No Blood for Phlebotinum: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
{{trope}}{{Needs Image}}
{{quote|''"War never changes. In the 21st century wars were still fought over the resources that could be acquired..."''|''[[Fallout]]''}}
{{quote|''"War never changes. In the 21st century wars were still fought over the resources that could be acquired..."''
|''[[Fallout]]''}}


{{quote|''"When goods do not cross borders, soldiers will."''|'''Frederic Bastiat'''}}
{{quote|''"When goods do not cross borders, soldiers will."''
|'''Frederic Bastiat'''}}


Nearly every conflict in human history has been over a resource of some kind. Land, water, food, oil, mineral rights, timber, livestock, labor... something other than national pride or honor and glory is usually lurking around as subtext whenever man kills man on the field of battle.
Nearly every conflict in human history has been over a resource of some kind. Land, water, food, oil, mineral rights, timber, livestock, labor... something other than national pride or honor and glory is usually lurking around as subtext whenever man kills man on the field of battle.
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The local [[Unobtanium]], [[Green Rocks]], [[Spice of Life]], [[Minovsky Physics|Minovsky Particles]], [[You Require More Vespene Gas|Vespene Gas]] or [[Imported Alien Phlebotinum]] are all naturally rare and valuable, so much that everybody wants to get their hands on it. Quite naturally, this can lead to world- or galaxy-wide wars over the damn stuff. Caught up in the middle are the usual tragic bystanders, for whom your magical miracle substances are [[Worthless Yellow Rocks]]. Things will get... [[Fantastic Aesop|interesting]] if the resource in question turns out to be [[Aesoptinium]] that decides it doesn't want people fighting over it and sets up a [[No MacGuffin, No Winner]] scenario.
The local [[Unobtanium]], [[Green Rocks]], [[Spice of Life]], [[Minovsky Physics|Minovsky Particles]], [[You Require More Vespene Gas|Vespene Gas]] or [[Imported Alien Phlebotinum]] are all naturally rare and valuable, so much that everybody wants to get their hands on it. Quite naturally, this can lead to world- or galaxy-wide wars over the damn stuff. Caught up in the middle are the usual tragic bystanders, for whom your magical miracle substances are [[Worthless Yellow Rocks]]. Things will get... [[Fantastic Aesop|interesting]] if the resource in question turns out to be [[Aesoptinium]] that decides it doesn't want people fighting over it and sets up a [[No MacGuffin, No Winner]] scenario.


To avoid [[Flame Bait]], [[No Real Life Examples Please|please do not add any real life examples]]. The trope itself is a kind of [[Not Using the Z Word]].
{{noreallife|to avoid [[Flame Bait]]. The trope itself is a kind of [[Not Using the Z Word]].}}
{{examples}}


