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6->''"Do the same thing as last time. Everyone's happy."''
7-->-- '''Deputy Chief Hardy''', ''Film/TwentyTwoJumpStreet''
8
9So, a sequel to your favorite work has just come out. When you go see, watch, read or play it, you notice that [[ItsBeenDone the plot]] [[RecycledScript is strangely similar to the first one.]]
10
11You've just encountered the Same Plot Sequel. It may feel like a traditional {{Remake}}, except it's still in the same canon as the original work, and [[SerialNumbersFiledOff has only a few minor details tweaked]]. Oftentimes this is done because [[PanderingToTheBase studios wish to appeal]] [[NostalgiaFilter to nostalgic fans]], or because [[LikeYouWouldReallyDoIt they're too afraid to actually hit the reboot button]], or that [[PopCulturalOsmosis the original is so iconic or omnipresent]] [[TheyChangedItNowItSucks that a remake would hurt the franchise as a whole]], or just because [[MoneyDearBoy they want to make a quick buck]]. [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools Note that this is not exclusively good or bad.]] VideoGames in particular can get away with variations on the same basic plot due to focusing on gameplay. It can also be used to recontextualise the original plot, such as with [[RecycledInSpace a change in setting]] or [[EmotionalTorque a switch from a dramatic tone to a parody]].
12
13See also SoftReboot, when the new entry straddles the line between "sequel" and "remake". May be the result of a SequelReset. If it's not, and the main character is the same, it probably incorporates AesopAmnesia. Contrast with SpiritualSuccessor and InNameOnly. Compare MissionPackSequel.
14
15----
16!!Examples:
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18[[foldercontrol]]
19
20[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
21* ''Anime/LoveLiveSunshine'' for the first eight episodes is essentially a beat-for-beat retelling of ''Anime/LoveLive'' with a different setting and [[{{Expy}} expies]] of µ's, the only real major difference being the [[TwoLinesNoWaiting presence of a B-plot.]] [[spoiler:However, a WhamEpisode 2/3rds of the way into the first season [[SubvertedTrope drastically changes things]] and begins to explore the existence of Aqours as not a copycat of µ's, but as a ''successor'' of µ's, playing into the CentralTheme of defying expectations and finding your own path.]]
22[[/folder]]
23
24[[folder:Film -- Animated]]
25* This is common for many Creator/DisneytoonStudios sequels:
26** ''WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeastTheEnchantedChristmas'' is technically a {{midquel}}; it expands on the events that happened during the song "Something There" in the original ''WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast''. Ultimately it tells exactly the same story: Belle is captured by the Beast, and they eventually soften up to each other and fall in love.
27** ''WesternAnimation/TheJungleBook2'', the sequel to ''WesternAnimation/TheJungleBook1967'', still revolves around the dilemma whether Mowgli belongs to the jungle or the man-village, and Baloo still wants him to live in the jungle with him, driving a plot where he brings Mowgli out of the man-village. Meanwhile, Shere Khan still pursues Mowgli to kill him, the difference being that not only does he fully know of Mowgli (he originally only learned about him through eavesdropping on Bagheera and Hathi), he attacks the man-village to find him.
28** ''WesternAnimation/LadyAndTheTrampIIScampsAdventure'' has a street-smart dog showing a house pet how to be a wild dog and falling in love over a plate of spaghetti, and running afoul of a dogcatcher only to realize they belong indoors with their family. The difference is this time the male (Scamp) is the house pet and the girl (Angel) is wild. Angel also has more desire to be domesticated than Tramp initially did in the first story, and she chews Scamp out for throwing away what he had, whereas Lady scolded Tramp in the first movie for getting her in trouble and taken to the pound.
29** In ''WesternAnimation/TheLittleMermaidIIReturnToTheSea'', Ariel's daughter Melody goes through pretty much the same plot as her mother in ''WesternAnimation/{{The Little Mermaid|1989}}'', only with the land and the sea inverted this time: teenage girl wants to live in the other element, overprotective parent stops her from doing so, she rebels and makes a deal with a power-hungry sea witch.
30** ''WesternAnimation/ReturnToNeverLand'' is a sequel to ''WesternAnimation/PeterPan'', and uses many of the same plot elements: a child (this time only one, Wendy's daughter, instead of three) ends up in Never Land (instead of willingly leaving the house like before, Captain Hook kidnaps her and takes her there), teams up with Peter Pan and gets pursued by Hook. Hook is still pursued by a hungry beast this time, except for some reason it's an octopus rather than a crocodile.
31* ''WesternAnimation/FindingDory'' has many of the same story beats as ''WesternAnimation/FindingNemo''. In both films the title character gets captured and put in an aquarium (a dentist's aquarium tank in the original, a public aquarium in the sequel), while two other characters (one being Marlin) try to find them. There's an opening flashback, a school field trip where things go wrong, a scene set on a shipwreck, a glow-in-the-dark predator (an anglerfish in the original and a giant squid in the sequel), some predators (sharks in the original, sea lions in the sequel) who are friendly to the protagonists, a goofy bird, a gruff character who tries repeatedly to escape the aquarium, a reunion with lost parents, and a climax in which dozens of fish perform an unlikely escape.
32* ''WesternAnimation/Incredibles2'' also has many of the same story beats as the original ''WesternAnimation/TheIncredibles1''. The movie begins with a failed attempt to capture a supervillain robbing a bank, which causes collateral damage that results in the public hating Supers again, one of the Parr parents is given the opportunity to relive their glory days as a superhero by an enigmatic tech company while the other parent stays at home raising the kids. [[spoiler:The benefactor, or in this case, his sister, turns out to be evil and the whole thing is a scheme to discredit superheroes, due a personal grudge from an incident in her past that she blames on all Supers. The movie's climax involves the Incredibles and Frozone stopping a giant machine from destroying the city, which elevates Public opinion of Supers again, and then ends on the Parr family [[AndTheAdventureContinues responding to another crime in progress]]]].
