Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2

The fourth main game in the Command & Conquer series, Red Alert 2 is set during the 70's, when the supposed puppet-Premier of the USSR leads a world communist alliance in a surprise invasion of the United States, with the help of the mindbending psychic Yuri. Though once more the Allies rally to win the war, the now-renegade Yuri has his own plans and steals a time machine in an attempt to conquer the past. He's thwarted, but the time travel shenanigans aren't finished.

The game was followed-up by an expansion, Yuri's Revenge on October 2001.

'''Please note that this page is for tropes specific to this game. Please add tropes relating to multiple games to the Red Alert series page.'''


 * All Up to You:
 * Justified in the Allied campaign, as you're the only battlefield commander still alive in the U.S. East Coast following the initial Soviet attacks.
 * In Yuri's Revenge, the Soviet commander ultimately gets Premier Romanov's full trust as he's not only about the only truly loyal one left but is also aware of the Bad Future Yuri intends to bring about.
 * Alternate History: Set in the 1970s, the game is this to both the first Red Alert and the original Tiberian Dawn.
 * Anachronism Stew: Thanks to the altered timeline, there are lasers, autonomous drones and even webcams by the 1970s.
 * America Saves the Day: Played with. The United States does eventually lead the way in the Allied campaign, albeit after receiving aid from the Allies in Europe. Something that Gen. Carville only begrudgingly relents to, as Americans needn't ask for help. In Yuri's Revenge meanwhile, President Dugan outright boasts to Yuri that "we won the war."
 * Awesome Personnel Carrier: The Battle Fortress and IFV are awesome in their own way. The IFV can change armaments depending on the troop type it is carrying; the Battle Fortress can crush other vehicles!
 * Badass: The Hollywood actors that help the Allied commander during the Hollywood mission in Yuri's Revenge are fairly badass in their own right.
 * Badass Bystander: Generic civilians in other missions will sometimes open fire on enemy troops (yours or the opposition, depending). They don't do very much damage. This is slightly more prevalent in Yuri's Revenge, if any mind-controlled civilians happen to be standing around Yuri's structures when the player disables the psychic dominators on the map.
 * Present, in typical awesome fashion in the second Allied mission in Yuri's Revenge, where you defend Hollywood, and find a few curiously familiar names, such as Flint Westwood, Arnnie Frankenfurter, and Sammy Stallion. 'Flint' can insta-kill infantry with his revolver, 'Arnnie' totes a minigun and is Nigh Invulnerable, and 'Sammy' somehow managed to put a Grenade Launcher attachment on his M-60 that can blow up any structure instantly. As such, Flint can annihilate waves of infantry, Arnnie just laughs when anything up to a tank shoots him, and Sammy can demolish entire bases in a few seconds, if you can keep them away from their horrendous weakness to various things.
 * Bald of Evil: Yuri.
 * Big Bad Wannabe: Premier Romanov isn't himself a threatening villain.
 * Bilingual Bonus: A number of tracks in the game's music contain audible lines in various languages such as French, Russian and German.
 * Bland-Name Product: McBurger Kong, a spoof of McDonald's and Burger King.
 * Brick Joke: The Soviets momentarily wind up too far in the past in Yuri's Revenge, fending off dinosaurs before arriving at the correct time due to overcharging the time machine.
 * Broad Strokes: How the game treats the first Red Alert, with its events more or less having happened, including an Allied victory. It's implied as well that the Red Alert 2 timeline also diverged at an unspecified point.
 * Cartoonish Supervillainy: Pretty much the entire premise of Yuri and his faction, which ups the somewhat ridiculous RA arsenal Up to Eleven with the addition of genetically mutated Hulk look-a-likes, psychically powered infantry, UFOs, and so on. Then there's the expansion campaign, which features such gems as weaponized Moai statues, an Arctic/Moon base, and a gothic Transylvanian mansion headquarters. Regardless of which campaign, all of Yuri's plans end up failing spectacularly and then Yuri himself eventually being submitted to some humiliating fate.
 * Casting Gag: Barry Corbin, who plays General Carville in RA2, is basically reprising his role as General Berringer from War Games. There's even an explicit Shout-Out during one of the Ant missions ("I'd piss on a spark plug if I thought it'd do any good!").
 * Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: General Vladimir, who was an important supporting character in Red Alert 2, is nowhere to be seen in Yuri's Revenge, its expansion pack.
 * Devil in Plain Sight: Yuri. Sure he's part of a villain faction, but he's Obviously Evil even compared to the other characters, and nobody but the brainless General Failure suspects him of treachery. See also, Obvious Judas below.
 * Distaff Counterpart: Boris to Tanya after a fashion in Yuri's Revenge.
 * Dirty Communists: How the Allies view the Soviets, obviously.
 * Dirty Coward: Yuri's gattling tanks and Magnatrons: they certainly like to dish out punishment at long range but flee at the first whiff of a counterattack.
