Decoy Protagonist: Difference between revisions

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{{examples}}
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== Anime and Manga ==
== Anime and Manga ==
* Taken [[Up to Eleven]] in ''[[Higurashi no Naku Koro Ni]]''. After Keiichi has been the main character for three arcs spanning the first 13 episodes, his spotlight is taken away for the rest of the season, with three arcs devoted to Akasaka, Shion, and Rena. Then the first episode of the second season focuses on Akasaka and Ooishi. Then we get an arc centered around Satoko. The eventual main character? {{spoiler|Furude Rika}}, a [[True Companions|True Companion]] who had received the least attention prior to the reveal. Keiichi still plays a critical role, though, as a source of inspiration and courage.
* Taken [[Up to Eleven]] in ''[[Higurashi no Naku Koro ni]]''. After Keiichi has been the main character for three arcs spanning the first 13 episodes, his spotlight is taken away for the rest of the season, with three arcs devoted to Akasaka, Shion, and Rena. Then the first episode of the second season focuses on Akasaka and Ooishi. Then we get an arc centered around Satoko. The eventual main character? {{spoiler|Furude Rika}}, a [[True Companions|True Companion]] who had received the least attention prior to the reveal. Keiichi still plays a critical role, though, as a source of inspiration and courage.
** And in ''[[Umineko no Naku Koro Ni]]'', {{spoiler|Bernkastel}} actually attempts to {{spoiler|[[Hijacked By Ganon|hijack the whole setup]] through her game piece, [[Replacement Scrappy|Erika]]}}, effectively weaponizing this concept.
** And in ''[[Umineko no Naku Koro ni]]'', {{spoiler|Bernkastel}} actually attempts to {{spoiler|[[Hijacked by Ganon|hijack the whole setup]] through her game piece, [[Replacement Scrappy|Erika]]}}, effectively weaponizing this concept.
* In the image above. Some viewers didn't realize Kamina wasn't the central protagonist of ''[[Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann]]'' until {{spoiler|his death in Episode 8.}} It turns out that Simon is the main character.
* In the image above. Some viewers didn't realize Kamina wasn't the central protagonist of ''[[Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann]]'' until {{spoiler|his death in Episode 8.}} It turns out that Simon is the main character.
* Waku from ''[[Bokurano]]'' is presented in a way that couldn't be mistaken for anything other than the classic shonen hero. At least until the [[Aloof Big Brother]] accidentally '''knocks him off of the [[Humongous Mecha]]''' after his first battle, in the second episode (fifth manga chapter). Said Big Brother will eventually go on to become {{spoiler|the main character himself (sorta).}} Does an excellent job [[Kill'Em All|setting the tone]] in any case.
* Waku from ''[[Bokurano]]'' is presented in a way that couldn't be mistaken for anything other than the classic shonen hero. At least until the [[Aloof Big Brother]] accidentally '''knocks him off of the [[Humongous Mecha]]''' after his first battle, in the second episode (fifth manga chapter). Said Big Brother will eventually go on to become {{spoiler|the main character himself (sorta).}} Does an excellent job [[Kill'Em All|setting the tone]] in any case.
** Of course, it's later revealed {{spoiler|that Waku was dead at that point anyway; Zearth is an [[Artifact of Death]] and anyone who pilots it dies shortly after.}}
** Of course, it's later revealed {{spoiler|that Waku was dead at that point anyway; Zearth is an [[Artifact of Death]] and anyone who pilots it dies shortly after.}}
* Played with in ''[[Baccano (Light Novel)|Baccano]]'', where Carol insists that Firo is the protagonist because he's "main character-ish." Given the [[Jigsaw Puzzle Plot|deliberately]] [[Anachronic Order|disjointed]] nature of the series (in the anime anyway, the source books are much more chronological), as well as the [[Loads and Loads of Characters|ridiculously huge cast of "main" characters]], she manages to be completely right and way off the mark at the same time.
* Played with in ''[[Baccano]]'', where Carol insists that Firo is the protagonist because he's "main character-ish." Given the [[Jigsaw Puzzle Plot|deliberately]] [[Anachronic Order|disjointed]] nature of the series (in the anime anyway, the source books are much more chronological), as well as the [[Loads and Loads of Characters|ridiculously huge cast of "main" characters]], she manages to be completely right and way off the mark at the same time.
** If one defined "main character" based on screen time alone, Isaac and Miria would fit.
** If one defined "main character" based on screen time alone, Isaac and Miria would fit.
* In Nobuhiro Watsuki's Crescent Moon in the Warring States, the protagonist is actually Isshinta, not Hiko Seijuro as many readers believe
* In Nobuhiro Watsuki's Crescent Moon in the Warring States, the protagonist is actually Isshinta, not Hiko Seijuro as many readers believe
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** Well, he wasn't ''that'' genre savvy. His bite was from trying to grapple a zombie from behind and in fact insisted on fighting the undead with hand-to-hand combat.
** Well, he wasn't ''that'' genre savvy. His bite was from trying to grapple a zombie from behind and in fact insisted on fighting the undead with hand-to-hand combat.
* ''[[Blassreiter]]'': This guy got a lot of screen-time. He's ''great''. His life is wrecked, but he should not give up. He got [[The Virus]] but clearly has enough of [[Heroic Willpower]] -- look, he doesn't kill when even non-infectee [[Et Tu, Brute?|could be]] [[Green-Eyed Monster|tempted]] [[Was It All a Lie?|a lot]]! He must be the protagonist! Right?.. Oops, he turns out to be but one more deadman, who just kept the horror scenes of imminent [[Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot]] [[Zombie Apocalypse|Apocalypse]] from being looked upon as [[A Million Is a Statistic]].
* ''[[Blassreiter]]'': This guy got a lot of screen-time. He's ''great''. His life is wrecked, but he should not give up. He got [[The Virus]] but clearly has enough of [[Heroic Willpower]] -- look, he doesn't kill when even non-infectee [[Et Tu, Brute?|could be]] [[Green-Eyed Monster|tempted]] [[Was It All a Lie?|a lot]]! He must be the protagonist! Right?.. Oops, he turns out to be but one more deadman, who just kept the horror scenes of imminent [[Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot]] [[Zombie Apocalypse|Apocalypse]] from being looked upon as [[A Million Is a Statistic]].
* The demon-hunting squad you're introduced to in the first episode of ''[[Ga Rei Zero]]''. They're all distinctive, have some interesting chemistry and seem like a skilled bunch. {{spoiler|They all die.}} At the end of that very same episode.
* The demon-hunting squad you're introduced to in the first episode of ''[[Ga-Rei Zero]]''. They're all distinctive, have some interesting chemistry and seem like a skilled bunch. {{spoiler|They all die.}} At the end of that very same episode.
** What makes it worse is that they were included on promotional material
** What makes it worse is that they were included on promotional material
* [[Legend of the Galactic Heroes]] has two main characters: Reinhard von Lohengramm of the [[The Empire]] and Yang Wenli of [[The Alliance]]. {{spoiler|While Yang Wenli IS the most important character of the democratic cast, he's assassinated three-quarters of the way through - completely changing the dynamic of the show. Yang's protégée Julian succeeds him in the last season while Reinhard is a protagonist throughout.}}
* [[Legend of the Galactic Heroes]] has two main characters: Reinhard von Lohengramm of the [[The Empire]] and Yang Wenli of [[The Alliance]]. {{spoiler|While Yang Wenli IS the most important character of the democratic cast, he's assassinated three-quarters of the way through - completely changing the dynamic of the show. Yang's protégée Julian succeeds him in the last season while Reinhard is a protagonist throughout.}}
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** {{spoiler|Clone Syaoran}} can still be considered to be the main protagonist for the first half.
** {{spoiler|Clone Syaoran}} can still be considered to be the main protagonist for the first half.
* Despite featuring an [[Ensemble Cast]], [[Naoki Urasawa]]'s ''[[Twentieth Century Boys]]'' {{spoiler|has Kenji Endo at the center of the story for the first five volumes or so. After the [[Time Skip]], this focus shifts to his niece Kanna}} and arguably remains there for most of the series.
* Despite featuring an [[Ensemble Cast]], [[Naoki Urasawa]]'s ''[[Twentieth Century Boys]]'' {{spoiler|has Kenji Endo at the center of the story for the first five volumes or so. After the [[Time Skip]], this focus shifts to his niece Kanna}} and arguably remains there for most of the series.
* While we're on the subject of Naoki Urasawa, {{spoiler|Richard Braun}} is this for ''[[Monster (Anime)|Monster]]''. Not an entirely straight example, because he isn't this way for the series as a whole, just for an arc that takes up volumes 5-9. Still for that arc, this trope definitely applies.
* While we're on the subject of Naoki Urasawa, {{spoiler|Richard Braun}} is this for ''[[Monster (manga)|Monster]]''. Not an entirely straight example, because he isn't this way for the series as a whole, just for an arc that takes up volumes 5-9. Still for that arc, this trope definitely applies.
* And back to Urasawa, ''[[Pluto]]'' {{spoiler|tells the story mostly from Gesicht's point of view for the first six volumes - up until his murder. Epsilon and then Atom take on the mantle of the hero, though Gesicht's memories play a role in the final confrontation against Pluto.}}
* And back to Urasawa, ''[[Pluto]]'' {{spoiler|tells the story mostly from Gesicht's point of view for the first six volumes - up until his murder. Epsilon and then Atom take on the mantle of the hero, though Gesicht's memories play a role in the final confrontation against Pluto.}}
* In ''The World Is Mine'', we meet the two [[Villain Protagonist|Villain Protagonists]] [[Psychopathic Manchild|Toshiya]] and [[Wild Child|Mon]] driving down the highway, with Mon having sex with a flashy-looking high school girl. She describes herself to the audience as if she'll be the protagonist ("My name is Miho, seventeen years old, ''love'' sex!") and is then [[Disposable Woman|pushed out of the car into oncoming traffic]]. The ''real'' female protagonist is a plain-looking girl and one of the few people that Mon doesn't want to rape or kill (Mon actually curls up into her lap and falls asleep like Berserker Rage [[Ranma]]).
* In ''The World Is Mine'', we meet the two [[Villain Protagonist|Villain Protagonists]] [[Psychopathic Manchild|Toshiya]] and [[Wild Child|Mon]] driving down the highway, with Mon having sex with a flashy-looking high school girl. She describes herself to the audience as if she'll be the protagonist ("My name is Miho, seventeen years old, ''love'' sex!") and is then [[Disposable Woman|pushed out of the car into oncoming traffic]]. The ''real'' female protagonist is a plain-looking girl and one of the few people that Mon doesn't want to rape or kill (Mon actually curls up into her lap and falls asleep like Berserker Rage [[Ranma ½]]).
* From the same author of ''[[Baccano (Light Novel)|Baccano]]'', [[Durarara]] has Mikado Ryuugamine who may look like he's the protagonist because he was the focus for the first episode. You might be thinking "huh, so we get to see Ikebukuro from the eyes of a [[Naive Newcomer]]". {{spoiler|Until you see his biggest secret.}} [[Word of God]] says that [[Headless Horseman|Celty]] is the protagonist of the series, not Mikado.
* From the same author of ''[[Baccano]]'', [[Durarara]] has Mikado Ryuugamine who may look like he's the protagonist because he was the focus for the first episode. You might be thinking "huh, so we get to see Ikebukuro from the eyes of a [[Naive Newcomer]]". {{spoiler|Until you see his biggest secret.}} [[Word of God]] says that [[Headless Horseman|Celty]] is the protagonist of the series, not Mikado.
* The majorly [[Broken Base]] of ''[[Gundam Seed Destiny]]'' always seems to be fighting over the problem of who exactly the main character ''was''. While [[Determinator|Shinn Asuka]] gets all the best combat scenes, pilots a [[Humongous Mecha|Gundam]] painted in the traditional white/blue/red/yellow color scheme usually used to signify a main character, and is front and center in most promotional material for the show; the [[Older and Wiser]] [[The Messiah|Kira Yamato]] takes Shinn's place as the front-and-center character halfway through the show and is portrayed as having the [[Omniscient Morality License|moral high ground]] over Shinn, who is supporting a character whose stated goal is the elimination of [[The Evils of Free Will]]. A fairly famous [[Flip-Flop of God]] has named Athrun Zala, a character who goes from being Shinn's [[The Obi-Wan|mentor]] to Kira's [[The Lancer|Lancer]] around the point that the change in perspective happens as ''the'' main character of the story. While there has been much [[Fan Wank]] over this idea, citing it as an [[Ass Pull]], it does [[Makes Sense in Context|make some sense in context]]; as A) a large amount of the story is dedicated to Athrun's crisis of faith over having to side with his former [[The Empire|ZAFT]] comrades against [[The Kingdom]] he defected to in the previous series (due to said kingdom deciding to give in to the corrupt [[The Federation|Federation]]), B) The change in series' perspective from pro-ZAFT to pro-Three Ships Alliance comes around the time when Athrun had learned of the [[Big Bad|Big Bad's]] master plan and jumped ship to rejoin Kira in hopes of stopping him, and C) Athrun is the one who engages and defeats Shinn (who by this point had become a ''very'' dangerous [[The Dragon|Dragon]]) in very emotional single combat right before the end of the war (Kira meanwhile, is busy [[Curb Stomp Battle|curbstomping]] the local [[Evil Genius]]).
