Crack Defeat: Difference between revisions

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{{examples}}
== Used straight ==
=== LiveComic ActionBooks TV ===
* In one of ''[[The Simpsons (Comic Book)|The Simpsons]]'' comic books, the school has a art competition. Everyone turns out something, and some of them are pretty good. The winner, however, is Bart who submitted a blank easel still in its packaging. He claimed that he was 'Drawing a blank', and the art critic who was judging the competition loved it.
 
=== Film ===
* ''The Hurricane'' opens up with Rubin Carter finishing a fight against Joey Giardello and inexplicably losing even though Giardello hardly seems able to stand up. Interestingly, this isn't how the fight actually happened- Giardello sued the filmmakers for libel, angrily claiming that he won the fight fair and square.
** The whole movie's given a [[Rose-Tinted Narrative]], which has a lot to do with it. Who cares about accuracy when you're trying to make Carter and the three Canadians into [[Historical Hero Upgrade|total saints]] among a sea of [[Historical Villain Upgrade|racist bastards]]?
* In ''Hot Dog: The Movie'', Harkin Banks is a newcomer to the world of competitive skiing, and delivers clearly the best skiing of anyone. But he is given far worse scores than his snobby rival, Rudi Garmisch, who admittedly delivers excellent skiing, but who is given top scores so he can continue to attract money and fame to the ski lodge.
 
=== WebcomicsLive-Action TV ===
* In the ''[[Good Eats]]'' episode ''Scrap Iron Chef'', despite much cheating on both sides and Alton being the obvious winner (the judges praised his cooking and called the Scrap Iron Chef's food crap), the Scrap Iron Chef won anyway. This is certainly a jab at the ''[[Iron Chef]]'' series, where the Iron Chefs always seem to win.
* Played for laughs in ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]]''. In the "Summarizing Proust" Competition, the host feels that none of the contestants delivered an award-worthy performance, so he gives it to "the girl with the biggest tits", who wasn't even in the competition.
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** Vocal Adrenaline's performance was (allowing for differences in taste) quite good, however, it WAS clear that the intent of the episode was that the New Directions should have ''at least'' taken second place.
* This kicks off the plot of a ''[[Kamen Rider Double]]'' story arc. Shotaro's [[Joshikousei]] informants Queen and Elizabeth enter an ''[[American Idol]]''-style singing contest, and do well in their first two weeks.<ref>Bearing in mind that the girls are played by members of [[AKB48]]</ref> In the third week, they come up against a guy [[Brown Note|whose singing is so terrible it knocks birds out of the sky and causes earthquakes]], but the judges absolutely adore him. Naturally the girls are suspicious, so they hire Shotaro to investigate. {{spoiler|No points for guessing that a Dopant is involved, but not in the way it might seem.}}
* The British TV series ''[[Robot Wars]]'' has had several crap robots beat the stronger ones over the years, but possibly the most infamous example is when Hypnodisc fought and '''''lost''''' to German entry, Nasty Warrior in a one off UK vs Germany fight. The only reason Hypnodisc lost the fight is because it beat up the wooden Nasty Warrior so much that the wooden splinters found their way into the body of Hypnodisc, jammed its internal mechanics, and caused the then two-time Grand Finalist to cease all movement entirely.
** In the University Challenge special in ''Extreme II,'' Behemoth was the best robot in its three way bout with CV and Infernal Contraption. It initially dominated the fight, until CV landed an axe blow on top of Behemoth... which is where its safety link just so happened to be. The result is that the axe cut through the wiring of said device, and Behemoth was dead in the water.
**Chaos 2's shockingly early exit in the Second World Championship; as it was tossing Mastiff around the arena (while Manta and Ansgar have their own dual elsewhere), driver George Francis tried to pull off a spectacular flip that could've sent Mastiff down the pit; instead, Chaos 2 flipped Mastiff ''away from the pit'', surged forward, and fell in itself! Justified in the fact that this was a driving error on George's part.
** Razer's loss to Aggrobot in The Third Wars was a Crack Defeat as well; after Razer was able to finally get a good grip on its pyramid shaped opponent, the crusher suddenly malfunctioned, causing the self righting wings to extend, and the team couldn't retract them. This in turn also caused the tail of Razer to lift its wheels off the floor, immobilising it, and eliminating the team from the competition in just the second round.
** Debatable, but Tornado's defeat against Diotior in The Fifth Wars counts; having spent half the fight shoving the Irish machine around the arena, Diotior suddenly found the confidence to release the pit, and eventually the strength to push Tornado (who at that point had lost drive on one side) into the open pit.
 
