Chekhov's Gun/Web Comics

"Jon Kilgannon: This page is guaranteed to be 100% free of foreshadowing. I swear."
 * Annyseed Is dashed with these… Just what does Professor Tripadiculous do with his guests? What is all this about Tarkwin's daughter, Juliet? Who was she? Are Perry's words to be taken seriously? And just what is Winston going to do, now that he ownes the love potion?
 * One Shortpacked strip has a shot of Mike's closet, in which a is slightly visible (it doesn't take a keen eye to see it, but it's not out in the open) about a year before the plot involving it.
 * El Goonish Shive is somewhat notorious for its use of Chekhov's Guns, many of which have yet to go off. Perhaps the most infamous Chekhov's Gun is Lord Tedd, who was first mentioned way back in the Sister Arc (and who's effects have been around since the Goo Arc, the first official arc of the series) but who's never been officially confronted.
 * Dinosaur Comics refers to this trope in their "Literary Technique Comics" series here.
 * Dominic Deegan: Luna's tusks are revealed to be  a full seven years after she and her tusks are originally introduced.
 * Lampshaded in Narbonic: Iris describes her fragile valuables and wonders why. Dave explains that he causes foreshadowing.
 * Order of the Stick has a few examples:
 * The Belt of Gender-Changing
 * This one is debatable, though, as the author himself stated in the books commentary that he decided to use it after "remembering he has introduced it". Therefore, it wasn't meant to be a Chekhov's Gun, although it could still be said that it became one.
 * Vaarsuvius' Potions of Heroism in comic 421 which she/he/it previously bought in comic 135.
 * Belkar's Ring of Jumping + 20
 * Elan's Boots of Elvenkind
 * Roy's Bag of Tricks
 * In fact, almost all of the items the party looted from Xykon's dungeon apply. Haley's gotten plenty of use out of that Bag of Holding, and Vaarsuvius's Ring of Wizardry was mentioned in passing. The only exception is Durkon's Amulet of Natural Armor, though to be fair, the item has a passive, "always on" type of ability.
 * Subverted in at least one instance: the comic's forums were wildly speculating about what had happened to a poisoned arrow that was misfired. The next comic featured the arrow, in a highly unlikely trajectory, narrowly missing all the most popular potential targets only to bounce off V's protection from arrows... but said spell is a Chekhov's Gun itself.
 * Even the cast page has one:
 * Until recently, Haley's panel contained a giant diamond. The cast needed 5000gp worth of diamonds to, so Haley just took the diamond and replaced it with "IO Me: one big-ass diamond."
 * Explosive Runes were used before a sudden 336-episode hiatus
 * The silver dragon shown dead in this strip is likely the one he reanimated and rode into the battle at Azure City.
 * In Comic 131 we learn that Haley's father has been imprisoned for ransom. More than six real-life years and 627 strips later it is revealed that
 * Celia mentioned that Dorukan left a gap in the cloister for summoning spells.
 * The spell Tsukiko is working on in these strips, is eventually confirmed to be part of the Snarl-controlling ritual. More to the point, her studying of it allows her to realize that.
 * Which is followed shortly by the reveal that the spell Redcloak is casting here is
 * In comic 842,
 * In The Adventures of Dr. McNinja, while the titular Doctor is visiting Count Dracula's moon base, he learns that Bruce Lee didn't die; he simply completed his career as the greatest martial artist ever by jumping to the moon. Later, when the Doctor must fight Dracula without any weapons suited for killing vampires, he slips off and gives Bruce a visit, and uses his knowledge well.
 * And then there was the time when he became very excited about the particular model of plane he was riding based on its toilet facilities. He was just in it for a cheap shot at pirates, but you guessed it, it becomes important.
 * Dan McNinja can.
 * Doc sings the Ghostbusters theme while dispatching ghosts.
 * Gunnerkrigg Court fans speculate wildly on every background object and character in the comic because of the number of Chekhov's Guns that have already popped up.
 * The gold brooch that Garanos wears for the first five chapters of the comic goes unnoticed and unmentioned, but several chapters later was revealed to be the key to restoring peace in her homeland.
 * Early on in Ansem Retort, Zexion puts a fire cracker inside Riku. A few episodes later, Riku tries to use a fire elemental attack which backfires and causes said firecracker to ignite which splits Riku in half.
 * In Season 6, Axel is seen fighting a shark. The shark appears for only one panel and its only purpose at the time was to show that the characters actually know that they're world is made of pure insanity. Later on, it's revealed that sharks are the only natural predators against werepires (were-wolf vampires...yeah). Lampshaded in that the shark is actually named Checkhov.
 * And if you thought that Jesus' miracle hang-over cure was just a stand alone joke, well guess who the team decides to call when time-travelling using alcohol cosumption
 * In 8-bit Theater, Thief is stated to have Ninja Lawyers. They inevitably prove useless however, since when he finally calls them, they turn out to have been dead for a long time.
 * Also,.
 * The Datasphere, in conjunction with that, proves to be crucial in and.
 * The Onion Kid, having been continually abused in the strip, is revealed to
 * SWORD-CHUCKS, YO!
 * Perhaps the ultimate example of Chekhov's Gun in the series:
 * The episode in question is entitled 'Longest Set Up In Webcomic History'.
 * Lampshaded in this Concerned strip.
 * In Irregular Webcomic, James Stud was given a literal Chekhov's Gun from Ãœ. Consider that in every James Bond film, every gadgets ends up being useful in some way, this probably is the most useful thing ever. And yes, there's a link to this page (and Red Herring, which the strip also talks about).
