Tennis Boss



"All you have to do is deflect your enemy's attacks back at them, like a game of interstellar Pong."

- Yahtzee reviewing Super Mario Galaxy

Alright, this is it. You're facing the boss, and it's a big one. He's charging up an energy attack, just getting ready to launch it at you. What do you do? Do you dodge out of the way? Block with your shield? Scream like a little girl?

Nope. Swing, batta batta, swing! That's right, smack that ball of destruction right back towards the boss! If you're lucky, he won't be ready for it, and it'll hit him, leaving him open for a few good whacks with your sword/weapon of choice. If you're not, he'll hit it back and the game is on. For the extra-challenging variety, the ball will speed up each time you do this, so that eventually, you're furiously mashing the button to attack again and again and hoping that the boss misses before you do.

Sometimes, the boss will let out a different energy attack that can't be deflected. If you hit that projectile, it'll probably explode and you'll be damaged.

Incidentally, it doesn't really count as Playing Tennis if the boss's light-based energy projectiles are simply reflecting off your Mirror Shield - reflecting the attack must require timing and reflexes.

It also should be noted that the first time you encounter this trope, you usually have no idea what to do. It's really one of those things that only makes sense in video games.

Why the boss feels the need to use the one attack that can damage itself at all is unknown.

For when you're literally playing tennis with the boss, see Go-Karting with Bowser.

Action Adventure

 * The Legend of Zelda is considerably fond of this. Fans of the games often refer to this trope as "Ganonball". Phantom Hourglass gave it an official name, Dead Man's Volley.
 * It originally appeared during the fight against Agahnim in A Link to the Past, which lets you use either the Master Sword or the butterfly net. He only does the attack that can be reflected back about a third of the time, so you have to watch him closely.
 * Link's Awakening featured a shadow version of Agahnim during the final showdown, complete with tennis-based battle strategy. This time, the Shovel also works.
 * Ocarina of Time first features this in the fight with Phantom Ganon in the Forest Temple, then repeats it for the main fight with Ganondorf. This is the first time it was a true "volley" - the attack would go back and forth between you, getting faster and faster. Following the rule of using silly weapons to defeat him, you can use empty bottles to hit his attacks back.
 * Oracle of Ages and Oracle of Seasons each had one of these against an Agahnim clone -.
 * The Wind Waker features this during the return to the Forsaken Fortress, as a fight against Phantom Ganon. As With Ocarina of Time, the use of the empty bottle for this purpose is still an option.
 * In Four Swords Adventures Phantom Ganon returns, and if playing multiplayer his magic will change colour as its struck and can only be hit by a certain player.
 * Twilight Princess forces you to fight during the final boss run in this manner. As with Ocarina of Time and Windwaker, you can use an empty bottle in place of the sword.
 * Phantom Hourglass has you fight the Cubus Sisters this way. They even make a game out of it they call "Dead Man's Volley". Just a bit later, the first half of the boss battle against the Twin Dragon Gleeok works this way, although with an unique twist, using the rope from the Grappling Hook like a big slingshot.
 * In Skyward Sword, you can do this during the last time you fight Ghirahim, though you can just dodge and attack him through other methods. As well, the attack is a spinning disc, which forces you not only to hit it back, but to use the Wii MotionPlus controls to hit it back the right way.
 * There's one more place where this strategy can be used in Skyward Sword, and to great effect: against . You'd probably never do it without knowing about it first, though, because
 * In the Zelda-based parody Legend of Princess, you have to fight one of the minibosses like this (a monster that is totally NOT Phantom Ganon), but it degenerates to button mashing when it gets too fast.
 * This can also happen with regular enemies, such as in Okami, where an evil tree launches fruit at you and you send it back with Power Slash (though the game does have boss battles that feature this trope as well).
 * The Ghost Woman of Horo Temple, the first boss of Legend of the Mystical Ninja, requires you to bat her spinning energy disks back at her. Your normal weapons will have no effect, since she doesn't have a physical body.
 * In Ganbare Goemon 4, a Japanese-only sequel to the game, the final boss consists of a minigame where you have to throw a ball back to the sports-obsessed villain until he is crushed by it. It's painfully difficult.
 * And in Mystical Ninja Starring Goemon for the Nintendo 64, the boss of the Festival Temple Castle, Tsurami, flings spinning plates at the heroes, who must slap them back at her to win.
 * The video game adaptation of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets had many battles like this in the form of magical duels. A Flipendo Knockback Jinx is volleyed between the player and their opponent with Expelliarmus, and the spell continuously becomes more powerful and harder to repel the longer the tennis match continues.
 * Predating that, the PC version of Harry Potter and the Philisopher's Stone's Mirror of Erised Battle with Quirrelmort. You're stuck in the outer ring of the circular room, surrounded by pillars. You have to hide behind the pillars so that Quirrelmort would cast a spell at it to destroy it. When all the pillars are gone, you then use Flipendo to make the Mirror of Erised spin in place and face a different direction. Then carefully position it and yourself so that you'll use the mirror to reflect Quirrelmort's spell back at him.
 * The point and click PC game Disney's Villains' Revenge has a Boss Rush variety for the final battle as you use the storybook to deflect Captain Hook's cannonballs, The Ringmaster's pies, The Queen of Hearts' croquet balls, and the Evil Queen's energy balls.
 * Dark Grotto boss in An Untitled Story. He charges up a fireball and you have to reflect it with iceshot. He might will reflect it. How many times he will do it in a turn increases with amount of hitpoints left and with difficulty level.

