Spoiler



"Lucky: "Fire!" isn't the worst thing you can yell in a crowded theater. It's "Bruce Willis is dead"."

- King of the Hill

"Al Mualim: "He who increaseth knowledge, increaseth sorrow.""

- Assassin's Creed

Information relating to surprises and character entry/exits in an episode were revealed ahead of transmission. The surprise was spoiled.

The most common kinds of spoilers are thus:
 * Someone de-bagged the cat in an online forum or in more conventional conversation;
 * Plot points got out by way of the media;
 * A show aired overseas first and overseas fans were talking about it.

The overseas type occurs frequently with Anime airing in Japan before a dubbed version reaches the west and Europe due to the transatlantic delay. If the show airs in the States first, American viewers will be talking about it before Europe sees it; the same applies if the show airs in Europe first, when European viewers will be talking about it before Americans see it.

Subtypes of the media type of spoiler: 
 * TV Guide Spoiler—An episode review makes a big emphasis on the fact of a major revelation or character death. They'll say it is being closely kept under wraps. Except, obviously, it isn't. For example, in Britain, TV guides for the following week (Sat-Fri) go on sale on the previous Tuesday. If the episode with the mysterious revelation is on Wednesday, all you have to do is look at next week's episode guide and the revelation is revealed.
 * Yet another type is the commercial spoiler, or for movies, the trailer spoiler, where, in attempting to advertise, they directly quote all the big surprise moments. Law and Order Special Victims Unit is somehow a major offender of both the above and the opposite.
 * Preview Tapes Not Available—critics are sent tapes of the episodes before they're shown so they can review them. However, producers want to keep stuff under wraps will not give out preview tapes, as has happened with Doctor Who. By season 4, they came up with another way to prevent spoilers-cutting out the most shocking bit when showing it to critics...and hoping the critics don't complain about the episode seemingly not having an ending.

Happens more for main networks.

When a spoiler becomes Common Knowledge in the mainstream—such as Darth Vader turning out to be Luke Skywalker's father—it's no longer spoiler fodder and gets demoted to It Was His Sled. If a work is remembered primarily for that spoiler it's All There Is to Know About "The Crying Game". When a sequel to a work spoils its predecessors, it's a Late Arrival Spoiler (Not to be confused with a spoiler that happens early or late in the work).

Posting spoilers on a fan forum will almost always get the forumgoers royally pissed off at you, but when the show's actual owners start using or threatening legal action against people who spoiler, you should Spoil At Your Own Risk.

Not to be confused with the DC Universe character Spoiler (though there's a reason she's called that; see below). Or with Double Spoiler, for that matter.

For a few tips on how we treat spoilers around this wiki, see Spoiler Policy.

See Spoilered Rotten for tropes about spoilers, and tropes where spoilers are almost inherent.

Comic Books

 * In the Batman comic books, the Cluemaster, a B-grade Riddler knockoff, got over his compulsion to leave hints behind at crime scenes after thorough psychiatric counseling ("Thank you, Arkham"). Stephanie Brown, his daughter, became disgusted with his villainy and decided to give up the information in his place, calling herself "the Spoiler." The name, however, became an Artifact Title soon afterwards as Stephanie continued to fight criminals beyond her father and no longer left hints or clues, instead directly intervening herself. She eventually became the fourth Robin and then Batgirl.

Literature

 * The concept of spoilers is mentioned—and briefly discussed—in The Kite Runner: the narrator/protagonist discovers, after revealing to a stranger the ending of a western, that Americans aren't very keen of the whole "telling people what happens in the end" thing—as opposed to life in his home country, where everyone floods the moviegoer with questions after he watches a movie.
 * In "Little Red Running Shorts" from The Stinky Cheese Man, Jack the Narrator gives away the entire plot before the story even starts. The characters get so ticked at this that they just leave, causing the remaining pages reserved for the story to be blank.
 * Applicable to the TV and radio versions as well (with radio being the original version), The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy features a spoiler at the start of the missile attack sequence, which reveals several key plot points in the interest of reducing stress from the suspense of not knowing, while keeping one rather trivial item (the identity of the person who suffers a bruised arm) hidden to preserve some suspense, even though it has no plot relevance, and is only revealed as a stinger at the end of the chapter/episode.

