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* The ending to ''ComicBook/WhateverHappenedToTheCapedCrusader.'' Granted, the series was intended to close the character of ComicBook/{{Batman}} with a metaphysical look at the character, but the ending grabs metaphysics and goes straight into the surreal, passing by {{Elseworld}}s, multiple universes, and the [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks Golden]], [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver]], and [[UsefulNotes/TheDarkAgeOfComicBooks Dark]] Ages of Comic Books along the way. The general point of it was that there is no such thing as a definitive Batman story, and that the happy ending to Batman's story is that he gets to be Batman... because who doesn't want to be Batman?

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* The ending to ''ComicBook/WhateverHappenedToTheCapedCrusader.'' Granted, the series was intended to close the character of ComicBook/{{Batman}} with a metaphysical look at the character, but the ending grabs metaphysics and goes straight into the surreal, passing by {{Elseworld}}s, multiple universes, and the [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks [[MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks Golden]], [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks [[MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver]], and [[UsefulNotes/TheDarkAgeOfComicBooks [[MediaNotes/TheDarkAgeOfComicBooks Dark]] Ages of Comic Books along the way. The general point of it was that there is no such thing as a definitive Batman story, and that the happy ending to Batman's story is that he gets to be Batman... because who doesn't want to be Batman?



** His review of ''VideoGame/TransformersConvoyNoNazo'' inexplicably end with The Nerd's [[UsefulNotes/NintendoEntertainmentSystem Famicom]] turning into a miniature robot claiming to be [[TheHero Optimus Prime]]. When The Nerd tries to question this, the little robot simply blasts him away.

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** His review of ''VideoGame/TransformersConvoyNoNazo'' inexplicably end with The Nerd's [[UsefulNotes/NintendoEntertainmentSystem [[Platform/NintendoEntertainmentSystem Famicom]] turning into a miniature robot claiming to be [[TheHero Optimus Prime]]. When The Nerd tries to question this, the little robot simply blasts him away.



** The review of ''VideoGame/YodaStories'' during Jon's [[Franchise/StarWars Starcade]] event [[https://youtu.be/6V3islv_LOA ends with him]] getting "Perfect Yoda", upon which his face flies off and bounces around the room like the cards in classic versions of [[UsefulNotes/MicrosoftWindows Windows]] Solitaire. Which was only the weirdest of a set of already weird endings; Starcade had a ''lot'' of them, including things like being apparently attacked by a Dubstep-playing Jar-Jar Binks and turned into a figurine, a sudden tangent with Jon admitting he "let those dogs out" because he wanted to sleep, and his EvilLaugh getting suddenly interrupted by distortion.

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** The review of ''VideoGame/YodaStories'' during Jon's [[Franchise/StarWars Starcade]] event [[https://youtu.be/6V3islv_LOA ends with him]] getting "Perfect Yoda", upon which his face flies off and bounces around the room like the cards in classic versions of [[UsefulNotes/MicrosoftWindows [[Platform/MicrosoftWindows Windows]] Solitaire. Which was only the weirdest of a set of already weird endings; Starcade had a ''lot'' of them, including things like being apparently attacked by a Dubstep-playing Jar-Jar Binks and turned into a figurine, a sudden tangent with Jon admitting he "let those dogs out" because he wanted to sleep, and his EvilLaugh getting suddenly interrupted by distortion.
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[[folder:Visual Novels]]
* The two ''VisualNovel/{{Kokoro}}'' games both have their fair share of confusing endings.
** The first game, ''VisualNovel/KokoroNoDokiDokiSenpai'', has a Bad End where Player, the main character, dies from spontaneous combustion with no explanation as to how he caught fire.
** Every ending in the second and most recent game, ''VisualNovel/KokoroBakaMonogatari'', leads to the revelation that Earth is under attack by psychic, parasitic aliens and that the four main characters were secretly being trained to fight them.
[[/folder]]
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* The last scene of ''ComicBook/BePrepared'' has Vera's StrugglingSingleMother revealing she got the new job she interviewed for--and it's in England, so the family is moving to London. [[EyeTake Vera stares off into the distance.]] End story!
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** ''GainaxEnding/MetalGearSolid2SonsOfLiberty''
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** The episode that ended with The Argument Sketch turned the Gainax Ending almost into an art form. All episode long, sketches had been ending with the police entering and making arrests, and the Argument Sketch was going to be no different. Then another police officer comes in to arrest the whole show for Gainax Ending abuse, only to suddenly realize that his doing so made him guilty of the same thing. As was true for the next cop who entered to arrest ''him'', etcetera ad infinitum.

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** The episode that ended with The Argument Sketch turned the Gainax Ending almost into an art form. All episode long, sketches had been ending with the police entering and making arrests, and the Argument Sketch was going to be no different. Then another police officer comes in to arrest the whole show for Gainax Ending abuse, only to suddenly realize that his doing so made him guilty of the same thing. As was true for the next cop who entered to arrest ''him'', etcetera ad infinitum. Also, said cop was an ape.
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--> [[spoiler:Mr.Popo]]: I'll say.

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--> [[spoiler:Mr.Popo]]: '''[[spoiler:Mr. Popo]]''': I'll say.

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Frankly, i don't think this one counts but i'll help you out to not get cut.


* The ending of Episode 12 of ''WebVideo/DragonBallAbridged'' -- "I'll say."

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* The ending of Episode 12 of ''WebVideo/DragonBallAbridged'' -- "I'll at first has [[spoiler:Krillin waking up from a nightmare where he was being attacked by a monster on [[{{Filler}} Fake Namek]], and reflects on it, and is suddenly jumpscared by [[HumanoidAbomination Mr. Popo]]. This ''then'' cuts to [[BreakingTheFourthWall live-action footage of the show's editor]] Creator/KaiserNeko abruptly waking up, and groaning that he should stop editing so late. Cut to a familar black void manifesting onto his computer "agreeing" with him and traumatising him]].
--> [[spoiler:Mr.Popo]]: I'll
say."
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* WebVideo/DougDoug's game tournament [[https://youtu.be/E2_SpkLltSc?si=qi8L520-z18Rk4zV Shufflemania]] ran on the premise of competitors duking it out in games that were rotated across multiple playthroughs by a "Shuffler" bot. Its final match has Ludwig Ahgren and Squeex of Team Orange beating WebVideo/{{Alpharad}} and WebVideo/RubberRoss after a grueling comeback, upon which Doug reveals the secret of the Shuffler: [[spoiler:[[UnroboticReveal it was never an AI]], but rather WebVideo/Jerma985, who then alongside Doug gives Team Orange their prize: [[SuddenContestFormatChange an abrupt tennis match]] (much to [[TheGadfly Twitch Chat's]] delight), complete with [[TheComicallySerious Parkzer]] as the referee]].