* The majorly [[Broken Base]] of ''[[Gundam Seed Destiny]]'' always seems to be fighting over the problem of who exactly the main character ''was''. While [[Determinator|Shinn Asuka]] gets all the best combat scenes, pilots a [[Humongous Mecha|Gundam]] painted in the traditional white/blue/red/yellow color scheme usually used to signify a main character, and is front and center in most promotional material for the show; the [[Older and Wiser]] [[The Messiah|Kira Yamato]] takes Shinn's place as the front-and-center character halfway through the show and is portrayed as having the [[Omniscient Morality License|moral high ground]] over Shinn, who is supporting a character whose stated goal is the elimination of [[The Evils of Free Will]]. A fairly famous [[Flip-Flop of God]] has named Athrun Zala, a character who goes from being Shinn's [[The Obi-Wan|mentor]] to Kira's [[The Lancer|Lancer]] around the point that the change in perspective happens as ''the'' main character of the story. While there has been much [[Fan Wank]] over this idea, citing it as an [[Ass Pull]], it does [[Makes Sense in Context|make some sense in context]]; as A) a large amount of the story is dedicated to Athrun's crisis of faith over having to side with his former [[The Empire|ZAFT]] comrades against [[The Kingdom]] he defected to in the previous series (due to said kingdom deciding to give in to the corrupt [[The Federation|Federation]]), B) The change in series' perspective from pro-ZAFT to pro-Three Ships Alliance comes around the time when Athrun had learned of the [[Big Bad|Big Bad's]] master plan and jumped ship to rejoin Kira in hopes of stopping him, and C) Athrun is the one who engages and defeats Shinn (who by this point had become a ''very'' dangerous [[The Dragon|Dragon]]) in very emotional single combat right before the end of the war (Kira meanwhile, is busy [[Curb Stomp Battle|curbstomping]] the local [[Evil Genius]]).
** It doesn't help that Shinn eventually gets the titular Destiny Gundam as his [[Mid-Season Upgrade]].
** It doesn't help that Shinn eventually gets the titular Destiny Gundam as his [[Mid-Season Upgrade]].
** Also, the Destiny TV Movies were narrated from Athrun's point of view.
** Also, the Destiny TV Movies were narrated from Athrun's point of view.
* In the second "season" of ''Takemitsu Zamurai'', a bandit leader named "[[Exactly What It Says On the Tin|Glass-eyed]] Tetsuzo" is set up to be the new antagonist after landing in jail. Unfortunately he's {{spoiler|[[Too Dumb to Live]] and kicks previous antagonist [[Implacable Man|Kikuchi]] awake.}} The next morning, Tetsuzo is found {{spoiler|''with his head twisted off'' and Kikuchi}} is now the owner of a {{spoiler|pretty marble, which he eventually uses to burn the prison down}} and escape.
* In the second "season" of ''Takemitsu Zamurai'', a bandit leader named "[[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|Glass-eyed]] Tetsuzo" is set up to be the new antagonist after landing in jail. Unfortunately he's {{spoiler|[[Too Dumb to Live]] and kicks previous antagonist [[Implacable Man|Kikuchi]] awake.}} The next morning, Tetsuzo is found {{spoiler|''with his head twisted off'' and Kikuchi}} is now the owner of a {{spoiler|pretty marble, which he eventually uses to burn the prison down}} and escape.
* The sequel to ''[[Black Butler (Manga)|Black Butler]]'' sets up Alois Trancy and Claude Faustus as the new Master and Butler duo, {{spoiler|until Sebastian comes back, and Ciel is brought back to life. All in the first episode. After all of the marketing A-1 Pictures has done for Alois and Claude, it turns out that it was done to hide the fact that Sebastian and Ciel would be returning. [[And the Fandom Rejoiced|Bravo.]]}}
* The sequel to ''[[Black Butler]]'' sets up Alois Trancy and Claude Faustus as the new Master and Butler duo, {{spoiler|until Sebastian comes back, and Ciel is brought back to life. All in the first episode. After all of the marketing A-1 Pictures has done for Alois and Claude, it turns out that it was done to hide the fact that Sebastian and Ciel would be returning. [[And the Fandom Rejoiced|Bravo.]]}}
* {{spoiler|Gohan, Videl, and Goku}} in the 13th [[Dragonball Z]] movie, ''Wrath of the Dragon''. Not a death example, but after the first act, the focus switches from them to Trunks and Tapion and arguably stays there for the rest of the film.
* {{spoiler|Gohan, Videl, and Goku}} in the 13th [[Dragonball Z]] movie, ''Wrath of the Dragon''. Not a death example, but after the first act, the focus switches from them to Trunks and Tapion and arguably stays there for the rest of the film.
* In ''[[Yoku Wakaru Gendai Mahou]]'' Yumiko has the focus in the First Episode until its shown that Koyomi is The Main Character
* In ''[[Yoku Wakaru Gendai Mahou]]'' Yumiko has the focus in the First Episode until its shown that Koyomi is The Main Character
* The First Episode of ''[[Shiki]]'' follows Megumi as the central character and her life around the village. {{spoiler|She's dead by the end of the episode}}
* The First Episode of ''[[Shiki]]'' follows Megumi as the central character and her life around the village. {{spoiler|She's dead by the end of the episode}}
* ''[[Emerging (Manga)|Emerging]]'': Since she appears on the cover and since the first chapter revolves around her, it's very easy to mistake Akari for the series' protagonist. {{spoiler|She gets infected with the disease at the very beginning of the story, and from then until the very end does nothing except lying in her hospital bed looking miserable. Her family doctor becomes the hero.}}
* ''[[Emerging]]'': Since she appears on the cover and since the first chapter revolves around her, it's very easy to mistake Akari for the series' protagonist. {{spoiler|She gets infected with the disease at the very beginning of the story, and from then until the very end does nothing except lying in her hospital bed looking miserable. Her family doctor becomes the hero.}}
* ''[[Puella Magi Oriko Magica]]'', had an odd case. For starters, the title character ''isn't even on the cover of the first volume''. In fact, {{spoiler|it's an [[Antagonist Title]]; Oriko is the villain.}} The real protagonists, at least in the first volume, are Kyouko and Yuma, the girl who actually was on the cover. Mami functions as a secondary protagonist. {{spoiler|And then in the second volume, [[Hijacked By Ganon|Homura]] [[Inverted Trope|becomes the protagonist]].}}
* ''[[Puella Magi Oriko Magica]]'', had an odd case. For starters, the title character ''isn't even on the cover of the first volume''. In fact, {{spoiler|it's an [[Antagonist Title]]; Oriko is the villain.}} The real protagonists, at least in the first volume, are Kyouko and Yuma, the girl who actually was on the cover. Mami functions as a secondary protagonist. {{spoiler|And then in the second volume, [[Hijacked by Ganon|Homura]] [[Inverted Trope|becomes the protagonist]].}}
* Takashi of ''[[All Rounder Meguru]]'' is clearly the star of the prologue, and his storyline is the heaviest and most dramatic element of the series, but Meguru's the one with his name in the title.
* Takashi of ''[[All Rounder Meguru]]'' is clearly the star of the prologue, and his storyline is the heaviest and most dramatic element of the series, but Meguru's the one with his name in the title.




== Comic Books ==
== Comic Books ==
* Like a lot of comics, [[Neil Gaiman]]'s ''[[Black Orchid (Comic Book)|Black Orchid]]'' lampshades [[Bond Villain Stupidity]]. Unlike most, the [[Mook]] really ''[[Defied Trope|does]]'' shoot the main character in the head. He doesn't know that [[Good Thing You Can Heal|she can regenerate]], but he [[Kill It With Fire|sets her on fire]] to be absolutely certain she's [[Deader Than Dead]]. Given this is on the second page of the first issue, it's a good thing [[Me's a Crowd]].
* Like a lot of comics, [[Neil Gaiman]]'s ''[[Black Orchid]]'' lampshades [[Bond Villain Stupidity]]. Unlike most, the [[Mook]] really ''[[Defied Trope|does]]'' shoot the main character in the head. He doesn't know that [[Good Thing You Can Heal|she can regenerate]], but he [[Kill It with Fire|sets her on fire]] to be absolutely certain she's [[Deader Than Dead]]. Given this is on the second page of the first issue, it's a good thing [[Me's a Crowd]].
* Similarly, Gaiman's ''[[The Sandman]]'' gave us a Decoy Antagonist with Roderick Burgess, the warlock who imprisons Dream in the first issue. He seems to be set up as the [[Big Bad]], or at least as a major antagonist. Then it turns out that the first issue spans ''70 freakin' years''. By the end of issue #1, Burgess has died of old age, and his son Alex is a harmless, senile old man. After Dream escapes, he leaves him in a permanent nightmare and never sees him again.
* Similarly, Gaiman's ''[[The Sandman]]'' gave us a Decoy Antagonist with Roderick Burgess, the warlock who imprisons Dream in the first issue. He seems to be set up as the [[Big Bad]], or at least as a major antagonist. Then it turns out that the first issue spans ''70 freakin' years''. By the end of issue #1, Burgess has died of old age, and his son Alex is a harmless, senile old man. After Dream escapes, he leaves him in a permanent nightmare and never sees him again.
* ''[[Two Thousand AD (Comic Book)|2000 AD]]'''s ''Shakara'' begins with a human thinking he's the [[Last of His Kind]] after the Earth is destroyed. He's killed on page 2, by the protagonist.
* ''[[2000 AD]]'''s ''Shakara'' begins with a human thinking he's the [[Last of His Kind]] after the Earth is destroyed. He's killed on page 2, by the protagonist.
* Used to great effect in ''Origin'', in which it turns out that the kid who looks like a young Wolverine and is nicknamed "Dog" isn't the one who grows up to be [[Wolverine]], and in fact disappears after the origin story ends.
* Used to great effect in ''Origin'', in which it turns out that the kid who looks like a young Wolverine and is nicknamed "Dog" isn't the one who grows up to be [[Wolverine]], and in fact disappears after the origin story ends.
* ''[[The Mask (Comic Book)|The Mask]]'' comics is a very good example of this. Stanley may be the first person to wear the [[Artifact of Doom]] but he is not the main character. It is debatable after the 2nd series of books whether the wearer of the mask is the main character or if it is Kellaway (the [[Sympathetic Inspector Antagonist]]). And Big Head is just [[The Big Bad]].
* ''[[The Mask (comics)|The Mask]]'' comics is a very good example of this. Stanley may be the first person to wear the [[Artifact of Doom]] but he is not the main character. It is debatable after the 2nd series of books whether the wearer of the mask is the main character or if it is Kellaway (the [[Sympathetic Inspector Antagonist]]). And Big Head is just [[The Big Bad]].
* The first ''[[Azrael]]'' miniseries begins with what appears to be the title character being shot and killed in the first few pages. As it turns out, this was the main character's father and the mantle is a [[Legacy Character]].
* The first ''[[Azrael]]'' miniseries begins with what appears to be the title character being shot and killed in the first few pages. As it turns out, this was the main character's father and the mantle is a [[Legacy Character]].
** James Robinson's ''[[Starman (Comic Book)|Starman]]'' series had a similar opening with a superhero being killed in the first two pages, only for his brother to take up the mantle.
** James Robinson's ''[[Starman (Comic Book)|Starman]]'' series had a similar opening with a superhero being killed in the first two pages, only for his brother to take up the mantle.
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== Fanfiction ==
== Fanfiction ==
* One no-one saw coming in ''[[Fairly English Story (Fanfic)|Fairly English Story]]''. Amazingly for a fanfiction, it was both unexpected, foreplanned, and incredibly well done.
* One no-one saw coming in ''[[Fairly English Story]]''. Amazingly for a fanfiction, it was both unexpected, foreplanned, and incredibly well done.




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* ''[[Mars Attacks (Film)]]''... Where do we begin? Everyone that could be main characters are killed, and some random guys survive.
* ''[[Mars Attacks (Film)]]''... Where do we begin? Everyone that could be main characters are killed, and some random guys survive.
* ''[[Kung Fu Hustle]]'' began changing apparent main characters while they are being killed almost the first half of the movie.
* ''[[Kung Fu Hustle]]'' began changing apparent main characters while they are being killed almost the first half of the movie.