Live-Action TV
"Harry: Attention, ticket holders. Listen up! At the end of the movie when the President turns out to be an alien [crowd groans] and he barbecues all the Congressmen, don't believe it, okay? Because aliens hate barbecue!"
 * Doctor Who: River Song, another time traveler who has already met the doctor (in her timestream) refuses to talk about stuff that has already happened to her but is still in the future for the Doctor. As such, this is basically her catchphrase. Shh, Spoilers!
 * The famous "No Hiding Place" episode of Britcom Whatever Happened to The Likely Lads features the two main characters trying to avoid spoilers for the final result of an England football match, so they can watch the highlights later on. Naturally a friend takes great delight in trying to spoil it to them.
 * How I Met Your Mother has a similar episode in which the main characters attempt to NOT find out what the score of the Super Bowl was.
 * An episode of Frasier involves Frasier intent on catching up on the latest episode of a television series he's taped the night before without being spoiled. Naturally, everyone else seems just as intent on spoiling it for him.
 * In The IT Crowd, Roy is desperate to see a pirated copy of the latest Tarantino movie unspoiled. This eventually culminates in him slapping a police officer.
 * An episode of Scrubs begins with Dr. Cox ruining the end of The Sixth Sense for the Janitor and ends with the Janitor   But Dr.Kelso did.
 * On an episode of House, Foreman is trying to prep Taub for an up-coming medical examination, but Taub is not interested in preparing for it and instead asks Foreman if he wants to watch The Usual Suspects, since he hasn't seen it yet. Foreman, annoyed by Taubs procrastination, simply tells him to enjoy the movie. Then, as he is leaving, he blurts out:.
 * In a 3rd Rock from the Sun episode, the Solomons saw an Alien Invasion movie and were upset by the portrayal of aliens as evil monsters. Harry decided to warn the people waiting to see the movie how inaccurate it was:

Newspaper Comics

 * In one FoxTrot comic, Jason tries to troll Eileen by spending hours online researching the upcoming - at the time - film version of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, hoping to spoil the ending for her. Of course, this plan falls flat when Peter points out the obvious - a big fan of the series like Eileen has likely read the book version.

Web Comics

 * Dork Tower: Even after seven months, it's still a spoiler.
 * xkcd: Cueball thinks earthquake early warning messages are earthquake spoilers.

Western Animation

 * In Central Park, Birdie - the Interactive Narrator - tells the viewers that his job gives him access to the whole script and that he is sorely tempted to reveal spoilers, even going into a musical number explaining why he can't. Unfortunately, he does, and is fired as a result, starting a rivalry with the guy who replaces him.

Anime and Manga

 * It's more or less impossible to mention Baccano!'s without spoiling a good amount of the Grand Punk Railroad/Flying Pussyfoot arc. So most of the time, he's split into two characters for explanation purposes until a certain point.
 * The character could be split into four names and there would still be certain users who compulsively conceal the ones that remain trivial even after The Reveal.
 * Some Cowboy Bebop fans are fond of spoiling the ending for their friends, with the blunt phrase, . At this point, it's become a kind of joke. This particular spoiler is revered for being solid spoiler gold: it is final, powerful, massively important to the plot, extremely well-done, and occurs at the very end of the last episode of the series.
 * In a similar vein as the above example, "Ladies' Night" eventually became code for the point in the Death Note anime.
 * Code Geass does the spoiler-in-the-title thing just enough to be EXTREMELY ANNOYING to people who have preview lists that include titles of upcoming episodes,, where the NAME spoils the previous episode's end result. There have even been cases where the title for a particular episode spoiled a shocking twist from later on in the very same episode, such as

Comic Books

 * The interesting thing about comic book spoilers is that the media doesn't seem to have any compunctions against publishing them. The newpaper's movie page would never think of putting, "Darth Vader is Luke's father" in the movie review, but they have no problem putting, "Captain America dies in the next issue!" on the front page of the entertainment section—especially strange since the media doesn't generally review comics at all.

Film

 * Dark City spoils itself over its own course, with a studio-imposed monologue at the beginning explaining multiple plot twists which are repeated quite clearly later on in the film. Many fans advise first-time viewers to turn the sound off until the end of the monologue.
 * Alternately, you can pick up the Director's Cut DVD, which takes out the monologue and adds in new footage to boot.
 * Another problem with Dark City is that it's hard to discuss it as a sci-fi film, or commenting on, because even its genre is a spoiler to a great extent.
 * An infamous review of Scream 4 by a disgruntled reviewer spoiled the murderer's identity... in the very first words of the very first sentence (and the spoiler shined proudly on the Rotten Tomatoes website for quite some time). People weren't pleased, and general drama ensued.