33* ''WesternAnimation/Sing2'' is largely ''WesternAnimation/{{Sing}}'' in a new setting. Buster wants to put on a spectacular show and engages in lies and illegal activities to make it happen. There's a humorous audition scene, then the individual character arcs kick in: Rosita, aided by Gunther, faces a crisis of confidence from mother duties / fear of heights, Johnny needs to learn a new skill (piano/dancing) while suffering under an overbearing authority figure (Big Papa/Klaus), Meena must overcome her crippling shyness from stage fright / a crush, someone (Ash/Clay) is profoundly shaken by the cheating/death of a loved one, a selfish jerk (Mike/Porsha) causes a disaster that wrecks the show and nearly gets people killed, a reclusive retired star (Nana/Clay) comes in at the last minute to save the show after the team resort to criminal trespassing and more illegal activities to perform it, and an antagonist (Judith/Jimmy) tries to stand in their way at every turn. But the show is a smash hit and all is forgiven.
34[[/folder]]
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36[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
37* ''Film/BillAndTedFaceTheMusic'' reuses plot elements from ''Film/BillAndTedsExcellentAdventure'' (Billie and Thea's subplot uses the same premise of using time travel to gather historical figures for a specific purpose) and ''Film/BillAndTedsBogusJourney'' (a robot from the future travels back in time on a mission to kill Bill and Ted, sending them to the afterlife where they meet Death).
38* ''Franchise/TheChroniclesOfRiddick'' creators David Twohy and Creator/VinDiesel expressed in interviews that they specifically wanted to avoid this when they made ''Film/TheChroniclesOfRiddick'' by not simply doing a remake of ''Film/PitchBlack'' only with bigger and meaner monsters. However, the sequel was then criticized for veering ''[[OutOfGenreExperience too far]]'' away from its premise by placing Riddick, a knife-happy VillainProtagonist in a SciFiHorror--into a ''Star Wars''-esque ScienceFantasy space epic as the [[TheChosenOne last hope]] of saving the universe from the thrall of an evil empire. The next movie, simply titled ''Film/{{Riddick}}'', then played this straight. Once again Riddick is stranded on an uninhabited planet before nightfall arrives and the whole planet is swarmed with hostile aliens, requiring the humans to retrieve energy batteries to power a ship and escape.
39* ''Film/TheCuttingEdge'' has three direct-to-video sequels. Each of those repeats the same basic formula: a professional ice skater needs a partner, who turns out to be someone from a different, less artistic sport (hockey player, rollerblader, hockey player, speed-skater). They become not only skating partners but also fall for one another. But there will usually be a RomanticFalseLead or miscommunication to add some drama, only for there to be declarations of love right before (or even during) the competition. Also, in two of the four cases, the romance doesn't last to the sequel. Only the couple from the original movie stays together (even if [[TheOtherDarrin played by different actors]]), while their daughter's marriage doesn't last, and the daughter's student's romance lasts only as long as her partner's skating career. We don't know anything about her second romance, since there wasn't a fifth movie. In every movie but one, the professional skater is female, while the amateur is male.
40* ''Film/EscapeFromLA'' is essentially a remake of ''Film/EscapeFromNewYork'' almost plot point for plot point. Snake is captured and then enlisted by the dystopian U.S. authorities to break into a former city that is now a huge prison island (Manhattan and Los Angeles, respectively) to retrieve an important person and prevent a war. Even characters are remarkably similar: Cuervo Jones is The Duke, Maps to the Stars Eddie is Cabbie, etc.
41* ''Film/FrightNight2NewBlood'' is an odd case where it's ''officially'' a sequel to [[Film/FrightNight2011 the 2011 movie]] (which was already a remake to [[Film/FrightNight1985 the 1985 movie]]), but it's really just the same plot *again*, character names and all. Teenage boy suspects that his neighbor is a vampire, recruits a horror TV star to reluctantly help him, [[spoiler:his best friend and girlfriend get turned]], final battle where the vampire is killed by sunlight. The only real difference is that [[GenderFlip the vampire is a woman this time around]] and is implied to be a historical figure like Dracula, namely UsefulNotes/ElizabethBathory. Which makes you wonder why they didn't just make it a DivorcedInstallment, since a bunch of rag-tag heroes fighting a vampirized Bathory has enough potential by itself.
42* Much of what made ''Film/GhostbustersII'' unpopular on release was that it was, for the most part, just the original ''Film/{{Ghostbusters|1984}}'' again. Both stories involve an ancient entity who possesses someone close to Dana Barret so that they can use her to free themselves, the Ghostbusters butting heads with the mayor and a sleazy official who hates them, and the climax has them facing off against the entity in a big gothic building, along with a giant symbol coming to life and rampaging across New York. What made it particularly evident was that a lot of plot points from the first film had to be [[SequelReset reset]] to make the sequel work: ghosts are claimed to be hoaxes, despite them having spent half the last film on the warpath, to justify the Ghostbusters being on hard times and having to win the public over again, and Dana breaks up with Venkman just so she can fall in love with him again.
43* ''Film/TheHangoverPartII'' was nearly a note-for-note copy of the original, with the gang getting together for another bachelor party, another drinking session, another morning hangover, another member of the party missing, Alan slipping the others drugs again, another madcap quest to find the missing person...
44* ''Film/HighlanderIIITheSorcerer'' follows the plot of the original ''Film/{{Highlander}}'' very closely after the disappointing ''Film/HighlanderIITheQuickening''. Once again, Connor is pursued by a very powerful and evil immortal from his past, there's a romance subplot with a present-day mortal woman who mirrors a woman from Connor's past, the {{Muggle|s}} police start investigating Connor because of all the strange beheadings he's involved in, the villain kidnaps one of Connor's loved ones towards the climax to draw him out, and at the end Connor finally defeats the villain after a heated duel and wins the Prize.
