Rock-Paper-Scissors



""It's a very serious human game.""

- Kurama, Yu Yu Hakusho

Rock-paper-scissors is a game that is known throughout the world. Extremely simple, but elegant, there are three choices a player can make, and each beats another and loses to the third. If two choose the same, they tie. It's also a tie if there are more than three people who each lose and win at the same time.

Many variations of the game exist, sometimes incorporating additional elements that may or may not be properly balanced against the usual three. For example, "Fire" may beat rock, paper, and scissors alike (but can only be played once) while "Water" beats "Fire" but loses to everything else (and can be played at any time).

Anyway, the simple and almost childlike qualities of the game make it a prime tool for a random Anticlimax. Few things cause the tension to fall apart like the heroes suddenly deciding a tense issue by playing games.

The use of rock-paper-scissors to resolve disputes or apportion chores (rather than as a game) is mostly a Japanese Media Trope, but it has recently been commuting over to Western audiences as well, where it may be Played for Laughs. The game is also known, incidentally, as "jan-ken-pon" in Japan and South America, "kawi-bawi-bo" in Korea, "rochambeau" in the West, "pierre-papier-ciseaux" or "chifoumi" in France, and "Ching-Chang-Wallah" in parts of England, though the more common British title is "paper-scissors-stone".

Not to be confused with Elemental Rock-Paper-Scissors, or Tactical Rock-Paper-Scissors, both of which describe a similar "X beats Y beats Z beats X" situation. Poor Predictable Rock is when someone devotes themselves to one of the three options for any conceivable scenario.

Advertising
""But I threw Paper..." "I threw a rock.""
 * A 2007 Super Bowl commercial for Bud Light involves two guys playing Rock-Paper-Scissors for the last bottle in an ice chest.


 * Similar to the above, a World Cup commercial for Pepsi has a referee run out of coins for the starting coin toss, and resort to this. It's the players' fault for snagging his Pepsi every time he got one out of the vending machine, although that sort of thing is all right if you're freaking David Beckham....
 * A 2011 "Subway" commercial involves two firefighters playing Rock-Paper-Scissors to see who gets a coworker's sandwich; but by the time they complete their best-two-out-of-three, he's already polished it off and merely hands over the empty wrapper.

