Gotta Catch Them All: Difference between revisions

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{{quote|'''Douche:''' Every [[Pokémon]]? [[Deconstructed Trope|Are you serious?]] You're sending us ''KIDS'' out into the world to find ''EVERY POKÉMON?'' You don't see ''ANYTHING'' dangerously irresponsible about this?
'''Oak:''' Nope! ''GOTTA CATCH 'EM ALL!''|''[[VG Cats|SUPER EFFECTIVE]]'', [http://www.vgcats.com/super/?strip_id=4 Strip 4]}}
|''[[VG Cats|SUPER EFFECTIVE]]'', [http://www.vgcats.com/super/?strip_id{{=}}4 Strip 4]}}
 
{{quote|''"Fantastic! I can't believe you went through the hassle! Are you some kind of machine? If it were me, I would have probably just let the world implode."''|'''Narain Soothfancy''', [[World of Warcraft]] [[NPC]]}}
|'''Narain Soothfancy''', [[World of Warcraft]] [[NPC]]}}
 
Simply put, there's a number of somethings spread across far and wide, and the cast has to go find them. It could be [[Debut Queue|more cast members]], [[Cosmic Keystone|magical artifacts]], [[Dismantled MacGuffin|pieces of a single artifact]], or some other [[MacGuffin]], but somehow each and every one will be involved in some individual plot that can pad the episode or even an entire [[Story Arc]]. The most basic form of [[Plot Coupon]].
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* '''Optional''': None of the artifacts of that type is needed to complete the game, unless aiming for [[100% Completion]]. ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog]]'' is an example of this. When they are earned in [[Bonus Stage]]s, they are [[Chaos Emeralds]].
 
One notable variation of this trope could be called "Gotta Retrieve Them All", in which the objects in question were once gathered in one place -- oftenplace—often [[Sealed Index in A Can|sealed in some variety of can]], or as [[Dismantled MacGuffin|parts of a complex artifact]] -- and—and only recently scattered (whether by accident or design). The collector must go forth and recover them, usually with the intent of returning them to whatever containment or construction originally housed them, or to put them in a new one.
 
Compare and contrast [[Gotta Kill Them All]], which follows much the same pattern, but takes a more... destructive approach.
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{{examples}}
== Advertising ==
* A commercial for an auto parts dealer showed a young man biking to the store over and over, each time retrieving a different component to repair a roadside clunker. At the end, he ''drives'' to the store to show off the car he's Caught All the necessary replacement parts for.
 