45* ''Film/HomeAlone2LostInNewYork'' is basically ''Film/HomeAlone1'' again. Complete with traps, MisunderstoodLonerWithAHeartOfGold, being out in a city rather than at his house, and so on. The fact that so many improbable events from the first film also occur in this one [[LampshadeHanging is repeatedly commented upon by the characters]].
46* ''Franchise/JurassicPark'': This happened not once, but twice after the series was revived:
47** ''Film/JurassicWorld'', taking place two decades after the original ''Film/JurassicPark1993'', borrows many elements from it. Two children visit a park of genetically engineered dinosaurs run by a relative of theirs (in the case of ''Jurassic World'', said relative was the second-in-command of the actual owner) so that they can be away from their soon-to-be divorced parents. Due to an error in the security system, usually caused by a secretly evil person, dangerous dinosaurs escape and attack people, and the children get lost. [[spoiler:The main antagonistic dinosaurs get defeated by the very same ''Tyrannosaurus'' in both movies.]] Also, the general theme of human greed and interfering with nature is the same.
48** ''Film/JurassicWorldFallenKingdom'' has been called essentially a remake of ''Film/TheLostWorldJurassicPark'', with a [[{{Anvilicious}} heavy-handed]], almost obnoxious GreenAesop about an expedition being sent back to the dinosaur-filled islands after the original park broke down to retrieve as many specimens as possible, while a bunch of SmugSnake {{Corrupt Corporate Executive}}s attempt to profit off it (the original outright had the heroes and villains in separate factions, whereas the later film had them initially work together only for the heroes to be betrayed). The dinosaurs (just ''Tyrannosaurus'' in the older film, multiple species of dinosaurs and the pterosaur ''Pteranodon'' in the later film) break free and cause a rampage on the mainland, leading to a KarmicDeath for the [[CapitalismIsBad cartoonish capitalist villains]], and an ending speech by one of the previous film's characters (the later film straight up using the main character of the older film (Ian Malcolm) to deliver the speech) that people will have to learn to live with dinosaurs roaming the Earth.
49* ''Film/NationalTreasureBookOfSecrets'' has been criticized for following the plot of the original ''Film/NationalTreasure'' too closely, such as working with the BigBad to find the treasure room, Ben having another romance arc with Abigail as well as being on the run from the [=FBI=], and even minor setpieces such as the treasure room having to be entirely lit up to reveal the treasure.
50* ''Film/PacificRimUprising'' follows the plot of ''Film/PacificRim'' pretty much beat for beat. The main character of each film is a disgraced former Jaeger pilot who gets coaxed back into service and teamed up with a female rookie whose parents were killed by Kaiju. Both films start with a replacement for the Jaeger program being proposed, only for a sudden disastrous attack to make the Jaegers relevant again. Both film have the majority of the Jaegers destroyed so that there's only four left to repel the biggest kaiju attack to date. Both films' climaxes involve [[spoiler:the heroes self-destroying their Jaeger in a last-ditch effort to avert a catastrophic event that is worse than any one Kaiju]].
51* ''Film/RamboIV'' to ''Film/RamboIII'': In which a reluctant Rambo is recruited by a group who are seeking to send aid in a war torn country, and when they do, they are immediately kidnapped by the villains. Rambo is then told by the group's superior about the disappearance, and works with other mercenaries to find and rescue the missionaries. They also meet the leader of the rebel group who agree to help Rambo and the group. Rambo saving Sarah from her torturer is also similar to how Rambo saves Trautman. And the end battle in which Rambo takes on the Burmese army with a mounted machine gun and is eventually aided by the rebel army is very much like the climactic battle of the third movie.
52* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
53** ''Film/TheForceAwakens'', the seventh installment in the ''Franchise/StarWars'' film series, has a similar plot to the original trilogy, particularly ''Film/ANewHope'', to the point that ''The Force Awakens'' comes off as a soft remake. An evil [[ANaziByAnyOtherName Nazi-esque]] army, commanded by (though not led by) a sinister figure in black, constructs a space weapon that can destroy planets (and unlike the Death Star in the original, this one can destroy multiple planets in the same solar system together). A resistance member hides some information the villains also want in the memory of an astromech droid, who gets stranded along with a second character (a protocol droid in the original, a reformed stormtrooper in the later film) on a desert planet and found by an orphan with affinity to the Force. They escape the villains and encounter an old mentor figure who fought in the previous war [[spoiler:and has a connection with the main villain]]. They go to the villains' base, [[spoiler:the mentor confronts the villain and gets killed by him. Then an AcePilot of the resistance group destroys the base]]. A lot of the same things also happen in the same order and around the same time as in ''A New Hope''.
54** To a lesser but still noticeable extent, this also applies to its sequel ''Film/TheLastJedi'', which has a very similar plot to ''Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack''. Both film start with the heroes' base being attacked by the villains. The heroes escape and are pursued, leading to a ChaseScene in space (''The Last Jedi'' notably has this stretched out over several scenes compared to the original due to the First Order tracking the Resistance through hyperspace). Some of them go to a new planet and meet an unsavory character who eventually betrays them (who, unlike Lando in ''The Empire Strikes Back'', never defects back to the side of the heroes). Meanwhile, the main protagonist is trained by an old Jedi Master on a remote planet. They venture to a place connected to the Dark Side where they have visions of themselves. Later, they go confront the main villain, who reveals the truth about their parentage. The film also contains a few scenes that are quite similar to those of ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'', notably when the protagonist is brought to the throne room of a powerful Dark Side-user [[spoiler: who ends up killed by his own apprentice]].
55* ''Film/SupermanReturns'': Superman arrives from outer space, makes his debut saving ComicBook/LoisLane from a falling aircraft, spends his OnPatrolMontage saving people and stopping petty crime, then tries to take on ComicBook/LexLuthor only to be weakened by kryptonite, thrown in water and saved before drowning, fights to protect citizens from major disasters and earthquakes, and then foils Luthor's plan by performing a ludicrously impossible feat in outer space. If it weren't for the sub-plot about a possible son, you'd be forgiven for thinking this was just a remake of ''Film/{{Superman|TheMovie}}''.
