It's a Small World After All: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}{{Needs Image}}
{{quote|''Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine.''|'''Rick Blaine''', ''[[Casablanca]]''}}
|'''Rick Blaine''', ''[[Casablanca]]''}}
 
A specific case of [[Million-to-One Chance]]: the laws of probability are nothing compared to the power of [[Theory of Narrative Causality|Narrative Causality]].
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In [[Video Games]], this [[Trope]] is taken to the logical next step, such that any [[Video Game]] that allows the protagonist to travel from one planet to another will probably have very little area in total that the protagonist is physically able to visit within each world, either constrained by [[Insurmountable Waist-Height Fence|boundaries that one would not expect an inhabited world to impose]], or literally representing the entire world as [[Space Compression|a very small space]].
 
See also [[Convenient Enemy Base]] and [[Conveniently -Close Planet]]. Compare [[One True Sequence]]. Not to be confused with [[Ear Worm|the song]] and [[It's a Small Net After All]].
 
{{examples}}
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
 
* ''[[Kobato.]]'': The title character seems to constantly run into the same person until she fixes their emotional problems, and then promptly never sees them again.
== [[Anime]] ==
* ''[[Elfen Lied]]'' in ''spades''. It goes beyond [[Contrived Coincidence]] and into some kind of [[HitchThe HikersHitchhiker's Guide to Thethe Galaxy|Improbability Field.]]
* [[Kobato.]] seems to constantly run into the same person until she fixes their emotional problems, and then promptly never sees them again.
* ''[[Kanon]]''. Although this may be due in some small part by [[It Makes Sense in Context|miracles,]] it's still damn unlikely for Yuuichi to run into people whenever he steps outside.
* [[Elfen Lied]] in ''spades''. It goes beyond [[Contrived Coincidence]] and into some kind of [[Hitch Hikers Guide to The Galaxy|Improbability Field.]]
* [[Kanon]]. Although this may be due in some small part by [[It Makes Sense in Context|miracles,]] it's still damn unlikely for Yuuichi to run into people whenever he steps outside.
* In ''[[Inuyasha]]'', Feudal Japan appears to be populated by a total of about twenty people, all of whom are at any given time within convenient brawling distance of one another.
* In ''[[Star Blazers]]'', the man that Queen Starsha rescued from the Gamilon ship that crash-landed on Iscandar ''just happens to be'' Alex Wildstar, Derek's long-lost brother, presumed dead.
* ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha]]'' has some pretty unlikely meetings, such as Arf and Alisa Bannings, or Hayate, Fate, and Nanoha in season two. Vivio also happens to run into Riot Force Six rather than, say, a police officer.
 
== Comics ==
* Inverted in ''[[Flash Gordon (comic strip)|Flash Gordon]]''. Mongo was a big, extremely multivaried place. Then again -- at least in the early days of the comic and most TV & film adaptations -- the main characters are stranded on Mongo and ''can't'' visit other planets, so it makes sense for Mongo itself to be portrayed as a richly diverse world.
 
== [[Film]] ==
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* ''[[Star Trek]]'' films:
** In ''[[Star Trek V: The Final Frontier]]'', after passing through the Great Barrier, the heroes land in a random spot on a random planet. After wandering around for a bit, they find the exact spot where the temple-thing comes out of the ground.
** In ''[[Star Trek (film)|Star Trek]]'', when Kirk ''just happens'' to run into {{spoiler|Spock Prime}} while marooned on Delta Vega. The latter was sent to a location where they could observe a certain unexpected astronomical event, while the former was, presumably, dropped within walking distance (or maybe [[Death World|getting eaten distance]]) of a Starfleet base, with no reason whatsoever for the two locations to be anywhere near each other -- apartother—apart from the [[Theory of Narrative Causality]], of course. Lampshaded in the novel adaptation.
* In ''[[Enemy Mine (film)|Enemy Mine]]'' the Human and the Drac both manage to not only crash on the same planet, but within ''walking distance'' of each others spaceships.
* In ''[[Honey, I Shrunk the Kids]]'', two characters are picked up by a bee, flown all around the yard which to them is now 3-miles long, and conveniently dropped off not far from the others. "[[PunA Worldwide Punomenon|It's a small world after all]]", indeed.
 