{{examples}}
== [[Anime]] ==
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* ''[[Transformers Energon]]'' was all about fighting over and using the titular [[Green Rocks]].
* ''[[Transformers Energon]]'' was all about fighting over and using the titular [[Green Rocks]].
** ''[[Transformers]]'' is usually about that ''in general'', be it [[Transformers Generation One|energon]], [[Transformers Cybertron|Planet Keys]], or [[Transformers Animated|Allspark fragments]]. ''[[Transformers Armada]]'' had Mini-Cons, which were sentient phlebotinum.
** ''[[Transformers]]'' is usually about that ''in general'', be it [[Transformers Generation 1|energon]], [[Transformers Cybertron|Planet Keys]], or [[Transformers Animated|Allspark fragments]]. ''[[Transformers Armada]]'' had Mini-Cons, which were sentient phlebotinum.
** ''[[Beast Wars (Animation)|Beast Wars]]'' had this in the first season, where the Maximals and Predacons fought over a planet rich in raw energon. Of course, by season 2 they found plenty of other things to keep fighting over.
** ''[[Beast Wars]]'' had this in the first season, where the Maximals and Predacons fought over a planet rich in raw energon. Of course, by season 2 they found plenty of other things to keep fighting over.
* In ''[[Code Geass (Anime)|Code Geass]]'', Japan was attacked by Britannia essentially because it was sitting on the largest Sakuradite reserves on the planet.
* In ''[[Code Geass]]'', Japan was attacked by Britannia essentially because it was sitting on the largest Sakuradite reserves on the planet.
** Or, possibly, the even more critical phlebotinum, {{spoiler|the thought elevator}}.
** Or, possibly, the even more critical phlebotinum, {{spoiler|the thought elevator}}.
* E2 energy from ''[[Another Centurys Episode]]'' and ''[[Continuity Reboot|A.C.E 2]]''
* E2 energy from ''[[Another Century's Episode]]'' and ''[[Continuity Reboot|A.C.E 2]]''
* ''[[Darker Than Black]]'' had Heaven's War, a [[Melee a Trois]] in the backstory where pretty much ''everyone'' was trying to get control of [[Not of This Earth|Heaven's Gate]] in Brazil. It only ended when [[Throwaway Country|most of South America got wiped off the map]].
* ''[[Darker than Black]]'' had Heaven's War, a [[Melee a Trois]] in the backstory where pretty much ''everyone'' was trying to get control of [[Not of This Earth|Heaven's Gate]] in Brazil. It only ended when [[Throwaway Country|most of South America got]] replaced with big "unaccessible" circle on the map.
* Shortly before the events of the main series, the world of ''[[Gundam 00]]'' was subject to the "solar power wars". When advanced solar technologies were discovered, oil suddenly became relatively worthless, leading to a number of Middle Eastern countries continually splitting apart into new ones. To harness the technology, countries needed to build space elevators, and this lead to blocs of nations forming who jealously guarded their elevators and were constantly at the brink of war with the other blocs.
* Shortly before the events of the main series, the world of ''[[Mobile Suit Gundam 00]]'' was subject to the "solar power wars". When advanced solar technologies were discovered, oil suddenly became relatively worthless, leading to a number of Middle Eastern countries continually splitting apart into new ones. To harness the technology, countries needed to build space elevators, and this lead to blocs of nations forming who jealously guarded their elevators and were constantly at the brink of war with the other blocs.



== [[Film]] ==
== [[Film]] ==
* The whole point of [[James Cameron]]'s ''[[Avatar (Film)|Avatar]]''. It's even [[Lampshade Hanging|called]] [[Unobtanium]].
* The whole point of [[James Cameron]]'s ''[[Avatar (film)|Avatar]]''. It's even [[Lampshade Hanging|called]] [[Unobtanium]].
* All Phlebotinum in ''[[District 9]]'' has a biological component, so while everybody is stockpiling [[BFG|BFGs]], only the slum residents can use them.
* All Phlebotinum in ''[[District 9]]'' has a biological component, so while everybody is stockpiling [[BFG]]s, only the slum residents can use them.


== [[Literature]] ==
== [[Literature]] ==
* ''[[Dune]]'' had its Spice, a resource so vital that whoever owns Arrakis, the only planet that produce them, will have a huge power over other planets. Several novels have story arcs where someone attempts (unsuccessfully) to break the Arrakis monopoly on spice by transplanting a [[Sand Worm]] to another planet, creating a spice substitute, etc.
* ''[[Dune]]'' had its Spice, a resource so vital that whoever owns Arrakis, the only planet that produce them, will have a huge power over other planets. Several novels have story arcs where someone attempts (unsuccessfully) to break the Arrakis monopoly on spice by transplanting a [[Sand Worm]] to another planet, creating a spice substitute, etc.
* ''[[Lord of the Rings]]'': The Ring, obviously.
* ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'': The Ring, obviously.
** Except the Ring is not what the war is about. It is about whether or not people of Middle Earth will be ruled by Sauron. The ring is just one of the weapons.
** Also Mithril in the [[The History of Middle Earth|supplemental material]], and the eponymous silmarils in ''[[The Silmarillion]]''. And the dwarven treasure horde taken by Smaug in ''[[The Hobbit]]''.
** Also Mithril in the [[The History of Middle Earth|supplemental material]], and the eponymous silmarils in ''[[The Silmarillion]]''. And the dwarven treasure horde taken by Smaug in ''[[The Hobbit]]''.
* Pynvium in Janice Hardy's ''[[The Shifter]]'' can absorb pain. Its mines are important enough to fight over, but it's when {{spoiler|the healers run out of it}} that the plot kicks in.
* Pynvium in Janice Hardy's ''[[The Shifter]]'' can absorb pain. Its mines are important enough to fight over, but it's when {{spoiler|the healers run out of it}} that the plot kicks in.