56* ''Teen Wolf Too'' follows a cousin of the main character in ''Film/TeenWolf'', who is also a teen and also discovers that he is a werewolf. The only difference is that instead of using it to become an ace at basketball, he uses it to become an ace at boxing.
57* Actually subverted by ''Film/Terminator2JudgmentDay'', which sets itself up as being this to ''Film/TheTerminator'': the machines send a Terminator back in time to kill John Connor before he can become a resistance leader, and so Connor sends someone to protect his own past self. The film's first act contains many scenes that mirror the first, with the Terminator played by Creator/ArnoldSchwarzenegger and his mysterious opponent, played this time by Robert Patrick, making their way around in the present day and trying to find their quarry, the only difference being that now they're looking for John himself rather than his young mother. Then comes the [[ItWasHisSled shocking twist]] that reveals that [[spoiler:Patrick's character is actually the Terminator the machines sent, while Schwarzenegger's Terminator is a re-programmed model sent by John]], at which point the plot goes off in a much different direction than the first film. Then again, there are some similarities: [[spoiler: The heroes are pursued by Patrick's T-1000 driving a semi tanker in a freeway chase. The destruction of the tanker seemingly kills the T-1000, which rises again and pursues the heroes inside a factory. After a pitched battle, the heroes succeed at the cost of one of their own. Additionally, there were cut scenes from ''Terminator'' where Sarah wants to attack the Cyberdyne factory, so it wasn't such a coincidence that's where they ended up]].
58* ''Film/TheThing2011'' is officially a prequel to ''Film/TheThing1982'', but recycles its whole plot, beat-for-beat, to the point that many reviews refer to it as a remake.
59* ''Film/TopGunMaverick'' hits all the same beats as [[Film/TopGun its predecessor]]: Both open with a brief text about the history of TOPGUN, complete with the Top Gun Anthem and Danger Zone playing back-to-back, Maverick disobeying orders from a major superior before being sent to TOPGUN, the trainees being introduced in a bar, not knowing their instructor is involved, one of the pilots having [[DarkAndTroubledPast personal issues]] due to having [[DisappearedDad lost his father at a young age]], a rivalry between two trainees, a fun time at the beach, a near tragic accident involving the trainees halfway through the film, [[spoiler:a close friend of Maverick's passing away]], and during the climax, one of the pilots having a [[HeroicBSOD confidence problem]] before getting a HeroicSecondWind. The ending also involves a triumphant return to an aircraft carrier in which the rivalry becomes a friendship, and also ends with Maverick reuniting with the LoveInterest and a plane [[RidingIntoTheSunset flying into the sunset]] over the end credits.
60* ''Film/WildThings2'' is pretty much a carbon copy of the original ''Film/WildThings'', set in South Florida, two high school girls as the main characters ([[TomboyAndGirlyGirl one a white trash tomboy, the other a feminine rich girl]]), a fraudulent court case that ends with somebody being awarded a lot of money, a threesome scene between the conspirators, then an ensuing GambitPileup with lots of other characters turning out to have been in on it all along, then either ending up dead themselves in a series of backstabs or revealed to have faked their deaths. There's even a montage of scenes over the ending credits to fill in the gaps in the plot.
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63[[folder:Literature]]
64* ''Literature/ACourtOfThornsAndRoses'': The main premise of ''A Court of Silver Flames'' recycles quite a bit from ''A Court of Mist and Fury''. A young woman who saved Prythian in the previous installment is left traumatized and alienated from her loved ones. She is forced out of her rut against her will and eventually finds ways to heal and makes new friends, while also developing a romance with a man she previously disliked who turns out to be her destined mate. Oh and there's a side plot about an evil monarch trying to get a magical artifact.
65* Crops up in some ''Literature/{{Goosebumps}}'' sequel books. In particular, the ''Literature/NightOfTheLivingDummy'' books all have a female protagonist who has issues with one of more siblings (or cousin, in ''III''); the living dummy (first Mr. Wood, later [[BreakoutVillain Slappy]]) comes to life and does cruel pranks, which the protagonist is blamed for; he declares the protagonist to be his slave, and then gets defeated with help of the sibling(s). Most have a twist where another dummy/doll is actually alive, too. The ''Most Wanted'' book ''Literature/SonOfSlappy'' finally mixes things up somewhat by having a male protagonist and a plot about Slappy putting him under MindControl (though this is still mostly a variant of the "protagonist blamed for the dummy's pranks" idea).
66* Despite being much longer and more epic in scale, ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'' recycles a lot of plot elements from ''Literature/TheHobbit''. Both books star a hobbit named Baggins, who gets sent by the wizard Gandalf, against their will, on a quest to a mountain in a desolate land. After resting in Rivendell and getting crucial advice from Lord Elrond, Baggins and his companions attempt and fail to cross the Misty Mountains due to a storm, so they decide to go through the tunnels under the mountains instead. In the tunnels, they fight some orcs/goblins and lose one of their companions who returns more powerful (Bilbo returns with the Ring, Gandalf returns as the White). As they carry on with their journey, they visit a forest kingdom of elves (Mirkwood/Lothlorien), encounter giant spiders (the Mirkwood spiders/Shelob), and travel on a river. They eventually arrive to a kingdom of humans without a king (Laketown/Gondor), ruled by a corrupt nobleman (the Master/Denethor) next to the desolation where the BigBad resides. A descendant of the lost king of the kingdom (Bard/Aragorn) participates in defeating the BigBad and reclaims his throne. A battle is fought near the gate of the villain's domain, which is joined by the eagles on the heroes' side.