* Marlon Brando had star billing and a Best Actor Oscar for his role as Vito Corleone in ''[[The Godfather (Film)|The Godfather]]'', but he was {{spoiler|gunned down}} less than forty minutes in and spent a good deal of the rest of the film {{spoiler|lying in a hospital bed before dying of a heart attack}}. His son Michael was the [[Villain Protagonist|hero]] of the film.
* Marlon Brando had star billing and a Best Actor Oscar for his role as Vito Corleone in ''[[The Godfather]]'', but he was {{spoiler|gunned down}} less than forty minutes in and spent a good deal of the rest of the film {{spoiler|lying in a hospital bed before dying of a heart attack}}. His son Michael was the [[Villain Protagonist|hero]] of the film.
* [[Quentin Tarantino]] takes this to the point of having an entire decoy CAST in the ''[[Grindhouse]]'' film Death Proof. Half of the movie focuses on a bunch of characters where they very distinctly focus on one character who just SCREAMS [[Final Girl]] only for her and all of the characters introduced to be {{spoiler|killed off all at once.}} After that the rest of the movie focuses on a completely different bunch of characters in a completely different area, and filmed in a completely different style. It was like watching a sequel to the movie in the middle of the first one!
* [[Quentin Tarantino]] takes this to the point of having an entire decoy CAST in the ''[[Grindhouse]]'' film Death Proof. Half of the movie focuses on a bunch of characters where they very distinctly focus on one character who just SCREAMS [[Final Girl]] only for her and all of the characters introduced to be {{spoiler|killed off all at once.}} After that the rest of the movie focuses on a completely different bunch of characters in a completely different area, and filmed in a completely different style. It was like watching a sequel to the movie in the middle of the first one!
* People often forget that, in the original ''[[Alien (Film)|Alien]]'' movie, [[Sigourney Weaver]]'s Ripley was not played as the main protagonist. For the first half of the movie, the presumptive lead was Captain Dallas {{spoiler|AKA Victim #3}}.
* People often forget that, in the original ''[[Alien (franchise)|Alien]]'' movie, [[Sigourney Weaver]]'s Ripley was not played as the main protagonist. For the first half of the movie, the presumptive lead was Captain Dallas {{spoiler|AKA Victim #3}}.
** It was made all the more shocking by the fact that, in 1979, [[Sigourney Weaver]] was easily the least famous actor in the cast, yet {{spoiler|Kane (the first victim) was played by [[John Hurt]], who was easily the movie's most bankable star}}. It's [[Seinfeld Is Unfunny|become somewhat spoiled]] by the fact that [[Sigourney Weaver]] went on to become the most famous actor in the movie, but at the time no one would have believed that she'd turn out to be the movie's hero.
** It was made all the more shocking by the fact that, in 1979, [[Sigourney Weaver]] was easily the least famous actor in the cast, yet {{spoiler|Kane (the first victim) was played by [[John Hurt]], who was easily the movie's most bankable star}}. It's [[Seinfeld Is Unfunny|become somewhat spoiled]] by the fact that [[Sigourney Weaver]] went on to become the most famous actor in the movie, but at the time no one would have believed that she'd turn out to be the movie's hero.
* Llwelyn Moss, from ''[[No Country for Old Men]]''. Sheriff Bell is the real protagonist.
* Llwelyn Moss, from ''[[No Country for Old Men]]''. Sheriff Bell is the real protagonist.
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* Jack in ''[[Big Trouble in Little China]]'' is the incompetent [[Comic Relief]], the real hero is his "Asian sidekick" Wang Chi.
* Jack in ''[[Big Trouble in Little China]]'' is the incompetent [[Comic Relief]], the real hero is his "Asian sidekick" Wang Chi.
** Although Jack does get his [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]] when {{spoiler|he kills [[Big Bad]] Lo Pan.}}
** Although Jack does get his [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]] when {{spoiler|he kills [[Big Bad]] Lo Pan.}}
* In ''[[Deep Blue Sea]]'', the adventurer/executive played by [[Samuel L Jackson]] {{spoiler|gets bitten in half by a shark}}.
* In ''[[Deep Blue Sea]]'', the adventurer/executive played by [[Samuel L. Jackson]] {{spoiler|gets bitten in half by a shark}}.
** {{spoiler|and later Saffron Burrows who got billing as the lead character, is the only character on the cover and posters and looking like the presumed [[Final Girl]]... gets eaten. It wasn't written that way, but the test audiences felt [[Karma Houdini|she shouldn't survive after causing that much death]].}}
** {{spoiler|and later Saffron Burrows who got billing as the lead character, is the only character on the cover and posters and looking like the presumed [[Final Girl]]... gets eaten. It wasn't written that way, but the test audiences felt [[Karma Houdini|she shouldn't survive after causing that much death]].}}
*** {{spoiler|Karmic Justice overrides [[Final Girl]]. And really, the movie is more memorable because of it. The Black Guy Lives!... Not Samuel L Jackson, the other black guy.}}
*** {{spoiler|Karmic Justice overrides [[Final Girl]]. And really, the movie is more memorable because of it. The Black Guy Lives!... Not Samuel L Jackson, the other black guy.}}
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* ''[[Mamma Mia]]!'' tries to fool you into thinking the daughter is the protagonist in the opening numbers, but then the POV switches to the significantly more interesting mother. (This should not be a surprise, given [[Meryl Streep|who got cast as the mother]].)
* ''[[Mamma Mia]]!'' tries to fool you into thinking the daughter is the protagonist in the opening numbers, but then the POV switches to the significantly more interesting mother. (This should not be a surprise, given [[Meryl Streep|who got cast as the mother]].)
* Paul Taylor in the remake of ''[[The Blob]]''.
* Paul Taylor in the remake of ''[[The Blob]]''.
* The 2009 [[Continuity Reboot]] of ''[[Friday the 13th (Film)|Friday the 13 th]]'' has a group of teens slaughtered by Jason in the beginning and then introduces another group of teens including obvious [[Final Girl]] Jenna. Jenna is the {{spoiler|[[Decoy Protagonist]] and is abruptly killed off twenty minutes before the end. The actual [[Final Girl]] is Whitney}}, one of the girls from the first group whom Jason took alive.
* The 2009 [[Continuity Reboot]] of ''[[Friday the 13th (film)|Friday the 13 th]]'' has a group of teens slaughtered by Jason in the beginning and then introduces another group of teens including obvious [[Final Girl]] Jenna. Jenna is the {{spoiler|[[Decoy Protagonist]] and is abruptly killed off twenty minutes before the end. The actual [[Final Girl]] is Whitney}}, one of the girls from the first group whom Jason took alive.
** There's also Rob Dier in ''Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter'', who we were led to believe was going to be the [[Big Damn Heroes|Big Damn Hero]], only for him to die a pretty anticlimactic death.
** There's also Rob Dier in ''Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter'', who we were led to believe was going to be the [[Big Damn Heroes|Big Damn Hero]], only for him to die a pretty anticlimactic death.
{{quote| '''Rob:''' [[Narm|He's killing me! He's killing me! Oh God, he's killing me!]]}}
{{quote| '''Rob:''' [[Narm|He's killing me! He's killing me! Oh God, he's killing me!]]}}
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* Lucius Hunt is clearly the protagonist of ''[[The Village]]'', right up until he is stabbed viciously and his blind girlfriend Ivy must make the journey to rescue him that takes up the rest of the film. Notably, this is the only plot twist in the film that isn't telegraphed very early on and actually feels twisty as a result.
* Lucius Hunt is clearly the protagonist of ''[[The Village]]'', right up until he is stabbed viciously and his blind girlfriend Ivy must make the journey to rescue him that takes up the rest of the film. Notably, this is the only plot twist in the film that isn't telegraphed very early on and actually feels twisty as a result.
* A rare third-act POV switch in ''[[Death Becomes Her]]'': Bruce Willis's character takes over as the protagonist, leaving the previous main characters played by Meryl Streep and Goldie Hawn sidelined until the movie's coda.
* A rare third-act POV switch in ''[[Death Becomes Her]]'': Bruce Willis's character takes over as the protagonist, leaving the previous main characters played by Meryl Streep and Goldie Hawn sidelined until the movie's coda.
* In ''[[A Nightmare On Elm Street|Freddy's Dead]]'' the apparent main character confronts Freddy, telling him {{spoiler|that he knows that he's his son.}} He promptly learns, {{spoiler|the hard way, that Freddy had a daughter.}}
* In ''[[A Nightmare on Elm Street|Freddy's Dead]]'' the apparent main character confronts Freddy, telling him {{spoiler|that he knows that he's his son.}} He promptly learns, {{spoiler|the hard way, that Freddy had a daughter.}}
** An even earlier ''[[Nightmare On Elm Street]]'' example is the very first movie: we're introduced to Freddy through Tina's dreams, hearing about Tina's fears in regards to the nightmares, and generally being led to believe that this movie will be about Tina's escape from Freddy. And then she's the first member of the group to die.
** An even earlier ''[[Nightmare On Elm Street]]'' example is the very first movie: we're introduced to Freddy through Tina's dreams, hearing about Tina's fears in regards to the nightmares, and generally being led to believe that this movie will be about Tina's escape from Freddy. And then she's the first member of the group to die.
** The 2010 remake employs a similar use of this trope. {{spoiler|Kris}} is actually the second victim but most of the first twenty minutes focus on her and the actual heroine, though already introduced only becomes important after {{spoiler|Kris}} is killed.
** The 2010 remake employs a similar use of this trope. {{spoiler|Kris}} is actually the second victim but most of the first twenty minutes focus on her and the actual heroine, though already introduced only becomes important after {{spoiler|Kris}} is killed.
** Elm Street Liked This trope. Part 4 starts out focusing on Kristen, the protaganist of Part 3, but she is rather quickly killed off and focus completely shifts to her best friend Alice.
** Elm Street Liked This trope. Part 4 starts out focusing on Kristen, the protaganist of Part 3, but she is rather quickly killed off and focus completely shifts to her best friend Alice.
* In another Wes Craven film, the trailer for the first ''[[Scream (Film)|Scream]]'' movie had audiences assuming that Drew Barrymore's character Casey was a main character. {{spoiler|She's killed in the first ten minutes.}}
* In another Wes Craven film, the trailer for the first ''[[Scream (film)|Scream]]'' movie had audiences assuming that Drew Barrymore's character Casey was a main character. {{spoiler|She's killed in the first ten minutes.}}
** Played with in the fourth film. [[Emma Roberts|Jill]] is set up as an [[Expy]] of her cousin Sidney, her actions mirroring those of Sidney in the first film, and everything seems to be on the way for her to become the [[Final Girl]]. {{spoiler|Turns out she's the killer.}}
** Played with in the fourth film. [[Emma Roberts|Jill]] is set up as an [[Expy]] of her cousin Sidney, her actions mirroring those of Sidney in the first film, and everything seems to be on the way for her to become the [[Final Girl]]. {{spoiler|Turns out she's the killer.}}
* ''A Perfect Getaway''. The seeming main characters are {{spoiler|not only ''not'' the protagonists, they turn out to be the ''villains''. The actual protagonists}} only show up twenty to thirty minutes into the film.
* ''A Perfect Getaway''. The seeming main characters are {{spoiler|not only ''not'' the protagonists, they turn out to be the ''villains''. The actual protagonists}} only show up twenty to thirty minutes into the film.
* ''The Spectre Of Freedom'' by Luis Bunuel does this repeatedly. (If you can call the characters protagonists in the first place...)
* ''The Spectre Of Freedom'' by Luis Bunuel does this repeatedly. (If you can call the characters protagonists in the first place...)
* Most people assume that Aurora is the protagonist of Disney's ''[[Sleeping Beauty (Disney)|Sleeping Beauty]]'' and get annoyed that she is so underdeveloped. It was planned for her to be a protagonist, but the final film has the three fairies as the protagonists and basically do most of the stuff for both Aurora and Phillip.
* Most people assume that Aurora is the protagonist of Disney's ''[[Sleeping Beauty (Disney film)|Sleeping Beauty]]'' and get annoyed that she is so underdeveloped. It was planned for her to be a protagonist, but the final film has the three fairies as the protagonists and basically do most of the stuff for both Aurora and Phillip.
* Ilios from Lucio Fulci's ''Conquest'' is [[The Chosen One]], possesses one of the few bows in the film's world, and is on [[The Quest]]. He tends to screw up and gets rescued by his sidekick, Maxz. And then {{spoiler|the minions of the [[Big Bad]] kill him and Maxz takes up his bow, completing the quest}}.
* Ilios from Lucio Fulci's ''Conquest'' is [[The Chosen One]], possesses one of the few bows in the film's world, and is on [[The Quest]]. He tends to screw up and gets rescued by his sidekick, Maxz. And then {{spoiler|the minions of the [[Big Bad]] kill him and Maxz takes up his bow, completing the quest}}.
