Bay 12 Games Forum

Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Advanced search  
Pages: 1 2 3 [4] 5

Author Topic: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot  (Read 10173 times)

Fniff

  • Bay Watcher
  • if you must die, die spectacularly
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #45 on: October 06, 2012, 08:10:45 am »

I agree, this is just getting silly.

Digital Hellhound

  • Bay Watcher
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #46 on: October 06, 2012, 09:42:07 am »

Be polite now.

I'm putting together all tropes, removing the Schizo Tech bits for now. Added Apocalypse How as the trope of Kashyyk's first bit. Changed Johnfalcon's Friendly Sniper pun from Stealth Pun to Incredibly Lame Pun just because I can. Kept Kashyyk's version of the Four Temperament Ensemble because it's stated earlier that Eriksson's Stoicness is just an act he drops eventually.

MASSIVE WALL O' TEXT WARNING

The Falling Dark

The Falling Dark was a Scottish Live-Action television show, set after the end in Orkney. It ran for three seasons from 2005 to 2007, before it was cancelled.

A film adaptation is planned.

Needs Wiki Magic

This series also provides examples of:

Everything Trying To Kill You: All over the place. Basically, if there's a break from all the unresolved sexual tension, it's usually caused by this.

Internal Retcon: Done chillingly by Colonel McArthur in the Season 1 finale. Lewis who?

The Dog Bites Back: Averted. It seems like this is going to happen to Doctor Grey at the end of 'Dead Light'. Cue the army... led by the Colonel.

Father Neptune: The captain from the season 2 premiere fits the bill. He even has the beard!

Apocalypse How: The world is massive hellhole to begin with, at least Severity Class two on that scale. Although the fandom are pretty sure that there was destined to be a good ending.

Guns Akimbo: Used to great effect by the Captain.

Tin Can Robot: Almost every robot in the series, although very few are actually functional.

Bald of Evil: Colonel McArthur. Also doubles as a Bald of Awesome.

Everyone calls him Barkeep : The Captain.

Omnicidal Maniac: Doctor Grey after the Season 2 finale.

Dreaming of Things To Come: According to Word of God, David's bizarre viking dream in Season 3's 'The Blizzard' was related to something from the cancelled fourth season, probably the Norwegians from the finale's Stinger.

The Stoic: Eriksson tries to be this, but he drops the act between Season 1 and Season 2. A more straightforward example would be Elizabeth after 'Drifters'.

Red Sky, Take Warning: What we see of the apocalypse in the opening titles. The episode 'Red Horizon' also features this on a smaller scale (implied to be a distant nuclear detonation, but never mentioned again).

Mechanical Monster: Colonel McArthur mostly commands a number of sentient machines which resemble this in his personal retinue.
Second Law My Ass:
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Chromatic Arrangement: The Captain's, David's, Slyv's, and Eriksson's outfits normally contain some form of Blue, Green, Red, and Yellow respectively.

Friendly Sniper: Pretty much Slyv, making him the most cheerful character on the show by a long shot.

Old Soldier:The Captain. Although it's never explicitly mentioned, it's generally believed due to Word of Dante and the fact that no one in the production office denied it. Colonel McArthur is obvious one.

Knight Templar: Alistair Laurence and Karen Phelps. Both of them were from the City.

Sliding Scale of Robot Intelligence: For the most part 1-3, but the Season 3 finale hints that at least Colonel McArthur's machines might have been much more than they seemed.

Tie-In Novel: One was released just before the show was cancelled, set between Seasons 2 and 3. Your Mileage May Vary, as it openly contradicts some things from the finale.

Crouching Moron Hidden Badass: Slyv. At first, he seems like a complete incompetent wash out from McArthur's army. Then he gets a Rifle.

Four Temperament Ensemble: David = Sanguine, Eriksson = Choleric, The Captain = Melancholic, Slyv = Phlegmatic.

Sacrificial Lion:
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Evil Evolves: The Colonel loves this trope. His robots start out as simple humanoid androids, then evolve to meet the situation. Notable examples would be Clarence, who resembles a cybernetic snake more then a robot, Drake, who is a Big-Dog style wolf, and Sheila, who eventually grows into a

Acid Trip Dimension: The Stranger's House, along with Eldritch Location. How weird is it? The bathroom has a closet that leads into a door to the bathroom and is also filled with a demon that stretches for infinity!

