Category:Omnipresent Tropes: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{IndexTrope}}
{{IndexTrope}}
The kind of [[Trope]] which you see all the time. [[Seen It a Million Times|ALL the time]].
This is the kind of [[Trope]] which you see all the time, and we mean [[Seen It a Million Times|''all'' the time]].


Some of them are intrinsically vital to storytelling itself; they're so ubiquitous, you don't even think of them as [[Trope|tropes]] until they're pointed out to you. Some are [[Acceptable Breaks From Reality]]--unrealistic [[Trope|tropes]] that are intrinsic to the escapist appeal of fiction, and would seriously detract from it if they were [[Averted]]. Then you have the ones which are not necessary by any means, but look like the most ''natural'' thing in the world--timeless classics which for centuries have driven stories forward, held audience breaths and become legends. You sit through the work expecting them, even looking forward to them; come the [[Establishing Shot]], the first thing you ask yourself is "Where's [[The Hero]]?"
Some of them are intrinsically vital to storytelling itself; they are so ubiquitous, and you don't even think of them as [[trope]]s until they're pointed out to you. Some are [[Acceptable Breaks From Reality]]--unrealistic [[trope]]s that are intrinsic to the escapist appeal of fiction, and would seriously detract from it if they were [[Averted]]. Then you have the ones which are not necessary by any means, but look like the most ''natural'' thing in the world--timeless classics which for centuries have driven stories forward, held audience breaths and become legends. You sit through the work expecting them, even looking forward to them; come the [[Establishing Shot]], the first thing you ask yourself is "Where's [[The Hero]]?"


If anything, ''these'' are the proof that [[Tropes Are Not Bad]]. If ''these'' are [[Cliche]] then so is nigh every single work in the history of fiction.
If anything, ''these'' are the proof that [[Tropes Are Not Bad]]. If ''these'' are truely [[Cliché]], then so is nigh every single work in the history of fiction.


Not to be confused with [[Universal Tropes]], which are used in all ''types'' of media, but need not be ubiquitous. If a [[Trope]] is omnipresent, but only within a specific genre, you may be looking at a [[Necessary Weasel]].
Not to be confused with [[Universal Tropes]], which are used in all ''types'' of media, but need not be ubiquitous. If a [[Trope]] is omnipresent, but only within a specific genre, you may be looking at a [[Necessary Weasel]].


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{{Trope Life Cycle}}
[[Category:Index Index/Sandbox]]
[[Category:Index Index]]
[[Category:Tropes]]
[[Category:Tropes]]
[[Category:Omnipresent Tropes]]
[[Category:Trope Life Cycle]]
[[Category:Category:Omnipresent Tropes]]

Latest revision as of 20:14, 16 July 2021


This is the kind of Trope which you see all the time, and we mean all the time.

Some of them are intrinsically vital to storytelling itself; they are so ubiquitous, and you don't even think of them as tropes until they're pointed out to you. Some are Acceptable Breaks From Reality--unrealistic tropes that are intrinsic to the escapist appeal of fiction, and would seriously detract from it if they were Averted. Then you have the ones which are not necessary by any means, but look like the most natural thing in the world--timeless classics which for centuries have driven stories forward, held audience breaths and become legends. You sit through the work expecting them, even looking forward to them; come the Establishing Shot, the first thing you ask yourself is "Where's The Hero?"

If anything, these are the proof that Tropes Are Not Bad. If these are truely Cliché, then so is nigh every single work in the history of fiction.

Not to be confused with Universal Tropes, which are used in all types of media, but need not be ubiquitous. If a Trope is omnipresent, but only within a specific genre, you may be looking at a Necessary Weasel.