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* WebVideo/DougDoug's game tournament [[https://youtu.be/E2_SpkLltSc?si=qi8L520-z18Rk4zV Shufflemania]] ran on the premise of competitors duking it out in games that were rotated across multiple playthroughs by a "Shuffler" bot. Its final match has Ludwig Ahgren and Squeex of Team Orange beating WebVideo/{{Alpharad}} and WebVideo/RubberRoss of Team Blue after a grueling comeback, upon which Doug reveals the secret of the Shuffler: [[spoiler:[[UnroboticReveal it was never an AI]], but rather WebVideo/Jerma985, who then alongside Doug gives Team Orange their prize: [[SuddenContestFormatChange an abrupt tennis match]] (much to [[TheGadfly Twitch Chat's]] delight), complete with [[TheComicallySerious Parkzer]] as the referee]].
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* WebVideo/DougDoug's game tournament [[https://youtu.be/E2_SpkLltSc?si=qi8L520-z18Rk4zV Shufflemania]] ran on the premise of competitors duking it out in games that were rotated across multiple playthroughs by a "Shuffler" bot. Its final match has Ludwig Ahgren and Squeex of Team Orange beating WebVideo/Alpharad and WebVideo/RubberRoss after a grueling comeback, upon which Doug reveals the secret of the Shuffler: [[spoiler:[[UnroboticReveal it was never an AI]], but rather WebVideo/Jerma985, who then alongside Doug gives Team Orange their prize: [[SuddenContestFormatChange an abrupt tennis match]] (much to [[TheGadfly Twitch Chat's]] delight), complete with [[TheComicallySerious Parkzer]] as the referee]].

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* WebVideo/DougDoug's game tournament [[https://youtu.be/E2_SpkLltSc?si=qi8L520-z18Rk4zV Shufflemania]] ran on the premise of competitors duking it out in games that were rotated across multiple playthroughs by a "Shuffler" bot. Its final match has Ludwig Ahgren and Squeex of Team Orange beating WebVideo/Alpharad WebVideo/{{Alpharad}} and WebVideo/RubberRoss after a grueling comeback, upon which Doug reveals the secret of the Shuffler: [[spoiler:[[UnroboticReveal it was never an AI]], but rather WebVideo/Jerma985, who then alongside Doug gives Team Orange their prize: [[SuddenContestFormatChange an abrupt tennis match]] (much to [[TheGadfly Twitch Chat's]] delight), complete with [[TheComicallySerious Parkzer]] as the referee]].
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* WebVideo/DougDoug's game tournament [[https://youtu.be/E2_SpkLltSc?si=qi8L520-z18Rk4zV Shufflemania]] ran on the premise of competitors duking it out in games that were rotated across multiple playthroughs by a "Shuffler" bot. Its final match has Ludwig Ahgren and Squeex of Team Orange beating WebVideo/Alpharad and WebVideo/RubberRoss after a grueling comeback, upon which Doug reveals the secret of the Shuffler: [[spoiler:[[UnroboticReveal it was never an AI]], but rather WebVideo/Jerma985, who then alongside Doug gives Team Orange their prize: [[SuddenContestFormatChange an abrupt tennis match]] (much to [[TheGadfly Twitch Chat's]] delight), complete with [[TheComicallySerious Parkzer]] as the referee]].
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* The [[GrandFinale series finale]] of ''Series/{{Castle}}'', "Crossfire", ended in such as way, partially due to the show's sudden cancellation: The show's writers were operating off the assumption that they had gotten a ninth season, but three days before the Season 8 finale aired, [[CutShort ABC cancelled the show.]] The resulting ending made viewers' heads spin: [[spoiler: [[DiabolusExMachina Caleb Brown turns out not to be dead and shoots Castle]], followed by Beckett returning fire at Brown [[MutualKill but not before he shoots her as well.]] A badly injured Castle & Beckett are then seen laying on the ground seemingly dying next to each other. Then we suddenly cut to a scene that is set [[TimeSkip 7 years later]] with the two of them eating dinner with 3 children.]] It is pretty clear what happened was a case of two endings being spliced together at the last minute. The fanbase had a field day trying to make sense of it, with theories ranging from [[spoiler: that Castle & Beckett really did die and the "7 years later" scene was just a DyingDream, or that the whole series was [[AllJustADream just the plot of one of Castle's novels]], with only the 1st episode being "real" and that Castle & Beckett are just a normal author & cop married in real life without all the crazy adventures of the series. Then there's the theory that simply takes the ending at face value: they made an UnexplainedRecovery and managed to EarnYourHappyEnding.]]

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* The [[GrandFinale series finale]] of ''Series/{{Castle}}'', ''Series/{{Castle|2009}}'', "Crossfire", ended in such as way, partially due to the show's sudden cancellation: The show's writers were operating off the assumption that they had gotten a ninth season, but three days before the Season 8 finale aired, [[CutShort ABC cancelled the show.]] The resulting ending made viewers' heads spin: [[spoiler: [[DiabolusExMachina Caleb Brown turns out not to be dead and shoots Castle]], followed by Beckett returning fire at Brown [[MutualKill but not before he shoots her as well.]] A badly injured Castle & Beckett are then seen laying on the ground seemingly dying next to each other. Then we suddenly cut to a scene that is set [[TimeSkip 7 years later]] with the two of them eating dinner with 3 children.]] It is pretty clear what happened was a case of two endings being spliced together at the last minute. The fanbase had a field day trying to make sense of it, with theories ranging from [[spoiler: that Castle & Beckett really did die and the "7 years later" scene was just a DyingDream, or that the whole series was [[AllJustADream just the plot of one of Castle's novels]], with only the 1st episode being "real" and that Castle & Beckett are just a normal author & cop married in real life without all the crazy adventures of the series. Then there's the theory that simply takes the ending at face value: they made an UnexplainedRecovery and managed to EarnYourHappyEnding.]]
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* In ''TabletopGame/DeltaGreen: Impossible Landscapes'' if the players are unable to escape the masquerade the King In Yellow will be unmasked revealing the truth of the universe. The party's attendants will then rush the Agents, strip them naked and dress them in stage clothing and make-up, they will be taken to a stage. As the curtain opens it will reveal every PC and NPC encountered during the campaign and they will clap, the Agents will then realise they are wearing the same clothes they had in 1995 when they first met investigating disappearance of Abigail Wright, the back curtain will open to reveal the set: Abigail's room in the [=MacCalister=] building, where the Agents first started the investigation 20 years ago and where they started the campaign. A man will start mouth the lines from the King in Yellow play, the same the agents said long ago. The Agents are now forever part of the play, which they created. The Game Master finishes by reciting a poem, and then the curtain closes.

