Mass Effect/Tropes M-P

Tropes A-D |  Tropes E-L  |  Tropes M-P  |  Tropes Q-Z

"-- Asari: We need a souvenir. How about a fish? -- Turian: Fish have nothing to do with the Citadel. Besides, it'll be dead in a couple of years. -- Asari: The important thing is to enjoy the time you spend with the fish."
 * MacGuffin: Shall we count them?
 * Magical Gesture: Most biotics make excessive hand and arm motions when using biotic powers; this is justified in-universe by saying the motions really do help make the instinctive connection between firing the right nerve endings and making stuff fly into space.
 * Magic From Technology: Biotics look like magic, feel like magic, follow the same arbitrary restrictions as traditional RPG magic, and take more handwaving to explain than the rest of the series' technology combined. In-universe, however, they're considered a very throughly understood field of science in everything but implementation, as it is impossible to reliably grant biotic potential to an individual.
 * really pushes this trope to its breaking point.
 * Magic Tool: The aptly-named omni-tool. There isn't much that it isn't used for in the Mass Effect universe. Some of the applications include:
 * Precision manufacturing of any small parts (which, of course, can be combined into larger items) from a commonly available plastic/silicone/metal mix named "Omni-gel". This includes EXPLOSIVES.
 * Hacking locks and remotely controlling drones.
 * Discharging EMP.
 * Medical diagnosis and field treatment.
 * Sensor data acquisition and communications.
 * Browsing the Extranet and portable gaming.
 * Flashlight.
 * As of Mass Effect 3, their holographic interface may temporarily become solid forcefields, allowing it to produce a Laser Blade.
 * Apparently, it is not a true Laser Blade. Fluff states that the omni-tool basically flash-forges a super-heated piece of molten metal and projects it in a mass-effect field, complete with glowing "Danger, Fire: Hot" holograms around it. The end result is a highly-penetrative, laser-looking wrist dagger that you can stick in your target and, you know, leave there.
 * Maligned Mixed Marriage: Inverted witht he Asari, who don't like to see members of their own species get together, and prefer that Asari get together with members of other species.
 * Mauve Shirt: The first game has Jeff "Joker" Moreau, Doctor Chakwas, Richard Jenkins, Navigator Pressly and Engineer Adams. Each has a name, some personality and a bit of a background, but Jenkins dies in your first mission, while Pressly gets killed in the opening cutscene of the second game. By contrast, Adams chose to retire after the Collectors' destroyed the Normandy and returns for the third game, while Chakwas and Joker tagged along in the second Normandy and will serve with you until the end assuming you save Chakwas in Mass Effect 2.
 * The second game introduces Kelly Chambers, Kenneth Donnelly, Gabriella Daniels, Rupert Gardner, Hawthorne, Patel, Rolston, Goldstein, Hadley and Matthews. All of them can die in the Suicide Mission, if you don't go into the Omega-4 Relay quick enough.
 * The third installment features Steve Cortez and Samantha Traynor and to a lesser degree Privates Westmoreland and Campbell.
 * Nihlus Kryik gets a fairly interesting backstory, a collected disposition and an Informed Ability, just before he gets killed in the second scene of Mass Effect 1. He gets a little more backstory from having previously encountered one of your Mass Effect 2 squadmates, Samara.
 * Mayfly-December Romance: Any asari relationship with anyone but a krogan or their own species. Sort of Nightmare Fuel, when you consider the fact that asari children are therefore all but guaranteed to lose their alien parent during adolescence or earlier.
 * And krogan aren't even a safe bet. Unless they happen to be a very patient krogan, odds are that the krogan parent will have either left and/or gotten themselves killed in one fight or another.
 * Or, as one asari mentions, their relative long lives means that it's possible for veterans of galactic wars separated by centuries to still meet up and get it on. In said asari's case, her father (a krogan) was a veteran of the Rachni Wars while her mother was a veteran of the Krogan Rebellions. When this is discovered by the two parents... well... it doesn't end well.
 * Also in the second game, you can overhear a conversation between a young asari and her salarian step-father, where this is brought up. The salarian is having a tough time buying a souvenir, to the exasperation of his daughter. If you listen to it all the way through, the salarian admits he's worried that his MUCH longer lived step-daughter won't remember him, and wants to buy something special for her mother so she won't forget either, as he asks her whether she remembers her father. Even worse: he's thirty-five at that time, and his species isn't expected to live much past 40. Tick tock...
 * In fact, its brought up all the time when talking to or overhearing asari speak about their relationships or parents. Two asari are discussing their prejudice against "purebloods" and one is far more vehement than the other. Her companion wonders whether its a response to the fact that she "barely knew" her salarian father.
 * On Illium an asari woman is inverting this with regard to her Krogan boyfriend (with whom she is going through a rough patch). She finds humans easier to date because she only has to stick around for a century or so and the human eventually drops dead, allowing her to amicably part from them (this admission does not amuse Shepard). However, Krogan can potentially live as long as asari, and thus are a potentially much bigger commitment, with the attendant restrictions that implies.
 * Of course, this wouldn't be Mass Effect if it didn't also have every interspecies relationship trope Played for Laughs. A certain couple on the Citadel give us this gem:
 * Discharging EMP.
 * Medical diagnosis and field treatment.
 * Sensor data acquisition and communications.
 * Browsing the Extranet and portable gaming.
 * Flashlight.
 * As of Mass Effect 3, their holographic interface may temporarily become solid forcefields, allowing it to produce a Laser Blade.
 * Apparently, it is not a true Laser Blade. Fluff states that the omni-tool basically flash-forges a super-heated piece of molten metal and projects it in a mass-effect field, complete with glowing "Danger, Fire: Hot" holograms around it. The end result is a highly-penetrative, laser-looking wrist dagger that you can stick in your target and, you know, leave there.
 * Maligned Mixed Marriage: Inverted witht he Asari, who don't like to see members of their own species get together, and prefer that Asari get together with members of other species.
