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1Sometimes an author will spend a lot of time blatantly {{Foreshadowing}} something, only to play with the audience's heads. When TheReveal comes, the promised (implied, really) development never occurs. Which, by the way, is {{Irony}}. May be an OrphanedReference and/or the result of an AbortedArc.
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3'''Here there be spoilers.'''
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5Compare SheepInSheepsClothing when the NiceGuy is suspected to be not-so-nice, but turns out to be exactly as advertised. See also TheUntwist, BaitAndSwitch, RedHerringTwist, RedHerring, RedHerringMole. This trope also includes any and all subversions of ChekhovsGun; see that page for examples.
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9!!Examples:
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11[[foldercontrol]]
12
13[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
14* ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'':
15** ''Anime/PokemonTheOriginalSeries''
16*** The opening of Master Quest seemed to hint that Casey and Ritchie would be competing in the Johto League, as they appeared alongside Gary in the background of a stadium. Neither fought Ash in the league.
17*** Late in the Johto saga, the gang comes across a mansion inhabited by a lone servant named Lokoko and her Ninetales. Or rather, a lone Ninetales and an illusion created by it by which it could communicate with the outside world. As Brock mentions how he once had a Vulpix (which he had returned to Suzy over sixty episodes prior to that point), the Ninetales clearly has a fondness for Brock ([[IdenticalStranger he resembles its old master]]), ''and'' the Poké Ball that kept it tethered to the mansion breaks at the end of the episode, one would expect Brock to invite Ninetales to join his team, but the Ninetales simply roams free and is never seen again.
18** ''Anime/PokemonTheSeriesDiamondAndPearl'':
19*** Ash's Aipom's love of Contests gets quite a bit of foreshadowing, eventually being traded over to Dawn and becoming one of her most used Pokemon. Zoey even tells her the two are meant to enter the Grand Festival together. Unfortunately, this is all thrown out the window after Ambipom suddenly gains a love for [[MundaneUtility ping pong]] and literally PutOnABus, never to be seen again.
20*** The Elite 4 and the Champion all make an appearance at separate points and it's almost set up that Ash will actually get to battle them. Shame he doesn't, no thanks to [[DiabolusExMachina Tobias]] at the League Conference. It wouldn't be until ''Anime/PokemonJourneysTheSeries'', 16 years later, that Ash gets to fight Cynthia in a 6 vs 6 Battle at the World
21** ''Anime/PokemonTheSeriesBlackAndWhite''
22*** The first half of the series, has Ash's badge case have a clear slot for the Legend Badge. After getting the Icicle Badge, the Opelucid Gym is temporarily closed (much to Iris's delight), so Ash eventually wins the Toxic Badge from Roxie instead.
23*** It's practically tradition that an (obviously) AlwaysSomeoneBetter trainer would be the one to prevent Ash from getting a tournament victory, which, in the Unova arc, fans would believe to be Virgil. Instead, it was Cameron, a worse IdiotHero than Ash was.
24*** The first episode of Unova implied Ash was Zekrom's chosen hero of ideals. The first time N makes his anime debut he seems to be Reshiram's chosen hero of truth. While they like each other well enough, N takes offence at Ash's chosen lifestyle as a Pokémon Trainer. So you think they will take command of each other's legendary and battle to see if truth or ideals wins the day as in the games? Nope, Ash gets N on his side before Reshiram appears and Reshiram leaves with little fuss. Zekrom doesn't even make an appearance.[[note]]This is apparently due to RealLifeWritesThePlot; Team Plasma had been planned to debut early in ''BW'', but the March 2011 earthquake in Japan caused those episodes to be delayed, and then the announcement of sequel games instead of the traditional updated third version caused the ensuing mess that happened. Early scripts of the planned episodes revealed that Ghetsis was directing Team Plasma to "liberate" Pokémon and help the Hero (hinted to be N). But in order to promote the ''[=BW2=]'' games, those plans were scrapped and Team Plasma debuts much later, with their ''[=BW2=]'' designs, while N has already split from them long before meeting Ash.[[/note]]
25*** Ash's Charizard returns late in the ''Black and White'' saga. In a case of BaitAndSwitchCredits, he doesn't have an actual role in Team Plasma, let alone face Reshiram, as the opening theme suggested. And then, when Mega Evolutions were introduced in the next generation, ''VideoGame/PokemonXAndY'', many were thinking that since Charizard stayed on Ash's team until the end of ''Black and White'' (and never returned to the Charicific Valley), Ash would get access to the new mechanic (since Charizard is one of those confirmed to get Mega Evolutions [two, in fact]). The ''Anime/PokemonTheSeriesXY'' came and went, and Ash ''never'' got to actually be a Mega user, in spite of having Charizard (and a whole LOT of other potential Mega candidates, for that matter). In fact, ''none'' of Ash's previous Pokemon appear at all in ''XY''. [[SubvertedTrope Finally subverted]] in ''Anime/PokemonJourneysTheSeries'' where Ash becomes a Mega user as his Lucario can Mega Evolve.
26** ''Anime/PokemonTheSeriesSunAndMoon'' featured a recurring Eevee with shaggy fur that was expected to join Ash's roster once it officially joined the main cast. Instead, it ended up being captured by Lana and nicknamed Sandy.
27* Despite all the hints throughout the series as to the real identity of Marin as Seiya's sister in ''Manga/SaintSeiya'', she doesn't end up being his sister at all, the real sister is somewhere else.
28** This, and Eagle Marin is the master of cryptic lines: she knew Seiya would have to face many a hardship, she knew who the real Athena was, but contrary to other Gold Saints who have good reason to suspect something was going on with the Sanctuary, it's never explained why she had knowledge of Saori being Athena. She also went to Star Hill to find the dead Pope's body. In the manga, she's basically always in the right place at the right time with the right info, hinting at a much larger role than that of a mere Silver Saint. WordOfGod also hinted in a databook that she has a mysterious unrevealed power.
29* The very first scene of ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'', which appears to be a FlashForward, but never actually happens.
30* ''Franchise/LyricalNanoha'':
31** ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaAs'': The introduction of Chrono's DisappearedDad made it appear that he was the MysteriousProtector of the Wolkenritter, especially since the said person looked like an older Chrono and acted as if he was familiar with Chrono. Nope, he was eventually revealed to be the disguised CatGirl familiars of Gil Graham, the friend of Chrono's father who was trying to execute a plan to seal the Book of Darkness that killed him. Rewatching the season after knowing TheReveal shows that the writers foreshadowed that one too, but the popularity of the LukeIAmYourFather trope allowed the Fauxshadowing to hide the actual {{Foreshadowing}} in plain sight.
32** ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaStrikers'' had the foreshadowing-that-wasn't of Vita's death.
33* In ''Anime/YuGiOh'', Joey vowed that he'd be the one to defeat Marik and save Mai after her defeat in Battle City, however, after seriously getting burned, Joey collapses just as he was about to win in the semi-finals.
34* ''Anime/YuGiOh5Ds'' foreshadowed that the BigBad Z-one was Yusei from a BadFuture. He turned out to be a random unnamed scientist who just assumed Yusei's identity so he could bring the world hope.
35** Sly who, in a potential subplot initially planned to take Stardust Dragon from Yusei counts as well.
36* ''Anime/ProjectAKo'' shows us A-ko, a PersonOfMassDestruction capable of feats of incredible speed and strength. Space aliens are searching for their long-lost princess they left behind on Earth. Obviously, the aliens have come to take A-ko away. Oh, wait, no they're not. They're here for [[TheDitz C-ko]]. [[spoiler:It turns out A-ko is [[LawyerFriendlyCameo all but said to be]] the daughter of ComicBook/{{Superman}} and ComicBook/WonderWoman.]]
