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3%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order. Thanks!
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7->'''Princess Sarah:''' I... never asked your name.\
8'''Jack:''' [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyI Garland]]. My name's Jack Garland.
9-->-- ''VideoGame/StrangerOfParadiseFinalFantasyOrigin'', "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm5hy-MfJYg Release Date Trailer]]"
10
11LongRunners often face the challenge of keeping established characters fresh. Sometimes, the audience gets bored with a particular character. Sometimes, the writer runs out of fresh situations to give to that character. Other times, the writer wants to reimagine or explore new depths of a character, but finds it challenging to convince fans to give their interpretation a chance ([[ToughActToFollow especially if one depiction of a character is seen as the standard for all subsequent depictions of that character to follow]]). For whatever reason, a writer wants to develop new material involving certain characters but doesn't want to run the risk of either beating a dead horse or [[BrokenBase dividing the fanbase]].
12
13One solution that writers have utilized is to write a story that features those established characters... albeit in the guise of someone completely different. Sometimes, they have the name of another character, but act nothing like them. More often, they neither look like any famous character from the main work's canon nor even have that recognizable name. If done well, fans will speculate who that "mysterious character" is. Maybe they don't believe that the "new" character would be anyone special. Maybe they will think that the "new" character is a BadassNormal with a MysteriousPast. Or maybe they'll think that the "new" character will be a groundbreaking addition to a work's mythos. But, if done successfully, [[TemptingFate fans will certainly not think that]] [[OverlyLongGag "new" character]] is someone already established in a work's canon.
14
15Until one day... [[WhamEpisode Wham!]] It turns out they were a canonical character after all!
16
17This trick may also be used in adaptations. One of the main characters is properly introduced, looking like a CanonForeigner, absent in the original work. Later in the work (or even [[TheEndingChangesEverything in the end]]) this character reveals that they ''are'' a character from the original canon, usually pointing that that's an alternate, old, or secret name of them. Alternatively, they undergoe the character's OriginsEpisode ''during'' the series, rather than in the first episode or in a distant flashback, and then turns into the character from the original canon.
18
19If fans believe a character in one particular work is secretly the guise of another character from a ''separate'' work, you're dealing with a common form of FanonWelding.
20
21Compare with RedHerringShirt. Sometimes overlaps with AdaptationNameChange or HijackedByGanon. If the twist is two separate canonical characters being one and the same in the adaptation, then it's CompositeCharacter.
22
23'''Warning: All spoilers will be unmarked.'''
24
25----
26
27!!Examples:
28[[index]]
29* CanonCharacterAllAlong/AnimeAndManga
30* CanonCharacterAllAlong/ComicBooks
31* CanonCharacterAllAlong/FanWorks
32* CanonCharacterAllAlong/{{Literature}}
33* CanonCharacterAllAlong/LiveActionTV
34* CanonCharacterAllAlong/VideoGames
35* CanonCharacterAllAlong/WesternAnimation
36[[/index]]
37
38[[foldercontrol]]
39
40[[folder:Film — Animated]]
41* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingMaurice'' gives the ratcatchers a mysterious leader, the Boss Man, who doesn't appear in ''Literature/TheAmazingMauriceAndHisEducatedRodents''. It turns out to actually be a WormThatWalks rat swarm, controlled by the Rat King.
42* ''WesternAnimation/JonahAVeggieTalesMovie'' features the character Khalil, a caterpillar/worm who seems to be a CanonForeigner PluckyComicRelief character. However, at the end, he is revealed to be the worm who ate the tree Jonah was using for shade. On top of that, he [[CompositeCharacter also]] delivers a TheReasonYouSuckSpeech to Jonah based on God's speech from [[Literature/BookOfJonah the source material]].
43* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeSocietyWorldWarII'':
44** Early into the film, Flash meets the JSA war correspondent Shakespeare and finds his face oddly familiar. Flash's deja vu is ultimately vindicated when during their raid on the codebreaker's prison, Shakespeare gets shot in the head three times and survives, then gives his real name: [[Franchise/{{Superman}} Clark Kent]].
45** Even later into the film, Aquaman's Advisor is revealed to be longtime villain Psycho-Pirate.
46* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyTheMovie2017'': Tempest Shadow's color scheme, affinity for fireworks-like magic, and her real name ([[FluffyTheTerrible Fizzlepop Berrytwist]]) reveal her to be a G4 re-imagining of Fizzy Pop, a G3 pony with an identical color scheme and a love for fireworks.
47* ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooAndBatmanTheBraveAndTheBold'' sees the Crimson Cloak turn out to be Clayface, acting under the orders of the Riddler.
48* ''Franchise/{{Shrek}}'':
49** The king and queen of Far, Far Away (and {{Deuteragonist}} Fiona's parents) are revealed at the end of the second film to also have come from a fairy tale: ''Literature/TheFrogPrince'', with King Harold being the frog in question.
50** ''WesternAnimation/PussInBootsTheLastWish'': The Wolf who comes after Puss is billed in advertising as "the Big Bad Wolf", a character who already exists in the series. After their fourth encounter, he reveals that he's not based on a fairy tale character, he ''is'' a fairy tale character, [[TheGrimReaper Death]], who has come to claim Puss's last life for wasting his 8 lives and arrogantly thinking he was untouchable.
51* ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManSpiderVerse'':
52** ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManIntoTheSpiderVerse'': [[Characters/MarvelComicsMilesMorales Miles Morales]]' class watches a video where a female scientist explains the concept of {{Alternate Universe}}s. She's later shown working for Kingpin, and Peter [[CasanovaWannabe tries to charm her]] for information. A ''[[ForScience creepier]]'' comment she makes prompts him to ask for her name: Olivia Octavius, a.k.a. a {{Gender Flip}}ped [[Characters/MarvelComicsOttoOctavius Doctor Octopus]].
53** The sequel, ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManAcrossTheSpiderVerse'', reveals that the random Alchemax scientist that Miles threw a bagel at was the film's version of Johnathan Ohnn, aka The Spot. He even brings up the bagel incident, apparently having taken it personally.
54* ''WesternAnimation/TheSuperMarioBrosMovie'': For a given value of "character", at least - the Koopa General initially appears to be a simple EliteMook, but careful viewers will notice that he is a Koopa Paratroopa with a spiky blue shell. During the Rainbow Road sequence, after his vehicle is totaled, he throws off his helmet and [[CallingYourAttacks yells]] "Blue Shell!", retreating into his shell and flying right at Mario and Donkey Kong before [[SuicideAttack exploding and blasting the two off the road]]. That's right - he's the film's adaptation of the [[ThatOneAttack Spiny Shell]], the bane of ''many'' a ''VideoGame/MarioKart'' player.
55* ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGoToTheMovies'' features a major character named Jade Wilson, a movie producer who agrees to help Robin make a movie for him. Since the film's antagonist is [[ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}} Slade Wilson]], fans speculated that Jade is his sister. It turns out that they're only half-right, as she's actually Slade ''[[DisguisedInDrag himself]]''.
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:Film — Live-Action]]
59* The [[Film/AttackOnTitan2015 film adaptation]] of ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'' has Kubal and Shikishima, who seem to be stand-ins for the military brass and Levi Ackerman, respectively. They're eventually revealed to be the film continuity's versions of the Colossal Titan and the Armored Titan. Shikishima additionally was revealed to be Eren's older brother, effectively becoming the film universe's version of Zeke Yeager.
60* ''Film/BeautyAndTheBeast2017'': Agatha, one of the few townspeople to treat Belle with kindness, turns out to be the Enchantress.
61* ''Film/BigBirdInJapan'' centres around the titular character from ''Series/SesameStreet'' visiting Japan and befriending a young woman that is about to leave the country soon. After a long period of not revealing her name, she finally reveals herself to be [[Literature/TheTaleOfTheBambooCutter Princess Kaguya]].
62* ''Film/TheDarkKnightRises'':
63** Miranda Tate appears to be another CanonForeigner love interest but late into the film it is revealed that it is an alias for ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, the [[DaddysLittleVillain daughter]] of ComicBook/RasAlGhul.
64** Near the end, John Blake reveals that his first name is Robin and follows Bruce's footsteps, showing that he is a CompositeCharacter of several of the {{ComicBook/Robin}}s.
65* ''Franchise/DCExtendedUniverse'':
66** In ''Film/{{Wonder Woman|2017}}'', the seemingly ReasonableAuthorityFigure Sir Patrick Morgan is really [[BigBad Ares]], the god of war and Diana's [[RelatedInTheAdaptation half-brother]].
67** In ''Film/ZackSnydersJusticeLeague'', Secretary of Defense Calvin Swanwick, first introduced as a general in ''Film/ManOfSteel'', is revealed as J'onn J'onzz, the ComicBook/MartianManhunter, in disguise.
