played for comedy, it can be played for drama or characterization as well.

Of course, the truth is that such a vast amount of material is now regarded as "classic" that it would be physically impossible to meaningfully consume all of it.
replies: 9

Deja Ou?
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 16:23:38 by dxman (last reply: 2009-11-21 16:23:38)
A place which is not the main hub or boss area in a series, but a minor place which appears over and over again within the same series.

Like Recurring Riff, but a place. Different from Nostalgia Level in that it is merely a recycled locale rather than a place meant to invoke memories.

Put more examples in the comments.

Examples:

  • The Mario Kart games always have Mario Circuit, Luigi Circuit, Wario Stadium, Bowser's Castle, and Rainbow Road. A Donkey Kong track usually appears too.
  • The Legend Of Zelda games often have incarnations of the Lost Woods, even in the games that don't take place in Hyrule. Death Mountain, Lake Hylia, Kakariko Village, and the Gerudo Desert often appear too.
  • The main Pokemon games always have a variation of Victory Road.
  • The Brookhaven and Alchemilla hospitals in the Silent Hill games.
  • In the Sonic The Hedgehog games, Green Hill Zone has appeared many times, in both older games and newer games.
  • In the Star Wars Expanded Universe games, Tatooine appears all the time, especially in the MMORP Gs.
  • The Clock Tower in the Castlevania games.
  • The games in the Gradius series have almost always a level set in a field full of active volcanoes, an organic level, a Moai level and the enemy mechanical base.
  • The Tales Series has players go to the tree of Mana, Yggdrasil, in several of its games.
  • A non-video game example: The Biers pub is mentioned a lot in Discworld.
replies: 36

Level Drain
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 10:01:13 by Unknown Troper @ 75.129.59.228 (last reply: 2009-11-21 16:19:08)
In a Class And Level System, as characters gain levels, they become more powerful. Some games have enemies (usually of the undead variety) which have the ability to take these levels away from a character, which has the effect of weakening the character, usually described as an attack that drains the character's Life Energy.

If there is no way to easily gain these levels back, enemies that can do this often take on the status of Demonic Spiders, especially if they appear in groups and can drain more than one level per shot. Characters who lose all their levels this way typically die, and often come back as the creature that killed them, or a subordinate creature under the control of their killer, particularly if the creature was undead.
Examples:
  • Dungeons And Dragons, as you might expect, is the Trope Maker and Trope Namer. Under most circumstances, the only way to defend against level drain was by making a saving throw against it, or by using magic items that acted to negate the drain.
    • In the older games (and the retroclones based on them), if you lost a level to level drain, it was gone for good, and the only way to gain it back was the hard way, since restoration magic was out of the reach of spell casters until the highest levels.
    • Third Edition introduced the concept of negative levels, which was basically temporary level loss that you then had to make a Fortitude save against at the end of the fight for every level that you "lost" this way. If you made it, you got the level back, but if you failed the save, it was gone for good and you had to gain it back the hard way.
    • Fourth Edition did away with level drain entirely, instead having monsters that originally level-drained you (such as wights and wraiths) instead inflicting the Weakened condition on you (which simply halves the damage that you deal in combat until you make your saving throw to end it), immobilizing you (you can't move from your space unless you teleport until you make your save), taking away healing surges, and so on.
  • Many Roguelikes, such as Net Hack, have this as just one of the many dangers that your character can face. Yes, they're Nintendo Hard.
  • A certain monster in Disciples II (Wight?) did this and also brought the target down one Evolution Level.
  • Runescape has many monsters, especially quest monsters, who do the temporary sort of draining, and there's even 'disease' from special undead, which hits a random stat for 10 to 1 levels, and there are potions to restore levels and cure disease, as well as jewelery that takes the disease for you.
  • Final Fantasy V had several enemies and powers that cause level drain, though thankfully it's all temporary.
  • Final Fantasy Tactics has a "level down" trap that you can use to abuse the leveling system for ungodly powerful stats (though most players generally don't bother).
  • This is Xykon's favorite form of attack in Order Of The Stick. He's used it on multiple occasions to take down other epic spellcasters.
replies: 7

The Almighty List
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-31 00:41:31 by KJMackley (last reply: 2009-11-21 16:01:28)
This is where a list or roster is made that takes prominence in a story. The reasons for it may vary, it could just be "Secret Government Papers" or it may involve the characters themselves being on that list.

Examples-
  • My Name Is Earl is about Earl making a list of all the bad things he has done in his life and repairing whatever he might have done in order to fix his Karma. Some times he ends up adding things to that list and most of the time it is about trying to get something off that list.
  • Schindlers List- The list here is very important, and even a cause for Samaritan Syndrome from Schindler himself that he couldn't save more.
  • Kyle XY had an episode "The List Is Life" (referencing Schindlers List) that dealt with an underground social list naming different people in the school as part of different categories: Biggest Brain, Biggest Jock, Biggest Slut, etc.
  • South Park has fun with this as Kyle is labeled on the girls list as being the ugliest kid in the third grade (even behind Cartman), which ruins his social standing. Stan goes off with Wendy to get to the bottom of this, only to find that the supposedly infallible girls "list making" committee had been compromised.
  • Home Improvement had Tim make a list of all the times he had wronged Jill in a car related issue, which was an effort to make amends with a recent screw up and possibly check in to the "Henry Ford Clinic."
  • The Bucket List- Two old men dying of cancer make a list of everything they want to do before they die.
  • The first Mission Impossible movie centered around a Mac Guffin list of every IMF agent and their corresponding code names, which in the wrong hands would destroy all of the espionage they do all over the world.
replies: 21

High Octane Fetish Fuel
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 11:48:02 by Aminatep (last reply: 2009-11-21 15:53:10)
Needs A Better Description.

So, we have Nightmare Fuel, examples of which are mostly intentionally scary, and mostly hor kids, and high octane variant which causes nightmares intentionally and scares adults.

But we have Fetish Fuel for both intentional and unintentional variants. That's unfair and not right.

Compare any G-Rated show with Bound And Gagged for practical reasons (but it becomes fetish fuel for somebody much later, compare Rule 34) and Empowered which runs on High Octane Fetish Fuel (Bound And Gagged and, to a lesser extent, Spank The Cutie)
replies: 13

Shonen Hair
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 12:41:28 by Primo Victoria (last reply: 2009-11-21 15:52:27)
Needs A Better Title. Should We Have This One?

Specific case of Anime Hair, that happens often in Shonen series. One or more of the characters, usually protagonists, have specific hairstyle - his hair are in mess, bluge on all sides and often looks like some kind of spikes. This hairstyle dosn't have to, but often comes in pair with short temper and nature somewhere between rebel, free spirit and Chaotic Good. Somebody coudl assume it's suppose to symbolize hero's dispespect for existing rules. Or his dislike for hairdressers.

Examples:

replies: 3

Cane Pain
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 18:45:33 by Unknown Troper @ 69.123.232.25 (last reply: 2009-11-21 15:47:56)
So, let's say you're an grumpy old man. There's a burglar in your house, and he's armed with a knife. Being the stubborn old curmudgeon you are, you aren't really up for running away. So, what do you do?

You pick up your trusty walking stick and give him a good whipping. That'll teach that rascal to respect his elders!

Tough, hard, and easy to whip around, variants of the cane have actually been made for the purpose of butt-whoopin'. It's mostly the favored weapon of Cool Old Guys and pimps everywhere.

Film
  • In Up, Carl Fredricksen starts using his cane for various awesome activities after a very important part in the movie, including using it in a duel with Charles Muntz.
replies: 15

Purely long-range weapon.
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 13:54:13 by Xander77 (last reply: 2009-11-21 15:39:35)
In certain videogames, units long range weapons have an additional disadvantage in the Tactical Rock Paper Scissors scenario - not only are are they weak to direct assault but they can't even retaliate against hack and slashers. Their weapons have a minimum range and can't be fire at enemies who are right next to the unit.
replies: 3

The Next Hitler
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-18 21:59:31 by Squall (last reply: 2009-11-21 14:41:55)
Given the wide scope of a certain man's...accomplishments...people tend to get quite emotional whenever discussing him. Or when talking whether it could actually all happen again.

In real life, the circumstances surrounding his rise to political power have been the staple of political science studies the world over, checks and balances have been introduced in more than a few countries to specifically guard against the methods he proved so successful in using, and ideas on further protections are still routinely theorized and debated. On the whole, the mere idea of Adolf Hitler has come to frighten the living shit out of a whole bunch of people, whether in positions of true social responsibility or not.

In fiction, his spectre haunts the shadows to an equal degree. You want to go time traveling? How do you know that that woman you saved who previously died won't end up giving birth to the next...?? A country is in cultural, economic and military crisis all at the same time, and one of the vying factions is led by a very charismatic personality? Quite a lot of people in the world will watch closely, in case they show any signs of... Rogue nations led by Tin Pot Dictators tend to cause laughs among the world's great powers only so long as that kind of dictator remains; one with too much cunning and guile is too reminiscent of... International fascistic terrorist-cells are starting to unify under a centralized banner? Find the source, and you'll find someone rising to become a new...

The possible versions, infinite; the concept, same.

Trope named, among many other things, after the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode where Picard tells Berlinghoff Rasmusen that he is fully aware that changing history might result in the birth of the next...
replies: 4

By Your Own Bootstraps
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 15:21:45 by Sackett (last reply: 2009-11-21 14:36:35)
Refers to improving your situation by your own efforts and diligence. Often in the face of hardship and bad luck.

Commonly advice from an old man to the protagonist- who doesn't care much for it.

We don't have this one?

Up For Grabs
replies: 7

First Day On The Job.
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 07:58:17 by ddonohu2 (last reply: 2009-11-21 14:10:24)
Do We Have This, Seen It A Million Times, Needs A Better Description.

But it's my first day...

Mr. Burns: You did this? How could you be so irresponsible?
Homer: Eh... it's my first day!
Mr. Burns: Since I've never seen you before, maybe it is your first day. Very well, carry on!
[Mr. Burns begins to walk off, when Smithers catches up with him.]
Smithers: Sir, that's Homer Simpson. He's been working here for ten years!
Mr. Burns: Ohh, really? Why did you think you could lie to me?
Homer: It's my first day!
Mr. Burns: Well, why didn't you say that be...[realizes] Yawoo! You're fired!

The Simpsons, Simpson Tide.

Essentially this trope describes someone who having to explain their behavior to an employer claims as mitigating circumstances "It's my first day" or something similar. Often also used by empathetic co-workers to defend the new guy.

This is Up For Grabs


Examples:

Anime and Manga:

Western Animation
  • The opening quote is from The Simpsons, an excuse used by Homer on more than one occasion.