 * Early-Bird Cameo: Many people don't realize that General Carville (and his actor) appeared in the second expansion of Red Alert 1, making him the only actor to appear in multiple titles and the only character other than Einstein to do so. This may have something to do with his only appearing in the Playstation release of the game under the Retaliation name.
 * Easy Level Trick: The second Allied level can be beaten by skipping your base building and using your starting forces to destroy the levels target.
 * Enemy Mine: The Allies and Soviets in Yuri's Revenge, though it's made pretty clear that both sides want the other out of the picture almost as much as they both want Yuri dead.
 * Everything Is Big in Texas: In Red Alert 2, one Soviet mission has you hunting down the U.S. president in San Antonio. All of the male civilians wear cowboy hats and fire handguns at you. The U.S. base is actually around the Alamo, though they don't garrison it. But you can.
 * Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods: Soviet anti-ship squids.
 * Evil Laugh: Crazy Ivan as well as Tanya.
 * For Want of a Nail: The fact that the Allied and Soviet campaigns of Yuri's Revenge start at all story-wise is because the failed American strike on the Psychic Dominator on Alcatraz still managed to cripple the nuclear reactor powering it, allowing precious time for the time machine in San Francisco to be completed.
 * Game Mod: A number have come out over the years. Among the most notable ones is Mental Omega, a full-fledged expansion pack and fan reimagining of Yuri's Revenge.
 * General Failure: General Vladimir, the incompetent glory hound who's your superior in the first half of the Soviet campaign. He gets you into trouble in the second mission by assaulting the vastly superior American fleet with only his personal command ship, and then leaving you to deal with them as he flees the battle. Then when you have completed the destruction of the U.S. East Coast fleet, he takes credit for your accomplishments by returning to Moscow before you can. His one saving grace is being savvy enough to see through Yuri, but it feels rewarding when you finally remove him from command.
 * Genetic Engineering Is the New Nuke: Literally; Yuri's "Genetic Mutator" superweapon instantly converts a bunch of people into massive musclemen.
 * The Good, the Bad, and The Evil: The Allies, the Soviets and Yuri (and his faction).
 * Government in Exile: President Dugan and what's left of his staff eventually wind up in an undisclosed location in Canada.
 * Historical In-Joke: Possible example in the briefing for one of the Soviet missions. The player is shown a picture of Stalin, with Yuri edited in on his right. This picture really exists and is famous for being doctored, the real life version showing Stalin sat next to Lenin, who bears a fairly strong resemblance to Yuri. This version of the picture, created at the behest of Stalin, is a forgery to try and give him more credibility as one of Lenin's closest collaborators.
 * Towards the end of the Allied campaign, the Cuban Missile Crisis is recreated. Except this time around, the Soviets and Allies are already at war and the outcome doesn't result in nuclear apocalypse.
 * Human Resources: Yuri's Bio-Reactors from the Red Alert 2 expansion. They don't generate much power on their own, but "garrison" infantry in them and they become some of the best power plants in the game.
 * I Love Nuclear Power: In addition to nuclear missiles, the Soviets this time around have access to radiation-spewing Desolators (via Iraq) and nuclear-armed Demolition Trucks (via Libya).
 * Invaded States of America: The catalyst of the game's plot and where a good portion of the game and expansion takes place.
 * Large Ham: Premier Romanov.
 * General Vladimir too: Behold the power. OF MOTHER RUSSIA!
 * Lighter and Softer: Unlike its darker and more serious predecessor, Red Alert 2 has a rather campy and light-hearted tone.
 * Mad Bomber: Crazy Ivan. Full of one-liners to match. "I lost a bomb... do you have it?"
 * "Here, hold this!"
 * Made of Explodium:
 * Not only barrels, but pretty much every scenery prop explodes (albeit harmlessly), even if you only ordered a GI/Conscript/Initiate to shoot at it. A bunch of tires is passable, but beach towels?
 * Yuri's "Psychic Dominator" weapon permanently mind-controls a few enemy units. It also, for some bizarre reason, makes all nearby buildings explode.
 * Monumental Damage: A lot of landmarks get blown up or are at least damaged considerably over the game, including the Pentagon. Averted with the Eiffel Tower in the Soviet campaign, however, which is used as a gigantic Tesla coil to destroy the rest of Paris. In Yuri's Revenge meanwhile, it's also possible to destroy the Apollo Lunar landing site at one point in the Soviet campaign.
 * Mood Dissonance: The game's cheery atmosphere gets a bit more serious when Carville dies.
 * Multinational Team:
 * The Allied forces, while having a much more pronounced American element, are still comprised of units from various countries.
 * Downplayed with the Soviets. While the majority by and large come from the USSR, there are units from Cuba and the Middle East.
 * No Campaign for the Wicked: Yuri in Yuri's Revenge does not have a campaign.
