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1''Phule's Company'' is a sci-fi series by Creator/RobertAsprin about (what appears to be) a MillionairePlayboy in the Space Legion who gets KickedUpstairs and in charge of the Legion's worst unit, unofficially called The Omega Company. He has to turn them from a RagtagBunchOfMisfits into a well-oiled machine, and through the books encounters more and more bizarre assignments and new worlds.
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3Later books in the series were officially "co-written" by Peter J. Heck. For better or worse, it is very likely that Heck did most if not all the work.
4
5Books in the series:
6* ''Phule's Company'' (1990). Phule gets a new Legion name and takes over the Omega Company, stationed on a swamp planet.
7* ''Phule's Paradise'' (1992). The company takes over guarding a space casino.
8* ''A Phule and His Money'' (1999). The company finds themselves in contest with a planetary government that runs on theme parks.
9* ''Phule Me Twice'' (2000). [[spoiler:Robot doppelganger]]
10* ''No Phule Like an Old Phule'' (2004). Phule Sr. shows up
11* ''Phule's Errand'' (2006).
12----
13!!''Phule's Company'' provides examples of:
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15* AllNaturalGemPolish: Lampshaded and averted. One of the executives of the mining consortium shows Phule the gems being mined in the swamps in ''Phule's Company''; they look like muddy gravel, and the miner states that they need to be both cut and polished before sale.
16* AtArmsLength: People do this to Super Gnat when she gets mad. [[BerserkButton It just makes things worse.]] It turns out that the only reason people get away with doing this to a ''multiple black belt'' is that she tends to forget how to fight properly when she loses her temper.
17* BerserkButton: Nearly ''everyone'' has one, [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits Omega Company]] or not.
18** Super Gnat's height in her earlier characterization. When first introduced, Gnat would attack anyone who said anything even remotely related to "short", whether they were referring to her or not. She even attacked another legionnaire who had only asked the mess cook for a "short stack of pancakes".
19** Insult Escrima's cooking skills or mess with the ingredients of his menu. [[SchmuckBait We'll wait.]] Though this turns out to be {{Justified}}: before Phule takes over the company, Escrima was subjected to a lot of insults because the company meals were so bad, and there was little he could do to improve matters, as the Space Legion food budget restricted them to the worst/cheapest available ingredients, edible or not. Once Phule starts funding the company, the food improves drastically, and Escrima is better able to control his temper when challenged on his cooking skills.
20* BriarPatching: The biker gang that Chocolate Harry joined the Legion to escape catches up with him. After hearing how CH had doublecrossed them, Phule orders C.H. to let them destroy his beloved hoverbike as punishment. Over C.H.'s impassioned protests, the gang takes their revenge. After they leave, we find that Phule and C.H. had planned the whole thing, and C.H. had exaggerated his grief to make sure they were satisfied. Regaining his peace of mind was worth the loss of his bike.
21* BulletholeDoor: [[AvertedTrope Averted.]] After pretty much completely obliterating the entire wall and everything in the room above waist level with full-automatic, belt-fed "Rolling Thunder" shotguns, the door is still standing and someone has to very cautiously stand up to let the assault squad in.
22* CampCook: Escrima. Cooks like a five-star chef, [[BerserkButton with an ego to match]]. Also qualifies as ChefOfIron, since he's a top-notch fighter, including teaching his namesake fighting style to other company members, and is capable of hospitalizing would-be food critics.
23* CastCalculus: Or how most of the Omega Mob gets broken down into manageable pairs... as well as non-Legion characters, such as the two IRS agents from ''A Phule And His Money'', General Blitzkrieg and his long-suffering assistant Sparrowhawk, etc.
24* ConfusionFu: Phule's logic for putting the Red Eagles' best fencer up against Escrima, a trained martial artist who had never fenced before in his life. It was mostly psychological on Phule's part; he knew that Escrima couldn't really win the match because Escrima didn't understand the rules of fencing, but he also knew that anyone watching would immediately understand that in a real fight Escrima's opponent would have been dead meat.
25* CorruptPolitician: Governor Wingas, in ''Phule's Company'', licks his lips at the possibility of getting a "campaign contribution" from Phule when the possibility of extorting him for dropping the charges against the Omega Mob's resident kleptomaniacs comes up. Phule points out that they were caught breaking in to return something they'd already stolen, and that while he'd never use them to pressure Wingas for favors, if a trial proceeded against his men he'd have no choice but to share the nasty details of the photos they'd snatched.