Anime and Manga
"Yomi: We should redo it since someone threw in late! Tomo: Who throws in late and loses?! Osaka: Wow, you're really good at rock-paper-scissors!"
 * In the original Dragon Ball, "Jan Ken" is a fighting move—Rock is a punch, Paper is a chop, and Scissors is a Three-Stooges-style eye poke. Also you have to call out which one you're using whenever you attack with it, which leads to a scene where Goku "cheats" somewhat by saying Paper but doing the Rock move instead.
 * During the King Piccolo arc, Goku and Yajirobe Rock-Paper-Scissors for the right to fight King Piccolo's minion Cymbal. Cymbal was not amused.
 * Dragon Ball Z has what is probably one of the most memorable examples of this trope, where the Ginyu force decide to play rock-paper-scissors to determine who will fight the heroes, and they stalemate by choosing the same option. And then do it again... And then continue to do so for about five minutes. Then, after the winner is defeated... they do it again! As a result, using rock-paper-scissors as a means to deciding important things, and then tying over and over again, became a sort of Call Back in the series, happening again to Goku, Gohan, and Vegeta in the last storyline (Vegeta won, which meant he was allowed to pretty much kill Pui-Pui).
 * Goku and Vegeta also play it before their last encounter with Kid Buu, having drawn him to Supreme Kai's planet for the final battle. Doing this instead of going the safe route and pulling off the Fusion Dance stun the Kais present, showing how prideful a Saiyan can be.
 * In Yu Yu Hakusho, one of the tests the Genkai has for choosing her apprentice is rock-paper-scissors—in truth a game that looks like it, but actually tests for spiritual awareness. Kuwabara, being subconsciously psychic, gets the highest scores, and has a reputation for being a "Rock Paper Scissors Master" as a result; throughout the whole series, he never loses a game.
 * During the Dark Tournament, Kuwabara, Kurama, and Hiei (who has to be taught the game) use this method to determine who will go up for the next fight to the death. They all want to win. Kuwabara tried to cheat by throwing in late but Hiei called him out.
 * The first act of Kaiji involves the titular character playing a card-based variation of rock-paper-scissors.
 * In Hunter X Hunter, Gon bases his abilities off of rock-paper-scissors, which he happens to be bizarrely good at playing.
 * They treat it as a sort of martial arts thing, where watching the opponent's small movements will allow you to predict their choice in a split second and react accordingly, which could be technically true. When he tells the other characters that he'd been doing this, they react as if he had been cheating all along (and Killua beats him in an RPS tournament by feinting with his other hand).
 * Kakashi and Gai have a rock-paper-scissors contest in an episode of Naruto.
 * When Kakashi teaches Naruto more about the use of shadow clones, their shadow clones play a game of rock-paper-scissors (with Naruto's clone insisting there be some wager, such as buying the winner a meal), and after dismissing the jutsu, asks Naruto about the outcome.
 * In one episode of Samurai Champloo, Mugen and Jin immediately play Jan Ken (in the variation where the loser has to avoid an imaginary punch) for three rounds to determine who gets to be with lovely courtesan Yatsuha, as opposed to the other, homely ones. It's meant to be comedic; throughout the episode, Mugen and Jin are bizarrely in tune with one another.
 * It also shows up in Part 4 of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure. The Stand Boy II Man has this as its power. Whenever he wins, he takes a portion of the opponent's power. If he wins 3 times, he gains complete control over the loser. Oh, and the whole match is Crazy Awesome.
 * In Yotsuba&!, Yotsuba's father teaches her a variation in which the loser is whacked with a rolled-up newspaper.
 * Bobobo-Bo Bo-bobo has a supplementary comic about a warrior who defeats several enemies in battle with rock-paper-scissors. The battle looks like standard anime martial artist rapid punches, but making the signs for rock, paper and scissors simultaneously. Whenever one of them loses, their heads explode.
 * Inuyasha: Kagome, Songo, and Miroku plays a team form of Jan Ken on the road in one episode. Kagome wins a lot.
 * In History's Strongest Disciple Kenichi, it is shown that the masters decide on Kenichi's training order by using RPS.
 * Poor Chiyo-Chan in Azumanga Daioh ends up having to ride with Yukari during the first summer break because, as she laments, "I'm bad at rock-paper-scissors!"
 * The of course, there's Osaka, resident Cloudcuckoolander who throws in late after Tomo has chosen scissors, and picks paper.


 * Gintama features a "hit-and-cover" variation, in which the loser has to avoid being hit in the head with a hammer by putting on a helmet. This being Gintama, no one plays by the rules at all: Otae whacks Kondou unconscious even after he gets the helmet on, Okita and Kagura's match devolves into an all-out beatdown, and Gintoki and Hijikata get drunk and decide to play the game with swords.
 * Weaponized in a scene in Yu-Gi-Oh! Yugi was racing to get to his friends as fast as possible, who were set to be attacked by Marik's Ghouls, and a pair of Ghouls show up, and begin playing Rock Paper Scissors to choose who faces Yugi first. They intentionally tied with each other over and over and over again to waste Yugi's time. Until Kaiba showed up and made it a 2-on-2.
 * Also in Black Lagoon. During a Chase Scene, Revy and Shenhua play one round of RPS to decide who gets to destroy one of the Japanese Red Army vehicles that wants them dead.
 * Used in Saiyuki to decide who has to carry the pack when they can't ride in jeep. Although it's not a fair game, the others all know that goku always uses scissors.
 * Used in one episode of Haré+Guu to settle a dispute between Haré, Guu, and Wigur. Guu wins, though it's not clear how anyone can tell: like the Powerpuff Girls, her hands are stylized into indistinct blobs.
 * In Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water, there is a collective rock-paper-scissors game to determine who's doing chores... which Sanson always loses because he's predictable (he tends to regularly pick scissors). Later in the same episode, when confronted by an enemy mecha armed with a crab-like pincer, Sanson briefly mumbles to himself the rules of the game, concluding with "Rock beats scissors!"... and he picks a big boulder to throw at the mecha, hoping to block its claw. It doesn't work.
 * In one episode of Keroro Gunsou, the main characters decide to have a snowball fight following the "official rules", which involves splitting into two teams. Tamama suggests that they add an element of Capture the Flag by having one teammate tied up and rescued by the others on their team, and that they pick who it is by using rock-paper-scissors. This is actually a ploy to get Natsumi out of the running, since she has the most physical prowess, but always loses at RPS.
 * In Bakuman｡, during the Beta Couple's critical dispute, Takagi suggests to Miyoshi to solve this and all their future disputes by using the rock-paper-scissors game.
 * In D Gray Man, a trio of Akuma with completely different abilities (ice, sound and wind) play rock-paper-scissors to determine how they're going to kill Allen. It backfires spectacularly.
 * Smile Pretty Cure's Yayoi does this after she transforms into Cure Peace. So far, everyone who plays along lost.
 * In Octave, Yukino and Setsuko go on an Old-Fashioned Rowboat Date. Since they're both girls, they janken to decide who rows.
 * Nichijou: Once Per Episode, a short clip shows Nano and the Professor playing this. It always ends with some catch that prevents Nano from winning. Either her hand will fly off, carrying her with it, it will be replaced by a shark, flowers....