Live Action TV
  • In the first episode of Scrubs Karla defends J.D. in this way (If memory serves...)
replies: 2

Pineapple Hair
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 13:52:28 by Prfnoff (last reply: 2009-11-21 13:54:13)
I need a good description for this. A number of anime examples are sitting in Fundamentally Funny Fruit, as leftovers from the now-cutlisted page Everything's Better With Pineapples.

Duplicating the examples here for good measure:
replies: 1

Short Hero Tall Villain
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-15 16:16:23 by Premonition_45 (last reply: 2009-11-21 12:35:03)
Short Hero Tall Villain, aka David And Goliath is, as the name suggests when the hero is noticably shorter than the villain.

Examples:

replies: 15

Death To Myself!
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-15 20:09:15 by EricDVH (last reply: 2009-11-21 12:26:07)
When, for whatever reason, whether accidentally or on purpose, a person in a position of powerful leadership ends up unofficially fighting against whatever authority they're officially the leader of.

The leader in question will end up falling in with a group of rebels who curse their name every day while rattling off a litany of the evil deeds done in their name, not knowing that the object of their hatred is right in their midst, possibly receiving the first honest criticism they've ever gotten. For maximum irony points, this leader figure will usually either become the Rebel Leader's most trusted lieutenant/romantic interest or rise clear to the top of the rebel organization.

Whether or not factions within the leader figure's own authority are aware of the situation, the leader is not intentionally acting as a double agent. In fact, most instances in which they are aware have traitorous factions attempting to use the situation as a convenient ruse to kill them.

With The Reveal typically comes an instant surrender by the leader's ostensible followers, and paralyzing surprise from the rebels.

See also Right In Front Of Me, King Incognito, Right Hand Versus Left Hand, Return Of The King.

Examples:
replies: 10

Bonds Before Reason
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 12:22:24 by MisterBibs (last reply: 2009-11-21 12:22:24)
Needs A New Title, likely, but here goes:

It's about 5, 10 years After The End. Maybe it's a Zombie Apocalypse, maybe The Virus has killed almost everyone. Does't matter how the world went to hell, but it did. Our heroes discover that the origin of whatever killed the world: a child. The child's parents aren't ignorant of that fact, nor did they cling to the belief that a cure was possible. No, they knew that their child was the source (and still is) of The Virus, and did nothing.

Our heroes point out that the parents, not the kid, are really the cause of the Crapsack World. They should have done something no parent wants to do. The parents, in keeping their child 'safe' and alive, doomed the world. If confronted by this, the parent(s) look at the heroes aghast: "Could you kill your child?"?

Sadly, the heroes are never Genre Savvy enough to say "", so they just stare back, unable to form a response.

A form of Why Dont Ya Just Shoot Him in which there's a reason why someone doesn't - because parents typically don't enjoy killing their children, after all - but that very defense leads to events where everyone wishes someone did it and never caused all of this to happen.

I've seen this in many places, but the one that comes to mind the most:

  • In Underworld Evolution, Alexander Corvinus uses this argument to justify why he didn't kill his two sons. Marcus, his son which is the grandfather of all werewolves, is a feral beast that can't stop himself from biting people and creating more feral werewolves. He opts to imprison Marcus instead, although that doesn't end the werewolf race... and sort of pisses off his other son, Marcus, who created a plan to release him because, after all, he's his brother.
replies: 0

Guilt Heel Turn
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 02:33:08 by Unknown Troper @ 194.63.132.6 (last reply: 2009-11-21 12:15:53)
A Bad Guy decides to help the Good Guys, because he suddenly remembers he's a member of a group that was once discriminated or persecuted in some way. Happens in the Island, I'm sure there's a ton of examples but I can't think of any right now.

Possible Needs a Better Title
replies: 5

Villain's Pet Dog
(permanent link) added: 2009-08-08 21:40:06 by Amazingly Enough (last reply: 2009-11-21 11:22:54)
Do We Have This One? Probably Needs A Better Name, and I'm open to suggestions.

Picture this: the heroes finally have the villain where they want him, our protagonist is holding his gun to the villain's head and demands to know one reason why he shouldn't finish everything here and now.

And then the villain's child/wife/kitten comes bounding down the stairs, innocently wanting to know what all the noise is about and Daddy, who is that scary angry man, and why does he keep shouting at you? Did you make him mad or something?

Similar to Morality Pet, this is a character who is usually young, cute, or in need of protecting who is in some way attached to the villain. While not always acting as a humanizing force for the villian himself, the important thing about this character is that they prevent the heroes from actually killing the villain because the heroes simply aren't that cold-blooded.

Usually the hero will put away his gun and wait for the proper authorities to take the villain to jail. Sometimes the villian will get off with a warning that they haven't seen the last of the heroes, and sometimes the hero just doesn't have the heart and decides to forget the whole thing. What happens may depend on where your protagonists fall on the Sliding Scale Of Anti Heroes, and how gritty the series in question.

Compare Morality Pet, Pet The Dog, and I Have A Family.

Examples:

  • During season four of Lost, Locke and the gang have captured Ben, and Sawyer suggests they just shoot him in the head while they have the chance. Locke says that he's not so inhuman that he'll shoot the guy right in front of his sixteen year-old daughter, who is looking on during this whole conversation.
replies: 11

ItIsAlwaysSquad10
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 11:22:49 by Lind_L_Tailor (last reply: 2009-11-21 11:22:49)
Something i've been thinking about making, and a possible subtrope of Spotlight Stealing Squad. Basically, out of a certain pool of characters/groups/etc., the same person/group is inevitably chosen every single time, for no other reason than coincidence. Trope namer is Bleach wherein every time a captain and/or lieutenant needs to be sent down to the world of the living, Captain Hutsugaya and/or Lieutenant Matsumoto of Squad 10 are always one of them.
replies: 0

Baby Boy Surprise
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 19:34:22 by sgamer82 (last reply: 2009-11-21 11:18:45)
Daryl MacPherson: I still don't like changing diapers, but ever since Hammie came along my reflexes have really improved.

Any time Hilarity Ensues because someone without experience is taking care of a baby, you can expect the writers to bring out the horrible and dreaded act of the diaper change for quick and easy Toilet Humour. This is frequently taken one step further when the child in question is a boy, since the infant will frequently "open fire" on his caretaker mid-change.

A Truth In Television trope, as anyone with any significant experience in caring for babies will confirm. Hardly exclusive to boys in real life, but in fiction it's only ever really brought up with them since they're the only ones for whom it's a potential projectile.

See Urine Trouble, which covers a broader range of such incidents.
Anime & Manga
  • An episode of Sailor Moon during the "Eiru & An" arc featured Darien caring for a baby. An got this whens she tried changing the baby's diaper.
  • Yui of the ecchi series Koharu Biyori has this happen to her while babysitting. Worse, the accident causes a short in the Robot Girl's system that deletes all the baby care information she had downloaded specifically for the task.

Live Action TV
  • In an episode of The Nanny, Fran is changing a baby boy's diaper when Max warns her to stand over to the side rather than in front in case of this trope, commenting that his own son was able to hit the wall clock.
  • Spoofed in Dinosaurs. It appears that Baby Sinclair is doing this to Earl, but he's actually shooting him with a water pistol.

Newspaper Comics
  • A strip of Baby Blues featured dad Daryl dodging, weaving, and ducking the first three panels, before finally saying the page quote to his wife Wanda as he holds his son.
replies: 7

Wise Old Owl
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 23:21:29 by Wacky Meets Practical (last reply: 2009-11-21 11:04:29)
When creating the Species Coded For Your Convenience trope, there was some conversation about the depiction of owls. Owls already do have their own trope in Owl Be Damned, but the main description of the post is that owls are creepy. Although many tropers tend to believe (And the examples in that trope seem to back it up), that owls are usually depicted as wise and honorable. They serve more as mentors, teachers, and allies than they do as villains. So here's a trope for that. Up For Grabs
replies: 17

Drawn like a celebrity
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-05 00:16:41 by Anke (last reply: 2009-11-21 11:00:12)
In comics and animation it may happen that a character resembles a person who actually exists.

Maybe you're looking at an adaptation using the looks of the actors who portrayed the characters in the original closely, or maybe the person responsible for the character designs just would love a particular actor to play that character, if there ever was a movie made. Or, in animation, maybe they actually played that character's voice.

Maybe the character is a parody, or maybe this is the "real world", and it's really supposed to be them.

They could also be based on a real person because the creator

Supertrope of Comic Book Fantasy Casting, No Celebrities Were Harmed and Ink Suit Actor.

Examples

Adaptation using original actors' looks

It's actually them

  • Biographies in graphic novel format, such as Johnny Cash: I see a darkness


Might need splitting, but I'd really like a place to put stuff like that when it's not either of the two tropes we have already. I hope I didn't miss one that exists. I'm really not good with names. Drawn Like A Real Person sounds like it's about realistic art style, Drawn Like A Celebrity could just mean they give you a "celebrity vibe", and I'm not sure if it implies that examples of non-famous people would be excluded, but it's the best I can come up with. That Face Looks Familiar seems too general, I Saw That Face In Real Life sounds like it's about Troper Tales. Real People With Ink Outlines? Computer animated stuff should be included, so the "drawn" is already a bit narrow. *wahwah*

Rolling Updates
replies: 3

Path Losing
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 14:03:06 by henke37 (last reply: 2009-11-21 10:53:37)
Subtrope to catch all the pathfinding issues in Artificial Stupidity.

Pathfinding sure is handy, it lets the units move away from obstacles and get from A to B in a fast and efficient matter. Well, at least that is the theory. Pathfinding can in some cases be more of a pain than a blessing.

Generic examples:
  • Units getting plain stuck behind embarrassing obstacles. A rock in the straight line between me and the enemy? Walk right into it!
  • Taking the route trought the rebel filled forest or using the well lit, if slightly longer pawed road? Forest all times, I mean, just because the last 50 units died at the same spot doesn't mean that this one will.
  • Moving with inhertia, like racing or even space racing. I am avoiding this rock. No, wait, I am avoiding that rock. No, that rock. *crash*
  • Anything requiring coordination of more than one unit at a time.
    • Multiple units in tight corridors. Another unit in the way? Clearly the road is permanently blocked and I need to find another, much longer router to use instead.
    • Carrier units, be it ships or spaceships. If you are lucky, they remember to build them to begin with.
  • Not thinking about friendly fire. Hey, stop shooting me!

replies: 4

Shut 'Em Up With Just A Finger
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 18:01:59 by Ari91 (last reply: 2009-11-21 10:51:31)
Do We Have This One?