37* This ended up happening to Orihime Inoue in ''Manga/{{Bleach}}''. At the start of the series, her main power seems to be healing people, along with creating defensive shields. Partway through the Arrancar Saga, she's kidnapped by people working for [[BigBad Aizen]], who reveals that her real power is to flat out reject reality, altering objects or restoring them to their previous state. Orihime develops a plan to use her ability to unmake the [[RealityWarpingIsNotAToy Hogyoku]]. Ulquiorra lates implies that Aizen has done something to modify Orihime, and a big deal is made during this arc about how Orihime's sole offensive technique is a OneHitKill that is rendered useless by her own gentle nature, weakening the attack to the point that almost anyone can block it. At the same time Ulquiorra is built up as far more Orihime's nemesis than Ichigo's, with Ichigo already getting two other major enemies in the arc (Grimmjow and [[BigBad Aizen himself]]). This is seemingly setting up Orihime to [[CentralTheme find the resolve to fight without holding back]] and defeat Ulquiorra herself. Ultimately, despite all this build-up, Orihime gets left behind in Hueco Mundo while Ichigo defeats both Ulquiorra and Aizen, the latter of whom he beats with a new power that causes him to be rejected by the Hogyoku without Orihime needing to do anything about it.
38* In ''Anime/FreshPrettyCure'', it was implied in episode 21 that Miyuki would become the fourth Cure. Two episodes later, the spot is given to a post-{{Heel Face Turn}}ed Eas.
39* ''Literature/NyarukoCrawlingWithLove'' has a lot of fun with this, at the expense of OnlySaneMan Mahiro's sanity. His attempts to be GenreSavvy usually involve trying to find the {{Foreshadowing}} that would produce the stupidest possible resolution to the plot; while his logic is accurate, he's almost always wrong because an entirely ''different'' piece of Foreshadowing will crop up that produces an even dumber resolution than he thought was possible.
40** Specific example: In ''Second Season'', the main cast goes to the GreatBigLibraryOfEverything because Nyarko has an overdue book; while they're there, a pair of aliens raid the library looking for a specific book. Putting two and two together, Mahiro guesses that Nyarko's book is the one they're looking for[[note]]What makes it stupid is, her book is just juvenile lit[[/note]]. However, it turns out that ''he'' had the MacGuffin, a book he picked up earlier and absently shoved in his pocket when the bad guys attacked. When this is revealed, Mahiro gets a BigNo at the idea that he's responsible for the plot twist, and Nyarko tells him how mean it was to immediately blame her for it.
41** Another example gets lampshaded; two episodes of ''Second Season'' have the Cyclone vacuum cleaner [[LargeHam voiced by]] Creator/NorioWakamoto. At the end of the latter episode, both Nyarko and Mahiro remark that they thought the vacuum would end up being important to the plot, based on how much set-up it got. But no, it was only there so they could give a ShoutOut to ''Series/KamenRiderDouble''.
42* Early parts of ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'' dropped a lot of hints that Van Hohenheim, Ed, and Al's father was the BigBad of the series. He's not, though the actual BigBad does look exactly like him, due to having constructed his physical body from Hohenheim's DNA.
43* Masashi Kishimoto, regarding ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'', [[WordOfGod has said]] that all the comparisons and parallels made between Naruto's mother (right down to the part where Kushina advises Naruto to find a girlfriend "like your mother") and his initial love interest, Sakura, were deliberately inserted [[TrollingCreator to pull the legs]] of the [[ShipToShipCombat shipping fans]]. Naruto ended up with Hinata instead, as fully detailed in ''[[Anime/TheLastNarutoTheMovie The Last]]''. It's also explained that the character in the current generation who most parallels Kushina is not Sakura at all, but Naruto himself (both being mischievous pranksters who were hosts of the 9-tailed fox and wanted to make everyone recognize their talents).
44* PlayedForLaughs in a chapter of ''Manga/MyMonsterSecret''. It starts with an ominous flashback featuring demonic principal Akane and a character we had heard of but so far never seen (the former principal Shirayuki). Then return to the present, where an equally mysterious character appears before Akane with their face hidden. They fight, then there's a dramatic build-up to the reveal that said character is completely unrelated to Shirayuki, and is baffled by Akane's assumption. Cue Akane curling on the floor in shame after her dramatic effect was ruined. The character in the flashback does eventually appear, but much later.
45* ''Manga/MadeInAbyss'' misleadingly implies that "Mitty," Nanachi's pet blob-mutant, is made of the remnants of Riko's mother Lyza. It's established that the Curse of the Abyss often turns people into unidentifiable "hollows" of their former selves, like Mitty, and Lyza was last seen heading to the region of the Abyss with this nasty side effect. Mitty seems oddly attached to Riko, and during a scene where Reg [[AmnesiacHero tries to remember]] what happened to Lyza, the camera keeps jumping to Mitty at ominously-framed angles. "Mitty" sounds like a nickname, and Nanachi is evasive about her backstory. It turns out Mitty was an unrelated girl of Riko's age; she was Nanachi's best (and only) friend, but they failed to save her from the machinations of a MadScientist that changed her, and Nanachi, into her current unfortunate form.
46* ''Manga/FairyTail'':
47** All throughout the second half of the series, [[BigBad Zeref]] anticipates that [[TheHero Natsu]] is the only person in the world capable of killing him. This is reinforced when Natsu is revealed to be E.N.D., a demon Zeref turned him into for this very purpose. However, Natsu's only opportunity to kill Zeref is wasted midway through the final story arc, and while he remains the only one capable of ''defeating'' him in battle, it's ultimately [[BigGood Mavis]] who kills him as an ActOfTrueLove via their shared InstantDeathRadius.
48** The Dragon King Festival is set up as a major event that is implied to happen on the anniversary of Igneel and the other dragons' disappearance, which is also when they openly announce their planned return. When the awaited date comes, all that happens is a BigBadWannabe's attempt to recreate a similar historic event, and none of the dragons are anywhere to be seen except a few random ones brought over from the past through the Eclipse Gate. It's later justified as the dragons were waiting for the ''true'' Dragon King Acnologia, who never showed up, and they all reappear in the next major arc when the GodzillaThreshold is crossed by both the threat of all magic being erased ''and'' Acnologia's arrival.
49** One example is played straight in the manga but averted in the anime. Early on, Lucy worries that Eisenwald's leader, Erigor, may one day come back for revenge. The last he's ever spoken of is a passing mention at the start of the Nirvana arc, due to the author changing the draft of the story where Erigor was planned to return, resulting in a WhatHappenedToTheMouse scenario. On the other hand, the anime ''does'' feature his return in two more story arcs: once as intended in the Nirvana arc, where he is [[VillainForgotToLevelGrind beaten with little fanfare]]; and again in the Key of the Starry Heavens {{Filler}} arc, where he TookALevelInBadass and is promoted to full member of the reborn Oración Seis.
50** After getting her butt whooped by Erza's seemingly invincible Nakagami Armor in the Grand Magic Games, Minerva reveals she has found a countermeasure for Erza's armor and promises an epic showdown with her rival. The closest they get to this "showdown" is a fight Erza has absolutely zero interest in and [[TalkingTheMonsterToDeath talks Minerva out of]], and Minerva's countermeasure is never revealed.
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53[[folder:Comics]]
54* The first story arc of ''ComicStrip/ThePhantom'' features an UpperClassTwit named Jimmy Wells, who occasionally drops hints that there's more to him than people think, and who tends to make excuses and leave quickly when something exciting happens; the clear implication is that he's the foppish alter-ego of the Phantom, like Lamont Cranston in ''Radio/TheShadow'' (or Bruce Wayne in ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'', except this was before Bruce Wayne had been invented). Eventually, the Phantom decides to reveal his true identity to his love interest -- and he's somebody completely different. It's generally assumed to be a case of an AbortedArc, where the writer originally did intend Jimmy Wells to be the Phantom but then had a more original idea partway through.
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57[[folder:Fan Works]]
58* In ''Fanfic/GirlsUndPanzerHopeDies'', the fic seems to imply that Miho's killer is Erika, who'd always been hostile towards her in canon. Erika late to return on the night of Miho's murder, and ominously expresses her hope that Miho won't show up to the finals the next day, even before Miho's body is discovered. At Miho's funeral, Erika clashes with Miho's friends and ends up throwing out wild accusations. She's apparently a likely enough suspect that the student council has her abducted and tortured to force a confession out of her. However, it turns out that the real killer is Yukari, of all people.