* During the first 1/2 hour of ''[[The Boys From Brazil]]'', it seems pretty clear that Barry (Steve Guttenberg) is the main character. Then he has a run in with some Nazis...
* During the first 1/2 hour of ''[[The Boys from Brazil]]'', it seems pretty clear that Barry (Steve Guttenberg) is the main character. Then he has a run in with some Nazis...
* The slasher flick/cop movie ''[[Maniac Cop (Film)|Maniac Cop]]'' focuses largely on Detective Frank McCrae (Tom Atkins) as he tries to track down a killer who dresses as a police officer, for about the first forty-five minutes. Then {{spoiler|the Detective is killed and the focus shifts to Officer Jack Forrest ([[Bruce Campbell]])}} for the remainder of the movie.
* The slasher flick/cop movie ''[[Maniac Cop]]'' focuses largely on Detective Frank McCrae (Tom Atkins) as he tries to track down a killer who dresses as a police officer, for about the first forty-five minutes. Then {{spoiler|the Detective is killed and the focus shifts to Officer Jack Forrest ([[Bruce Campbell]])}} for the remainder of the movie.
* [[The Hurt Locker]] opens with the focus on Thompson, played by Guy Pearce, who seems to be the hero until he dies and gets replaced with the real main character.
* [[The Hurt Locker]] opens with the focus on Thompson, played by Guy Pearce, who seems to be the hero until he dies and gets replaced with the real main character.
* Unless you had seen the poster or trailer for the first ''[[Bring It On]]'' movie, the opening sequence would lead you to believe that {{spoiler|Big Red}} is the main character. Then, mid-song, the focus shifts to {{spoiler|Torrance}}. Granted, {{spoiler|Torrance}} is there in the first part of the song too, but she's off to the side or in the background. No one dies, but it otherwise fits this trope.
* Unless you had seen the poster or trailer for the first ''[[Bring It On]]'' movie, the opening sequence would lead you to believe that {{spoiler|Big Red}} is the main character. Then, mid-song, the focus shifts to {{spoiler|Torrance}}. Granted, {{spoiler|Torrance}} is there in the first part of the song too, but she's off to the side or in the background. No one dies, but it otherwise fits this trope.
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* At the end of ''[[Sucker Punch]]'', the protagonist Baby Doll has a revelation that {{spoiler|the movie isn't actually her story at all, but actually Sweet Pea's. She sacrifices her own freedom for Sweet Pea once she realizes she was only ever meant to be the catalyst for Sweet Pea's escape from the mental asylum}}.
* At the end of ''[[Sucker Punch]]'', the protagonist Baby Doll has a revelation that {{spoiler|the movie isn't actually her story at all, but actually Sweet Pea's. She sacrifices her own freedom for Sweet Pea once she realizes she was only ever meant to be the catalyst for Sweet Pea's escape from the mental asylum}}.
* The horror movie ''Scarecrow 2'' started off with an older farmer telling a flashbacked story about how the titular monster murdered his father when he was a kid to a reporter. It sets up as if he's (one of) the main protagonist(s), but he's chopped up by the scarecrow to the point of [[Ludicrous Gibs]] while handcuffed to a hospital bed within 20 minutes of the opening credits.
* The horror movie ''Scarecrow 2'' started off with an older farmer telling a flashbacked story about how the titular monster murdered his father when he was a kid to a reporter. It sets up as if he's (one of) the main protagonist(s), but he's chopped up by the scarecrow to the point of [[Ludicrous Gibs]] while handcuffed to a hospital bed within 20 minutes of the opening credits.
* Watch the first hour of ''[[The Return (Film)|The Return]]'', and it's pretty clear that Ivan is the main character. Watch the final 20 minutes, and it's pretty clear that Andrei has taken over the role. According to [[Word of God]], Andrei was the main character for the entire movie, but was metaphorically "hidden in the shadows" up until that point.
* Watch the first hour of ''[[The Return]]'', and it's pretty clear that Ivan is the main character. Watch the final 20 minutes, and it's pretty clear that Andrei has taken over the role. According to [[Word of God]], Andrei was the main character for the entire movie, but was metaphorically "hidden in the shadows" up until that point.
* Both Tom and Jerry in ''[[Tom and Jerry The Movie]]''.
* Both Tom and Jerry in ''[[Tom and Jerry: The Movie]]''.
* Detectives [[Dwayne Johnson|Danson]] and [[Samuel L Jackson|Highsmith]] in ''[[The Other Guys]]''
* Detectives [[Dwayne Johnson|Danson]] and [[Samuel L. Jackson|Highsmith]] in ''[[The Other Guys]]''
* In ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]'', the audience is led to believe that the man entering the cemetery in the present day is Captain John Miller, and that the 95% of the film set in WWII is Miller's flashback. Then Miller dies in the final battle, and it's revealed that the man in the cemetery is actually Private James Ryan, who has spent the whole movie recalling the story of how Miller saved his life.
* In ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]'', the audience is led to believe that the man entering the cemetery in the present day is Captain John Miller, and that the 95% of the film set in WWII is Miller's flashback. Then Miller dies in the final battle, and it's revealed that the man in the cemetery is actually Private James Ryan, who has spent the whole movie recalling the story of how Miller saved his life.
** This is somewhat undermined however by the fact that Tom Hanks was twice Matt Damon's age. Anyone doing the math in their heads would be skeptical about 40ish Tom Hanks looking as relatively young as aged!Ryan does, given that he'd be well into his nineties.
** This is somewhat undermined however by the fact that Tom Hanks was twice Matt Damon's age. Anyone doing the math in their heads would be skeptical about 40ish Tom Hanks looking as relatively young as aged!Ryan does, given that he'd be well into his nineties.
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* In ''One Day'', given that the movie, at first, appears to focus primarily on Emma, she appears to be the protagonist. However, with about fifteen minutes of the film to go, {{spoiler|she gets hit by a truck and dies}}, completely transferring the focus to Dexter.
* In ''One Day'', given that the movie, at first, appears to focus primarily on Emma, she appears to be the protagonist. However, with about fifteen minutes of the film to go, {{spoiler|she gets hit by a truck and dies}}, completely transferring the focus to Dexter.
* In ''[[MacGruber]]'', the title character assembles a super-team of secret agents. {{spoiler|They are then promptly packed into a car then blown up, to be replaced by a rag-tag team consisting of [[MacGruber]], Vicki St. Elmo and Dixon Piper.}}
* In ''[[MacGruber]]'', the title character assembles a super-team of secret agents. {{spoiler|They are then promptly packed into a car then blown up, to be replaced by a rag-tag team consisting of [[MacGruber]], Vicki St. Elmo and Dixon Piper.}}
* A superhero appears at the beginning of [[Kick Ass]], prepared to make the dive of a skyscraper. He's hailed by a bad-ass soundtrack and the voice-over about superheroes. {{spoiler|He dies from the fall. And the movie moves on.}}
* A superhero appears at the beginning of [[Kick-Ass]], prepared to make the dive of a skyscraper. He's hailed by a bad-ass soundtrack and the voice-over about superheroes. {{spoiler|He dies from the fall. And the movie moves on.}}
* A deleted opening for ''[[Atlantis the Lost Empire (Disney)|Atlantis the Lost Empire]]'' was actually going to make [[Horny Vikings|a team of Vikings]] the main characters of the movie. Cue [[Kraken and Leviathan|the Leviathan]] sinking their ship, killing said Vikings, and causing the Shepherd's Journal to float away into the Atlantic Ocean...
* A deleted opening for ''[[Atlantis: The Lost Empire|Atlantis the Lost Empire]]'' was actually going to make [[Horny Vikings|a team of Vikings]] the main characters of the movie. Cue [[Kraken and Leviathan|the Leviathan]] sinking their ship, killing said Vikings, and causing the Shepherd's Journal to float away into the Atlantic Ocean...
* ''[[Slither]]'' has a variation, in that it sets up Bill Pardy as being the quiet guy who will eventually become the kick-ass action hero when the situation requires it. Then, when the situation requires it, while neither incompetent nor cowardly Bill is clearly shown to be completely out of depth in what he's found himself embroiled in, he spends most of the movie completely bewildered and terrified by what's happening, and pretty much every opportunity he gets to be a [[Badass]] ends with him either completely screwing it up and getting his ass kicked or him running away.
* ''[[Slither]]'' has a variation, in that it sets up Bill Pardy as being the quiet guy who will eventually become the kick-ass action hero when the situation requires it. Then, when the situation requires it, while neither incompetent nor cowardly Bill is clearly shown to be completely out of depth in what he's found himself embroiled in, he spends most of the movie completely bewildered and terrified by what's happening, and pretty much every opportunity he gets to be a [[Badass]] ends with him either completely screwing it up and getting his ass kicked or him running away.
* Mike from ''[[Killer Klowns From Outer Space]]''. He survives the whole movie, but his role as [[The Hero]] is usurped early on by Dave the policeman, who becomes the only character in the entire film to kill any of the klowns, and he never gets it back.
* Mike from ''[[Killer Klowns From Outer Space]]''. He survives the whole movie, but his role as [[The Hero]] is usurped early on by Dave the policeman, who becomes the only character in the entire film to kill any of the klowns, and he never gets it back.
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* The [[Star Wars]] prequel trilogy is about Anakin Skywalker but he doesn't actually appear until half way through the first movie. For most of ''[[The Phantom Menace]]'' Qui-Gon Jinn seems like the main character.
* The [[Star Wars]] prequel trilogy is about Anakin Skywalker but he doesn't actually appear until half way through the first movie. For most of ''[[The Phantom Menace]]'' Qui-Gon Jinn seems like the main character.
* ''Silver Tongues'' opens with Rachel and Alex, a newly married and already fraying young couple on their tense honeymoon. A few minutes in they run into a couple in their 40's and have dinner with them. {{spoiler|The older couple turn out to be con artists who trick Rachel and Alex into believing they are swingers, manipulate the frustrations the younger couple have and leave the newlyweds with a seemingly broken marriage. The plot then sticks with the con artists as they run into other people - Rachel and Alex are never seen or mentioned again after the first act.}}
* ''Silver Tongues'' opens with Rachel and Alex, a newly married and already fraying young couple on their tense honeymoon. A few minutes in they run into a couple in their 40's and have dinner with them. {{spoiler|The older couple turn out to be con artists who trick Rachel and Alex into believing they are swingers, manipulate the frustrations the younger couple have and leave the newlyweds with a seemingly broken marriage. The plot then sticks with the con artists as they run into other people - Rachel and Alex are never seen or mentioned again after the first act.}}
* In [[Bram Stokers Dracula]], Jonathan Harker appears to be the heroic protagonist for the first quarter until the focus shifts to his fiancee Mina for the rest of the film and Jonathan fades into the background as a supporting character. {{spoiler|Mina is even the one who vanquishes Dracula in the end.}}
* In [[Bram Stoker's Dracula]], Jonathan Harker appears to be the heroic protagonist for the first quarter until the focus shifts to his fiancee Mina for the rest of the film and Jonathan fades into the background as a supporting character. {{spoiler|Mina is even the one who vanquishes Dracula in the end.}}
* ''[[Pitch Black]]'' had {{spoiler|Carolyn who dies at the end and its Riddick who ends up starring in his own movie}}.
* ''[[Pitch Black]]'' had {{spoiler|Carolyn who dies at the end and its Riddick who ends up starring in his own movie}}.


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* In Thomas Sniegoski's ''The Fallen'', the first few pages revolve around a high school kid experiencing a bout of [[Heroic BSOD]] due to the fact that he's just gained superpowers and can now talk to animals. He's obviously the protagonist, right? Wrong. [[Our Angels Are Different|He gets torched by the big bad]] and is [[But for Me It Was Tuesday|never mentioned again]].
* In Thomas Sniegoski's ''The Fallen'', the first few pages revolve around a high school kid experiencing a bout of [[Heroic BSOD]] due to the fact that he's just gained superpowers and can now talk to animals. He's obviously the protagonist, right? Wrong. [[Our Angels Are Different|He gets torched by the big bad]] and is [[But for Me It Was Tuesday|never mentioned again]].
* In the book ''[[Hexwood]]'', we are first introduced to Ann Stavely, a 14-year-old-ish girl recovering from a long illness, who lives in a small town. About halfway through, the protagonist switches to a 20-something fashion designer from the heart of the galaxy. It turns out she was just {{spoiler|hallucinating that she was the girl, Ann, due to the effects of a powerful magical artifact.}}
* In the book ''[[Hexwood]]'', we are first introduced to Ann Stavely, a 14-year-old-ish girl recovering from a long illness, who lives in a small town. About halfway through, the protagonist switches to a 20-something fashion designer from the heart of the galaxy. It turns out she was just {{spoiler|hallucinating that she was the girl, Ann, due to the effects of a powerful magical artifact.}}
* ''[[Brave New World (Literature)|Brave New World]]'' features perhaps one of the most iconic examples of this: we are initially led to believe the protagonist of the story is Bernard Marx, as the novel focuses on him being a misfit in the World State and his questioning of its ideals. Then, as soon as Bernard and Lenina arrive at the Savage reservation, we are introduced to John the Savage and the novel focuses more and more on John while Bernard fades into the background.