 
== Anime and Manga ==
* In the first season of ''[[Sailor Moon]]'', Luna and Usagi must find her comrades, and then the group must fund the seven Rainbow Crystals to reform the Ginzuishou. The S season also has the Three Talismans, but there's only the three.
* ''[[Pokémon Special]]'' had some fun with this. Like the game that inspired it, this is Professor Oak's dream so he can make a comprehensive Pokédex. Since he's too old, he just hands out Pokédexes to the main characters and asks them to do the job. Problem is, the Dex Holders all have their own goals, and this isn't high on the priority list. Oak is understandably pissed about this, and he ends up hiring Crystal to do the job. She succeeds... and then it turns out there's a whole other generation to catch. Poor Oak.
* This is the driving force behind the first two seasons of ''[[Cardcaptor Sakura]]'' -- Sakura—Sakura accidentally scatters the cards in the first episode, and has to re-capture them.
* In ''[[Chrono Crusade]]'', Aion's plan hinges around finding {{spoiler|the gifted children known as "Apostles".}} Chrono and Rosette's [[True Companions]] attempt to stop him from doing this.{{spoiler|but only ends up handing him the last one he needs.}} [[Nice Job Breaking It, Hero]].
* ''[[Dinosaur King]]'' revolves around new dinosaurs appearing in every episode, with the D Team and the Alpha Gang racing to get them. The DS game makes this mandatory, including a Dinosaur Encyclopedia that catalogues the Mesozoic beasties that you obtain, with rewards for getting certain amounts.
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== ComicsComic Books ==
* A [[Donald Duck]] comic by [[Don Rosa]], "Recalled Wreck", has Donald doing this after he finds out that his neighbor (without any bad intention) sold the pieces of his beloved car to the neighbors.
* ''[[The 99]]'' is initially about Dr. Ramzi's efforts to track down the 99 noor stones, but that goal shifts in the first issue to finding the people who have been bonded to them.
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== Literature ==
* The entire plot of ''[[Harry Potter and Thethe Deathly Hallows (novel)|Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows]]'' rests on this. Harry, Ron, and Hermione have to search for all of Voldy's horcruxes.
* In [[Douglas Adams]]' ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy/Life, The Universe And Everything|Life The Universe And Everything]]'', the third book in the [[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy|Hitchhiker's Trilogy]], it's the villains who are collecting the pieces of the Wikkit Gate, and our heroes are trying to stop them (or, some of them are. The rest would rather get a drink and have a lie down).
** On a more lighthearted note, there is Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged, who has grown [[Who Wants to Live Forever?|so bored of immortality]] that he's made it his mission to track down and verbally insult every sentient being in the universe. In alphabetical order.
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== [[Live -Action TV]] ==
* ''[[100 Deeds For Eddie McDowd]]'', a show that was [[Too Good to Last]] on Nickelodeon. The title character, a juvenile delinquent, was turned into a dog and needed to do 100 good deeds in order to regain his human form.
* Ezekiel Stone, the main character of Fox's short-lived 1998 series ''[[Brimstone (TV series)|Brimstone]]'', is released from Hell by the Devil to use his police skills to track down and retrieve 113 damned souls who escaped the afterlife back to Earth. Short life meant he got nowhere NEAR his goal.
* Ditto with Jeremy Piven's ''Cupid'', who was supposed to unite 100 couples. The show only ran 15 episodes, and some of them didn't add any couples to his tally.
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* The premise of ''[[Friday the 13th: The Series]]'' is that Micki and Ryan must recover all of the cursed antiques purchased from their uncle's store.
* In ''[[My Name Is Earl]]'', Earl must fix all the things he's ever done wrong in order to clear his karma.
* In the first ever ''Chinese Tokusatsu Armor Hero'' they have to seal 52 monsters into 52 cards, in 52 episodes. It's quite a clean show like that.
* In the Sci-Fi show ''[[The Lost Room]]'', characters are, for various reasons, seeking artifacts known as Objects, which originated in a 1960s motel room and are endowed with curious properties (for instance, one Object is a watch which can boil an egg placed inside the band).
* The main plot point of ''[[Reaper]]'' is that the lead has to catch escaped souls from Hell, similar to ''[[Brimstone (TV series)|Brimstone]]'' mentioned above.
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** Another client had to re-absorb the people made from her split personalities.
* In ''[[The Legend of Dick and Dom]]'' the heroes are questing for potion ingredients (the claw of a siren, the mists of time, a pint of milk...) to cure a plague.
* In ''[[Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers]]'', the rangers scatter the Zeo Crystal across time and space in order to stop it from falling into evil hands. In ''[[Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers|Alien Rangers]]'' they have to reassemble it in order to restore time back to normal.
 