26* CorruptQuartermaster: Captain Jester asks his new supply sergeant Chocolate Harry point blank at their first meeting what company gear he's been selling on the BlackMarket. Harry indignantly denies the accusation until Jester threatens to lock down his inventory and bring in an outside auditor to check everything over. After he owns up, Jester then explains that he doesn't want to lower the boom, just to have some oversight about what gets sold. He also has a shopping list of what he wants from the black marketeers in return.
27* DatingCatwoman: In ''Phule's Paradise'' Beeker and Laverna strike up a pleasant relationship despite--in fact, somewhat ''because'' of--being aides de camp to the leaders of the enemy groups.
28* DoWrongRight: Former white collar crook Sushi's primary objection to street rat Do-Wop isn't the fact that Do-Wop steals, it's that all his thefts are high-risk and low-reward.
29** See also Corrupt Quartermaster above.
30* DungeonBypass: In the competition with the Regular Army, the Army group goes through the obstacle course quickly, cleanly, and precisely, setting an excellent time despite the obstacle course being fairly brutal and the requirement of performing it wearing full combat gear. By contrast, the Omega Mob ''used'' their full combat gear, more or less demolished half of the obstacles on the course in various ways, and blew the Army's time out of the water. The army guys didn't know it, but this was the way Omega ''normally'' runs the obstacle course, and they had rebuilt it several times.
31* EarthThatWas: Although Earth and its history are often indirectly mentioned, it is always in the past tense. During the very few times the Earth is directly mentioned, it's referred to as Old Earth.
32* EloquentInMyNativeTongue: Tuskanini. He speaks English poorly, which contributes to his DumbMuscle appearance, but it's revealed that this is because he chose to learn it the hard way, rather than taking advantage of the TranslatorMicrobes most non-human species use. The microbes avert this for the Gambolts and Sinthians, but not so much for Leftenant Qual.
33* {{Elvis Impersonator}}s: Converts to the Church of the [[Music/ElvisPresley King]] have plastic surgery to take on his features. This leads to a certain amount of confusion, which the Legionnaires eventually use to their advantage.
34* ExactWords: Used in the DungeonBypass example above. Phule requested the obstacle course runs be in "full combat conditions" which most of the Army members took to mean in full gear. When they try to complain, it is pointed out that in combat, you wouldn't climb a wall if there was no reason not to just blow it up and get it out of your way.
35* Fiction500: Captain Jester, aka Willard Phule, is one of the richest men in the galaxy, which is why he was reassigned to the Omega company instead of being sent to the stockade.
36* FirstContact: At the end of the first book. Phule has taken on the responsibilities (and the profits) for dealing with the aliens.
37* FramingDevice: Supposedly, the books are Beeker's recounting of events; the story is interspersed with his personal comments, and occasionally he will explain that he's just inferring scenes he wasn't there for from the things he does know.
38* FutureImperfect: The founders of Wild West-theme tourist planet Cut'n'Shoot, while aware that "Injuns" were a necessary component of the motif, weren't clear on ''which sort'' of Indians this historical term actually referred to. Therefore, its attractions include outlying villages based on Old Earth's West Indians, Native Americans, and the inhabitants of India.
39* GentleGiant: The pacifistic Volton Tuskanini, a seven-foot-tall warthog who wouldn't fire a gun at the start of the series. Over time he picks up a strong protective instinct for his friends, picking a fight with Brandy to protect Super Gnat and insisting that he be allowed to carry one of the Rolling Thunder automatic shotguns when Phule is kidnapped.
40* GungHolierThanThou: Armstrong starts out as this; Phule tells him to knock it off. Thumper's attitude and performance gets him shunned by his fellow-recruits for showing them up in Basic Training before his transfer to Omega.
41* HeelFaceTurn: Colonel Battleax was the one who decided to assign Phule as the CO of Omega Company, under the pretense that dealing with a group of [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits the Legion's unassignables]] would force him to resign. It only took one book for her to be one of the company's biggest supporters, even going up against General Blitzkrieg, ''her superior officer.''