* ''[[Brave New World (novel)|Brave New World]]'' features perhaps one of the most iconic examples of this: we are initially led to believe the protagonist of the story is Bernard Marx, as the novel focuses on him being a misfit in the World State and his questioning of its ideals. Then, as soon as Bernard and Lenina arrive at the Savage reservation, we are introduced to John the Savage and the novel focuses more and more on John while Bernard fades into the background.
** This could actually be a double example - ''Lenina'' looks like she could be the protagonist at first, before Bernard is introduced.
** This could actually be a double example - ''Lenina'' looks like she could be the protagonist at first, before Bernard is introduced.
* ''[[The Diamond Age]]'' by [[Neal Stephenson]] features a particularly spiteful example: as the book begins, we're introduced to a thuggish cyberpunk protagonist straight out of the low-rent sci-fi movies of the late Eighties, complete with spiffy black leather clothes, skull-mounted nanotech weapons, and life of petty crime. Within a hundred pages he's been {{spoiler|gruesomely executed for armed robbery}}, and his neglected four-year-old daughter turns out to be the book's ''real'' heroine.
* ''[[The Diamond Age]]'' by [[Neal Stephenson]] features a particularly spiteful example: as the book begins, we're introduced to a thuggish cyberpunk protagonist straight out of the low-rent sci-fi movies of the late Eighties, complete with spiffy black leather clothes, skull-mounted nanotech weapons, and life of petty crime. Within a hundred pages he's been {{spoiler|gruesomely executed for armed robbery}}, and his neglected four-year-old daughter turns out to be the book's ''real'' heroine.
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** {{spoiler|Jon Snow}} and {{spoiler|Stannis Baratheon}} both by the end of Book 5. Maybe.
** {{spoiler|Jon Snow}} and {{spoiler|Stannis Baratheon}} both by the end of Book 5. Maybe.
* Played straight in Ben Bova's ''Moonrise.'' The first half of the book has playboy astronaut Paul Stavenger as the main character, only to have him die about half way through. Following a [[Time Skip]], Paul's arguably less interesting and [[Marty Stu]]-esque son assumes the role of protagonist.
* Played straight in Ben Bova's ''Moonrise.'' The first half of the book has playboy astronaut Paul Stavenger as the main character, only to have him die about half way through. Following a [[Time Skip]], Paul's arguably less interesting and [[Marty Stu]]-esque son assumes the role of protagonist.
* Veil Sixclaw in ''[[Redwall|Outcast of Redwall]]''. The book's description talks about nothing but him and doesn't even mention the real protagonist. He's even on the front cover. So naturally, one would assume the story centers around him. [[Covers Always Lie|It doesn't.]] Veil ''doesn't even exist'' in Part 1 of the story and he's a [[Jerkass]] in Part 2 ([[Laser-Guided Karma|and gets banished for what he does]]). By Part 3 his subplot (which should've been ''the main plot'') [[Trapped By Mountain Lions|wasn't necessary to keep the book going]], and at the end of the story {{spoiler|he does a random "heroic" [[Heroic Sacrifice|sacrifice]] [[Ass Pull|for reasons not fully explained]] and dies}}.
* Veil Sixclaw in ''[[Redwall|Outcast of Redwall]]''. The book's description talks about nothing but him and doesn't even mention the real protagonist. He's even on the front cover. So naturally, one would assume the story centers around him. [[Covers Always Lie|It doesn't.]] Veil ''doesn't even exist'' in Part 1 of the story and he's a [[Jerkass]] in Part 2 ([[Laser-Guided Karma|and gets banished for what he does]]). By Part 3 his subplot (which should've been ''the main plot'') [[Trapped by Mountain Lions|wasn't necessary to keep the book going]], and at the end of the story {{spoiler|he does a random "heroic" [[Heroic Sacrifice|sacrifice]] [[Ass Pull|for reasons not fully explained]] and dies}}.
* In the first ''[[Marcus Didius Falco]]'' novel, the young female character who encounters Falco seems to be the second protagonist and then she's {{spoiler|murdered}} and her aunt ends up as {{spoiler|Falco's love interest and the second major character}} throughout the series.
* In the first ''[[Marcus Didius Falco]]'' novel, the young female character who encounters Falco seems to be the second protagonist and then she's {{spoiler|murdered}} and her aunt ends up as {{spoiler|Falco's love interest and the second major character}} throughout the series.
** ''The Course Of Honour'' appears to be Caenis' story, but in reality, it's the story of the rise of Vespasian, seen through Caenis' eyes.
** ''The Course Of Honour'' appears to be Caenis' story, but in reality, it's the story of the rise of Vespasian, seen through Caenis' eyes.
* Highly pronounced in Susanna Clarke's ''[[Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell]],'' where the titular Jonathan Strange is not introduced for 250 pages, before proceeding to gobble up most of the spotlight.
* Highly pronounced in Susanna Clarke's ''[[Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell]],'' where the titular Jonathan Strange is not introduced for 250 pages, before proceeding to gobble up most of the spotlight.
* Though he doesn't die, in ''[[Discworld (Literature)/Guards Guards|Guards! Guards!]]'' quite a few pages are spent making it look like Carrot is going to be the main character of the story, having all the traits of the classical hero, before Sam Vimes takes over as protagonist, not just of the book, but of the City Watch series.
* Though he doesn't die, in ''[[Discworld/Guards Guards|Guards! Guards!]]'' quite a few pages are spent making it look like Carrot is going to be the main character of the story, having all the traits of the classical hero, before Sam Vimes takes over as protagonist, not just of the book, but of the City Watch series.
** This was how it was intended to be, before [[Terry Pratchett]] realised Vimes had more character and switched protagonists.
** This was how it was intended to be, before [[Terry Pratchett]] realised Vimes had more character and switched protagonists.
* ''The Zero Game'': The apparent protagonist [[Revealing Coverup|is murdered]] four chapters in, with the narration switching to his friend.
* ''The Zero Game'': The apparent protagonist [[Revealing Coverup|is murdered]] four chapters in, with the narration switching to his friend.
* In the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' novel ''Prisoner of the Daleks'', {{spoiler|Stella}} seems like a perfect companion figure for the Doctor, but {{spoiler|she gets killed off}} by Chapter Three. This sets the [[Darker and Edgier]] tone for the book.
* In the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' novel ''Prisoner of the Daleks'', {{spoiler|Stella}} seems like a perfect companion figure for the Doctor, but {{spoiler|she gets killed off}} by Chapter Three. This sets the [[Darker and Edgier]] tone for the book.
* In the classic Greek ''[[Antigone (Theatre)|Antigone]]'', the titular character seems to be our main until... Well, she is a {{spoiler|[[Tragic Hero]]}}. Creon, the only character to have appeared in all of the Theban plays, takes the spotlight. Ergo, trope is [[Older Than Feudalism]].
* In the classic Greek ''[[Antigone]]'', the titular character seems to be our main until... Well, she is a {{spoiler|[[Tragic Hero]]}}. Creon, the only character to have appeared in all of the Theban plays, takes the spotlight. Ergo, trope is [[Older Than Feudalism]].
* In ''The Night of the Generals'', during [[World War II]], an officer of German military intelligence is investigating a series of murders of prostitutes, and comes to the conclusion that the killer is a German general. Two-thirds of the way through the book, he {{spoiler|confronts the murderer, and is killed}}. Years later, a friend of his, who had a very small role in the story before this point, {{spoiler|takes up the case and brings it to a successful conclusion}}.
* In ''The Night of the Generals'', during [[World War II]], an officer of German military intelligence is investigating a series of murders of prostitutes, and comes to the conclusion that the killer is a German general. Two-thirds of the way through the book, he {{spoiler|confronts the murderer, and is killed}}. Years later, a friend of his, who had a very small role in the story before this point, {{spoiler|takes up the case and brings it to a successful conclusion}}.
* [[Jack Vance (Creator)|Jack Vance]]'s ''[[Lyonesse (Literature)|Lyonesse]]'' trilogy begins with the birth and upbringing of the spirited Princess Suldrun. At about the halfway point of book one, however, she dies. The rest of the series divides its focus amongst a number of other characters, including her lover, son and father.
* [[Jack Vance]]'s ''[[Lyonesse]]'' trilogy begins with the birth and upbringing of the spirited Princess Suldrun. At about the halfway point of book one, however, she dies. The rest of the series divides its focus amongst a number of other characters, including her lover, son and father.
* Robert Silverberg's ''The Alien Years'' begins with an alien invasion from the perspective of a resourceful pilot. He's killed in the first chapter, and the rest of the novel focuses on his brother's family.
* Robert Silverberg's ''The Alien Years'' begins with an alien invasion from the perspective of a resourceful pilot. He's killed in the first chapter, and the rest of the novel focuses on his brother's family.
* Orson Scott Card uses this at least a couple of times. In ''Xenocide'', Qing-jao is the focus of the storyline on Path. She doesn't die, {{spoiler|(she does have her OCD/godspoken-ness taken away though)}} but she's very handily displaced by Wang-mu towards the end of the book, and though Wang-mu appears as a main character in ''Children of the Mind'', Qing-jao does not. Also, in ''Empire'', we meet Reuben Malich, who is basically the hero of the whole book {{spoiler|except he gets unceremoniously shot in the face about two-thirds the way through, and Cole has to finish his work.}} Bonus points for the paperback version of Empire because it happens ''right'' before a page turn.
* Orson Scott Card uses this at least a couple of times. In ''Xenocide'', Qing-jao is the focus of the storyline on Path. She doesn't die, {{spoiler|(she does have her OCD/godspoken-ness taken away though)}} but she's very handily displaced by Wang-mu towards the end of the book, and though Wang-mu appears as a main character in ''Children of the Mind'', Qing-jao does not. Also, in ''Empire'', we meet Reuben Malich, who is basically the hero of the whole book {{spoiler|except he gets unceremoniously shot in the face about two-thirds the way through, and Cole has to finish his work.}} Bonus points for the paperback version of Empire because it happens ''right'' before a page turn.
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* The first chapter of ''[[The Phantom of the Opera]]'' novel centers around a [[Brainless Beauty]] named La Sorelli, who is given a disproportionate amount of detail describing her physical appearance, personality, and history for someone who turns out to be one of the most insignificant characters in the book. This is particularly [[Hilarious in Hindsight]] considering the losses the real heroine Christine endures to her personality in adaptations, reducing her to [[The Ingenue]] who vaguely resembles La Sorelli, personality-wise.
* The first chapter of ''[[The Phantom of the Opera]]'' novel centers around a [[Brainless Beauty]] named La Sorelli, who is given a disproportionate amount of detail describing her physical appearance, personality, and history for someone who turns out to be one of the most insignificant characters in the book. This is particularly [[Hilarious in Hindsight]] considering the losses the real heroine Christine endures to her personality in adaptations, reducing her to [[The Ingenue]] who vaguely resembles La Sorelli, personality-wise.
* Andrew Phelan in ''[[The Trail of Cthulhu]]''. It seems like he'll be something of a [[Supporting Protagonist]] or an [[Action Survivor]], witnessing the bizarre goings on that may or may not be connected to his mysterious new employer, Professor Shrewsbury of Miskatonic University...but that's only for the first chapter. {{spoiler|1=After this, he is no longer the POV character and eventually all-but-disappears entirely. He doesn't die, though, and considering this is a [[Cthulhu Mythos]] yarn, that's really saying something.}}
* Andrew Phelan in ''[[The Trail of Cthulhu]]''. It seems like he'll be something of a [[Supporting Protagonist]] or an [[Action Survivor]], witnessing the bizarre goings on that may or may not be connected to his mysterious new employer, Professor Shrewsbury of Miskatonic University...but that's only for the first chapter. {{spoiler|1=After this, he is no longer the POV character and eventually all-but-disappears entirely. He doesn't die, though, and considering this is a [[Cthulhu Mythos]] yarn, that's really saying something.}}
* [[Arthur Machen (Creator)|Arthur Machen]]'s short story, "The Dover Road". The first two thirds of the story stars Professor Warburton as he tries to come to grips with a bizarre phenomenon he and his colleagues have witnessed. Warburton eventually gathers up enough evidence to come up with [[Agent Scully|a rational-enough solution that completely satisfies him]]. The focus then turns to one of the other witnesses, [[Agent Mulder|Ian Tallent]], who had previously taken up all of 2-3 sentences in the story. Ian notices that Warburton's proposed solution fails to address certain aspects of the case and spends the remainder of the story doing some investigating of his own.