== [[Literature]] ==
* In ''[[The Windup Girl]]'' by [[Paolo Bacigalupi]], Emiko is running for her life and looks certain to be killed when Anderson Lake ''just happens to be'' riding past in his rickshaw and rescues her.
* Robert Sheckley's ''[[Mindswap]]''. That method of looking for Ze Kraggash actually pays off. Somewhat.
* ''[[Harry Potter and Thethe Deathly Hallows (novel)|Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows]]'': Whilst jumping around the British countryside ''entirely at random'', our heroes land within a few hundred meters of a group of people they know, and Harry just happens to wander by them while they discuss plot-relevant events. Britain, remember, covers some 210,000 square kilometers.
** And in the film, they just happen to apparate right in the middle of of a group of snatchers.
** This happens in favor of the villains in the background of ''Goblet of Fire''. Pettigrew decides to stop at an inn on the way to meeting Voldemort, and runs into a Ministry official who happens to know the location of a loyal Death Eater, {{spoiler|secretly being held under house arrest by his father and assumed dead by the rest of society.}}
* In [[Dan Simmons]]' ''[[Ilium]]'' and ''Olympos'' this is justified and deconstructed. Everyone lives close to the teleporters all across the planet because there is no need to go very far from them. The unfortunate result is that they've managed to forget about the entire rest of the planet.
* [[Older Than Radio]]: In Fielding's ''[[Tom Jones]]'', characters who are travelling separately are forever running into each other at [[You All Meet in An Inn|inns]] along the road. Critics have tried to [[Justified Trope|justify]] these remarkably convenient coincidences by making learned references to the average speed of a stagecoach and the density of coaching inns along the major roads in Georgian England.
* ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]'': The first humanoid alien Arthur meets after he goes into space is a guy who crashed a party he'd been to. The second is the Earth woman that guy hit on at said party after Arthur had been chatting her up himself. They acknowledge that this is weird, although this is the Improbability Drive in action, so... [[A Wizard Did It|A Sci-Fi Scientist Did It]]?
** Zaphod is ''also related to Ford'' just for a gag about [[Bizarre Alien Biology]].
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** Jaden Korr (of [[Jedi Academy]] fame) happens to be in precisely correct spot in all of space to intercept an Old Republican jedi master who was flung into the future due to a hyperdrive malfunction.
 