 * Mauve Shirt: The first game has Jeff "Joker" Moreau, Doctor Chakwas, Richard Jenkins, Navigator Pressly and Engineer Adams. Each has a name, some personality and a bit of a background, but Jenkins dies in your first mission, while Pressly gets killed in the opening cutscene of the second game. By contrast, Adams chose to retire after the Collectors' destroyed the Normandy and returns for the third game, while Chakwas and Joker tagged along in the second Normandy and will serve with you until the end assuming you save Chakwas in Mass Effect 2.
 * The second game introduces Kelly Chambers, Kenneth Donnelly, Gabriella Daniels, Rupert Gardner, Hawthorne, Patel, Rolston, Goldstein, Hadley and Matthews. All of them can die in the Suicide Mission, if you don't go into the Omega-4 Relay quick enough.
 * The third installment features Steve Cortez and Samantha Traynor and to a lesser degree Privates Westmoreland and Campbell.
 * Nihlus Kryik gets a fairly interesting backstory, a collected disposition and an Informed Ability, just before he gets killed in the second scene of Mass Effect 1. He gets a little more backstory from having previously encountered one of your Mass Effect 2 squadmates, Samara.
 * Mayfly-December Romance: Any asari relationship with anyone but a krogan or their own species. Sort of Nightmare Fuel, when you consider the fact that asari children are therefore all but guaranteed to lose their alien parent during adolescence or earlier.
 * And krogan aren't even a safe bet. Unless they happen to be a very patient krogan, odds are that the krogan parent will have either left and/or gotten themselves killed in one fight or another.
 * Or, as one asari mentions, their relative long lives means that it's possible for veterans of galactic wars separated by centuries to still meet up and get it on. In said asari's case, her father (a krogan) was a veteran of the Rachni Wars while her mother was a veteran of the Krogan Rebellions. When this is discovered by the two parents... well... it doesn't end well.
 * Also in the second game, you can overhear a conversation between a young asari and her salarian step-father, where this is brought up. The salarian is having a tough time buying a souvenir, to the exasperation of his daughter. If you listen to it all the way through, the salarian admits he's worried that his MUCH longer lived step-daughter won't remember him, and wants to buy something special for her mother so she won't forget either, as he asks her whether she remembers her father. Even worse: he's thirty-five at that time, and his species isn't expected to live much past 40. Tick tock...
 * In fact, its brought up all the time when talking to or overhearing asari speak about their relationships or parents. Two asari are discussing their prejudice against "purebloods" and one is far more vehement than the other. Her companion wonders whether its a response to the fact that she "barely knew" her salarian father.
 * On Illium an asari woman is inverting this with regard to her Krogan boyfriend (with whom she is going through a rough patch). She finds humans easier to date because she only has to stick around for a century or so and the human eventually drops dead, allowing her to amicably part from them (this admission does not amuse Shepard). However, Krogan can potentially live as long as asari, and thus are a potentially much bigger commitment, with the attendant restrictions that implies.
 * Of course, this wouldn't be Mass Effect if it didn't also have every interspecies relationship trope Played for Laughs. A certain couple on the Citadel give us this gem:

- Turian: Is this the life span talk? I'm not having the life span talk.

"Wrex: Yes, because you humans have a wide range of cultures and attitudes, but krogan all think and act exactly alike."
 * In the third game, a human woman and her asari lover are talking about the best way to break the news to the human's husband that she wants to leave him. If you listen to the whole conversation, it eventually becomes apparent that the asari is not thinking of the relationship as long-term like the human woman is...
 * In Mass Effect 3, asari-vorcha couples get mentioned (their offspring are apparently allergic to dairy) - vorcha have a life expectancy of 20 years.
 * Mechanical Evolution: The geth.
 * Mechanical Lifeforms: The geth,.
 * Mega Corp: Most of the businesses in the game, honestly. Granted though, if you're gonna supply a galaxy, you gotta be pretty huge.
 * One in particular stands out: Elkoss Combine. The running gag on advertisements is ending with "A division of Elkoss Combine". In Mass Effect 3, Elkoss Combine's sales kiosk on the Citadel has the motto "Elkoss Combine: If it exists, we carry it." You even may pass by the owner, the volus Rupe Elkoss, having an idle chat about business practices.
 * Memetic Hand Gesture: The Turian Councilor's air quotes when he dismisses the reports of the Reapers.
 * Men Are the Expendable Gender: Averted and played straight by the races to varying degrees. There is a strong Gender Rarity Value going on for the ones who do.
 * The salarians keep their rare females as safe as possible (though one of the two you meet can be killed if you don't play your cards right).
 * You hear about how protective the krogan are of their rare fertile females (at least of their own clans), only to find out they use their non-fertile ones as decoys. Also, the fertile female you meet can die.
 * Mental Affair: Pretty much the whole way the asari work, though they can get physical as well.
 * Men Use Violence, Women Use Communication: Zig-zagged constantly by the various species, although we rarely see their female members, some of them play this trope straight.
 * Notable are the krogan, to the point that it's emphasized and lampshaded by Wrex and Eve.
 * Humans and quarians, on the other hand, are subject to Gender Is No Object moreso than this trope.
 * The asari zig-zag it all one their own: they're the only all-female race in the series, and they're shown to be capable warriors and diplomats. However, they're also the only species whose Hat is being stereotyped as an Obstructive Bureaucrat.
 * Mercy Kill: What Shepard and Co. consider killing off any victim of Reaper Indoctrination to be. Knowing how horrible the process is, it's hard to disagree with that assessment.
 * Mercy Rewarded: Something of the point of going along the Paragon path. Paragon can actually net you more money, and gives you a significant discount at stores in the first game.
 * If you've been merciful throughout the series, it pays off big-time in the third game.
 * The Metric System Is Here to Stay: The Normandy uses Earth-based time units. It's completely justified, given that you're human and serving on a human vessel.
 * The Citadel actually has 20 hour days, divided into 100 minutes which are divided into 100-seconds (so a kind of metric time), each second being roughly half of our second. Which amounts to approximately 28 Earth Hours.