* [[Arthur Machen]]'s short story, "The Dover Road". The first two thirds of the story stars Professor Warburton as he tries to come to grips with a bizarre phenomenon he and his colleagues have witnessed. Warburton eventually gathers up enough evidence to come up with [[Agent Scully|a rational-enough solution that completely satisfies him]]. The focus then turns to one of the other witnesses, [[Agent Mulder|Ian Tallent]], who had previously taken up all of 2-3 sentences in the story. Ian notices that Warburton's proposed solution fails to address certain aspects of the case and spends the remainder of the story doing some investigating of his own.
* Machen did this again in his novella, ''The Terror'' where he makes ''[[Creator Cameo|himself]]'' the main character for the first few chapters before being demoted to mere [[Greek Chorus]].
* Machen did this again in his novella, ''The Terror'' where he makes ''[[Creator Cameo|himself]]'' the main character for the first few chapters before being demoted to mere [[Greek Chorus]].
* Biographical example in ''[[Stranger Than Fiction the Life And Times of Split Enz (Literature)|Stranger Than Fiction the Life And Times of Split Enz]]''. Author Mike Chunn leaves the titular band in chapter nine out of sixteen, before they [[The Pete Best|even released their third album]]. Even still, he was only really a [[Supporting Protagonist]] up till that point.
* Biographical example in ''[[Stranger Than Fiction: The Life and Times of Split Enz|Stranger Than Fiction the Life And Times of Split Enz]]''. Author Mike Chunn leaves the titular band in chapter nine out of sixteen, before they [[The Pete Best|even released their third album]]. Even still, he was only really a [[Supporting Protagonist]] up till that point.
* From [[The Kingdoms of Evil]]: Pon, who appears to be a Farm Boy onhis way to seek his fortune. You know, before {{spoiler|he's slaughtered.}}
* From [[The Kingdoms of Evil]]: Pon, who appears to be a Farm Boy onhis way to seek his fortune. You know, before {{spoiler|he's slaughtered.}}
* Sara Douglass's Wayfarer's Redemption series takes an interesting take on this. The main protagonist of the first three volumes is Axis. Initially, it seems that his love interest is {{spoiler|Faraday}}. However partway through the series, Axis falls in love with and marries {{spoiler|Azhure}}, relegating {{spoiler|Faraday}} to a supporting role. the first half ends on an apparently final note with Axis defeating Gorgrael, after {{spoiler|Gorgrael kills Faraday and tears her body apart in a hopeless attempt to distract Axis}}. Then the second half begins with {{spoiler|Axis retired and the kingdom in the hands of his eldest son Caelum}}. The first volume strongly pushes Caelum as the main protagonist, {{spoiler|Only for him to be rather unceremoniously cut down by Qeteb, turning over the reins of the series to his disgraced younger brother, [[Dragon Star]].}} Oh, and {{spoiler|Faraday returns from the dead to become ''Drago's'' love-interest.}}
* Sara Douglass's Wayfarer's Redemption series takes an interesting take on this. The main protagonist of the first three volumes is Axis. Initially, it seems that his love interest is {{spoiler|Faraday}}. However partway through the series, Axis falls in love with and marries {{spoiler|Azhure}}, relegating {{spoiler|Faraday}} to a supporting role. the first half ends on an apparently final note with Axis defeating Gorgrael, after {{spoiler|Gorgrael kills Faraday and tears her body apart in a hopeless attempt to distract Axis}}. Then the second half begins with {{spoiler|Axis retired and the kingdom in the hands of his eldest son Caelum}}. The first volume strongly pushes Caelum as the main protagonist, {{spoiler|Only for him to be rather unceremoniously cut down by Qeteb, turning over the reins of the series to his disgraced younger brother, [[Dragon Star]].}} Oh, and {{spoiler|Faraday returns from the dead to become ''Drago's'' love-interest.}}
* Margo Smith is the hero of the first ''[[Time Scout (Literature)|Time Scout]]'' book. Skeeter Jackson steps in for the second and carries much of the rest of the series.
* Margo Smith is the hero of the first ''[[Time Scout]]'' book. Skeeter Jackson steps in for the second and carries much of the rest of the series.
* Eponymous character of [[Narrative Poem]] ''Pan Tadeusz'' (''[[Sir Thaddeus]]'') by Adam Mickiewicz, Tadeusz Soplica is set up to make readers belive he is the main character, but as the story progress it becomes more and more apparent that real protagonist is Preist Robak [[Foregone Conclusion|also known as]] {{spoiler|infamous Jacek Soplica}}.
* Eponymous character of [[Narrative Poem]] ''Pan Tadeusz'' (''[[Sir Thaddeus]]'') by Adam Mickiewicz, Tadeusz Soplica is set up to make readers belive he is the main character, but as the story progress it becomes more and more apparent that real protagonist is Preist Robak [[Foregone Conclusion|also known as]] {{spoiler|infamous Jacek Soplica}}.
* Shadow is technically the main character of ''[[American Gods (Literature)|American Gods]]'', in that he is the viewpoint character, but his role in the story is largely the same as that of [[Alice in Wonderland (Literature)|Alice]]; that is to say, he watches as the plot happens around him, occasionally pausing to say, "Gosh, that's unusual," but by and large he neither actively contributes to the plot unless deliberately roped into it by someone else nor does he react as though he seriously believes he's involved. It's really Mr. Wednesday's story at the end of the day (well, [[Jedi Truth|there's a strong argument]] that it's actually Mr. Nancy's, but he's letting Mr. Wednesday borrow it).
* Shadow is technically the main character of ''[[American Gods]]'', in that he is the viewpoint character, but his role in the story is largely the same as that of [[Alice in Wonderland|Alice]]; that is to say, he watches as the plot happens around him, occasionally pausing to say, "Gosh, that's unusual," but by and large he neither actively contributes to the plot unless deliberately roped into it by someone else nor does he react as though he seriously believes he's involved. It's really Mr. Wednesday's story at the end of the day (well, [[Jedi Truth|there's a strong argument]] that it's actually Mr. Nancy's, but he's letting Mr. Wednesday borrow it).
* There are ''two'' of these in the ''[[Mistborn]]'' series. In the first book, though the main viewpoint character is [[Supporting Protagonist|Vin]], the story is about Kelsier and his rebellion. {{spoiler|Then he dies and Vin takes on the main protagonist role.}} It happens ''again'' in ''Hero of Ages'' when {{spoiler|Vin sacrifices herself to destroy Ruin and it turns out that the story was really about Sazed becoming [[The Chosen One]].}}
* There are ''two'' of these in the ''[[Mistborn]]'' series. In the first book, though the main viewpoint character is [[Supporting Protagonist|Vin]], the story is about Kelsier and his rebellion. {{spoiler|Then he dies and Vin takes on the main protagonist role.}} It happens ''again'' in ''Hero of Ages'' when {{spoiler|Vin sacrifices herself to destroy Ruin and it turns out that the story was really about Sazed becoming [[The Chosen One]].}}
* The focus in ''[[Wraeththu (Literature)|Wraeththu]]'' shifts from Pellaz who [[Rags to Royalty|becomes a king]], to Swift who [[Coming of Age Story|grows up to defy his father]], to Cal, a side character who turns out to be the key to everything.
* The focus in ''[[Wraeththu]]'' shifts from Pellaz who [[Rags to Royalty|becomes a king]], to Swift who [[Coming of Age Story|grows up to defy his father]], to Cal, a side character who turns out to be the key to everything.
* While he is not a point of view character until the third book and then only part of the time Valraven in ''[[Chronicles of Magravandias (Literature)|Chronicles of Magravandias]]'' is the true protagonist of the story. The story shifts from [[Brother-Sister Incest|his sister]] to his [[Platonic Life Partners|second wife]], to [[The Chosen One|a peasant boy]], but the focus of the story is always Valraven.
* While he is not a point of view character until the third book and then only part of the time Valraven in ''[[Chronicles of Magravandias]]'' is the true protagonist of the story. The story shifts from [[Brother-Sister Incest|his sister]] to his [[Platonic Life Partners|second wife]], to [[The Chosen One|a peasant boy]], but the focus of the story is always Valraven.
* [[Jin Yong]] loves this trope. A majority of his [[Wuxia]] novels start around an apparent protagonist, only to reveal (sometimes several chapters later) that it is not. First comes to mind should be [[The Smiling Proud Wanderer]] (笑傲江湖) when the audience should be fooled to view Lin Pingzhi as the protagonist {{spoiler|while it is actually Linghu Chong}}.
* [[Jin Yong]] loves this trope. A majority of his [[Wuxia]] novels start around an apparent protagonist, only to reveal (sometimes several chapters later) that it is not. First comes to mind should be [[The Smiling Proud Wanderer]] (笑傲江湖) when the audience should be fooled to view Lin Pingzhi as the protagonist {{spoiler|while it is actually Linghu Chong}}.
* In ''[[The Walking Dead Rise of the Governor (Literature)|The Walking Dead Rise of the Governor]]'', {{spoiler|the two main characters are Philip and his ineffectual brother. Philip is the name of the Governor in the comics and it seems apparent that the novel is about him. Before it ends, however, Philip is killed and Brian takes on his name. Thus, the story was about him.}}
* In ''[[The Walking Dead: Rise of the Governor|The Walking Dead Rise of the Governor]]'', {{spoiler|the two main characters are Philip and his ineffectual brother. Philip is the name of the Governor in the comics and it seems apparent that the novel is about him. Before it ends, however, Philip is killed and Brian takes on his name. Thus, the story was about him.}}
* The original novel version of ''[[The Unholy Three]]'' has the titular, murderous three as the main characters until the fourth or fifth chapter; afterward, the focus switches to a young man named Hector who has the misfortune of crossing paths with the three. Averted in the movie adaptation (coincidentally [[Lon Chaney]] Sr's only sound picture), where the focus remains on the three even after Hector is introduced.
* The original novel version of ''[[The Unholy Three]]'' has the titular, murderous three as the main characters until the fourth or fifth chapter; afterward, the focus switches to a young man named Hector who has the misfortune of crossing paths with the three. Averted in the movie adaptation (coincidentally [[Lon Chaney]] Sr's only sound picture), where the focus remains on the three even after Hector is introduced.
* In ''[[Un Lun Dun]]'', Zanna is at first set up as [[The Chosen One]], but is quickly incapacitated and disappears for the rest of the story, forcing [[The Unchosen One|Deeba]] to take her place.
* In ''[[Un Lun Dun]]'', Zanna is at first set up as [[The Chosen One]], but is quickly incapacitated and disappears for the rest of the story, forcing [[The Unchosen One|Deeba]] to take her place.
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* ''[[The Wire]]'' features an extended example: in the first season, D'Angelo Barksdale is the POV character for the criminal side of Baltimore, as McNulty is for the cop side. However, {{spoiler|he's killed off early in the second season}}, while McNulty lasts through the entire show and other criminal figures step into the spotlight. This seems natural, {{spoiler|as Baltimore drug dealers tend to live short lives}}.
* ''[[The Wire]]'' features an extended example: in the first season, D'Angelo Barksdale is the POV character for the criminal side of Baltimore, as McNulty is for the cop side. However, {{spoiler|he's killed off early in the second season}}, while McNulty lasts through the entire show and other criminal figures step into the spotlight. This seems natural, {{spoiler|as Baltimore drug dealers tend to live short lives}}.
* The pilot of ''[[CSI]]'' centred around [[Naive Newcomer|Holly Gribbs]], only to have her {{spoiler|get shot in the end and die in the next episode.}}
* The pilot of ''[[CSI]]'' centred around [[Naive Newcomer|Holly Gribbs]], only to have her {{spoiler|get shot in the end and die in the next episode.}}
* As mentioned in the Literature example above, {{spoiler|Eddard Stark}} in ''[[Game of Thrones (TV)|Game of Thrones]]''. Oh boy, never has [[Contractual Immortality]] been averted so hard.
* As mentioned in the Literature example above, {{spoiler|Eddard Stark}} in ''[[Game of Thrones]]''. Oh boy, never has [[Contractual Immortality]] been averted so hard.
* Multiple layer example in the first episode of [[Saul Of The Molemen]]. The opening credits feature S.T.A.R. Team who promptly dies seconds later in a meteor shower. Follows the replacement credits for Johnny Tambourine... who is a complete moron. Then opening credits for The Molemen (as a funyn sitcom)... and finally the ''real'' credits for Saul himself.