It may seem related to Finger On Lips, but it is not. Happens usually when someone tries to seductively silence a friend, lover, and so on, so they place a single index finger to the lips of that person. Slightly related to the Shut Up Kiss. An example can be seen at the very end of Evanesence's Call Me When You're Sober http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=izYIO9VtjUs

replies: 4

Burned Alive
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 15:47:00 by Unknown Troper @ 65.1.69.230 (last reply: 2009-11-21 10:19:26)
I don't have much to say. How do we not have this? We have one about being killed with fire or fire based things, and one about being cremated, but none specifically about the act of lighting a living being on fire to kill it.
replies: 4

I Ate What?
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 08:03:00 by rjung (last reply: 2009-11-21 10:15:11)
Do We Have This, Needs More Examples, and Rolling Updates.
Alternate titles and redirects: I Drank What?

This trope covers instances when a character eats or drinks something that's not intended to be food, usually without being aware of what they're consuming. Results in an immediate Spit Take, Vomit Indiscretion Shot, or some other response once the discovery is made.

Inevitably produces lots of Squick. Might lead to It Tastes Like Feet when the dust settles. Often played for laughs as a form of Refuge In Audacity.

Differs from Foreign Queasine and Alien Lunch in that the stuff eaten wasn't supposed to be eaten by anyone. Bob drinking Rigelian bloodwine ("a delicacy on my planet!") is not this trope, but Bob drinking Rigelian rocket fuel is.

Contrast with Gargle Blaster, Masochist's Meal, Fire Breathing Diner. Also see Lethal Chef.


Examples:

  • Moral Orel once sold his urine as an energy drink for the school sports teams.
  • The South Park episode "Scott Tenorman Must Die" ends with Cartman feeding Scott the ground-up remains of his parents.
  • The second Jackass movie has a scene where Chris Pontius drinks horse semen.
  • In American Born Chinese, the caricature Chin-Kee urinates into someone's can of Coca-Cola as part of a prank. When the character later discovers this, he throws up.

replies: 19

Just Mom
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 09:10:58 by Super Troper (last reply: 2009-11-21 10:05:52)
Needs A Better Title. Sub-trope of Hot Mom

Sometimes when a boy has a Hot Mom, his friends and others will notice. Having them hit on her in his or his mother's prescence is a constant source of irritation or even a Berserk Button for him because to him, she's "Just Mom".

Examples:

  • Violette Morhange in Les Choristes. Pierre reacts to his teacher's interest in her by throwing an inkbomb at him.
  • Ross in All Fun and Games Until Somebody Loses an Eye, most down to the fact that Jane had his sister at 19.
  • Missy from Bill And Teds Excellent Adventure. A step-mom but she still counts.

replies: 1

Insanity Is The Only Option
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 09:11:26 by Scuba Air Surfer (last reply: 2009-11-21 09:11:26)
For a character to survive or overcome a problem, they will find that they can't go about it in any sensible manner, maybe they're placed in a Crapsack World full of Black And Gray Morality, or perhaps they're stuck on a battlefield where War Is Hell, or they might even be/are/have victimised by a Complete Monster somehow. Whatever the situation that character finds themselves - be it forced or "voluntary" - going to that "special" place to cope with it all, they're not going to off themselves (though that maybe the course of action that they ironically end up going for in the end in due part because of the insanity) they want to live, better than accepting they will fail.

Though bearing in mind the one, albiet twisted, silver lining for the afflicted character is that if the show is particularly fond of treating mental illness lightly, then the person who willingly became insane can just as easily become Bored With Insanity and cure him or herself.

Not to be confused with moments where the character enters into a Unstoppable Rage and it's variants as that more a loss of self-control. Understandably this is a tricky line when determining examples.

Sister Trope to Happy Place.

Examples:
  • Possibly in Pi, where Max gives in to insanity by drilling a hole in his head although it's debatable whether or not that literally happened or was symbolic of simply blowing a fuse (usually taken as literal).
  • In Generation Kill, a comment made by "Captain America" observes how the nature of the battlefield makes this the only way to survive in it also suggests this is the explanation for his behaviour making it a possible Alternative Character Interpretation.
  • Mal from Firefly suggests this the reason survivors of Reaver attacks end up emulating them.
  • A deliberate version in Harry Harrison's The Stainless Steel Rat. Jim diGriz decides that to find Angelina, he must temporarily become as insane as she is. He does it by taking a collection of psychotomimetic drugs combined with post-hypnotic suggestion.
  • In the third book of The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy, while trapped on Prehistoric Earth, Arthur reaches his wits end after about five years. He declares that he'll just go mad! At that moment, Ford pops back up and informs him that he did that for a while himself, it was quite refreshing.
  • In the Vorkosigan Saga, Mark Vorkosigan, clone-brother to Miles, during torture developed an unusual psychosis that he later dubbed "The Black Gang", a group of specialist sub-personalities. Later, he allowed himself to subvert back into psychosis in order to survive torture and defeat an enemy.
  • The Strange Case Of Jonathan Strange And Mr Norrell: Strange became temporarily insane in order to get in touch with Faerie.
  • There was one story where, for some bizarre reason, the Joker woke up to find himself sane (and very much not liking it) in a post-apocalyptic version of Gotham. He naturally chose to return to insanity when he regained enough of his memories.
  • This is part of the opening narration for Die Anstalt. Heartbreaking is the word.
    "In a soulless world...its inhabitants spineless...These creatures can't defend themselves. They cannot run away. Insanity...is their only way of escape."

Rolling Updates but that's granted isn't it?
replies: 11

Eccentric Detective
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-09 15:28:43 by OuttaTheBLAM (last reply: 2009-11-21 09:04:02)
Do We Have This One, or is it part of Bunny Ears Lawyer? It seems in fiction that detectives have the tendency to be rather eccentric, maybe because they are geniuses.

I can't think of a lot of examples but

Probably a subtrope of Defective Detective.
replies: 21

Bookshelf Dominoes
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-24 11:59:54 by Paradisca Corbasi (last reply: 2009-11-21 08:34:01)
How Did We Miss This One?

In the library or archive, there are always stacks upon stacks of books, and so many bookcases in so many rows. The fight begins, and a bookcase falls...into its neighbor, which falls onto its neighbor, and causes a Chain Reaction that levels the whole library.

Film
  • The Mummy Trilogy: In the first movie, Evy does this by accident because she's a klutz.

WesternAnimation
  • El Tigre: causes it in his mother's library because the bad guys duck his Rocket Punch. The falling bookcases end up getting them in the end.
replies: 18

Binge Montage
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 15:10:49 by johnnye (last reply: 2009-11-21 07:57:38)
Several characters get drunk, wasted and frisky over the course of a night, often portrayed in alternating slow and fast motion at wild camera angles, with heavy dance music over the top. Someone free-pouring spirits in/onto themselves/someone else is obligatory.

A trendy modern variation on Drunken Montage. Similarities: Shaky Cam, simulation of Beer Goggles, ambiguous passing of time, disorientation. Differences: Drunken Montage is drinking alone, lonely and depressed, Binge Montage is. if not happy, at least hedonistic and fun.

See Wild Teen Party, a common setting for the technique.

Examples:
replies: 1

Sharp Dressed Man
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-13 12:37:51 by Mystery Otaku (last reply: 2009-11-21 07:41:44)
Do We Have This One?

Let's face it, ladies, there is something about a good old-fashioned suit that ups a man's sex appeal by like 20 points. Whether intended or not, there is something about a basic three piece (nevermindthe other, older suits) that really turn heads. Perhaps because it implies power and wealth. Perhaps he is able to wear it like no one else can. Whatever the reason, girls love the basic, every day, suit, and that is not reduced to fictional girls. These characters are some of the more likely guys to attract the Perverse Sexual Lust of fans. If he's a villain, expect fangirls to put him in something a little more form fitting for fanfiction. If he's a good guy, expect him to attract any sort of female attention imaginable.

Examples:
  • Light Yagami from Death Note
  • Death the Kid as a dressing staple and Soul when in the Black Room from Soul Eater
  • The 10th Doctor of Doctor Who
  • James Bond
  • William Spears from Kuroshitsuji
  • Sanji from One Piece
  • Real Life (most guys I've known wear suits to get their mates' attention like girls wear miniskirts/low cut shirts)
  • An episode of iCarly plays with this when Spensor can only get the attention of a girl when he is wearing a Tux.
  • What do all incarnations of the Joker have in common? They are slaves to fashion as much as their color scheme permits. What does he have that fanboys want? Harley Quinn.
  • Tuxedo Mask from Sailor Moon.
replies: 7

It's Nothing
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-15 04:51:52 by Rikka (last reply: 2009-11-21 07:10:45)
Alice: What's the matter? Bob: Nothing... (he must have a problem doesn't want to disclose it for some reason. Can be a case of Can Not Spit It Out, or maybe the character is emotionally shattered and wants to make a Heroic Sacrifice/commit suicide and talking about it will ruin their attempt.

Do We Have This / Is This Tropable? Seen It A Million Times.

Example off the top of my head: Ashita no Ousama

Contrast I Can Fight. Not related to Its Probably Nothing.
replies: 19

Intelligent Weaver
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 19:44:30 by Ronka87 (last reply: 2009-11-21 05:50:01)
(Needs A Better Description but I'll work on it in the morning)

A very old trope, originating at least in the Greek classics. Weaving is seen as a sign of great intelligence, and whenever you see a character weaving, it is a shorthand way of demonstrating that person is very clever. This extends to spiders, because of their cleverly constructed webs. Since weaving is also largely the woman's domain (think the origin of Distaff Counterpart), is it also generally specific to the intelligence of women.


Examples:
  • Penelope in The Odyssey, whose cleverness matches that of her Trickster Archetype husband. Her most famous act in the epic is the way she delays her suitors' pursuit of her: she says she will choose one after she has finished weaving a funeral shroud for her husband. Everyday she works on it, and every night she unravels what she did in the day, thus delaying her choice indefinitely. By the way, she tricks the suitors this way for forty years!
  • Arachne in Greco-Roman myth, who was so great at weaving that she beat Athena, goddess of wisdom and also a weaver, in a contest. That didn't sit too well with ol'grey eyes, though, and she turned (predictably) Arachne into a spider.
  • Anansi, the African Trickster, is a spider, although he's male.
  • Charlotte of Charlotte's Web

(Thoughts on the trope? Should it be broadened to weaving in fiction in general?)
replies: 1

Easy Exp
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 14:18:53 by Optimystic (last reply: 2009-11-21 05:37:15)
Alternate titles: In Experienced, No Experience Necessary, Entry Level Adventuring.