Action Game

 * Even if it's not essential to defeat him and very risky to do, in the first Devil May Cry you can swat back the fireballs that the first Recurring Boss, Phantom, spits at you, and this is also the solution to one of the (few) game's puzzles. Doing this to the Final Boss in his second form gets you a health power-up.
 * You can also do this to the pillars Beowulf throws at you in Devil May Cry 3. It's not essential
 * Also in Devil May Cry 3, you also can reflect the Doppleganger's anti-light energy blasts.
 * The Gigapede in the fourth mission throw eletric balls of energy at you that you can send right back.
 * In Devil May Cry 4, Nero can use his Devil Bringer to deflect the attacks of one of the bosses, as well as throwing a sword-shaped enemy at whatever's nearest. Additionally, some of the Alto Angelos can summon Bianco Angelos to stand next to them and fire a huge beam of energy at either character. They can promptly deflect it with any attack - including a single thrown rose from Dante - to destroy the entire group and get an instant SSS rank.
 * The final phase of the last boss of Playstation 2 game Alter Echo is fought using this mechanic. Notably, there is nothing like it in the rest of the game.
 * The NES game Monster Party starred a baseball bat wielding kid who could bat enemy's projectiles back at them. This didn't have quite the Guide Dang It aspect that this trope sometimes fosters, since this technique worked on practically everything that used projectiles, and you could generally defeat bosses by just pummeling them with the bat instead.
 * Done in Kendo Rage against a boss that literally, is playing tennis with little star shaped monsters.

Adventure Game

 * In Epic Mickey, Mickey must do this with Petetronic's Tron discs in order to stun him long enough to hit him for real. While Petetronic does not attempt to hit back, he will put up deflector shields later on that automatically sends the discs back at Mickey, requiring Mickey to break a hole in the shields to get to Petetronic.

Beat Em Up

 * During the fights in the optional stages in Bonesaw, your opponent will spiral balls of green and yellow energy at you. The only way to defeat the boss is to hit the spiraling orbs with the titular weapon, which you need to charge from scratch as the boss uses YOUR Bonesaw energy to summon his own at the start of the fight.
 * Advance Guardian Heroes actually has this as a major fighting tactic. The best way to deal with pretty much any given attack is to parry it at the last second. In the case of projectile attacks, this sends it right back at whoever shot it. At the very end of the game, you have to knock back a Planet-killing blast, which requires perfect timing: Any parry that hits before the absolute last possible moment (the game is merciful enough to give you a timer) will be sent back at you, forcing you to do it all over again.
 * The Xbox Live Arcade version of Castle Crashers literally makes you play a game of volleyball with the boss of the Desert Sandcastle.
 * In Bayonetta, against the third-to-last boss, it's possible to catch a missile several times your size and throw it at the boss, who throws it back, so you throw it again, etc. The next boss tries to kill you with skyscrapers and a Colony Drop... Yeah.