59[[/folder]]
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61[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
62* In ''WesternAnimation/AtlantisTheLostEmpire'', Mole comments on how the dormant volcano the exploration team has landed in will only erupt in reaction to an explosion of great magnitude. In response to this, everyone stares at [[DemolitionsExpert Vinny]], who is tinkering with a time bomb. When the volcano does erupt, however, Vinny has nothing to do with it; in fact, he lampshades this.
63* In ''WesternAnimation/BatmanSoulOfTheDragon'', it seems like Jade is set up to potentially be a villain like her comics counterpart (Cheshire) due to the envy she has for Shiva being better than her. That's not the case as she's murdered by Rip Jaggar to open the gate before this could happen meaning that she still has Main/AdaptationalHeroism in the movie.
64* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Rango}}'', the leader of the GreekChorus of owls states explicitly several times that the main character is going to die. At the end of the movie, Rango is still very much alive, and the owl states that he will die someday, as everyone does eventually... just not right now.
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67[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
68* Early in the ''[[Film/AtorTheFightingEagle Ator]]'' sequel, ''Film/TheBladeMaster''[[note]]Known best to ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000'' fans as ''The Cave Dwellers''[[/note]] appears to set up Ator's female companion, Mila, as having a ChekhovsSkill that would come into play, later on [[note]]Her ability to use gunpowder/wall scrapings as explosives[[/note]]... however, that skill is never used and she becomes more of a FauxActionGirl / DamselInDistress / NeutralFemale, instead [[note]]in particular.. cowering in the giant-snake pit when she could've aided Ator with a skull-bomb or something[[/note]].
69* In ''Film/FirstBlood'', Teasle asks Col. Trautman if he'd give Rambo a hug or blow his brains out, leaving Trautman to give the wish-washy answer "I couldn't decide until I met him face-to-face". This hints at the original ending in the book, where Trautman [[BoomHeadshot goes with blowing his brains out]] (Rambo and Teasle shot each other and it was a MercyKill at this point).
70* [=SkekSil=] the Chamberlain is set up perfectly in ''Film/TheDarkCrystal'' to pull a HeelFaceTurn, but then he just... doesn't.
71* The original ''Franchise/StarWars'' trilogy features several:
72** Han Solo getting the feeling he's never going to see the Millennium Falcon again. There's an UrbanLegend that the line was a holdover from an earlier draft of the script, where he ''didn't'' see it again, but even the earliest version of the script had both Lando and the Falcon surviving to the end.
73** Yoda proclaiming that Luke was not their last hope, implying that he would fail and that the "other" he was talking about (Leia) would have to take his place. An Infinities arc was later written that demonstrated this possibility.
74** The "love triangle" of Luke/Leia/Han. Han and Leia end up together, but only after Luke and Leia have shared a few kisses that are never re-visited after [[JustifiedTrope they learn they're brother and sister]].
75* The whole film ''Film/SleepawayCamp'' seems to be setting up a [[TheReveal reveal]] that Angela, the obvious suspect, is innocent, and Ricky is the real killer. Every time someone victimizes her who later ends up dead, Ricky always witnesses what they're doing to her and gets angry. That the head of the camp suspects him seems to be obviously part of the fake-out. Everything seems calculated to add up to Ricky being the killer for those who are watching carefully, but it's not too terribly overt. Then at the end, it turns out that [[TheUntwist Angela really is the killer]], and the real surprise is... well, let's just leave it that it's something else entirely, although that ''has'' been conservatively foreshadowed. A little bit.
76* Wes Craven said on the commentary track of ''Film/WesCravensNewNightmare'' that he had deliberately made two characters seem, very subtly, to be possible villains in disguise. He did this by introducing them with "was it really a false alarm or just foreshadowing?" moments, and by making their performances seem suspicious. One is a babysitter (who in the original draft of the screenplay ''was'' in league with Uber Freddy) and the other is a slimy chauffeur. Neither of them turns out to be either a villain or a threat: the babysitter ends up dying to save Dylan and the chauffeur is never seen again after his one introductory scene.
77* ''Film/{{Unstoppable}}'' has an excellent example in the form of Frank's death. He has a FatalFamilyPhoto, he [[{{Retirony}} retires in less than a month, and he even]] [[TemptingFate Tempts Fate]] at one point by remarking offhandedly to Will, "Don't get sentimental on me; it makes me feel like I'm gonna die." He survives to the end of the movie.
78* Creator/StevenSpielberg has stated that upon seeing ''Film/ForbiddenPlanet'' as a child, he was very disappointed that the movie never revealed what the Krell actually looked like, after the line about a characteristic triangular door shape throughout their compound being the only clue to their physical appearance.
79* While everyone who knows about ''Film/{{Audition}}'' (or [[TrailersAlwaysSpoil catches sight of its DVD cover]]) knows just what's up with the enigmatic Asami, watching it in the mindset of someone unaware of the twist makes it apparent that the first half of the film set up many indicators of Asami [[DeadAllAlong being a ghost]]: her [[EtherealWhiteDress ethereal white-dressed]] beauty, Aoyama's friend commenting that something seems off about her and that none of the references she gave exist, and her sudden and mysterious disappearance one day that baffles Aoyama -- all of which would make TheReveal even more shocking to an unknowing viewer who was expecting a quiet, romantic story.
80* ''Film/MarthaMarcyMayMarlene'': The cult leader takes the protagonist (Martha) out to the woods to practice shooting. Turns out she's barely involved in the murder the cult perpetrates (and that is with a knife). Martha also spends much of her time swimming alone in a large lake by her sister's summer house and near the end of the film, her sister cautions her that the day is quite cold for swimming, suggesting that Martha might meet a watery end. She doesn't.
81* In ''Film/StarTrekIntoDarkness'', Chekov is forced to put on a RedShirt at one point, suggesting [[AnyoneCanDie he could die at any second]] (he even looks appropriately ''horrified''). Instead, Kirk is the one who ends up dead (he gets better).
82* In ''Film/ManOfSteel'', Zod's armor has a BladeBelowTheShoulder he uses to kill Jor-El. In the final fight with Superman he makes an adjustment to his right gauntlet as if to bust out the blade, but instead just removes his armor.
83* Early in ''Film/DjangoUnchained'', when Django and Schultz ride into the first town they visit, the foreground of one shot conspicuously incorporates a noose through which Django's head cleanly passes, strongly suggesting that he will be hanged. In a way, he does end up hanging, but not quite that way.
84* ''Film/LeavingLasVegas'' seems to be setting the viewer up for a thriller plot or subplot, with its early chance encounters between Ben. the mobsters, and Yuri, with exposition on the latter's increasingly desperate circumstances. But then he's killed, offscreen, and that's that.
85* ''Film/StillAlice'' invests considerable time in setting us up for the title character to kill herself once her early-onset Alzheimer's has progressed beyond a certain point -- she records a video telling herself how to do it, and when she ''does'' [[DespairEventHorizon reach that point]], she pulls it up and watches it, going to considerable effort to make sure she does it. However, her attempt fails when she spills the pills on the floor and can't remember what they're for
86* ''Film/BeneathHill60:'' The explosives in the mine are electrically detonated, and we get several shots of groundwater dripping over the racks of wired-up explosives. When the time comes for the big bang, this goes unmentioned and causes no problems.
87* For most of ''Film/{{Waitress}}'', it's heavily implied that after Jenna gives birth, she'll quietly leave her abusive husband and get together with Dr Pomatter, and/or that she'll win the Springfield Pie Contest, then use the prize money to leave the town and start her own pie shop somewhere far away. None of this happens - after her daughter is born, Jenna calmly tells her husband she wants a divorce ''despite'' not having the money to leave town, she breaks off with Dr. Pomatter after realising that he still has a good relationship with his wife, she inherits a large sum of money from Joe and buys the diner that she already works for, and the Springfield Pie Contest ends up having no real impact on the plot.
