In-Universe - TV Tropes
- ️Wed Jun 17 2009
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/InUniverse
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In their original form, tropes are storytelling devices meant to convey a concept to an audience. The overwhelming majority of tropes on this site are specifically that: devices that can be recreated by an aspiring author who visits this wiki. Other tropes are about identifying how the audience reacts to an event, and are often an unintended side-effect of the use of a trope. If common enough, there are separate tropes for the same thing from two points of view. Some tropes tend to blur that line where both the characters within the story and the audience react the same way to the use of the trope, which sometimes involves a Lampshade Hanging.
In this wiki you will find the use of the comment "in-universe" by someone saying "This trope was used in-universe when..." and that is where a trope more often thought of as an audience reaction is used within the story, i.e. its fictional universe. One such use is the Invoked Trope, where the characters actively set up the trope in advance, though that happens more often with storytelling tropes.
For an example, Replacement Scrappy is a fan reaction to a replacement character. The reaction is often "You're mostly the same as the previous character, but you're not the one I remember and love." The series Star Wars: The Clone Wars has an episode where R2D2 is lost in battle and Anakin is given a new (virtually identical) droid. He ends up having the same reaction and attitude as most fans have with a replacement character.
And there is also a distinction between what is used in the story and the reasons it was used in the story, called Watsonian versus Doylist. For example, Elliot was transformed with long hair during Grace's birthday party in El Goonish Shive. The in-universe reason was to get Justin, who likes playing with hair, to agree to come. The practical storytelling reason was because he would look just like Ellen otherwise.
Word of advice to prospective writers. Despite what may be often believed, even without a lampshade, writers should be aware of the tropes they are using and how people will react to it. What separates Good Writing and Bad Writing is how much effort there is put into cleaning up the way tropes are used. Do not neglect the In-universe reasons. Give them a Hand Wave at least. Your readers will not forgive you if you don't.
It's also known under a variety of other names, such as In-Story, In-Series, and In-Fiction.
And here are some tropes that are separated by In-universe and Audience Reaction — Real Life (In that order):
- Actor/Role Confusion — …But I Play One on TV
- Actually Pretty Funny — Mexicans Love Speedy Gonzales
- Adaptation Personality Change — Memetic Personality Change
- All of the Other Reindeer/The Friend Nobody Likes/Hated by All/Hate Sink — The Scrappy
- Alas, Poor Villain/Antagonist in Mourning — Alas, Poor Scrappy
- Ambiguously Evil — Designated Evil
- Anti-Villain/Villainy-Free Villain — Designated Villain
- Ascended Fanboy — Promoted Fanboy
- Asshole Victim/Offing the Annoyance — Take That, Scrappy!
- Beautiful All Along — Unnecessary Makeover
- Beyond Redemption/Jumping Off the Slippery Slope/This Is Unforgivable! — Moral Event Horizon
- Black Comedy Rape/Lovable Sex Maniac — Memetic Molester
- Brain Bleach/Screaming at Squick — Squick
- Break the Cutie/Broken Bird — The Woobie
- Broken Pedestal — Fallen Creator
- Butt-Monkey — Memetic Loser
- Butterfly of Doom/Protocol Peril — MST3K Mantra
- Canon Discontinuity/Selective Obliviousness/Theory Tunnelvision — Fanon Discontinuity
- Can't Take Criticism — Protection from Editors
- Cerebus Retcon — Harsher in Hindsight
- Character Flaw Index — Writing Pitfall Index
- Cheaters Never Prosper — No Fair Cheating