Driving Game

 * In Snowboard Kids 2, any projectile can be deflected back at the racer who shot it by doing a quick board grab. The idea is that the projectile hits the smooth, reflective surface of the snowboard. Deflected projectiles, however, can be deflected again, sending the projectile back at its target. This can be kept up until someone times it wrong or cannot do a board grab.

Fighting Game

 * Possible during the Super Smash Bros. series. Mario has a move which flings his cape (of Super Mario World fame) in front of him, doing one of two things: Turning an immediate opponent in the other direction or redirecting projectiles in the other direction. It's with this second possibility that the 'tennis' idea comes into play.
 * Other characters also have similar moves, and the Franklin Badge does this automatically for everyone. In Melee, it was also possible to reflect with the normal shield if you had frame-precise timing. But playing this with that technique is another matter entirely...
 * Ness can reflect Samus's blasts with his baseball bat. Of course, this can be a brilliant in-game move as most players expect Ness to absorb the blast to heal damage
 * Ness's bat (and Mario's cape, and the other reflectors) can knock back any projectile—this can get excellent against items that are "owned" by the thrower, meaning they can't get damaged by them, like banana peels, Poké Balls, and ROB's odd top weapon. If they don't notice you reflected them before they fell, they'll think they're immune to them, and assume they're still not a threat. Hilarity ensues.
 * Fox and Falco's reflectors are capable of the same thing, and is required to perform an infamous glitch in Melee.
 * It can't go forever though; reflected items get stronger each time. Eventually a tennis match will end when the reflected attack becomes so powerful, it destroys the reflector. Better watch out if that was a Red Shell you were reflecting...
 * Zelda's Nayru's Loves, Fox, Falco and Wolf's Reflectors, Dr. Mario's Super Sheet and Mario's Cape, Rob's spinning arms, Mewtwo's Psychic, Ness and Lucas' bats and Pit's Spinning sacred blades and Palutena's Mirror can all reflect projectiles. The latter most is notoriously broken about it, defending behind him when the shield is in front of him.
 * In The King of Fighters you can "serve" a fireball, then they'd ping-pong it back and forth with reflectors until one of the players messes up their timing.
 * Both the Dragon Ball Z Budokai and Budokai Tenkaichi games feature generic Ki Blasts as attacks. With the right timing, you can either deflect them away or back at your opponent. A few of them even feature mini games where the objective is to keep this going for a specific amount of volleys.
 * In Killer Instinct, the final boss Eyedol can smack your projectiles back at you. Use a cheat to play as Eyedol, and you can play tennis til the cows come home.