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* In ''TabletopGame/DeltaGreen: Impossible Landscapes'' if the players are unable to escape the masquerade the King In Yellow will be unmasked revealing the truth of the universe. The party's attendants will then rush the Agents, strip them naked and dress them in stage clothing and make-up, they will be taken to a stage. As the curtain opens it will reveal every PC and NPC encountered during the campaign and they will clap, the Agents will then realise they are wearing the same clothes they had in 1995 when they first met investigating disappearance of Abigail Wright, the back curtain will open to reveal the set: Abigail's room in the [=MacCalister=] building, where the Agents first started the investigation 20 years ago and where they started the campaign.campaign starts. A man will start mouth the lines from the King in Yellow play, the same the agents said long ago. The Agents are now forever part of the play, which they created.created, doomed to repeat it forever. The Game Master finishes by reciting a poem, and then the curtain closes.
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* GainaxEnding: Par for the course with the rest of the plot. [[spoiler:George actually tries to shoot Bob. Though it fails, it causes the Helmeted Author to stop possessing him. It's then revealed that the entire episode was a bet between the two authors, and the comic was being run by Bob and George's mom as a BatmanGambit to toughen George up. Afterwards, Mom takes Bob and George back home while the Shadowy Author ends the comic on an epilogue where all the other characters seemingly die in the Calamity, but in fact faked their own deaths to prevent a time paradox and move to Acapulco, where they lived HappilyEverAfter.]]

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* GainaxEnding: ''Webcomic/BobAndGeorge'': Par for the course with the rest of the plot. [[spoiler:George actually tries to shoot Bob. Though it fails, it causes the Helmeted Author to stop possessing him. It's then revealed that the entire episode was a bet between the two authors, and the comic was being run by Bob and George's mom as a BatmanGambit to toughen George up. Afterwards, Mom takes Bob and George back home while the Shadowy Author ends the comic on an epilogue where all the other characters seemingly die in the Calamity, but in fact faked their own deaths to prevent a time paradox and move to Acapulco, where they lived HappilyEverAfter.]]
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* GainaxEnding: Par for the course with the rest of the plot. [[spoiler:George actually tries to shoot Bob. Though it fails, it causes the Helmeted Author to stop possessing him. It's then revealed that the entire episode was a bet between the two authors, and the comic was being run by Bob and George's mom as a BatmanGambit to toughen George up. Afterwards, Mom takes Bob and George back home while the Shadowy Author ends the comic on an epilogue where all the other characters seemingly die in the Calamity, but in fact faked their own deaths to prevent a time paradox and move to Acapulco, where they lived HappilyEverAfter.]]
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%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order. Thanks!

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%% This page list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add new examples Take care to put your example in the correct order. Thanks!its proper place in accordance with Administrivia/HowToAlphabetizeThings!
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True Art Is Incomprehensible is now an in-universe trope as per TRS.


* [[Music/JethroTull Jethro Tull's]] album-length 1973 ConceptAlbum ''A Passion Play'' ends with [[JumpScare jarring, stabbing chords]] and distant crowd screaming of "Steve! Caroline!!", then jazzy saxophone notes as it fades out. [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment One of the most mysterious sections]] in what is already [[TrueArtIsIncomprehensible a barely scrutable]] album.

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* [[Music/JethroTull Jethro Tull's]] album-length 1973 ConceptAlbum ''A Passion Play'' ends with [[JumpScare jarring, stabbing chords]] and distant crowd screaming of "Steve! Caroline!!", then jazzy saxophone notes as it fades out. [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment One of the most mysterious sections]] in what is already [[TrueArtIsIncomprehensible a barely scrutable]] scrutable album.
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Brawl''. The reveal of Kirby as the ultimate mastermind and Ness and Lucas jointly acting as "the Butcher" isn't too hard to understand. The ''really'' weird stuff happens after the final battle when we see Kirby is still alive, has ''murdered [[RageAgainstTheAuthor Masahiro Sakurai]]'', and just before it fades to black ''Creator/ShigeruMiyamoto'' walks into the room.

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Brawl''.* ''Brawl''. The reveal of Kirby as the ultimate mastermind and Ness and Lucas jointly acting as "the Butcher" isn't too hard to understand. The ''really'' weird stuff happens after the final battle when we see Kirby is still alive, has ''murdered [[RageAgainstTheAuthor Masahiro Sakurai]]'', and just before it fades to black ''Creator/ShigeruMiyamoto'' walks into the room.
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Per TRS.


Compare NoEnding and AmbiguousEnding, which also contain an at least partial lack of resolution, TrippyFinaleSyndrome, which has similar imagery but actually makes sense (it's explicitly a DreamSequence, a BattleInTheCenterOfTheMind, takes place in AnotherDimension, etc), EsotericHappyEnding, an ending that is considered happy despite all the evidence to the contrary, BigLippedAlligatorMoment when a similarly confusing event happens that is not the end of the story, and MindScrew (and associated tropes), or a WidgetSeries, where it's not simply the ending but the work ''overall'' that evades explanation. For when the ending ends up changing the entire scenario, see TheEndingChangesEverything. Not to be confused with {{Gainaxing}}.

