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3%% Examples have been alphabetized. Please place your example in the correct spot.
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6[[quoteright:350:[[Webcomic/{{Dregs}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dregsname.png]]]]
7[[caption-width-right:350:Guess that old title went down the drain.]]
8
9Sometimes a work has a different name [[WorkingTitle during production]] that ends up being different from the one it has once it's finally released. Sometimes, though, a work's title changes ''after'' it's been released.
10
11This is often to coincide with a re-release, but it can happen at any time and for a variety of reasons. Sometimes the title ended up [[RenamedToAvoidAssociation conflicting with a previously existing work]], sometimes the title ended up being too generic and not friendly to search engines, other times the new title is more indicative of what the work became, and other times still the creator simply didn't like the original name and opted to change it as soon as they could think of something better.
12[[index]]
13Sub-tropes include:
14* CensoredTitle: When a title has to be changed because it's considered "inappropriate" for its target audience.
15* MarketBasedTitle: When a work's title is changed to make it more appealing to foreign audiences.
16** CompletelyDifferentTitle: When said localized title has absolutely nothing to do with the original.
17** TheForeignSubtitle: When the work's title remains the same in foreign markets but is given a new subtitle.
18* NewSeasonNewName: When an ongoing work changes its name to represent its current arc.
19* OfficiallyShortenedTitle: When an ongoing work later cuts down a previously elaborate title.
20* {{Retronym}}: When a work's title is retroactively changed because it shares its name with something else.
21** FranchiseDrivenRetitling: When a work is retroactively given a subtitle to bring it in line with later installments.
22** TheOriginalSeries: When the original work in a franchise gets a subtitle identifying it as the original work.
23** Title1: The first installment of a franchise may retroactively receive a number if its sequels are numbered.[[/index]]
24
25SisterTrope to WorkingTitle: when a work has a different title during production, either because a title has not been finalized, or to help prevent [[ContentLeak leaks]].
26
27!!If your example fits one of the sub-tropes, please place it on the appropriate page and not here.
28----
29!!Examples:
30[[foldercontrol]]
31
32[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
33* ''Manga/DeathNoteSpecialChapter'' was renamed ''The A-Kira Story'' in the ''[[Franchise/DeathNote Death Note Short Stories]]'' collection, matching with the previous oneshot (and immediate predecessor) ''The C-Kira Story''. The [[Manga/DeathNotePilot pilot]] was also renamed ''The Taro Kagami Story'' to differentiate it from the manga it would inspire.
34* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' is a unique case, as many of its eight parts had different names on their publication, and changed in later releases:
35** ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventurePhantomBlood'': Published in 1986 under the name, ''Jonathan Joestar: His Youth''.
36** ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureBattleTendency'': On 1987, under the title ''Joseph Joestar: His Proud Lineage''.
37** ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders'': Originally titled as ''Jotaro Kujo: Heritage for the Future'' on 1989. This title wound up referenced in [[VideoGame/JojosBizarreAdventureHeritageForTheFuture the Capcom game.]]
38** ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable'': Published in 1992 as just ''Josuke Higashikata''.
39** ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureGoldenWind'': This part went through two: It began publication in 1995 as ''Giorno Giovanna: Golden Heritage'', and was later renamed as ''Vento Aureo''. When the 2019 anime came, the title ended up changed as Golden Wind, translating the Italian title to English.
40** ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean'': Beginning in 1999, this part had the least drastic change, as it was originally called ''Jolyne Cujoh: Stone Ocean'', and the final title just removed the protagonist's name from the subtitle. This was the last part with a name change, as ''Manga/SteelBallRun'' and ''Manga/JoJolion'' launched with their final titles.
41[[/folder]]
42
43[[folder:Asian Animation]]
44* ''Animation/FlowerAngel'': The English text in the show's logo reads ''Flower Fairy'' in Season 1 and ''Flower Angel'' from Season 2 onwards.
45* For its first eight seasons, ''Animation/HappyHeroes'' went by the Chinese title 开心宝贝 (pinyin "Kaixin Baobei", English translation "Happy Babies"). Starting from Season 9, it switched to being called 开心超人联盟 (pinyin "Kaixin Chaoren Lianmeng", English translation "Happy Superman Alliance"). The seasons prior to Season 9 retained their old name, though, and official English translations - for the most part - have stuck to the name ''Happy Friends'' for all the seasons.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Comic Books]]
49* ''ComicBook/AllStarComics'' was an AnthologyComic that shifted towards being a ComicBook/JusticeSocietyOfAmerica comic, before getting retitled ''All-Star Western'' and turned into a cowboy-themed anthology comic at issue #57 in 1951.