68** One of the new Task Force X members introduced in the opening scene of ''Film/TheSuicideSquad'' is a mysterious character known only as T.D.K., who refuses to explain what the acronym stands for. Once the Squad is engaged in a firefight, it's revealed his codename is "The Detachable Kid," making him the film's version of the obscure ''ComicBook/LegionOfSuperHeroes'' member Arm-Fall-Off-Boy.
69* ''Film/EnolaHolmes2'' introduces a slew of original characters that don't have anything to do with either [[Literature/EnolaHolmes the books the film was based on]] or the greater ''Literature/SherlockHolmes'' mythos...except for Mira Troy, who is revealed to be Moriarty reimagined into a black woman near the end of the film.
70* At the end of ''Film/FantasyIsland2020'' Jimmy O. Yang's character Brax decides to stay on the island and become Roarke's new assistant. He also decides to go by his old nickname: "Tattoo".
71* ''Film/FiveNightsAtFreddys2023'':
72** Mike Schmidt is given the job offer to Freddy's by his career consultant, Steve Raglan, who seems to be a character created for the film. The climax reveals that "Steve Raglan" is a pseudonym; his real name is [[BigBad William Afton]].
73** While she shares her first name with a major character from ''VideoGame/FiveNightsAtFreddysSecurityBreach'', Vanessa Shelly is a police officer rather than a security guard here, and is mostly an original character, with no traits of her Vanny alter-ego present. Then it is revealed that her real name is Vanessa Afton, she is William's daughter, and she has been working for her father all along, making her a direct counterpart to Elizabeth Afton from the games.[[note]]There is a theory that Vanessa from the games is William's daughter, though this has not been confirmed yet.[[/note]]
74* In ''Film/GhostInTheShell2017'', the Major's name is Mira Killian. Later, it's revealed that it was a false past and that her family was never killed in a terrorist bombing, and her true name is actually Motoko Kusanagi.
75* ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}''
76** ''Film/GodzillaFinalWars'' has Monster X, who late in the movie transforms into what was until then, the only {{Kaiju}} missing from the movie: [[HijackedByGanon Ghidorah]]. Although ironically enough, Creator/{{Toho}} considers this version to be a separate character, naming him Kaiser Ghidora rather than King. Reportedly, Toho even went so far as to keep said kaiju's existence a secret from Japanese audiences until the movie's release in theaters, so as to make his surprise appearance at the end all the more satisfying.
77** A subtler example in the American-produced ''Film/GodzillaKingOfTheMonsters2019'', when Dr. Ilene Chen shows a few pictures of her with her extended family, who seem to consist almost entirely of sets of identical twin sisters. This clues fans of the franchise in that she and her sister (who also appears in a few scenes) are this universe's version of the Shobijin fairy twins, key figures in the lore around Mothra.
78* In Goosebumps, one of the main characters is R.L. Stine's daughter Hannah, who is later revealed to be the main character from The Ghost Next Door.
79* In ''Film/GIJoeTheRiseOfCobra'', Destro's M.A.R.S. armaments company is the main villain, but the members are the usual members of Cobra (The Baroness, Storm Shadow, Zartan, etc). The only CanonForeigner is the Doctor...or so it seems. While one might initially assume he's this version's Dr. Mindbender, The Doctor reveals in his {{Backstory}} that he ''met'' Mindbender and was mentored by him, and at the end of the film, the Doctor reveals that he is taking control of M.A.R.S. and turning it into Cobra with himself as Commander. Yes, the Doctor is Cobra Commander.
80* ''Film/HouseOfTheDead'' has a WhamLine in its closing moments where the protagonist, Rudy reveals his last name: Curien, a.k.a. Dr. Curien, BigBad of the games who descended into madness and kick started the ZombieApocalypse. In fact, the entire film is essentially retroactively a StartOfDarkness for the character.
81* ''Film/JamesBond'':
82** The [=MI6=] field agent Eve from ''Film/{{Skyfall}}'' has her last name revealed at the end to be Moneypenny.
83** The villain Franz Oberhauser from ''Film/{{Spectre}}'' is revealed to be an alias of Ernst Stavro Blofeld, Bond's old nemesis from the earlier films.
84* ''Film/KamenRiderTheFirst''
85** One of "Hopper's" intended victims at the start of the film is Katsuhiko Yano, who would turn up later BackFromTheDead as "Hopper 2", ie. Kamen Rider Nigo.