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Compare NoEnding and AmbiguousEnding, which also contain an at least partial lack of resolution, TrippyFinaleSyndrome, which has similar imagery but actually makes sense (it's explicitly a DreamSequence, a BattleInTheCenterOfTheMind, takes place in AnotherDimension, etc), EsotericHappyEnding, an ending that is considered happy despite all the evidence to the contrary, BigLippedAlligatorMoment when a similarly confusing event happens that is not the end of the story, and MindScrew (and associated tropes), or a WidgetSeries, QuirkyWork, where it's not simply the ending but the work ''overall'' that evades explanation. For when the ending ends up changing the entire scenario, see TheEndingChangesEverything. Not to be confused with {{Gainaxing}}.
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Compare NoEnding and AmbiguousEnding, which also contain an at least partial lack of resolution, TrippyFinaleSyndrome, which has similar imagery but actually makes sense (it's explicitly a DreamSequence, a BattleInTheCenterOfTheMind, takes place in AnotherDimension, etc), EsotericHappyEnding, an ending that is considered happy despite all the evidence to the contrary, and MindScrew (and associated tropes), or a WidgetSeries, where it's not simply the ending but the work ''overall'' that evades explanation. For when the ending ends up changing the entire scenario, see TheEndingChangesEverything. Not to be confused with {{Gainaxing}}.

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Compare NoEnding and AmbiguousEnding, which also contain an at least partial lack of resolution, TrippyFinaleSyndrome, which has similar imagery but actually makes sense (it's explicitly a DreamSequence, a BattleInTheCenterOfTheMind, takes place in AnotherDimension, etc), EsotericHappyEnding, an ending that is considered happy despite all the evidence to the contrary, BigLippedAlligatorMoment when a similarly confusing event happens that is not the end of the story, and MindScrew (and associated tropes), or a WidgetSeries, where it's not simply the ending but the work ''overall'' that evades explanation. For when the ending ends up changing the entire scenario, see TheEndingChangesEverything. Not to be confused with {{Gainaxing}}.
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Updating Link


* After seventeen issues of wrapping up forty years' worth of loose ends and providing a conclusive ending to the story of the X-Men in a big battle royale, ''ComicBook/XMen: ComicBook/{{The End|MarvelComics}}'' randomly ends with several X-Men [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence gaining godhood]] without any forewarning. Oh, and Kitty Pryde becoming President of the US and giving a speech to the surviving X-Men, but that one ''was'' foreshadowed, with her narration having been present from the start.

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* After seventeen issues of wrapping up forty years' worth of loose ends and providing a conclusive ending to the story of the X-Men in a big battle royale, ''ComicBook/XMen: ComicBook/{{The End|MarvelComics}}'' ''ComicBook/XMenTheEnd'' randomly ends with several X-Men [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence gaining godhood]] without any forewarning. Oh, and Kitty Pryde becoming President of the US and giving a speech to the surviving X-Men, but that one ''was'' foreshadowed, with her narration having been present from the start.