50* ''ComicBook/DarkCrisisOnInfiniteEarths'' was originally solicited as just ''ComicBook/DarkCrisis'', and the first three issues of the main series were printed under that title. During the 2022 San Diego Comic Con, Creator/DCComics announced the true name of the event, saying the old title was used to market the series in order to hide the return of the original multiverse.
51[[/folder]]
52
53[[folder:Fan Works]]
54* ''FanFic/{{LMS}}'': The {{rewrite}} of the first installment, ''The Rock Raiders Meet BIONICLE - Revised'', was later retitled to the more original-sounding ''Two Worlds''.
55* ''Fanfic/UniverseFalls'': The chapter, "Northwest Mansion Nightmare", was originally titled "Northwest Mansion Mystery", but was changed after the author fused said episode with the ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'' episode, "Nightmare Hospital".
56* ''Fanfic/ShatteredSkiesTheMorningLights'' was originally titled simply ''Shattered Skies''; it was given its subtitle with the release of Chapter 37, which marked the formation of the multi-universe MagicalGirl team and their adoption of the titular name.
57[[/folder]]
58
59[[folder:Film -- Animated]]
60* Disney's ''[[WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfIchabodAndMrToad The Wind in the Willows]]'' was reissued in 1978 as ''The Madcap Adventures of Mr. Toad''.
61* In 1990, ''WesternAnimation/TheBlackCauldron'' [[http://platypuscomix.com/hollywood/magiccauldron.html was theatrically re-released]] as ''Taran and the Magic Cauldron'' to try to get more ticket sales and hide the DarkerAndEdgier elements of the film that led to it [[BoxOfficeBomb bombing]] during its initial release. It didn't work, and when the film made its home video debut in 1998 (1997 outside America), the original title was reinstated.
62* ''WesternAnimation/TheGreatMouseDetective'' saw its title expanded for the 1992 theatrical re-release, to ''The Adventures of The Great Mouse Detective''. Home video releases from the 1992 VHS and Laserdisc, to the 2002 VHS and DVD, used the shorter name on the packaging, and the longer one in the opening credits. The remaster struck for prints from the 2010 DVD onwards reverted the title to the shorter version, by swapping the '92 credits back with the ones used at the 1986 premiere.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
66* ''Film/BabesInToyland1934'': The film was reissued in 1950 as ''March of the Wooden Soldiers'', with about 5 minutes cut. It's this version that's aired for decades in TV syndication and what most people are familiar with.
67* The ''Film/{{Birds of Prey|2020}}'' movie was originally titled ''Birds of Prey and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn'' to cash in on the popularity of Creator/MargotRobbie's portrayal of Harley. When the movie fizzled at the box office, critics pointed out that it was more of an ensemble film than focusing purely on Harley, and for home release, it was retitled ''Birds of Prey'' or ''Harley Quinn: Birds of Prey''.
68* ''Film/{{The Birth of a Nation|1915}}'' originally premiered in January 1915 as ''The Clansman'', after the Thomas Dixon novel it was based on. It was changed to its current title shortly before it premiered in New York a few months later.
69* ''Film/DangerDiva'' was renamed ''Devi Danger'' after its heroine for its updated rerelease, as the previous iteration was hampered by a toxic distributor.
70* ''Film/EdgeOfTomorrow'' had a lackluster performance in the box office, so Creator/WarnerBros attempted to rebrand it for the home video release by emphasizing the movie's TagLine over the actual title. ''Live. Die. Repeat.'' was plastered across the Blu-Ray cover in massive letters, while ''Edge of Tomorrow'' was shrunken and exiled to the bottom corner. Several digital retailers listed the film as ''Live Die Repeat: Edge of Tomorrow''.
71* ''Film/TheGreatSantini'' failed to attract audiences on initial release. Warner Bros. executives thought the title was to blame, as it suggested a circus story rather than the film's actual subject (a drama about a military family). They renamed it ''The Ace'' (after that title tested the best among other possibles, ''Sons and Heroes'' and ''Reaching Out'') but it didn't perform any better. The producer, Charles Pratt, raised enough money to rerelease the film in New York City under the original title, and that title seems to have stuck now.
72* ''Film/HowlingIIStirbaWerewolfBitch,'' released in 1985, was released on home video as ''Howling II: Your Sister is a Werewolf''.