88* In ''Film/LInvitation'', a meek office drone winds up buying a lavish mansion after coming into some money, and he throws a reception for his coworkers, hiring a butler named Emile to serve drinks at the party. Emile has a vague air of mystery about him, and he gives people oddly knowing looks, and as the film unfolds it seems certain that Emile will do something dramatic to affect the story somehow--but he doesn't. Also, there's a man lurking about the grounds that is eventually revealed as a burglar who is being hunted by the police, but that doesn't affect the story either, as the burglar is simply arrested at the end of the film.
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91[[folder:Literature]]
92* In Creator/VladimirNabokov's ''Literature/{{Lolita}}'' there are several indications that Humbert will murder the title character; and we know from the prologue that Humbert was arrested for murder after the novel's events. He won't.
93* David Farland's ''Literature/TheRunelords'' draws heavily upon Mormon theology, philosophy and symbolism, and one of the clearest examples is the wizard Binnesman, based on a [[Literature/TheBookOfMormon Book of Mormon]] prophet named Abinadi. His confrontation and continual opposition to the [[BigBad evil king]] Raj Ahten make the comparisons clear almost from the first encounter between the two. Raj Ahten's ever-growing affinity for fire only serves to heighten the foreshadowing: Binnesman is clearly going to end up being burned to death by Raj Ahten, or at his command, which was the fate of Abinadi. Except... in the end, Raj Ahten is defeated and Binnesman is still alive, preserved by the author to meet an even stranger fate in the books that follow.
94* Some people were ''very'' disappointed while reading ''Literature/TheShining''. Early in the book, a character mentions a large picture window, how expensive it was to install, and to take care that it doesn't get broken. It doesn't get broken [[KillItWithFire presumably until the scene where the hotel explodes, which does not mention the window]].
95* In the beginning of the Literature/LordPeterWimsey mystery ''The Nine Tailors'', the bumbling vicar explains how his dear old clock is going a bit slow these days. He always sets it an hour early when he winds it on Sunday morning - but if you can only remember that it is before time on Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, accurate on Wednesday, and late on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, why, it's a very excellent clock indeed! The reader expects a tricky alibi problem, but it never happens. The clock is only mentioned once more in the book. Lord Peter's manservant and the vicar's maid have an argument about cleaning it.
96* The ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' novel ''Literature/{{Maskerade}}'', which is heavily inspired by the various versions of ''Franchise/ThePhantomOfTheOpera'', has several characters remark that [[FallingChandelierOfDoom the giant chandelier in the middle of the Opera House is an accident waiting to happen]]. At the end of the book, it still hasn't fallen, though that's [[InvokedTrope not for lack of the villain trying]].
97* In ''Hero of Ages'', the third book of ''Literature/{{Mistborn}}'', a character, Marsh is under mind-control from BigBad Ruin. He has enough HeroicWillpower to resist ''once'', and his thoughts in his POV sections make it clear he intends to use this to kill himself at a key point, depriving Ruin of his services. Nope: he uses it to rip out [[ActionGirl Vin]]'s earring -- revealed as a kind of minor ArtifactOfDoom -- thereby allowing her to break free of its influence and ascend to a PhysicalGod-type state, where she can face Ruin directly. Marsh is one of the only POV characters to ''survive'' the entire series.
98* In ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'', prophecy is commonly used as a tool for {{Foreshadowing}}; [[TheMagicComesBack Talents thought extinct or dying are resurfacing]], several of which allow insights into the future, with varying accuracy and clarity. There are characters who mostly just crank out one serious-sounding prophecy after another; however, most prophecies are quite diluted in importance as a result[[note]]There is only so much drama one can fit into a person's life![[/note]], and there is no telling which prophecies are important or even fulfilled during the timespan of the series.
99* ''Literature/HarryPotter'':
100** Neville Longbottom is revealed as having been a potential ChosenOne until the BigBad singled out Harry instead. He is plagued with memory problems. What deep, dark secret is lurking in the recesses of his mind? [[Film/{{UHF}} NOTHING!]]
101** Ron Weasley mentions offhand that his mother has a cousin [[MuggleBornOfMages with no magical abilities]]. The cousin works as an accountant. We never get to meet this character.[[note]]WordOfGod is she originally planned to make this cousin important, he was going to have a witch daughter named Mafalda who would cause trouble. But then Rowling rewrote Goblet Of Fire and Mafalda never made it into any of the books[[/note]].
102* ''Literature/CiaphasCain'': The last words of Chaos Warmaster Varan the Undefeatable ("That was unexpected.") are used as a quote at the beginning of a chapter, leading the reader to think it's a character wryly commenting on his betrayal (the other quotes are similarly humorous). When the actual character is seen in a later book, he actually screams the line, the reveal being that his CompellingVoice isn't the only thing he got out of worshipping the Chaos gods, they also gave him carapace-like skin and razor claws. Not that it stops Cain from dispatching him with a kickass ([[HilariousInHindsight and]] [[Memes/GameOfThrones prescient]]) PreMortemOneLiner ("Commissar Donal sends his regards").
103* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'':
104** Back when the series was pitched as a trilogy, Jaime Lannister was intended to be TheEvilPrince. In a letter to his editor, Creator/GeorgeRRMartin wrote that Jaime would kill everyone in his way in order to seize the throne, which never ended up happening and he instead went on a RedemptionQuest. Thus, some early foreshadowing, like him being found sitting on the throne right after killing the Mad King, doesn't have the same implications anymore. Going by the series LiveActionAdaptation ''Series/GameOfThrones'', this arc seems to have been given to his twin sister Cersei instead.
105** Another plot arc in that letter was for Sansa to take the Lannisters' side against her own family. Martin seems to have been setting the reader up for this as late as the scene early in ''Literature/AClashOfKings'' where she has her first period, practically lampshading it by having her note that [[EmbarrassingDampSheets the bloody stain on her bedsheets]] was "Lannister crimson, as if her body had betrayed her". But she ultimately remained a Stark.
106[[/folder]]
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108[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
109* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': In Season 5, Bronn jokes about death, sings a song about dying, and gets cut by a poisoned weapon. Despite all of these obvious death flags, Bronn survives the season.
110* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' Season 2, probably as a side effect of the Writers' Strike cutting the season short, had three main plots: 1. ''slowly-building storyline about a character with the uncontrolled power to produce a deadly virus and her antigen-producing brother'', 2. ''major plot about a future deadly apocalyptic virus outbreak'' and 3. ''Hiro gets set back in time to meet his ancient Japanese samurai hero''. The brother is offed by Sylar and the sister arrives in New York just in time to not be involved in destroying the virus at all, and the ancient samurai hero ends up being a foreign Immortal who tries to release the virus.
111** There's also the Isaac Mendez comic of St. Joan which is supposed to be Monica. Also, a kriss-bladed dagger appears in the vault at the end of Season 2. As we all know, the Monica arc doesn't go anywhere.
112** Also, just about anything in the vault.
113* In ''Series/BrooklynNineNine'', the episode "[[Recap/BrooklynNineNineS7E09Dillman Dillman]]" has the squad under investigation after someone pranks Jake with a glitter bomb that winds up contaminating valuable evidence. It's not difficult to deduce that the culprit is ''very'' unlikely to be a member of the squad, which leaves only three other suspects who have any role in the story: Detective Dillman, Officer Booth, and District Attorney Greene. Dillman is the obvious choice among them; he's played by the [[NarrowedItDownToTheGuyIRecognize famous actor]] Creator/JKSimmons, [[HiredToHuntYourself he's the one called in]] to investigate the squad, and the episode is [[AntagonistTitle named after him]]. Meanwhile, Officer Booth only appears for a gag in one scene and Greene [[TheGhost isn't actually seen or heard]] in the episode. Near the end of the episode, Jake accuses Dillman after proving that he was lying about working for the SFPD, but the culprit actually turns out to be Officer Booth, who's working on behalf of Greene.
114* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'':
115** Giles the untouchable. The BigBad of Buffy's last arc could take the form of anyone who had died, but only as a non-solid illusion. There was a scene that suggested Giles may have died, and his later appearances had him never directly interacting with anything, hinting that he may be the aforementioned BigBad in disguise. The characters themselves eventually pick up on this and panic, especially as Giles just went off to mentor the very group of teenage girls the BigBad has been trying to kill. When they finally catch up with him and find that he is indeed still a living, tangible person, he gets a great line about how "they thought he was evil because he ''wasn't'' touching underage girls?"
116** The fifth season introduces Buffy's little sister Dawn, [[FakeMemories who's suddenly always been there]]. At the end of her introduction episode, Dawn ominously narrates "She thinks I'm just her dumb little sister. ''Boy'' is she in for a surprise". While this seems to be telegraphing that Dawn is aware that she's deceiving Buffy and the others, it's actually just a ploy by the writers to make Dawn seem suspicious, as we later learn that Dawn has no idea her existence is abnormal.
117* ''Series/{{Lost}}'':
118** Locke's [[ArcWords special]] destiny is foreshadowed for about five seasons. Then he dies uselessly.
119** Caesar for Season 5. Prior to the premiere, they ''heavily'' hyped him up with bits and pieces of information. When it airs, the hype grows as questions are asked: why is he on the plane? Why does he seem to already know about the Island? Why is hiding a gun and other items from what appears to be his lancer, Ilana (who comparatively seems boring, just some bounty hunter who escorted Sayid onto the plane)? What is his agenda? Surely he'll be an important player in the show's endgame...then he dies in the middle of an episode. He's never mentioned again, while his lancer turns out to be an important character with a personal link to Jacob and a promotion to regular for the final season.....which she abruptly dies in the middle of without resolution to her connection to Jacob.
120* The BigBad of Season 3 of ''Series/{{Justified}},'' [[RuthlessForeignGangsters Detroit mob enforcer Quarles,]] has a rail-mounted gun he conceals up his sleeve; multiple characters point out that, while this is handy for getting the drop on people, he'd be fucked if the mechanism were to jam. In the season finale, nothing goes wrong with the mechanism... but Quarles' ''entire arm'' is lopped off with a meat cleaver.
121* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
122** In [[Recap/DoctorWhoTVMTheTVMovie the TV Movie]], there is a radical reveal that the Doctor is half-human, a detail stated three times to make sure we get it. It's also made very clear that the Eye of Harmony, a structure inside the Doctor's TARDIS containing the Doctor's memories and the TARDIS's power source (which the Doctor says would suck out his soul if he looked into it), can only open when looked upon by a human retinal structure. Surely the Doctor's half-human eyes are going to be instrumental in opening the Eye of Harmony? Nope, it never happens, the Master instead using his human companion Chang to open the Eye. The consensus seems to be that this was [[AbortedArc buried in rewrites]].
123** Amy and the Doctor getting together and/or being together off-screen seemed like this. In Series 5, Amy was especially flirtatious with him and even attempted to have sex with him on her wedding night. In "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E7AmysChoice Amy's Choice]]" she chooses her fiancé Rory, but it's revealed that the Doctor had been battling with his attraction to her. Eventually, the couple does get married, but they keep the tension up; when kidnapped Amy keeps up a constant monologue, saying she loves a man, "even though you think it should be him," without specifying which 'him' it is, only that he has a 'stupid face'. It's Rory. Later, when Amy and her child are kidnapped, she tells the baby to look out for her father, who is TheLastOfHisKind and OlderThanHeLooks. She actually means The Last Centurion, Rory's alter-ego. Later, when the two of them have been (briefly) rescued, they beg the Doctor to tell them what's going on, because this is their baby. His response is "It's mine." He actually meant the cot. And then there's the reveal that the baby is part Time Lord...because Amy and Rory conceived her in the time vortex.
124* In the prequel season of ''Series/SpartacusBloodAndSand'', obviously any character who appeared in the first season was not going to die. Anyone else was fair game and most of the important characters introduced that season were indeed killed. However, that wasn't the case with the champion Gannicus. He was never mentioned in the first season and anyone unfamiliar with the legend would very likely assume it was a question of when and how rather than if he was going to die. The writers exploited this by giving him some close calls, but ultimately he won his freedom and left the Ludis, then reappeared in Season 3.
125* We are led to believe in the "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS1E24Conspiracy Conspiracy]]" episode of ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' that we might have another encounter with the "Bluegill" aliens after Remmick sends out a transmission. Nothing ever comes of it (at least within the main canon), and what remained of the ideas regarding them were repurposed into the Borg.
126* In ''Series/RedDwarf'' episode "[[Recap/RedDwarfSeasonIFutureEchoes Future Echoes]]", the cast sees a "future echo" of an aged Lister with a mechanical arm. Six series later, Lister gets his arm chopped off in an attempt to cure him of a sentient virus that had been driven into that arm, apparently fulfilling the foreshadowing... until the next episode where Lister's body is reconstructed by nanites, giving him a whole new flesh and blood arm.
127* ''Series/HowIMetYourMother'':
128** Future Ted mentions at one point that the titular Mother was at the same St. Patrick's party he and Barney went to. Stella mentions offhand that she went to the same party. She is not the Mother.
129** Various episodes in the series imply that Barney and Robin's wedding will turn out disastrous. It actually went off without a hitch (though Barney backs out on the flower gorilla idea at the last moment).
130* In ''Series/BreakingBad'', when Hank follows Heisenberg's rolling meth lab to a garbage disposal yard, he pulls off the duct tape over the bullet holes in an attempt to gain probable cause to investigate. When he does, light shines through the holes and falls on Walter's chest, clearly indicating that Hank would shoot Walter. Hank is gunned down by a gang of Neo-Nazis two episodes before the end.
131* Season 2 of ''Series/BigLittleLies'' had several hints that one of its main characters was going to drown, most likely Bonnie. However, it ended with all five still alive and Bonnie's ''mother'' dying of a stroke.
132* In the comics, Barry Allen/Franchise/TheFlash travels back in time to save his mother from Professor Zoom, which would lead to the ''ComicBook/{{Flashpoint}}'' storyline. In ''Series/TheFlash2014'', after a whole season of buildup, Barry travels back in time, but was prevented from saving his mother by his alternate (perhaps older) self, and thus Flashpoint never came to fruition.
133** And then the next season, this ends up being averted, as at the end he decides to save his mom after all, and ''does'' create the show's version of the Flashpoint reality.
134* In the ''Series/StarTrekStrangeNewWorlds'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekStrangeNewWorldsS2E02AdAstraPerAspera Ad Astra Per Aspera]]", a mystery hangs over the episode as to who ratted out Una's secret as an Illyrian to Starfleet. La'an is horrified as she's afraid that she might have said something, given that she was furious over learning it back in "[[Recap/StarTrekStrangeNewWorldsS1E03GhostsOfIllyria Ghosts of Illyria]]". However, a EurekaMoment over this allows Una's council, Neera, to figure out the true culprit: ''Una herself'', who got tired of hiding who she was.
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Podcasts]]
138* ''Podcast/InStrangeWoods'':
139** In episode 3, the bear that attacks the New Year's party is hinted to have had contact with humans before, and it's the kids resolving the incident that lets their parents okay the Final. It seems like Howl may have had something to do with it, but ultimately he didn't.
140** Howl's shady past and the ambiguity of whether he let Jacob die or not seems like foreshadowing that he'll be up to something during the Final, or perhaps is training Peregrine for a sinister purpose. Ultimately, his actions are sincere and nature itself is the only obstacle to making it back.
141[[/folder]]
142
143[[folder:Role-Playing Games]]
144* In ''Roleplay/DinoAttackRPG'', there was a ''lot'' of build-up with Andrew's dreams and dark consciousness that seemed to foreshadow a FaceHeelTurn, or at the very least a mutation. What happened in the end? Andrew got over it. [[WhatCouldHaveBeen This was mainly the unintentional result of Andrewnuva199 changing his plans for Andrew.]] Ironically, another Dino Attack agent from LEGO Island, Zachary, ended up fulfilling the FaceHeelTurn role.