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[[folder:Literature]]
* OlderThanFeudalism: ''Literature/TheAeneid'' is an ancient example of this: the story literally ends with Aeneas killing [[BigBad Turnus]] and Turnus going to Hell. Virgil himself was unsatisfied with the ending and always saw it as incomplete, but was prevented from changing the story by [[ExecutiveMeddling the freakin' Emperor of Rome himself]]. It's also assuming that the fact that he DiedDuringProduction wasn't at fault, and that the relevant pages aren't just missing, as happens with much ancient literature.
* ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}''' ending is mostly a DiabolusExMachina, but it's also a decidedly strange one. Having tied up the series' main plot, the latter half of the final book deals with [[TokenNonHuman Ax]] going missing and the others, minus Cassie, going into space to find him. In the last three pages we meet "The One," who [[TheAssimilator shapeshifts into Ax and a few other forms]], seems to know who Jake is[[note]]specifically he refers to him as "Jake the Yeerk killer,'' which is what Crayak and [[GreatGazoo the Drode]] call him[[/note]] and is worshiped by the remaining Yeerks. Jake [[BolivianArmyEnding orders them to ram the Blade ship]], and the story ends. Creator/KAApplegate has never explained it and {{Jossed}} any fan attempt to make it make sense in light of previous events.
* One of Creator/DaveBarry's books, in the midst of his trademark wonky comedic observations, suddenly shifts into a serious romance plot about a woman moving towards having an affair -- portrayed sympathetically, at that. This has next to nothing to do with the chapter it's supposed to be the conclusion for, and is also a bit of a [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment BLAM]].
* Literature/TheBible has the Literature/BookOfDaniel, which is chronologically the last in the Hebrew version, starts off normally enough, with famous stories like the fiery furnace, the writing on the wall, and the lion's den in the first half. The last half consists of four very confusing prophetic visions that seem to be about world events over the next few centuries.
** There's also the Book of Revelation, the last book in the Bible. Its contents are so strange that theologians have been arguing about what it means for thousands of years. Theories include it being a metaphor for the reign of Nero, a prediction of future events (with the various beasts and disasters either being literal or metaphorical), or an allegory for the liturgical practices of the church. Some even suggest that the author, one John of Patmos, was [[WhatDoYouMeanItWasntMadeOnDrugs high]] when he wrote it, as the island he was living on at the time had an abundance of psychedelic morning glory plants.
* The [[Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia Narnia]] books end this way, although the ending makes sense if you treat it as the very heavy-handed UsefulNotes/{{Christian|ity}} allegory that it is (in fact, it makes a great deal ''more'' sense than [[Literature/BookOfRevelation the story it's a reworking of]]). Read the summary [[http://narnia.wikia.com/wiki/The_Last_Battle here]].
* Croatian novel ''The Devil's Eye'' is a pretty standard teen-horror story; a teenage hero must stop an evil demon that's killing his classmates... and the whole thing ends with [[GenderBender him turning into a girl for some reason]], with ''abso-friggin'-lutely nothing'' resolved. And the author's response? [[ShrugOfGod "The ending is whatever you think it might be."]] Yeah, thanks.
* Science-fiction author Creator/PhilipKDick pretty much made a career out of this and MindScrew:
** ''Literature/{{Ubik}}'': It's stated that the reality being experienced by Joe Chip for most of the book was how he perceived 'half-life' (a form of cryonic suspension) after he was killed in an explosion. His boss Runciter, who survived, has been trying to get through to him, and one sign of this is Runciter's head appearing on coins. Then, in the last chapter, the viewpoint switches to Runciter, alive, in the world outside... who begins to find Joe Chip's head on his coins.
** "Faith Of Our Fathers" might be Philip K. Dick's most confounding story. Is it a satire of Communist society? An exploration of the true meaning of religion? Or a role reversal of LSD culture? Who can tell? The great Communist leader is actually God in human form, and you can only see his true form(s) (a series of grotesque monstrosities) when you take Thorazine, an antipsychotic medication that was used as an "antidote" to LSD (to end bad trips).
** ''Literature/TheManInTheHighCastle'' ends a book about an AlternateHistory America after the Axis won WWII with... the characters discovering they're fictional.
*** The ending also implies that we, the readers, are from a fictional timeline as well, since the war in the [[ShowWithinAShow novel-within-a-novel]], which the I Ching implies is true, plays itself out differently than our historical reality.
* ''Literature/TheDifferenceEngine'' just abruptly stops and then there's a long stretch of seemingly random snippets of nothing.
* ''Franchise/DoctorWhoExpandedUniverse'':
** The short story anthology ''Short Trips and Sidesteps'' contains one long-running story ("Special Occasions"), broken up into four parts with each part written by a different author, about the Fourth Doctor and Romana. The first three stories show them celebrating K-9's birthday, Valentine's Day and Christmas, all in a cute OriginalFlavour SugarWiki/{{WAFF}} style. The final story starts with the Fourth Doctor ruminating about Romana and Christmas, going through a pile of dolls, before, in the last few paragraphs, suddenly being transformed into a nightmarish living puppet being forced to watch a flickering film and succumbing to the void.
** The final ''Literature/DoctorWhoMissingAdventures'' novel ''The Well-Mannered War'' by Gareth Roberts, is (as was typical for Roberts) a fairly standard Fourth Doctor and Romana story. (In fact it's ''relentlessly'' traditional, doing its best to look like a Target novelisation of a TV story that doesn't exist -- the online version takes this further.) And then it ends with the Black Guardian suddenly appearing to tell the Doctor he manipulated everything to present the Doctor with a SadisticChoice, and the Doctor deciding to TakeAThirdOption by ''leaving the universe forever'', possibly ending up in the Land of Fiction, where Romana comments they'd be "fictional characters, not real people". It reads very much like an attempt to inflict Semi-CanonDiscontinuity on the JNT era (except Roberts says it wasn't), or possibly pre-emptive Semi-Canon Discontinuity on the upcoming BBC Books.
* ''{{Literature/Doom}}'' would make Studio Gainax proud by having ''two'' such endings:
** Fly and Arlene finally return to Earth after nearly five hundred years, hot in pursuit of the Newbie/Resuscitator ship planning on "fixing" humanity. The enemy never arrives and they never find out why. They land at the rebuilt Salt Lake City Tabernacle where an AI construct of Jill is waiting. She confirms their identities and welcomes them inside to receive a gift: a teenage clone of Jill and a black box on a card table with a card reading "Albert". The end.
--> ''Albert! Albert?! I didn't know what to say, so, Goddamn it, I decided to just shut up and be a Marine. Semper fi, Mac... I know when I'm beat!''
** A duplicate Fly and Arlene slog through the Deimos facility looking for a backdoor out of the Newbie computer system. They find the door and open it, finding the soul of a Newbie, and kidnap it back into the simulation as the Newbies pull the plug. The hyperactive evolution overclocks within the system and they will the Newbie to evolve out of the physical dimension. They have no idea if they banished one or somehow all of the enemy species, it turns out they did and that is why the enemy ship never arrives. The pair realizes that, barring a miracle, they're trapped inside the simulation forever. Fly and Arlene resolve that they can will their new reality to be better than the original by ending the invasion before it lands. Arlene hopes she can un-remember Albert's death so she can be with him again. The end?
-->''I awoke to a brave new world that had such damned peculiar creatures in it!''
* The nineteen-book UsefulNotes/ColdWar-era AfterTheEnd series ''Doomsday Warrior'' (not to be confused with the game), by Reidar Syvertsen and Jan Stacy (under the shared pseudonym of Ryder Stacy), suffers from severe KudzuPlot and many a BigLippedAlligatorMoment to begin with, and gets DenserAndWackier from the tenth book on out in the bargain. Nonetheless: the story ends with [[spoiler: the hero and his most trusted crew on their way off of an asteroid after [[NoOneCouldSurviveThat finally]] [[WhyWontYouDie killing]] the BigBad—having stopped the DeathRay, but with it still up in the air whether they've thwarted the ColonyDrop which they were there to avert to begin with—]]only to skip to an epilogue [[spoiler:set a thousand years later,]] in which [[spoiler:an inexplicably still-surviving (if possibly no longer quite human) member of the hero's crew and a character who was introduced ([[AmbiguousSituation and possibly killed off]]) in that very book have an incomprehensible philosophical argument in a seaside {{Arcadia}}]]. One is left [[WhatDoYouMeanItWasntMadeOnDrugs suspecting that narcotics may have been involved]].
