You Lose At Zero Trust

Some games reward you for pursuing romance and sex. Others punish you for neglecting it. (Naturally, some do both.)

Punishing you for neglecting your relationships means that You Lose At Zero Trust. If you don't maintain a relationship in game, the consequences range from losing special abilities to a Heroic BSOD or worse.

This also works in games with an Alliance Meter, if you anger every faction and they all come after you.

Related to Level Up At Intimacy 5 and Deus Sex Machina. Compare Mate or Die.


 * Bliss Stage is the Trope Namer. If your Trust in any relationship is ever reduced to zero, that relationship "breaks". A broken relationship earns you a ton of Bliss points, more if you have higher Intimacy. Getting more than 108 Bliss is very bad.
 * In Persona 3, neglecting to pay attention to certain Social Links may lead to them becoming Reversed, which means you'll have to repair the Link before it can be levelled up again. (You usually have a month after they request some attention to return it.) Persona 4 follows the same system, though it is also possible to Reverse or Break Social Links by pissing off the person in question. This is most noticeable when dealing with Ai Ebihara (The Moon), where one wrong word will quickly lead to her bitching you out.
 * Some Social Links can even be Broken altogether, in which case you will be unable to use Personas of the matching Arcana. The ones that can break are your prospective girlfriends. Want them to Break quickly? Date more than one girl at the same time - the amount of time you have to hang out with a girl before the link Breaks is cut by a quarter each time you see a different girl. In Persona 3, there are five such links that will seem mutually exclusive if you don't have extensive knowledge of this mechanic. Good luck!
 * Persona 4 notably improved the system however. Compared to 3, the only two social links you COULD actually break in 4 are Ai's and Naoto's, and that's if you treat them rudely during the budding friendship. Each of your prospective girlfriends has a "just friends" option allowing the MC to freely spend time with them without reversing any other Links. However this locks you out of a romantic relationship with that character for the rest of the game meaning you can't spend time with them on Christmas and get a powerful item from that girl. Persona 4 also kept the romantic overtones out of the S link until the last two allowing you to romance them and then complete the link soon after. Once you complete the Link it will never break or reverse allowing you to date another girl.
 * That's right folks! The Persona series actually REWARDS being a man-whore (unless you get caught)! Unlike every other video game in existence!
 * Not only rewards you but actively encourages you!
 * The Updated Rerelease for Persona 3 uses this system...as a female. But you can romance those fangirl magnets, and a ten year old.
 * Along similar lines, being enough of a jerk to your team members in Mass Effect can alienate them to the point that Kaidan and Ashley will find excuses not to talk to you, and Tali will outright inform you that she's only sticking around for the mission and doesn't want to speak to you. (Wrex, on the other hand, seems to like you a little better if you're a jerk to him.)
 * Wrex probably sees it as Shepard having more of a backbone, being that Wrex comes from a society of Blood Knights.
 * Mass Effect 2 takes things further. The only way to make it through the Suicide Mission against the Collectors with everyone in your crew alive is for everyone to be loyal to you through doing their loyalty missions after recruiting them. And even then, this only gives you a fighting chance—making the wrong choices during the final mission and/or not upgrading your ship could very easily lead to you losing squadmates no matter how loyal they are.
 * Even if you have her loyalty, Samara still tells Renegade Shepard that she's going to kill him/her after the mission is over. You can avoid this by killing her first. (Also, she doesn't actually kill you in the game. Yet.)
 * This is basically the entirety of Façade. If Trip gets very upset with you, he'll kick you out, leading to a Game Over.
 * In Vanguard Bandits, on the main story path, you get the Bad Ending if the average Morale of your units is under a certain number.
 * Turning your back to your god in Nethack is a very, very bad idea.It will lead to a Downer Ending in the best case, and in being electrocuted and disintegrated on the spot in the worst.
 * Sort of played in The Elder Scrolls, where if your speechcraft skills fail multiple times, you'll make an NPC hate you, which means you'd better not drop a plot-important NPC's trust level to zero. Especially since some NPCs attack you when that happens.
 * In The Elder Scrolls II: Daggerfall your reputation with your various guilds can decline if you stay away from them for a while and, though you can never lose guild ranks, you can be ejected from the guild until your reputation with them zeros out.
 * This is a significant aspect of Sacrifice. At the beginning, you are able to perform missions for any deity whenever you choose. As you accomplish these tasks and the plot progresses, you gradually fall out of favor with those you ignore, until the endgame leaves you permanently aligned with one of them and opposed to the four others.
 * In Tsukihime, if you take a very specific path, you'll ignore all main girls to such an extent that you'll get a Nonstandard Game Over, and in the hint corner afterwards, you'll get told to "give the girls more attention".
 * Additionally, game over can occur at several points in Tsukihime if character affection isn't high enough.
 * Which also happens in Fate Stay Night.
 * In Katawa Shoujo, if you don't make enough of an impression on one of the five girls by the end of the first week,.
 *   in Full Metal Daemon Muramasa:
 * In general, many Dating Sims and Romance Games will punish you with a bad ending if you haven't built up a high enough relationship with any of your potential suitors by a certain point. Some of these games make this ending extremely brutal as if to accentuate just how royally you screwed up, like Fantasia: Requiem of the Abyss that ends with if you fail to get on a guy's path by Chapter 3 and Hatoful Boyfriend that ends with  if you fail to complete a romance with anybirdie.
 * The Sims, naturally, though not just with romantic relationships. If you neglect your relationship with another sim you may lose them as a "family friend" and you need a certain number of family friends to get promoted at work.
 * Sims 3 averts this though. Your Sims never need friendships for anything other than improving the Charisma skill. They can even be promoted without having friends at all.
 * This only applies to some jobs. Other jobs play this trope straight by requiring you to have a high relationship with your boss or co-workers before allowing you to be promoted.
 * At one point in Neverwinter Nights 2, if you don't have enough influence with Elanee, she will leave your party and wander away (assuming you don't kill her instead). At the end of the game, The Dragon will try to lure some of your companions away from you, and those you have low influence with will fight at his side against you.
 * Bishop turns against you whatever you do, and Quara, Sand, Ammon Jerro, and Neeshka are all offered the opportunity if you were a jerk to them.
 * Though the "Trust" mechanic of Splinter Cell: Double Agent doesn't involve romance in any way, Sam will still lose if he reaches zero "trust" with either the JBA or the NSA.
 * Also, the game's ending is determined by how much each side trusts him.
 * A slight example exists in Star Ocean: Till the End of Time, if you don't have high enough affection with another character to get their paired ending, the Bonus Boss in the Bonus Dungeon, Urssa Cave Temple will be Fayt and Luther Lansfeld, who are significantly stronger than the same for a paired ending (where you fight Fayt and whoever he was paired with at the end of the main story).
 * In the Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Tag Force series, if you can't get a tag partner before the tournament, you get a game over and must start again.
 * At Zero Approval in the first Valkyrie Profile game, the goddess Freya attacks you. Win or lose, it's game over.
 * How one gets the infamous endings in School Days.
 * Maid RPG has this as one of the main features (that and the weirdness, of course). Although the GM can choose to simply assign you to a different mansion, you are getting removed from the campaign either way.
 * Personal relationships affect the mystery plot of Hotel Dusk: Room 215. Certain characters distrusting you (such as Dunning, the hotel owner) leads to a Nonstandard Game Over.
 * Geneforge 5 utilizes the Alliance Meter variant, provoking an Enemy Mine and an automatic game over if you piss off every faction.
 * The Thing is entirely based on this. Everyone in the game is so paranoid that if they lose all trust in you they immediately assume you are the Thing and start shooting at you. To make matters worse, they won't cooperate if they don't trust you enough. You can partially fix this by giving them guns, running blood tests to prove your humanity, or killing a member of the group that is a Thing and allowing it to expose its horrid form.
 * A large part of the story in Wizardry: Tale of the Forsaken Land revolves around interparty trust, which is what determines your access to the combos that are far better than individual actions and absolutely required to get very far. They also influence the success rate of resurrections... which given how often people will die if you don't keep your trust up... Oh and if the res fails twice, that character is Forever Dead. Even if it works though, dying and coming back negatively affects stats, in particular HP (so that they're more likely to die again) and trust (so you have a much harder time breaking the cycle). Screwing up your trust can effectively force you to restart the entire game.
 * The mediocre GBA version of Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron has you gaining the trust of wild horses and leading them through various areas. To keep their trust, you had to give them food and water. If trust got low enough, they'd refuse to let you ride, and would eventually run away from you. You can imagine how fun this was in the desert level.
 * Several Harvest Moon games punish you for not befriending (or romancing) certain characters by taking them away forever. In Harvest Moon 64, you could lose one of your potential brides and a rival this way, and that also meant not completing your recipe book since they had recipes they'd take with them. In A Wonderful Life, losing townspeople meant that you'd lose their "influence" over your child's interests. Either way, they'd be generally Lost Forever as NPCs.
 * Rune Factory: Frontier inverts this trope in one case. Pursing one of the potential brides, the maid Tabatha, will at one point eventually cause her sister to arrive. Continuing to do so means that in completing the final task required to marry Tabatha her sister will leave.
 * In Grand Theft Auto (starting with GTA San Andreas), you can date certain girls; once they like you enough, each one provides a special service (e.g., getting your weapons back when you're arrested, removing Wanted Levels, etc.). GTA IV added platonic friends—who basically work the same way, except for the lack of sex at the end of the date. If you don't take each NPC out on a regular basis (or you do things they don't enjoy when you do take them out), they'll stop being your friend/girlfriend, and you lose their special ability.
 * In Kira Kira, in addition to points with each girl, the band as a whole has Relationship Values. If you don't have any band points by midway through the game, you get a Nonstandard Game Over.
 * If you don't maintain a good relationship with your monster in Monster Rancher 2, it will be more likely to misbehave (losing you fights and precious training time) or even run away.