145[[/folder]]
146
147[[folder:Theatre]]
148* In ''Theatre/JasperInDeadland'', Agnes mentions that she wants her and Jasper to be one of "the great couples of all time", like Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet, Theatre/AntonyAndCleopatra, or [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Orpheus and Eurydice]]. All of those couples end up dying tragically at the end of their respective stories, unlike Jasper and Agnes, who actually get a happy ending.
149* In ''Theatre/NextToNormal'', Diana's medication has a LongList of potential side effects, including possibly being fatal. Her doctor brings this up in a way that makes it sound important, and then nothing comes of it - Diana throws her meds away for unrelated reasons shortly after receiving them.
150* In ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'', there's a brief scene when Madame Morrible meets up with Elphaba during a rainstorm, at one point saying, "You mustn't get wet." Elphaba is not seen in contact with water throughout the show. It's just a RedHerring, Elphaba isn't actually allergic to water in this version.
151[[/folder]]
152
153[[folder:Video Games]]
154* At the beginning of ''VisualNovel/AceAttorneyInvestigationsMilesEdgeworth'', a shadowy figure holds up Edgeworth in his office. We can't hear the voice, obviously, and Edgeworth only refers to them as 'that person', leaving open the possibility that the mysterious person might not even have been a man despite the masculine silhouette. It turns out to be Detective Badd.
155* ''VideoGame/AlbaAWildlifeAdventure'': The woods north of town have 'no fire' signs around them, and the police officer warns that they could go up in flames at the slightest spark. While there is a fire, it's at the construction site for the new hotel, and the woods remain unburnt through the valiant efforts of the townsfolk.
156* One of the biggest buildups of ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyModernWarfare2'' was Task Force 141 gathering intel that could lead to the whereabouts of Makarov. But towards the end of the game, their leader General Shepherd betrays the group and brands them as terrorists. For that reason, the remainder of the crew decides instead to get their revenge on Shepherd. You don't return to hunting Makarov until ''[[VideoGame/CallOfDutyModernWarfare3 MW3]]''.
157* Near the end of ''VideoGame/Sly3HonorAmongThieves'', after Sly recovers from his injuries, Bentley warns him that taking another blow might result in a brain shock. Sure enough, Sly [[TakingTheBullet takes a hit from Dr. M to protect Carmelita]] and suddenly has amnesia. Until TheStinger shows that he was [[FakingAmnesia faking it]] just to finally be with Carmelita.
158* In ''VideoGame/DeadRising2OffTheRecord'', Sullivan displays extremely suspicious behavior, for example suggesting a VigilanteExecution. As it turns out, Sullivan is an admittedly jerkish SheepInSheepsClothing, while it's Stacey who is the BitchInSheepsClothing.
159* In ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid2SonsOfLiberty'', whenever Snake's name is brought up in front of the Colonel, he dodges the subject, only referring to him as "that man", eagerly accusing the terrorist of being Solid Snake as if desperate to kill even a lookalike to get some closure, and getting irrationally angry whenever anything is mentioned about Snake's competence, prowess, or heroism. However, Snake and the Colonel parted in the previous game as close friends. Raiden explicitly asks the Colonel if Snake did something terrible to him, and he doesn't give a straight answer -- every implication is that Snake somehow betrayed the Colonel or hurt him on a very personal level, and [[ChekhovMIA the absence]] of Snake's love interest from the previous game, Campbell's daughter, adds to this suspicion. As personal secrets come out, TheReveal is actually that Snake had nothing to do with anything and that Raiden has been talking to a crazy A.I. that had been imitating the Colonel and attempting to bring about a plot to control human will and consciousness.
160* In ''VideoGame/TalesOfSymphonia'', a game full of betrayal as is, it was heavily suggested that [[TheLancer Genis Sage]] would betray the party and side with the BigBad, Mithos. In fact, there is one optional scene where he openly states that If TheHero, Lloyd, and the BigBad, Mithos (who wasn't known to be the BigBad at that time) were to get in a fight, he (Genis) would side with Mithos. [[TheReveal When it all comes out]], Genis sides with Lloyd, mainly because he knows by that point that Mithos is the BigBad.
161** Subverted in a sense with Kratos. Most of the foreshadowing that he might be Lloyd's father is ''heaped'' on early in the game, and if you're going into the game expecting a plot twist -- which you should, it's a ''VideoGame/{{Tales|Series}}'' game, after all -- that is most likely what you'll guess. However, when you arrive at the Tower of Salvation, it seems to be Fauxshadowing because Kratos pulls a pretty blatant and unexpected FaceHeelTurn. So then you believe ''that's'' the plot twist, and all of the father stuff was fauxshadowing. In the end, it turns out that Kratos ''is'' Lloyd's father and the FaceHeelTurn was actually a sham, so he could go on helping Lloyd from inside Cruxis. Kratos is a complicated guy.
162* The Creator/{{Infocom}} game ''VideoGame/{{Wishbringer}}'': Throughout the feelies and prologue, repeated mention is made of the threat of the dragon Thermofax, who doesn't play any role in the game whatsoever. Naturally, there are a number of fake clues in the hint book about dealing with him.
163* ''VideoGame/MegaManX'':
164** The end of ''VideoGame/MegaManX3'' hints that to save the world, [[FightingTheLancer X must destroy Zero at some point in the future]]. (In the original Japanese, it merely hints they will fight at some point.) ''[[VideoGame/MegaManX5 X4]]'' continues the hint and states they will come to blows in some kind of epic, world-shattering battle. ''[[VideoGame/MegaManX5 X5]]'' finally [[FightingYourFriend has them fight]], and canonically it wasn't even close to a fight to the death or for the fate of the world. (In the non-canon BadEnding, it IS to the death, however.)
165** ''Mega Man X4'' foreshadows the title character's FaceHeelTurn for the SequelSeries ''VideoGame/MegaManZero''. (Un)fortunately, because [[ExecutiveMeddling Capcom vetoed]] what they viewed as SuddenSequelHeelSyndrome (and Zero subsequently killing the evil X) making things ''too'' dark, that plot twist never comes to be. At least it succeeds in foreshadowing the Maverick Hunters' transformation into the evil Neo Arcadian regime. (Plus said regime is ruled by an evil copy of X that Zero has to stop.)
166*** This is compounded by Zero's ending in ''VideoGame/MegaManX7'', in which he has a nightmare of X hunting him down [[BrokenRecord while droning on about eliminating Mavericks]]. What makes this example particularly weird is that ''X7'' released '''after''' ''[[VideoGame/MegaManZero1 Z1]]'', meaning many players would already know the real X remains a heroic character in the future, though it can be argued this still works in the context of [[ItGetsEasier X's fears that he'll go down]] [[KnightTemplar that]] [[FallenHero path]], something he confesses to Zero at the end of ''Z1''.
167** Similarly in ''Mega Man X5'', Sigma mentions during the final battle that he has a "partner" who hates X as well and provided him with a new body. Due to the story being nuked by ExecutiveMeddling, we never find out who this partner is and he [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse vanishes]] into the numerous other {{plot hole}}s in the following sequels. WordOfGod claims he meant it to be [[VideoGame/MegaManClassic Dr. Wily]] in some form or another and the game does strongly hint at Wily's presence plus ''[[VideoGame/MegaManX6 X6]]'' ''does'' hint that the newly introduced Isoc is actually Dr. Wily in a robot body, [[AbortedArc but it never gets resolved]].
168--->'''Sigma:''' Here I am. You can challenge me at any time. I have delightful news. I've recently acquired a new partner. He has been very supportive. He seems to have created quite a few robots. And he gave me the toughest body that you will ever see. You got here sooner than I expected, so it is not yet complete... But...it is enough to defeat you... He is an excellent partner... I believe you two know each other... In fact, he used to be a comrade of yours. He was very persistent about you... and that makes him very helpful to me. You see X, there is someone other than me...who hates you... Now feel our combined rage and die! ...But not before suffering horribly, ha ha ha! ...Goodbye, X!
169* ''VideoGame/{{Prototype}}'': The only surviving child born in Hope, Idaho, was taken into government custody and codenamed PARIAH. According to the few people who know about him, it would be "extraordinarily bad" if he and protagonist Alex Mercer were ever to meet one another. Fortunately, they don't.