Comic Books

 * A Babylon 5 comic book features a futuristic rock-paper-scissors called "Laser, Mirror, Starweb", where laser (a single finger extended) cuts starweb (a hand with all fingers spread out), starweb covers mirror (a hand with all fingers together), and mirror reflects laser.
 * In Teen Titans, Robin and Speedy decide who gets to finish off a villain this way.

Film

 * In The Castleof Cagliostro, Lupin III and Jigen play rock-paper-scissors to decide who'll fix a flat on their car.
 * In Rio, a couple of mooks play RPS and one of them wins by lying to the other that scissors cuts rock.
 * Tremors. Valentine and Earl regularly use Rock Paper Scissors to decide things, such as who's going to make breakfast. Later, they use it to decide who will make a dangerous heroic dash to save everyone.
 * Picked up again in the sequel, where Earl's new sidekick has apparently never heard of the game. When it get used to see who takes the heroic risk, Earl loses, then just says lies about the rules ("Rock rips through paper!") and goes in anyway.
 * In Volcano, the children are playing rock-paper-scissors to pass the time. Subverted, in that a little boy is believed to have played "paper" but he actually says, "That's not paper. That's lava. What beats that?" Cue the tense silence until the hero's daughter says, "My dad. I hope."
 * In the first Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles live-action movie, after seeing Raphael and Leonardo spanked by Shredder, Donatello and Michaelangelo do RPS, with the loser having to take him on next.
 * Note that the Turtles could only use the standard version of this trope, as nearly all variations (e.g. Lizard/Spock) require more fingers than they've got.

Literature

 * In one of the Doctor Who Expanded Universe novels, a character plays rock-paper-scissors with an Eldritch Abomination to avert The End of the World as We Know It. It Makes Sense in Context and it's far, far Better Than It Sounds.
 * In one of the Xanth novels, this results in a terrible and tragic misunderstanding. A dragon and a merman are friends and decide to resolve a dispute using "Earth, Water, Fire." Predictably the merman picks water, and the dragon picks fire. Each declares he has won, and incensed at his friend's cheating (and his drowning attempt), the dragon eats the merman. Later he learns that while dragons believe that "Water covers Earth, Earth smothers fire, and Fire evaporates water", in Merman society "Earth blocks Water, Fire melts Earth, and Water douses Fire." He's quite broken up about the fact that he ate his friend over a misunderstanding.
 * A chilling example in Altered Carbon is the protagonist Takeshi Kovacs playing with Rock Paper Scissors with a copy of himself (long story) to see which one gets erased and which one gets to live.
 * In Animorphs, an ill and delirious Ax learns the game from Erek. He expresses confusion on how it is that paper beats rock—rocks don't breathe, so why would they care? -- and (though probably only due to his delirium) states that he owes Erek a ridiculous sum of money due to this misunderstanding.
 * It seems like Ax might have been too sick to remember Erek's explanation afterwards, because his friends had to reintroduce him to the game in a later book. "Apparently, it is a human method for making decisions. If this game was really the way that they made most of their major decisions... well, it explained much."
 * Twilight has two characters settle a dispute with rock-paper-scissors. Since one of them could tell the future and the other read minds, they didn't bother actually playing.

Live-Action TV
"Major: Now... scissors cut everything, don't they? Sergeant: Not stone, sir. Major: They're very good scissors."
 * One Monty Python's Flying Circus sketch in episode 25. Several World War I soldiers use rock-paper-scissors to decide which one will kill himself (long story). However, they call it "Fisties" and Rock is called "Stone".