- Comically Invincible Hero — Memetic Badass
- The Complainer Is Always Wrong — Fandom Heresy
- Cosmic Retcon — Retcon/Continuity Reboot
- Culture Clash/Deliberate Values Dissonance — Values Dissonance
- Dead Artists Are Better — Posthumous Popularity Potential
- Depending on the Writer — Alternative Character Interpretation
- Disappointed by the Motive/Freudian Excuse Is No Excuse — Unintentionally Unsympathetic
- Disproportionate Retribution — Karmic Overkill
- Dude Looks Like a Lady and Lady Looks Like a Dude — Viewer Gender Confusion
- Dude, Not Funny! — Humour Dissonance
- Dumbass Has a Point/Hypocrite Has a Point/Jerkass Has a Point/Villain Has a Point — Strawman Has a Point
- Effective Knockoff — Not-So-Cheap Imitation
- Endearingly Dorky — Adorkable
- Eskimos Aren't Real — Aluminum Christmas Trees
- Everybody Knew Already — Captain Obvious Reveal
- Explain, Explain... Oh, Crap! — Fridge Horror
- Failed Attempt at Drama — Narm
- Fan Disservice — Fetish Retardant
- Felony Misdemeanor — Informed Wrongness
- From Bad to Worse — Harsher in Hindsight
- God Guise — Misaimed Fandom
- Good Is Not Nice/Rightly Self-Righteous — Jerk Sue
- Hand Wave — Rule of Cool
- Hate Sink/Hated by All — Love to Hate
- Hatred Tropes — Scrappy Index
- Head-Turning Beauty — Ms. Fanservice
- Heh Heh, You Said "X"/Innocent Innuendo — Accidental Innuendo
- Her Code Name Was "Mary Sue" — Mary Sue
- Heroic Comedic Sociopath — Memetic Psychopath/Memetic Troll
- Hilarious in Flashback — Hilarious in Hindsight
- How Is That Even Possible? — Fridge Logic
- I Do Not Like Green Eggs and Ham — Tainted by the Preview
- Icon of Rebellion — Movement Mascot
- Impossibly Tacky Clothes — WTH, Costuming Department?
- Innocently Insensitive — Unfortunate Implications
- Internal Retcon — Orwellian Retcon
- Invincible Hero — God-Mode Sue
- Invincible Villain — Villain Sue
- Invoked Trope — Intended Audience Reaction
- It's All About Me — Protagonist-Centered Morality
- "Just Joking" Justification — Parody Retcon
- Knew It All Along — I Knew It!
- Made Out to Be a Jerkass — Unintentionally Sympathetic
- Monster Fangirl — Draco in Leather Pants
- Never Accepted in His Hometown — Germans Love David Hasselhoff
- Nice Job Breaking It, Hero!/Shoot the Dog — Why Fandom Can't Have Nice Things
- Nominal Hero — Designated Hero
- Old Shame — Creator Backlash/Bury Your Art
- Once Done, Never Forgotten — Never Live It Down
- Passing the Torch/Take Up My Sword (depending on whether the character lives) — Changing of the Guard
- Replacement Goldfish — Suspiciously Similar Substitute
- Scully Syndrome — Epileptic Trees
- Shipper on Deck — Shipping
- Shrouded in Myth — Memetic Badass
- Sickeningly Sweet — Sweetness Aversion
- Someone Ruins It for Everyone — Why Fandom Can't Have Nice Things
- Stylistic Suck — So Bad, It's Good/So Bad, It's Horrible
- Sucksessor — Replacement Scrappy
- Sure, Let's Go with That — Ascended Fanon
- Sympathy for the Devil — Cry for the Devil
- This Explains So Much — Fridge Brilliance
- Uncanny Valley — Unintentional Uncanny Valley
- Unexpectedly Obscure Answer — Moon Logic Puzzle
- Unwanted Assistance — Annoying Video Game Helper
- You Monster! — Complete Monster
See also In-Universe Marketing (a closely related phenomenon), In-Universe Examples Only (when tropes can only have examples and wicks in-universe).
On the wiki "In-universe" (or In Universe) is also a "magic word" you can you use to mark cases of in-story use of Audience Reactions, that don't have genuine trope equivalents. Typing this (or better yet, using it as a pothole, since the phrase usually sounds out of place, especially when dropped in a pre-written example) will disable the in-page YMMV notification for that bullet and its lower level bullets.note Do not abuse this feature, or we'll be forced to do terrible things to you, whatever universe you're in.