== [[Live Action TV]] ==
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
* In the ''[[Star Trek (Franchise)|Star Trek]]'' universe, the Klingons and Federation sometimes fought over sources of dilithium crystals (e.g. the ''[[Star Trek the Original Series (TV)|Star Trek the Original Series]]'' episode "Elaan of Troyius"). In ''[[Star Trek IV the Voyage Home (Film)|Star Trek IV the Voyage Home]]'', Scotty and Spock invent a way to "recycle" it with particles stolen from "nuclear wessels", thus making it less rare by the Next Generation era.
* In the ''[[Star Trek]]'' universe, the Klingons and Federation sometimes fought over sources of dilithium crystals (e.g. the ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'' episode "Elaan of Troyius"). In ''[[Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home]]'', Scotty and Spock invent a way to "recycle" it with particles stolen from "nuclear wessels", thus making it less rare by the Next Generation era.
** In an episode of ''[[Star Trek Enterprise (TV)|Star Trek Enterprise]]'', a planet was raided for ''[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deuterium deuterium]''. The writers [[Did Not Do the Research]]... although given the existence of things like the Oklo natural nuclear reactors in Gabon, who's to say that there isn't some way the planet could have produced and/or received abnormally large amounts of heavy hydrogen?
** In an episode of ''[[Star Trek: Enterprise]]'', a planet was raided for ''[[wikipedia:Deuterium|deuterium]]''. The writers [[Did Not Do the Research]]... although given the existence of things like the Oklo natural nuclear reactors in Gabon, who's to say that there isn't some way the planet could have produced and/or received abnormally large amounts of heavy hydrogen?
** In the first ''[[Star Trek Shatnerverse]]'' novel, Chekov and Uhura are engaged in an undercover operation and pretend to deal with a shady Klingon. He offers dilithium as payment. Chekov brushes him off, saying it's nearly worthless now, ever since the whole "nuclear wessels" discovery (i.e. ships can run forever on a single set of dilithium crystals without needing to replace them).
** In the first ''[[Star Trek Shatnerverse]]'' novel, Chekov and Uhura are engaged in an undercover operation and pretend to deal with a shady Klingon. He offers dilithium as payment. Chekov brushes him off, saying it's nearly worthless now, ever since the whole "nuclear wessels" discovery (i.e. ships can run forever on a single set of dilithium crystals without needing to replace them).
** Somewhat bizarrely, in ''[[Star Trek Voyager (TV)|Star Trek Voyager]]'', the Kazon, an oxygen-breathing species traveling in hydrogen-powered ships, will kill, steal, or trade hostages for '''water'''. When he first arrives on the ship, Neelix seems similarly surprised by Alpha quadrant water technology.
** Somewhat bizarrely, in ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'', the Kazon, an oxygen-breathing species traveling in hydrogen-powered ships, will kill, steal, or trade hostages for '''water'''. When he first arrives on the ship, Neelix seems similarly surprised by Alpha quadrant water technology.
*** That's mainly because the Kazon are [[Too Dumb to Live]]. The Borg refuse to assimilate them because of that.
*** That's mainly because the Kazon are [[Too Dumb to Live]]. The Borg refuse to assimilate them because of that.
* A classic ''[[Doctor Who (TV)|Doctor Who]]'' had one of these, in the episode "The Caves of Androzani". It was over spectrox, "the most valuable substance in the universe."
* A classic ''[[Doctor Who]]'' had one of these, in the episode "The Caves of Androzani". It was over spectrox, "the most valuable substance in the universe."

== [[Music]] ==
* "Roadkill (...or Be Killed)" by Steelwing:
{{quote|The scavengers soon will rule
Waging war for a tank of fuel }}


== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
* ''[[Warhammer 40,000]]''
* The flammable substance promethium is critical to the war machines of at least three factions in ''[[Warhammer 40000]]'': the Orks, the Imperium, and Chaos. Expect frequent conflicts over promethium mines and refineries, since the Imperium is the only group that bothers to build them instead of just stealing the stuff from everyone else.
** Promethium (a catch-all term for oil-like flammable substances) is critical to the war machines of at least three factions - the Orks, the Imperium, and Chaos. Expect frequent conflicts over promethium mines and refineries, since the Imperium is the only group that bothers to build them instead of just stealing the stuff from everyone else.
** The same goes for many natural resources, from less common ores to Nephium (a toxic exotic substance with variety of uses, mined on some planetoids) - in ''[[Rogue Trader]]'' had two strongest dynasties come to blows over a rich source of the latter until they had to settle on division.
** The "Archeotech" (among the Human factions) and various [[Precursor|more ancient]] [[MacGuffin|artifacts]] (in general).
* ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'' in various settings have a lot of wars in various settings over a local source of something valuable or trade route allowing access to it.
** ''[[Dark Sun]]'' over... well, [[Death World|just about anything that can help to survive or give one an edge]], from water sources to obsidian mines.
** ''[[Forgotten Realms]]'' has Zhentarim trying to control trade over the whole continent, thus their fortified bases (like Darkhold) tend to sit in a spitting distance of some or other trade route.
** ''[[Spelljammer]]'' has [[Space Whale|kindori]] fat used for e.g. lamps, and most Greek Fire made from it. As a result, kindori riders occasionally clash with space whalers; they collect and sell fat only when kindori die of natural causes, of course - the creatures that can [[Turtle Island|carry a village]] don't reproduce like rabbits and are just too valuable.


== Toys ==
== Toys ==
Line 47: Line 61:


== [[Video Games]] ==
== [[Video Games]] ==
* The ''[[Command and Conquer]]'' [[Command and Conquer Tiberium|Tiberium]] series revolves around an [[Green Rocks|alien crystal]] that's extremely rich in resources, leading to several Tiberium Wars fueled by or fought over the stuff. Of course, it's the fight ''[[Alien Kudzu|against]]'' tiberium that's the real danger...
* The ''[[Command & Conquer]]'' [[Command & Conquer: Tiberium|Tiberium]] series revolves around an [[Green Rocks|alien crystal]] that's extremely rich in resources, leading to several Tiberium Wars fueled by or fought over the stuff. Of course, it's the fight ''[[Alien Kudzu|against]]'' tiberium that's the real danger...
* Humans fought a really big war over Imulsion in the [[Backstory]] to ''[[Gears of War]]'', before the scary underground alien invasion.
* Humans fought a really big war over Imulsion in the [[Backstory]] to ''[[Gears of War]]'', before the scary underground alien invasion.
* "Ragnite" was one of the reasons behind the war in ''[[Valkyria Chronicles]]'', with the player's small neutral country caught right in the middle due to its large natural deposits of it.
* "Ragnite" was one of the reasons behind the war in ''[[Valkyria Chronicles]]'', with the player's small neutral country caught right in the middle due to its large natural deposits of it.
* Tarydium in the ''[[Unreal]]'' series.
* Tarydium in the ''[[Unreal]]'' series.
* "Nectar" in ''[[Haze]]''. [[Anvilicious|Not in any way a stand-in for a certain other resource found in South America.]]
* "Nectar" in ''[[Haze]]''. [[Anvilicious|Not in any way a stand-in for a certain other resource found in South America.]]
* Practically inevitable in the later installments of ''[[Civilization]]'' if you want your faction to prosper, unless you get really lucky with city placement or allies. If you do not have era-appropriate strategic resources, expect to be invaded by other civilizations who do and consider you easy pickings. If you have era-appropriate strategic resources, expect to be invaded by other civilizations who do not have it and desperately want it. Either way, wars are almost certainly going to be fought over it.
* Practically inevitable in the later installments of ''[[Civilization]]'' if you want your faction to prosper, unless you get really lucky with city placement or allies. If you do not have era-appropriate strategic resources, expect to be invaded by other civilizations who do and consider you easy pickings. If you have era-appropriate strategic resources, expect to be invaded by other civilizations who do not have it and desperately want it. Either way, wars are almost certainly going to be fought over it.
* ''[[Final Fantasy VII]]'' features the miracle substance Mako. Generated from the essences of creatures long-since dead and pumped from the ground, it has allowed the company controlling it to control world politics, and its overuse creates serious consequences for the planet... similar to a certain black substance that the people of Earth have been using for several decades with similar results. This certain black substance is later treated as a viable alternative to mako in ''Advent Children''.
* ''[[Final Fantasy VII]]'' features the miracle substance Mako. Generated from the essences of creatures long-since dead and pumped from the ground, it has allowed the company controlling it to control world politics, and its overuse creates serious consequences for the planet... similar to a certain black substance that the people of Earth have been using for several decades with similar results. This certain black substance is later treated as a viable alternative to mako in ''Advent Children''.
** There's a bit in Shinra's headquarters where they have a set of advertisements for the line of cars that they make (represented during the opening FMV). The video clearly shows the engines of said cars using Mako in a way that is analogous to the use of the... distillates of the aforementioned black substance. (And "The Aforementioned Black Substance" would make a [[A Good Name for A Rock Band|great band name]].)
** There's a bit in Shinra's headquarters where they have a set of advertisements for the line of cars that they make (represented during the opening FMV). The video clearly shows the engines of said cars using Mako in a way that is analogous to the use of the... distillates of the aforementioned black substance. (And "The Aforementioned Black Substance" would make a [[A Good Name for a Rock Band|great band name]].)
* The ''[[Fallout]]'' series' backstory mentions conflicts over the world's dwindling oil reserves between the 2050's and 70's. The European Coalition invaded the Middle East once oil prices rose too high, though these Resource Wars ended suddenly once the last of the petroleum in the region was tapped out. With Alaska containing the last oil on the whole planet, China invaded America in a conflict that led to a global nuclear war, hence the game's [[After the End|post-apocalyptic setting]].
* The ''[[Fallout]]'' series' backstory mentions conflicts over the world's dwindling oil reserves between the 2050's and 70's. The European Coalition invaded the Middle East once oil prices rose too high, though these Resource Wars ended suddenly once the last of the petroleum in the region was tapped out. With Alaska containing the last oil on the whole planet, China invaded America in a conflict that led to a global nuclear war, hence the game's [[After the End|post-apocalyptic setting]].