"Experience is one thing you can't get for nothing."
-Oscar Wilde hasn't played many RPGS lately.

Do We Have This One?

In most roleplaying games, gaining experience is an arduous task that represents your character's mastery of previously insurmountable obstacles, concepts and techniques. Typically they involve long hours of mass murder in the great outdoors, fetching granny's dentures from the dungeon next door, or combining the two (by committing mass murder on the way TO the dentures.)

Some games, however, hand you this precious resource on a platter, for doing the most mundane activities imaginable. Travel somewhere new? Have some exp! Talk to an NPC? Have some exp! Talk to someone in your party more than once? Have some exp! Read a book? Have some exp! Look at something interesting (or not)? Have some exp! Pop a pill? Have some exp!

These games never quite make the connection between performing these mundane tasks and getting better at killing things. This connection is tenuous enough even when actually killing things IS the reason for leveling up, but this trope removes even that flimsy justification.

Typically, in a token concession to realism, such activities grant your character less experience than the mass murder and questing that RP Gs usually rely on - implying (rightfully) that risking your life is a bit more educational than glancing at a computer screen or road sign while strolling merrily through the game. However, games that include this form of experience tend to include so many ways to gain it, that you can often gain a few levels simply by running around and doing all of them. This can result in the highly rare RPG phenomenon of "leveling in town."

This may be the videogame justification for Hard Work Hardly Works. Abusing this system can be key to unlocking the Magikarp Power. If this takes the form of a consumable item, it is typically a Rare Candy.

Examples:

  • World Of Warcraft's primary sources of experience are slaughter, quests, and quests involving slaughter. However, it is also possible to gain substantial experience simply by walking to a new area and recording it on your world map. This "exploration exp" is available in sufficient quantities to cause well-travelled explorers to gain levels early on even without battling a single monster. Certain high-leveled areas present substantial sums of exp to more advanced characters as well.
    • World of Warcraft also gives you bonus exp for not playing the game at all. Logging off in an inn or major city increases this bonus substantially.
  • EVE Online gives you experience for doing nothing - literally. You advance your skills by not playing the game.
  • In Mass Effect, the standard ways of gaining exp are killing and questing, as above. However, you can gain substantial amounts by talking to people, repeatedly talking to your party members between missions, and even just looking at things, like the computers on your ship.
  • The Elder Scrolls games contain books that boost your skills when read. Finding books that boost your primary skills can cause rapid level gains if the player isn't careful.
    • Since you have total freedom over what your primary skills are in Morrowind and Oblivion, you can set them to activities that you perform regularly, such as running, jumping and swimming. This is ill-advised however, because doing so will usually cause you to gain levels far faster than you like, and enemies' levels scale up with yours.
  • Pokemon has the item equivalent (for which it is the trope namer.) Later installments have variations on this.
replies: 10

mobile kiosk
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-03 19:37:37 by Giant Space Chinchilla (last reply: 2009-11-21 03:43:55)
Exactly What It Says On The Tin

In Speculative Fiction sometimes The Little Shop That Wasn't There Yesterday has a very good reason for disappearing and reappearing at will, it has a motor!

A Mobile Kiosk would be any device where the owner sells something with the additional benefit of when business dries up he can pick up and move. perhaps a conman with a collapsible table, a bazaar merchant with his store on a cart, or a hoverskift selling fresh alien fish

Examples:

  • Vending carts/trucks especially the one in The Fifth Element
  • Bookmobiles: kind of as they are essentially libraries
  • Shadowrun: often has mobile medical care facilities and repair shops for the "don't ask questions" type
  • there are companies out there that will wash your car and/or repair windshields on the spot (well in the parking lot anyway)

Is This Tropable?
replies: 9

Personality As The Plot Demands
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 03:28:53 by Yannick (last reply: 2009-11-21 03:28:53)
Needs More Examples, Do We Have This One, Rolling Updates. Formerly named Character Fluctuation.

A character whose personality changes frequently to better match the plot, or to set the plot in motion. In one episode, they might fit the description of The Daria, while by the next episode they're a great example of the Shrinking Violet. In other words, it's a character who seemingly has nothing but Out Of Character Moments. This can have many causes, but it's usually caused by bad writing or multiple writers with different ideas.

How the character is perceived depends on how the character is written. If done well, the character will seem complex in a believable way, and it will appear that the shift in personality is a result of the plot. Some form of justification, like a personality disorder, may be given. If done poorly, the character will seem like he or she was created specifically to be a wild card, the inconsistency itself will be annoying.

Contrast Flanderization. Compare Rounded Character, Hidden Depths, Out Of Character Moment. See also Ping Pong Naivete, Compressed Vice. Related to the "dere" family.

Examples:

Anime and Manga

Theatre
  • Eliza from Pygmalion (and to a lesser extent My Fair Lady) would seem to fit this trope, as she's alternatingly hysterically weepy, boldly spirited, obediently demure, etc, whenever it seems opportune for her to act in such a way.

Western Animation
replies: 13

Even Better Remake
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-17 16:14:28 by Ganondorfdude11 (last reply: 2009-11-21 02:08:39)
Sometimes the classic version of a story isn't the first one. This can sometimes occur when a film is remade with a larger budget or different direction that makes it resonate more with an audience. Sometimes problems with the original work can be ironed out with The Remake. Related to both Even Better Sequel and Adaptation Displacement.

Examples

  • While the silent versions of The Ten Commandments and Ben Hur are considered classics of the medium, their remakes in the 1950s are best remembered today. Both took advantage of larger budgets and the benefits of sound and color to improve on the originals.
  • The most famous version of The Maltese Falcon with Humphrey Bogart was not the original.
  • Film adaptations of The Wizard Of Oz had been produced for decades before the classic 1939 version.
  • The Sound Of Music was done as a straight dramatic film before the more-famous musical version.
  • The original Star Fox pales in comparison to its remake for the Nintendo64.
  • The Dark Knight Saga appears to be this for the Batman film series.
replies: 14

Tickle Torture
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 11:18:06 by Aminatep (last reply: 2009-11-21 02:03:29)
Seen It A Million Times.

So, we have a Disney Villain who is going to inflict a horrible torture on his victims. Cutting off fingers won't work in a G-Rated show, what can be a substitute? Of course, tickling! Sometimes lampshaded. Basically, tickling is a G-Rated Cold Blooded Torture.

Can lead to a Fridge Horror (as does forced marriage when you realise that it's actually G-Rated rape)

Of course, covered in Cool And Unusual Punishment, but tickling is neither cool nor unusual, has its unique characteristics and, therefore, should be a subtrope.

  • Paper Mario: Princess Peach suffers from this
  • Asterix: Getafix also suffers from this. Complete with "Torture me instead!"
    • It was a powerful source of Fridge Horror for This Troper. Really, think of a potion as a powerful war technology and change rating to R (R stands for Real-life)
replies: 20

Spank The Cutie
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-21 02:01:30 by Aminatep (last reply: 2009-11-21 02:01:30)
For example, it's typical Boke And Tsukkomi Routine. The boke (usually a female) just said or did something stupid, kinky or childish, and the tsukkomi (usually a male) has to correct and punish him. However, instead of doing it with words or with a Dope Slap he suddenly gives her a spanking. Hilarity Ensues. Most of the time Fetish Fuel also ensues. Of course, it's not limited only by Boke And Tsukkomi Routine. Bonus Points earned by different ways, such as: And so on.

Examples:

Seen It A Million Times. How Did We Miss This One? Needs A Better Description, badly. Rolling Updates.
replies: 11

Non-Action Dress Rip
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-21 14:01:00 by OuttaTheBLAM (last reply: 2009-11-21 01:50:26)
Do We Have This One? Taking an ugly dress and turning it into a nice-looking one by ripping it or cutting it apart. It's usually a trope used in children's films or a Chick Flick. I'm pretty sure I've Seen It A Million Times, but these are the only examples I can think of at the moment. Needs A Better Title.

  • What A Girl Wants has Daphne cutting the top layer of an ugly dress off to reveal a nice dress underneath.
  • Sleepover has Julie's friends cutting up her mom's old tacky dress to make it look cooler.
  • 6teen has Nikki ripping apart two boring dresses and sewing them into two "cool" dresses.
replies: 17

Guilt-Free Vengeance
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 21:56:49 by Paul A (last reply: 2009-11-21 00:15:58)
The hero is out for revenge, but he's the hero, and killing people is Bad, so he spends a lot of time (or the audience is expected to spend it on his behalf) worrying about whether he'll actually kill the villain in the end, and if so whether that was the right thing to do. It comes to the final show-down, he has the villain at his mercy, he hesitates...

And he decides not to kill the villain.

And then, somehow, the villain dies anyway.

The audience cheers, because the villain got what was coming to him without the hero having to do a bad thing. Except for that spoilsport up the back who insists that this is cheating.

  • Seen It A Million Times
  • In the Star Trek Deep Space Nine episode "Blood Oath", an old Klingon friend of Dax's asks her to help him track down and kill the man who killed his son, Dax's godson. Dax goes along, but worries about what will happen if it comes down to her to do the vengeance, which of course it does after her friend is struck down. Dax hesitates, and then her friend has a My Name Is Inigo Montoya moment and lets her off the hook.
  • If memory serves, this happens at the end of the film version of Patriot Games. (But not in Tom Clancy's novel, where the hero decides not to kill the villain and then the villain doesn't die.)
  • According a YKTTW further down the page, this happens in the movie of The Dead Zone
replies: 8

If You Can't Beat Them, Hire Them
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 11:44:10 by Unknown Troper @ 99.242.211.62 (last reply: 2009-11-20 23:46:39)
Pretty self explanatory title. Any examples?
replies: 3

Hotel Hellion
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-21 13:50:17 by OuttaTheBLAM (last reply: 2009-11-20 23:38:24)
Do We Have This One? You know them. They're that bratty rascal who terrorizes the hotel. Usually a young kid, these little hellions cause trouble in even the fanciest of hotels.

EXAMPLES:

  • The Trope Maker is Eloise of the Eloise books, which were later adapted into a movie.
  • ''The Suite Life Of Zack And Cody
  • Dunston Checks In has a monkey instead of a child.
  • Stoked has bratty guest kids who like to cause trouble at the hotel and make messes for the staff to clean up.

replies: 13

Deliberate Non-Romance
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 17:08:14 by TreeFallComplete (last reply: 2009-11-20 23:31:51)
I'm thinking of a particular brand of Romantic movie (I don't say "comedy", because these stories are generally bittersweet) wherein the plot revolves around the relationship between two people who theoretically *could* develop a romantic attachment, but very conspicuously do not.