Literature

 * A spoiler from the sixth Harry Potter book actually managed to become an Internet meme. Someone who found out that went out to the Internet, posted it everywhere, and now you can even see image macros in the biggest Web forums with this spoiler that, on top of that, is as short, powerful and final as the one from Cowboy Bebop. There's even a story about a fanboy who killed himself after he accidentally stumbled upon it!
 * The has become this too.
 * As a result, ridiculously elaborate precautions were taken to keep the 7th book under wraps until it was in the hands of bookstore customers; the printers worked in darkness, the manuscript was kept in a safe, etc. etc. etc.
 * The title of the Babysitters Club book "Jessi's Gold Medal" gives away the fact that in synchronized swimming.
 * The earliest recorded example of fiction being "spoiled" occurred in 1841, when sailors revealed Little Nell Trent's death in The Old Curiosity Shop to North America before the issue containing it was released for sale there. While Charles Dickens's work is generally fairly well remembered and read, little is remembered or discussed about this one besides her death.

Live-Action TV
"Vala: I don't think anyone will see this coming. Daniel: There'll be . Sam: Are you kidding? It'll be in the commercial."
 * The Bill has this happen frequently.
 * Star Trek: Voyager fans call this Previews Always Spoil.
 * Sci-Fi Channel commercials for the season finale of Doctor Who, spoiling the end of the penultimate episode. The network seems to have trouble with this in general.
 * The network was pretty bad with this on Battlestar Galactica too, most notably a week before the episode "The Ties That Bind" aired when they clearly showed.
 * In advertising the championship match of the 2006 World Series of Pop Culture, VH1 put up the names of the teams who would battle it out... even though one of the semifinal matches was not finished yet.
 * Brazillian soap operas: at least 80% of the newspapers have a complete spoiler of the current episodes of all the soap operas airing on open TV. Oddly enough, most of the audience actually reads the spoilers and watches the show anyway.
 * Not just Brazilian ones, British TV guides and women's magazines love to discuss upcoming plots. When I pointed out that these magazines always spoil plots and yet she still reads them, my mother said she likes how it's played out, not what happens.
 * The main exception is the final episodes (usually the last two), especially if there is a "who killed X" plot. In the last case, often several variations of The Reveal are filmed, with different culprits, to prevent leaks (only one of them is actually broadcast).
 * "On the Next..." trailers are a frequent source of spoilers, to the degree that many fans refuse to watch them in order to remain "pure". 24 and the 2000s Battlestar Galactica are major offenders in that category.
 * Battlestar Galactica even went a step further, and put spoilers for each episode in its own opening credits. They flashed by at high speed, but some people still could see them clearly, and had to close their eyes through the credits or else have every episode spoiled.
 * The British TV guide Radio Times is bad at this; so bad, in fact, that one of the writers of Doctor Who, Steven Moffat, once went onto a massive Doctor Who forum and warned everyone to stay away from it. Ironically, said magazine is made by the same people who make Doctor Who in the first place.
 * Many Doctor Who stories have been spoilt by the title, particularly when featuring popular and prominent villains such as the Daleks and the Cybermen. As such, many a big dramatic surprise reveal and cliffhanger that these feared adversaries appeared in would be completely ruined by the fact that the story was titled '(Something) of the Daleks / Cybermen', thus priming the audience to expect them to appear at some point. The new series isn't entirely free of this; guess what appears in the episode called 'Dalek'?
 * Russell T. Davies caught some flak for them putting Dalek Sec on the front cover, he'd decided to go for the cover than the surprise.
 * "Bad Wolf" did not have its title revealed until some weeks into Season 27/1.
 * In season 30/4, the producers have tried to avert this with the twelfth episode, which remains unrevealed several months after the other titles have been revealed.
 * In "Silence in the Library" the Doctor berates Donna for trying to look in some history books from the future as they'd contain spoilers for reality.
 * The episode's subsequent 'Next Time' trailer then ended with two characters repeating the word "spoilers", followed by a third shouting "No, don't tell, you mustn't tell!" into the camera. Knowing what Steven Moffat's like, it's not hard to imagine that the trailer was edited that way deliberately.
 * A notable aversion, though, occurred in 1982, when the Cybermen returned to the series for the first time in seven years. The episode title ("") doesn't mention them, the TV guide listings were carefully crafted to avoid TV Guide Spoilers, and the then producer actually turned down a Radio Times cover story in order to keep the surprise.
 * The Jon Pertwee serial "Invasion " did something similar. The title was simply "Invasion" until the big reveal, after which the complete title was shown.
 * Advertising for the fifth season finale of Buffy the Vampire Slayer (and the series finale, from the WB's perspective) blatantly spoiled.
 * The March 24th, 2008 episode preview for two game shows - Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader? and Deal or No Deal - revealed the results of the games.
 * Stargate SG-1's fourth-wall cracking, in-joke spouting, lampshade-hanging 200th episode...called, of course, "200" (for reasons both related and not to this fact)...featured the return of 's character for the first time on the show since the beginning of season 9. This exchange says it all:


 * And it was.
 * Complete scene by scene spoilers for Lost's 3rd and 4th season finales made it to the internet before those episodes aired. In the case of season 4, some fans thought the spoiler was actually a foiler In an effort to keep the whole thing from being spoiled, multiple versions of the  were filmed, with various characters.
 * A plot-point concerning the winners of Prom in an upcoming episode of Glee was just very publicly spoiled over Twitter. Creator Ryan Murphy has made it very clear that he is not happy with the leak.
 * The Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Skin of Evil" killed off Tasha Yar but the fans saw it coming as it was known that Denise Crosby wanted to leave the show. It was also known that she wanted to leave the show in a way that had never been done before on Star Trek; namely killing off a central character permanently. At the time, there were few complaints about the foreknowledge of Tasha's impending death. Everyone tuned in out of curiosity mostly because this was a revolutionary move for Star Trek for which the general rule up until then has always been: Death Is Cheap unless you are a Red Shirt.

Professional Wrestling

 * Most wrestling websites prominently post spoilers for shows that are taped before they air. WWE.com even got in on the act for a short time.
 * Of course, the most egregious use of spoilers in wrestling was done by WCW, against the then-WWF. WCW's Monday Nitro was aired live, while WWF's Monday Night RAW was taped a week in advance; thus, right before 9:00 (when WWF RAW started), the WCW commentary team would spoil the WWF's main event for the evening, in order to coax viewers into continuing to watch Nitro instead. This backfired, however, when Tony Schiavone revealed that Mick Foley—then wrestling as Mankind—would be winning the WWF Championship that evening; he jokingly said "yeah, that'll put butts in seats". An estimated half a million viewers switched over to RAW, an act which killed Nitro's ratings, gave the WWF the upper hand in the Monday Night Wars, and caused fans to start bringing "Mick Foley put my butt in this seat" signs to WWF shows.
 * It also didn't help that the night in question also featured WCW's biggest Jump the Shark moment, the "Finger-Poke of Doom".

Theatre

 * Right at the start of Romeo and Juliet, one of the actors comes out on stage and tells the audience everything that's about to happen in one soliloquy. In Baz Luhrmann's William Shakespeares Romeo and Juliet, this happens twice. First a small TV with a news anchor reciting the soliloquy, and then we get it again but with more dramatic editing, imagery and narration.

Web Comics

 * A plot point was spoiled for the webcomic And Shine Heaven Now when the author posted the relevant trope on the comic's page on this wiki two days before posting the corresponding comic. While spoilers are a common enough occurrence here, it usually does not happen that way.

Western Animation

 * In Avatar: The Last Airbender, "Sozin's Comet" was originally supposed to be a shocking and incredible SERIES finale. Unfortunately, the third midseason was back scheduled to fill out Nickelodeon's summer schedule. Even more unfortunate, was that nobody told the publishers of the junior novelization of said series finale, as they released on schedule. Boom.
 * Leave it to Pinkie Pie to spoil the events of episode 16 of My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic all the way back in episode 5! Of course, you're just as liable as Twilight Sparkle to disregard the whole conversation as it is tucked away in The Teaser.
 * In the opening credits of the Chilly Willy cartoon "Chilly Chums", Grace Stafford is credited as "Woody's voice", thus ruining the cartoon's joke cameo of Woody Woodpecker.

Comic Books

 * The cover for The Fantastic Four #21 (the first appearance of the Hate-Monger) has a blurb that warns the reader, "Don't dare reveal his identity after reading this tale!!" Most modern fans of Marvel know, of course, that this is because the Hate-Monger was Adolf Hitler himself. Well, sort of...  It's kind of confusing. Suffice to say,  that's what everyone thought at the time.

Film

 * The big twist in Psycho was considered so integral to the enjoyment of the film that Hitchcock didn't let anyone come into the movie casually (as people were allowed to walk into films late at the time) and specifically requested at the start of the film to not talk about the plot to any of their friends.

Theater

 * At the end of The Mousetrap the actors on stage swear the audience to secrecy so as not to spoil it for people who haven't seen it yet. Of course, we all know who the killer really is. The real killer is ... didn't expect that, did you?

Western Animation

 * New Zealanders really know how to keep their mouths shut. While the Kim Possible finale episode "Graduation" has already aired there, none of the lucky fans who got to see it said even a single word, and no trace of the episode appeared at any internet file-sharing sites.