* ''Literature/TheFall'' ends with the narrator breaking the fourth wall and implying that the reader was, like himself, an accomplice to the suicide described earlier in the story.
* In ''Literature/{{Fame}}'', Elisabeth finds herself in one of Leo's stories together with him, talking to his characters. When she asks him why, he simply vanishes from the story and leaves her in a world where no one knows who he his, and where as the author, he has full power over what she says and does. The straightforward explanation would be that she left him and he just included her in a later story out of spite, but more surrealistic interpretations are also possible.
* British children's/teens' author Creator/AlanGarner has an affinity for the Gainax Ending that is unusual in non-adult fiction. ''Literature/TheOwlService'' ends with a young girl who had been possessed by an incredible supernatural force converting that force from anger -- "owls" to peace -- "flowers". However, everything else about the characters' relationships (which have been totally wrecked) is left unresolved.
* ''Literature/TheGiver'' ends with Jonas getting a vision of a family celebrating Christmas. The ending is written ambiguously enough that the reader can interpret it as [[spoiler: Jonas and Gabe escape, or they end up back at the Community, or the ending is a DyingDream, or what-have-you. Lois Lowry responded with a ShrugOfGod when asked about it, although ''Literature/{{Messenger}}'' heavily implies their survival and ''Literature/{{Son}}'' confirms it]]. Still doesn't explain the Christmas thing, though...
* The ''Literature/{{Goosebumps}}'' series subscribed to the theory that a book wasn't complete without a MandatoryTwistEnding, leading to a few endings that came out of nowhere and made no sense even in a setting where anything can be mistaken for anything else so long as it takes place over a chapter break. There was one where the main characters turned out to be dogs transformed into humans. There was one where it turned out that a seemingly supernatural incident was being faked by some characters who were secretly aliens all along. There was even one where the story you'd been reading was a work-in-progress written by the monster for his monster friends.
* Creator/ThomasPynchon is well-known for this, with endings that frequently leave the central mysteries of the plot unresolved or just bury the narrative under tons of symbolism. The most famous example is probably ''Literature/GravitysRainbow'', which ends with Rocket 00000 apparently destroying the text itself. Suitably, the narrative itself begins to disintegrate at the end. The ending of ''Literature/TheCryingOfLot49'' may also be fairly well known, as it does not resolve whether the conspiracies Oedipa has been researching are real, whether they're an elaborate hoax planned out by her ex-boyfriend, whether they're being hallucinated by her, or something else entirely. All are acknowledged by Oedipa herself as possibilities.
* Creator/JoeHaldeman:
** Haldeman has written several novels (''Mindbridge'', ''Forever Peace'', ''Worlds'' trilogy) where the plot seems to have come to a halt, and the resolution apparently is to introduce an all-powerful, invisible, sadistic alien that randomly murders and tortures several of the characters. Then this alien wanders off, apparently satisfied it's made its point, whatever that was. Then the plot continues to some anti-climactic 'and life goes on' type of ending.
** Haldeman's short story "Monster" is presented as a document being dictated by a Vietnam vet confined to a mental hospital. In it, the vet insists that, when he was a member of a LRRP patrol in 'Nam, he watched a black-skinned, black-furred [[HumanoidAbomination creature]] come out of nowhere and tear apart two other platoon members engaged in a homosexual encounter. However, a Viet Cong deserter who happened to approach at the same time testified that it was ''him'', our narrator, who committed the crime, and of course our narrator can't say he saw a monster for fear it will make him sound even more crazy. Our narrator spends years in an asylum, after being adjudged insane. While inside, he studies legend upon legend about monsters, but can't find anything in the literature that resembles what he ''knows'' he saw. When he comes out, he hunts down the former Viet Cong soldier, now an American citizen, and tortures him to make him admit the truth -- that either the former VC ''is'' the monster, or that he saw what our narrator saw and wouldn't admit it. To no avail; the former VC says nothing, and our narrator kills him, turns himself in and is put back into an insane asylum. The story ends with a doctor's report detailing the incident of the night before: Our narrator was found dead in his cell from having his heart torn out. But there was no break-in, no signs of a struggle, and no noise. The story's last line is: "He did it to himself, and in total silence." The questions the story raises remain unanswered -- was there really a monster or wasn't there?
* Most of Creator/RobertAHeinlein's endings tend to taper off into absolute nothingness. ''Literature/TheNumberOfTheBeast'' has often been said to be best left about 2/3rds of the way through, and ''Literature/{{Friday}}'' is much the same.
* ''Literature/HeroInTheShadows'', by Creator/DavidGemmell. After a straightforward ending in which the invading demonic hordes are pushed back, the epilogue engages in some pretty strong MindScrew: Waylander, who has only hours left to live, is sent into an alternate universe, where he manages to prevent the rape and murder of his wife - making it not only an alternate universe, but the past as well, or ''something'' like that. He then dies, after which the Waylander from that dimension comes home to his wife. The End. Early in the novel there is a reference to a fortune teller prophesying that Waylander will never know peace until he looks up into his own face. Which is exactly what happens: after saving his wife and child in an alternate past reality and preventing the moment that turns him into a assassin he dies looking up at the alternate version of himself, knowing he is free from the nightmare his life would become.
* Creator/DavidFosterWallace's ''Literature/InfiniteJest'' provides a bunch of hints near the end that come close to explaining the strangeness of the first chapter, and sets up a dramatic climax, then ends very deliberately before that climax, in the middle of a secondary character's flashback.
* Creator/StephenKing:
** ''Literature/FromABuick8'' and especially 'The Colorado Kid' are based on this theme: the mysterious death of the eponymous character from 'Kid' is no closer to resolution at the end than the beginning.
** ''Franchise/TheDarkTower'' series could be considered as this trope as well. Although the ending does tie into the overall theme of 'ka' (Karma/fate) as being a wheel, so it could be more of a symbolic ending. What happens is that, after his very long quest to reach the Tower, Roland climbs to its top... and suddenly finds himself back at the beginning of the first book.
** ''Literature/TheLongWalk''. The ending is a bit confusing. Why does Stebbins suddenly drop dead? Who is the shadowy figure beckoning to Garraty? Fan theories abound.
* ''Literature/LegacyOfTheForce'' is particularly bittersweet, but it raises two questions: Is Jacen redeemed or not, and how the hell did Daala become president? But between the fanservice, the CainAndAbel, the paedophilia, and the like, Gainax could've written it.
* The ending of ''Literature/TheManWhoWasThursday'' by Creator/GKChesterton really throws readers for a loop, even taking its subtitle, "A Nightmare" into account. The confusion is even addressed in the book's dedication to his friend E. Clerihew Bently, in the form of a poem:
-->'''GKC:''' ''Oh, who shall understand but you; yea, who shall understand?''
* The series ''Literature/MaximumRide'' by James Patterson. Ends with much cataclysm, as promised (leading to a DownerEnding), but no one knows what caused it.
* Creator/RobertSheckley's ''Mindswap'' has this. The hero ends up trapped in the "Twisted World" but believes himself to have regained his own body and returned home successfully.
* Not only does ''Literature/MostlyHarmless'' see [[DownerEnding every possible version of Earth and therefore every version of Arthur and Trillian destroyed forever by the Vogons]], concluding their plot arc, but it completely fails to tie up any number of outstanding plotlines. It does include a possible Ultimate Question in "[[ItMakesSenseInContext Where does it all end]]?" ([[MemeticMutation 42]].)
* The Polish novel series ''Mr Hopkins'' for young readers--about a time-travelling gentleman--has the occasional weird mystery that never quite gets explained. The endings of the second and third books, in particular, get quite trippy:
** The second installment has a bizarre ending where Mr Hopkins decides to time-travel to London to visit his grandfather Franchise/SherlockHolmes, but instead inexplicably ends up in a featureless void where he meets a man implied to be UsefulNotes/AlbertEinstein, then he finds himself back at his home only to realize that he's actually his own young sidekick, Karol. Then Karol looks into a mirror and sees Mr Hopkins inside, who promises that he will return soon and vanishes. The book ends at this point. In the third book, it's explained that that entire ending was Karol's fever dream, which is probably the only explanation possible.
** At the end of the third and final installment, some time after meeting the TimePolice who forbid him from time-travelling ever again, Mr Hopkins somehow meets the three mythical [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moirai Moirai]] (the series having never involved any mythical or supernatural elements up to that point) who tie his thread of life into a loop. Mr Hopkins then ends up back at the beginning of the series, with no memories, and the narration implies that he's now trapped in a StableTimeLoop forever. [[DownerEnding The end.]]
* In ''Literature/NuklearAge'' by Creator/BrianClevinger (who made ''Webcomic/EightBitTheater''), most of the book is a comedic parody of the superhero genre, somewhat akin to ''WesternAnimation/TheTick''. The last section of the book turns dark quite rapidly as nearly everyone dies in a villain-caused apocalypse that kills off half the planet's population and destroys every major city but three, and injects a bunch of philosophy based somewhat off of Myth/NorseMythology into the mix. It was quite the elaborate joke, at least according to The Apology.
* The Polish book ''Osobliwe przypadki Cymeona Maksymalnego'' is a few hundred pages of teen drama. Then, at the very end, the protagonist is approached out of the blue by some creepy guy who invites him to follow him into a dark forest. The protagonist follows him obediently, even though he's got no reason to do so, and in fact suspects that the man is a SerialKiller. Then the novel just ends, almost mid-sentence.
* ''Literature/ThePendragonAdventure'': A mild example, but the contradictions within it make it fall under this trope. Though told every person displaced through time and space must stay on the ruined worlds they're currently on and can't go back home, and after most of the Travelers return to Solara, Bobby expresses regret that he won't be able to live a normal life. Uncle Press considers this. Suddenly, a flashback of Bobby's "normal" life plays, where he never became a Traveler, married Courtney, and Mark [[DroppedABridgeOnHim died of cancer]]. Bobby is lying on his deathbed when a strange man in a long coat comes in and gives him a clutter of papers- his old journals. End book. Many fans believe Bobby was being given his happy ending through [[InsideAComputerSystem Lifelight,]] but DJ [=MacHale=] never confirmed or denied this.
* Creator/GregEgan's novel ''Literature/PermutationCity'' ends with the [[InsideAComputerSystem simulated universe]] called "the Autoverse" somehow becoming more real than the hardware it was running on, much to the confusion of all the characters involved, as well as the reader.
* Fredrick Pohl seems to like this. In the penultimate chapter of ''Jem'' the POV protagonist gets knocked out at the start of a war involving everyone on the eponymous planet. The next chapter is set in a radically different society several generations into the future with no real mention of how we went from one to the other, and nothing by tantalizing glimpse of how this new civilization came about, or how it works. In ''Gateway'', the protagonist is undergoing psychiatric care to resolve the issues in his life. At the conclusion, we discover the reason he's come to the (robot) psychiatrist in the first place, and the story ends without a real attempt at closure.
* ''Literature/{{Remnants}}'' suffered from a KudzuPlot, and the finale made little attempt to resolve things logically. In our [[ADayInTheLimelight second-to-last]] book, Tate winds up SharingABody with the Troika, who are good now, and somehow time-travels to the past (but still after the Rock hit?) to crash [[SapientShip Mother]] into the Earth. Back with our main characters, Sancho has a vision from... Tate's spirit, maybe?, to go to the crash site. It turns out that Billy (who is SharingABody with the missing five humans from the ''Mayflower''?) can use Tate's corpse to fix the Earth, somehow, as long as he's holding Echo's blind baby. This has to happen on Echo's birthday, because reasons. Also [=2Face=] hears her dead mother talking to her and then dies. Eventually Billy does the thing and also dies, and somehow the world now has grass and cows again; this also gives the baby sight. We end with a DistantFinale where the characters are married with kids, and everybody's superpowers just sort of faded away over time, with no explanation of where they came from in the first place. The Alphas are noted to have mysteriously vanished, [[ChuckCunninghamSyndrome as did D-Caf without anybody noticing]].
* ''Literature/TheScienceOfDiscworld'' Volume 1 ends this way. Long story short, the wizards have accidentally created a pocket universe where magic does not exist, where worlds are round balls rather than discs on the back of turtles and elephants. At the end, the computer Hex mentions "Recursion Is Occurring" and then, after the wizards have abandoned the "Roundworld Project", we see a discworld atop elephants and a turtle condensing out of gas and dust in the far reaches of its universe...
* ''Literature/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents''. Basically every single plot point in the series was left unresolved at the end. The last book can best be summarized as "Ha, ha! In life, there are lots of mysteries you'll never know the answer to."
** In ''The Beatrice Letters'', it explains very briefly what was happened to the Baudelaires after the 13th book. Not a whole lot, just enough to keep the mystery alive.
** Moreover, the reader not only finds out the fate of almost all the major characters (even if that fate is occasionally metaphorical), but enough information is given for the readers to make a good guess about the immediate Lemony/Beatrice backstory, even if the characters can't. The author doesn't give explicit answers, but a lot is done by implication.
** On the other hand, it doesn't even give a hint about the Sugarbowl Secret.
** The very final sentence ''does'' reveal who Beatrice was, although most readers will probably have figured it out already.
** And to be perfectly honest, [[SnicketWarningLabel the series was warning the readers that they wouldn't like the ending all along]]. Readers, however, were hoping Snicket was kidding.
** Subverted with the [[Series/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents2017 the Netflix TV series]] which, while it doesn't answer every question, does end with some definitive happy endings to certain supporting characters, an actual answer to the Sugarbowl Secret, and an implied, but happy AndTheAdventureContinues for the Baudelaire siblings. Clearly even Snicket must've not been happy with how his own books ended after a while, as he's directly involved with the show and even wrote the scripts for several of the episodes.
* Creator/NealStephenson books:
** ''Literature/{{Cryptonomicon}}'': although the novel's ending is implied to be suitably epic, by that point in the story, the POV character has lost interest, so all we get is a bare-bones version of events, with a month's worth of events crammed into just under six pages.
** ''Literature/{{Anathem}}'' actually has a proper ending, so he may be growing out of this.
* The [[Literature/SweetValleyHigh Sweet Valley Twins]] "Frightening Four" miniseries. It's also a blatant ripoff of ''Film/ANightmareOnElmStreet1984'' (see the Film folder, above).
* Toward the end of ''Through the Looking-Glass'' (Creator/LewisCarroll's sequel to ''Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland''), Alice has just been crowned a queen and is being honored with a royal banquet, when suddenly the candles on the table grow up to the ceiling, the bottles attach plates to themselves as wings and start to fly, the guests lie down in the dishes while the food and utensils start to walk around, the White Queen disappears into the soup tureen and the Red Queen shrinks down to the size of a kitten. Even considering the {{Cloudcuckooland}} setting, it's an exceptionally weird ending for Alice's dream, making the more famous trial scene that ended her dream in the first book look positively sane by comparison. Then after waking up, Alice starts [[SchrodingersButterfly speculating]] that she herself could be a mere figment in the dreams of the sleeping Red King, who she saw earlier in the book.
* ''Literature/WarmBodies'' makes clear that its zombies aren't simply diseased humans, and implies early on that they're in some way supernatural, but most of the story plays out in a pseudo-realistic fashion. Then the ending all but states that zombies are a consequence of human sin, and explicitly calls upon ThePowerOfLove to fight them. This doesn't outright contradict anything earlier in the story, but it leaves a lot of unanswered questions.
* Creator/AEVanVogt's fixup novel ''The Weapon Shops of Isher'', which is mostly about the eponymous weapon shops, the Isher Empire that opposes them, and an immortal man trying to keep them in balance, ends with an alien concluding that humanity is "the race that shall rule the sevagram". This is the first time anyone in the story has mentioned a sevagram, and we never learn what it actually is.
* InUniverse in Creator/WalterMoers's ''Zamonia'' series. Hildegunst von Mythenmetz has once written a novel of nine hundred pages, where he intricately develops the many plot lines and characters, only to end the book completely out of the blue with his own recipe for sunny side eggs.
* Yeats is Dead has such an ending. The murder mystery conspiracy novel ends with all the characters politely having brunch while working out a solution they can all agree to. These members include people who were trying to actively murder each other just hours beforehand.