 * Mexican Standoff: Numerous. How many of them ends with a Blast Out is up to the player.
 * Mildly Military: While the Alliance and even Cerberus crews are fairly spit-and-polish, the majority of Commander Shepard's squadmembers are anything but formal. This is called attention to by various crew members.
 * Largely averted in the third game. Liara is the only squadmate without military experience.
 * Military Science Fiction
 * The Milky Way Is the Only Way: Mass effect drives are amazingly fast (twelve light years per day or 4383 times lightspeed), but Bioware has an amazing sense of scale, meaning the mass relays are the only reasonable means to travel between star clusters. Mass relays only exist within the galaxy.
 * They may be fast but there's one major restriction. Using the low estimate of the diameter of the Milky Way (100k LY), it would take over 22 years to get from one side to the other at that speed. However, drive cores acquire charge as they're used for FTL (if recalled correctly, roughly 50 hours, depending on size of the core) before they get saturated by charge to the point where they have to discharge it somewhere or else the crew turns extra crispy. Depending on the size of the core and the method of discharge (smaller ships that can hit a planet's escape velocity can use grounding facilities on that planet, larger ships that wouldn't be able to make escape velocity use planetary magnetic fields), discharging a drive core can take hours (releasing it to a gas giant's magnetic field) or days (discharging to a moon's field). Secondly, the relays allow practically instantaneous transport between two points, so instead of having to take 22+ years to go cross galaxy, one could plot a relay course that takes them there in a day.
 * Mind Hive: The geth. An individual geth "terminal" can potentially contain thousands of geth programs. Some or all of those programs can later be uploaded to a hub and then downloaded to a different terminal. Geth programs running on the same hardware will disseminate information and reach a consensus, but each individual terminal has a unique perspective, which will cause the programs to reach different conclusions, until they re-interface with a hub and share any new data.
 * The Reapers as well seem to be a case of this. This is corroborated by Legion, explaining that this was part of why the Geth heretics identified so closely with the "old machines", citing Sovereign's "we are each a nation" speech to Shepard's team during the first game as being an indication of this. He claims that the Reapers have many minds, but one will, their indivisability being their strength, while the Geth are interdependant, not yet capable of fully integrating with each other, and thus must build consensus.
 * Mindlink Mates: Again, the asari and whoever they mate with.
 * Mind Over Matter: Biotics, people with Element Zero in their bodies, can manipulate gravity with a gesture.
 * Asari commandos get bonus points for saying "Mind Over Matter!" verbatim.
 * Mind Rape:.
 * Mini Game: Pretty much anything that involves unlocking, decrypting, or resource gathering on both games.
 * And in Mass Effect 3, you get to play cat 'n' mouse with the Reapers on the galaxy map, which is... interesting.
 * Minovsky Physics: Element Zero, required for the titular mass effect, which in turn is necessary for almost all of the technology obtained from the Protheans.
 * In fact, Element Zero's description fits the one of Exotic Matter.
 * Miranda Rights: Yup, they're still there.
 * Mirror Chemistry: Turians and quarians.
 * Mohs Scale of Science Fiction Hardness: The technology is pretty hard compared to most Space Opera. Most of it is a logical extrapolation of the properties of the fictional Element Zero.
 * Giving it a 4 (drifting towards 3 due to some handwaves and plot devices) on the Mohs Scale. The main big lie is Element Zero, all other technology is based on that.
 * Mook Maker: Geth spaceships.
 * Reapers, too, apparently.
 * And the harvester creatures in the second game drop klixen.
 * More Than Mind Control:.
 * Morton's Fork: Used occasionally throughout the series, most often in cases where Charm/Intimidation cannot be used. The most prominent examples in the first game is the decision to either save or abandon the Council and the decision to either kill Balak or let him go to save the hostages. In the second game, there's a sidequest in which you must choose between saving two targets from a slew of missiles: a heavily-populated civilian settlement, or a strategically-important military installation.
 * Mr. Exposition: Absolutely everyone you meet with a speaking role. EVERYONE. Though they'll only Info Dump on you if you ask for details.
 * Mr. Fanservice: As per usual in a Bioware game, there are the popular female romances, and very often shipped thoroughly and discussed adoringly on the forums of said company. In Mass Effect, the most popular for female Shepard (and only male and non-annoying, really) was Kaidan. Of course, Garrus was very popular too, but he wasn't romanceable then. The sequel brought a whole multitude of new choices that split the fangirls between Kaidan, Garrus and the new kid on the block... Thane. Of course, Jacob was a romanceable figure too; some enjoyed his lack of brooding angst but much of the fandom decided he was too generic and not troubled enough and found it not at all romantic that he refers to Shepard as a "prize." Behind her back. The ensuing fan fiction confused a lot of people who had jumped ship for Thane. After Horizon, a lot of Kaidan fangirls decided to go down with the ship.
 * And then there's the Joker fans... which gets disturbing fast if you're also a Batman fan.
 * Vega in the third game, who, unfortunately, is not a romance option, except for the option of a one-night stand in the Citadel DLC.
 * Andromeda has Liam, who frequently goes shirtless (well, twice on-screen, not counting the sex), and the very smoothly voiced Jaal, who Liam persuades to join him in nakedness at one point.
 * Ms. Fanservice:
 * The asari. All of them. Even in-universe; young males of every race tend to be fascinated with them. Lampshaded on Illium in a Crowning Moment of Funny if you listen in on the salarian's "bachelor" party. The same conversation implies its deliberate on the part of the asari..
 * Miranda. Skin-tight clothing, genetically-enhanced body, plenty of lingering shots of her... assets. Again lampshaded in-game, especially in a conversation between Ken and Gabby.
 * And then there's in the third game.
 * Diana Allers. Suffice it to say that the camera rarely focuses on her face. And for good reason.
 * Every romanceable female NPC has at least one moment that qualifies them.
 * Multicultural Alien Planet: Though most members of a race are similar than not, there is noticeable cultural diversity. Most present amongst the quarians. Many quarian ships have existed longer than some countries on Earth.