 * The Tokimeki Memorial series punish you hard if you totally ignore all characters except your target love, as they will be all too willing to "bomb" you, i.e. spreading bad rumours about you, and if you don't take measures to defuse those bombs, they will explode, heavily damaging relationships with all the characters you know. It's very hard to recover from a gone-off bomb with regular characters, and an essential Game Over with Nintendo Hard characters such as Shiori Fujisaki or Kei Hazuki.
 * In Dragon Age, if you annoy your party members enough or make choices that they don't approve of then they will either leave your party or attack you. The only character who will never leave is Alistair, but that's only because the mission to destroy the Archdemon is more important to him than anything else.
 * Morrigan will never leave the party either
 * If approval is not high enough by the time . Similarly, if  his approval is not high enough in Haven,
 * Averted in Dragon Age II. Companions gain different bonuses if they have high friendship or rivalry values. It's entirely possible to romance rivals as well. Maxing out a companion's rivalry will also earn his/her Undying Loyalty. Presumably this is because they either respect you despite your differences (Fenris, Sebastian), want to keep an eye on you (Aveline), enjoy messing with you (Varric), or want to prove you wrong about them (Anders, Merrill, Isabela).
 * Actually, you'll be at a disadvantage if anyone's friendship or rivalry isn't maxed by the final mission, as . But in  's case, having friendship or rivaly at a high level by the endgame of Act 2 is essential to getting the Supplier achievement/trophy, which is already a Guide Dang It clusterfuck to begin with. Not to mention   friendship/rivalry has to be high for   to be usable in Act 3 at all.
 * In Tactics Ogre: Let Us Cling Together, the Ogre Battle spin off, your troops have a loyalty meter that will change based on your decisions in battle and during story scenes. Though you can't lose by having troops with low loyalty, your troops will begin to leave you if they don't agree with you or aren't treated well. In a game where Anyone Can Die and the enemies you fight level up with the highest leveled member in your team to ensure you never get an easy fight, having the strong surviving warriors in your party leave you can be crippling. Combining this with the fact that you don't always know which actions will effect which characters, and the fact that your actions will always prompt a range of different reactions within your team, and that things as simple as not letting your units move during battle, or attacking an enemy unit of the same nationality of one of your characters can result in a drop in loyalty, AND the fact that loyalty is a relatively well hidden stat that can never be measured exactly makes this game Nintendo Hard.
 * In Paperboy, if all customers cancel their subscriptions, you get fired.
 * Only relevant in missions, but in both Mercenaries games if you do enough to become an enemy of the faction you're doing a mission for, you automatically lose the mission. Enemy factions also won't give you missions, which is the only way to get information on bounties (although that doesn't make the game unwinnable)
 * Soldier of Fortune II: Continually jeopardize the soldiers' mission in Colombia, and they will execute you on the spot for treason.
 * If a Relationship Boosted check in Monsters and Other Childish Things fails, or if a monster drawing upon the power of a relationship is PWZNED in a fight, then the relationship is "Shocked" and suffers a penalty as a result. Failure to repair the relationship in time can permanently damage it.
 * In Agarest Senki 2, if the relationship of the girl who you is low and you marry her. She would be presumably raped by your main character to bear the next Generation child. Said child's stats will be terrible.
 * In Fallout: New Vegas, some companions will leave you if your reputation with a faction drops too low or goes too high, if you do things they feel are wrong, or in Cass' case, if your karma drops too low. This generally happens if you associate with Caesar's Legion since all the human companions hate them though the non-human companions are ambivalent at best.
 * Averted in Alpha Protocol. Negative relationship values with certain characters nets Michael different bonuses than positive relationship values. This can also be used to manipulate characters into doing what you want them to do since the game encourages you to be a Manipulative Bastard.
 * Applied to a factional rather than a personal level, this trope can be found in just about any grand strategy game / political simulator that tries to model the Cold War from the perspective of one of the superpowers. If the other superpower distrusts you too much, the nukes fly, usually leading to The End of the World as We Know It.
 * In Septerra Core there are two pairs of party members - Led and Lobo and Corgan and Selina - that hate each other's guts and any of them may randomly attack the other one during a combat, if you travel with both of them. You need to go on two subquests to repair their relationships. It's possible to avoid the trouble by not travelling with both of either pair at the same time, but not getting subquests done will bite you back hard at the very end of the game, when the party splits in three teams - and people who hate each other will end up in the same one.
 * If you manage to reach the end of Romancing Walker without being nice enough to (and getting enough events of) the other members of your party, you'll get as far as the second-to-last room in the game... after which the game will scold you for not trying to court the women. The only two recourses are to load a slightly earlier game and grind out enough secret points to make an eighth member available (whose existence is a Guide Dang It in itself) OR to load a much earlier save file so that you can get relationship values high enough to have a partner going into the final battle.
 * In the Sim City series, you get fired if your approval rating gos too low, or if you are in debt for too long.
 * In the Sim City series, you get fired if your approval rating gos too low, or if you are in debt for too long.