* Multiple layer example in the first episode of [[Saul Of The Molemen]]. The opening credits feature S.T.A.R. Team who promptly dies seconds later in a meteor shower. Follows the replacement credits for Johnny Tambourine... who is a complete moron. Then opening credits for The Molemen (as a funyn sitcom)... and finally the ''real'' credits for Saul himself.
* Season 15 of ''[[The Amazing Race]]'' had Zev & Justin, who, when compared to similar editing of teams in previous seasons, appeared to be set up for a run late into the race, including a burgeoning rivalry with Maria & Tiffany, that is until they lost a passport in leg 4.
* Season 15 of ''[[The Amazing Race]]'' had Zev & Justin, who, when compared to similar editing of teams in previous seasons, appeared to be set up for a run late into the race, including a burgeoning rivalry with Maria & Tiffany, that is until they lost a passport in leg 4.
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** ''[[Silent Hill 4]]'' has ''two'' examples of this. You start the game playing as Joseph Schreiber, gone mad from The Room's influence. After the prologue, you start playing as Henry Townshend... who ''still'' turns out not to be the protagonist, as most of the game focuses on Walter Sullivan.
** ''[[Silent Hill 4]]'' has ''two'' examples of this. You start the game playing as Joseph Schreiber, gone mad from The Room's influence. After the prologue, you start playing as Henry Townshend... who ''still'' turns out not to be the protagonist, as most of the game focuses on Walter Sullivan.
*** So much so that to date Henry's the only Silent Hill protagonist to have nothing to do with the outline and inhabitants of the game's Otherworlds, which are taken strictly from Sullivan's unconscious.
*** So much so that to date Henry's the only Silent Hill protagonist to have nothing to do with the outline and inhabitants of the game's Otherworlds, which are taken strictly from Sullivan's unconscious.
** Happens again in ''[[Silent Hill Origins (Video Game)|Silent Hill Origins]]''. Travis crashes his car at the edge of the titular town and stumbles right into the tangle of events surrounding what happened to Alessa (though of course he does have to deal with his own problems as well).
** Happens again in ''[[Silent Hill Origins]]''. Travis crashes his car at the edge of the titular town and stumbles right into the tangle of events surrounding what happened to Alessa (though of course he does have to deal with his own problems as well).
** And again [[Mind Screw|more famously]] in ''[[Silent Hill Shattered Memories]]''. The game switches back and forth between a [[Heroic Mime|first-person therapy session]] set in the present and third-person gameplay starring Harry Mason, making it look like Harry's reminiscing of Silent Hill while under therapy. [[Twist Ending|The end]] reveals that {{spoiler|the patient was Cheryl, Harry's daughter, and that the third-person PC was but a figment of Cheryl's imagination, distraught over her father's death many years ago. The therapy sessions weren't meant to cure Harry's trauma, but Cheryl's denial over Harry's death}}.
** And again [[Mind Screw|more famously]] in ''[[Silent Hill: Shattered Memories]]''. The game switches back and forth between a [[Heroic Mime|first-person therapy session]] set in the present and third-person gameplay starring Harry Mason, making it look like Harry's reminiscing of Silent Hill while under therapy. [[Twist Ending|The end]] reveals that {{spoiler|the patient was Cheryl, Harry's daughter, and that the third-person PC was but a figment of Cheryl's imagination, distraught over her father's death many years ago. The therapy sessions weren't meant to cure Harry's trauma, but Cheryl's denial over Harry's death}}.
* In ''Everlong'', the main character Brad was... well, the main character, until he suddenly vanishes as the evil spirits within him took over him, causing him to because [[Brainwashed and Crazy]], take a [[Face Heel Turn]] and end up being killed by the [[Big Damn Heroes]]. Ohnoes.
* In ''Everlong'', the main character Brad was... well, the main character, until he suddenly vanishes as the evil spirits within him took over him, causing him to because [[Brainwashed and Crazy]], take a [[Face Heel Turn]] and end up being killed by the [[Big Damn Heroes]]. Ohnoes.
* Infamously, Solid Snake in ''[[Metal Gear Solid]] 2''.
* Infamously, Solid Snake in ''[[Metal Gear Solid]] 2''.
** And [[Played for Laughs]] in ''[[Metal Gear Solid]] 3''
** And [[Played for Laughs]] in ''[[Metal Gear Solid]] 3''
* To some, it isn't immediately apparent that you're playing as Chaz in ''[[Phantasy Star]] IV'', rather than Alys.
* To some, it isn't immediately apparent that you're playing as Chaz in ''[[Phantasy Star]] IV'', rather than Alys.
* ''[[Kingdom Hearts II (Video Game)|Kingdom Hearts II]]''. Roxas. Provided the cover art isn't a giveaway, anyway.
* ''[[Kingdom Hearts II]]''. Roxas. Provided the cover art isn't a giveaway, anyway.
** Likewise in ''[[Birth By Sleep]]'', Ven resembles Sora and Roxas in several ways, but {{spoiler|the plot actually revolves more around Terra, and Aqua does the more traditional heroic deeds.}}
** Likewise in ''[[Birth By Sleep]]'', Ven resembles Sora and Roxas in several ways, but {{spoiler|the plot actually revolves more around Terra, and Aqua does the more traditional heroic deeds.}}
* In ''[[Star Wars]]: [[Rogue Squadron]] 2'', you start out playing as Luke Skywalker for two and a half missions, but when Luke's Snowspeeder gets shot down in the Battle of Hoth he gets replaced by Wedge Antilles, on Hoth and in subsequent missions. As we know, this is because while Luke survived, he didn't regroup with the others, so it was up to Wedge to lead Rogue Squadron.
* In ''[[Star Wars]]: [[Rogue Squadron]] 2'', you start out playing as Luke Skywalker for two and a half missions, but when Luke's Snowspeeder gets shot down in the Battle of Hoth he gets replaced by Wedge Antilles, on Hoth and in subsequent missions. As we know, this is because while Luke survived, he didn't regroup with the others, so it was up to Wedge to lead Rogue Squadron.
* Locke of ''[[Final Fantasy VI (Video Game)|Final Fantasy VI]]'', while Terra gets the main focus of the story in the World of Balance, its Locke that is in the traditional protagonist role. He is locked into the party for most of the game's first half and plays a role in both Terra's and Celes's stories. However, Celes becomes the protagonist in the World of Ruin and while Terra gets forced into the ending if you don't recruit her, Locke can miss the ending entirely. He is one of the last and hardest to find party members you re-recruit and his role is diminished quite a bit in the second half. While Kitase said that there is no main characters, it's Terra and Celes that come the closest to it.
* Locke of ''[[Final Fantasy VI]]'', while Terra gets the main focus of the story in the World of Balance, its Locke that is in the traditional protagonist role. He is locked into the party for most of the game's first half and plays a role in both Terra's and Celes's stories. However, Celes becomes the protagonist in the World of Ruin and while Terra gets forced into the ending if you don't recruit her, Locke can miss the ending entirely. He is one of the last and hardest to find party members you re-recruit and his role is diminished quite a bit in the second half. While Kitase said that there is no main characters, it's Terra and Celes that come the closest to it.
* ''[[Final Fantasy X (Video Game)|Final Fantasy X]]'' has Tidus say in the beginning "''[[Arc Words|Listen to my story]]''". You then spend most of the game hearing about Yuna and her pilgrimage, Yuna and her Aeons, Yuna's duty and her goal .. {{spoiler|until you reach Zanarkand. This is when Tidus really ''screws the rules'' and became more the leader}}. Not insignificantly, Yuna eventually says "This is ''our'' story."
* ''[[Final Fantasy X]]'' has Tidus say in the beginning "''[[Arc Words|Listen to my story]]''". You then spend most of the game hearing about Yuna and her pilgrimage, Yuna and her Aeons, Yuna's duty and her goal .. {{spoiler|until you reach Zanarkand. This is when Tidus really ''screws the rules'' and became more the leader}}. Not insignificantly, Yuna eventually says "This is ''our'' story."
* In ''[[Final Fantasy XII (Video Game)|Final Fantasy XII]]'', Reks, a level 3 soldier and the brother of the protagonist, is this as you briefly control him through the castle, and fight empire enemies in attempt to save the king during the prologue.
* In ''[[Final Fantasy XII]]'', Reks, a level 3 soldier and the brother of the protagonist, is this as you briefly control him through the castle, and fight empire enemies in attempt to save the king during the prologue.
** Basch was originally supposed to be the main protagonist. Vaan was added to the game later to appeal to the main demographic of the game. The developers didn't really bother to alter the story significantly when he was added. The scene where Reks dies and sets up Vaan's motivation is also the same scene that sets up Basch's motivation. Also, very little actually happens from the start of the game to when Basch shows up.
** Basch was originally supposed to be the main protagonist. Vaan was added to the game later to appeal to the main demographic of the game. The developers didn't really bother to alter the story significantly when he was added. The scene where Reks dies and sets up Vaan's motivation is also the same scene that sets up Basch's motivation. Also, very little actually happens from the start of the game to when Basch shows up.
*** Considering the story, Vaan is called the protagonist only because he is the first permanent character the player gets. Period.
*** Considering the story, Vaan is called the protagonist only because he is the first permanent character the player gets. Period.
*** That, and considering that the story is actually mostly about ''Ashe''...
*** That, and considering that the story is actually mostly about ''Ashe''...
*** And Balthier being the "Leading Man"? Man, FFXII is just ''crammed'' with Decoy Protagonists...
*** And Balthier being the "Leading Man"? Man, FFXII is just ''crammed'' with Decoy Protagonists...
* It could be argued that this is pulled with ''[[Golden Sun (Video Game)|Golden Sun]]'''s Isaac, despite the fact he doesn't die. You begin the first game controlling him as a silent protagonist, only for the second game to shift POV to Felix, revealing that ''his'' quest was the one saving the world, making Isaac a [[Decoy Protagonist]] who is ''actually an antagonist'' (unwittingly). {{spoiler|Then, at Jupiter Lighthouse, the whole situation is explained to Isaac, and [[Big Damn Heroes|he joins forces with Felix for the finale]].}}
* It could be argued that this is pulled with ''[[Golden Sun]]'''s Isaac, despite the fact he doesn't die. You begin the first game controlling him as a silent protagonist, only for the second game to shift POV to Felix, revealing that ''his'' quest was the one saving the world, making Isaac a [[Decoy Protagonist]] who is ''actually an antagonist'' (unwittingly). {{spoiler|Then, at Jupiter Lighthouse, the whole situation is explained to Isaac, and [[Big Damn Heroes|he joins forces with Felix for the finale]].}}
* {{spoiler|Joseph Allen}} in ''[[Call of Duty|Modern Warfare 2]]'', who is killed off in his {{spoiler|second playable mission}} after leaping the [[Moral Event Horizon]]. Also implied with Gary 'Roach' Sanderson, whose role as a playable character seems to be to show off how [[Badass]] 'Soap' MacTavish has become. {{spoiler|Confirmed when Roach [[Dropped a Bridge On Him|had a metaphorical bridge dropped on him]] so the rest of the game could be told from Soap's perspective.}}
* {{spoiler|Joseph Allen}} in ''[[Call of Duty|Modern Warfare 2]]'', who is killed off in his {{spoiler|second playable mission}} after leaping the [[Moral Event Horizon]]. Also implied with Gary 'Roach' Sanderson, whose role as a playable character seems to be to show off how [[Badass]] 'Soap' MacTavish has become. {{spoiler|Confirmed when Roach [[Dropped a Bridge on Him|had a metaphorical bridge dropped on him]] so the rest of the game could be told from Soap's perspective.}}
** The first ''[[Modern Warfare]]'' game has {{spoiler|Sgt. Paul Jackson}}, who seems like he's going to be a second protagonist for the entire game until {{spoiler|he's killed by a nuke}}. After this, the story focuses entirely on Soap's squad.
** The first ''[[Modern Warfare]]'' game has {{spoiler|Sgt. Paul Jackson}}, who seems like he's going to be a second protagonist for the entire game until {{spoiler|he's killed by a nuke}}. After this, the story focuses entirely on Soap's squad.