 * Multiple Life Bars: The first game just has health and shields, but the second implements a much more complicated version. The standard rule is that enemies will have one bar of health, "protected" by a bar of armor, shields or barriers, with each affected by different offensive abilities. Unusual enemies will have more than two bars, and some have no health at all (making them completely immune to abilities that only work on foes with exposed health bars).
 * My Greatest Failure: Almost every major character has one, if not two, or three, or several... stands out even so.
 * Names to Run Away From Really Fast: Cerberus, any mercenary band (Blue Suns, Blood Pack, Eclipse), Spectre,.
 * Also, why would anyone want to poke a stick at something known as ?
 * Remnant Destroyers, as named by Pelessaria B'Sayle after her first encounter with one.
 * Neglectful Precursors:.
 * Nigh Invulnerability: The Reapers. They can be killed but it takes an ENORMOUS amount of effort. At the end of the first game, it took two whole fleets to bring down just ONE, and only when it was focusing its energy on fighting Shepard. Some sight-seeing locations imply that.
 * No-Paper Future: Averted. You never personally use paper, either for money or for information, but it still exists; you can even see it if you look closely enough. It's just that paper money is almost exclusively used for illegal purposes due to being less efficient and harder to trace than electronic transfers, and, well, a military ship needs the space too much to store a printer and paper supplies. Datapads work just fine.
 * Books also still exist, but they are not as popular as digital media. Doctor Chakwas seems to have several books and binders in her lab, Donovan Hock has several shelves of books in his manor and one can purchase books themselves in Mass Effect 3.
 * No Biochemical Barriers: Averted. Turians and quarians are based on dextro-amino acids, unlike the rest of the galaxy. They need their own food (with some exceptions), because ours can cause anaphylactic shock.
 * Actually a minor plot point in Mass Effect 2..
 * There's also the volus, who must live in high-pressure, toxic environments... or environmental suits.
 * Played straight with the angara, who apparently have no problem fornicating with Milky Way species. Meanwhile, a running gag through Andromeda is Dr Suvi Anwar repeatedly sampling Andromeda flora to see if it's edible. For Science!.
 * Noble Male, Roguish Male: Paragon Shepard (Noble Male) versus Renegade Shepard (Roguish Male). Paragon Shepard also has this dynamic going with Garrus to the point it resembles a Buddy Cop Show.
 * A bit of this with Cortez (noble) and Vega (roguish) in the third game, who can usually be found together in the shuttle bay.
 * No Points for Neutrality: Played straight in both games. You get no benefits whatsoever for doing so in the first game, and in the second game, this can actually cause you harm.
 * BioWare took pains to avert this in the third game, turning the Karma Meter into a reputation system. Shepard's ability to sway other powers depends on his or her reputation, whether that reputation is for even-handedness or ruthlessness. However, much also depends simply on general reputation, with Paragon or Renegade opening new options or influencing the outcome. Many actions build reputation but are morally neutral, causing both Paragon and Renegade values to rise at the same time, but keep the same ratio with regard to each other as they do.
 * No Scope: Possible to do with sniper rifles, but so difficult it's more effort than it's worth. And even if the enemy is close enough for it to work, well, you have a shotgun.
 * Notice This: By putting symbols over important items, per BioWare standards.
 * No Transhumanism Allowed:
 * In-universe, by Citadel law. Humanity actually made a disturbing amount of progress in this direction before becoming part of Citadel space and being forced to abandon their experiments. You get to see a few examples in both games, though,.
 * Including Shepard by the time of the second game, which is practically taken to Samus-esque levels where it is questionable *just* how human Shepard is anymore, particularly if you buy all the upgrades that involve screwing with your biology (namely your bones, skin, and muscles) in fairly major ways. Hammered home when.
 * This becomes a minor point of angst for Shepard during a couple of moments in the third game. In a conversation with EDI, Shepard is mildly disturbed by the implication, but EDI reassuringly says Shepard's brain is organic and thus they aren't a true transhuman, despite their multitude of cybernetic implants. A brief existential crisis can also occur during the raid on Cerberus HQ, if Shepard views footage from the Lazarus Project.
 * Not Quite Dead:
 * The Reaper in Mass Effect 2
 * Also.
 * Not Using the Z Word: In-universe: the term 'robot' and 'artificial lifeform' have been legally changed to 'synthetic'. Also, despite running into husks and Thorian creepers, no one takes the opportunity to shout the Z-word. It's only mentioned once in the game, during a conversation.
 * Not Worth Killing: This is the ultimate insult a krogan can give an enemy. As a Proud Warrior Race, krogan status is determined by who ones' enemies are. This extends to other races as well; the Mass Effect Rogues Gallery is exactly why most krogan see Shepard as the most badass creature in the galaxy.
 * Now Where Was I Going Again?: As usual for a Bioware game, you have a journal which lists all of your quests, where you currently are in terms of progress, and what you need to do next. It even separates main story quests from sidequests.
 * Numerical Hard: Borderline between aversion and playing it straight. Most of the changes in difficulty do just change how long it takes to shoot the enemies to death, but there are behavior modifications as well.
 * Fully averted in the third game. Especially the multiplayer mode.
 * Oddly Small Organization: Apparently, Cerberus despite being so shadowy and influential only has about a hundred and fifty actual members. In an organization that spans half the galaxy.
 * Justified though in that these are just acknowledge members who knowingly work on behalf of Cerberus. There's plenty of signs that Cereberus is more than happy to let other people work for them without said people knowing about what they're doing or by working within a larger unknowing organization. And it's also mentioned that they have backers who aren't members but simply provide money and resources.
 * I guess they don't consider their sizable military to be included in that membership.
 * The military only really comes into play in the third game, and we learn pretty quickly that they are bascially indoctrinated (and that Cerberus isn't above kidnapping civilians to bolster their ranks).
 * More importantly, from what we've seen Cerberus operations tend to have a high fatality rate.
