Magic Ampersand

"Ampersand Law #1. Early RPGs always had names in this format: [Something] & [Something Else That Usually Begins With The Same Letter]. (Dungeons & Dragons, Tunnels & Trolls, Villains & Vigilantes, Chivalry & Sorcery, etc.)"

- RPG Cliche List

Any fictional roleplaying game can be recognized as such, because it will have a title consisting of two alliterative plural nouns suggestive of its genre separated by an ampersand. A writer in need of a fictitious parallel to Vampire: The Masquerade, for instance, would probably dub it something like "Cloaks & Coffins". Bonus points if the two nouns are a place name and a monster name.

The Magic Ampersand form serves the same instant-identification purpose for ad hoc roleplaying games that the Chest Insignia does for ad hoc superheroes. It's also frequently used to make jokes about fictional creatures playing a roleplaying game based on our own mundane lives.

Of course, sometimes there is Truth in Television: Bunnies and Burrows, Castles and Crusades, Mutants and Masterminds, Villains and Vigilantes, Tunnels and Trolls... all paying homage to the mother of them all, Dungeons and Dragons.

(Note: Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility are aversions of this trope, being Jane Austen novels.)

Compare The Noun and The Noun.

Examples: ""We're pretending we are workers and students in an industrialized and technological society.""
 * Rona Jaffe's Mazes & Monsters.
 * An early issue of The Dragon (the official Dungeons & Dragons magazine) actually parodied itself, with an insert cartoon showing several fantasy characters playing a "mundane life" RPG titled Papers & Paychecks.


 * Robot Chicken had a similar parody in one of its small in-between scenes.
 * One college comedy magazine in the US had another "mundane life" RPG called Driveways and Desk Jobs.
 * Kingdom of Loathing has "Cubicles and Conference Calls".
 * A fictional roleplaying game/laser tag hybrid called "Aliens & Asteroids" appeared in an episode of War of the Worlds
 * "Grottos and Gremlins" from the video game Bully.
 * Literary example: Neal Stephenson's The Big U explicitly compares the LARP Sewers and Serpents, played by characters in the novel, to Dungeons and Dragons.
 * The Web Comic Darths & Droids.
 * Due to the Celebrity Paradox, in the Darths & Droids universe, the makers of Darths and Droids are working on a similar comic about an RPG version of Harry Potter: Wands & Warts. Every 50 episodes, they add a new burrow to this little rabbit hole.
 * In the Wands & Warts universe, the makers are working on a screencap comic about The Sound of Music: Notes & Nazis
 * In that universe universe, the Irregulars are making Mutants & Miscreants. (X-Men)
 * In THAT universe, they're writing Enlisted Men & Extraterrestrial Biological Entities (Aliens).
 * Then Magicians & Munchkins? (The Wizard of Oz)
 * Sandals & Spartans (300, for the 300th strip).
 * Avatars & Avi-Fauna (Avatar)
 * Terminators & Temporal Paradoxes (Terminator).
 * Carcasses & Carcharadons Jaws.
 * Trenchcoats & Turncoats, Casablanca.
 * Amphibians & Anthropomorphisms, The Muppet Movie.
 * Heists & Hypnagogic Hallucinations, based on Inception.
 * Barnacles & Bilgewater, based on Pirates of the Caribbean.
 * Docs & Deloreans based on Back to The Future
 * The real-life Tabletop Games Villains and Vigilantes, by Fantasy Games Unlimited. They also made Starships & Spacemen.
 * Wizards & Warriors in both DC Comics' Robin and an episode of Quantum Leap.
 * Wizards & Warriors was also the name of a summer replacement TV series in the early 80s. It parodied many themes and tropes from fantasy stories and FRP games. One episode even featured the hero gathering a "Dungeons and Dragons"-style party of specialists to go on a quest.
 * There's yet another Wizards and Warriors series out there...a trilogy of video games developed by Rareware for the NES.
 * The webcomic Dungeon Damage had a group of Dragons playing "Humans and Houses".
 * The (unnecessarily complex, at least for this first-edition AD&D veteran) Powers & Perils fantasy role-playing game, published by Avalon Hill, if you can believe it.
 * The superhero RPG Mutants and Masterminds.
 * And the supplements for different comic book genres: Wizards & Warlocks (sword'n'sorcery comics) and Mecha & Manga (guess).
 * An episode of Dexters Laboratory, (Itself called D & DD) features the titular character running a game of "Monsters & Mazes". Dee-Dee replaces him as the Game Master, with amusing consequences.
 * A sketch in The Onion Movie featured the game "Wizards & Warbeasts."
 * In Spellcasting 101: Sorcerers Get All The Girls, a group of students at Sorcerer University is always playing "Malls & Muggers".
 * And they're still playing - with no evidence of having stopped at any point in the year between games - in the next game. One of the tasks that your would-be fratmates have to accomplish in order to get through hazing week (which you can watch) is to make them stop.
 * From the web series, "Gold": "Goblins & Gold"
 * The computer RPG Might and Magic
 * FoxTrot had a series of strips where Jason and Marcus were playing "Houses & Humans", which is pretty much what it sounds like.
 * Esther Friesner's fantasy novel Majyk by Hook or Crook has a brief mention of a game called "Palaces & Puppies."
 * Firesign Theatre: Ah, I don't wanna play Dungeons & Vikings!
 * Simon the Sorcerer II features a group of characters interested in a game called "Apartments and Accountants". Since Simon the Sorcerer is a fantasy series, A&A simulates real life.
 * Something Positive of course, has its own take on it.
 * In Werewolf: The Apocalypse, one rival to Black Dog Games' Talespinner system and World of Shadow setting (a Self-Parody of The World of Darkness) was the venerable Labyrinths & Lamiae, formerly owned by LSD Inc, and later by Magicians of the Bay.
 * Black Dog themselves produced Axes & Arcana, parodying White Wolf's Swords & Sorcery.
 * Two unrelated video games titled Swords & Serpents: one by Imagic for the Intellivision, another by Interplay for the Nintendo Entertainment System.
 * D and DS 9 is a fairly standard example.