86** The film also features a B-plot about a terminally ill couple in the hospital. Eventually, they accept Shocker's deal to save their lives, and they turn up in the climax as kaijins Cobra Man and Medusa[[note]]the latter previously a manga-only kaijin, unlike other kaijins in the film[[/note]].
87* In ''Film/KamenRiderTheNext'', deceased idol Chiharu's last name is revealed to be Kazami, making her the younger sister and CynicismCatalyst ([[AdaptationNameChange originally]] Yukiko) of Shiro Kazami, alias Hopper V3/Kamen Rider V3.
88* ''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse'':
89** In ''Film/{{The Incredible Hulk|2008}}'', Martin Starr appears as a random student at Culver University who offers Bruce Banner some pizza. Nine years and fourteen movies later, he reappears in ''Film/SpiderManHomecoming'', identified as Roger Harrington, one of Peter Parker's high school teachers.
90** Banner's online ally "Mr. Blue", who collects samples of his blood and tries to create a cure for his condition, is revealed to be his colleague Samuel Sterns. In his last scene, he is about to be mutated into The Leader.
91** In ''Film/IronMan2'', Tony saves a young boy wearing a replica of his mask from one of Vanko's drones. WordOfGod has retroactively revealed that the boy was a young [[ComicBook/SpiderMan Peter Parker]].
92** ''Film/IronMan3'' inverts this trope. The man believed to be the Mandarin is in fact an actor named [[CanonForeigner Trevor Slattery]].
93** J.A.R.V.I.S. ''becomes'' a canonical character in ''Film/AvengersAgeOfUltron'' when he is converted into ComicBook/TheVision. InUniverse, he's also ''based'' on the MCU version of a canonical character, the actual [[Series/AgentCarter Edwin Jarvis]], who in this continuity is ''Howard'' Stark's butler instead of Tony's.
94** Florence Kasumba was a OneSceneWonder in ''Film/CaptainAmericaCivilWar'' as [[ComicBook/BlackPanther T'Challa's]] intimidating [[BodyguardBabes bodyguard]]. The character [[NoNameGiven wasn't named]] initially (with the credits only calling her "Security Chief"), but the ''Film/{{Black Panther|2018}}'' movie brought her back and confirmed that she was Ayo, a prominent character from the comics.
95** In ''Film/SpiderManHomecoming'', Creator/{{Zendaya}} plays a high school student named Michelle. The ending of the film reveals that she prefers to be called "MJ", indicating she's the MCU's {{Expy}} of [[Characters/MarvelComicsMaryJaneWatson Mary Jane Watson]]. Made more explicit in ''Film/SpiderManNoWayHome'', which reveals that her full name is Michelle Jones-Watson.
96** In ''Film/AvengersInfinityWar'', ComicBook/{{Thanos}} and ComicBook/{{Gamora}} meet the Stonekeeper, a mysterious being who guards the Soul Stone on the distant planet Vormir. Once the Stonekeeper lifts his cloak, he's immediately recognizable as the [[NeverFoundTheBody long-missing]] ComicBook/RedSkull, banished to Vormir and cursed with immortality. Admittedly, Thanos and Gamora (and in ''Film/AvengersEndgame'', ComicBook/{{Hawkeye}} and ComicBook/BlackWidow) have no way of knowing this.
97** ''Film/{{Captain Marvel|2019}}''
98*** The heroine's commander/mentor is never referred to by name until after she finds a major clue that indicates he is keeping an important secret from her. He's Yon-Rogg, and just as it is in the comics, he is the villain indirectly responsible for Carol getting her powers.
99*** PosthumousCharacter Wendy Lawson, TheMentor to Carol when she was still on Earth, is later revealed to be a [[GenderFlip Gender Flipped]] Mar-Vell, the original ComicBook/{{Captain Marvel|MarvelComics}} from the comics.
100** One interpretation of ''Film/AvengersEndgame'''s ending is that Steve was Peggy Carter's husband (previously mentioned in ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheWinterSoldier'') all along. According to the writers, Steve created a StableTimeLoop by going back through the Quantum Realm after returning the Infinity Stones, and therefore was part of the timeline all along. However, according to the directors, this is not the case, and Steve created an alternate timeline instead.