 
== [[Machinima]] ==
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** To the point where it's [[lampshade]]d [[Take That Us|hilariously]] in the beginning of ''Banjo-Kazooie: Nuts 'n Bolts''.
{{quote|<small>{{smallcaps|"Now then. In line with Banjo Tradition, your challenge will consist of collecting as many pointless items as possible."}}</small>}}
*:* ''[[Donkey Kong 64]]'' has been blamed by some as [[Genre Killer|killing]] the collectathon [[Platform Game]] genre by single-handedly making gamers completely sick of it.
* Many [[BioWare]] games operate like this.
** ''[[Neverwinter Nights]]'' is almost entirely based off this trope. First, you need to collect the bits of fantastic creatures to cure the plague, then you need to collect the journals of the cultists to prove they are in Luskan, then after Luskan you need to collect the Words of Power, after which the final battle begins.
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** [[Knights of the Old Republic]] 2 has the Jedi Masters you have to hunt down and gather at Dantooine or kill.
** ''[[Mass Effect]]'': you collect bits of a coordinate, more coordinates that tell you how to use what you find when you get to the first coordinates, and somebody who can understand the whole thing. A checklist of planets, each with a beginning, middle and end, and each with their own miniature scenario which you must resolve as part of your quest to [[Save the World|Save The Galaxy]].
** ''[[Mass Effect 2]]'': This is very nearly the ''entire point'' of the game. Most of the game revolves recruiting teammates for your suicide mission (with [[Downloadable Content|DLC]], there are 12 members in total, though you technically only need 8 to complete the game) and then gaining their loyalty so they don't die during the final mission.
* The ''[[Mega Man Battle Network]]'' series does this. In each of the 6 games in the series, you battle with battle chips. Each game has a couple of hundred to find by either defeating enemies quickly or simply picking them up. Collecting them all usually allows you to fight a [[Bonus Boss]].
* The ''[[Mega Man Zero]] series'' until the fourth game also does this, with the [[Energy Beings|cyber-elf]] ''computer programs''. These little critters are collected all over the place, powered up, and used to give Zero useful bonuses. The games inhibit the latter feature, though, by lowering Zero's rank with each use.
* In ''[[MOTHER]]'', you needed to collect eight melodies throughout the game (although this wasn't obvious). In ''[[EarthboundEarthBound]]'', most of the game consisted of visiting "Sanctuary" locations, and collecting... eight melodies. Finally, a big part of ''[[Mother 3]]'' was pulling needles. The catch was, {{spoiler|your literal [[Evil Twin]] was too.}}
 
* Virtually all the ''[[Nancy Drew (video game)|Nancy Drew]]'' video games require Nancy to track down missing pieces—gears, dolls, crystals, mirrors, whatever—for some sort of mechanism. ''The Last Train To Blue Moon Canyon'' interlaces ''three'' collect-em-all subplots.
* ''[[The Neverhood]]'' requires you to collect twenty videotapes telling the story of the world, narrated by Willie Trombone. You can watch these and get a good idea of what's going on even with several tapes missing, but collecting all twenty is important, since {{spoiler|it unlocks the final part of the movie, allowing you to get a key from Willie}}.
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* ''Animal Crossing''. Too many things to collect. Furniture... Clothes... Fish... Bugs... Fruit... Flowers... Gyroids... The list goes on forever!
* ''[[Interactive Fiction|Jigsaw]]'' has the player reassembling an ... enchanted? hyper-tech? ... jigsaw puzzle, unlocking more destinations for their [[Time Travel|time machine]] with each piece found. Then, at the end of the game, you find out you were also supposed to be {{spoiler|sketching animals}} to achieve the (only slightly different) good ending. Better [[Fake Longevity|start over]]!
* MANY classic [[Interactive Fiction]] games rely on this concept: learning all the spells (''Enchanter'', ''Spiritwrack''), assembling the [[Dismantled MacGuffin]] or some other piece of machinery (''Starcross'', ''[[Planetfall|Stationfall]]'', ''Wonderland''), or retrieving all the treasures from a dangerous area (''[[Zork]]'', ''[[ADVENTColossal Cave Adventure|Adventure]]'', ''Hollywood Hijinx'', dozens more).
* The Great Cave Offensive game in ''[[Kirby Super Star]]'' lets you win by just running straight to the right and beating a few bosses ... but it's not a VICTORY unless you pick up the 60 treasures along the way.
* ''[[Tony Hawks Pro Skater]]'' has gaps, areas where you have to grind, manual, or jump from point A to point B. Finding all of them nets [[One Hundred Percent Completion]].
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* In ''[[Jabless Adventure]]'', there's an optional sidequest to collect the 10 Hero's Fruit.
* Both the ''[[Baten Kaitos]]'' games have the Gathering, a sidequest to document ''every Magnus in the game''. Including pictures of enemies, quest magnus, and other things that can be easily [[Lost Forever]]. In the first game, one magnus takes ''336 hours, or two weeks in-game time'' to transform. And it does nothing in battle.
* In the ''[[StarcraftStarCraft II|Starcraft II: Wings of Liberty]]'' campaign, Raynor must complete certain missions to acquire all the pieces of a Xel-Naga artifact before unlocking the final three missions of the game. The artifact is the {{spoiler|key to defeating Kerrigan.}} Other missions are optional, but a certain number must be played to unlock each of the artifact missions.
* In ''Chack'n Pop'', Chack'n has to recover a bunch of hearts that have been stolen by Monstas and trapped inside cages. It's just that kind of game.
* Warzone2100's campaign practically revolves around finding new parts to upgrade your forces - lest you get stomped to bits by your enemy.
* Every Mario RPG ever made. [[Super Mario RPG]] has Star Pieces, [[Paper Mario 64]] 1has Star Spirits, [[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]] 2has Crystal Stars, [[Super Paper Mario]] has Pure Hearts, [[Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga]] pieces of the Beanstar, [[Mario & Luigi: Partners In Time]] has pieces of the Cobalt Star and [[Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story]] has Star Cures. All are crucial, although their importance varies.
 