Generally one of the characters is in an unhappy marriage and the other character makes an advance on them but is turned down.

Hopefully I've done a good enough job of explaining it, but I do have some examples as well: "Once" and "Lost in Translation", both movies.

I think it's hard for this kind of plot to stand completely on its own (as with typical romantic comedy plots) so it often has something else that is interesting in its own right supporting it, as in the music in Once or the crazy Japanese culture in Lost in Translation.
replies: 1

Weaponized Trope
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-18 15:35:57 by Magus (last reply: 2009-11-20 21:51:25)
Using a trope not normally used for combat into combat. This does not exclude tropes that are not physical.

replies: 5

Amazing Technicolor Chorus
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 21:02:35 by Prfnoff (last reply: 2009-11-20 21:02:35)
How to make a bunch of characters visually distinguishable despite costumes of similar design? Dye their costumes wildly different colors! The resulting ensemble possibly resembles a fruit salad and may be perceived as Camp Gay.

Compare Amazing Technicolor Population, Colour Coded For Your Convenience.

Examples:

  • For a good movie musical example, see the brothers' shirts in Seven Brides For Seven Brothers.
  • This was also used in Broadway musicals: the costume designer of Oklahoma! had to be told that his "bitch-pink shirts" were not appropriate for cowboys.
replies: 0

Fake Gay
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-18 04:05:58 by wellinever (last reply: 2009-11-20 20:57:17)
Needs A Better Title and Do We Have This One Already. I looked for it in the Queer As Tropes page but it wasn't there.

Examples:

replies: 13

Robot Factory Montage
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-05 19:49:42 by Giant Space Chinchilla (last reply: 2009-11-20 20:06:06)
Just something I noticed in Matter Replicator

In fiction Robot Assembly Lines are there to showcase Special Effects while establishing Infinite Supplies so that we can stop wondering "Where did all that X come from?". Usually done as a fleeting scene to indicate that they are not that important for the plot.

kind of a subtrope to Technology Porn or Eternal Engine

Examples:

Is This Tropable? or did I get hit by a paranoia plague?
replies: 8

No Conservation of Momentum
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 06:25:52 by tkdb (last reply: 2009-11-20 19:40:38)
Needs More Examples, Needs A Better Title, Needs A Better Description, Rolling Updates

Conservation of momentum means that a moving object will tend to stay moving unless a force stops it... And such a force can cause a lot of damage to fragile things like, say, human bodies. When fictional works ignore this fact, it's No Conservation Of Momentum.

Tropes include :

The Mystery Trope This YKTTW Was About :

It is something you learn in basic physics that objects in a moving system move at the same rate as the system... Hence if you drop a ball in a train it will seem to go straight down, because it's moving with the train. And if you drop a bomb from a plane it will continue going forward with the plane. And if you jump from a train you will continue going at the same speed as the train... Wait, what ?

In fiction characters will often jump out of moving cars or trains with not much more than scratches for their trouble, very much as if the car or train wasn't moving at all. Bonus points if they fall straight out (relative to the landscape) when they should retain the the horizontal velocity they had in the vehicle. Even more egregious, jumping onto the top of a moving train seems to them like the perfect way to escape pursuers, even though one would think the smooth and above all narrow top of a train is not the best place to withstand a sudden acceleration from Zero to Quite Fast.

I looked for this trope because I've just watched episode 32 of Fullmetal Alchemist : Brotherhood, which has a straight example and an aversion in the same episode. Namely, Scar isn't on the train Kimblee thought he was on, so Kimblee looks for a curve where the train would have been slow enough to jump off of. Fine, except that Scar jumped on that train earlier in the episode in the middle of a flat plain where it was going pretty fast !

It reminded me of a Tintin episode (probably during Prisoners of the Sun) where he has to jump off a train. He worries about it some, appropriately implying it's dangerous, but once he does it (while it's going over a bridge, thank goodness for Soft Water) I'm pretty sure he falls straight down, when he should have continued moving with the train. I might be wrong, it's been a long time. I do know he jumps onto trains at least once though.
replies: 9

Sir Index
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-18 22:25:35 by kuyanJ (last reply: 2009-11-20 19:16:09)
replies: 6

Screw you, Dad!
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 19:09:13 by GoldenGoomba900 (last reply: 2009-11-20 19:09:13)
When a child or sidekick leave their mentor, guardian, or leader they usual want to be remembered as stronger and better than them. That's where this comes in. They end up with the character insulting his mentor and sometimes even hurting them. They'll most likely end up as someone acquainted with (or sometimes even become) the Big Bad. However most of them join back up with the group again after having their heads handed to them.
replies: 0

Thirty Elemental Pileup
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 00:27:42 by ungulateman (last reply: 2009-11-20 18:35:10)
When Elemental Rock Paper Scissors go bad. The "web" of type advantages is either too imbalanced, too complex, or too irrelevant that it simply doesn't work.

The three categories are:
  • <b>Imbalanced.</b> One or more types are much better than the others, which leads to little use of any of the other elements. Dragon- and Steel-types are an example from more competitively minded Pokemon play.
  • <b>Overcomplicated.</b> There are so many types (or the types aren't distinguished clearly) that the player turns a blind eye and uses whatever they want.
  • <b>Irrelevant.</b> The type matchups aren't significant enough to warrant the player to actually use the matchups to their advantage. A 10% boost against Fire isn't worth all the effort and focus the player would put into something which would get that boost, for example.

  • A fan mod of Warcraft III named Element TD fits this. The high powered-towers don't give a rat's ass about the elemental typing, by virtue of having useful effects, doing more than enough damage to not care about the damage reduction, or simply ignoring the matchups entirely.
  • The second type applies to...less skilled Pokemon players. My level 25 Charmeleon will beat Brock, Rock-typing be damned!
    • And in competitive battling, the first applies, with Dragons and Steel-types dominating the metagame and Poison-types doomed to be ineffective against anything which isn't Grass-type.

If this already exists, bite me.
replies: 6

FullFrontalShielding
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 15:46:19 by Unknown Troper @ 69.165.134.155 (last reply: 2009-11-20 18:29:54)
Full Frontal Shielding involves the placement of Deflector Shields or other protection on the front of a given object or entity, making it highly resistant to attacks; however, there is very little protection from behind, where Genre Savvy entities would attack instead.

Not to be confused with slightly weaker armor or defences on the back; that can be dismissed as a reinforced front or a generic weak spot that isn't designed for receiving attacks. To qualify for this trope, the front must be effectively indestructible or hard to overcome compared to a side or rear attack.

Related to: For Massive Damage, Attack Its Weak Point

Examples:

Video games:
  • Counter Strike's riot shield
  • Descent 2 final boss
  • Dogs Of War: Shooting a front of a tank takes forever; attack it from behind to defeat it in one hit.
  • Ghost Recon, where machine gun nests put metal-plating on the sides of the machinegun to increase protection.
  • La Mulana
  • Left 4 Dead 2, zombies wearing security uniforms
  • Shadowgrounds
  • In the X-Wing series, you could use double shielding in lieu of fully-powered shields; although there's not much reason to. Can also be inverted to backward shields.

Television:
  • A Police Squad episode had a scene where baddies try to get various weapons to defeat Leslie Neilson. One of the "weapons" was a Picasso, which prevented a direct punch but not one that went around the painting.

Real Life:
  • The Mangiot Line, was an impressive defense by the French, spanning the entire German border. It was defeated by simply by going through Belgium.
  • Porcupines invert this trope.
replies: 1

You're wearing an IV you know.
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 18:29:05 by blackout62 (last reply: 2009-11-20 18:29:05)
This ones bugged me for years

So or hero has been under some sort of sedation and wakes up in a hospital, almost like clockwork they either: get out of bed on the wrong side, start walking away till the iv pulls the arm it's attached to back, (which brings up the point of how unrealistically secure I Vs are inserted in media)or any other way a character hurts themselves because they totally didn't notice the tube coming out of their arm.

Examples: 28 Days Later: Can't remember exactly but the main character does this. The Men who Stare at Goats: Averted and played straight, Ewan Mcgregor's character notices the IV starts walking while holding it then leaves it and continues to walk till it pulls on his arm. Walking Dead: Averted, the main character removes his IV and only falls because of unrelated reasons.
replies: 0

Leave the Dart In
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-18 07:05:19 by Qi Chin (last reply: 2009-11-20 18:28:47)
Do We Have This One?

In many situations, people might use darts are projectiles - due to technological level (blowgun) or it's non-lethal effect (tranquilizers). If the dart is not covered/filled with Instant Sedative, and was inserted into an unwilling, yet not helpless target, the one thing that these targets don't do is pull the dart out. Instead they leave it and let it spread whatever substance it was meant to spread throughout them. This is especially obnoxious when the dart is in easy-to-reach places, such as the shoulder.


Examples of this trope include:

Live Action TV
  • In the opening of the Stargate SG 1 episode "The First Commandment", Franks is hit by a dart fired from a blowgun while fleeing. The dart is left in his shoulder all the way until he gets shot.
replies: 8

Aesop Dispencer
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 17:24:13 by src9 (last reply: 2009-11-20 17:24:13)
Do We Have This One ? Needs A Better Description

So, you need to add an An Aesop, but cant figure how, right? All you need is to add a new character whose sole purpose in the history is to give one! Older Than Print, started in the Greek Drama.

Up For Grabs.
replies: 13

Inverse Broke Episode
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 15:13:01 by Frodo Goofball CoTV (last reply: 2009-11-20 17:15:48)
Surely we have this? Should We Have This? Needs A Better Title, Needs A Better Description, Rolling Updates all likely....
Alternate Titles:
  • A Fool And His Money Are Soon Parted
  • A Fool And His Money Episode
  • Easy Come Easy Go Episode
  • Unexpected Windfall Episode

Basically, Exactly What It Says On The Tin, instead of a Broke Episode, an episode where one character suddenly has a lot MORE money than before, but things later return to the way they were because Status Quo Is God. The character will invariably have a huge and very sudden increase in expendible income. This might be for any reason, such as winning a lottery, getting a better job, crime, inventing the latest popular gadget, or even because something was delivered to the wrong address. Simultaneously, however, they are handed the Idiot Ball.

Almost invariably, the character gets it in their head that they must now act like an Upper Class Twit, spend like there's no tomorrow, mindlessly buy "whatever it is that rich people like", blow off their former friends as has - beens, etc. Within a few days, one of the following happens:
  • The character somehow manages to completely exhaust their fortune except for just enough to buy themselves back into the life they had before.
  • The bank, mafia, CIA, etc., realizes their mistake and sends a collection agent to confiscate the missing funds.
  • They get fired from their job for gross neglegence, making the company look bad, insulting the boss, etc.
  • They get in trouble for something, and to get out of jail time, a mob hit, etc., they must abandon their fortune.