73* After the smash critical and commercial success of the 1991 film adaptation of ''Literature/TheSilenceOfTheLambs'', the 1986 film adaptation of ''Literature/RedDragon'', initially released in theaters as ''Film/{{Manhunter}}'', was brought to cable under the title ''Red Dragon: The Pursuit of Hannibal Lecter''. This is in spite of the fact that "Lecktor" is already behind bars by the time the film begins and has only 8 minutes of screentime (in a two-hour film) across just three scenes; the actual killer being hunted is Francis "The Tooth Fairy" Dolarhyde, who fulfills a similar role as Jame "Buffalo Bill" Gumb in ''Lambs''.
74* ''Film/MissionImpossibleDeadReckoning'' used to be titled "Part One". Since the sequel will not be titled ''Dead Reckoning Part Two'' anymore, Creator/{{Paramount}} dropped "Part One" for the home video release.
75* ''Film/ANewHope'' was only given that name once ''Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack'' came out. Initially, the film was simply called ''Star Wars'' before that became the name of the series, rather than the name of the original film.
76* ''Film/SlapHerShesFrench'' was retitled ''She Gets What She Wants'' in U.S. markets.
77* The 1968 film ''Star!'', after flopping on its initial roadshow engagements, was recut and rereleased as ''Those Were the Happy Times'' the following year.
78* ''Film/InglouriousBasterds'' was initially titled "Inglourious Bastards" but was changed due to offending moviegoers. It was censored even further as advertisements for the movie only referred to it as Inglourious.
79* The Music/WillieNelson NonActorVehicle ''Honeysuckle Rose'' was re-released as ''On the Road Again'', after the soundtrack's BreakawayPopHit, though later reissues restored the original title.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:Literature]]
83* The Creator/AgathaChristie novel ''Literature/AndThenThereWereNone'' was originally titled ''Ten Little Niggers'' in the UK. The initial US edition used the now-current title, but subsequent paperback reprints from 1964 to 1986 used ''Ten Little Indians''. The original US title was adopted for the UK reprints starting in 1985 and is now the official title. The translations that used the original UK title are slowly but surely switching to less offensive titles; the most recent one (as of this writing) was the French version in 2020.
84* ''Literature/TheEnchantedFiles'': The first book was originally released in hardcover as ''Diary of a Mad Brownie''. When it was reprinted in paperback, its title was changed to ''Cursed''.
85* ''Literature/GamearthTrilogy'': Renamed to ''Hexworld''.
86* ''Literature/IWasASixthGradeAlien'': The books, originally released in 1999-2001, were reissued in 2020-2022, and six of them were given new titles in the process -- book 1 (''I Was a Sixth Grade Alien'') had its title shortened to ''Sixth Grade Alien'', book 2 (''The Attack of the Two-Inch Teacher'') became ''I Shrank My Teacher'', book 3 (''I Lost My Grandfather's Brain'') became ''Missing -- One Brain!'', book 4 (''Peanut Butter Lover Boy'') became ''Lunch Swap Disaster'', book 6 (''Don't Fry My Veeblax!'') became ''Class Pet Catastrophe'', and book 11 (''There's an Alien in My Underwear'') became ''Aliens, Underwear, and Monsters''.
87* ''The Scorpio Ghosts and the Black Hole Gang'', by Kathy Kennedy Tapp, was released in hardcover in 1987. When it was reissued as a paperback in 1988, it was retitled ''The Ghostmobile''.
88* ''Literature/Starforce2012'': Series name changed to "Starcrime" and contents altered.
89* ''Literature/WhereAreTheyNowMysteries'': Justified. The original book was released in hardcover by one publishing company under the title ''Without Mercy'', but when author Toni L. P. Kelner switched publishers to Berkley Prime Crime for the paperback reprint and sequels, they'd recently published a different book under that name and, to avoid confusion, retitled Kelner's book to ''Curse of the Kissing Cousins''.
90[[/folder]]
91
92[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
93* ''Series/TheHoganFamily'' was originally a vehicle for Creator/ValerieHarper titled ''Valerie''. After Harper left the show, it became ''Valerie's Family''. When Harper threatened legal action, they changed it again to ''The Hogan Family''. In syndication, the entire series was released under this title.
94* British {{Edutainment}} show ''Series/PoliceCameraAction'' was called ''Police Stop!'' in its first episode which aired 7 September 1994 (although EditedForSyndication versions retroactively call it ''Police Camera Action!'' and add the episode title "Danger! Drivers Ahead"), then from 20 December 1994, it became ''Police Camera Action!''. This was partially because the show wanted to be more than just an adaptation of ''Series/PoliceStop'' with presenter links (the original first episode of this show now known as Police Camera Action ''had'' Police Stop! producer Bill Rudgard involved), and [[ScrewedByTheLawyers due to legal reasons]] - the original ''Police Stop!'' ClipShow was to continue on in 1995 as its own separate series.