170* ''Franchise/MassEffect'':
171** ''VideoGame/MassEffect1'': Can potentially happen on Noveria. At arrival at the Peak 15 facility, the surviving scientists will mention how the guards are increasingly on edge, and how it's gotten noticeably worse now that Shepard's shown up. If the player goes through the effort of doing a complex side-mission rather than going straight to the Hot Labs, nothing comes of it. If they do, it turns out it's because the guards have orders to kill everyone in the facility.
172** In ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'', Shepard rescues Tali from the geth on Heastrom. Before being attacked, she was researching the planet's star. It turns out the star is dying but is nowhere near old enough to actually be in the stage of decay it's at. Later, she hypothesizes that dark energy is decreasing the star's mass and killing it, noting that if it's not just an isolated, freak phenomenon, it could be very bad for galactic civilization. This plot point is never brought up in ''VideoGame/MassEffect3''; stopping it from becoming widespread was originally the true goal of the series' villains, [[http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/125213-Mass-Effect-Writer-Reveals-Discarded-Ending-Ideas but this was discarded early in the third game's development.]]
173* A [[MindScrew fairly bizarre]] scene in ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTwilightPrincess'' seems to imply that Link or Midna will wind up corrupted by the [[MacGuffin Fused Shadows]] they spend the early parts of the game tracking down. Upon getting the final Fused Shadow, they're stolen by the villain (who's ''already'' evil, so the Fused Shadows didn't seem to do anything to him). Then the heroes get the Fused Shadows back, Midna turns into a monstrosity!... for only two different scenes, and in both of them, she is completely in control, still on the side of good, and goes back to normal for a few seconds later. After all this, the scene Lanayru presents to you seems like a BigLippedAlligatorMoment -- it ''does'' explain the backstory of the Twilight Realm and the existence of the Twili, but it's strangely acted out by effigies of Link and his friend Ilia, and as mentioned, it doesn't come up again in the plot.
174* ''VideoGame/BraveFencerMusashi'' has the action figures of enemies and bosses, each with voices and "attack actions" that you can often buy before encountering said enemies. Typically they serve as a heads-up to what kind of enemies you'll be facing next. However, [[TheUnfought you never fight Colonel Capricolla]] and it turns out [[TheMole he's been helping you the entire time]]. The pistol, sound effects, and [[CallingYourAttacks battle cries]] made by his action figure are only there to keep players from discovering the big twist.
175* There's an minor character in ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublicIITheSithLords'' named Zherron. A creepy dude that's spying on the mercenaries and is holding something back. Most Definitely Not A Villain. Sarcasm excluded, as the mercenaries intended to attack the local settlement and Zheeron was one of the few who suspected that.
176* In ''VideoGame/PoppyPlaytime'', Mommy Long Legs' commercial has a disclaimer saying not to bring her near extremely hot or cold areas, suggesting that those will play a role in her defeat. That proves to be wrong - she instead gets caught in a grinder.
177* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'', Red XIII's tattoo puts him in the same category as the Clones, which all have number tattoos. He's given a scene where he worries to Tifa that the fact that he was experimented on by Hojo means he might go mad and get possessed by Sephiroth. Red XIII's medical history or mental state is never mentioned again in the rest of the game. Early in Disc 2, there ''is'' a scene where Red XIII is manipulated by Sephiroth into giving Cloud the Black Materia for [[IdiotBall flimsy reasons]]... but Barret, who was never experimented on, will do the exact same thing if the player gives him the Black Materia instead.
178* ''VideoGame/PaperMario'':
179** In ''VideoGame/PaperMario64'', sometime after Chapter 1, if Mario checks his mail, he will find a letter from the Koopa Bros. (the bosses of Chapter 1) vowing to return to get their revenge on him. Sure enough, they do indeed make their return during the final chapter, ready to make good on their threat... [[BaitAndSwitchBoss only to get their asses thoroughly kicked]] by [[PlotIrrelevantVillain Jr. Troopa]].
180** In ''VideoGame/SuperPaperMario'', Tippi reacts to Dimentio in his first meeting with Mario in a way that implies she already knows who he is, but even after Tippi's backstory is explored, her familiarity with him is never mentioned again.
181* In ''VideoGame/FireEmblemFates'', while attempting to clear the Rainbow Sage's trial it's mentioned that you would be the fifth person to do so. It's explained that King Garon and King Sumeragi were the first two, and Prince Xander was the most recent. The third person to receive his blessing is described as being a knight from an unknown land, and the game's GoldenEnding deals with the lost kingdom of Valla, an entire kingdom with a curse placed on it that kills anyone who speaks too specifically of it or anyone from it outside the kingdom itself. Everything was lined up for the third person to be a knight from Valla who couldn't be described more specifically than "a knight from an unknown land", but this isn't the case. The third person's identity is never revealed.
182* In ''VideoGame/FireEmblemThreeHouses'', the Flame Emperor's true identity is [[spoiler: Edelgard, leader of the Black Eagles and a potential playable character if the player choses the Black Eagles route. Edelgard is not playable during chapters where the Flame Emperor is present, and conspicuously disappears any time the Flame Emperor is set to make an entrance, hinting at her double identity. However, on the Blue Lions and Golden Deer, the same conspicuous absences are repeated by Dimitri and Claude, despite them having nothing to do with the Flame Emperor, seemingly only for gameplay parity.]]
183* In the third chapter of ''VisualNovel/DanganronpaV3KillingHarmony'', there is a double murder, which leads to Monokuma introducing a rule that only the one who killed the first victim will be considered the culprit. Throughout the trial, this rule is often brought up whenever discussing the second murder, noting that the first one is more important, making it seem like the one who killed the second victim will escape execution. However, as it turns out, [[SerialKiller Korekiyo had actually killed both of the victims]], and [[RedHerring the rule ends up not playing any role for the rest of the game]].
184* ''VideoGame/BugFables'':
185** Chapter 2 is centered around an unseen goddess named Venus. The game drops every hint it can that she's EvilAllAlong and a venus fly trap monster: it fits with the main characters being bugs, it's mentioned that nobody has actually seen her, the Golden Hills has flytrap-like objects that eat her offerings, there are venus flytraps seen throughout the area, "offerings" to her are mentioned a lot, it is possible to encounter a pitcher plant optional boss before the proper encounter with her, and even her name suggests the plant. While Venus is the boss of the chapter (through a sunflower creation of hers), she turns out to be a completely benevolent goddess who is only challenging Team Snakemouth to see if they are worthy of getting the second Artifact. She is also more like an orchid than a flytrap.
186** The first five chapters purposefully present Queen Elizant II in an eerie light to make it look like she's going to turn out to be the game's true main villain. Around the second time the Wasp King attacks the Ant Kingdom, it becomes evident that he really is the Big Bad, while more light is shed on Elizant II which shows that her intentions are much better than they were implied to be.
187* ''VideoGame/HearthstoneHeroesOfWarcraft'': In the FinalBoss for Tombs of Terror, [[BigBad Rafaam]] steals the [[MacGuffin Plague of Undeath]] and uses it to summon the four [[EldritchAbomination Old Gods]] to distract the player while he escapes. That seems like pretty obvious foreshadowing for his mysterious evil scheme, especially since his [[TheDragon Dragon]] Madame Lazul is a servant of the Old Gods. But it turns out that his plan was to use the plague to resurrect [[DraconicAbomination Galakrond]] instead, and the Old Gods didn't make a reappearance until a year later with no relation to Rafaam.
188[[/folder]]
189
190[[folder:Webcomics]]
191* ''Webcomic/MSPaintAdventures'' is ''built'' on this trope... (and [[{{Troperiffic}} most of the other ones]]). The overall plot is planned ahead of time, but the actual ''details'' of the story are mostly ad-libbed, making foreshadowing difficult. The author's solution? Foreshadow ''everything,'' and decide which ones were red herrings later, shortly before the reveal.