== [[Live -Action TelevisionTV]] ==
* In ''[[Sliders]]'', they would always randomly appear in the precise place and time where four strangers could, over the course of a few hours, completely alter the way of life on the planet. (We did briefly see the Sliders in universes where they had no particular impact, usually at the very start of an episode. Presumably, there were any number of such banal slides and the network was only showing us the [[Your Mileage May Vary|interesting]] ones.)
** [[Discussed Trope|Discussed]] in one of the first episode, where the professor tries to see which way they should go: should they interfere, are they sent there by a form of God, or should they take up a "[[Star Trek|First Commandment]]" or sorts of not interfering. They chuck it out the window in favor of [[Rule of Cool|doing whatever they want]] or [[Omniscient Morality License|what they consider moral]].
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* ''[[Stargate Atlantis]]'', where those who live in deadly fear of the human-eating Wraith never move away from (or block) the stargate the Wraith ships emerge from - generally making it easy for the ships to fill their human quota in about half an hour.
** Well, considering that when they ''do'' do those things, the Wraith come in from space and bomb the place to hell, it might make more sense.
* Very obvious in ''[[Doctor Who]]'', where the TARDIS never seems to land on the opposite side of the planet from wherever the local intrigue is going on. The episode ''"The Doctor's Wife''" tells us that the TARDIS is doing it on purpose, even in the early seasons when the ship's flights were entirely random.
** For example, despite having an entire planet to argue over, the Thals and the Kaleds apparently live within walking (or gliding) distance of each other in ''Genesis of the Daleks''.
* In one episode of ''[[Farscape]]'', Zhaan searches for her missing crewmembers by ''asking a bartender'' on a random planet nearby. Because clearly there is only one bar on the entire planet which they could have visited if they had been there, which, thankfully, they did not.
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**** Translation: "[[Follow the Leader|We wanted to be like]] ''[[Lost]]''."
* Cleverly [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshaded]] in the original ''[[Land of the Lost (TV series)|Land of the Lost]],'' where the artificial pocket dimension the Marshalls are trapped in is not only small, but warps over on itself, so that if you walk far enough in one direction, you will return to your starting point. The local "mountain range" is, in fact, just the endlessly repeated image of the ''same mountain,'' and if you stand on its peak and look at the neighboring beak with binoculars, you can see your own back.
* Averted and then played straight in ''[[Battlestar Galactica Reimagined]](2004 TV series)|the 2004 ''Battlestar Galactica'' reboot]]. Starbuck crash lands on a barren moon and a big deal is made of how difficult it is to find one person on a planet when all you've got is "visual scanning". At one point they even show a map of the moon with the comparatively small area they've managed to search drawn on. They then throw this out the window by having Starbuck find a crashed Cylon Raider that apparently came down not far from where she crashed. [[Contrived Coincidence]] maybe, maybe not, as she personally shot it down before she crashed from damage it inflicted.
** Later in the series, Starbuck makes various similar leaps with predictability especially during the final episode where she {{spoiler|manages to make an FTL co-ordinate out of the song she and the Final Five kept hearing, just in time to avoid the collapse of the Cylon colony ship under nuclear attack, only for this to turn out to be a new habitable planet, precisely what the fleet had been looking for since the planet formerly known as Earth had turned out to have been nuked by humans attacking earlier Cylons}}. Not only do all of those ducks get lined in a row, but {{spoiler|it turns out there are indigenous humans genetically compatible with the humans on the fleet, despite total biological isolation of the two populations prior to this episode.}} Lucky coincidence indeed.
*** The answer to all of the above is, of course: {{spoiler|[[A Wizard Did It|the entity which does not like to be called God did it.]]}}
* Present in ''[[Angel]]'' season 2, in the Pylea arc. After lengthy discussion of how two people going through the portal might wind up halfway across the world from each other, -and- coming up with a plan to stop them from doing so, Angel, Wesley, Gunn, and Lorne get to Pylea and find {{spoiler|they're a few miles from where Cordi ended up after her own trip through the portal. Cordi herself came through about the same place that Fred had, on yet another trip}}. Possibly [[Justified Trope|justified]] in that it's mentioned that the portals need psychic energy to open. The Pyleans, and a few of the wild animals nearby, produce quite a bit of said energy.
 
== Newspaper Comics ==
* Inverted in ''[[Flash Gordon (comic strip)|Flash Gordon]]''. Mongo was a big, extremely multivaried place. Then again -- atagain—at least in the early days of the comic and most TV & film adaptations -- theadaptations—the main characters are stranded on Mongo and ''can't'' visit other planets, so it makes sense for Mongo itself to be portrayed as a richly diverse world.
 