 * I wonder how many agents Cerberus had before Shepard came along?
 * Or Zaeed? He 'lost count around 50'...
 * Fridge Brilliance: Keep in mind, this number of agents and operatives, is given after Project Lazarus, Project Overlord, the headquarters and research facilities from the first game, the IFF recovery operation, and the personnel from Jack's "uplifting escape story", were all slaughtered. Taking those casualties into account, they probably had more than a thousand people.
 * Oh Crap:
 * A villain gets a particularly satisfying one. After being one step behind him for the entire game, watching and hearing Saren lose his cool for the second time time when is nothing short of delicious.
 * The first half hour or so of Mass Effect 3 is pretty much one continuous Oh Crap.
 * The ending of Mass Effect 2: !
 * During Miranda's loyalty mission, a Renegade interrupt results in a hilarious example, as you take out four out of five mercs aiming at you in a matter of seconds. You can almost hear the fifth one saying it.
 * During Thane's loyalty mission, when Mouse turns around to see Thane and Shepard standing behind him.
 * When Shepard wakes up during the Arrival DLC, the Project scientist looking after him/her has a very satisfying one.
 * Prior to that, during the stand-off against waves of Project security near the Reaper device, you can hear them growing more and more upset that Shepard just won't stop.
 * Garrus responds this way to awkward surprises such as bombs or EDI passing out.
 * Oh My Gods: Since the galaxy, by and large, has not Outgrown Such Silly Superstitions in this future, various deities of various species are invoked on a fairly regular basis.
 * The phrase "Oh my gods" is actually uttered verbatim during Thane's loyalty mission, when facing down Kolyat; during the hostage situation, the Renegade option is
 * Older Than They Look: Any asari you run into is apt to be old enough to be your great-great-grandmother, at a minimum. Considering that the average asari lifespan runs around a millennium, this also skirts the edges of Really Seven Hundred Years Old.
 * Humans, thanks to better medical science. One of the characters in the Expanded Universe is in her forties, but looks like she's in her twenties. Miranda Lawson is thirty-five, though you wouldn't know it by looking at her. While Miranda explicitly mentions she was genetically engineered for superior longevity among other things, normal humans enjoy benefits of advanced medical science as well. Dr. Chakwas says she's lived a full life and certainly comes across as grandmotherly, but doesn't look it quite so much. She was with the Alliance during the First Contact War. In ME1, she says she joined "right out of medical school." The First Contact War was 30 years prior to the game, so depending on how long it took her to graduate med school and how long she served before the War, Dr. Chakwas is either in her late 60s or early 70s. Which would mean Grandma, What Massive Hotness You Have!.
 * It's been explicitly stated average human lifespan has increased to roughly 150 years, barring unnatural causes. This may be in part due to sheer ubiquity of grafts and cybernetic augmentation, which implies everyone with a medical insurance is likely to have at least a few organs replaced during their lifetime.
 * Old Save Bonus: Decisions you've made have an impact throughout the entire trilogy. Even if it's just an e-mail from someone you helped saying how they're doing or an incidental news report, most actions are at least referenced. Bigger decisions have much larger impacts.
 * On a mechanics note, you can also receive in-game bonuses like starting with a higher level and extra money if you imported a rich, high-level character; and on a meta note, you can get the "Long Service" achievement after playing through Mass Effect 2 once if you import a character, rather than two playthroughs with new characters.
 * Honestly, this series is probably qualifying for the Trope Codifier on this. While other series have doubtlessly used the concept before, few, if any, have paid so much attention to continuity being maintained throughout the franchise as a result of using it. Granted, it's not completely perfect, but you likely won't be able to look at games which merely import character names and a few altered statistics the same way.
 * Old School Dogfighting: Theoretically averted in the Codex. Ships are mentioned to engage each other over humongous distances. However, played notoriously straight in every space combat cutscene actually shown. Justified because these situations are not waged under typical circumstances and engagement at unusually close range is a part of the strategy specifically to confuse and outmaneuver the enemy.
 * Fighter-to-fighter combat specifically is rare: their purpose is more to harass larger ships and overload their missile-defense systems.
 * Well, the codex does mention a specific class of fighters, called "interceptors".
 * They act more like Skirmishers, drawing fire so that Point Defense lasers will overheat, letting the bombers do their thing.
 * Omnicidal Maniac:.
 * Not quite,.
 * Omniscient Morality License: The Illusive Man and Cerberus as a whole seem to think they hold one; they constantly spout off about saving the human race and helping them to get ahead, despite committing atrocities against human worlds on par with batarian pirates and, if in-game events are anything to go by, being responsible for more Alliance casualties than the First Contact War. And let's not forget Jack ("This is a bad place."). Registration for these licenses is also pretty much fifty percent of Spectrehood.
 * puts all of the above to shame.
 * Once Is Not Enough: Krogan. Unless you have some kind of regeneration-killing ammo equipped, don't be fooled when they fall. Keep shooting until the bodies dissolve.
 * One-Gender Race: The asari, who default to the "child-bearing sex" (i.e. female) as they are biologically monogendered. The salarians come in both genders, but males outnumber females 9:1 due to their reproduction methods, and since females head every salarian family line, they hold too much responsibility and political power to ever leave their home systems. The turian females were cut due to time constraints, and female krogan have their own sequestered clans to prevent males from going to war over them.
 * One-Federation Limit: One Alliance, one Republic(s), one Hierarchy, one Union, one Hegemony, one Flotilla, one Collective...
 * On closer examination, this is likely averted because of the turian foreign policy: There are stated to be more 'client races' besides the volus. So, more than one Protectorate.
 * One Nation Under Copyright: Noveria and Illium are entire planets controlled entirely by corporations.
 * One Riot, One Ranger: Spectres. Each must prove themselves to be an omni-competent badass just to be worthy of consideration. They have virtually unlimited authority to complete their missions and answer only to the Council directly. It's mentioned that the Council sending in a Spectre is just one step below sending in a full blown war fleet.