101** Part of the backstory established in ''Film/{{Black Widow|2021}}'' is that many years ago, the title character killed a young girl named Antonia [[CollateralDamage while trying to get to Dreykov, the child's father]]. The film's third act reveals that Antonia actually survived the explosion and was subsequently rebuilt as a cyborg assassin with the ability to copy the fighting styles of others, making her a {{Gender Flip}}ped version of Anthony Masters, a.k.a. ComicBook/{{Taskmaster}}.
102* The ending of ''Film/MechanicalViolatorHakaider'' heavily implies that Michael, the angelic android who serves as TheDragon to Gurjev, is actually that continuity's version of Series/{{Kikaider}}. The video game sequel also sees [[BigBad Gurjev]] himself return as Blue Hakaider, who was a supporting villain in ''[[Series/{{Kikaider}} Kikaider 01]]''. Instead of being one of Hakaider's [[ColorCodedCharacters color-coded identical lackeys]] however he's depicted instead as an EvilCounterpart to him.
103* ''Franchise/PlanetOfTheApes'':
104** ''Film/RiseOfThePlanetOfTheApes'' introduced, among the apes under Caesar, a bonobo named Koba and an orangutan named Maurice, who seemed initially to be wholly original characters. In the next movie, ''Film/DawnOfThePlanetOfTheApes'', however, Koba starts plotting against Caesar out of mistrust for the latter's willingness to coexist with humans, while Maurice serves as Caesar's primary scientific and moral advisor, establishing them as equivalent characters to, respectively, Aldo and Virgil from ''Film/BattleForThePlanetOfTheApes'', of which ''Dawn'' is more-or-less a remake.
105** Caesar's infant son was unnamed in ''Film/DawnOfThePlanetOfTheApes'', but the next film, ''Film/WarForThePlanetOfTheApes'' revealed his name to be Cornelius, who was one of the chimpanzees who helped Taylor in the original ''Film/{{Planet of the Apes|1968}}'' film. A downplayed example, however, since Cornelius was [[DeadGuyJunior also]] the name of Caesar's son in ''Film/BattleForThePlanetOfTheApes''.
106** The young, mute girl who the apes come across in ''War'' is later given the name "Nova" by Maurice, the same name given to Taylor's mute love interest in the original 1968 film.
107* Mewtwo features heavily in ''Film/PokemonDetectivePikachu'', with footage of scientists recently and locally studying old fossils of Mew suggesting he's a new clone created for this story. Much like the canonical Mewtwo, he is very heavily under the impression that HumansAreBastards. Nope, turns out he's the Mewtwo from Kanto 20 years ago, having already undergone his CharacterDevelopment, and the various clips through the movie were trimmed to paint him as the bad guy. This was intentional on the BigBad's part.
108* ''Film/Prey2022'' has a TokenGoodTeammate of the French expedition who gives Naru a flintlock pistol. In the final moments of the movie, we see the gun has the engraving "Raphael Adolini 1715", meaning it's the same one from the ending of ''Film/Predator2''.
109* ''Film/Rampage2018'': At first, Claire Wyden appears to be another human character created for the film. However, at the end of the movie, she's shown wearing a red dress prior to George eating her. As it turns out, she's the film's [[AdaptationalVillainy villainous interpretation of the woman in the red dress from the game's title card prior to being eaten by the same giant ape]].
110* Matt Adison, one of the survivors captured at the end of ''Film/ResidentEvil2002'' film, gets experimented on to become the [[Videogame/ResidentEvil3Nemesis Nemesis]] for the next film, ''Film/ResidentEvilApocalypse''.
111* In ''Film/ScoobyDoo2002'', the new villain Emile Mondavarious turns out to be a robot suit being piloted by [[TheScrappy Scrappy]] [[TropeNamer Doo]], who underwent a FaceHeelTurn after being kicked out of the group and is now seeking to take over/destroy the world in revenge.
112* In ''Film/ScoobyDooMonstersUnleashed'', the gang fights the [[BigBad Evil Masked Figure]] while being harassed by [[{{Paparazzi}} Heather Jasper Howe]]. It's eventually revealed that both of these characters are aliases for Jonathan Jacobo, the Pterodactyl Ghost.
113* Throughout ''FIlm/ShinKamenRider2023'', Hongo and Ruriko are aided by a pair of anonymous government operatives in their fight against SHOCKER. At the very end of the movie, the agents reveal their names are Tachibana and Taki, who were two of Hongo and Hayato's recurring allies in [[Series/KamenRider the original 70s series]].