67* In an ingenious twist, Creator/DavidEddings made this a ''plot point'' of ''The Malloreon'', the sequel to his first fantasy series ''Literature/TheBelgariad''. He even has the characters lampshading it! Both series are in the form of a travelogue: Garion and company visit every land on the map as they follow the villain and a MacGuffin to a final confrontation at a prearranged place, with their quest guided by prophecy and marked at intervals by encounters with very specific types of people. Belgarath speculates and Cyradis eventually confirms that this isn't just their imagination: when the EVENT that split the Universe and created the Light and Dark Prophecies occurred, it put the future "on hold" in a mystical sort of way. Until the conflict between the Spirit of Light and the Spirit of Dark is resolved, they'll just keep going round the same (or a similar) sequence of events over and over again.
68* ''Literature/ThreeHundredSixtyFiveDays'': Laura is unhappy in her current relationship and feels her significant other doesn't meet her needs. She's kidnapped by a member of organized crime, whom she finds attractive and swiftly develops feelings for. Now, are we talking about the plot of the first novel, or the second one?
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71[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
72* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
73** "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS10E4PlanetOfTheDaleks Planet of the Daleks]]" is notoriously a near-remake of the first Dalek story "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS1E2TheDaleks The Daleks]]": Thals versus Daleks on a planet full of random monsters, with the Daleks planning to do something that will make it inhospitable to everyone but them.
74** "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS12E5RevengeOfTheCybermen Revenge of the Cybermen]]" is a near-remake of "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS4E6TheMoonbase The Moonbase]]": Cybermen using a fake plague attack a human outpost somewhere in the solar system intending to use it as a base for an attack on another planet.
75** In the new series, "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS32E9NightTerrors Night Terrors]]" is extremely similar to "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E11FearHer Fear Her]]": a kid with out-of-control reality warping powers becomes a threat to a working-class contemporary community when their phobias become real. The difference is that in "Fear Her" the powers come from an alien that has become emotionally attached to the child, while in "Night Terrors" the child is actually an alien himself.
76* ''Series/{{Helix}}'' Season 2 changes the location from the Arctic to an island in the Pacific Northwest, but otherwise is pretty much the same as season 1: CDC officials have to contend with a viral outbreak at a remote complex with all sort of access points and secrets, and led by a mysterious leader who is actually an immortal member of a centuries-old conspiracy, with at least one member of the CDC team having unofficial ties to the conspiracy. Over the course of the season, the situation deteriorates until the number of infected reaches a critical point and the whole site has to be destroyed.
77* ''Franchise/KamenRider'': While ''Series/KamenRiderV3'' adds several new elements to the mix, it's plot is still largely a retread of the [[Series/KamenRider original series]], involving the titular Rider doing battle against the hordes of animal-themed monsters dispatched by a NebulousEvilOrganisation led by a [[NoOneSeesTheBoss disembodied voice]] (the [[ReturningBigBad same one]] as in the previous series, in fact). The shows that followed after it (''[[Series/KamenRiderX X]]'', ''[[Series/KamenRiderAmazon Amazon]]'' and ''[[Series/KamenRiderStronger Stronger]]'') also followed similar formulas, though each put their own unique spin on it.
78* ''Series/SpaceSheriffSharivan'' and ''Series/SpaceSheriffShaider'' both followed essentially the same formula as the first ''Series/MetalHeroes'' show, ''Series/SpaceSheriffGavan'' (e.g. Earth is attacked by an alien crime syndicate, so a LaserBlade-wielding, spaceship-piloting, shiny armored warrior is sent in by the SpacePolice to defend it).
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81[[folder:Scripts]]
82* Had it gone into production, the Circle 7-produced ''Script/{{Toy Story 3|Circle7}}'' would have been a blatant rehash of ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory2'' - one of the main toys (Woody/Buzz) would have been forcibly taken to another location (Al's Penthouse/China), forcing the other main toy (Buzz/Woody) to form a team of other toys (Mr. Potato Head, Rex, Slinky and Hamm, with both Jessie and Bullseye tagging along in the latter) to save them. The captured toy would have befriended a group of similar toys (Jessie and Bullseye/Jade and Cozy Rosey) during their efforts to escape and become enemies with another toy from their line (Stinky Pete/Daxx Blastar), all of the toys would have had to deal with a delusional Buzz, and Andy's toys would have returned to his room without Andy realizing anything was amiss.
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85[[folder:Theme Parks]]
86* Two of the American-based ''WesternAnimation/FindingNemo'' attractions: ''The Seas with Nemo and Friends'' and the ''Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage'' present themselves as stories of Nemo getting lost once again, while replaying all of the original film's major setpieces as if it were one of the more traditional Disney dark ride adaptations.
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89[[folder:Video Games -- Nintendo]]
90Creator/{{Nintendo}} loves to do this with a lot of its core franchises, from those with long scripts and deep narratives, to those with an ExcusePlot and the ones in between.
91* ''VideoGame/AnimalCrossing'': You are a young adult moving out and you arrive in a village where you are the TokenHuman. You don't have enough money to pay for a house but are allowed to pay your debt little-by-little. ''New Leaf'' changes up the plot with you becoming the mayor of the town.
92* ''VideoGame/Bayonetta2'' despite having a different initial premise than [[VideoGame/{{Bayonetta}} its predecessor]] (in the first game, Bayonetta investigates her past while in the second she tries to find a way to rescue her friend Jeanne from Hell) ends up rehashing several plot points and scenes. In both games, Bayonetta wanders in an old city with ties with the supernatural (Noatun and Vigrid), stumbles upon a mysterious child who's being targeted by the enemies (Cereza and Loki) and regularly fights with an EvilCounterpart (Jeanne and the Masked Lumen) who turns to be a pawn of the OmnicidalManiac BigBad ([[spoiler:Father Balder and Loptr]]). At the end of both games, [[spoiler:the BigBad uses the Eyes of the World to summon a gigantic mass-destroying deity (Jubileus and Aesir). Bayonetta and her redeemed rival defeat it by [[SummonBiggerFish summoning an even bigger one]] (Queen Of Sheba and Omne).]]