 * One Steve Limit: Averted. There are four Jacobs. The guy on the MSV Worthington, the deceased husband in the sidequest Family Matter, the previous guy's son and the party member in Mass Effect 2.
 * Also, there's Jack.
 * There are also two characters named Delan: a hanar merchant on the Citadel in the first game (short for Delanynder in this case), and a human mechanic on Horizon in the second.
 * The Cerberus Daily News for May 7, 2010 quotes a turian relief worker named Saren.
 * Curiously, there really is only one Steve (Cortez).
 * There's actually also Admiral Steven Hackett.
 * Also possible for Shepard, depending on the first name you decide to give him/her. This is, of course, never said in dialogue.
 * One World Order: Subverted. The Council presides over most of the galaxy, but is more like a more influential United Nations than anything else, and most species have a single government that rules them. Subverted in that there is definitely separation, though, and few species seem to answer entirely to one government. Even the Alliance is only the group elected to represent humanity to the Citadel.
 * Especially highlighted in Mass Effect 2 where Shepard spends most of the game in the rather extensive Terminus Systems and interacts heavy with other non-Citadel, non-Terminus cultures.
 * Humanity itself is mentioned as comprised of distinct countries and polities.
 * The third game repeatedly emphasizes that the asari aren't remotely united: their government is the Asari Republics, and their fleets operate largely independently. This... does not serve them well, compared to more organized species.
 * Only a Flesh Wound: In the games, shooting a breathing enemy in the legs will slow them down. That's it. No bleeding, no breaking, nothing. They just stumble for a moment and then keep going. This is definitely at odds with the flesh-pulping, bone-pulverizing properties of mass effect weaponry described in the books.
 * Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: Mark Meer (the male Shepard) has a noticeable Canadian accent in some lines.
 * Opening Scroll: Used to bring the audience up to speed in both games.
 * Opening the Sandbox: All three let you loose after a few hours of tutorial.
 * Optional Character Scene: Aaaaaaaaaaall over the place.
 * The Order: The Spectres fit the bill, even thought they're sci-fi as opposed to fantasy.
 * Organic Technology: Present in pretty much everything of the Collectors.
 * Our Space Elves Are Better:
 * From the way asari are described in the Codex—the first race to discover the Citadel, having some of the greatest political influence in the galaxy, perfect democracy, long lives, great technology, universally strong biotic abilities and producing some of the best warriors of any race—you'd think this trope would be played straight. But in-game asari as a whole are treated with no more or less respect than most other races, and the entire superiority attitude is completely deconstructed by an asari in the second game.
 * The quarians get a bit of this in the third game, specifically as space wood elves..
 * Our Zombies Are Different: Husks. Victims of Reaper indoctrination or defeat at the hands of minions of the Reapers. Skewered on special spike machines and slowly turned into cybernetic zombies. In the first game, there's just your basic Husk. The sequel introduces Abominations, Scions and Praetorians.
 * And in the third game we go Up to Eleven with huskified batarians, turians, asari, krogan/turian hybrids, harvesters and.
 * Outgrown Such Silly Superstitions: An interesting take on the subject, but not played anviliciously straight. The Codex offer details on the religions and cultures of the major races (for example: it turns out that Confucianism and Zen Buddhism have found a niche among the turians), but religion doesn't have a large part in the actual game.
 * One of the conversation possibilities with Ashley reveals that she is religious and that this is considered unusual. Shepard can also proclaim that they're religious. Legion and EDI reference the Christian Bible when coming up with his name.
 * Mordin also claims he studied religions "looking for answers." Justified in his case.
 * Even the geth are religious; Legion states that this is because they're synthetic life forms.
 * The Shadow Broker's file on Cerberus states it arranged the assassination of the Pope so that a new one with militaristic beliefs and an attitude of forgiveness towards the salarians (apparently this was to improve relations with the turians since they both were responsible for the genophage... it's not very clearly explained) would take power. The Catholic Church is clearly still a major political power.
 * In a bitter irony, one of the Mass Effect 3 live action trailers features a church scene.
 * Overheating: In the first game's background, all guns had ammunition stores that would number into the thousands (the "mass-accelerator" technology allowed the guns to shear off a small piece from a block of metal inside the gun and accelerate it to ridiculous speeds, allowing small arms to be very deadly and be capable of shooting thousands of shots with one block), therefore ammunition stores are non-problematic for a single engagement and don't show up in-game. However, the guns still gave off heat, so a gun that fires too often overheats and must wait for it to cool down to fire again.
 * The second game, however, went for reloading. What is reloaded, however, is the "thermal clip" heat sinks for the gun: as opposed to a magazine being depleted to be reloaded, the number of shots you may fire before reloading represents how many shots the gun fires before a new heat sink must be inserted due to the old one being overheated; the magazines of the guns are still capable of holding thousands of shots. While a player technically should be able to wait for their heat sinks to cool down and fire later instead of being forced to eject them after too many shots, the game no longer gives that option. There are also a few other nitpicks about the new system.
 * As a minor point: if the heat dispersion mechanism is chemical in nature (ie heat is absorbed to convert the sink material from a high energy to a low energy state), they would be unusable after being depleted and no amount of waiting would reverse that. Even if was just a mechanical "dump this heat into a metal or other material as quickly as possible," most metals with high melting points and high thermal conductivity would also take an eternity to cool down on their own in a normal atmosphere, and ejecting them would be the only practical way to use them. Of course, then there's the issue of ejecting near-molten metal tubes through the air in cramped quarters during a firefight...
 * Overly Long Name: Ask a salarian for his full name. Better, don't.
 * There is one point on Noveria where you can overhear a salarian businessman trying to dig up some dirt on the administrator of the facility, asking his brother if he is ready before reading off the full name: "Rannadril Ghan Swa Fulsoom Karaten Narr Eadi Bel Anoleis."
 * Arguably qualified as an example of this trope: Tali'Zorah vas Neema nar Rayya, which literally translates as "Tali of the clan Zorah, crew of the Neema, child of the Rayya," the Rayya being the ship she was born on. Fittingly, it is only used once in a highly official context, otherwise being shortened to different lengths. A salarian will also give you an explanation of what each of his names mean.