114* Introduced in ''Film/SonicTheHedgehog2020'' was Commander Walters, a decorated but somewhat awkward military official who convinced the government to send [[BigBad Doctor Robotnik]] to Green Hills. Following the battle between Sonic and Robotnik in San Francisco and by the events of ''Film/SonicTheHedgehog22022'', he was put in charge of a new secret task force dedicated to battling extraterrestrial threats, deeming Sonic one for not aligning himself with them. The group was named "Guardian Unit of Nations", or G.U.N. for short. This makes Walters a LighterAndSofter version of the G.U.N. Commander from ''VideoGame/ShadowTheHedgehog''. His horrified reaction to "Project Shadow" only cements this further.
115* Had Sam Raimi's ''Film/SpiderManTrilogy'' continued, Creator/BruceCampbell's various cameos would have been revealed to all be disguises of Quentin Beck, a.k.a. ComicBook/{{Mysterio}}.
116* ''Film/StarTrekIntoDarkness'':
117** Creator/BenedictCumberbatch's character is introduced as "John Harrison", but halfway through is revealed to be this universe's [[Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan Khan Noonien Singh]].
118** The new character Carol Wallace is soon revealed to be the evil Admiral Marcus's daughter, making her Carol Marcus, Kirk's love-interest from Star Trek II. Downplayed, as unlike Harrison, her true identity was never treated as a huge secret.
119** On a less plot relevant note, the security officer credited as "Cupcake" (a.k.a. "Burly Cadet #1" from the previous movie) is referred to by Kirk as "Mr Hendorff", confirming the suggestion in the ''ComicBook/StarTrekIDW'' comic book that he's this universe's version of Hendorff from "The Appl.".
120* This was originally going to be the case for ''Film/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2014'', where CorruptCorporateExecutive Eric Sacks was supposed to don a suit of PoweredArmor and reveal himself as the Shredder at the film's climax. Despite this clearly being set up (including "Eric Sacks" being a play on the Shredder's traditional real name of "Oroku Saki"), reshoots added actor Tohoru Masamune as the ''real'' Shredder due to heavy fan backlash after the twist was leaked online.
121* ''Film/TheWaltonsHomecoming'', a 2021 reboot TV-movie for ''Series/TheWaltons'' was noticeably missing one of the kids, Ben. The sequel, ''Film/AWaltonsThanksgiving'' features the family befriending and ultimately adopting a poor little orphan boy called Red... who ultimately reveals that his real name is Ben.
122* ''Film/{{Wendy}}'': James turns into Captain Hook at the end, losing a hand and fashioning a hook for himself in its place. In a more lighthearted take, he embraces the role of Peter's "enemy" as a form of play-acting for their mutual amusement.
123* One of the central antagonists of ''Film/TheWolverine'' is a new character named Ichirō Yashida. To stave off his impeding death via cancer, he hooks himself up to a gleaming set of samurai-styled PoweredArmor, becoming the film's version of Silver Samurai.
124* In TheStinger of ''Film/YoungSherlockHolmes'', the BigBad Rathe is revealed not to have died in his fight with Holmes. He checks into an inn by signing his name as "Moriarty", showing that he will become Holmes's nemesis in the years ahead. Literature/SherlockHolmes media seems to love this trope.
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Podcast]]
128* One episode of ''Podcast/WelcomeToNightVale'' introduces a new character known as Silas, a GentlemanThief that is now seemingly imprisoned. He spends the whole episode monologuing to someone who is taking care of him but can't understand him, and the only connection this episode has to the rest of the show is him mentioning to his caretaker that "you probably haven't even left Night Vale". Until the last line of the episode: "And for the last time, my name is Silas, [[ForcedTransformation not]] [[TeamPet Kosheck]]!"
129* ''Podcast/{{Wolverine}}'':
130** Variant in the first season, where Logan is pursued by a pair of FBI agents named Sally Pierce and Tad Marshall. In the season finale, they're revealed to be human-sized [[RidiculouslyHumanRobot Sentinels]] created by Weapon X.
131** In the second season, the characters are menaced by a mysterious, flamboyantly-dressed individual who Marcus calls "The Whisper Man." In episode 3, the Whisper Man turns out to be Jason Wyngarde, a.k.a. Mastermind.