95* The ''Franchise/StarTrek'' prequel series ''Enterprise'' officially became ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'' at the start of its third season.
96* Creator/StevenWeber starred on a sitcom in 2000 titled ''[[Series/Cursed2000 Cursed]]'' about a man who ends up cursed after a date gone wrong. Shortly into the show's run, the curse angle was dropped and the show was renamed ''The Weber Show''.
97[[/folder]]
98
99[[folder:Music]]
100* The 77s wanted to name their sixth album ''Pray Naked'', but their record label feared potential controversy and released it (in 1992) under the title ''The Seventy Sevens'' instead. (Confusingly, this made it the band's ''second'' SelfTitledAlbum.) Unhappy but undeterred, the band just continued referring to the album by its working title and let all their fans know what it was supposed to be named. At the time, if any fans brought a copy of the album to be autographed, the band members would always "correct" the title before signing the cover. Eventually, the 77s obtained the full rights to their back catalogue, so they took the opportunity to made their preferred title for that album the official one, rereleasing it in 2017 as ''Pray Naked''.
101* When Creator/RCARecords reissued Music/DavidBowie's 1969 SelfTitledAlbum in 1972 off the back of ''Music/TheRiseAndFallOfZiggyStardustAndTheSpidersFromMars''[='=] smash UK success, it was retitled ''Music/SpaceOddity'' after its opening track and already-iconic lead single; the name remained in place until it was reverted back to being self-titled in 2009, with Creator/ParlophoneRecords later changing the name in 2015 to ''David Bowie (a.k.a. Space Oddity)''.
102* In 2001, Music/{{Bush}} were planning the release of their album ''Golden State'' and its lead single "Speed Kills". Then [[UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror 9[=/=]11]] happened and they changed the song's title to "The People That We Love".
103* Canadian FolkMusic[=/=]CountryMusic icon Music/StompinTomConnors released his debut album ''The Northlands' Own Tom Connors'' in 1967. A few years later the album was reissued on a different label, but apparently someone misheard the album's original title and mistakenly called it ''Northlands Zone''.
104* Music/ChrisCornell's ''Euphoria Morning'' was later reissued as ''Euphoria Mo'''u'''rning'' -- the latter was his originally intended title, but he was convinced to alter it because "mourning" and "morning" are homonyms, and listeners who heard the album title mentioned on the radio would be more likely to assume it was "morning". He'd come to regret this decision, so when the idea of a reissue came up, he belatedly had the title changed.
105* Tom Dissevelt and Kid Baltan released what's probably [[UrExample the first album]] of SynthPop in 1962 under the title ''Electronic Music: A New Concept of Music Created by Sonic Vibrations'' (and the two composers were just credited as "The Electrosonics"). The next year, it was rereleased as ''The Fascinating World of Electronic Music'' (and this time Baltan and Dissevelt were credited individually). In 1968 it was re-released on a new record label as ''Song of the Second Moon: The Sonic Vibrations of Tom Dissevelt & Kid Baltan''--and this time, six of the eight songs were retitled as well. "Drifting" was renamed "Moon Maid", "Mechanical Motions" became "The Raymakers" and so on. ''Song of the Second Moon'' seems to have become the ''de facto'' title, as most recent reissues have used it.
106* Funkadelic had his happen twice with a album of theirs - despite being credited to Funkadelic, the album had [[TheBandMinusTheFace no input]] from Music/GeorgeClinton and was a product of founding members Calvin Simon, Clarence Haskins and Grady Thomas - because of that, when the album was first released in 1980 (in Germany and Japan), the album was titled ''42,9%'' [[labelnote:*]]Because the members made up 3/7ths of the original group[[/labelnote]]. Then, when it was time for the album to be released in the United States the following year, it was renamed ''Connections And Disconnections''. And then, years later, the album was reissued again under a different title: ''Who's A Funkadelic?''. This also applied to one individual track in the album, with the track "Funk-A-Disco" being renamed "Come Back" on the later issues.
