The TVTropes Trope Finder is where you can come to ask questions like "Do we have this one?" and "What's the trope about...?" Trying to rediscover a long lost show or other medium but need a little help? Head to Media Finder and try your luck there. Want to propose a new trope? You should be over at the Trope Launch Pad.
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openGiving someone else's name? Print Comic
Do we have one where a character, when asked their name by someone who's grateful to them ("I'd like to name my child after you", etc.), gives someone else's name instead? I usually see this in superhero stories.
openComic characters reacts to shock as if punched (hat crushed over head, flips over) Print Comic
This is an older trope from comic strips. The punch line has A making a scathing verbal comeback to B or otherwise shocking or discomfiting B, and the way that this is shown is some sort of physical consequence as if A had physically punched B, even though B wasn't actually touched. For example, B's hat is suddenly crushed onto his head as if A had pounded on the top of it, or B physically flips over.
Hat example: https://9gag.com/gag/aWxqorZ
Flipping upside down example: https://www.the-solute.com/my-anxieties-have-anxieties-the-year-of-the-month-in-peanuts/
openSplash art focused on many characters' hands reaching towards something Print Comic
I've seen this type of splash page, frame, poster and/or fanart where many characters (usually the entire cast) reach their hands into the center or towards the main characters, usually as a representation of everyone lending their help for the finale. Do we have anything like that? Closest thing I can find is Team Hand-Stack.
Here
's an example from the Fullmetal Alchemist manga, and here
's an example of Baldur's Gate III fanart

The backstory for the Captain America villain William Burnside involves him discovering that the Nazi spy who assassinated Dr. Erskine, the man whose Super Serum formula created Captain America, had actually copied the formula and sent it to his superiors before he died assassinating Erskine and destroying his lab, thus preventing America from creating an entire army of super soldiers like they planned. However, his Nazi superiors never read his report and instead just stuck it in their filing, thus preventing them from using the Super Serum too. Does anyone know if we have a trope to describe this sort of self-sabotaging bureaucratic/managerial incompetence?