First Person Shooter

 * Doom 3: Resurrection Of Evil's first boss was one of these. For that matter, you could kill virtually every other (non-boss) enemy in the game with one hit in this manner.
 * You can get into a semi-amusing game of this in the Star Wars game Jedi Academy, playing Force-push tennis with a launched rocket and Dark Jedi. Of course, the fact that they have more Force power than you makes this usually end with Jaden Korr splattered.
 * Except for the Korriban valley level. There's a dark Jedi standing on the top of some pillars in the middle who seems to have been placed there specifically for this purpose, as he's difficult to reach and rarely leaves his perch. Rocket tennis can be played with him indefinitely from several locations on the map, as he's far enough that the force regenerates before the missile comes flying back.
 * The same level has fights between light and dark force users in several places. You can fire a rocket at them and get them to play tennis against each other.
 * In Star Wars itself, one of the first tricks Luke learns is the ability to deflect blaster fire; in later movies we see Luke and other Jedi taking out Mooks by reflecting their own shots back at them (the main enemies, of course, use lightsabers of their own). In the movies, this is more about attunement to the Force than reflexes; in some video game adaptations (Lego Star Wars comes to mind) it comes back to player reflexes.
 * This tactic can be played straight with AT-STs and is one of the better ways to combat them.
 * An unintentional example could be pulled in the SNES game adaptation of The Empire Strikes Back during the final battle with Vader. By switching to a blaster, firing a shot, then switching back to the lightsaber, you could play a very pointless game of pong with Vader. He has perfect deflection reflexes, and won't move until the shot clears the screen (either by hitting you or being jumped by you).
 * LEGO Star Wars has some fun with this. It is possible to intercept blaster shots that have been deflected at a friend, and when you deflect them perfectly, they will go back to the first deflector, which will start a tennis match with no end unless you get yourself shot.
 * While very difficult, it is actually possible to reflect incoming fire such as rockets using Unreal Tournament impact hammer.
 * In Unreal Championship 2 The Liandri Conflict, you can reflect any weapons fire with your melee weapon, assuming you get the timing right. Rockets are fairly easy, unless you're too close, but sniper rounds are...difficult. If you get a kill by reflected shot, the announcer will say "Rejected", to make sure you know how badass you are.
 * It also says that when you get killed by one too, to make sure you know how badly you got owned. Also, sniper reflections tend to hit you in the head more often than not, which is especially aggravating since the AI can pull them off with ease.
 * Team Fortress 2 had an update which allows the Pyro class to use the alt fire on their flamethrower to deflect explosives. The newly released Flare Gun (a Pyro-only weapon) fires a deflectable projectile. As a result its possible for to Pyros to keep trying to deflect a flare at each other.
 * The Scout used to be able to deflect a Demoman's sticky bombs with his bat. This never happened with any other projectile, and was never implied in any game information provided by Valve, so it was likely a glitch (The bombs can bounce off character models; it was likely a combination of that and the ability to send the bombs flying after they land using a melee weapon).
 * The Scout weapons update also introduced the Sandman bat, which comes with a baseball projectile that Scouts can bat back and forth. Scouts can quickly "reload" a baseball by picking up one that they (or another Scout) left on the ground.
 * There's a custom game mode called "Dodgeball" that is less like dodgeball and more like tennis with player homing rockets and nukes and everyone forced to go Pyro to project rockets back with the compression blast.
 * The Pyro's air blast can affect Pyro flares, Demoman pipe bombs, Demoman sticky bombs, Soldier rockets, Scout baseballs, and Sniper arrows. Of those, flares, baseballs, and arrows can be reflected back and forth between two Pyros.
 * The absolute best thing about the reflection ability is being able to get headshots on enemy Snipers with their own arrows. The previous best thing about the reflection that there used to be a bug that stunning a Scout with his own reflected baseball and killing him resulted in him getting a kill assist point for assisting in his own death. This has unfortunately been fixed.
 * This is part of how you beat the last boss in Painkiller.
 * Happens with a couple of bosses in Metroid Prime 3, including the very first one.
 * Also happens (somewhat) in the Final Boss in Metroid Prime 2. Instead of bouncing it back, you catch some of it until you have enough and then throw it back at the boss. Easier than it sounds, especially due to the time limit you're under.
 * In Halo 3, the physics engine allows for some crazy examples of this, well timed explosions or gravity hammer swings can send rockets and grenades ricocheting back at the enemy.
 * Postal 2: When fighting Gary Coleman, you can kick his grenades right back at him. They explode on contact.

Hack And Slash

 * Final battle. God of War: Chains of Olympus. Textbook example.
 * In a rare moment of Genre Savvy,  will sometimes refuse to use the one attack which can be reflected in this manner, often for far longer than would be statistically probable if her attack pattern was truly random. Sometimes she'll alternate use of her other two attacks for up to ten minutes at a time, before finally getting frustrated enough to use her reflectable attack. Sometimes, when playing on God Mode, the difference in timing (and player excitement that she's finally using the one attack you've been waiting for) will be enough to throw you off and let her win.
 * There's also the battle with  in God of War 2. This is, in fact, the primary way of dealing damage until that boss is weakened enough for you to grapple.
 * While not required to win the fight, Travis can do this (with a beam katana, no less) during the Rank 2 battle in No More Heroes. The disturbing part? The projectiles in question are guys in gimp outfits. And every now and then, the boss will return your return with the same weapon she used to launch them with. A baseball bat to the back of the head. To their credit, they seem to like it.
 * There are a couple of regular enemies (and bonus fights) that toss baseballs at Travis that he can also swat back.
 * Hardest to do, but most gratifying, in the Destroyman fight. His Destroy Cannon can be reflected, or used when he is flying to hit the switch knocking him back down to earth.
 * Also subverted earlier in the game with the Rank 9 battle cutscene. Travis tries to do this to Dr. Peace's bullet. Turns out the bullet explodes.
 * In the God of War-like Heavenly Sword for the Play Station 3, you can deflect the daggers of the crazy mercenary and in the final battle the fire and lighting balls of the mad king.