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
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* Averted in ''[[Final Fantasy IV]]'', where the heroes travel to the moon and find that, though it is indeed smaller than the normal world, as one might well expect of a moon, it nevertheless does have a fully detailed worldmap. It's just... rather sparsely inhabited. Again, as one might expect of a moon.
** This is also because all of the humanoid inhabitants are sleeping below the surface, and the only other people living there, the Humingways, occupy one cave.
* Averted in ''Haven: Call of the King'', a game which goes to show exactly why it's played straight most of the time. In the later stages of the game, you're tasked with [[Hundred-Percent100% Completion|finding 12 hidden dungeons in order to get the best ending]]. You have a space ship, and have to check the game's several worlds for them. As these are full sized planets, it will literally take hours worth of flyovers in your space ship to find one, partly because your ship doesn't move nearly with the kind of speed you'd expect of an intergalactic vessel.
* ''[[Mass Effect]]'''s planets generally consist of about a square kilometer of mountainous terrain. You can see areas beyond the tiny map, but you're not allowed to go there - and, at any rate, all the stuff on the planet worth exploring is within a short drive of everything else.
** "You're leaving the bounds of the operational area, you're leaving our scopes, you need to turn around Commander" says Joker every time you try to go a little too far out. Although on one particular planet there's an annoying bit of ore that's JUUUUUUST outside the operational area and you have to very, VERY carefully inch over to it on foot or Joker picks you up and deposits you back at the "beginning of the level". Great scanners you got there, Normandy...
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** Played straight with searching for Liara. The smallest to which your superiors can narrow down her location is a sector ''with four navigable star systems''. Although they do recommend starting the search on "the planet with the Prothean ruins", without even specifying its name. Likewise, Liara can only narrow down the Conduit's location to "somewhere on Ilos", and you only find it by locating [[Big Bad|Saren]] and airdropping right behind him.
* The ''[[Knights of the Old Republic (video game)|Knights of the Old Republic]]'' games take this trope to an even farther extreme than the ''[[Star Wars]]'' movies. Regardless of whether the protagonists land on a desert planet, an ocean planet, or a planet that is one big city (Coruscant-style), their destination is always just a few zones away, perfectly walkable on foot, even if they don't know its location. Also applies when their spaceship crash-lands in the middle of nowhere.
** In the case of Tatooine(desert planet) and Manaan(water planet), there were only one setlement on each planet, so there really wasn't anywhere else to go. Also on Tatooine, when finding the Star Map there is really no way to know how far it was before you find the cave containing the map, especially given that you are unable to travel there without a map. Also on Taris(city planet), you and Bastila both ejected from the same ship at roughly the same time, meaning it would be highly unlikely for you to end up in different locations. Everything else that you encounter is largely related to Bastila's capture. Although the fact that you travel to Tatooine of all places is really an example of this.
* [[The King of Fighters]] meta-series has several of the oldest fighters (Takuma, Saisyu, Chin, etc.) having either known each other superficially or being old friends. Specially, [[Art of Fighting|Takuma Sakazaki]] knew [[Fatal Fury|Jeff Bogard]] rather well, and he also was an acquintance of Kyo Kusanagi's father Saisyu; also, Chin Gentsai was an old friend of [[Fatal Fury|Tung Fu Rue]]. ** Noticeable in that the "Takuma knew Saisyu" angle was pure [[Fanon]] at first, then became canon.
* In ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh! Reshef of Destruction]]'', the player (along with Yugi and Joey) travel from Domino City (in Japan) to several other locations around the globe: China, Italy, Canada, Egypt, and Galapagos Islands, somehow able to do so in minutes each time. The most egregious example is the side-quest where Tristan is missing, and Serenity fears he might have been turned into the Robot Monkey she saw leave the game shop. The entourage goes to the Galapagos to find the robot, then gets back to Domino to find out it was simply a toy robot, and Tristan had [[Red Herring| just gone to some fast food place]]. Meaning they had gone there and back in the time it took Tristan to have lunch.
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* In ''[[El Goonish Shive]]'', runaway Grace sought Tedd after the Goo incident became public, [http://www.egscomics.com/?date=2002-02-17 and...]
{{quote| '''Grace''': (thinks) I don't believe this! How can ''he'' be Tedd's father?!<br />
'''Mr.Verres''': (thinks) Is that -- Shade Tail?! }}
** Grace and an Immortal she just met and didn't know anything about [http://www.egscomics.com/?date=2010-07-26 discovered] they got a few common acquaintances...
{{quote| ''You're dating [[Chivalrous Pervert|Tedd Verres]]?!''<br />
You know [[Chivalrous Pervert|Tedd]]?! }}
*** Technically, though, he only knew Tedd's father, who is the head of the American [[The Men in Black]].
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* In the episode "Around the Berry Big World," [[Strawberry Shortcake]] goes on an "Around the World in 80 Days" style trip and is deflected at every turn, yet she always manages to end up near one of her international friends (from the "World of Friends" line).
* [[Top Cat]] plans an all-you-can-eat pizza binge for him and his pals in "Rafeefleas" but picks the wrong pizza shop to do it:
{{quote| '''T.C.:''' A thousand pizza parlors in New York and ''we'' had to pick the one run by Officer Dibble's cousin!}}
 
== Real Life ==
* It actually is a small world... when comparing urban centers to rural. The reason humans tend to run into each other - even across the earth from where they met - is they tend to hang around cities and other places where humans live.
** If the entire human race of several billion people were put into a megacity at the same population density as New York City, it would be the size of the state of Texas. Seems big, but compared to the amount of available land on the earth is pretty tiny - .0046% of the total land area of the earth.
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[[Category:Speculative Fiction Tropes]]
[[Category:Suspiciously Convenient Index]]
[[Category:Its A Small World After All]]
[[Category:It's a Small World After All]]