192* ''Webcomic/DiamondInTheRoughAladdin'', a prequel to the Disney film, throws in misleading hints to who the main characters might be, such as suggesting they might be the Sultan or Jafar. The real answer is [[WasOnceAMan much more surprising...]]
193[[/folder]]
194
195[[folder:Western Animation]]
196* The second season finale of ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'': After spending an entire season giving Zuko every reason to do a HeelFaceTurn, he makes the choice to stay loyal to his father instead. This was then DoubleSubverted because he ''does'' do a HeelFaceTurn later.
197* ''WesternAnimation/WinxClub'', season 3 (you decide if this was intentional or not): An episode has Stella saying, "I hope I don't have to save Chimera", of having to save someone from her own realm to earn her Enchantix. [[TemptingFate You know what that means, right?]] Well, wrong. When Chimera and her mom and her dad come under attack at a party later, Chimera's mom takes her daughter and escapes, leaving just Stella's father for Stella to save.
198* ExecutiveMeddling has an example of executives putting the Faux in Fauxshadow (the ''WesternAnimation/ExoSquad'' entry).
199* The SeriesFauxnale of ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'', "[[Recap/FuturamaS4E18TheDevilsHandsAreIdlePlaythings The Devil's Hands are Idle Playthings]]", has a scene where Fry makes a deal with the Robot Devil to replace his clumsy human hands with those of a "random" robot chosen by a giant Wheel of Fortune with the name of every robot featured in the series. The scene drops numerous blatant hints that the Robot Devil has rigged the wheel to stop at Bender's name... and when the wheel spins, it moves just past it and lands on "Robot Devil," to his utter shock.
200* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague Unlimited'':
201** There are hints early on that Batman might join forces with Project Cadmus. As it turns out, [[DebateAndSwitch Cadmus was more of an authoritarian power-grab than it first seemed]], so the foreshadowing comes to nothing: Batman stays in the League.
202** The last season seems to be building up to the resurrection of Brainiac, with ComicBook/LexLuthor bent on that singular goal. However, this is twisted in the second-to-last episode when Darkseid, who was killed with Brainiac in the second season episode of Justice League, is accidentally revived instead. The Luthor-Brainiac plot thread dies away in the last episode (although Darkseid's new appearance led to fan speculation that he had been fused with Brainiac, WordOfGod said otherwise).
203* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'':
204** Done intentionally and PlayedForLaughs in the first Christmas episode (sorry, first non-denominational holiday episode). It was the first episode in which Kenny doesn't die, despite being put in several life-threatening situations.
205** Played Straight in Season 20, which was plagued by other problems such as dropped characters and plot points. Lennart Bedrager, the apparent BigBad of the second half of the season, was hinted to not be what he seemed; for example, he dropped his Danish accent to reveal he was apparently American. So the fans speculated that he was actually one of the characters from the previous episodes that could be acting behind the scenes, such as J. J. Abrams, Hillary Clinton, or even a lifeless husk being controlled from the inside by the Memberberries. The answer? He was just some random guy who wanted to cause World War III for shits and giggles.
206* A long-running subplot in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' involved Apple Bloom, Sweetie Belle, and Scootaloo trying to find their cutie marks, symbols that represent their special talent. The season one episode "The Show Stoppers" drops hints as to what their talents are. Apple Bloom is shown to be a skilled designer, Sweetie Belle has an excellent singing voice, and Scootaloo is a talented dancer. A season four episode shows Apple Bloom's potion-making skills, Sweetie Belle's improving magic, and Scootaloo's mechanical prowess. And all along, Scootaloo's namesake scooter skills basically make her the pony version of Evel Knieval, performing insane stunts with ease and once getting enough speed to ''outrun a train''. Finally, in season ''five,'' the episode "Crusaders of the Lost Mark" has them gain their cutie marks when they realize that their real talent is helping other ponies figure out their special talents.
207* In ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDragonJakeLong'', Sara predicted the death of Haley's mentor Sun Park, but due to ExecutiveMeddling they had to rewrite "Homecoming" to remove the scene where Rose killed her.
208* In ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime,'' we see various versions of [[KidHero Finn]]--via {{Reincarnation}}, an AlternateTimeline and a YearInsideHourOutside lived-a-whole-different-life situation--who [[AnArmAndALeg lose one arm]] and get a [[ArtificialLimbs robotic replacement]]. Eventually, Finn ''does'' lose an arm...[[ResetButton and then gets it back a few episodes later]], through weird means in an episode that was already disliked for other reasons. Though they technically ''did'' follow through with (half) of their {{Foreshadowing}}, many fans cried foul, and eventually [[AuthorsSavingThrow Finn lost his arm again]], this time getting a robotic replacement. He even explained away his AngstWhatAngst by admitting that [[FandomNod this felt right somehow]].
209* ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'': The "Zodiac," hinted at at the end of the opening sequence, is built to be something relating to the BigBad. The fact that it has symbols that clearly represent some of the main characters (the pine tree on the hat Dipper gets at the end of the first episode, the shooting star on one of Mabel's sweaters, etc) and some that are more subtle had led to plenty of speculation throughout the series as to who the ten people involved would be. In the GrandFinale, these characters ''do'' gather as Ford explains that the Zodiac is the key to defeating Bill. But the whole process is interrupted by Stan and Ford arguing over the former's grammar long enough for Bill to arrive and trap everyone who isn't a Pines and destroy the drawing they needed. Bill is finished off by [[LaserGuidedAmnesia another method, and the Zodiac never actually plays a role in the show.]] The official "Journal 3" lampshades this with Soos theorizing that the Zodiac would grant the team superpowers.
210* ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'': A popular theory around the time that ''[[WesternAnimation/StevenUniverseFuture Future]]'' was airing was that Steven would either [[EyeScream lose an eye]] or somehow gain heterochromia, based on images throughout both the original and the epilogue series (the Cookie Cats, Steven's black eye at the end of Season 1, Lars' scar, a doll of Steven with different coloured buttons for eyes, and Bluebird drawing her gems on Steven's face, one of which is around his eye). However, while the fanbase was right about the monster seen in ''Future's'' intro turning out to be Steven himself, which was how they believed he would have one of his eyes affected, he looks the same as he did before after turning back, with no "corruption scars" or anything similar, and the series ends with his eyes looking just as they've always looked.
211* ''WesternAnimation/StretchArmstrongAndTheFlexFighters'': After Rook's secret is revealed, several characters including Rook himself insist that Kane is unaware of it. Along with Kane's visible displeasure with Rook, this makes it seem like he's going to leave Rook and join the Flex Fighters once he finds out the truth. Kane knew about Rook's double life all along and he proceeds to double-cross him, but he's also the villainous Number One, rather than an ally to the heroes.
212* ''WesternAnimation/SheRaAndThePrincessesOfPower'':
213** Early in the show, Light Hope shows Adora a selection of princess holograms, including several silhouettes of characters that we haven't met - and one that bore a notable similarity to Catra, fuelling a ''lot'' of fan speculation - accompanied by some stuff about uniting the princesses. Season 4 would later establish that only five of the princesses were important to Light Hope's plan (Mermista, Perfuma, Frosta, Glimmer and Scorpia), we never meet any of the unidentified outlines, and Catra never turns out to be a princess.
214** A lot of work was put into showing that Catra and Shadow Weaver weren't so different, with parallel dialogue choices, similarly cruel and controlling treatment of Adora, even some elements of costuming such as the asymmetrical sleeve in Catra's fourth-season outfit, hinting that it might become important to her arc. The graphic novel even had Adora outright call Catra "the new Shadow Weaver". In the fifth season, it's dropped entirely, Catra never deals with those similarities or even really realises they're there, and the closest thing it gets to a resolution is that the show just cuts off her asymmetrical sleeve and gets rid of the mask.
215** There are some hints that Glimmer's tiny wing-buds might end up as full wings similar to her mother's, most notably that a Glimmer toy was released with an element on the back that could have served as a mounting point for a set of wings. They even grow out early in season 4, as she bonds with the Moonstone fully...and then they disappear and are never seen again by the end of the scene.
216[[/folder]]

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