 * The finale of The Detectives has a running gag of the two of them trying to decide who does the unpleasant job by playing paper, scissors, stone, but this fails because both of them always do scissors. Then at the end, they "draw" the imaginary scissors in a gunfight.
 * My Hero (TV) had an episode where a conflict between superhero and supervillain that appeared to be heading towards a dramatic duel at the conclusion... Yes, it was a game of Rock Paper Scissors.
 * Farscape: Occasionally used to solve disputes between Crichton and D'argo over who will be the Big Damn Heroes.
 * When John gets split into two identical copies of himself, they play RPS over and over again. They always tie, which is used to illustrate the fact that the two are completely equal and identical. . There's also a hilarious short scene where D'argo tries to play RPS with himself and is frustrated and confused that he keeps on tying. Probably foreshadows the above, come to think of it.
 * On Friends, Rachel and Monica use rock-paper-scissors to decide who gets the last condom in the box. Rachel wins. In another episode, Chandler and Monica make thanksgiving dinner for the gang only for them to be late for various reasons. They play this to decide who goes in to apologise first. Joey uses fire, only to be beaten by Phoebe's water balloon.
 * In Doctor Who, it shows up a few times, most notably when the Doctor and Romana teach the Movellan the game to show them.
 * An episode of the topical news quiz Have I Got News for You used this to decide a tie breaker at the end of the season, presumably because it was humorously trivial and cheap for a game show, and because it was a game Ian Hislop would know.
 * A season two episode of Joan of Arcadia had Joan and her brother have an epic battle of rock-paper-scissors, which culminated with the song "Eye of the Tiger" playing in the background. Joan, unfortunately, lost.
 * The Adventures of Pete and Pete: in a two-part episode, a particular schoolyard villain, Papercut, used this as his gimmick, forcing kids to play Rock Paper Scissors with him and lose or else (everyone knew he always choose "paper", but they were too afraid to use this against him). In the end,
 * The Big Bang Theory featured "Rock, Paper, Scissors, Lizard, Spock". It must be seen to be believed.
 * Note that this variant dates back to the mid nineties, and was invented by Sam Kass
 * A Rochambeau tournament is one of the ESPN-created side events that occurs at the World Series of Poker in the "The Nuts" segments. Which they've stopped doing recently. Ah, well...
 * Arrested Development has an episode showing GOB and Michael deciding company business through RPS (with Michael being Poor Predictable Rock), although the climax of the episode occurs when GOB, wielding ribbon cutting ceremonial scissors, comes at Michael who is holding a fake "Solid as a Rock"... rock. Rock beats Scissors, but the entire embarrassing ordeal is covered by the Paper.
 * In Numb3rs, after two others RPS, Charlie begins to explain some mathematical strategies to FBI agents. He stops short and say he'll save them in case he "has to throw down with them" someday.
 * In one episode of Leverage, Eliot and Hardison do RPS. Haridson loses twice, to which Eliot replies that he has a tell.
 * Supernatural: Sam and Dean often use Rock Paper Scissors to decide which of them will do something unpleasant or dangerous (like crawling into an vent shaft to find signs of a creature) -- except Sam, knowing Dean, plays strategically and usually wins.
 * Done in an episode of NCIS between Tony and Ziva, to decide who was going to keep the map and do the navigation in the woods. Tony wins, but start walking in the wrong direction.
 * The MythBusters build team will occasionally use RPS to decide who gets to pull the quick-release or trigger the explosives.
 * Similarly, the presenters on Top Gear played it to determine who would have the "honor" of driving the Caterham-7 kit car they'd just assembled.
 * Appeared in the QI episode "Fingers and Fumbs," as a double-or-nothing wager if the panelists used the special forfeit "F-word" (no points for guessing which one). Stephen Fry spent a good five minutes explaining winning game strategies—and then lost or tied every single game.
 * That '70s Show had a variant created by Hyde called "Cockroach Foot Nuclear Bomb." He explains it here.
 * An episode of CSI had Warrick and Nick make eye contact and play a round from some distance after Grissom states that someone will need to dive into a murky pool to see if anything's underwater. Nick loses and volunteers.
 * Reba has Van play this game once against his wife to decide who would tell Reba something touchy. Too bad for Van his system is easier to break than an actual rock.
 * In Hawaii, there used to be an entire game show dedicated to RPS. It didn't last long, however.
 * On The Amazing Race, racers will sometimes do this to determine which of them is going to do a Roadblock if they're fairly evenly matched physically and it's still early going, so they're not worried yet about hitting up against the individual-racer Roadblock limit.