At that point, expect that the character is sincerely worried about their future and the people they left behind, perhaps for the first time in their life. They are now so low that a life in Perpetual Poverty is starting to look good to them, having insulted their old friends, quit their old job, etc., they are likely on the streets. Expect the character to be Easily Forgiven; their friends blow it off as completely unimportant, their old boss hasn't been able to find anyone willing to apply for their old job, the person they sold their old house to is moving out of the area and sells it back to them, and the collection agents go home. In the end, the charccter's lifestyle is restored EXACTLY to what it had been before.

Examples:

  • In Futurama, Fly discovers he'd left some cash in a forgotten bank account, and the accrued intrest has made him fabulously wealthy.
  • Happens to Ron in Kim Possible.
  • Happens to Peter in Family Guy.
  • The P Js
replies: 3

Stealing The Credit
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 17:08:35 by FantiSci (last reply: 2009-11-20 15:58:26)
This must be here, surely, under a more obscure title...

Someone does something impressive. Someone else takes the credit and the glory for it. A defining trait of the Fake Ultimate Hero and the Glory Hound, but often features as part of The Power Behind The Throne and serves as a What The Hell Hero moment, when a protagonist's ego gets too big and he ends up stealing his friends' minor victories. On a larger scale, it's a big part of the examples under tropes such as America Wins The War.

Often a Pet Peeve Trope - this really gets under the audience's skin.

  • Boy Meets Boy - Tybalt takes the credit from Mikhael's romantic gestures for a very specific purpose - he's trying to seduce Harley.
  • Debatable villainous case in Other Peoples Business - Leon steals a Mac Guffin for Collin and Creed Corp, but one of Collin's associates ensures that it's stolen from Leon and that he, not Collin, takes the credit for it. Debatable in that he did actually acquire the thing...just that he did so after Leon already had it.
  • In the Circle Of Magic books, Frostpine reveals that a shaman stole his (powerful)magic and used it to further his own reputation in the village, a case of actual power being stolen along with the glory.
  • Many a Yamato Nadeshiko character is perfectly happy to have her own work passed off as someone else's (particularly her beloved's).
  • After Mulan is revealed as a girl, China is all set to honour Shang as their hero. He doesn't look too happy about it, mind.
  • In Pet Shop Of Horrors, the owners sometimes take the credit for their pets' achievements (i.e. "Dice")
  • Can happen in real life, either deliberately or through "editing" history. That Alexander Graham Bell is supposed to have stolen the credit for the invention of the telephone from Antonio Meucci and Elisha Gray (among others) is an example of the first instance (although that's a very messy debate). That Philo T. Farnsworth is often credited with the invention of the television, when in actual fact John Logie Baird preceded him by over a year (people forget to mention that Farnsworth's was the first electronic - and therefore, modern television - not the first actual TV) is an example of the second.
replies: 7

One Man's Trash...
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 15:42:14 by Wheezy (last reply: 2009-11-20 15:42:14)
The nature of most economies seem to ensure that wherever someone is dying from lack of a certain necessity, people not too far away will have so much of it that they'll often have no use for the stuff, and will be using it in stupid ways or just throwing it away to keep from drowning in it. This is sometimes used to add more cynicism to Perpetual Poverty plots.

Another variant is the Scavenger World, when it exists alongside more prosperous and modern countries, causing the residents to literally turn the trash from their rich neighbors into useable tools.

This inequality is often a cause of Decade Dissonance.

Examples

Literature

  • Discworld: 'Piss Harry' King made his fortune off this. People paid him to take their nightsoil away... and then he turned around and sold it to whomsoever required it.

Western Animation

  • The Yum Yum fish in The Simpsons. While the small Dying Town that the episode focuses on is almost abandoned because of a lack of the fish, which were their main tourist draw, it's shown that nearby Japanese fisherman refer to them as "garbage fish," and have been catching them all and throwing them away.
  • The Animaniacs short "A Gift of Gold" has Elmira open a present wrapped in gold wrapping paper for her birthday, tearing the wrapping to pieces. One of the pieces flies away and moves about town until it lands in the trash, a man finds it and uses it to wrap up a toy for his daughter.

New Media

  • This Cracked article is all about how rich people can waste money that they have little other use for. They make reference to this trope in almost every paragraph.

Real Life

  • Zig-zagged with food. People in some of the most fertile countries on Earth starve to death due to bad government and resource management, while morbidly obese people in the western world keel over from... malnutrition. In some places, the rich tend to be the healthiest and most well-fed, but in others, it's subsistence farmers.
replies: 3

Words that do not mix well with explosives
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 14:45:52 by salsathegeek (last reply: 2009-11-20 15:40:01)

"Whassup George?"
"Bomb Squad guy just said, 'Oops.'"

Similar to [1] but instead uses explosives and (a) keyword(s). In general, any situation in which you should run if an expert or someone in the know does or says something. The guy in charge of demolitions going pasty and then yelling "TAKE COVER!" is an example. A person who has no idea of what their talking about running when the demo guy drops a stick of dynamite is not (Nitroglycerin however...). This also applies to anything that can go up in an explosive way.

Please refrain form putting theoretical situations, those belong in a forum, not here. Situations in which if you ever see an expert running you probably should be too do go here.

feel free to suggest better titles as this one's pretty lame.


  • Shlock Mercenary has several examples, like this and this.
replies: 1

Fighting Game Global Warming
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-25 13:51:17 by Magus (last reply: 2009-11-20 15:16:23)
A fighting game will often have far more instances of The Mario or the Fragile Speedster than a Mighty Glacier. Even in a roster of thirty or so, there will probably only be one or two big heavy guys.

Examples:
  • Street Fighter 3: About 20-24 characters and two big guys (Alex and Hugo).
  • Guilty Gear XX: Around 30 characters and exactly one big guy (Potemkin).
replies: 15

Convoluted Side and Easy Side
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-06 19:01:45 by Kilyle (last reply: 2009-11-20 15:09:41)
...okay, obviously Needs A Better Title.

There's a particular sort of joke/story/anecdote that fits this pattern:

The Experience of Women:

(details convoluted story of the topic at hand, say A Public Restroom or A Sick Toddler)

The Experience of Men:

(details a very quick-and-easy version of same topic)

Example: A giant and highly detailed story about all the many things a woman has to do to prepare dinner, compared with the man's version: Order pizza.

This is often, but not exclusively, done with Women vs. Men. I've seen ones with Cats vs. Dogs and there are likely others.

(Possibly the same trope, possibly a different one: The Intelligent Version vs. The Dumb Version, as with the contrast of the Cat who's narrating a diary like he's in prison ("tripped one human in the hallway today; must try that at top of stairs") and the Dog who's just going "Food! My favorite thing! Walks! My favorite thing!").

The joke lies in the extreme contrast between the first story and the second. The fact that I can predict the nature of the second story from the first indicates that this is a trope. The way that I can predict it so well as to go "Ah, I don't need to read this whole shaggy dog" probably means that it's becoming an overused trope, at least in forwarded emails. But it still can be riotously funny.

Assuming we don't have this: Up For Grabs.
replies: 18

True Beauty Is On The Inside
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 14:23:28 by Some Guy (last reply: 2009-11-20 14:23:28)
Come on, we gotta have this one, right? I've just been catching all the pages directly around it this whole time?

One of the most common Aesops out there- we shouldn't judge people based on how they look on the outside but rather how they look on the inside. Looks are a shallow motivator and are almost always wrong.

Admittedly, this trope is most commonly known for how it's skewered unintentionally by the heavy presence of tropes like Hollywood Homely. As a rule, nearly everyone in visual media who purports this trope will either clearly be beautiful themselves or will become beautiful by the end of the movie. So...maybe a good idea to read some books instead and just pretend like they're ugly.

Examples:
  • Appears in all the Beauty And The Beast adaptations as it is the crucial lynch-pin of the story- beauty must come to understand that just because beast is a hideous cruel monster doesn't mean he's a bad person.
  • Shallow Hal has a character cursed with a very literal example of this trope- he is only capable of seeing a person's "true beauty" which, for most of the movie, seems to be personified by Gwyneth Paltrow.
replies: 8

Rushing Walls of Screaming
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 07:57:45 by King Zeal (last reply: 2009-11-20 13:40:12)
When two opposing armies meet on the battlefield, there's always a bit of dramatic tension. Sometimes, the leaders will even exchange a few words of dialogue, or someone in the smaller army realizes that they're hopelessly outnumbered and outclassed. In either case, when the battle proper begins, there's only one thing to do . . .

Scream real loud and run headlong into each other!

That is the Rushing Wall of Screaming in a nutshell. Two sides of an epic battle (usually in an ancient or fantasy setting) run at each other screaming furiously until they meet, whereupon they start hacking at each other mercilessly. One side might try to even the odds a bit by tossing out a few arrows, boulders, dogs, whatever . . . but eventually, that wall of screaming soldiers is going to get there, and all hell is going to break loose.

Examples:

replies: 8

Everyone has a key?
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 12:31:34 by maslego (last reply: 2009-11-20 13:25:53)
I couldn't think of a good title. Do we have this already? Alice Bob and Chris are on a quest or just walking. Each of them has an unique talent or power. They come to a locked door or gate. Alice opens it with her talent/power. They keep going and come to a second locked door/gate this time Bob opens it. Third door/gate and Chris opens it. Example: In Family Guy (Ocean's Three and a Half) when Peter, Quagmire and Cleveland are robbing the vault they come upon three doors. Cleveland passes the voice scanner, Quagmire breaks the penile match, and Peter guesses the name.
replies: 2

As I Am Now
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 08:45:39 by rbx5 (last reply: 2009-11-20 13:12:35)
Needs A Better Description

Essentially, when a character acknowledges that they cannot accomplish a goal/realize a dream in their present state, whether in terms of strength or (in a more metafictional sense, since only the audience will recognize it) Character Development. Whether it's because they're not strong enough to beat The Rival or Big Bad ("I cannot defeat you as I am now), or maybe they feel they can't start a relationship with the love interest ("I can't be with him/there for him as I am now"), they recognize this and admit it. This is pretty much the equivalent of a giant neon sign saying "ATTENTION: Character Development Imminent!"
replies: 1

Toyless Toyline Character
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-16 11:25:57 by Vree (last reply: 2009-11-20 13:06:59)
A Character from a ( Often Merchandise Driven) show who does not get a toy.

replies: 37

Final Boss New Dimension
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 10:54:51 by OmegaMetroid (last reply: 2009-11-20 12:59:51)
''"Going to some other dimension to fight a final battle is such a cliche!"
-- Xiaomu, Super Robot Wars OG Saga: Endless Frontier

Seen It A Million Times: You're off to fight the final boss, so you end up having to go to another dimension. A Video Game trope, probably caused because the developers want it to be memorable, impressive, and/or awesome. May very well have an Amazing Technicolor Battlefield (thanks, unknown troper) or be a High Altitude Battle. It might also come with a Surreal Theme Tune. The main thing, however, is that it's in its own dimension, universe, or whatever. May also be applied to Bonus Bosses, even though they're not the final boss. A subtrope of Amazing Technicolor Battlefield, it's a common part of Trippy Finale Syndromes.


Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Tabletop RPG]]
  • Judges Guild adventure Dark Tower (1979), using Dungeons And Dragons rules. The final battle against the Big Bad Pnessutt the Lich took place in the highest level of the Outer Plane of Hades. The party had to activate a planar portal to reach him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
  • The Bonus Boss Culex in Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars is fought inside an alternate dimension that appears to be somewhere in the Final Fantasy universe, probably near the Final Fantasy IV reality/world/whatever.
  • Super Robot Wars OG Saga: Endless Frontier has its final battle in the Einst dimension. It also has the final battle between the Namco characters Reiji and Xiaomu and their foe, Saya, which, while not the final boss of the game, counts because the game's dimension is an alternate dimension for them. Ironically, the page quote is for the latter, not the former.
  • The final Specter fight in Ape Escape is fought in Dimension X, if the stage name in the NTSC version is to be trusted.
  • Super Smash Bros Brawl: The Subspace Emissary has the final boss fight with Tabuu in the realm of Subspace.
    • Any of the Super Smash Bros series, actually - the fight with Master Hand (or Crazy Hand) takes place in some sort of other-dimension (this is, of course, before Subspace Emissary came up).
  • Boss from original Half-Life.
  • In Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, the final battle with Anti-Spiral happens in His own pocket Universe.
  • Final Fantasy IX has a final battle in another dimension. As does Final Fantasy VIII. Square Soft seems fond of this one.
  • And then there's Dynamite Headdy. A battle on an Amazing Technicolor Battlefield, it certainly doesn't seem like any normal stage setting.
  • A rather weird example occurs in XenoSaga Episode 1, where the space station you're on inexplicably switches to a cloudy battlefield against the final boss.
  • The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask. The final boss battle takes place in an alternate dimension within an alternate dimension. Or something to that effect. Also, inverted in Twilight Princess, when, after going through the second-to-last dungeon in an alternate dimension, during the boss battle Zant actually transports you to places in Hyrule visited previously during the game.
[[/folder]]

Rolling Updates.
replies: 14

Color coded enemies
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 12:00:21 by Rikka (last reply: 2009-11-20 12:29:24)
When a new enemy/monster is introduced in a video game, Bob notices that it looks just like the old one, but with different colors. The newer version usually looks more striking and it's harder to beat.

Examples:

replies: 4

Megalopolis
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 00:42:15 by Fishbreath (last reply: 2009-11-20 12:21:38)
According to Lost and Found, we missed this one. I can't imagine we actually missed it--is there some reason it doesn't seem to be around? Needs a better description, Up For Grabs, etc. Rolling Updates are currently in effect.

A megalopolis is an extensive area of heavy urbanization with tight interconnection. Most common in science fiction.

Sometimes a supertrope of Capital City. In extreme cases, it's related to Single Biome Planet.

Sometimes, but not always, related to some of the following: The City, City Noir, Vice City, Wretched Hive, City Of Adventure, New Neo City, Crystal Spires And Togas, Cyber Punk, Egopolis

Examples

Comics
  • Superman's Metropolis
  • Actually, many superhero cities are like this. ([[Batman Gotham]], Keystone/ Central City, Hub City...)
  • The Mega-Cities in Judge Dredd.
  • The City in Transmetropolitan.

Film
Trinity: There used to be cities that spanned hundreds of miles. Now these sewers are all that's left.

Literature
  • Isaac Asimov seems to be fond of these:
  • After the invention of the transfer booth in Larry Niven's Known Space, the major cities of Earth end up as something along the same lines: though geographically, they're not contiguous, they are in every way that counts.

TabletopRPG
  • Megaplexes and metroplexes in Shadowrun: New York, Rhine-Ruhr, Greater Frankfurt, Philadelphia,

Video Games

Western Animation
  • Cybertron
  • Obligatory Avatar example, and another of the relatively rare fantasy type: Ba Sing Se.

Real Life
  • The Northeast Megalopolis (Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C.) was the first to be actually described as one.
  • The Taiheiyo Belt has been called a megalopolis too.
replies: 12

Shockwave Attack
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 05:59:35 by DrNamgge (last reply: 2009-11-20 12:11:51)
Do we have this one?

A staple of platform bosses, but can also be seen in standard Mook's attacks. Usually, but not always involves a boss stomping on the ground sending out a shock wave along the ground, usually arcing out in an increasing circle, or part circle from the point of impact, that the player has to jump over.

Examples.

  • N. Tropy in Crash Bandicoot Warped does this with a selection of laser beams that cross the arena.
    • Neo Cortex in the same game does something similar, in the first section anyway, as Aku Aku and Uka Uka create a beam that needs to be jumped over as they stare each other down.
  • [1]Sonic Heroes' final boss does this with both horizontal and vertical attacks as you chase him down.
    • Rare 2D example, in Sonic 2, in the Oil Ocean Zone, Robotnik's laser can skim across the platfrom you're stood on leaving a trail similar to a standard Jump Rope Attack.
  • Done by the generic spacemen enemies in the Blarg station in Ratchet And Clank.
  • lampshaded in Psychonauts during one boss, the boss cries out "Hard to avoid area attack" as he does this.
replies: 8

Yo Ho Song
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-13 17:31:26 by dxman (last reply: 2009-11-20 11:42:06)
It's an I Am Song for the whole crew!

If you come across a jolly band of pirates in a musical, and sometimes even in a non-musical, you're almost guaranteed to be treated to a number from them eventually. This song describes the "ideal" life of a pirate crew (as far as they're concerned) and will almost invariably (A) be accompanied by a squeezebox; (B) be set in 6/8 time; and (C) contain the phrase "yo-ho" somewhere. Not always a Villain Song since, in popular media, not all pirates are actually villains.

Examples:

  • The most famous example is the theme from the Pirates of the Caribbean ride.
  • In Disney's Peter Pan, Hook's crew gets two: Their introduction song "A Pirate's Life Is a Wonderful Life", and the later Villain Song "Captain Hook."
  • "When You're a Professional Pirate" from Muppet Treasure Island, which appears late in the film because the pirates have only just revealed themselves to be such.
  • An otherwise song-less episode of The New Adventures of Winnie The Pooh in which Tigger, Pooh, and Piglet are playing pirates opens with one of these. Notably, Pooh gets mixed up and sings "Ho-yo" at one point.
  • From Lazy Town: "Do what you want 'cause a pirate is free; / You are a pirate!"
replies: 26

All Quadrupeds Are Horses
(permanent link) added: 2009-10-13 02:05:06 by Chabal 2 (last reply: 2009-11-20 11:21:18)
A subtrope of All Animals Are Domesticated and related to Horse Of A Different Color, this would be when any four-legged animal, wild or not, can be, and is used as a mount, despite the fact that this would be stupidly dangerous (Bear/Tiger Cavalry, anyone?) or just plain impractical. Rule Of Cool plays a large part in this trope.

  • As mentioned, Bear and Tiger cavalry. While this no doubt looks awesome, it would very soon cease to be as the mounts turn on their riders or collapse under the armored weight.
  • Wolf riders (from LOTR, Warcraft, any fantasy you care to name...) and dog riders (Native Americans did use dogs, but for pulling heavy loads, until horses were introduced), though this is usually reserved for persons of smaller size (Chiyo-chan comes to mind).
  • Pirlouit from the early Smurfs comics rides a goat.
  • Belkar from Order Of The Stick uses a basset hound as a mount at one point.
  • Dungeons And Dragons has a lot, I believe you can have a wooly rhinoceros in one setting.
  • In some legends, Merlin rides a stag. Used by other druids since, as Malfurion does in Warcraft.
  • Bull riders in some fictions, though the only examples I've seen are when the bull is stampeding and the rider wants to get off but can't (Feet Of Clay, Achille Talon).
  • Night Elves ride giant panthers.

Up For Grabs
replies: 42

World Morph
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 11:14:49 by Earnest (last reply: 2009-11-20 11:14:49)
Why go Down The Rabbit Hole when the hole can fall around you? The Hero has the world morph into something else around her. It may be Sealed Evil In A Can that creates a Dark World, or a dimensional traveller that makes the land their Fisher Kingdom, or a Teleporter Accident that changes the past for everyone but the hero. Whatever the case, Dorothy did not land in Oz, Oz landed on Dorothy.
replies: 0

Extra Ore Dinary
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 11:12:40 by OmegaMetroid (last reply: 2009-11-20 11:12:40)
Some Elemental Powers let you control fire, water, air, or earth. Some even let you control lighting; ice; plants; light; darkness; arcane forces, magic, or the mind; and even heart (when not a victim of What Kind Of Lame Power Is Heart Anyway). This, however, is power over METAL. It generally allows one to control metal, although it may even include being made of metal and using one's body to attack.

(Extra Ore Dinary comes from "Dennis Moore", a Monty Python sketch. They sing that he's extraordinary, but make it sound like "Extra Ore..... Dinary".)

So, here are the votes for each suggested name. Don't know when the name's been finalised, so when nobody's voted or suggested another name for a few days, I'll just use the most popular name (which is currently Extra Ore Dinary). I'll probably make the second-most popular name an alternate title, unless there are objections to that.

Examples: Anime And Manga:
  • Digimon Frontier has the legendary warrior of metal, Mercurimon.
    • Also common in ''Digimon' games is to have a "Machine" element.
  • One Piece has Mr. 1 who, after eating the Supa Supa (Dice Dice) Fruit, got a body literally Made Of Steel as well as the ability to form bladed weapons on any part of his body.
  • Fairy Tail has Gazille, who uses iron dragonslayer magic.
Comic Books:
  • Magneto.
  • In Ultimate Spiderman, Ultimate Doc Ock has control over metal, whether due to magnetic control or some kind of telekinesis geared for metal, it's not made clear.
    Doc Ock: "It was the metal, Parker! I was controlling the metal!"
Mythology:
  • One of the five classic elements according to Chinese mythology, along with Fire, Water, Earth, and Wood.
Video Games: Webcomics:
  • K'thonya of Earthsong belongs to a race with the soulstone ability of being able to manipulate metal; essentially the only thing she can't do with it is turn one kind into another and create it out of thin air (though she can expand a relatively small piece of metal to many times its original size). Her species' hair has a high enough metal content to be subject to her power, and the use of this ability by other members of her race apparently inspired gorgon myths in Earth culture.
Western Animation:

Again, there'll be Rolling Updates.