MMORPG

 * World of Warcraft has a few boss fights with variations on this.
 * In the Wrath of the Lich King expansion, there's a Volleyball Boss. Basically, big glowing bombs slowly drop into the room, and the only way to keep them from touching the ground, blowing up, and killing everyone is to shoot them with ranged attacks.
 * An even closer example was added in the Cataclysm expansion, a boss who creates a glowing ball of energy and sends it roaming around the room. When it hits a player, it does moderate damage to all players nearby and starts moving in the opposite direction. When it hits the boss, the boss gets a Status Buff that eventually leads to an Area of Effect attack on the whole raid, but that attack also resets the ball. The problem is, if the ball ever hits the wall of the room, it's a Total Party Kill. So, basically, one or a small group of players spends the fight bouncing the ball between them and the boss but keep it from ever hitting the wall.

Party Game

 * In Rayman Raving Rabbids and its sequel, nearly all bosses in the shooter levels were shielded and could only be defeated by hitting missiles they shot at you. No matter what angle you shoot the missile at, it somehow finds its way back to the enemy.
 * In the original Rayman platform game, Mr. Sax is defeated by punching his "sharp notes" back at him.

Platform Game

 * In general, after starting with Zelda, Nintendo loved using this trope everywhere. Donkey Kong Jungle Beat features several mini-bosses that must be fought in tennis matches.
 * Super Mario Galaxy has this in a fight against King Kaliente, a giant, coconut-and-fireball-spitting octopus in a lava pit.
 * In addition to that, occasionally you will also find other vaguely octopus-like monsters that shoot coconuts.
 * The hammers in the Mario & Luigi series give you the ability to smack projectile attacks back at most bosses (and some enemies). The first game hangs a lampshade on it by having pull out a tennis racket when he spits a fireball. You have to smack the fireball back and forth a few times until one of you miss.
 * Variation in Super Mario Bros. 2: Birdo spits eggs that you have to jump on and throw back.
 * A common occurrence in the Crash Bandicoot series - most notably the first game's final boss.
 * La-Mulana's final battle. But wait! Only one of your many weapons can reflect the projectiles! Which one, you ask? Find out yourself, says the game!
 * Kirby's Dream Land 2 has you gaining the Rainbow Sword and go to the special area to fight Dark Matter. You can hit him directly with the sword, but a safer strategy is to keep your distance and wait for him to fire a certain attack, then thwack it with the sword back at him.
 * The True Final Boss of Sonic Rush Adventure shoots meteors and various other projectiles that can be reflected back at him—and probably should be, if you don't want the fight to drag on forever.
 * The sixth boss of Sonic Advance 3 must be beaten this way.
 * Similarly, the True Final Boss of Sonic And The Secret Rings can be damaged and stunned by deflecting its giant energy ball back at it. Since there's no other way to avoid this attack, this is a wise course of action.
 * The Final Boss in indie platformer Iji is like this. Although you can hurt him a bit with your guns, the only way to seriously damage him is to use a Resonance Reflector to bounce back his charged shot. In fact, the Resonance Reflector can be obtained as early as Level 2, and used on almost every attack in the game that spends time in the air, including the rockets and plasma rockets fired by almost all regular enemies. Certain enemies ALSO have Reflectors and can bounce back YOUR missiles, but your reflector takes five full seconds to recharge so extended volleys aren't possible unless you get the temporary autoreflector power up which usually results in the projectile bouncing back and forth until the enemy fails to reflect it.