=== ComicVideo BooksGames ===
* When developing a [[Fighting Game]], beginners being able to beat experts is widely seen as '''''the''''' thing to avoid at all costs, sometimes regardless of how well-made the rest of the game is.
 
* In ''[[Atelier Annie]]'', you need to win the gold prize in all six challenges to win the competition and get the two best endings. If you fail in this, {{spoiler|Julian}} wins instead. Where this trope comes into play is that {{spoiler|whenever you win a gold prize, you run into Julian in a cutscene whining about how he only got the silver this time. So if you win 5 out of 6, Julian wins the prize despite only getting one Gold to your five.}}
* In one of ''[[The Simpsons (Comic Book)|The Simpsons]]'' comic books, the school has a art competition. Everyone turns out something, and some of them are pretty good. The winner, however, is Bart who submitted a blank easel still in its packaging. He claimed that he was 'Drawing a blank', and the art critic who was judging the competition loved it.
** However, [[Fridge Brilliance]] if you've gotten the [[Golden Ending]]: {{spoiler|maybe he managed to synthesize the Cosmic Conis?}}
 
=== Film ===
 
* ''The Hurricane'' opens up with Rubin Carter finishing a fight against Joey Giardello and inexplicably losing even though Giardello hardly seems able to stand up. Interestingly, this isn't how the fight actually happened- Giardello sued the filmmakers for libel, angrily claiming that he won the fight fair and square.
** The whole movie's given a [[Rose-Tinted Narrative]], which has a lot to do with it. Who cares about accuracy when you're trying to make Carter and the three Canadians into [[Historical Hero Upgrade|total saints]] among a sea of [[Historical Villain Upgrade|racist bastards]]?
* In ''Hot Dog: The Movie'', Harkin Banks is a newcomer to the world of competitive skiing, and delivers clearly the best skiing of anyone. But he is given far worse scores than his snobby rival, Rudi Garmisch, who admittedly delivers excellent skiing, but who is given top scores so he can continue to attract money and fame to the ski lodge.
 
=== Webcomics ===
 
=== VideoWeb GamesComics ===
* In ''[[Bob and George]]'', the robot Ran Cossack's backstory is that Kalinka Cossack built him for a [[Science Fair]]. They lost to a giant model volcano.
** Specifically, he lost to a model volcano because the alternative would be giving the prize to a ''girl''. And we obviously can't give the prize to a girl, right?
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=== Western Animation ===
 
* ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]'':
** "Mr. Lisa Goes To Washington": Lisa's essay on political corruption gets a corrupt politician expelled... but loses to a Vietnamese immigrant's tale of how his family ran a tire shop.
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** "Lisa's Rival": Lisa reluctantly enlists Bart's aid in attempting to defeat her new rival in a diorama competition. However, Ralph Wiggum's 'diorama', which is nothing but a bunch of [[Star Wars]] action figures in their original packaging, wins the competition, making this an example of both a Crack Defeat and a [[Dark Horse Victory]].
** The episode where Lisa is being forced to throw a [[Spelling Bee]]... and then accidentally loses anyway was very nearly a Crack Defeat, and was set up to be one, then she lost, but was lauded roundly for coming second. So subverted there.
** And once again with another episode where Lisa decided to use Bart as a guinea pig for a science project (out of spite for him ruining her original one on a practical joke) dubbed "Is My Brother Dumber Than A Hamster?". When it comes time to show her results at the fair., Sheshe's shown up and ''actually beaten'' by Bart who simply dresses up a hamster with a tiny scarf and goggles, puts him a model plane and appeals simply for cute factor. (He does later apologize to Lisa though, you have to see the scene on DVD as syndication cuts out that part.)
* The ''[[SpongeBob SquarePants]]'' episode 'The Great Snail Race' had Spongebob, Squidward, and Patrick's pet snails ([[The Unintelligible|Gary]], Snellie, and [[Companion Cube|Rocky]] respectively) pitting against each other. Snellie, who is a purebred snail, would've won, but she forfeited and comforted an overworked Gary. So the winner? Rocky!
** It needs to be said that Rocky was an ''[[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|actual rock]]''. How it legitimately got to the finish line was [[Offscreen Teleportation|never explained.]]
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* In the ''[[Phineas and Ferb]]'' episode 'Unfair Science Fair', Doof enters a grade school science fair because of a long history of entering them as a child, always with creations remarkable for someone his age (or anyone really), and losing every single time to a baking soda volcano. He later gave up science fairs and tried writing poetry, but, curiously, [[Rule of Funny|still lost to a baking soda volcano]].
** The above example also contains a weird double subversion, as the winner of that science fair was a girl with an impressive set of self-made, [[Spider-Man|Doc Ock-style]] [[Artificial Limb|mechanical arms]]... that she used to build her ''real'' project, [[Mundane Utility|a baking soda volcano.]]
 