Newspaper Comics

 * The Far Side has a cartoon where three cavemen play this and kept tying (because paper and scissors hadn't been invented yet).

Professional Wrestling

 * Shawn Michaels and Triple H do this when they're fighting as D Generation X to determine who fights first or speaks first... or gets to do anything, really.

Tabletop Games

 * The homebrew comedy Tabletop RPG Mascot-tan uses rock-paper-scissors instead of dice to determine the results of actions.
 * In many live-action role-playing systems, conflicts are resolved via RPS. This is joked about in Dork Tower during a Vampire party.
 * Magic: The Gathering's joke expansion set Unglued had three cards called Rock Lobster, Paper Tiger, and Scissors Lizard. Each one is a 4/3 artifact creature with an ability that prevents one of the other three cards from attacking or blocking (Rock Lobster prevents Scissors Lizards from attacking or blocking, etc.).
 * The Pokémon cards Misty's Duel and Team Galactic's Wager require the players to play rock-paper-scissors.
 * Misty's Duel comes with the clause "If you don't know how to play Rock-Paper-Scissors, flip a coin instead".

Video Games
"Inmate #3: Gun beats paper. Inmate #2: No, gun doesn't beat paper. Stick to the rules! Inmate #1: One, two, three! Inmate #2: What the hell is that? Inmate #3: Dynamite. Inmate #1: For the love of... Again!"
 * In the Alex Kidd video games, this game gets played a lot. This is how some of the Boss Battles are fought in Miracle World and Enchanted Castle, and in the latter game, it is required to win items as well.
 * Spoofed in Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater's secret movie, "The Ultimate Weapon", where Snake manages to combine the three hand gestures into one.
 * Of course, the Boss then demonstrates that.
 * In one of the The Sims expansions, when a character dies, death comes and you can play a game against him to let the character stay alive. The game looks an awful lot like rock paper scissors.
 * In the original Wario Ware, one of the games is Rock Paper Scissors against Mario. On the first difficulty level, you just have to beat his hand sign; on the higher ones, he'll switch signs after a couple of seconds.
 * In Mother 3, Lucas must do this with all the members of DCMC to It's literally impossible to lose, too, as the guys will have you re-do a move if their hand beats yours.
 * Adult Swim.com brings us Rock Paper Scissors Extreme Deathmatch.
 * Rock-paper-scissors is a common mini-game in edutainment software for children, being both easy to program and with rules known even by young kids. One such game about The Little Polar Bear features a RPS played between a polar bear and a penguin—and not even as anthropomorphic animals. Just think about it for a second....
 * The Japan-exclusive PlayStation game Finger Flashing combines this with a Shmup-type setup: rock, paper or scissor-themed enemies come from the top of the screen, and can only be killed by shooting them with the corresponding gesture. Shooting them with the wrong one causes them to duplicate.
 * In some of the Naruto: Ultimate Ninja games, if two players' attacks collide against each other, this can trigger a "clash" sequence, the outcome of which is decided either by a Button Mashing contest or a choice of rock-paper-scissors between the two players. (Loser takes an extra hit.)
 * In Ratchet and Clank Going Commando, some enemies can be seen playing this before they are alerted to your presence.
 * The GF summons Brothers in Final Fantasy VIII has the two brothers, Minotaur and Sacred, play RPS to determine which one will Fastball Special the other at the enemy. Minotaur always wins. And Sacred never notices that his brother was obviously cheating (Minotaur was a split-second late in the draw).
 * Xenogears had an RPS-obsessed guy early in the game who'd give you a badge if you beat him five times in a row. The badge is a nasty combination of Guide Dang It and Lost Forever because it's part of a set that you can use to trade for a strong piece of armor about halfway through the game.
 * One puzzle in Zork: Grand Inquisitor requires you to play strip rock-paper-scissors.
 * A cutscene in Parappa the Rapper when they prepare for Sunny's birthday. The three friends had to decide who will set up the party, bring presents, or bring a cake by playing RPS.
 * In Tales of Monkey Island Chapter 5: Rise of the Pirate God, Reginald Van Winslow has been working on a game he calls "Rock, Paper, Fountain Pen", and describes to Guybrush how the game is played: "Well, paper beats rock. And then the player must shame the paper into defeat by filling it full of lewd phrases using the pen."
 * Monkey Kombat from Escape from Monkey Island is essentially a five-item variant.
 * Stage 2 of Parodius ends with a ship shaped like a hand that challenges the player to a game of rock-paper-scissors. If you lose, it's back to the beginning of the stage; if you win, the ship explodes. A tie leads to a normal Boss Battle.
 * Newgrounds has Pico vs. Uberkids, which gives us RPS Russian Roulette
 * Princess Tomato in the Salad Kingdom had its "battles" structured around a combination of Rock-Paper-Scissors and "Look away".
 * In Sonic Adventure 2's Tiny Chao Garden, you could play a game that was based on RPS. A circle of cards would go around, each with a RPS Symbol, and at the bottom of the screen were three shooters, again with a RPS symbol on them. You fired the symbol at the circle of cards. If your symbol beats that of the symbol of the card, it's knocked away and you score rings. A tie just makes the opposing card disappear, but you still get the symbol back to shoot again. If your symbol loses, it's knocked away and you lose a life. Lose all 5 lives or run out of time, and the game's over.
 * This minigame also comes with at least one of the games in the Sonic Advance Trilogy.
 * Three Mooks are doing this during the side-quest to recover Mr. Freeze's wife in Batman: Arkham City. One of them is apparently smart enough to question if you can do this with three players. It doesn't matter, since they all end up chosing the same thing over and over.
 * And then one of them decides to start tripping the rules...