107* Music/PeterGabriel's first four albums were all self-titled, with the idea of them being treated like different issues of a magazine. Because of how confusing this got, [[FanNickname fans started referring to the first three]] as ''Music/{{Car}}'', ''Music/{{Scratch}}'', and ''Music/{{Melt}}'' after their cover art, while the fourth was retitled ''Music/{{Security}}'' in the United States and Canada thanks to ExecutiveMeddling at the behest of Gabriel's US distributor, Creator/GeffenRecords. When these same four albums were reissued in 2002 as part of a remastering campaign for Gabriel's full backlog to promote his then-new album ''Up'', they were respectively retitled ''1'', ''2'', ''3'', and ''4'' (though the ''Security'' title remained in place in the US & Canada until 2010). The fan nicknames for the first three would eventually become AscendedFanon with the half-speed vinyl reissues in 2015, which officially referred to the first three albums in associated written material by their colloquial monikers (the fourth reverted back to the American ''Security'' title in the same campaign).
108* Music/{{Genesis|Band}}: Jonathan King gave their first album, ''Music/FromGenesisToRevelation'', many retitles over the years as he constantly reissued it. These include ''In the Beginning'', ''The Silent Sun'', ''Where the Sour Turns to Sweet'', ''The Original Album'', ''Into Wonderland'', and generic titles taken from reissue series like ''Rock Roots'' and ''Gigantes del Pop''. Some releases even make the record a SelfTitledAlbum.
109* Music/VinceGuaraldi's third album was ''Jazz Impressions of Black Orpheus'', featuring the song "Cast Your Fate to the Wind" which became Guaraldi's breakthrough hit single. Sometime after the song caught on, the label [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jazz_Impressions_of_Black_Orpheus.jpeg redesigned the album cover]] to add the blurb, "Featuring: Cast Your Fate to the Wind". Even later, they [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:OrpheusCastyourfate.jpg outright swapped the position of the blurb and the actual album title,]] leading a lot of people to refer to the album as ''Cast Your Fate to the Wind'' even though it wasn't ever officially retitled.
110* In the wake of 9/11, Music/JimmyEatWorld's album ''Bleed American'', released in July 2001, was reissued as a SelfTitledAlbum in December of that year, with the title track retitled "Salt Sweat Sugar" (after a lyric from the chorus). A later reissue would re-instate the original title.
111* An interesting case can be found with Music/{{Kraftwerk}}'s ''Electric Café''. When the album was in production, it was given the WorkingTitle ''Techno Pop'', and early ads for it used this name; however, upon release in 1986, it was retitled to ''Electric Café'' for unspecified reasons. Later, when the album was re-released as part of the band's 2009 remastering campaign, its title was reverted back to ''Music/TechnoPop'', essentially both inverting this trope and playing it straight simultaneously.
112* Music/{{Kyuss}}' "Flip the Phase" originally appeared as a B-side on their "One Inch Man" single in 1995. It was inexplicably renamed "Fatso Forgotso Phase II" (albeit with the original title next to it in smaller print and [[VisualPun flipped vertically]]) when it appeared on the ''Kyuss[=/=]Music/QueensOfTheStoneAge'' split EP in late 1997, before reverting to its original title on the ''Muchas Gracias'' compilation in 2000.
113* The Music/{{Melvins}}' 1992 album ''Lysol'' had this happen twice. The initial release was recalled at the last minute due to trademark infringement involving the cleaning product. Early pressings simply taped or inked over the name, which was easily removed; later pressings removed the name entirely, effectively rendering it a SelfTitledAlbum. When the album was reissued on LP in 2015 alongside the EP ''Eggnog'', it was changed again to the similar-sounding ''Lice-All''.
114* Music/FrankOcean: ''Blond'' was retitled ''Blonde'' (note the "e") for its double-LP reissue in 2022.
115* Music/PizzicatoFive put out their third album ''On Her Majesty's Request'' in 1989. When they re-released it in 1995, the title was tweaked slightly to '''''By''''' ''Her Majesty's Request''. (Since two songs had to be dropped from this version of the album, it's likely the name change was meant as a sign to buyers that the tracklist had changed.) This stuck around until it was issued on vinyl for the first time in 2018, and this edition retitled ''On Her Majesty's Request -Analogue Edition-''.
116* Music/{{Queen|Band}}: The hidden thirteenth track at the end of ''Music/MadeInHeaven'' originally went without a name; it was officially retitled " '13' " for the 2015 double-LP reissue (mostly out of necessity, since it takes up the entire fourth side).
117* Music/{{Starflyer 59}}'s first two albums (released 1994 and 1995 respectively) were officially both [[SelfTitledAlbum self-titled]] at the time, though the fandom was quick to distinguish them by the [[FanNickname nicknames]] ''Silver'' and ''Gold'', based on their [[MinimalisticCoverArt monochromatic covers]]. The band and record label also used those nicknames unofficially--then [[AscendedFanon made them official]] when they rereleased both albums (in remastered and expanded form) as ''Silver [Extended Edition]'' and ''Gold [Extended Edition]'' in 2005.