 * From the same author, in Darths and Droids episode 240, Morgan-Mar mentions that the would-be assassin of Padme Amidala in Episode 2 possesses shapechanging, and while it is introduced, it is never developed afterwards (in an averted Chekhov's Gun).
 * For a straighter Darths and Droids example, see this strip where Qui-Gon checks his equipment list. Sometime later...
 * This Rock, Paper, Cynic comic subverts the concept with a play about pacifists in a gun shop entitled "Chekhov Was a Filthy Liar".
 * In Thunderstruck, there are several Chekhov's Skills and other elements that are introduced early on and then used later. In a mild variation, there's usually a link below the comic sending readers back to the previous use of the Chekhov's Gun.
 * In an early chapter of Girl Genius, Gil shows Agatha a real Heterodyne device that he's trying to figure out what it does. Shortly thereafter, they have to use it to fight a swarm when a Hive is activated. During the battle, other people notice a weird effect going on. Years later, Gil pulls it out and uses the 'weird effect' brilliantly.
 * That's nothing. Phil Foglio seems to be a master of this trope; if there's a detail mentioned somewhere in the story, whether a visual cue, off-hand comment or subtle hint, you can bet it's going to be brought back up later to make for either a major twist, minor gag or even both. Perfect example: when Agatha joins up with the traveling performers, she gets hooked onto the idea of equipping them with the ability to defend themselves. However, after showing Krosp plans for "a merry-go-round that can level a small town", it's never really mentioned again... Then, finally, as another character is recounting an event at the end of the battle, he mentions that Captain DuPree was found wounded, and she claimed that her injuries were the results of destroying (wait for it) a merry-go-round.
 * The golden brooch Agatha wears at the start of the series turns out to be a Chekhov's Armoury all on its own. Among other things, it is
 * The ring that unfolds into a lockpick! That's a double Chekhov's Gun!
 * Another, literal Chekov's Gun: see that weapon Tarvek is holding? The one that looks like the bastard offspring of a blunderbuss and a Kalashnikov? As it turns out, about a month later we find that it pulls to the left.
 * Franz, the huge reptilian monster who lives in the catacombs under Mechanicsburg was first seen in june 2008, trying to sleep. Three and a half years later....
 * Misfile had glimpses of the Monster XR in Books 1 and 2 before it was fully revealed in Book 3. The liner notes for Book 3 show that invoking Chekhov's Gun was intentional.
 * Digger has had at least two so far;
 * The Vampire Squash.
 * Descending Helix of Fernfossil Clan.
 * Sluggy Freelance does this constantly, on a scale comparative to Harry Potter, and during a longer run of stories. Pete Abrams is also very, very good at disguising the Guns, to the point that in June 2009 he was able to reveal that all along for about a decade, which no reader had noticed even though it had been shown several times.
 * The regular Cyanide & Happiness comics don't have these due to short-form constraints. Their movies, however, are a delightful exception.
 * Subverted in this Mountain Time comic, and lampshaded for good measure.
 * The MS Paint Adventures, series Problem Sleuth has both candy corn and 'Sepulchritude', which are introduced early in the comic. The main character has to abstain from their use several times.
 * Megatokyo invokes this several times, with perhaps the greatest example in these strips. Over 8 years apart in writing.
 * Forgath's Anymug (magically able to fill itself with any liquid) just became one of these on Goblins. Turns out there's a highly-flammable liquid Forgath is familiar with, and a cup full of that is very handy when fighting a higher-level enemy with a wooden body.
 * A Magical Roommate is peppered with very subtle plot points, which often don't come into play until hundreds of strips have passed. Even the Running Gag of Aylia transforming her sister became a gun when Alassa decided to make transformation her focus...
 * In A Miracle of Science, 's therapy is reported to be robust against anything less than a major psychological disturbance.


 * Sinfest: Criminy gets glitter points, and then keeps the Bishie Sparkles. Lampshade Hanging on his appearance? Nope.
 * Yet another one got fired in the Hell Fishing series. Seems the "Reality Zone" is toxic to demons.
 * In the first mini-arc of Penny and Aggie, Penny, looking for a way under Aggie's skin, learns she's sensitive about her late mother, something she imagines using against her until having an attack of conscience. She finally gives in to temptation seven (real-time) years later, or about two in-comic, the two having been close friends several (in-comic) months, when Aggie's admission, to an FBI agent pressuring her to divulge more and more information, that she witnessed Brandi commit a violent act, gets Brandi detained for further questioning in an unrelated case.
 * In Trope Overdosed the Webcomic, an arrow shot a few strips earlier kills a spy/soldier.
 * Homestuck has several, though due to how quickly it updates, said guns usually don't exist for long before going off.
 * Early in the series, PM tries to contact Jade using her terminal, however, due to interference, the terminal blows up. About a year later, it's revealed that the interference was.
 * Also, in this update, Karkat snarks that Superman is the humans subconsciously admitting to the troll's superiority. Four months later,.
 * In Narbonic, one of the many bits of mad science is the Tinasky Case. We see Helen B. Narbon invited to the Mad Science Symposium to lecture on it. We see Dr. Lupin Madblood getting upset about it. It isn't until the last couple arcs that we realize it is the Chekhov's Gun of the entire seven years of the comic... and why.
 * In Captain SNES, the author notes that it took him eight years to fire one of these off. Thing is, it actually goes back one year further than that!
 * Chapter 13 of The Dragon Doctors fires one introduced in the B plot of chapter 4 - the egg received in payment from the gorgon-turned-human
 * Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures practically invokes this trope by name.
 * Commonly referenced in Full Frontal Nerdity, along the lines of "If the DM describes it, it must be stolen, because it is important".