 * Due to the final boss being invulnerable to armor damage and being too heavy for anything humanoid to kick, this is the only way to defeat it on Ultimortal. You are given the Resonance Reflector prior to the battle for this very reason.
 * At the end of the 3rd level of Flintstones - Surprise at the Dinosaur Peak, there's a yeti boss which makes rocks fall from a sky which can be swung back at him with a club. Often though, yeti swings that rock back again, often resulting rock going back and fourth 5-6 times.
 * In the battle with the Vizier in Prince of Persia the player and the Vizier can counter each others' counterattacks indefinitely, creating a close-range tennis match.
 * In the SNES version, he has a One-Hit Kill projectile attack you must deflect.
 * The second boss of Lyle in Cube Sector must be fought like a game of Breakout.
 * In NiGHTS Journey of Dreams the Reala battles are more or less a game of dodgeball with your Evil Twin.
 * This is how you beat Neo Cortex in Crash Bandicoot. Only the green ones can be deflected back though, the red ones will harm you, and the blue ones will zig-zag back and forth across the screen also harming you.
 * This is required to beat the final stage of the final boss in Vexx: Revenge Is Unleashed.
 * The final boss fight in The Legendary Starfy ends with
 * Even before he does that, the primary way to damage him is by using your star spin to deflect asteroids he throws at you, back at him.
 * The final boss of the 2009 A Boy and His Blob has you smacking back energy spheres at the boss  to weaken him for a physical attack.
 * Using the Mirror power to send back projectiles is the only way you can defeat Dr. Wily at the end of the original Game Boy Mega Man.
 * A literal example in Bug!!. The boss is an octopus who throws fish at you, so you take a tennis racket and swat them back at his head.
 * In Spyro: Year of the Dragon, a Bonus Boss in the Spooky Swamp tosses bombs and the way to defeat him is to hit them back at him.
 * In the Viewtiful Joe series, eternal rival and recurring boss Alastor likes to unleash swords that float around independently and home in on you when you get close. Unfortunately for him, they switch their target to their creator upon a properly placed hit by Joe. There are also a lot of tank-riding mini-bosses who fire shells at you that you can punch back with your Slow power.
 * In Red Hot Rumble, one of the showdown mini-games that can pop up in the middle of a fight involves hitting a Bianky mook back and forth at increasing speed until one side gets smacked with it.
 * Drill Dozer has a boss that's based on catching the projectile the right way and timing it so it explodes at the right time, so its more like hot potato with the boss. Like one Zelda example, the boss will refuse to keep playing after its lost enough rounds, forcing a more direct approach.
 * In |Sonic the Hedgehog 2006, this is Silver's primary means of taking out everything. Since he has no way to attack enemies directly (aside from a psychoshock attack that can do a tiny bit of damage and allow Silver to grab them while stunned) Silver's primary means of attacking is to use telekinesis to grab any nearby debris or, if nothing else is around, the enemy's projectiles and throw them back at the target.
 * In Mega Man X 6, Gate is completely immune to your attacks. The only way to hit him is to attack the colored spheres he throws at you; they then split into pieces, which damage Gate if they hit him. Oh, and did I mention that this battle happens in a room with a bunch of tiny platforms above a Bottomless Pit? Good thing your characters can climb the walls.
 * The first form of the final boss in Mega Man 9 spits out explosive dinosaur eggs (!). The eggs have to be shot back so they bounce into the boss's mouth.