42* HoverBoard: Spartacus, the Synthian, rides one of these. The board proved so useful for him that he and Louis, the squad's other Synthian, teamed up to bring them to their homeworld.
43* HugeGuyTinyGirl: Tuskanini and Super Gnat. He stands over seven feet tall (and looks rather like a bipedal warthog, to boot). She's about 5 feet tall.
44* IntelligentGerbil: Cat, slug, warthog, allosaurus, rabbit. Phule considers all of these [[FantasticSlurs racial slurs]] and discourages their use.
45* TheJeeves: Beeker, Phule's butler. And that's ''just'' Beeker. Additional titles are neither wanted nor required.
46* KickedUpstairs: Phule, and how the series gets its start.
47* LoopholeAbuse: The Omega Mob finds itself in a competition against the elite Red Eagles to see who can make it through an obstacle course fastest. Phule specifies that the race will be with "full combat gear and conditions," and the Red Eagles quickly complete it despite carrying a full infantry loadout. However, Phule's company finishes even faster since[[spoiler: "full combat conditions" means they can blow up or destroy every obstacle in their way, and take prisoner the Army troops manning the obstacles]] something the Red Eagles hadn't considered. Rather unusually for this trope, the Red Eagles don't object, once their Captain points out that ''they could have done the same thing''.
48* MartialArtsStaff: Escrima named himself after the Filipino stick-fighting style he's highly adept in.
49* MeaningfulName: Legionnaires are generally known by their Legion names, names they chose upon enlisting or are later given by comrades. Some examples include Escrima, for his fighting style, and the Sinthians Spartacus & Louie, who come from opposite social classes and named themselves after the famous rebel slave and Louis the XIV, respectively. One character goes by "Rose", though the others call her ShrinkingViolet, since she's horribly shy, then becomes "Mother" as the company communication specialist who is a ''lot'' more confident over the radio, and tends to get maternal with her colleagues.
50* MildlyMilitary: The Omega Company, though it's used for good once Phule takes over. After Phule takes over it's actually unusually regimented by Legion standards; the uniforms are even standardised.
51* MilitaryBrat: Lieutenant Armstrong, apparently; he's one of the more militarily formal Legionnaires as a result.
52* MisfitMobilizationMoment:
53** The first in the series is either the obstacle course or the massing-of-Mob-members-at-the-airstrip moment, both in the first book. First, when the Mob demonstrated that they (and their leader's methods) weren't completely worthless; second when they fully demonstrate their solidarity/loyalty to their new captain.
54** They also get off a good one in the second book when Max kidnaps Phule but neglects to do anything to neutralize the Legionnaires. As Beeker comments, this essentially removes every brake they had.
55* MissionControl: Mother.
56* MundaneSolution: [[spoiler:Grenades + Combat Conditions = ''What'' Obstacle Course?]]
57* OverTheTopRollerCoaster: One of the books takes place in a world whose [[PlanetOfHats hat]] is '''really''' liking rollercoasters, with an unfriendly competition between theme parks to build the one with the highest drop. {{Corrupt Politician}}s pass a law that no coaster can go higher than x off the ground (allegedly for safety reasons but really to preserve one park's claim on being the highest). Phule & co. build one bigger anyway - AintNoRule that the bottom of the rollercoaster's drop has to be above ground, so they build one where the drop ends in an underground tunnel.
58* PrivateMilitaryContractors: Sort of what the Legion is.
59* PunnyName: ''Phule's Errand'' introduces Jester's uncle in Italy, Pitti da Phule.
60* RagtagBunchOfMisfits: The Omega Company.
61* ReassignmentBackfire: Every. Single. Book.
62* RedOniBlueOni:
63** Do-Wop and Sushi, for one, the former being [[HotBlooded hot-blooded]], short-tempered, easy-going (when not being Hot Blooded), and impulsive, while the latter starts out like TheStoic (becoming TheSmartGuy), is [[TheCracker technically adept]], and good enough to [[TalkingYourWayOut talk his way out]] of a riot and ''into'' the {{Yakuza}}. Of course, they initially dislike each other and attempt to get re-assigned to new pairs, but by the end of the book they're breaking and entering for the good of the Mob. To varying degrees, most of the rest of TheSquad is like this as well.