...I'm not sure when a YKTTW is done, so is it ready to launch?
replies: 21

Effective Immediately
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-15 11:46:50 by Cao Cao (last reply: 2009-11-20 11:04:58)
America Jones loses her "friends".
A Stock Phrase. Originally used in corporate and administrative contexts, it has tended to spill over into other areas of late.


replies: 6

Sexless Adult Romance
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 19:19:23 by Totally (last reply: 2009-11-20 11:00:52)
"I'll never dance with another." - I Saw Her Standing There, The Beatles

The S.A.R. is where an adult couple has a romance, but no sex.

This stems from the days when people wanted desperately to believe that babies came from various animals such as birds, bees, and storks. Old entertainment has many SARs as is evident when a married couple sleeps in separate beds. Sex was symbolically replaced with elaborate singing and dancing numbers (the movie that inspired this post was White Christmas).

This classic tradition is often shown today, especially with adult characters in children's entertainment, natch, but also when the entertainment is aimed at adults who believe that those who are chaste, abstinent, asexual, etcetera, are quaint, charming, pure, and otherwise better than those who have sex (especially rebellious, edgy sex and / or homosexual sex). This theme is aimed at those who secretly or openly appreciate it when sex is only had under strict circumstances.

Gay people still often fall into this category. Many asexual sissy boys and asexual butch girls fit this role. Willow from Buffy was this with Tara, having symbolic rituals instead of actual sex until they finally consummated their relationship and Tara promptly died and Willow became the villain. Heck, Buffy was this with Angel until they finally consummated their relationship and Angel became a big Jerk Ass and it ruined her life and he went to hell.

Narrative reasons for SARs may include...

  • They are physically unable to touch each other, for instance if one is an intangible ghost.
  • They choose not to, for instance if they are religious or Just Friends.
  • The sex is never shown. Sometimes never even hinted at. The audience is left guessing how they ever had kids. Adoption? That bizarre Beebirdstork creature?

Children don't count, for obvious reasons. For instance, Bart and Lisa Simpson, who constantly fall in love and date people despite being pre-pubescent. Though as an interesting fun fact, note that when Bart is thought to be gay during Homer's Phobia, it's because of stereotypical traits and not because he likes a boy too much. Also included in that episode is John Waters, who can only be identified as gay because he says so and is a sissy, but is otherwise not in a relationship, sexless or sexful, with a man.

Do We Have This One ?

Alternate title: Fuckless Adult Romance, as to not confuse fucking with gender.
replies: 12

Shirtless Seme Pantsless Uke
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 07:25:57 by lebrel (last reply: 2009-11-20 10:45:48)
This is a Boys Love Fanservice trope.

To show what a hottie the Seme is, he will unbutton his shirt or take it off. To show what a cutie the Uke is, he will somehow wind up with just the shirt. He's also more likely to get put into really short shorts. The point of this, of course, is to allow the seme (and the reader) to ogle his adorable little butt.

An implementation so common it almost counts as a subtrope: the uke's clothes get wet or dirty, the seme offers to wash them, and while they're drying the uke hangs around the seme's apartment in a borrowed shirt, or his underwear, or in extreme cases a towel, while the seme slavers discreetly. (The stated explanation will be that none of the semes' pants fit him.)

This shades into Total Uke Exposure: any guy running around in just underwear, a tiny bathing suit, or Censor Steam is likely to be the uke. This trope can in fact be used to sort out the eventual sexual dynamic for a Seme x Seme, Uke x Uke, or otherwise ambiguous couple; the first guy you see naked will be the bottom.

Also applies to sex scenes: the uke usually gets stripped sooner, and even once things are underway the camera will show you more of his body than of the seme. Sometimes leads to Right Through His Pants.

A couple examples (please contribute!):
  • Yuuri in Kyou Kara Maou (who is an uke type) is given Special Royal Underwear that he must wear; a tiny black string bikini. Then he has to change in front of everybody to put them on. The sole purpose of this incident is to show him in a tiny black string bikini, and cause all the semes to have Nosebleeds.
  • Aversion: the seme in Selfish Mr. Mermaid spends quite a lot of time starkers. Of course, he's a mermaid, and he spends most of his time in the tub, underwater, or simply dripping wet, so clothing is not so practical.
replies: 1

Song Lyrics Not Related
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 01:54:20 by undefined (last reply: 2009-11-20 10:30:30)
Is This Tropable?

A dramatic, musically fitting song is playing for the event. Except the lyrics don't match up.

Compare Soundtrack Dissonance.


  • Pick any James Bond song. Any.
  • Commercial for Left 4 Dead 1 used Elbow's Grounds for Divorce, about an alcoholic pissing away his time at a local pub.
  • Semi-variant: Not sure if it was played in the titular film, but David Bowie's Cat People is about a man longing for someone.
replies: 15

Complaining About Wrestlers IWC doun't like
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 10:28:09 by Heartbreak (last reply: 2009-11-20 10:28:09)
He was still Hulk Freaking Hogan. Although now people tend to view the last year and a bit of Hogan's run in the WWF as being an abject failure where he was despised wherever he went, he was still popular, and he was still a draw. More so than Bret, who tanked enough that the plan was to have Yoko walk out of Wrestlemania IX as champ.
Ask 411 talking about Hogan popularity in 93/93

Several people dislike seeing anyone other them their favorite person on top and no wear is this more apparent then Internet Wrestling Community where the mantra can sometimes seem to be Its Popular Now It Sucks. Whoever is the top guy in the company will undoubtedly be called The Wesley and be bashed as a no talent hack that douse not deserve to be there regardless of their skills or how they were thought of by the IWC before (yet strangely for some like Triple H and Cena after almost all their matches the IWC will claim that is the only good match they have ever had).

Sometimes it seems like the only way a champion can escape this fate is if the other major company has a more popular champion or the casual fans go away after they become champion, like in 1994 when WCW was getting a ton of the WWF market when they brought in Hulk Hogan and the WWF given the title to Bret Hart. The IWC will claim that Hogan destroyed WCW while Hart saved the WWF despite the numbers showing the opposite happening

This is especially conman with Wrestlers that have been popular for a long time like Hulk Hogan, The Rock, Triple H, and John Cena. Several people in the IWC Seem to forget that these are real people and call for their deaths and cheer whenever something bad happens to them in real life

For examples I will probably move several things from So Bad Its Horrable The Scrappy and The Wesley that do not belong there

replies: 0

Good Is Weak
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 21:52:45 by Amperschwa (last reply: 2009-11-20 10:26:12)
Do we have this sort of thing anywhere? It's rather common in video games where a party member does a Face Heel Turn (or is it Heel Face Turn?) and suddenly he pops up from level five to level forty. It's rather annoying, personally, when you know characters can't exceed 9,999 HP or whatever and there he goes, up at 15 or 18 thousand or something... Also, I most definitely Need A Better Title. Hey, I just thought of one. The last one was 'Double Crossing The Hero Powers You Up.'
replies: 2

Triumphant Smirk
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-19 11:31:53 by Koveras (last reply: 2009-11-20 09:47:40)
As suggested by the Psychotic Smirk Discussion, a heroic version of the Psychotic Smirk (minus the psychosis, obviously). Actually, I would love to merge both because splitting tropes along the villain/hero lines always ends up tricky when an Anti Hero does it, so I came up with a title that qualifies for both villains and heroes: after all, it's always a smirk and it's always used to signify triumph. So Yeah. What do you think?

As for examples...

  • Archer from Fate Stay Night (see that discussion page) is a heroic example.
  • Lelouch from Code Geass (currently listed on the old page) in an anti-heroic example. Ditto any Anti Hero currently listed.
replies: 1

Island Isolated
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 05:17:53 by Vree (last reply: 2009-11-20 08:00:34)
A person is marooned on a deserted island. They have several worries: food, shelter, fresh water. The wild life might be trying to kill them.

However, those are by far not their greatest problem.

Their biggest problem is loneliness.

Extended isolation from human contact CAN drive a person crazy, although it will take some time. In most shows, a few hours is often enough for this. It is usually accompanied by delusions of grandeur, hallucinations, neglect of basic grooming and hygiene (a beard grows almost instantly) and unsuccessful attempts to try to mimic tribal lifestyle.

Also, in order to not to go COMPLETELY crazy - or rather, a surefire sign that they ARE - the character elects a Companion Cube to act as a surrogate for a real person. They usually paint a smiley face on or take other measures to make it look more lifelike.

This objects is usually cast away as soon as the character makes human contact again, which surprisingly will cure them almost instantly, although looking at themselves a moment later is often embarassing. However if the character is particularly childlish then they may continue to hold on to their "friend".

Subtrope of The Aloner.

Examples: "Total Drama Island": Owen's Mr Coconut. "Cast Away": Wilson the Volleyball. Variations of "Treasue Island" usually have a character like this.
replies: 13

Evil Prison Warden
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-18 05:09:05 by AstyanaxBleak (last reply: 2009-11-20 07:29:44)
Do We Have This One? Is it part of a larger villain trope, like Bad Boss? Because as the saying goes, How Did We Miss This One?

They say a man's home is his castle. For some, their jobs are their castles. Some of them are not very good rulers. They might turn the other cheek as bad men do terrible things to each other, they may use their position for financial gain, they might utilize the bad men they guard as free labor, or death-match gladiators, or makeshift hitmen, and they will likely make the innocent or at least less-nasty-than-the-rest prisoner protagonist more of a hell than prison already is.

Examples

-The prison warden in Lock-Up -The prison warden in Shawshank Redemption
replies: 12

The Boyfriend Shirt
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 06:56:27 by lebrel (last reply: 2009-11-20 07:02:44)
This is a Fanservice trope.

So you have a sweet little innocent (usually a girl, but it also works for the Uke in Boys Love), and you want to have them be sexy but still innocent. Solution: put them into a men's white dress shirt that is ten sizes too large so it slips off their shoulders in a risque fashion, and no pants. Bonus points for implying that there's nothing underneath. Also works on characters who are not so innocent.

Example (mildly NSFW)

Seen It A Million Times.
replies: 1

Bully / Bully Index
(permanent link) added: 2009-11-20 06:46:38 by Marshmello (last reply: 2009-11-20 06:46:38)