Humanoid Abomination: The Stranger. He is so wrong that he rivals Slender Man. Notable in Episode six of the second season where he stalks David through a forest for hours, while somehow being at Siyv's house at the same time. Did we mention
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

After The End: At the start of series 1, it is confirmed that it takes place a "Short period of time" after a complete economic collapse that resulted in a large scale war that left the entire world completely destroyed. The government is non-existent, the closest authority figure being the Colonel, dust has blocked out the sun making it impossible to farm, everyone apart from the protagonists (And [url=http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/NonActionGuy]Doctor Grey) is completely helpless or apathetic, and the only remaining city (named The City) is a complete dictatorship that is falling apart anyway[/url]. However, there are signs things may be getting better, such as

Antagonist In Mourning: 'Silent Echoes' starts with Doctor Grey and Elizabeth burrying
Spoiler (click to show/hide)
with the rest of the episode being a flashback.
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Alas, Poor Villian:
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Billions of Buttoms: The Stranger's House. It is never revealed what they do.

Well Intentioned Extremist: Doctor Grey.

Nothing Is Scarier: Everything about The Stranger. We never find out anything meaningful about him/her, but s/he is easily the creepiest character, despite the presence of vampires and at least one intelligent zombie.

Tonight Someone Kisses: Used repeatedly in advertising, nearly always out-of-context and misleadingly. Very little of the show's UST is ever actually resolved.

Hell Is That Noise: Played oh-so-straight with the noises from the Stranger's bathroom closet. Hell is that noise indeed (or something from there is).

Cosmic Horror Story: Averted. There are Lovecraftian elements, but they're only relevant in a few episodes (though Word of God says they would've become more important later on) and as the second season tagline goes, 'hope remains'.

Reasonable Authority Figure: Lewis in Season 1, until he's ingloriously killed off and basically removed from existence in the Season 1 finale, apparently a result of the actor's behavior on set.

Coat, Hat, Mask: The Stranger's trenchcoat, grinning theater mask and fedora is the most striking thing about the Stranger at first. The creators confirm that the trenchcoat is the same one that Lewis had. Which implies an even worse fate for Lewis...

Wham Line: One to wrap up each season!
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Good Scars, Evil Scars: The Colonel has a nasty Glasglow Grin (Well, half of one, so it's technically a Glasglow Smirk) and is absolutely covered in scars on his torso. Lewis has white phosperous burns on his right arm.

Young Gun: Alistar is a serious case of this. He gets better in Season 2.

The Unmasqued World: Apparently the vampires, the zombies and everything else existed before the apocalypse without the humans knowing; it's just that they have become just as apathetic as everyone else and don't think hiding matters anymore. Then again, this is Frank the Bloodsucker we're talking about here, so he may be lying.

Friendly Neighborhood Vampire: Elizabeth is fairly friendly, and
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Our Zombies Are Different: The Stenches are running, dumb cannibals who can use melee weapons but can't use tactics, who spread by being bitten who need to eat flesh or they will die. The Risers are smart zombies who like flesh but don't need to have it constantly, regenerate lost limbs but will be put down by fire as they "Regenerate themselves to death", and are created by burying them in places infected by the "Rising Plague".

Swamps Are Evil: The swamps of Orkney were created by the carpet bombings of World War III deforming the terrain and causing rivers to flow down into the plains, and they are infested with Stenches and Risers.

Crowning Music Of Awesome: The Opening Theme is really really good. Sweeping, fits the show's atmosphere well, and it's just fun to listen to.

Dramatic Shattering: The Captain does this often when everyone is talking at the same time.
David: "Surely you can only have so many glasses?"
Captain: "... Oh, yeah. Looks like we may have to drink from the bottle tonight."


Bound And Gagged: David wakes up in the Stranger's House tied up with ropes made out of flesh, and upside down. He gets out eventually after a lot of screaming.

Broken Treasure: The Captain's diamond studded seashell in "Memories In The Waves", broken accidentally by . The saddest part of the episode was Siyv's confusion as to why the Captain was so upset over the loss of such a useless item.
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Flashback Episode: Memories In The Waves is one of the best done examples of combining this trope with Hidden Depths and How We Got Here, at least with how the apocalypse was..