** Practically exaggerated in ''[[Call of Duty|Modern Warfare 3]]''; the game has ''three'' decoy protagonists. The first is Derek 'Frost' Westbrook, who's the decoy ''decoy'' protagonist. His missions aren't of any critical importance to the A plot, {{spoiler|but he doesn't die along with the rest of his squad by the end of the game}}. The real decoy protagonist is {{spoiler|Yuri, who used to be Makarov's partner until his [[Heel Face Turn]]. ([[Redemption Equals Death|Guess what happens in the end?]])}} And then there's {{spoiler|Soap, who was the original protagonist in the first two game's after the decoy protagonists were killed. But in this game, he dies ''before you even have the chance to play as him''.}} So who's the ''real'' protagonist in the series? {{spoiler|Captain Price. You only get to play as him ''once''.}}
** Practically exaggerated in ''[[Call of Duty|Modern Warfare 3]]''; the game has ''three'' decoy protagonists. The first is Derek 'Frost' Westbrook, who's the decoy ''decoy'' protagonist. His missions aren't of any critical importance to the A plot, {{spoiler|but he doesn't die along with the rest of his squad by the end of the game}}. The real decoy protagonist is {{spoiler|Yuri, who used to be Makarov's partner until his [[Heel Face Turn]]. ([[Redemption Equals Death|Guess what happens in the end?]])}} And then there's {{spoiler|Soap, who was the original protagonist in the first two game's after the decoy protagonists were killed. But in this game, he dies ''before you even have the chance to play as him''.}} So who's the ''real'' protagonist in the series? {{spoiler|Captain Price. You only get to play as him ''once''.}}
* Done twice in [[Baten Kaitos]], first when it's revealed that Kalas is [[The Dragon]], and Xelha takes over, and then second when Kalas experiences a [[Heel Face Turn]] and rejoins your party.
* Done twice in [[Baten Kaitos]], first when it's revealed that Kalas is [[The Dragon]], and Xelha takes over, and then second when Kalas experiences a [[Heel Face Turn]] and rejoins your party.
* The Prelude to ''[[The Godfather (Video Game)|The Godfather]]'' game starts with you playing Johnny Trapani, but he gets gunned down within minutes. The real player character is his son after a [[Time Skip]].
* The Prelude to ''[[The Godfather (video game)|The Godfather]]'' game starts with you playing Johnny Trapani, but he gets gunned down within minutes. The real player character is his son after a [[Time Skip]].
* ''[[Total Overdose]]'' pulls this twice. The first level is an older man... who is neutralized mysteriously. Then it's his son, who gets laid up in the hospital. Then it's the twin brother who takes up the guns and starts shooting everything.
* ''[[Total Overdose]]'' pulls this twice. The first level is an older man... who is neutralized mysteriously. Then it's his son, who gets laid up in the hospital. Then it's the twin brother who takes up the guns and starts shooting everything.
* In ''[[Hybrid Heaven]]'', you begin the game as Diaz. Except you are not Diaz, you're just in his body and get yours back about an eighth of the way through the game. Diaz is, in fact, a major villain.
* In ''[[Hybrid Heaven]]'', you begin the game as Diaz. Except you are not Diaz, you're just in his body and get yours back about an eighth of the way through the game. Diaz is, in fact, a major villain.
* ''[[Yggdra Union]]'' starts out with a [[Everything's Better With Princesses|princess]] [[Pursued Protagonist|running for dear life from an enemy army]], accidentally costing the leader of a band of thieves his fortress, and begging him to help her take her country back. Although you start out playing as thief Milanor and this looks like your classic [[Star Wars|Luke-and-Leia setup]], Princess Yggdra becomes the player character very shortly after. Milanor himself remains a completely static character until the penultimate chapter, and is shunted into the role of mentor and sidekick. (The player does take control of him during certain points of the story where Yggdra isn't where the action is, however.)
* ''[[Yggdra Union]]'' starts out with a [[Everything's Better with Princesses|princess]] [[Pursued Protagonist|running for dear life from an enemy army]], accidentally costing the leader of a band of thieves his fortress, and begging him to help her take her country back. Although you start out playing as thief Milanor and this looks like your classic [[Star Wars|Luke-and-Leia setup]], Princess Yggdra becomes the player character very shortly after. Milanor himself remains a completely static character until the penultimate chapter, and is shunted into the role of mentor and sidekick. (The player does take control of him during certain points of the story where Yggdra isn't where the action is, however.)
** Milanor's presence in the story at all, compared to his relative unimportance to the plot, is probably due to the need for a surrogate for male players--who might be uncomfortable at the idea of playing a game from the perspective of a (''very'' feminine) girl.
** Milanor's presence in the story at all, compared to his relative unimportance to the plot, is probably due to the need for a surrogate for male players--who might be uncomfortable at the idea of playing a game from the perspective of a (''very'' feminine) girl.
* Taken to a ridiculous extent in ''[[Kuon]]''. For nearly the entire game, you have two phases--yin and yang--to choose from, each starring a different girl. By the time you've completed them both, one protagonist is {{spoiler|a zombie}} and the other one is {{spoiler|almost dead}}. The true hero of the game is {{spoiler|Abe no Seimei, an exorcist who is only been mentioned in passing up to the point you start playing her phase.}}
* Taken to a ridiculous extent in ''[[Kuon]]''. For nearly the entire game, you have two phases--yin and yang--to choose from, each starring a different girl. By the time you've completed them both, one protagonist is {{spoiler|a zombie}} and the other one is {{spoiler|almost dead}}. The true hero of the game is {{spoiler|Abe no Seimei, an exorcist who is only been mentioned in passing up to the point you start playing her phase.}}
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** It does it during the tenth game as well. Despite taking place in the post-Path of Radiance world, the most mention of Ike is that he's [[Memetic Mutation|the father of Sothe's children]]. It seems that Micaiah is the main character of this game. Then [[And Now for Someone Completely Different|part 2]] rolls around, with Queen Elincia and her gang. Then Ike shows up and kicks ass, as usual. THEN you get his story, which leads into a plot about {{spoiler|killing a goddess.}} Guess who gets shifted pretty much ''[[Out of Focus]]'' for the rest of the game? {{spoiler|No points for guessing Micaiah.}} That's right. The main character isn't even mentioned [[All There in the Manual|IN THE GAME MANUAL.]]
** It does it during the tenth game as well. Despite taking place in the post-Path of Radiance world, the most mention of Ike is that he's [[Memetic Mutation|the father of Sothe's children]]. It seems that Micaiah is the main character of this game. Then [[And Now for Someone Completely Different|part 2]] rolls around, with Queen Elincia and her gang. Then Ike shows up and kicks ass, as usual. THEN you get his story, which leads into a plot about {{spoiler|killing a goddess.}} Guess who gets shifted pretty much ''[[Out of Focus]]'' for the rest of the game? {{spoiler|No points for guessing Micaiah.}} That's right. The main character isn't even mentioned [[All There in the Manual|IN THE GAME MANUAL.]]
* At first glance, ''[[Sonic Battle]]'' is about Sonic and his friends messing around with Emerl, a cool robot that mimics their combat abilities. As the cast rotates babysitting Emerl and he starts developing an emergent personality, it gradually becomes apparent that Emerl is really the protagonist. The majority of Cream's and Shadow's chapters near the end of the game are played as Emerl, and the final chapter is his solo attempt to stop Eggman's plot.
* At first glance, ''[[Sonic Battle]]'' is about Sonic and his friends messing around with Emerl, a cool robot that mimics their combat abilities. As the cast rotates babysitting Emerl and he starts developing an emergent personality, it gradually becomes apparent that Emerl is really the protagonist. The majority of Cream's and Shadow's chapters near the end of the game are played as Emerl, and the final chapter is his solo attempt to stop Eggman's plot.
* Played with in ''[[Chrono Trigger (Video Game)|Chrono Trigger]],'' depending on how the game is played. {{spoiler|The main character, Crono, dies halfway through the game. The player has the choice of either going back in time and preventing his death or continuing the game without him.}}
* Played with in ''[[Chrono Trigger]],'' depending on how the game is played. {{spoiler|The main character, Crono, dies halfway through the game. The player has the choice of either going back in time and preventing his death or continuing the game without him.}}
* ''[[Agarest Senki (Video Game)|Agarest Senki]]'' has Leonhardt himself. He is the protagonist of the first generation, but when you finish his chapter, he gets to be sealed in a pillar with the three [[Love Interest|Love Interests]]. Then his son Ladius gets to be the protagonist of his chapter but also gets sealed after his chapter is done with his three [[Love Interest|Love Interests]]. Same thing happens to Thoma and Duran in the third and fourth generation. Duran's son Rex then becomes THE TRUE protagonist for the rest of the game itself.
* ''[[Agarest Senki]]'' has Leonhardt himself. He is the protagonist of the first generation, but when you finish his chapter, he gets to be sealed in a pillar with the three [[Love Interest|Love Interests]]. Then his son Ladius gets to be the protagonist of his chapter but also gets sealed after his chapter is done with his three [[Love Interest|Love Interests]]. Same thing happens to Thoma and Duran in the third and fourth generation. Duran's son Rex then becomes THE TRUE protagonist for the rest of the game itself.
* In ''[[Dead Space Extraction (Video Game)|Dead Space Extraction]]'', you first play as a mining employee, who first notices the necromorphs showing up. At the end of the first level, he's killed and his mantle of PC is taken up by the leader of the expedition that killed him.
* In ''[[Dead Space: Extraction|Dead Space Extraction]]'', you first play as a mining employee, who first notices the necromorphs showing up. At the end of the first level, he's killed and his mantle of PC is taken up by the leader of the expedition that killed him.
* Done brutally in ''[[Halo Reach]]'' where Noble Six has the same combat rating as Master Chief and, like John, is also {{spoiler|chosen by Cortana to be her carrier. Unfortunately, Six dies on Reach, affirming a comment Cortana made in Halo 3. What separates Six and John is ''luck''.}}
* Done brutally in ''[[Halo: Reach]]'' where Noble Six has the same combat rating as Master Chief and, like John, is also {{spoiler|chosen by Cortana to be her carrier. Unfortunately, Six dies on Reach, affirming a comment Cortana made in Halo 3. What separates Six and John is ''luck''.}}
** Master Chief also has far more combat experience than Noble Six, being a SPARTAN-II who's been in the military for about 35 years, as opposed to Six's 13 years as a SPARTAN-III.
** Master Chief also has far more combat experience than Noble Six, being a SPARTAN-II who's been in the military for about 35 years, as opposed to Six's 13 years as a SPARTAN-III.
* [[Nine Hours Nine Persons Nine Doors]] has {{spoiler|Junpei. Notably, he's still the main character, but just before the final puzzle it is revealed that you have been playing as Akane, not him, for the entire game.}}
* [[Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors]] has {{spoiler|Junpei. Notably, he's still the main character, but just before the final puzzle it is revealed that you have been playing as Akane, not him, for the entire game.}}
* [[Persona 2]] starts out with five protagonists: Tatsuya, Michel, Ginko, Maya, and Yukki. However, {{spoiler|Yukki ends up being a decoy protagonist for Jun, a.k.a. Joker, who joins your party near the end of the game.}}
* [[Persona 2]] starts out with five protagonists: Tatsuya, Michel, Ginko, Maya, and Yukki. However, {{spoiler|Yukki ends up being a decoy protagonist for Jun, a.k.a. Joker, who joins your party near the end of the game.}}
* The prologue of [[Xenoblade (Video Game)|Xenoblade]] introduces Dunban, a legendary hero who is the only one who can wield the famous Monado sword. Then there's a [[Time Skip]], and he's retired after losing the use of his right arm. We then meet Shulk, the game's actual protagonist. {{spoiler|Unlike most examples of this trope, not only does he not die, but he also later becomes a powerful party member in his own right, using a katana with his ''left'' arm to fight.}}
* The prologue of [[Xenoblade]] introduces Dunban, a legendary hero who is the only one who can wield the famous Monado sword. Then there's a [[Time Skip]], and he's retired after losing the use of his right arm. We then meet Shulk, the game's actual protagonist. {{spoiler|Unlike most examples of this trope, not only does he not die, but he also later becomes a powerful party member in his own right, using a katana with his ''left'' arm to fight.}}
* ''[[Fate Extra]]'' has one of the most [[Tear Jerker|tragic]] uses of this in recent videogame history. {{spoiler|You spend the prologue playing as an average high school student who quickly gets swept up in the Holy Grail War. Depending on how many optional scenes you unlock, he manages to discover several secrets that are crucial to the future plot. Then, when the time comes for his trial in the prelims, he fails ''miserably''. As in, he isn't even able to get a ''single attack'' before the enemy Servant effortlessly cuts him down. The prologue ends with the dying student tearfully begging that someone, ''anyone'' will remember who he was. The most tragic part is, thanks to how Eliminations in the War [[Ret-Gone|work]], ''no one ever will''.}}
* ''[[Fate Extra]]'' has one of the most [[Tear Jerker|tragic]] uses of this in recent videogame history. {{spoiler|You spend the prologue playing as an average high school student who quickly gets swept up in the Holy Grail War. Depending on how many optional scenes you unlock, he manages to discover several secrets that are crucial to the future plot. Then, when the time comes for his trial in the prelims, he fails ''miserably''. As in, he isn't even able to get a ''single attack'' before the enemy Servant effortlessly cuts him down. The prologue ends with the dying student tearfully begging that someone, ''anyone'' will remember who he was. The most tragic part is, thanks to how Eliminations in the War [[Ret-Gone|work]], ''no one ever will''.}}