118* Kay Starr had an album in 1950 called ''Songs for Stags'', which was quickly renamed to ''Songs by Kay Starr'' due to complaints from her manager that the "stag" term (as in "stag parties") implied the songs were suggestive (a comment about "howls from the back room" in the liner notes didn't help; that line was cut when the title changed), even though the label insisted the title merely referred to songs about men.
119* The Toasters' 1996 album was released in the US as ''Hard Band for Dead'' but [[MarketBasedTitle was put out in Europe]] as ''2 Tone Army''. But since 2011, American rereleases have switched over to ''2 Tone Army'', apparently deciding the latter is a much stronger title (after all, the title track is probably their SignatureSong).
120* Music/{{Yello}}:
121** The single version of "Bostich" was retitled "Bostich (N'est-ce Pas)" when it was included as a bonus track on the 2005 remaster of ''Solid Pleasure''.
122** ''Essential Yello'', the band's first GreatestHitsAlbum, was retitled ''Essential Christmas: The Singles Collection'' when it was re-released in 1995 to promote ''Film/TheSantaClause1''. The original title, however, is still present on the jewel case inlays.
123* When Music/FrankZappa reissued ''Music/CruisingWithRubenAndTheJets'' on CD, he re-recorded many of the instrumental parts, which drew fan outcry for clashing with the {{Retraux}} DooWop sound of the original LP. Zappa Records relented and released the original version of the album on CD in 2010--but to avoid confusion with the remixed version, which was still in print, the original was retitled ''Greasy Love Songs''. ([[{{Irony}} So the original version got retitled, and the remixed version got the original title...]])
124[[/folder]]
125
126[[folder:New Media]]
127* Website/ThisVeryWiki is no stranger to the phenomenon. See Administrivia/RenamedTropes for the long list of trope articles that got retitled after their launch, along with the reasons why.
128[[/folder]]
129
130[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
131* Dana Simpson launched the webcomic ''Heavenly Nostrils'' in 2012. In January 2015, while working towards a newspaper syndication deal, Simpson renamed the comic ''ComicStrip/PhoebeAndHerUnicorn'', so that was its title when it launched in newspapers in March that year.
132* ''ComicStrip/TheFamilyCircus'' was originally called ''The Family Circle'' when it debuted (referring to the circular panel border), but was forced to change its name few months later due to objections from a magazine of the same circle.
133* ''ComicStrip/RobotmanAndMonty'' began as simply ''Robotman'' and was about the title character who, in part, sought to find his creator. Once said creator, Monty, was found, he became a regular and his name was added to the title. Over time, Monty displaced Robotman as the real star of the strip, leading to Robotman being written out permanently, and the strip becoming just ''Monty''.
134[[/folder]]
135
136[[folder:Theatre]]
137* The one-act musical ''The Mad Ones'' was originally known as ''The Unauthorized Autobiography of Samantha Brown''. The title was changed to be [[CompleteTheQuoteTitle a quote]] from the main character's [[Literature/OnTheRoad favorite novel]], and it applies to both her and her best friend, whose death [[PlotTriggeringDeath kickstarts the plot]].
138[[/folder]]
139
140[[folder:Toys]]
141* The ''Toys/LEGOStudios'' parody of ''Film/JurassicPark'' is titled ''Fetch T-Rex'' on the Steven Spielberg [=MovieMaker=] Set's software. However, its title was changed to ''Jurassic Bark'' on the LEGO website.
142[[/folder]]
143
144[[folder:Video Games]]
145* ''7 Grand Steps: What Ancients Begat'' was originally ''Grand Steps, Step 1: What Ancients Begat''. It was renamed when when it was decided to not develop the following installments.
146* ''Block In The Lock'' was originally called ''B.i.t.Lock''. The developers changed it because, according the developer, the previous name "isn't search-friendly, can be tedious to type because of the dots in the name and sometimes even confuses people".
147* ''VideoGame/CallersBane'' was originally titled "''Scrolls''" and only changed its title in June 2018, when the game relaunched unexpectedly after Mojang had announced it was ending development in June 2015.
148* The ''VideoGame/DragonQuest'' series was originally called ''Dragon Warrior'' [[MarketBasedTitle in the US]] due to a competing trademark from [[TabletopGame/DragonQuest a tabletop game]]. Once the legal issues were eventually cleared up, the series adopted its Japanese title worldwide and all remakes and rereleases are now under the ''Quest'' branding (with each main-series game other than the first gaining an additional subtitle on top of that).