Nightmare Fuel: Memories In The Waves. Even the Stranger and Red Horizon can't stand up to the sheer horror of the situation: You've been drafted into a war you don't know the reason of, your beautiful village is being shelled and everyone you love in there is going to die. The best thing?
Spoiler (click to show/hide)
Then the world ends, making your entire struggle pointless in the long run.

The Brigadier: Lewis. Even if he's technically a postman, he's a former SAS officer and seems to be the only authority figure left in England apart from the Colonel, organizing Orkney and trying to start production again. It's implied that he was also involved in "Operation Shepherd's Warning", which seems to be the cause of the apocalypse, so he might be not as benevolent as one may think.

From Nobody To Nightmare: Gee, who'd have thought Dr Grey, the mild-mannered Red Cross medic (Who happens to be the only Red Cross still operating) would eventually
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Five Rounds Rapid: Lewis loves this trope. He once shot at the Stranger with a flare gun and then fired an assault rifle clip into it's chest.
River Of Insanity: In the premier of the second season (S2E1, "The Swamps of Madness"), this trope was played straight to a tee. After fleeing Orkney, the team has a month's worth of food, a canoe and as many bullets as they can carry. They also have some friends in the swamp, and they have an amulet that they are pretty sure will ward off the Stranger. The swamps will fry the Colonel's robots from the water, and if they move fast his human troops can't keep up. How can that go wrong?
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Zombie Apocalypse: Implied to be part of the apocalypse. Zombies include Stenches, Risers, and
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Big Fancy House: Colonel McArthur's home after the events of session 1.

Leave No Witnesses: Quoted word for word during the season one finale by the Colonel.

"Lovable Traitor: the character, Susan, that is introduced in season three has a lot of these tendencies, first by betraying David to Slyv, after Slyv learns about the visions, but has several redeeming qualities despite.

Hero Of Another Story: Alistair, Karen and Ruth are busy fighting the ever growing vampire troops during season 2 and 3, but still show up from time to time.

The Berserker:
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Loads and Loads of Characters

The Faceless: Ever since he was introduced, Slyv has never taken off his old City Military uniform. This quite obviously causes some trouble after session 1.

The Unreveal: Invoked by Slyv in a conversation with Eriksson in Session 2, episode 5 "Darker Waters"
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

CoolAirboat The Captain's hoverboat hydrofoil airboat has a top speed of 160 KM/H, goes on land and water, seats 6 but can hold 10, has enough remote controlled guns to start a small war mounted on it, and it comes equipped with radar, sonar, a full sound system and a mini-bar.

Badass Biker: Eriksson. His bike is a classic Harley, no modifications. And if you try to attack him when he's on the bike, you are going to die.

The Big Board: The Stranger has one in his bedroom that tracks every single person in England (And possibly the world), including the protagonists. And there are too many buttons to count. David pressed one, causing a city on the map to suddenly disappear. What would the others do?

KillSat: The Icarus Satellite slowly gathers huge amounts of solar energy, then gathers it all up to fire at specific targets. The good news is that the only way to activate it is under a mile of radioactive rubble.
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Generic Graffiti: A lot of the graffiti is actually fairly detailed, offering background information, references to future plot points or simply just being hilarious.
Spoiler: Graffiti (click to show/hide)

City Noir: The location for the vast majority of Season three. Particularly nice because it allows a closer insight to society in The City (Outside from the first two episodes in Season 1.)

Artistic License - Geography: "The City" is implied to be in the vague area of real life Kirkwall. The problem? Kirkwall is actually a small town, rather then the large ruined metropolitan city that its showed as in the show.

Deadpan Snarker: The Robot that David and Eriksson encounter when travelling through the Sewers leading into the City in Season three, Episode 2 "Backdoor".

Book Dumb: Apparently, David repeatedly flunked both Science and Math in school before the Bombs dropped. Talked about before, but it shows a lot more clearly in S3, E2. How he ended up as a Police Officer in The City before the Show's premiere is anyones guess.

Private Investigator: Implied to be Eriksson's job before Chief Magistrate Lewis hired him in Season 1, Episode 1. Makes a little sense considering his Skillset.