 * In the tie-in game for The Tigger Movie, Tigger's Honey Hunt, one of the multiplayer games is this.
 * In Katawa Shoujo, Hisao and Shizune get into a dispute over the much prized veal cutlet bread during Shizune's route. In order to settle the issue, they decide to play RPS over it—a game upon which, according to Shizune, "the fate of nations has been known to rest". They tie, seventeen times, before deciding that it would be easier to just share.
 * In the first Simon the Sorcerer game, the Shapeshifter Showdown against the Witch functions as a game of RPS: snake beats cat, cat beats mongoose, and mongoose beats snake.
 * In SpongeBob SquarePants: Lights, Camera, Pants, if two players are tied at the end of a particular location's set of games, they will engage in a rock-paper-scissors minigame to determine who the winner is.
 * In Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha A's Portable: The Gears of Destiny, this is how Nanoha and Vita eventually decide who should get the role of attacker against the Unbreakable Darkness. Incidentally, it's mentioned that Nanoha normally sucks at this game, but if you choose her, she gets a lucky win.
 * In Final Fantasy XIII-2, one of the Datalog entries describes how Mog came to serve Lightning. "It was an exciting duel. She threw down scissors three times in a row, kupo! I wasn't expecting that. Maybe I shouldn't have picked swords after all, kupo..."

Web Comics

 * Penny Arcade features a Tribes-flavored strip where two people play RPS, except one player brings from nowhere a huge gun. The other says, "Fuck you."
 * Not a straight example of this trope, but this strip of The Order of the Stick deserves mention: "Paper Beats Rock"
 * Also, the title of this one: "It Does Beat Scissors"
 * Used in Pirate Ninja Cowboy.
 * This Angel Moxie omake.
 * This The Perry Bible Fellowship strip.
 * Wondermark: The eternal conflict, resolved at last.
 * Used by the Dragon and God in Sinfest, to demonstrate the conflict between western civilization and eastern philosophy
 * In Wapsi Square, this is the official form of conflict resolution at Daren's Bar.
 * Wonderella meets the Lady of the Lake and demands a Cool Sword. Since the Lady doesn't do that anymore, the best she can offer is a pair of invincible shears that can cut through anything. Wonderella turns her back on it dismissively, but regrets it when her city is invaded by elemental monsters of Paper and Rock.
 * There is a webcomic with the title of "Rock Paper Scissors".