149* ''VideoGame/FallenLondon'' was originally titled "Echo Bazaar". Developer Creator/FailbetterGames decided to change the name to coincide with making social network integration optional.
150* Zombie-themed MMO-turned BattleRoyaleGame ''[=H1Z1=]'' had ''several'' retitles. Initially releasing on Steam Early Access as ''[=H1Z1=]'' in 2015, the game was split into two separate games in 2016 with different development groups: ''[=H1Z1=]: Just Survive'' (based around the MMO and survival elements), later just named ''Just Survive'', and ''[=H1Z1=]: King of the Kill'' (based around the battle royale). ''Just Survive'' was [[DefunctOnlineVideoGames shut down in 2018]], and around the time, ''[=H1Z1=]: King of the Kill'' started being simply referred to ''[=H1Z1=]'' again by official media. When development of ''[=H1Z1=]'' was briefly passed on from Creator/DaybreakGameCompany to [=NantG=] Mobile in 2019, the game was retitled again to ''Z1 Battle Royale'', which remained even after development was swiftly returned back to Daybreak within ''one month''.
151* ''VideoGame/{{KGB}}'' was retitled "''Conspiяacy: Starring Creator/DonaldSutherland''" when it was re-released on CD, with a bunch of new content featuring Sutherland.
152* ''VideoGame/QuestForGloryI'' used to be ''Hero's Quest: So You Want to Be a Hero''. However, since Creator/MiltonBradley already had a board game called ''TabletopGame/HeroQuest'', revisions of the game starting from v.1.102 and all future games in the ''VideoGame/QuestForGlory'' series stuck to the new title.
153* ''VideoGame/NosekaTheGoldProject'' was originally titled '''Noreya''': ''The Gold Project'', but was temporarily delisted from Platform/{{Steam}} and later brought bought back under the new name after trademark issues with the name Noreya.
154* ''[[VideoGame/Oasis2005 Oasis]]'' was renamed ''Defense of the Oasis'' in its Steam release to be more easily searchable.
155* ''VideoGame/SpookysJumpScareMansion'' was originally called ''Spooky's House of Jump Scares'' but were forced to change it when German mobile game developer Spooky House Studios wanted to trademark "Spooky House" and sent them a cease-and-desist order. They were so unamused by it that they changed the logo by just [[ClumsyCopyrightCensorship covering parts of the titles in tape and writing the new name in them.]]
156* ''Holy Invasion of Privacy, Badman! What Did I Do to Deserve This?'' was renamed to ''VideoGame/WhatDidIDoToDeserveThisMyLord'' following legal threats from the owners of the ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'' IP.
157* The Platform/SegaSaturn RPG ''Mystaria'' was renamed to ''Blazing Heroes'' in later printings due to the original title being too close to [[TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons Mystara]].
158* ''VideoGame/ShovelKnight'' was eventually renamed ''Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove'' as new expansions got released. The original game got a ''Shovel of Hope'' subtitle.
159* The 2011 XBLA game ''Trenched'' was renamed to ''VideoGame/IronBrigade'' in all territories a few months after its American release due to a trademark disspute preventing the original title from being used in Europe.
160* The 1995 Platform/PlayStation game ''ESPN Extreme Games'' was renamed ''1Xtreme'' when rereleased as a Greatest Hits title, both because the ESPN license had expired and to make the connection to its sequel, ''2Xtreme'', more obvious.
161* Both ''VideoGame/WorldOfTanks'' and ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarships'' combine this with MarketBasedTitle. In 2022 Wargaming withdrew from CIS (post-Soviet Union states) market, and gave Lesta Studio (Russian co-developer of ''World of Warships'') the right to operate its games in said market. Both games were named in English [[ForeignLanguageTitle even in their native Belarus and Russia]], but Lesta translated them into Russian ''Mir Tankov'' and ''Mir Korabley'' (the latter meaning just ''World of Ships'').
162* ''VideoGame/YourOnlyMoveIsHustle'' was orignally released as just ''Yomi Hustle'', but legal issues related to the use of "Yomi" in the title got the name changed. The OfficiallyShortenedTitle is still ''[[FunWithAcronyms YOMI]] Hustle'', however, preserving the original title in a way.
163[[/folder]]
164
165[[folder:Visual Novels]]
166* ''VisualNovel/AstoriaFatesKiss'' was originally titled ''Labyrinths of Astoria''. It was changed to its current title in October 2015, upon the completion of the Season 1 story release schedule.