 * The soul names of Hanaar also qualify apparently. One name that Thane mentions in the second game is "Illuminates the Folly of the Dancers". Another that turns up in the third game is "Regards the Works of the Enkindlers in Despair".
 * Painfully-Slow Projectile: In the first game, anything of heavier caliber than small arms moved slowly enough to simply be sidestepped. Still largely the case in the second game, but now the vast majority of those attacks are also seeking.
 * Pamphlet Shelf: The Codex. You don't have to read it, but it helps a lot of things make more sense.
 * Parental Abandonment: Two out of three of Shepard's origin stories, and approximately half of the crew.
 * Pausable Realtime: Two radial menus allow the player to swap weapons and use powers.
 * Paused Interrupt: Unfortunately, often occurs during the least likely times to pause between lines. Usually, the conversations flow pretty well though.
 * Pay Evil Unto Evil: Certain characters, such as Renegade Shepard, Garrus and Samara prescribe to this philosophy.
 * People Farms:.
 * In the third game,.
 * The Philosopher: This game is swimming in them. Sure, there are certain characters who consistently fit this trope, like Wrex or Mordin or Thane, but every character gets their introspective moments.
 * Photographic Memory: Both the salarians and the drell have perfect recall. The salarians have control over the process, whereas drell... don't. Whether this is Cursed with Awesome or Blessed with Suck depends on the memory.
 * Humans can pick up this ability, as well, via a cybernetic implant called a greybox. Kasumi Goto has one, and even suggests that Shepard should get one, as well..
 * Plant Aliens: The Thorian. Also, any drones it creates.
 * Planet of Hats: Note that many alien races see humanity in this way, too: both determined and relentless... though some of those races themselves are forced to certain traits due to their physiology. Kaidan discusses this, saying he finds jerks and saints within other races, and "They're like us".
 * Overall, Mass Effect heavily subverts this trope (and lampshades it on numerous occasions). There are the stereotypes, but the races don't conform to said stereotypes.
 * There's a pointed conversation between the Warrior Race member Wrex and an Alliance officer (Kaidan or Williams). Officer remarks that Wrex isn't what he expected.
 * Overall, Mass Effect heavily subverts this trope (and lampshades it on numerous occasions). There are the stereotypes, but the races don't conform to said stereotypes.
 * There's a pointed conversation between the Warrior Race member Wrex and an Alliance officer (Kaidan or Williams). Officer remarks that Wrex isn't what he expected.


 * As far as humans go, it's somewhat intentional as mentioned in the backstory. The Systems Alliance is the official face of humanity in space, but Earth itself is still split along political and national lines. It was only after first contact with the turians that the Systems Alliance was able to establish itself as the galactic face of humanity. Thus, less Genre Savvy aliens may very well believe that the Alliance is the only facet of human culture that exists... which would explain why many aliens with less contact with humans believe that Humans Are Special at war on par with the turians. The Alliance has parlayed its single military engagement with a dominant species into political power and prestige.
 * The second game subverts this even more especially with the krogan. It gets to the point that.
 * Even with the subversion, the other races are still more prone to wearing "hats" than humanity. A conversation with Mordin on Tuchanka has him pointing out that humans are more biologically diverse than any other sapient species. According to Mordin: you can roughly judge an asari, turian or krogan's capabilities and intelligence at a glance, but humans just vary too widely for that to be effective.
 * Samara makes a similar (though affectionate) statement about human variation: "You are the most diverse species I have ever encountered. If there are three humans in a room, there will be six opinions."
 * In the first game, a number of alien characters will mention that humans have a reputation for asking random people lots of questions about their race and culture.
 * Platonic Prostitution: Sha'ira, the asari Consort, rarely grants sexual services to her clients personally... much to the frustration of some of her more enamored admirers.
 * Player Headquarters: The Normandy serves this purpose in every game, though the second one is far more tricked out in this regard than the first. The refitted Normandy in the third game even more so.
 * Playing with Syringes: There's more secret evil experiments going on in this series than you can shake a stick at.
 * Plot Lock: Found throughout the games are doors that, mysteriously, neither you nor your more tech-savvy companions can hack your way through. They will inevitably open later in the mission. The second game goes as far as to conveniently mark such doors with a red lock.
 * Population Control: Quarians have a one-child limit due to limited resources and space (they live on a fleet of spacecraft), but if their population gets too small then extra children may even be encouraged. The salarians enforce this on themselves with carefully planned breeding to avoid overpopulation problems.
 * The salarians forced this on the krogan via the genophage.
 * A salarian's sex is determined by whether or not the egg was fertilized: an unfertilized egg produces a male and a fertilized egg produces a female. Because females lay eggs at set intervals, salarian law only allows ten percent of eggs to be fertilized.
 * Portal Network: The only reason you can travel the galaxy is because the Precursors built the mass relays, that allow instantaneous transportation that not even faster-than-light drives can match.
 * Possession Implies Mastery: Subverted. Apparently, the mass relays are simplicity itself to use; a few years of study and humanity was zipping all over the galaxy with them. But no amount of study has been able to crack how they actually work yet, to the point where the galactic community at large has stopped trying..
 * Averted in the first game with respect to your weapons. Everyone carries all four weapons everywhere but starts out with nothing more than basic training in any of them, resulting in poor accuracy and damage. This is especially noticeable with the sniper rifle, with which it's almost impossible to hit anything without a fair amount of training because of how much the targeting reticule drifts while aiming.
 * The second game also brings up a point about the mass relays being rather inaccurate when used like this. Though that is only a problem concerning the Omega-4 relay, since its end point is surrounded by the wreckage of thousands of ships, and is located in the galactic core.
 * Post Processing Video Effects: A 'film grain' effect added to the games, particularly noticeable in the cutscenes. It can be turned off.
 * Powered Armor: Seems to actually be introduced incrementally as the series progressed.