Badass Longcoat: Eriksson.

Leeroy Jenkins: Pretty much the entirety of Slyv's tactical planning and Execution. Good thing his Improbable Aiming Skills keep him from obtaining the fate of the others who followed the same strategy.

Disposable Woman: Dr. Grey's wife, who is said to have been murdered before the series began.
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Jack Bauer Interrogation Technique: Used by Slyv to extract information about the colonel's whereabouts from one of his Captains in S2, E11. Who knew Slyv took Interrogation so seriously?

---

I think this may actually be the most successful Narrative By Trope to date! Good job, guys!
« Last Edit: October 06, 2012, 10:11:47 am by Digital Hellhound »
Logged
Russia is simply taking an anti-Fascist stance against European Nazi products, they should be applauded. ¡No parmesan!

Fniff

  • Bay Watcher
  • if you must die, die spectacularly
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #47 on: October 06, 2012, 10:04:51 am »

You know, this actually sounds like a pretty good show.

Edit: Actually, try Airboat instead. It's meant to be like this, but a bit more large. Perfect for swamps, wouldn't you agree?

Edit Edit: I have a terrifying feeling this is going to be an edit war.
« Last Edit: October 06, 2012, 10:08:40 am by Fniff »
Logged

Fniff

  • Bay Watcher
  • if you must die, die spectacularly
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #48 on: October 06, 2012, 10:18:06 am »

Hm. Anyway, sorry for the double post, but do you guys wanna continue this, come up with a new fiction or just end it?

Digital Hellhound

  • Bay Watcher
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #49 on: October 06, 2012, 10:24:40 am »

Why would we want to end it? What's wrong with you, man? Don't you even dare say things like that. It's bad luck, m'boy.
Logged
Russia is simply taking an anti-Fascist stance against European Nazi products, they should be applauded. ¡No parmesan!

Fniff

  • Bay Watcher
  • if you must die, die spectacularly
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #50 on: October 06, 2012, 10:26:11 am »

People can have the oddest notions, so catering to them can be okay.

So, new trope page or continue this one?

Digital Hellhound

  • Bay Watcher
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #51 on: October 06, 2012, 10:35:57 am »

I'm fine either way - I don't think we've ran out of steam for this quite yet. Two suggestions have been made for the next, my video game RPG (scifi unless there's a more popular idea) and Johnfalcon's steampunk animation series.
Logged
Russia is simply taking an anti-Fascist stance against European Nazi products, they should be applauded. ¡No parmesan!

Fniff

  • Bay Watcher
  • if you must die, die spectacularly
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #52 on: October 06, 2012, 10:39:09 am »

Hm. I have an idea for a MSPA that takes place in a long abandoned research facility with elements of a transformation comic that could be fun to let develop.

Johnfalcon99977

  • Bay Watcher
  • The Herp Derp Assassin
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #53 on: October 06, 2012, 11:18:21 am »

We could also just do the The Falling Dark movie, if thats okay with you guys.

I also still had some tropes for the show to drop as well.
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

Edit:
Kept Kashyyk's version of the Four Temperament Ensemble because it's stated earlier that Eriksson's Stoicness is just an act he drops eventually.

Uh, you realize that it puts Slyv, who has been characterized as an erratic and positive Sniper, as "Calm, stoic, reliable, reactionary, and observant". And that Eriksson can still fit four out of five of those traits, right?
« Last Edit: October 06, 2012, 11:33:30 am by Johnfalcon99977 »
Logged
Also known as the Knowlagable, the Forgetful, and/or the Ignored

Please excuse my horrible awful linguistic skills.

Digital Hellhound

  • Bay Watcher
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #54 on: October 06, 2012, 11:36:07 am »

Well, fair enough. I suppose Eriksson could be Phlegmatic II, too?
Logged
Russia is simply taking an anti-Fascist stance against European Nazi products, they should be applauded. ¡No parmesan!

GreatWyrmGold

  • Bay Watcher
  • Sane, by the local standards.
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #55 on: October 06, 2012, 05:21:23 pm »

Idea: Alphabetisation.
Logged
Sig
Are you a GM with players who haven't posted? TheDelinquent Players Help will have Bay12 give you an action!
[GreatWyrmGold] gets a little crown. May it forever be his mark of Cain; let no one argue pointless subjects with him lest they receive the same.