167* ''VisualNovel/TheConfinesOfTheCrown'' was originally titled ''The Royal Trap'' as a {{double meaning|Title}} of the trap of royal politics and the GildedCage that royals live in. An unintended meaning arose from [[spoiler:the princess having been RaisedAsTheOppositeGender]], and the title was changed to avoid that unfortunate meaning.
168[[/folder]]
169
170[[folder:Web Animation]]
171* ''WebAnimation/WeeblAndBob'' released a DVD and several Creator/{{MTV}}-exclusive episodes as ''Wobbl & Bob'' with the title character also renamed, due to an existing trademark on "Weebles" toys.
172[[/folder]]
173
174[[folder:Webcomics]]
175* The webcomic ''Webcomic/{{Dregs}}'' was retitled ''Drainers'' when it was published by Creator/CloudscapeComics, likely to avoid issues with the unrelated comic ''ComicBook/TheDregs'', published by Creator/BlackMaskStudios around the same time.
176* Creator/KrisStraub's sci-fi webcomic was initially named ''Starshift Crisis''. When he realized this could lead to a trademark problem (with the video game ''[[VideoGame/StarshiftTheZaranLegacy Starshift: The Zaran Legacy]]''), he renamed it ''Star'''slip''' Crisis''--and even changed every in-comic mention of "starshift" to "starslip", using alternate universes to justify this OrwellianRetcon. Later, the story arc "The End of the End" resulted in another huge CosmicRetcon and an ArtShift with it, so the title was changed again to just ''Webcomic/{{Starslip}}''.
177* Day 12 of ''Webcomic/SWAPEnsemble'' was originally titled "Class v. Jazz Round" as a [[CrossReferencedTitles cross-reference]] to Day 2. A year and a half after it concluded, it was retitled "Round Robin Reading" to be catchier.
178* The initial pictures for ''Webcomic/TawawaOnMonday'' had the much longer title ''I Offer Tawawa to Corporate Wage Slaves on Monday Morning''.
179* Creator/AndrewHussie's webcomic ''ComicBook/{{Whistles}}'' was initially titled ''The Starlight Calliope'' when it was uploaded to Team Special Olympics. After scoring a publishing deal with Creator/SlaveLaborGraphics, it was rechristened to its current name, although a collected volume made the original title its subtitle.
180[[/folder]]
181
182[[folder:Web Original]]
183* ''Website/NobodyHere'' originally launched in 1998 under the title ''Berichten van Jogchem'' (''Messages from Jogchem'') before changing to its current name and domain in 2000.
184[[/folder]]
185
186[[folder:Web Video]]
187* The web series ''Series/StargateOrigins'' was retitled ''Stargate Origins: Catherine'' when it was re-released as a CompilationMovie for purchase. It was expected that this meant there would be more "Origins" installments in the future, but the lackluster reception to the original meant that they [[StillbornFranchise never came to pass]].
188[[/folder]]
189
190[[folder:Western Animation]]
191* WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts: The 1949 short ''Toy Tinkers'' was renamed ''Christmas Capers'' when it was released for 16mm non-theatrical exhibition in 1961.
192* ''WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace'' was originally released as ''Donald Duck in Nutziland'', but changed its title to reflect the popularity of the featured song of the same name.
193* ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'': The season two episode, "Northwest Mansion Mystery", was originally called "Northwest Mansion Noir" in promos. Some places still list it with the original title.
194* When Random House released ''WesternAnimation/HalloweenIsGrinchNight'' on VHS in 1992, it was given the title [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56nDU1_qA8E It's Grinch Night!]]. When Universal released the special on DVD in 2003 (as a bonus with ''Dr. Seuss on the Loose''), the original title was restored.
195* ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'':
196** To comply with TV censorship guidelines during the 1970s, the shorts ''Curtain Razor'' and ''Prince Violent'' were renamed ''Show Stoppers'' and ''Prince Varmint'', respectively, once they hit airwaves. What's odd is that ''Curtain Razor'' has its normal title back while ''Prince Violent'' doesn't.
197** ''WesternAnimation/WabbitALooneyTunesProduction'' was renamed ''New Looney Tunes'' starting from season 2, to embrace how the series stopped having Bugs Bunny as the only main character. In some countries, [[MarketBasedTitle the new title was retroactively given to season 1 in reruns]].
198* ''Polly and the Zhu Zhu Pets'' was renamed ''WesternAnimation/TheZhuZhus'' beginning with the 8th episode and had the protagonist renamed to Frankie, likely to avoid confusion with ''Polly Pocket''.
199* ''WesternAnimation/TangledTheSeries'' was retitled ''Rapunzel's Tangled Adventure'' in season 2.
200[[/folder]]

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