=== Video Games ===
 
* When developing a [[Fighting Game]], beginners being able to beat experts is widely seen as '''''the''''' thing to avoid at all costs, sometimes regardless of how well-made the rest of the game is.
* In ''[[Atelier Annie]]'', you need to win the gold prize in all six challenges to win the competition and get the two best endings. If you fail in this, {{spoiler|Julian}} wins instead. Where this trope comes into play is that {{spoiler|whenever you win a gold prize, you run into Julian in a cutscene whining about how he only got the silver this time. So if you win 5 out of 6, Julian wins the prize despite only getting one Gold to your five.}}
** However, [[Fridge Brilliance]] if you've gotten the [[Golden Ending]]: {{spoiler|maybe he managed to synthesize the Cosmic Conis?}}
 
=== Real Life ===
* In the 1988 Seoul Olympics, Roy Jones Jr. pummeledpummelled Park Si Hun in the final, landing 86 punches to Park's 32. But after the bout, the judges gave Park a 3-2 win, and an ill-deserved gold medal. Jones would later go on to become a famous pro boxer.
 
** That was more [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]]. 4Four years earlier, South Korean officials had gone to the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics in order to observe the Americans. After a number of controversial decisions went the Americans' way (Ofof the 38 boxing matches involving Americans that went the full three rounds, 37 ended up being judged as American victories)., Oneone Korean Olympic official iswas quoted as saying "We came here to learn a lot about the Olympic Games, because we are the hosts in 1988, and we've decided there's nothing to learn." Except how to get revenge.
* In the 1988 Seoul Olympics, Roy Jones Jr. pummeled Park Si Hun in the final, landing 86 punches to Park's 32. But after the bout, the judges gave Park a 3-2 win, and an ill-deserved gold medal. Jones would later go on to become a famous pro boxer.
** That was more [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]]. 4 years earlier, South Korean officials had gone to the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics in order to observe the Americans. After a number of controversial decisions went the Americans' way (Of the 38 boxing matches involving Americans that went the full three rounds, 37 ended up being judged as American victories). One Korean Olympic official is quoted as saying "We came here to learn a lot about the Olympic Games, because we are the hosts in 1988, and we've decided there's nothing to learn." Except how to get revenge.
** It's pretty much an unwritten rule of the Olympics that the host country is not allowed to be embarrassed. Thus all but the most blatant cheating on their behalf (and sometimes even that) will be ignored, and judges will favor them whenever possible.
* Sometimes, if someone has a really great idea for a TV show/video game/cartoon/line of pencil moisteners, but doesn't have the creative freedom to just make whatever random-ass idea pops into their head, they'll make the accompanying pitches as terrible as they possibly can on purpose, in the hopes that the decision-makers will hate it and choose the one the creator likes. But, as the [[Executive Meddling]] page demonstrates, executives are notorious for having terrible taste, so sometimes the gamble doesn't pay off and they're stuck working on a really shitty show which they deliberately designed to be so.
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== Character passed over for a job ==
=== WesternVideo AnimationGames ===
* In the NES game ''[[Punch-Out!!]]'', you better KO your opponent in the title bouts, or else the judges will always vote for the other guy. Mr. Sandman must also be KOed even though he isn't a circuit champion. You can win on points in other matches, though it takes a ludicrous amount.
 