132[[/folder]]
133
134[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
135* In the ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' 5E adventure ''TabletopGame/TheWildBeyondTheWitchlight'', the archfey Zybilna turns out to be [[TabletopGame/{{Greyhawk}} Iggwilv the Witch Queen]], better known as Tasha.
136[[/folder]]
137
138[[folder:Theatre]]
139* In the original West End staging of ''Theatre/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory'', Charlie encountered an old tramp in the garbage dump near the former's house at the top of the show, who later encouraged him to buy the Wonka Bar that turned out to contain the last of the Golden Tickets. The very last scene revealed that this character was actually Willy Wonka, who had taken a shine to the creative boy and thus rigged his own contest to make sure Charlie could visit the factory. This plot twist was removed for the Broadway and subsequent stagings. Notably, the show didn't CastAsAMask and there are only a few hints in the libretto that these characters could be connected.
140* ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' provides backstories for several characters in ''Literature/TheWonderfulWizardOfOz.'' While some are established from the get-go (Elphaba is the Wicked Witch of the West, her sister Nessarose the Wicked Witch of the East, and Glinda is, well, Glinda the Good Witch), three of them are left as reveals for Act Two. The lion cub that Elphaba rescues from a kidnapping is the Cowardly Lion- Elphaba not "letting him fight his own battles" is blamed for his cowardly behavior. Munchkin prince Boq is the Tin Man, as Nessarose's mispronounced spell shrinks his heart, so Elphaba saves his life by turning him into something that could live without a heart. Lastly, Fiyero is the Scarecrow, who was also transformed by Elphaba so he could survive the savage beating he got in the cornfield.
141[[/folder]]
142
143[[folder:Visual Novels]]
144* ''VisualNovel/TheGreatAceAttorney'', a prequel to the ''Franchise/AceAttorney'' series features Literature/SherlockHolmes and incorporates elements of Holmes' mythos, actually takes pride in ''inverting'' this trope, possibly to make its mystery solutions [[NotHisSled more surprising for Holmes readers]].
145** In the first game's second case, Grimesby Roylott, a canonical character from ''The Adventure of the Speckled Band'', turns out to be a disguise for 15 year old Russian ballerina Nikolina Pavlova, an original character. She's still the culprit though, albeit entirely [[AccidentalMurder by accident]], and [[DidNotDieThatWay she didn't even kill her "victim"]].
146** The second game reveals that one of the first game's Holmesian characters wasn't who you thought he was. Namely, John H. Watson ''isn't'' the "Watson" of Holmes' stories, rather, the literary Watson was based on Yuujin Mikotoba, a Japanese medical professor who's Holmes' actual best friend and investigative partner in this universe.
147** By extension Iris Watson isn't John Watson's daughter either, she turns out to be the child of a totally original character with a tangential connection to Holmsian canonicity, with her identity being the last surviving member of the Baskerville family from her mother's side.
148** That said, the trope is somewhat played straight with street urchin Gina Lestrade, who at first seems to be just an InNameOnly nod to the [[TropeNamer trope-naming]] UsefulNotes/ScotlandYard [[InspectorLestrade detective of the same name]], but ends up being made into an actual detective in the sequel (albeit an in-training one).
149** Eggert Benedict, the culprit of the first game's final case, is really Ashley ''Milverton'', the infamous blackmailer villain (though much more sympathetic).
150** Klint Van Zieks is revealed in the final case to be the equivalent of Jack Stapleton/Rodger Baskerville, as he uses a hound to murder his victims and winds up creating a legend, like the original. Like Milverton, he is also given AdaptationalSympathy.
151* ''VisualNovel/BoyfriendToDeath'': One of the new characters introduced in the sequel is Vincent Metzger, a lycanthropic military veteran who doesn't remember much about his past. A tie-in story reveals that [[ImpersonationExclusiveCharacter Vincent was killed by a werewolf a long time ago]] -- his dogtags were then switched with those of Akira Kojima, a side character from the first game, who you had been interacting with this whole time.
152* [[ItWasHisSled Although well known now]], ''VisualNovel/KajiriKamuiKagura'' pulled a variation of this trope with its villainous group, the Yatsukahagi. These demonic entities are eventually revealed to be [[RogueProtagonist several members of the former main cast]] from ''VisualNovel/DiesIrae'' having become NecessarilyEvil in order to deal with [[OmnicidalManiac Hajun]]. The fact that the setting of ''Kajiri Kamui Kagura'' is set in a sort of medieval Japan while ''Dies Irae'' had a more contemporary setting makes this reveal all the more notable as it completely re-contextualizes how the two stories not only connect to each other, but with the greater series as a whole.