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* [[GainaxEnding/Literature]]

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* In one series of ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' strips, Charlie Brown watches the sun rise, and it looks like a baseball. Then the moon does too, and he starts seeing baseballs everywhere. Then he gets a rash on the back of his head that makes it look like a baseball. His pediatrician suggests going to summer camp to take his mind off baseball; because he's embarrassed by the rash, he puts a paper sack over his head. At camp, someone half-jokingly suggests nominating "the kid in the sack" for camp president, and before he knows it, Charlie Brown is practically running the place, everyone following his advice and looking up to him. Eventually, though, he decides to take off the sack -- becoming his old self again -- and watch the sun rise to see if he's back to normal... [[spoiler:And it looks like [[Magazine/{{MAD}} Alfred E. Newman's]] head with the words [[CatchPhrase "What me worry?"]] under it. "Good grief!" cries Charlie Brown at the ending that made no sense.]]

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* In one series of ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' strips, Charlie Brown watches the sun rise, and it looks like a baseball. Then the moon does too, and he starts seeing baseballs everywhere. Then he gets a rash on the back of his head that makes it look like a baseball. His pediatrician suggests going to summer camp to take his mind off baseball; because he's embarrassed by the rash, he puts a paper sack over his head. At camp, someone half-jokingly suggests nominating "the kid in the sack" for camp president, and before he knows it, Charlie Brown is practically running the place, everyone following his advice and looking up to him. Eventually, though, he decides to take off the sack -- becoming his old self again -- and watch the sun rise to see if he's back to normal... [[spoiler:And it looks like [[Magazine/{{MAD}} Alfred E. Newman's]] head with the words [[CatchPhrase "What me worry?"]] worry?" under it. "Good grief!" cries Charlie Brown at the ending that made no sense.]]
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* British children's/teens' author Creator/AlanGarner has an affinity for the Gainax Ending that is unusual in non-adult fiction. ''The Owl Service'' ends with a young girl who had been possessed by an incredible supernatural force converting that force from anger -- "owls" to peace -- "flowers". However, everything else about the characters' relationships (which have been totally wrecked) is left unresolved.

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* British children's/teens' author Creator/AlanGarner has an affinity for the Gainax Ending that is unusual in non-adult fiction. ''The Owl Service'' ''Literature/TheOwlService'' ends with a young girl who had been possessed by an incredible supernatural force converting that force from anger -- "owls" to peace -- "flowers". However, everything else about the characters' relationships (which have been totally wrecked) is left unresolved.
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* After seventeen issues of wrapping up forty years' worth of loose ends and providing a conclusive ending to the story of the X-Men in a big battle royale, ''ComicBook/XMen: ComicBook/TheEnd'' randomly ends with several X-Men [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence gaining godhood]] without any forewarning. Oh, and Kitty Pryde becoming President of the US and giving a speech to the surviving X-Men, but that one ''was'' foreshadowed, with her narration having been present from the start.

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* After seventeen issues of wrapping up forty years' worth of loose ends and providing a conclusive ending to the story of the X-Men in a big battle royale, ''ComicBook/XMen: ComicBook/TheEnd'' ComicBook/{{The End|MarvelComics}}'' randomly ends with several X-Men [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence gaining godhood]] without any forewarning. Oh, and Kitty Pryde becoming President of the US and giving a speech to the surviving X-Men, but that one ''was'' foreshadowed, with her narration having been present from the start.
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* ''Script/{{Watchmen}}'' ends with the complete destruction of the timeline of the ''Watchmen'' universe, [[WelcomeToTheRealWorld causing New York to revert to the real world.]] This is accomplished via Rorschach, Nite Owl, and Silk Spectre "spinning and tumbling through an other-dimensional funhouse of sound and color" until they land in Times Square, where a kid is reading ''Comicbook/{{Watchmen}}'' and excitedly shouts that he recognizes them. Then the police arrive. Cut to black.
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* ''ComicStrip/CalvinAndHobbes'': In one story arc, Calvin apparently reverses gravity while in his bedroom (not) doing his homework, then he grows so big he outgrows the Milky Way. The story ends when Calvin ends up floating through a white void and finds a door that conveniently leads him back to his bedroom. Then his mom comes in and berates him for not doing his homework after so long. In retrospect, Creator/BillWatterson didn't think highly of the story and considered it "weirdness for weirdness's sake".
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As this is an EndingTrope, expect '''unmarked major spoilers''' from here on, but '''don't''' expect them to make any sense!

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As !!As this is an EndingTrope, expect '''unmarked major spoilers''' from here on, but '''don't''' {{Ending Trope|s}}, [[Administrivia/SpoilersOff unmarked spoilers abound]]. But don't expect them to make any sense!
sense!

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