=== VideoWestern GamesAnimation ===
* ''[[King of the Hill]]'': After having a heart attack, the boss of the propane company Hank Hill works at asks Hank to "take care of my dogs", and he thinks that boss is metaphorically telling him to take care of the company, so he accepts the job. Turns out boss literally does mean to take care of his dogs, while some other guy is taking charge of the company and putting "tattleboxes" in the propane delivery trucks, which royally pisses off the drivers and ruins productivity.
* ''[[All Grown Up!]]'', "Interview with a Campfire": No-talent Angelica Pickles and talented singer Susie Carmichael are auditioning for the lead in a camp musical. After all is said and done, both Kimi and Lil think Susie had the better audition for the lead role in the play (although we have to [[Take Our Word for It|take their word for it]]). However, come play time, she's only in a supporting role.
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* Straddling on the fence... ''[[Rugrats]]'', "Moving Away": Angelica Pickles' mom Charlotte has packed her bags, and is ready to move (with Angelica and hubby Drew) cross-country to New York to be the new Vice President of her company. After Angelica recounts with the rest of the Rugrats on how they met in the first place, Charlotte's plans have hit one major snag: her assistant, Jonathan has taken the job ahead of his apparent superior. "There's no loyalty in this town!"
 
=== Video Games ===
 
* In the NES game ''[[Punch-Out!!]]'', you better KO your opponent in the title bouts, or else the judges will always vote for the other guy. Mr. Sandman must also be KOed even though he isn't a circuit champion. You can win on points in other matches, though it takes a ludicrous amount.
 
== Either/both, with excuse==
=== Live Action TVFilm ===
* In ''[[Stick It]]'', one of the gymnasts performs a difficult vault with impeccable skill, but loses points because of a technicality: her ''bra strap'' was showing. As she herself points out, the judges were overtly biased against her coach and were exploiting this rule as a covert mean of revenge. This event causes the rebellion that makes up the remainder of the film, and is apparently a problem [[Truth in Television|in real life]]; in actual gymnastic competitions the complex rules and unnecessary penalties confuse viewers and allow judges to deliberately alter the outcome.
* One of Dewey Finn's lies in ''[[School of Rock]]'' has him telling about how he auditioned for an orchestra and ended up getting spurned in favor of a relative of Yo Yo Ma's. Dewey: "A little nepotisssss!"
** {{spoiler|By film's end, Dewey suffers what he feels is a Crack Defeat at a band contest, at the hands of the very band that kicked him out at the film's start. [[Crowning Moment of Heartwarming|Until his band gets a call for an encore.]]}}
 
=== Literature ===
* Obligatory ''[[Discworld]]'' example: At the end of ''[[Discworld/Maskerade|Maskerade]]'', Agnes's annoying and tone-deaf roommate Christine is the one who looks forward to a brilliant future as a diva while Agnes, who actually did all the singing every time Christine appeared onstage, is shunted off to one side. The stage manager {{spoiler|Walter Plinge}} tells her that yes, she was very good, better than Christine will ever be even after years of training - but Christine is naturally a star, which in the opera world is more important than being talented.
* Justified in [[Piers Anthony]]'s ''[[Apprentice Adept]]'' novels, where Stile and Clef compete in a contest to see who's the master musician. Clef's first piece is technically perfect, but doesn't attempt to appeal to the audience at hand. Stile's piece does so, allowing Clef to learn to suit his music to his audience. Although the audience clearly finds Clef's second performance to be the best of the lot, the judges aware the victory to Stile, because Clef's skills benefited more from hearing Stile's piece than vice versa. So, Stile is the master and Clef—howeverClef — however refined his technique—istechnique — is the apprentice under the circumstances.
** Also noteworthy in that both the audience response ''and'' the AI computer analysis had Clef as the winner. However, they only get to submit ''advisory'' opinions; the judges' vote is binding.
 