64** In fact, some of the Omega Company was paired off like this with this trope in mind. [[HugeGuyTinyGirl Tusk-anini and Super Gnat]], for instance; Tusk-anini's peaceful tendencies help mellow out Gnat at the same time that he picks up a couple of {{Berserk Button}}s of his own. Do-Wop and Sushi were paired off because they were the squad's resident kleptomaniacs; Phule explicitly tells them that he hoped Sushi would learn to loosen up a bit and Do-Wop would drop the petty theft in favor of thinking big. Even Lieutenants [[ByTheBookCop Armstrong]] and [[BadassPacifist Rembrandt]] show shades of this.
65* ScaryBlackMan: Chocolate Harry, although only to non-Legionnaires. Well, he ''is'' a BadassBiker in addition to being one of the two main [[TheBigGuy big guys]].
66* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney: One of the extremely rare occurrences where this is done by the good guys, for good reasons, usually to get around an ObstructiveBureaucrat.
67** And to sum up Phule himself, [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney Screw the rules! I have money]] [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections and contacts,]] [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight and I have a command to take care of!]]
68* ServileSnarker: Beeker has been known to crack wise on occasion. A good example from ''Phule's Paradise'' after Phule accepted Rembrandt's choices of actors without looking her files over and telling her to make her strongest instinct her final decision:
69--> '''Phule:''' "What you're trying to say, in your traditionally subtle way of course, is that you think I was a little hard on Rembrandt just now. Right?"
70--> '''Beeker:''' "I suppose from your point of view, sir, you were being quite tolerant. I mean, you ''could'' have had her stood up against a wall and shot."
71* TheShowMustGoOn: In ''Phule's Paradise'', Phule hires a number of actors to impersonate Legionnaires. When two of the actors are badly beaten, he wants to immediately end the masquerade and send the rest of the actors away. This trope is basically their response.
72* ShownTheirWork: Book 2 could easily have been called ''A Phule's Guide to Fleecing a Casino''.
73* ShrinkingViolet: Rose/Violet/Mother off-radio; her first Legion name (Violet) directly references this trope.
74* SleevesAreForWimps: Chocolate Harry... convinces... the tailor that Phule hires that his custom-designed uniform does not need to have sleeves.
75* SupremeChef: Escrima. And he will beat you down if you question it.
76* TakeAThirdOption: The Omega Mob's typical method of operation.
77* TakeThat: After Asprin ran into RealLife trouble with the IRS, an absolutely vicious tax-agency subplot appeared in ''A Phule and His Money.''
78* TerraDeforming: ''Phule's Errand'' introduces the planet [[SdrawkcabName Ron'n'art]] which is totally roofed over, up to a mile from the surface, making it an extreme example of a Planet City. Ron'n'art is noted as having a richly deserved reputation for decadence, corruption, and paralysis of every agency. If it weren't for the robots and automated systems, nothing would get done and everyone would starve.
79* TranslatorMicrobes: Translator boxes, with audio output that can be set to the user's preference. [[StarfishLanguage Qual's translated speech]] is the only time the translator boxes have trouble, though.
80* {{Vibroweapon}}
81* TheVoice: Mother. A mild subversion since the person exists but is cripplingly shy and will talk freely only when she's on the radio.
82* UnclePennybags: Phule himself.
83* UnskilledButStrong: Tuskanini. When he picks a fight with Brandy because of remarks toward Super Gnat, he actually gets beaten. When Super Gnat hears of this, she comments that simply being big and tough isn't enough against someone like Brandy, who is also big and tough but is also an excellent brawler.
84* VocalDissonance: Spartacus's translator renders his voice in a baritone. Picture a three-foot-tall slug speaking in Keith David's voice for a good idea of what this might seem like.
85* {{Workaholic}}: Phule. Seemed to have reached a major point in ''Phule's Paradise'', to a point where he'd spent so much time focusing on both preparing the Fat Chance for its opening as well as handing company-related issues that [[spoiler:he made the best of his kidnapping by getting some '''much''' needed sleep.]]
86* YouNoTakeCandle: Subverted. Tuskanini learned the language manually instead of relying on TranslatorMicrobes, and Phule realizes that even speaking stilted English is a sign of exceptional intelligence.

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