 * In Mass Effect 1, the armor looks like flexible suits of riot gear with built in life support and provides Deflector Shields. It -may- include an exoskeleton upgrade, but this is optional and only useful for increasing melee damage.
 * In Mass Effect 2, most of Shepard's armor are hardsuits with exoskeletal joints and spine. Some types of armor by default increase movement speed and physical strength by a small amount, but not to the same extent as most entries in the trope. They also aid in combat by making the user's aim more accurate.
 * In Mass Effect 3, Cerberus soldiers wear much bulkier armor than regular mercenaries. It features such novelties as thrusters for shock drops, full servo systems for lifting heavy objects, and of course there are the ATLAS mechs..
 * Power Glows: Biotics, full stop. The even get an aura when they're preparing to throw people around. The primary weapons of Reapers also glow brightly before firing.
 * Power Perversion Potential: Biotic Powers to be precise according to Mordin.
 * Pre-Mortem One-Liner: Some characters have these.
 * Pre-Climax Climax: The culmination of the romance paths (should you choose to follow one) in the first two games, right before the final mission. The third game also has a romance scene before the final two missions, but depending on which romance you're pursuing, it may or may not be the culmination of the romance.
 * Precursors: The Protheans, replete with Lost Technology. . All of it turns out to be.
 * Precursor Killers:.
 * Prestige Class: Used in both games, though implemented differently. The first game has a standard "advance to level twenty, then choose a prestige after a special mission." The second game gives each individual ability a prestige class; when you max it out, you can choose between one of two uber-effects, usually in the neighborhood of more power or wider area of effect.
 * Privateer: The Corsairs, a secret branch of Alliance Marines who act as independent groups outside of Alliance space. While not exactly pirates, their duties may include piracy, in addition to other black ops, and the Alliance can disavow any knowledge of them if they are caught. Jacob Taylor from the second game is an ex-Corsair.
 * Projected Man: A standard way for V.I. programs to manifest throughout both games. EDI gets in on the action in the second game as well, even though she doesn't take an anthropomorphic form.
 * Proud Merchant Race: In terms of combat ability, the volus suck. Since they're so horrible at fighting, they gravitated to the turians (who were the undisputed champions of combat at the time) for protection. Pretty much the entire volus race is now involved in trade of one form or another.
 * That said, they do bring two sizable War Assets to the table in Mass Effect 3: A fleet of frigates designed for aerial bombardment, and, judging by the description, one of the single most powerful dreadnoughts in Council Space. Turns out when you do as much commerce as the Volus do, you can afford to spend a lot of money on the occasional warship. And considering how the Treaty of Farixen limits the number of dreadnoughts among non-council races to one for every turian five, one can see why the volus would want to really make their limited number of ships count.
 * Also in the third game, volus are playable in the multiplayer. They absolutely suck at combat, but are phenomenal in a support role.
 * Proud Warrior Race Guy: Now in two flavors! Get your brutal krogan and disciplined turians while supplies last! The krogan are a particularly brutal Deconstructed Trope example; the trope is then reconstructed in Mass Effect 2, at least to some extent. Oh, and the newest player on the scene, humans, are regarded as these too, making the more peaceful races justifiably fearful of trope overdose.
 * Pstandard Psychic Pstance: The exaggerated motions the biotics make when using their powers, or simply charging up to use them. Justified, in that they use their powers by firing certain nerves which correspond with muscle groups, so the easiest way to make things happen is to wave their arms and hands.
 * Psychic Powers: Only technically psychic, and telekinesis only. The asari can read and transfer thoughts and knowledge, but that's more because of physiological quirks than mental abilities.
 * Punch Clock Villain: The various mercenaries fought throughout both games. Rana Thanoptis, Saren's pet neurobiologist on Virmire, arguably also fits the trope.
 * Puny Earthlings: GLORIOUSLY averted. Humanity as a whole is actually quite formidable in the Mass Effect universe. While the other alien races have advantages over humanity, humanity also has advantages over them: cultural and genetic diversity (humans have the most diverse gene pool of any race), a formidable military, respectable life expectancy(around 150 years at the time of the games, thanks to eradication of most diseases and advancements in medical technology), hardy constitutions and a driving ambition and creative drive. These characteristics have helped humanity not come up second best to any race in Mass Effect. Krogan and Asari might live longer, Krogan and Turians might be hardier, Salarians might learn and develop much faster, but none of these are advantages over humans in the long run. And also, the galaxy's most badass individual is a human, so...
 * Purely Aesthetic Gender: Somewhat. What gender you pick chooses Shepard's love interests, as well as the voice actor and, well, appearance, but otherwise nothing really changes. No exclusive sidequests for certain genders or different paths along some quests. Just some dialogue shuffling.
 * Well, mostly. There's a couple of moments of unique dialogue, at least in the second game, a completely hilarious Renegade Interrupt at the beginning of Archangel's recruitment mission if you play as a female Shepard, and another amusing scene in Samara's loyalty mission when female Shepard gets hit on by a turian who won't take no for an answer. But there's no impact on gameplay or the overarching story.
 * Put Down Your Gun and Step Away: Shows up a couple of times throughout the games. The example from the first game ends with the hostage safe and the hostage takers dead/surrendered no matter what, but the situation in the second game is a little different as you're there for the taker in the first place. You can even shoot the hostage yourself. And not feel any particular remorse for this course of action.
 * Lair of the Shadow Broker has a somewhat similar situation, where you're told to drop your thermal clips.
 * In the third game, the hostage taker can actually be talked out of it and get away with his life. Unless Miranda is alive.
 * During Vetra's loyalty mission, the villain does this, then pulls out a grenade... only for it to take so long to go off that Ryder's team can grab their weapons and get the hostage to safety before it goes off. Things do not improve for the villain after that.
 * During Vetra's loyalty mission, the villain does this, then pulls out a grenade... only for it to take so long to go off that Ryder's team can grab their weapons and get the hostage to safety before it goes off. Things do not improve for the villain after that.