=== WebcomicsLive-Action TV ===
* ''[[The Torkelsons]]'': Dorothy Jane Torkelson is in the finals of a contest whose winner will get to be a foreign exchange student in Paris. Her family situation gets high marks, and the judges do seem to like her... but still loses anyway because the family in France wanted a boy. Thus making the finals [[Shaggy Dog Story|completely meaningless]] since there was only one boy out of the three finalists.
** Mind you, when Dorothy first meets said finalist, she pretty much says, "[[Tempting Fate|There's no way I'll lose to you]]" before getting concerned at the other finalist.
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** [[Eliminated From the Race]] (''[[The Amazing Race]]''): A normally-excellent team just has a really bad day and comes in last.
** [[Voted Off the Island]] (''[[Survivor]]'', ''[[Big Brother]]'' US): Plot and scheme all you want, you still have to please the other competitors so they'll keep you around. Many players have been voted out for being too good and a threat to others' success.
** [[One Judge to Rule Them All]] (''[[The Apprentice (trope)|The Apprentice]]'', ''[[Hell's Kitchen|Hells Kitchen]]''): Players have been awesome businessmen, chefs, or whatever; but as soon as they pissed off the judge they didn't have a prayer.
 
=== Video Games ===
* In ''[[Breath of Fire]] 2'', Petape hits upon the idea of flushing out the impostor pretending to be her brother Tapeta by holding a cooking contest. For all his [[Cloudcuckoolander]] tendencies, Tapeta is a superb chef, and Petape suspects rightly that he will easily beat the impostor, especially with the high-quality ingredients the party obtains from [[Let's Meet the Meat|the powerful insect monsters]] lurking in the castle's basement. While the head chef gives high marks to the impostor's dishes, he's positively ''ecstatic'' about Tapeta's - but each time, he finds some nit-picky reason to deduct points. This comes to a head when the chef comes to a dessert made using only [[Foreign Queasine|the most rare and exquisite fly in existence]] and Petape calls him out. Unsurprisingly, it turns out that the impostorimposter has rigged the vote.
 
=== FilmWeb Comics ===
* The ''[[Sluggy Freelance]]'' arc "Torg Potter and the Sorcerer's Nuts" does this as a direct parody of the "last minute points" scene in the first ''[[Harry Potter (novel)|Harry Potter]]'' film/book. House Wunnybun (the equivalent of Slytherin) has won the house cup with 534 points, while House Snackewyrm (the equivalent of Gryffindor) comes in last with minus a billion. At the awards ceremony, headmaster Gandledorf announces that's he's granting his Snackewyrm niece a trillion points for [https://web.archive.org/web/20090723212855/http://sluggy.com/daily.php?date=020923 "being so gosh darn cute,"] making Snackewyrm the winner instead. He later confides to Torg that he just didn't want to mess up his paperwork by treating Wunnybun with respect.
 
=== Western Animation ===
 
* ''[[Kim Possible]]'', "Hidden Talent": In yet another hybrid of Crack Defeat and [[Dark Horse Victory]], Ron stalls for Kim (who is trying to escape an especially elaborate death trap) in the school talent show with an eclectic (and exhaustive) list of vaudeville acts (e.g., ventriloquism, breaking bricks with his head), and ends up winning first place over Kim and Bonnie's big, flashy acts (Bonnie dances ballet, while KP performs "Say the Word", a song by Christy Romano, her voice actress). Barkin proclaims, "Proving that quantity is indeed better than quality".
* Playing with this trope is ''[[Hey Arnold!]]'', "Family Man", where restaurant cook Hyunh (see [[Celebrity Is Overrated]]) is concerned that his new boss will pick an inferior cook as his new head chef because he has a large family, and Hyunh only has a daughter (who doesn't even appear in the story).
* ''[[Rocket Power]]'' included a sand castle contest. The various entrants spent lots of time and effort on elaborate sand sculptures, but first place went to a little girl who made a tiny sand tower with a bucket. Reason? It was a sand ''castle'' contest, and hers was the only one that could be called a "castle".
* In an episode of ''[[Pepper Ann]]'', the eponymous character completely wins over the judges of a beauty pageant with her heartfelt speech about being herself... but another girl wins because the entire pageant was rigged to give her the prize—she's the daughter of the president of the company that organized it.
* In ''[[Equestria Girls]]: Rainbow Rocks'', the Rainbooms advance to the final round of the Battle of the Bands despite ''completely tanking'' their semi-finals performance, being unfairly advanced over the objectively superior performance done by Trixie and the Illusions. Justified in that this is part of the villains' [[Xanatos Gambit—theGambit]] — the Dazzlings gain power from negative emotions and discord, and set up the Battle of the Bands in the first place to power-up off of the strife and competitiveness it would produce among the school. By having the contest be unfairly rigged in such a blatant manner, they guaranteed the entire audience would be ragingly pissed off and powering them up to the maximum, while at the same time driving the mind-controlled Trixie far enough over the edge that she'd sabotage the Rainbooms and take them out of the final round entirely. (Of course our heroines escaped for the final act and won, but the Dazzlings made a ''very'' respectable effort.)
 