Puzzle Game

 * The N64 game Mischief Makers had a level where you play volleyball with a boss. The boss in question is also a kitty cat.
 * Technically, it's dodgeball, in the middle of an Olympics-style event, against a cat with the same creepy haniwa face as nearly everything else in the game, while a Pretty Flower and green slime are also present on the court. And while you can cross the center line to directly beat the snot out of the cat, the crowd will gasp, and the cat will call you a cheater, and not give you hints for the next fight. If that wasn't I Am Not Making This Up enough for you, bear in mind that you also ride the cat on the next stage.
 * There's more. This is a boss fight where the cat that you are riding on is being chased by a giant motorcycle that looks like a dog, is armed to the teeth, and is ridden by an anthropomorphic wolf. You can also ride on the missiles it fires (while still riding the cat, of course). So... yeah...

Role Playing Game

 * Bonus Boss Ice Titan in Kingdom Hearts requires you to hit his icicles back at him, as anything else you can hit him does absolutely nothing until you stun him with the aforementioned icicles. In fact, you can do this in all sorts of places. Most projectile attacks in the game can be reflected back at an opponent, often giving a nice xp bonus and stunning the enemy.
 * The last part of the final battle of Kingdom Hearts II requires this; great deal of button mashing, since it's not one powerful attack - it is a goddamn torrent of energy blasts. On the other hand, if you manage to hit most of them back, you'll have blasted off a good deal of his health bar. Really, it's Press X and Triangle simultaneously not to die.
 * Several Final Fantasy bosses, usually at least once per game since the Reflect spell was introduced, will cast Reflect on themselves and/or the party, and bounce damaging spell off itself onto you and curative spells off you onto it. The solution is of course to follow suit. The best example of this is Bahamut and Dark Bahamut in Final Fantasy IV. Bahamut spends five turns charging up Mega Flare, the only real way to survive is to Reflect it back at him. His cousin Dark Bahamut casts Reflect on himself and bounces normal Flares off himself, and if you summon say, Bahamut to pierce Reflect, he counters with Mega Flare, which you need to Reflect to survive.
 * Exdeath in  Dissidia: Final Fantasy , is technically just another playable character instead of a boss, but just take a look at this match. Watch the vacuum wave projectiles fly from shield to shield to shield to shield to shield...
 * Deflecting their flying sword spell back at them is the only way you can harm the Three Wise Men in Odin Sphere. Unfortunately, they also teleport away if struck by anything else, know a large variety of other spells that inflict Standard Status Effects on you (meaning said flying swords come out very seldom, and only following barrages of other spells), and is enough of a Mook Maker to keep you busy, which makes them That One Boss even by Odin Sphere standards.
 * The final boss of Ys: Oath of Felghana will not only employ this strategy in the last part of the fight, he makes it as nasty as possible. He sucks away all your energy to do it, and launches other attacks after launching the reflect-able energy ball, meaning you have to play Pong with him and dodge his attacks at the same time!
 * Orjugan in Ys VI requires you to deflect its bombs back with the Wind Sword, while also dodging its instant-kill Death Ray and Giant Hands of Doom.
 * The Earth Trolls in Fable will rip up chunks of the ground and hurl them at you with alarming regularity. They cannot be blocked, but it is possible to dodge them or knock them back at the troll. Of course, the latter requires twitch-reflex timing and more than a little luck (or the time-slowing spell).
 * Several Avatar battles in .hack//G.U. are exactly like this. They even have a label that says "Shoot" or "Slash". Most of the time, they even show you hints like "Slash x to (do) y!"
 * In Dragon Quest Swords, swatting a bodkin archer's arrow back at it is that only way that it can be killed, as they never get close enough for you to hit them.
 * Likewise, you fight a scythe-wielding boss named Harvest Loon in  Dragon Quest Heroes: Rocket Slime  with him over a pit, out of range. The only way to damage him is to avoid his large scythe and smack the smaller Castlevania-esque scythe projectiles into him.
 * Avalon Code (NDS) features a variation(?) of this called "Judgement Link," although it's less like tennis and more like "how long can you keep the ball from hitting the ground" -- you smack the enemies into the air repeatedly, getting points and bonuses for long combos. In fact, there are two ways to do it: attack with one hand and send the enemies higher each time (which quickly gets insanely difficult); or alternate hands and keep them lower, but have to hit them faster (more challenging with heavier enemies).
 * You can also play Judgement Link against other NPCs, making it much closer to the trope.
 * In Dark Chronicle, Max is able to deflect certain enemy projectiles with his wrench.
 * In Terranigma, during the second form of Dark Morph boss, you have to deflect its attacks back to cause damage. The first form of the final boss applies too.

Shoot Em Up

 * Ikaruga allows you to absorb like-colored enemy fire and return it in the form of homing lasers. While this isn't technically reflecting fire, the game's second to last boss volleys homing lasers at the player at an ever increasing rate which are optimally returned the moment they are absorbed.
 * The Final Boss battle of obscure N64 game Sin and Punishment features Ruffian Saki fighting a gigantic evil Earth firing lasers and asteroids at regular Earth in this manner, deflecting its attacks back at it using your own swords and lasers.
 * You have to do it again for the final battle in the sequel.
 * In Triggerheart Exelica, the final boss tosses all sorts of debris from the space station at you. The most optimal way to beat it is to use the Anchor System to grab that debris and toss it back.
 * DJ Octavio, the Final Boss in Splatoon. He's got four stages and several attacks, and all of them are dealt with this way.

Simulation Game

 * Strong Bad Zone. The Wii version lets you permanently raise your shield, though.