Web Original

 * The Web Video/Lonelygirl15 universe video "Nut Kills Man" includes a variant called "Squirrel Nut Man": squirrel eats nut, man kills squirrel, nut kills man (he has allergies).
 * The Waverly Films Clip of the week, Rock Paper Scissors EXTREME, is the antithesis of the anticlimax definition, since the RPS-ing is the climax.
 * This site. Just... this site.
 * Inmyrock-paper-scissors? It's more likely than you think. Behold: RPS 101! You read that right. Rock-paper-scissors with 101 hand signs instead of 3. Good luck with that. To boot, clicking on a hand sign in that Flash application brings you to an explanation of why that sign dominates each of its 50 victims. Some are really weird, naturally.

Western Animation

 * In The Simpsons, Bart and Lisa once resolved a discussion by a game of RPS. The result serves as the Trope Namers (and page quote) for Poor Predictable Rock.
 * Kaz loses the band in a high stakes game of rock-paper-scissors in Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi.
 * An episode of The Fairly OddParents has Timmy transported to a Western setting where he fight the corrupt Sherrif Vicky. Their Showdown At High Noon is a RPS match.
 * Code Lyoko, Season 4 episode "Hard Luck": Yumi and Ulrich decide through RPS who's going to be virtualized back to the Desert Replika and fight William.
 * Jackie Chan Adventures: An Oni Mask is on a toppled totem pole that's just stuck in place between two rock walls. The Enforcers play this to see who gets it, and Finn and Chow convince Ratso that "rocks crush paper". He doesn't figure it out until he's halfway across.
 * In the pilot for Regular Show, Mordecai and Rigby play rock-paper-scissors to see which of them will get a discarded chair, but they keep tying. After tying 100 times, they accidentally summon an Eldritch Abomination that can only be dismissed by breaking the tie.
 * Appears in two Robot Chicken sketches. One features a variation of the game and the other takes it literally.

Real Life
"Upon consideration of the Motion -- the latest in a series of Gordian knots that the parties have been unable to untangle without enlisting the assistance of the federal courts -- it is ORDERED that said Motion is DENIED. Instead, the Court will fashion a new form of alternative dispute resolution, to wit: at 4:00 P.M. on Friday, June 30, 2006, counsel shall convene at a neutral site agreeable to both parties. If counsel cannot agree on a neutral site, they shall meet on the front steps of the Sam M. Gibbons U.S. Courthouse, 801 North Florida Ave., Tampa, Florida 33602. Each lawyer shall be entitled to be accompanied by one paralegal who shall act as an attendant and witness. At that time and location, counsel shall engage in one (1) game of "rock, paper, scissors." The winner of this engagement shall be entitled to select the location for the 30(b)(6) deposition to be held somewhere in Hillsborough County during the period July 11–12, 2006."
 * In Indonesia, there is this version: Elephant crushes Person, Person crushes Ant, Ant drives Elephant crazy by crawling in its ear. Elephant is the thumb, Ant is the pinkie, and Person is the index finger.
 * A U.S. federal judge ordered a minor (but lengthily debated) side issue to be resolved by having the disputants play rock-paper-scissors:


 * If this makes no sense to you, please see Only in Florida.
 * Or be aware that the judge was trying to embarrass the litigants' lawyers for arguing at length over such a frivolous matter and wasting everybody's time.
 * Mongolia has a slightly more complicated team version where each finger beats the one immediately below it, with the little finger beating the forefinger. So there are more combinations, but more of them result in a draw. You're knocked out after the best of three, at which point your next teammate takes over until one team or the other is eliminated. For somebody who isn't used to it, the hardest part is managing to extend the correct finger at speed...
 * And if you're particularly immature, it may take a while for you to stop picking the middle finger every time.
 * Way back when, with the After Dark Screensaver program for Macintosh, there was a screensaver with a Rock, a piece of Paper, and a pair of Scissors walking around, and they'd fight whenever one of them met. However, sometimes Rock would jump through Paper, Paper would whip the screw out of Scissors, and Scissors would sculpt Rock into a statue. When you returned to wake up your computer, the screensaver would inform you of which had the most victories.
 * One guy who played Rock-Paper-Scissors threw a funny-looking "scissors" (thumb and index finger rather than first two fingers) and kept getting told he wasn't allowed to throw "gun." How fair is Rock-Paper-Scissors if you can just shoot the other guy? After a lot of protesting that he was actually throwing scissors, he eventually decided that he was throwing "gun"—and that "gun" trumped paper and scissors but not rock.
 * That's called "Countryman's Choki", and is supposed to tie with scissors (but is not valid in the standard game; it is a slight variant).
 * In sports, this is occasionally used in place of flipping a coin.