=== Webcomics ===
 
* The ''[[Sluggy Freelance]]'' arc "Torg Potter and the Sorcerer's Nuts" does this as a direct parody of the "last minute points" scene in the first ''[[Harry Potter (novel)|Harry Potter]]'' film/book. House Wunnybun (the equivalent of Slytherin) has won the house cup with 534 points, while House Snackewyrm (the equivalent of Gryffindor) comes in last with minus a billion. At the awards ceremony, headmaster Gandledorf announces that's he's granting his Snackewyrm niece a trillion points for [https://web.archive.org/web/20090723212855/http://sluggy.com/daily.php?date=020923 "being so gosh darn cute,"] making Snackewyrm the winner instead. He later confides to Torg that he just didn't want to mess up his paperwork by treating Wunnybun with respect.
 
=== Film ===
 
* In ''[[Stick It]]'', one of the gymnasts performs a difficult vault with impeccable skill, but loses points because of a technicality: her ''bra strap'' was showing. As she herself points out, the judges were overtly biased against her coach and were exploiting this rule as a covert mean of revenge. This event causes the rebellion that makes up the remainder of the film, and is apparently a problem [[Truth in Television|in real life]]; in actual gymnastic competitions the complex rules and unnecessary penalties confuse viewers and allow judges to deliberately alter the outcome.
* One of Dewey Finn's lies in ''[[School of Rock]]'' has him telling about how he auditioned for an orchestra and ended up getting spurned in favor of a relative of Yo Yo Ma's. Dewey: "A little nepotisssss!"
** {{spoiler|By film's end, Dewey suffers what he feels is a Crack Defeat at a band contest, at the hands of the very band that kicked him out at the film's start. [[Crowning Moment of Heartwarming|Until his band gets a call for an encore.]]}}
 
=== Literature ===
 
* Obligatory ''[[Discworld]]'' example: At the end of ''[[Discworld/Maskerade|Maskerade]]'', Agnes's annoying and tone-deaf roommate Christine is the one who looks forward to a brilliant future as a diva while Agnes, who actually did all the singing every time Christine appeared onstage, is shunted off to one side. The stage manager {{spoiler|Walter Plinge}} tells her that yes, she was very good, better than Christine will ever be even after years of training - but Christine is naturally a star, which in the opera world is more important than being talented.
* Justified in [[Piers Anthony]]'s [[Apprentice Adept]] novels, where Stile and Clef compete in a contest to see who's the master musician. Clef's first piece is technically perfect, but doesn't attempt to appeal to the audience at hand. Stile's piece does so, allowing Clef to learn to suit his music to his audience. Although the audience clearly finds Clef's second performance to be the best of the lot, the judges aware the victory to Stile, because Clef's skills benefited more from hearing Stile's piece than vice versa. So, Stile is the master and Clef—however refined his technique—is the apprentice under the circumstances.
** Also noteworthy in that both the audience response ''and'' the AI computer analysis had Clef as the winner. However, they only get to submit ''advisory'' opinions; the judges' vote is binding.
 
=== Video Games ===
 
* In ''[[Breath of Fire]] 2'', Petape hits upon the idea of flushing out the impostor pretending to be her brother Tapeta by holding a cooking contest. For all his [[Cloudcuckoolander]] tendencies, Tapeta is a superb chef, and Petape suspects rightly that he will easily beat the impostor, especially with the high-quality ingredients the party obtains from [[Let's Meet the Meat|the powerful insect monsters]] lurking in the castle's basement. While the head chef gives high marks to the impostor's dishes, he's positively ''ecstatic'' about Tapeta's - but each time, he finds some nit-picky reason to deduct points. This comes to a head when the chef comes to a dessert made using only [[Foreign Queasine|the most rare and exquisite fly in existence]] and Petape calls him out. Unsurprisingly, it turns out that the impostor has rigged the vote.
 
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[[Category:Narrative Devices]]
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