 
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* [[Alien Dice]] involves scattering a number of "dice" over a planet and capturing the animals they bond to. It's supposed to be a deconstruction of the Mons genre if you couldn't guess.
* Professor Dr. of ''[[The B-Movie Comic|The B Movie Comic]]'' just fell to [http://www.bmoviecomic.com/?cid=398 the urge].
* The "plot" of ''[[Adventurers!]]'' revolved around finding the [https://web.archive.org/web/20100206074054/http://www.adventurers-comic.com/d/20011112.html Elemental Relics]. Unfortunately, these were the relics of the ''modern'' elements: [https://web.archive.org/web/20100206074054/http://www.adventurers-comic.com/d/20011112.html Hydrogen, Helium, Lithium, and all the other elements in the periodic table]. The progress on this quest was generally kept in the background.
* The main quest in ''[[Our Little Adventure]]'' is to collect pieces of a wish granting artifact known as the 'Magicant.'
* ''[[Wasted Youth]]'' has 50 Piggymon cards for you to collect, a card game with hamsters.
* ''[[Virtual Shackles]]'' show [https://web.archive.org/web/20130815201301/http://www.virtualshackles.com/140 charts].
 
== [[Web Original]] ==
 
== Web Original ==
* Lab/Treasure/Land maps, Talisman pieces, collectable plushies... Petsites are ''full'' of these, and they always have a final goal, that's it, some sort of status for the users that collect these, since it's impossible to have all the pets at once.
* The aim of [[My Opinions On Every Pokémon Ever]] is to review every single Pokémon.
* A double-subversion occurs in ''[[The Holders Series]]''. The 538 cursed objects must ''NEVER'' be brought together, or it will result in [[The End of the World as We Know It]]. That doesn't stop the Seekers from trying to find them, though.
 
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* A ton of old ''[[G.I. Joe]]'' episodes involved Cobra's attempts to Catch Them All, perhaps the best-known being their collection of historical military leaders' DNA to create Serpentor. The 5-part G.I. Joe miniseries ''MASS Device'' involves the Joes in a race with COBRA to collect three rare elements from various places to power their teleportation machines. One of the rare elements is ''heavy water'' which is in pools at the bottom of the deepest ocean (obviously).
* The premise of ''[[Lilo and& Stitch: The Series]]'' (a [[Recycled: the Series]] of the Disney movie ''Lilo and Stitch'') is that everyone has to find the other 625 experiments (Stitch's "Cousins") lost throughout Hawaii. {{spoiler|As of the finale movie 'Leroy and Stitch', this has been completed, up to and including Leroy, who is unofficially Experiment 629}}
* The crew of the Wraith in ''[[Pirates of Dark Water]]'' were supposed to collect 13 treasures. The show only lasted long enough for them to get 8, in part because the eighth took the entire (truncated) second season to find.
* ''The Thirteen Ghosts of [[Scooby Doo]]'' had those meddling kids (well, four of them: Daphne, Shaggy, Scooby, and Scrappy) plus [[The Mentor|mentor]] [[Vincent Price|Vincent Van Ghoul]] and [[Ethnic Scrappy|the supposedly lovable young rascal]] Flim-Flam trying to recapture 13 ghosts that had escaped from "The Chest of Demons".
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[[Category:Magical Girl Tropes]]
[[Category:Plots]]
[[Category:Gotta Catch Them All{{PAGENAME}}]]