You All Meet in a Cell

""In Oblivion, you start off in a dungeon in the imperial palace. You're never told what crime you committed, I guess you're supposed to fill in that blank for yourself so I chose to believe I was in there for shagging the emperor's wife and daughter at the same time while playing a rock guitar solo on the desecrated corpse of God.""

- Zero Punctuation on The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion

This is kind of like You All Meet in An Inn, except instead of the players beginning in a inn, they start off in some form of captivity for no apparent reason. Maybe they're the Noble Fugitive or Loveable Rogue types, or maybe they've been unjustly accused; important part is, the first time they're seen, they've been thrown in the slammer. The characters must then escape imprisonment, find out why, and possibly clear their names.

The theme in RPGs and writing is that imprisonment is instant motivation ("get out of here"), and that they can work out the details of why later. It also gives reason why people who wouldn't normally like each other are pulling together. Similar to a Closed Circle, and a common way to Gather Characters.

Can lead to the Great Escape, Boxed Crook, or Condemned Contestant. May be used to justify a No-Gear Level. In Tabletop Games, You All Meet in a Cell usually goes poorly, as the characters have no reason to stick together once they escape their confinement, and often don't. At least when You All Meet in An Inn, any character who isn't inclined to join up with the group will leave immediately, instead of one or two sessions in.

Anime and Manga

 * In Record of Lodoss War, the team meets Woodchuck the thief in prison after they're arrested.
 * In Overman King Gainer, Gain and Gainer meet in a cell. Gain's there because of a Batman Gambit he's running; Gainer's there because his name sounds like Gain's.

Film

 * Down By Law starts with Tom Waits' character being arrested. The other main characters soon end up in the same cell.
 * The main characters of O Brother, Where Art Thou? meet in a chain gang.
 * The Usual Suspects has the variant of "You all meet in a police line-up."
 * One of the few things we seem to know for sure after the ending of The Usual Suspects is that the group of crooks met while they were all being held and questioned by the NYPD. This did include sharing a large cell/holding room where they began plotting how to strike back at the NYPD.
 * The original The Inglorious Bastards has the heroes meeting as U.S. Army prisoners who escape and try to make their way to Switzerland.
 * The Dirty Dozen are all in prison for various crimes, that's why they are picked for the suicide mission, it's their only hope to avoid a long prison term or death sentence. They don't meet there but we meet them there as the commander offers each one the mission.
 * The Cube series has characters meeting after being mysteriously imprisoned for no known reason in a shifting death trap"
 * Many times in the Saw-verse
 * The Breakfast Club has a high school variant where a group of students meeting in a detention and becoming friends who otherwise would never have come together. It's practically lampshaded when one character confronts the two "popular" kids about how they will probably go back to treating the others like social outcasts again if they were to meet in the halls with their other friends around.

Literature

 * Martin and Gonff meet this way in Brian Jacques' Mossflower.
 * Alec and Seregil in Nightrunner.
 * Five characters wake up in the title building of William Sleator's House of Stairs, which appears to have no way out.
 * The protagonists of Raymond E. Feist's Shadow of a Dark Queen meet just before they're all sent to the gallows.

Live-Action TV

 * The original cast of Blake's 7 (with one exception, introduced later) were all prisoners on a prison ship.
 * Farscape: the main characters of all meet on a prison ship. They then make off with said prison ship and run around the galaxy.
 * The Lone Gunmen: While Langly and Frohike were business rivals (they sold bootleg cable), the Gunmen only solidified into a unit once they found themselves in the custody of Baltimore PD for their failed attempt to expose a conspiracy to test a mind-control drug on the unsuspecting public.

Tabletop Games

 * Dungeons & Dragons this is actually a good way to explain why the PC party first meets, assuming the DM doesn't want to use the older You All Meet in An Inn hook. Some specific examples:
 * In the Advanced Dungeons and Dragons module A4 In the Dungeons of the Slave Lords, which starts out in, well, Exactly What It Says on the Tin. Somewhat justified in that the previous module ended with the PC party being captured by the Slave Lords.
 * In Finder's Bane Joel and Holly who already knew each other met Walinda and Jasmine after being captured by clergy of Iyachtu Xvim and had to escape together.
 * The epic 5th edition adventure Out of the Abyss starts with the low-Level PCs captured by drow slavers, at the mercy of the merciless Mistress Illvarta, a villain whom they do not have a prayer to overpower or defeat in a fight at their current level. The entire first chapter is devoted to the party figuring out a way to escape the small outpost (the slavers forcing them to do labor while waiting for their superiors to come pick them up, giving them a means to scope the place out), and there are other NPC prisoners can befriend, each with many variables regarding who to befriend or trust. (One might be friendly and want to help, but have limited ability to do so, while another might have valuable information, but is likely to double cross them). When they do escape, the second chapter is spent evading Illvarta and her henchmen|who is intent on recapturing them, more out of pride than any idea of profit.
 * Deadlands example: In the Devil's Canyon adventure, the posse wakes up alone in a cabin in the back country, with no memory of how they got there. Doesn't seem like much of an example, until most of the way through the adventure. Turns out

Web Comic
""You All Meet in An Inn -" "Boring!" "Okay, smart guy. You all meet in an inn ... and wake up the next morning in the county jail.""
 * Goblin Hollow, at the beginning of the D&D game storyline:


 * Last Res0rt—it's about a bunch of criminals (and a few volunteers) on a reality show. Of course it's held in a prison!
 * Jail Break starts off this way, not surprisingly. Problem Sleuth does, too, though it's not obvious at first.

