Pure Pwnage

Pure Pwnage, is a Web Original, POV Cam, Mockumentary series. The fictional series purports to chronicle the life and adventures of Jeremy, a Canadian self-proclaimed "pro gamer," filmed by his brother Kyle, an aspiring film director.

This work contains examples of:
""I'm coming at your base with two rockvees and an ambo. You've got a Jarmen, two scorps, and a quad. What do you do?""
 * Affectionate Parody - Machinima parody of Red vs. Blue, and live action parodies of Homestar Runner, animated parody of Zero Punctuation
 * Agitated Item Stomping - FPS Doug does this to his keyboard after being the recipient of his favorite move.
 * Author Existence Failure - The death of Troy Dixon, the actor who played T-Bag.
 * Banned in China - Presumably for featuring the Tibetan flag/Tibetan independence protest.
 * Boom Headshot - Trope Namer
 * Brick Joke: Twice. "Everyone knows you run faster with a knife" in reference to first-person shooters where this rule is invoked.
 * In the Counter-Strike tournament final against Deathstriker6666, Jeremy trusts his instincts and uses a knife throughout the entire match, resulting in a Crowning Moment of Awesome when he uses his avatar to score a  Counter-Strike players typically use any number of guns in their matches.
 * In the TV series, Doug's Man Child nature is taken Up to Eleven when is out at a playground and
 * Canada Eh
 * The Character Died With Him - Halfway through filming season two of the original web series, Troy Dixon, who played T-Bag, was tragically involved in a car accident and killed. Naturally, this stopped the series cold for a good while, although the website continued to publish news and articles, until the series was picked up for television.
 * Cliff Hanger
 * Code Name: FPS Doug, T-bag go by their gamer names, Anastasia is often called Tagi, her World of Warcraft character's name.
 * Continuity Reboot: The TV series addresses the web series as the reason for its own existence, but goes off in its own direction. With the exception of Jeremy, Doug, and Kyle, all their friends in the TV show are expies of the original cast.
 * Damsel in Distress -
 * Deadpan Snarker - Dave.
 * The TV series has Simon, manager of the Internet cafe. Pure Pwnage seems to like giving the roles to Asian guys.
 * Disc One Final Boss: The Counter-Strike player "Deathstriker6666" and the Power Glove Man qualify.
 * Even Nerds Have Standards: Doug's love of shooters sometimes worries even Jeremy.
 * Face Heel Turn -.
 * Gamer Chick- Anastasia,  The TV Series has October
 * Heroic Comedic Sociopath - FPS Doug.
 * Heterosexual Life Partners - Mostly Jeremy and Doug but really all the guys on the show except Kyle.
 * He Who Must Not Be Seen - Kyle.
 * Insufferable Genius - Jeremy is the best gamer ever and isn't shy about letting people know it.
 * Instant Awesome Just Add Ninja - Teh_Masterer.
 * Most Gamers Are Male- The composition of the cast is a demonstartion of the The Smurfette Principle, with one female gamer and 4-6 male gamers.
 * Music Video Syndrome and Stupid Statement Dance Mix - Many episodes include original music including "Hey Noob" "I Feel Like Pwning Noobs" "Get out of Myspace"
 * Mysterious Past- Teh_Masterer is a mysterious master gamer who is always shown clad in ninja costume, is capable of playing four games at once and and seems to have omniscient knowledge of Jeremy's actions.
 * Noob - In Jeremy's opinion the only reason to play games is to pwn Noobs.
 * Not What It Looks Like - Dave walks in right on time when Jeremy and Doug accidently turn on the porn  while they take off the clothes they spilled their drinks on.
 * Product Placement - The web series has many PP t-shirts for sale and the characters often wear them on the show.
 * Unstoppable Rage - The epic scene in which FPS Doug dies (in Counter-Strike), proceeds to scream "FUCKING GODDAMN LAG!", and smashes the everloving shit out of his keyboard.
 * Serious Business - The entire main cast (besides Kyle) takes gaming very seriously.
 * Spin Off - Pro At Cooking with Dave. There also was a Webcomic.
 * Take That - in the Pro At Cooking spinoff, Dave regularly delivers Take Thats to vegetarianism. In "Dave's Pimpin' Pizza" (episode 3), he made three types of pizzas: two vegetarian pizzas and one "real pizza" and justified his meat eating to his vegetarian assistant that episode. In "Dave's Mouthwatering Chili" (episode 4), he told his vegetarian assistant to prepare the meat. Finally in "Dave's Eggplant Parmesan," he had a vegan assistant. When she told him about the environmental benefits of not eating meat (ie: the production of meat releases a lot of greenhouse gases), he mentioned since she drove a car and he rides a bike (which is more environment-friendly), that gives him the right to eat as much meat as he wants. Then when she began ranting about the health and ethical benefits of her diet as they waited for the meal to finish cooking, he overdubbed a rant about how pro at cooking he is and how good meat is.
 * Techno Babble - to anyone not familiar with Command and Conquer Generals jargon:


 * Took a Level In Badass - Up until "The Story of Dave" Dave had shown little interest in games until Jeremy is attacked by micro warriors. During the middle of the battle, the action cuts off to an important flashback of Daveâ€™s past in China, revealing his gaming history. He reveals that he too has micro skills and comes to the rescue.
 * Up to Eleven - Episode 16 opens with a Back to The Future homage where Jeremy activates a series of amplifiers and overdrivers attached to his Xbox360 and dialing up the volume past the labeled 'Max' setting as well as the labeled 'Dude', and 'Srsly' marks to reach 'WTF' before rocking out to Rock Band.
 * Videogames of Note - Name checked on the show: Call of Duty, Halo, Counter-Strike, Dance Dance Revolution, Super Smash Bros and World of Warcraft.
 * Wide Eyed Idealist - Oh, Doug. In the final episode of the TV series, Doug cheerfully signs up for the actual Canadian Army, thinking it'll be a life where he gets to carry out missions with real guns and if he dies, he'll simply "re-spawn" like video game avatars do. Kyle and October try in vain to explain to Doug what it is he's actually doing.