93* There are two {{Excuse Plot}}s that the ''VideoGame/DonkeyKongCountry'' series has used. The first is that someone has stolen DK's Bananas. The second is that someone has kidnapped the other Kongs. ''VideoGame/DonkeyKong64'' managed to do both, and ''adds'' the caveat of K. Rool planning to destroy the Kongs' island.
94* ''VideoGame/EarthBound1994'': Earth is being invaded by aliens and you and the friends you make along the way must travel around the Earth collecting portions of a special melody. In fact Earthbound's plot is so similar to that of ''VideoGame/EarthBoundBeginnings'' that it could be considered a stealth remake.
95* ''Franchise/FireEmblem'' has [[RecurringElement a whole series of archetypes that recur between games]] but are typically played with and subverted. On the other hand, there's Roy's game, ''[[VideoGame/FireEmblemTheBindingBlade The Binding Blade]]'', which arranges these elements like [[VideoGame/FireEmblemShadowDragonAndTheBladeOfLight Marth's first title]] and plays out like am mix of ''Shadow Dragon'' and ''[[VideoGame/FireEmblemMysteryOfTheEmblem Mystery of the Emblem]]''.
96* {{Subverted|Trope}} by ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising''. While the premise is essentially an inversion of ''VideoGame/KidIcarus1986''[[note]]in the original, Pit escapes the Underworld and ascends to Skyworld to defeat Medusa after she's already won; in ''Uprising'', Pit descends into the Underworld to stop Medusa before she can win again[[/note]], it follows several very familiar story beats, such as Pit fighting Twinbellows, Hewdraw, Pandora, and T(h)anatos; collecting the Three Sacred Treasures in order to defeat Medusa; and then celebrating his victory with Palutena as the 8-bit credits roll. And then [[YourPrincessIsInAnotherCastle Hades tears through the credits]] and reveals that the game isn't even halfway over yet! After that point, ''Uprising'' features a completely new story that no longer relies on repeating the original game's beats.
97* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
98** There are several recurring elements and plots beats in many of the major games. Particularly the ones that revolve around the Triforce.
99** In particular, ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime Ocarina of Time]]'' (officially a direct prequel) reuses and fleshes out a lot of plot elements that were introduced in ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast A Link To the Past]]''. After a great war, the Triforce was lost to another realm. Lately, an evil priest/foreign king has gained the favor of the King of Hyrule and is using his position to manipulate events in order to steal the Triforce. After witnessing the tragic death of his father figure, Link goes on an adventure to acquire three {{Plot Coupon}}s so he can retrieve the Master Sword, which ends up locking him in another dimension. After mastering the different dimensions Link rescues and awakens the Wise Men/Sages and their power combined forces the evil manipulator to reveal himself as Ganon. In the final battle Link defeats Ganon. Several sidequest characters even had appropriate counterparts.
100** ''Ocarina of Time'' later had its own Same Plot Sequel, ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTwilightPrincess'', which was a deliberate return to form after the initially divisive reception of the [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaMajorasMask more experimental]] [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTheWindWaker previous games]]. Link is raised in the forest of southern Hyrule, where he is friends mainly with children. After meeting an ExpositionFairy, he embarks on his journey and obtains three {{Plot Coupon}}s from dungeons: one in the forest (and the dungeon housing it is located inside a large tree), one in Death Mountain (passing through Kakariko Village and befriending the Goron chief along the way), and one in Zora's Domain (helping the Zora royalty along the way). He also has to navigate the Skull Kid-populated Lost Woods by following the sound of Saria's Song in order to find the Sacred Grove. After Princess Zelda disappears due to the BigBad's actions, Link acquires the Master Sword from a temple and now has to acquire more Plot Coupons from even more dungeons, including one in Gerudo Desert. Finally, he goes to Hyrule Castle and ascends the tower to face Ganondorf, who assumes the demon Beast Ganon form during one phase of the battle. The Exposition Fairy leaves, Zelda and Link say goodbye, and Link returns to his old life (before soon embarking on a new journey).
101** ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkBetweenWorlds A Link Between Worlds]]'' is a deliberate homage to ''A Link to the Past'' and therefore unsurprisingly follows a very similar story. Once again, an EvilSorcerer causes havoc in Hyrule and abducts the descendants of the seven sages to resurrect Ganon. You are tasked by Zelda and Sahasrahla to find the three Pendants of Virtue and obtain the Master Sword. Once you've done it, you land in the Dark World and have to rescue the descendants of the sage before facing the sorcerer in his lair. [[spoiler:This is an InvokedTrope on the part of the antagonists, not too dissimilar from ''VideoGame/{{Metal Gear Solid 2|SonsOfLiberty}}''. The Triforce of Courage was sealed away in an unknown location, bound to the soul of the Hero, between the events of ''A Link to the Past'' and ''A Link Between Worlds''. In order to break the seal on it, the hero’s successor must show a display of true courage–so the antagonists set out to goad the new Link into reenacting out the closest thing they know to such a feat, the events of ''A Link to the Past'', in order to unseal the Triforce of Courage. This goes off without a hitch, but Link manages to keep the Triforce from their grasp in the end.]]
102* ''Franchise/{{Metroid}}'':
103** ''VideoGame/SuperMetroid'' is essentially a fleshed-out version of the original ''VideoGame/{{Metroid|1}}'', predating [[VideoGame/MetroidZeroMission the actual remake]] by a full decade: Space Pirates steal a Metroid and bring it to their fortress on planet Zebes with the intention of breeding Metroids as bioweapons, so Samus Aran is hired to stop them. She goes to Brinstar, where she defeats Kraid and acquires the Varia Suit; she goes to Norfair, where she defeats Ridley and acquires the Screw Attack; she activates statues based on Kraid and Ridley in order to enter Tourian; she fights her way through the Metroids in Tourian and defeats Mother Brain; and finally she escapes Zebes before a time bomb explodes. Completing the game fast enough removes Samus's helmet, and completing it even more quickly shows her in a revealing outfit.