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156* The first part of ''WebAnimation/AnimatorVsAnimation VI'', "Wanted", introduces at the very end a familiar-looking dark gray stick figure. The second part, "The Box", through a few instances of him [[IconicAttributeAdoptionMoment using his old weapons and tactics]], and a FreezeFrameBonus outright naming him, reveals him to be victim, [[TheBusCameBack returning from the very first]] ''Animator vs. Animation''.
157* ''WebAnimation/KnightsOfTheOldRepublicCinematicUniverse'': In ''Episode VI: Knights and the Darkness Pt. I'', [[VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublicIITheSithLords Meetra Surik]] is approached on Nar Shaddaa by a mysterious man and his female companion who eventually decide to help in the fight against the Exchange. After they've helped storm Visquis' secret base with their lightsaber skills, they reveal themselves to be [[ComicBook/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic Zayne Carrick and Jarael]].
158* In the ''WebAnimation/MinilifeTV'' "LOST EPISODE" special, the newly-introduced DJ DIAL-UP reveals himself to be one of the twin laptops Archie gave birth to in "How I Got Your Laptops" grown up after presenting the ''Minilife TV'' Two Year Anniversary special.
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162* The ''WesternAnimation/{{Aladdin}}'' fancomic ''[[Webcomic/DiamondInTheRoughAladdin Diamond in the Rough]]'' starts out with seemingly new protagonists, until TheReveal that they are the flying Carpet and the Tiger head of the Cave of Wonders in human form.
163* In ''WebComic/ElGoonishShive'' an extra who [[https://www.egscomics.com/comic/2006-06-28 shows up]] in a flashback is dubbed "Shy Girl" and is [[https://www.egscomics.com/sketchbook/2006-06-30 well received by fans]] only to be [[https://www.egscomics.com/comic/2010-12-27 revealed]] as Rhoda sporting a different look.
164* ''WebComic/SluggyFreelance'': In "Oceans Unmoving", where Bun-bun is trapped in Timeless Space and acts as a SpacePirate captain, he has a mysterious nemesis called Captain Blacksoul -- always hooded, apparently mechanical, super-strong, able to give even Bun-bun a hard time in combat, and somehow hell-bent on following Bun-bun, just as Bun-bun is determined to not have him do so. It turns out that Blacksoul is Bun-bun himself, after having been thrown out of time a second time, riding a floating robot. He's amnesiac about how he got out the first time, so he's trying to follow his old self home. He figures that, knowing himself, if he saw another of himself, he'd attack it expecting a trick, and also expecting that if it really was him it would have expected such a reaction. That's why he has to maintain the secret identity.
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168* In the Website/{{Facebook}} version of ''Franchise/TheTransformers''' ''Ask Vector Prime'' column, Vector Prime was asked about the Autobot ToylineExclusiveCharacter named... [[ShapedLikeItself Autobot]]. His response was to all but state that "Autobot" was himself in the past, that he had such a form after his memory was erased, and believes the name might derive from a title of his in some timelines, "The First Autobot". That's right, the tiny silver watchbot that never appeared in anything or had any story significance was [[AngelUnaware the amnesiac god of time]]. This actually had already been implied in another answer months earlier, where he mentioned being part of a group of "Time Warriors" - Autobots who had followed him in his mission to protect time - that consisted of all the other Kronoform toys of whose line Autobot was a part, [[HiddenInPlainSight only Vector Prime didn't mention Autobot]]...
169** In response to this, another letter asked if he was in the audience that saw Megatron kill Emirate Xeon (a black-colored version of the same toy had cameoed in a Dreamwave comic, causing some to identify it as Autobot as other toys with that mold had never been released as part of the Transformers brand), only for Vector Prime to state that ''this'' individual was, in fact, [[RetroactiveLegacy the G1 version of]] [[Film/Transformers2007 Meantime]], sporting a black version of the same mold, in a MythologyGag to the toy's origins as Kronoform toy with four possible colors, one of which was black. Prime goes on to mention two other characters based on said toy, one of them a preexisting, novel-only character named Azimuth, who had the gold color.
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173* ''WebVideo/TheDomReviews'': Terrence the Douchebag from Ravenclaw looked like an original character for The Dom's ''Harry Potter'' reviews, but he's ultimately confirmed to be the obscure character Terry Boot.
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