Survival Horror

 * The second part of the battle against Leviathan in Dead Space is this. After you destroy its tentacles, it will start spitting huge festering balls of... something... at Isaac, who must use his kinesis to push them back at it. It always shoots five at a time, so the key is rebounding only the odd-numbered ones: the first and third ones will collide with the second and fourth ones, leaving the fifth ball to be shot back into its... mouth... or whatever the hell the Leviathan shoots those balls from.
 * Brutes in both games are Bullfight Bosses until you disable a limb, at which point they start spitting exploding balls of gunk at you. Grabbing them and flinging them back with Kinesis is an easy kill.
 * In Half-Life 2, the gravity gun can be sometimes used to catch enemy attacks and throw them back; Anti-matter orbs and objects stuck with hunter flechettes, for example. Also, grabbing a manhack (a flying sawblade robot) creates a chainsaw-like effect if held in the Zero-Point field, aside from the use of launching it at an enemy.

Third Person Shooter

 * In Blood Rayne 2, one of the earlier bosses is a giant who will throw mooks with explosives strapped to their chests at you. The only way to beat her is to harpoon them out of the air and throw them back when her belly is exposed.

Wide Open Sandbox

 * Ghasts and Blazes in Minecraft

Anime and Manga

 * In Pokémon Special, Guile can reflect a Pokémon's attack back at its user using his sword.
 * In Angel Beats!! Otonashi and Noda do this... in a baseball game.
 * A subversion appears in a season one Sailor Moon episode. The Monster of the Day is a camera-themed youma, Cameran, that's capable of trapping people in photographs with the beam it shoots from the eye in her palm. Left to fight Cameran by herself, Sailor Moon realizes that in order to weaken her, she needs to Cameran to take a picture of herself. The beam bounces off a mirror and hits Cameran, badly weakening her enough for Sailor Moon to destroy her and free the captive people in the pictures.
 * When Yu Yu Hakusho's Kuwabara develops his signature spirit sword, he at one point does it to a fireball thrown by an opponent.
 * It's later subverted with the second of the four legendary monsters. The beast shoots a ball of sound (don't ask) at Kuwabara. He's about to try to bat it back when the others tell him to dodge. He jumps to another pillar ... and the ball of sound obliterates the one he was standing on.

Film

 * The movie You Don't Mess With the Zohan features Playing Tennis With The Boss" literally through the use of tennis rackets and a grenade.
 * A scene in the Chinese movie Hero has two people using their swords to "play tennis" with a waterdrop.
 * In The Lost Empire (also known as The Monkey King), the protagonist uses his sword to reflect a villain's energy blasts, comparing it to a game of racquetball.
 * In Godzilla vs The Sea Monster, Godzilla and Ebirah play a round or two of this with a boulder. Neither of them manage to actually damage each other doing this, so after a while Godzilla basically says "screw it" and just shoots Ebirah with his atomic breath.
 * Godzilla and Rodan do this with a boulder in Ghidorah: The Three-Headed Monster. Rodan eventually wins, but the volleying lasted a long time.
 * This trope, combined with Taking the Bullet, is the reason why The Fairy Godmother ended up defeated in Shrek 2. Basically, after Fiona's father revealed that he deliberately gave her regular tea instead of the one laced with a love potion, she tries to kill Shrek by firing a null-happily ever after spell at Shrek, Fiona's father intercepts the attack and gets hit with it instead, and since he was wearing armor at the time, it rebounded and hit the Fairy Godmother, which apparently disintegrated her into bubbles.
 * Done with a thrown knife rather than energy at the conclusion of Big Trouble in Little China.

Live-Action TV

 * Power Rangers RPM has an three-against-one instance of this in the episode Not So Simple.

Web Comics
"Queen: Show no mercy to the usurper! King: No hand shall touch my royal person! Detain my wife!"
 * Girl Genius: "He threw a bomb at me!"
 * Happens during the King and Queen's breakdown in Dubious Company. Each orders the arrest of the other, leading to the guards running in circles and getting more confused and winded.


 * In Cucumber Quest, Almond does this to Peridot in this comic.

Web Original

 * In Kickassia, Yanki J does this with one of Baugh's cannonballs.
 * In Xin, Andre and Finrak do this with a baseball, hitting it back and forth with bats.

Western Animation

 * In Kung Fu Panda 2,