 * Nuclear Weapons Taboo: Justified. The Allied arsenal is detonated at the start of the game.
 * Averted by the Soviet Union, though. Romanov assures the player in one mission that "After you feel pain from my nuclear bombs, you will WEESH for ANOTHAIR chance!"
 * Obvious Judas: . There's something suspicious about him from the very beginning, and he only gets more suspicious as the game goes on. By the time it gets the point that is murdered, it's already blatantly obvious that he has an agenda. Then comes his 'proof' that  is responsible. Miraculously, the player character still seems to see nothing wrong.
 * The Player Is the Most Important Resource: The video cutscenes after the final mission acknowledge that the success of the final battle was due to your leadership.
 * Playing with Fire: Yuri's Initiates are psychics who attack by burning things with their powers.
 * Power Glows: Starting with Red Alert 2, any unit that makes it to Heroic (max veterancy) status will find their weapon fire glowing red, either in the form of a large red muzzle flash, the projectiles themselves glow, or the explosions they create are bright red mushroom clouds bigger than the unit itself. Heroic-level Grizzly, Rhino, and Apocalypse tanks launched two miniature nuclear shells per barrel, and Heroic-level V3 Launchers and Dreadnoughts launched V3 rockets with small nuclear warheads. Kirovs also got tesla bombs, at least doubling the area of effect with a blue electrical glow.
 * Renegade Russian: Subverted with Yuri, who has a family estate in Transylvania that he uses as a stronghold and is implied to be of Romanian descent. He and his followers eventually breakaway from the Soviet Union, having his own army by Yuri's Revenge.
 * The Remnant: The Allied forces in and around San Francisco (and Einstein's time machine) are all that remains of the free world at the start of Yuri's Revenge, Yuri's Psychic Dominators having turned the rest of the planet into mind-controlled slaves. The only reason why that's so is because the one built in Alcatraz was insufficiently powered.
 * Ret-Gone: This is what the Allies' Chrono Legionnaire does, literally erasing enemies from time.
 * Set Right What Once Went Wrong: Both campaigns in Yuri's Revenge, albeit for different reasons.
 * For the Allies, it's to stop Yuri while also making sure that the war against the Soviets is still won on schedule.
 * For the Soviets, it's both stop Yuri and win the war against the Allies. Which is particularly evident in one mission, which is basically a repeat of the Allied mission to protect Einstein's lab in Germany...except this time, thwarting it as the Soviets.
 * Spanner in the Works: The Soviets in Yuri's Revenge. Yuri activating the Psychic Dominators doesn't stop their initial goal of stealing the time machine in San Francisco to change the past and win the war. Only now, they're forced to deal with both the Allies and Yuri, thwarting both factions in the process.
 * Spiteful AI: The mind control tanks take damage if it mind controls too many units. It will happily push forward and Mind Rape as many units as it can regardless of this until it is destroyed.
 * Symbology Research Failure: Red Alert 2 has Russian Orthodox Church architecture on Communist structures.
 * The Dev Team Thinks of Everything:
 * McBurger Kong restaurants from RA2 feature a giant ape statue/sign on the roof. When the building is garrisoned the ape gains a commando-style headband, when the building is damaged into the red the ape covers its eyes as if cowering in fear.
 * An Allied mission of Yuri's Revenge, which takes place in Sidney, Australia, has instead the McRoo Burger restaurant, complete with a giant kangaroo on the roof!
 * If Boris dies early on in the first Soviet mission in Yuri's Revenge, not only is there unique dialogue. But Boris himself reappears once your forces successfully return to the past, momentarily puzzled as he hadn't died at that point.
 * Title Drop: "The entire world and all of its history is mine to command and conquer."
 * Unperson:
 * Yuri brands general Vladimir a traitor and a "non-person" after setting him up for Romanov's murder. Having known Stalin personally, he probably picked up the habit from the man himself.
 * By the expansion, the Soviets generally refer to Yuri as the "Traitor Yuri."
 * Video Game Cruelty Potential: Yuri's faction has the Grinder machine, which you can send your obedient soldiers (or hypnotized enemies/civilians) into to be shredded into valuable scrap bits.
 * One allied mission sees you trying to destroy a network of such devices Yuri's built in Los Angeles. There's no time limit on the mission, though, so you're free to watch brainwashed civilians walk into them for as long as you like while you build up your forces.
 * Villainous Breakdown: Premier Romanov in Allies campaign, especially after the player destroyer the 3 nuclear silos in one of the missions.
 * Violent Glaswegian: The crew of the Allied Battle Fortress in Yuri's Revenge certainly qualifies, though the accent is pretty bad.
 * Battle Fortress: ROLLING THUNDER!!
 * Washington DC Invasion: The Soviet campaign has the Commies invading America's capital twice. The second time being, at Yuri's orders, to eliminate Vladimir, who's taken up residence in the White House.