104** ''Videogame/MetroidOtherM'' is a Same Plot ''Prequel'' to ''VideoGame/MetroidFusion''. In both games, Samus must investigate a massacre in a space station (Biologic Space Laboratories/BOTTLE SHIP) divided into sectors based on habitats from Zebes, follows the order of someone named Adam (a computer/Adam Malkovitch), finds herself reminiscing about her past and finds out [[spoiler:that the Federation plots to recreate the Metroid through a secret hatchery]]. Notably in both games, Samus faces Nightmares and a resurrected Ridley. The main difference is that ''Other M'' has subplots not present in ''Fusion'' (the Deleter and "MB").
105* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'': Every main series game prior to ''VideoGame/PokemonLegendsArceus'' follows a basic formula (with some variations): The games start with a rookie trainer often coming from a small town who gets a starter and a Pokédex usually courtesy of the local professor, goes on a quest to catch em all and become Champion by gaining eight Gym Badges (or, in the Alola games, completing the island challenge) and challenging a local Pokémon League, and along the way takes down a crime syndicate that commonly want to exploit (legendary) Pokémon for their own personal gain. The crime syndicate plot also usually peaks between Gyms 7 and 8 (or in the Alola games, between the third and fourth islands). The closest things to exceptions are ''VideoGame/PokemonBlackAndWhite'', where the crime syndicate is the FinalBoss instead of the Elite Four and Champion, and ''VideoGame/PokemonUltraSunAndUltraMoon'', where the main antagonist is instead a Pokémon itself.
106* ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'':
107** Bowser invades the Mushroom Kingdom and kidnaps Peach, so Mario has to travel around the country/island/world/galaxy to save her. In most scrolling games he just has to get from point A to point B. In most 3D games he has to collect about 70 [[MacGuffin MacGuffins]] of power to find Bowser's true hiding spot, and can keep going to collect all 120 for 100% completion. The most explicit case is ''VideoGame/SuperMarioBrosTheLostLevels'', which reuses the main premise of the original ''VideoGame/SuperMarioBros1'', with the justification that the events take place "in a parallel universe".
108** ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy2'' bizarrely went as far as to have the same plot of ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy.'' In both games Bowser invades on the day of the Star Festival which only happens once every 100 years. Meaning the ending of the first game reset the timestream, the sequel takes place 100 years in the future, or the creators really don't care about the details of reusing an ExcusePlot[[note]]The official statement from the developers is that it's a "reimagining" of the original ''Galaxy'' but [[ExcusePlot without any of the lore]], which was the result of ExecutiveMeddling from Shigeru Miyamoto[[/note]]. The main difference is in the first one Mario ends up on the comet observatory with Rosalina, and in the sequel he's on the Faceship Mario with Lubba.
109** ''VideoGame/PaperMario64'' began its life as a sequel to '' VideoGame/SuperMarioRPG'', which might explain why the two games revolve around Mario going on a quest to find stars that have the power to grant wishes.
110* ''VideoGame/YoshisIsland'': The Stork carrying Baby Mario and Baby Luigi (and potentially more babies) is attacked by Kamek. Kamek kidnaps Luigi, but Mario is accidentally dropped and falls onto an Island of Yoshis. The Yoshis band together to defeat Baby Bowser and deliver the child to their parents.
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112
113[[folder:Video Games -- Other]]
114* ''VideoGame/AceCombat6FiresOfLiberation'' is a WholePlotReference to ''VideoGame/AceCombat04ShatteredSkies'', except with shinier new tech (both in-universe and [[MediaNotes/TheSeventhGenerationOfConsoleVideoGames console-wise]]) and taking place on a different continent of [[ConstructedWorld Strangereal]] about 11 years down the timeline.
115* ''VideoGame/ArmoredCore: Master of Arena'' is a retelling of the original ''Armored Core''. In both games, the player character a mercenary who does random jobs and is found to be too much of a threat to the social order due to his skills. He is lead into a trap by #1 mercenary Nineball (who in both games is revealed to be a mass-manufactured AI rather than an individual), but defeats him and destroys the A.I. responsible for ruling the Raven's Nest and manipulating the whole world.
116* ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry2'' essentially rehashes the same plotline as ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry1''. Devil hunter Dante is invited by an ActionGirl to a remote island in order to stop demonic forces from raising an ancient demon sealed away in the Demon World by Dante's father Sparda. [[spoiler: The ActionGirl is later revealed to be a demon created by the BigBad. Dante comforts her by telling her "Devils never cry" and, after defeating the BigBad, the ActionGirl joins Dante's agency. The main difference between Trish and Lucia is that the former was actually working for Mundus then turned good at the end of ''[=DMC1=]'' while Lucia defected from Arius before the beginning of ''[=DMC2=]'''s story. In the FinalBoss fight of his campaign, Dante also kills The Despair Embodied with a powered-up shot from his handgun, just like how he defeated Mundus in the first game.]]
117* Apart from the intentional call-backs and {{Continuity Nod}}s, the story of ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry5'' has several parallels to that of ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry3DantesAwakening''. A tall demonic structure suddenly appears in the middle of a city (Qliphoth and Temen-ni-gru), Dante is drawn to the action by a mysterious man who always carries a book (V and Arkham), [[spoiler:Vergil]] ventures through said structure and seeks something that would grant him power (The Qliphoth's fruit and the Force Edge), although [[spoiler:his demon half Urizen is responsible for it]] this time around. Dante's battles with [[spoiler:Urizen]] in ''5'' also follow the pattern of his battles with [[spoiler:Vergil]] in ''3'', namely; [[spoiler:Dante loses the first fight, gains a new demonic power after being stabbed by Rebellion, their second fight technically ends in a draw, and Dante emerges victorious in the third. Vergil is the FinalBoss again and he mostly fights just like how he did back in ''3'' (though Nero is the last person who defeats him this time)]]. And just like the finale of ''3'', [[spoiler:Vergil dives into the Underworld again, but Dante follows him this time instead of letting him go alone]].
