Appointment With FEAR

Appointment with F.E.A.R. is a Gamebook by Steve Jackson in the Fighting Fantasy series. It is especially noteworthy for taking on a very different subject: instead of the usual Heroic Fantasy settings, it is set in a Comic Book-inspired superhero setting, though still in a place called "Titan" (Titan City, to be precise).

You are Jean Lafayette, a.k.a. The Silver Crusader, a masked vigilante who underwent a genetic experiment as you were born, and the effects started to show just as the scientists behind all this gave up on seeing the effects. Having either Super Strength (with Flight), Psychic Powers, being a Gadgeteer Genius or blasting Pure Energy, you embark on a fight against crime in the city of Titan!

Evil organization Federation of Euro-American Rebels, or F.E.A.R., led by the sinister Vladimir Utoshki a.k.a. the Titanium Cyborg, is bent on world domination. The Silver Crusader must stop FEAR the day their leaders are to meet, or else it might be The End of the World as We Know It.

The book contains examples of tropes such as: ""You can honestly say that you've saved the world from F.E.A.R. itself.""
 * Bald of Evil: Vladimir Utoshski.
 * Big Bad: Vladimir Utoshski / Titanium Cyborg
 * Bound and Gagged: Several instances. In one case, you do this to a villain once you defeat them.
 * Busman's Holiday: Lafayette can hardly go shopping in the mall or relax on the seashore without some supervillain or big danger coming by...
 * The Cape: That's the kind of superhero the Silver Crusader is supposed to be.
 * Captain Ersatz: The book is full of them:
 * The Scarlet Prankster is a CE of The Jester (Marvel) or the Joker (DC).
 * The Creature of Carnage is definitely a Hulk CE.
 * The Silver Crusader himself, as well. Picking Super Strength/Flight makes you very much like Superman, while Gadgeteering Genius plays out a lot like Batman.
 * Chainsaw Good: Chainsaw Bronski is a criminal whose weapon and tool of choice is, as you'd guess, a chainsaw.
 * Chinese Launderer: He seems to also serve food if you ask him too.
 * Distressed Damsel: Several, although children and men are just as likely to need rescuing as the women.
 * Everything's Even Worse with Sharks: When you go to the beach, guess what danger comes from the sea?
 * Fun with Acronyms: F.E.A.R itself.
 * Flying Brick: One of the four superpowers you can choose from, and the one that makes the game easier to beat.
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar: In the French version, the "Peking Duck" has been translated as "Canard de Cholon" ("Cholon Duck"). You'd better not try to learn what it is unless you require Brain Bleach.
 * Guide Dang It: As is usual for a Fighting Fantasy book.
 * Heroic Bystander: Doubles as a Crowning Moment of Awesome.
 * Incredibly Lame Pun: The very last sentence if you get the good ending


 * It's a Wonderful Failure: Contains one of the darkest bad endings that you can possibly get in a Fighting Fantasy gamebook.
 * Lighter and Softer: When you fight enemies, you merely capture them as opposed to killing them. That's not to say that deaths don't occur in the book, just not when Silver Crusader wins any fights.
 * Of course you don't kill them, you're a superhero.
 * You can kill them, but you lose hero points. This is something of a hollow punishment when you consider that hero points are very rarely important.
 * Gameplay-wise, almost never, true. They're really meant as a way of keeping score so you can compare one playthrough to the next.
 * The Many Deaths of You
 * Mix-and-Match Critters: You will meet a mad scientist who has created a four-armed man and a tiger-headed one.
 * Mugging the Monster: You being the monster, of course. You can choose whether-or-not to fight them off,.
 * Mummy: One of the supervillains to be fought, described as an Implacable Man.
 * Mysterious Informant: Several.
 * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Usually causes you to lose hero points, except for one case where your powers actually kill somebody and nobody calls you on it.
 * No Celebrities Were Harmed:
 * "Michael Blackson"?
 * "Georgie Boy"?
 * "Lloyd Webber-Andrews"?
 * Oh Crap:
 * Pastiche: Of Silver Age superhero comics.
 * Playing with Fire: The Fire Warriors.
 * Red Herring: If you choose Super Strength as your power, one of the clues you can obtain actually contradicts all the other clues. Deceptive, cunning villain or sloppy editing? Your call.
 * Reptiles Are Abhorrent: Fear The Serpent, supervillain in a snake suit who has an actual poisonous bite!
 * Shout-Out: Many!:
 * "Wayne Bruce"? "Drew Swayne"?
 * "Clark Street"
 * It's possible to buy your boss a Dungeons and Dragons set, or a copy of The Warlock of Firetop Mountain.
 * Peter Laboratories and Parker Airport appear in the same paragraph.
 * Really, you can make a drinking game out of these. (Richard Storm, anyone?)
 * Super-Hero Speciation
 * The Beast Master: An unencountered supervillain is referred as this name, and the hero learns that he has escaped. Despite this, it is never mentioned again.
 * Ungrateful Bastard: If you defeat the shark by blowing it up with an Energy Bolt, it will explode and chunks of its flesh will land on the beach-goers... who will then criticize you harshly and calling you out for tormenting a "poor fish". This will quite dishearten you.
 * What Kind of Lame Power Is Heart, Anyway?: The Psi powers will prove to be the most useless one. Check this one if you want a challenge!
 * Yank the Dog's Chain:
 * Yellow Peril: The only Asians to appear in the book are shifty eyed orientals in an ethnic restaurant who