Hubris Incalculable

  • Bay Watcher
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #56 on: October 07, 2012, 07:38:57 pm »

Our Zombies Are Different: We-ell...not that different, apart from their origin, as they were created from a mutation. They still act like typical Type P/F zombies.

Our Vampires Are Different: We-ell...not that different, apart from their origin, as they were created from a mutation.

((Kinda time for me to start contributing again, I think.))

EDIT: oops. already an OZAD.
« Last Edit: October 07, 2012, 07:43:10 pm by Hubris Incalculable »
Logged
Code: (Bay 12 Lower Boards IRC) [Select]
server = irc.darkmyst.net
channel = #bay12lb

Digital Hellhound

  • Bay Watcher
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #57 on: October 08, 2012, 08:53:00 am »

Updated the episode list.

Season 1
1. Lewis, as 'Chief Magistrate' of the survivors, hires Eriksson's services.
12. Ashes to Ashes - Lewis is Internal Retconned with Colonel McArthur implied to be taking over his vaguely defined position.

Season 2
1. The Swamps of Madness - The Captain is introduced. The team flees Orkney to the worst swamp ever, srlsly.
5. Deeper Waters - Slyv does the Unreveal.
6. The Stranger stalks David through the woods while being at Slyv's house at the same time. And is, no doubt, generally supercreepy.
11. Slyv does a bit of Jack Bauer Interrogation Technique fun on one of the Colonel's underlings to find out his whereabouts.
12. Red Horizon - Nightmare Fuel aplenty, red skies, implied distant nuclear detonation. The Colonel finds a surviving nuclear arsenal. Doctor Grey goes Omnicidial Maniac/I Can Rule Alone.

Season 3
?. The Blizzard - David has dreams about vikings. Go figure.
2. Backdoor - Daviv and Eriksson muck about in the sewers, encounter snarky robot. David's revealed as quite Book Dumb.
13. Flying North - One of Colonel McArthur's robot's turns into a huge tank. Then they betray him, and atleast one of them wants to make peace with the humans. There's a Stinger about Norwegians.

Undefined
?. Drifters - Elizabeth gets Broken Bird-ed.
?. Silent Echoes - Elizabeth and Doctor Grey mourn and bury David, the rest of the episode is a flashback. David actually becomes an intelligent zombie, though.
?. Memories in the Waves - The Captain's treasure gets broken, flashbackin' goes on and hidden depths are revealed. There's a healthy bit of adult fear to spice things up, too.

I'd be fine with making the Movie now.
Logged
Russia is simply taking an anti-Fascist stance against European Nazi products, they should be applauded. ¡No parmesan!

Fniff

  • Bay Watcher
  • if you must die, die spectacularly
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #58 on: October 09, 2012, 09:01:19 pm »

Please complain if this isn't right, but I quite like the idea and I think it'll be a nice starting point.

The Falling Dark: The Lone Cry
The Falling Dark: The Lone Cry is an adaption of the television series The Falling Dark.

It is six months after the last episode of the Falling Dark, Flying North. The team (Slyv, David, Eriksson and the Captain) have fled Orkney and made their way south, to London. Believing rumors that the government has started up again in London, they take the small sliver of hope to get to safety. However, it turns out that London has been taken over by an unknown figure known as the Monarchy, who only communicates by omnipresent screens, who has turned it into a nightmarish version of Victorian London. With the Stranger amassing a cult called the "Catherdral of Rats" and the Colonel's rogue robots attempting to invade London, to say it got worse would be an understatement...

Darker And Edgier: Yes. They made a series about the immediate aftermath of a nuclear war and made a film that made the situation even more grim.

Theoboldi

  • Bay Watcher
    • View Profile
Re: Narrative By Trope: The Reboot
« Reply #59 on: October 10, 2012, 02:15:31 am »

And The Fandom Rejoiced: When it was announced that the original cast would come back for the movie.

Religion OF Evil: The Cathedral of Rats. Duh.

The Hyena: Most of the members of The Stranger's cult are this.
« Last Edit: October 10, 2012, 06:14:53 am by Theoboldi »
Logged
Pages: 1 2 3 [4] 5