Video Games

 * 1213, a freeware platformer by Zero Punctuation creator Ben Croshaw, opens with an amnesiac character being allowed to escape his cell.
 * Arx Fatalis starts the player off in a cell in a goblin fortress with no knowledge of who you are or why you're there.
 * In Baldur's Gate 2, finding out why you were imprisoned and experimented upon by the Big Bad is actually a major part of the plot.
 * Most The Elder Scrolls games start off with this. As the protagonist is always an Featureless Protagonist (or rather Choose Your Own Age, Face, Gender, etc) whose actions and personality are entirely up to you and with the Elder Scroll games being so open-ended, your character's origins have to be open-ended, too. Your character might be a thieving murdering bastard who got caught, or they might be a paragon of righteousness who was wrongfully imprisoned, or they might not even know themselves.
 * In The Elder Scrolls: Arena, your character is in prison because you had incurred the displeasure of the Big Bad.
 * In The Elder Scrolls II: Daggerfall, your character suffered a shipwreck and found him/herself washed up in a cave that connected to a dungeon. Not technically a prisoner, but it amounts to the same thing.
 * In The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind you start as a prisoner aboard an imperial ship, you are about to be released. The first spoken words in the game are the daedra Azura speaking to you in a dream, saying: "They have taken you from the Imperial City's prison".
 * In The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion, you're just someone who apparently nobody recognizes in a prison cell for no reason ever revealed. It's implied you were teleported there by a god. Lampshaded when one of your first dialogue options is, effectively, "Why am I in prison?" (implying that not even the character knows how he/she got there), to which the response can best be paraphrased as "Who knows? Maybe it was the work of the Gods?"
 * To the surprise of none, you begin your adventures in The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim as a prisoner... and you're on your way to be executed after being mistaken for a rebel.
 * Escape from Monkey Island began with Guybrush tied up to the mast of his own ship, while Elaine and the others repelled a pirate attack.
 * Fallout 3: Escaping the previous idea of striking out from your Doomed Hometown, Black Isle's canceled game was going to start out with you held in a prison cell.
 * The expansion Mothership Zeta starts off like this, and you have to team up with various other abductees who otherwise have nothing in common with you, or each other. One doesn't even speak the same language as the rest of you.
 * In the original Fallout 3 (Van Buren) you started off as something tore a hole in wall of your cell.
 * The original tutorial for City of Villains started with the player's character being freed from a Cardboard Prison by a Big Bad's Faceless Goons. It's long since been replaced with a unified hero/villain tutorial scenario, but if you still want to play it, it's available through the Oroborous flashback system.
 * Rayman 2: The Great Escape begins with Globox freeing Rayman from a prison cell.
 * Seiken Densetsu 3. You get your final party member while in a cell in Castle City Jad unless you chose Carlie to be third (in which case the fourth would-be party member will act as an NPC). Different in that you've already played long enough to beat the first boss before you end up in a cell.
 * Interestingly, this trope gets mixed with You All Meet in An Inn within the same town, as every playable character except Carlie appears in that town for their own reasons at the start of the game, just in time for the beastmen to put the whole city on lockdown.
 * Unreal begins with the player's character regaining consciousness after the ship, which was transporting him/her to a prison planet, crashes on Na Pali, killing (almost) every other passenger and conveniently enabling the player's escape.
 * Exile/Avernum begins with the group being thrown into a gigantic underground prison complex together. In later games, the group apparently got together deliberately.
 * You meet everyone in prison. The entire game takes place in that gigantic underground prison complex. Your party, however, was thrown in at the same time, although not necessarily because they were arrested at the same time, in the same place, or for the same reasons.
 * In the second game, the PCs are part of the Avernite armed forces - whether they banded up themselves, or were assigned to each other by the military is left to imagination. In the third game, the situation is similar - only this time, they're the back-up surface explorers acting on behalf of the Avernite government.
 * Legerdemain. You start the game in "The Jails of the Doobah Boogadah II", and the beginning of the game involves breaking out.
 * In SaGa Frontier, Emelia begins her story in Despair, a supermax prison, wrongfully accused of her fiance's murder. She breaks out accompanied by Anne and Lisa. (Ironically, in anyone else's story, Anne would help you break into Despair during the Rune Quest.)
 * Early on in Tales of Vesperia the main character, Yuri, is placed in the Imperial City's prison. The person in the cell next to him is a man named Raven, . He helps Yuri escape, and several hours of gameplay later he becomes your last party member.
 * Riven's gameplay begins with the player witnessing a struggle from withing a prison cell, after which the cell is opened.
 * Practically the plot of the first Riddick game, starting off with our man in restraints being transferred to the game's titular prison planet in a drop shuttle. 'Course, he meets a lot of people, but none of them really stay alive, and guess how long he stays in the cell?...
 * The Suffering opens with the main character being checked into his cell on death row at Abbot Penitentiary. Then an earthquake hits, and hideous monsters emerge from the woodwork and start killing people.
 * The eponymous protagonist of the Sonny games wakes up aboard a research vessel out in the middle of nowhere with no memory of what happened prior to that point in time. Escaping the research ship is the first zone of the first game. The second game somewhat inverts this by having the player character and his partner break into a prison after a biker steals a cassette tape from the pair and enter the prison to escape them.
 * Dark Souls has you start off locked away in the Northern Undead Asylum, where Undead such as yourself are locked away from the world, until a mysterious knight drops a corpse with a key on it into your cell.
 * The whole point of the Action RPG Grimrock. Your four characters are literally tossed into the eponymous dungeon for unspecified crimes. If you can get out of the dungeon (in both meanings of the word) you are free to go. Too bad no one has done so yet...

Web Original

 * Ruby Quest starts with the protagonist waking up in a box in a mysterious facility, where she shortly meets Tom, who is in a cell.
 * A Game of Gods starts off with the heroes trapped in a hotel.

Western Animation

 * In Animaniacs, Rita and Runt first meet in the city pound.