118* Both ''VideoGame/{{Dishonored}}'' games have the same basic plot; the empress is removed from her throne[[note]]Thankfully, Emily isn't killed like her mother was[[/note]], and the player finds and (potentially) kills everyone involved in the conspiracy. You can even play the second game as Corvo, the protagonist of the first game, who even spends most of it trying to rescue the same person as last time. The Outsider even lampshades the similarity if you play as Corvo.
119* ''VideoGame/DraculaUnleashed'' plays with very similar plot points to the Bram Stoker novel ''Literature/{{Dracula}}'', with the characters even noticing how similarly things are progressing to the previous time they had a vampire enter their lives. They even lose one woman to the Count while another one is threatened to soon follow if they don't stop him.
120* ''VideoGame/DynastyWarriors'' pretty much lives on this trope, at least since the second one. Each new game starts with the Yellow Turban Rebellion, more or less, and up until the seventh entry ended at the Wuzhang Plains. Each new entry has added new game mechanics, [[PromotedToPlayable previously generic NPCs now available to play as]] and more/different parts of the story to go through. When the franchise is based on [[Literature/RomanceOfTheThreeKingdoms a book]], there's only so much you can really do.
121* Every ''VideoGame/FatalFrame'' game has the same basic plot: there's a portal somewhere that connects to the afterlife, there was a secret ritual involving human sacrifice that was used to plug it and prevent evil spirits from escaping, the ritual failed one time and all the evil energy escaped, killing everyone involved, and a StringyHairedGhostGirl is at the center of it all. What changes are the themes at the core of each game.
122* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIVTheAfterYears'' recycles a lot of sequences and boss fights from the previous game, which is sometimes lampshaded by the characters. The climax also involved travelling to the second moon (which is a different moon this time around) to fight the BigBad.
123* ''VideoGame/GroundhogDayLikeFatherLikeSon'', the SequelInAnotherMedium to the movie ''Film/GroundhogDay'', is essentially just ''Groundhog Day'' with a SettingUpdate. You play as the son of Phil Connors, Phil Connors Jr., who starts out as a {{Jerkass}} social media influencer (rather than a weatherman), becomes trapped in the titular GroundhogDayLoop, finds out that he's in a time loop, and uses it to become a progressively better person and break out of the loop.
124* ''VideoGame/GunstarSuperHeroes'', while formally a sequel to ''Gunstar Heroes'', recycles almost every level, boss fight, plot point, and music track from the original game.
125* ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsX'', originally a desktop browser game exclusive to Japan, was remade as ''Unchained χ'' for mobile devices, but the remake curiously omits the climactic ending of ''χ''. [[spoiler:The sequel arc, ''Union χ'', reveals that ''Unchained χ'' was actually an example of this trope, with the new Union leaders using their power over dreams to allow the other, slumbering Keyblade wielders to relive the events of ''χ'' without the trauma of the Keyblade War. The implication is that ''Unchained χ'' is actually this sanitized dream.]]
126* ''VideoGame/MetalGear'':
127** ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid'' is a semi-remake of ''VideoGame/MetalGear2SolidSnake'', with none of the characters seeming aware of this. (Probably inspired by ''Film/EscapeFromNewYork''->''Film/EscapeFromLA''.)
128** ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid2SonsOfLiberty'' is particularly (in)famous for this. As the game progresses everything from the plot, to the characters, to the level design starts to bear an increasingly blatant resemblance to ''Metal Gear Solid''. [[note]]Which was itself basically a 3D remake of ''Metal Gear 2: Solid Snake'', albeit less famously, thanks to a combination of SequelDisplacement and NoExportForYou.[[/note]] [[ItWasHissled Of course]], as revealed in its equally infamous [[Recap/MetalGearSolid2SonsOfLiberty ending]], this was done deliberately as part of the game's postmodernist obliteration of everything. Whether or not it actually worked depends on who you ask. [[MindScrew Possibly]].
129** ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidPortableOps'' is a less slavish remake of ''Metal Gear 2/Metal Gear Solid'', but incorporates {{Expy}} bosses and similar plot beats.
130* In play with ''VideoGame/ParasiteEve'' video game, as it is a pseduo-sequel to [[Literature/ParasiteEve the novel of the same name]]. The game acknowledges the events of the book/film adaptation as canon to the storyline (the entire point of the character of Maeda is basically to provide a recap of said plot in the form of an ExpositionDump), yet the story of the game is in essence a slightly altered retelling of the book's plot.
131* ''VideoGame/Persona5Strikers'' recycles more than a few plot elements from ''VideoGame/Persona5'' with a few thematic elements from ''Persona 5 Royal'' for flavor, with many major new characters in ''Strikers'' [[{{Expy}} having obvious parallels]] to characters from the original and even some story beats being recycled. [[spoiler:The FinalBoss is even called "The Demiurge", which is just an alternative name for Yaldabaoth in mythology.]]
132* ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiV'' reuses many plot elements from ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiNocturne'', including the premise that a student from modern-day Tokyo being thrust into a new world, becoming a half-demon, and given the responsibility to choose the ultimate fate of the world. It is likely not a coincidence that ''Nocturne'' saw a remaster a year before ''V'''s release, as well as the protagonist from ''Nocturne'' appearing as a DownloadableContent boss and party member.
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134
135[[folder:Visual Novels]]
136* Happened deliberately in ''VisualNovel/Danganronpa2GoodbyeDespair'': [[spoiler:the BigBad planned their viral infection of the Neo World Program around the fact that the survivors or [[VisualNovel/DanganronpaTriggerHappyHavoc the first killing game]] were watching the carnage unfold and knew they would (like heroes) jump inside the program to help at the first opportunity if they saw students dying in droves in nearly the same manner they almost did. This both gave them an opening to escape into the real world along with a chance at revenge on the three survivors that did arrive in the final class trial]].
137[[/folder]]

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