<!-- No Real Life Examples *means* No Real Life Examples -->
== [[Real Life]] ==
* This is zig-zagged in real life in that while it is true that many nations/organizations may enter into wars at least in part to obtain resources, it is usually far from the only reason for any given conflict. [[Internet Backdraft|And let's just leave it there, all right?]]


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:No Real Life Examples Please]]
[[Category:Applied Phlebotinum]]
[[Category:Applied Phlebotinum]]
[[Category:Military and Warfare Tropes]]
[[Category:Military and Warfare Tropes]]
[[Category:Speculative Fiction Tropes]]
[[Category:Speculative Fiction Tropes]]
[[Category:No Blood For Phlebotinum]]
[[Category:No Real Life Examples, Please]]
[[Category:Trope]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]

Latest revision as of 00:19, 1 October 2022

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"War never changes. In the 21st century wars were still fought over the resources that could be acquired..."

"When goods do not cross borders, soldiers will."

Frederic Bastiat

Nearly every conflict in human history has been over a resource of some kind. Land, water, food, oil, mineral rights, timber, livestock, labor... something other than national pride or honor and glory is usually lurking around as subtext whenever man kills man on the field of battle.

The local Unobtanium, Green Rocks, Spice of Life, Minovsky Particles, Vespene Gas or Imported Alien Phlebotinum are all naturally rare and valuable, so much that everybody wants to get their hands on it. Quite naturally, this can lead to world- or galaxy-wide wars over the damn stuff. Caught up in the middle are the usual tragic bystanders, for whom your magical miracle substances are Worthless Yellow Rocks. Things will get... interesting if the resource in question turns out to be Aesoptinium that decides it doesn't want people fighting over it and sets up a No MacGuffin, No Winner scenario.

No real life examples, please; to avoid Flame Bait. The trope itself is a kind of Not Using the Z Word.

Examples of No Blood for Phlebotinum include:

Anime and Manga

  • Transformers Energon was all about fighting over and using the titular Green Rocks.
  • In Code Geass, Japan was attacked by Britannia essentially because it was sitting on the largest Sakuradite reserves on the planet.
    • Or, possibly, the even more critical phlebotinum, the thought elevator.
  • E2 energy from Another Century's Episode and A.C.E 2
  • Darker than Black had Heaven's War, a Melee a Trois in the backstory where pretty much everyone was trying to get control of Heaven's Gate in Brazil. It only ended when most of South America got replaced with big "unaccessible" circle on the map.
  • Shortly before the events of the main series, the world of Mobile Suit Gundam 00 was subject to the "solar power wars". When advanced solar technologies were discovered, oil suddenly became relatively worthless, leading to a number of Middle Eastern countries continually splitting apart into new ones. To harness the technology, countries needed to build space elevators, and this lead to blocs of nations forming who jealously guarded their elevators and were constantly at the brink of war with the other blocs.

Film

Literature

  • Dune had its Spice, a resource so vital that whoever owns Arrakis, the only planet that produce them, will have a huge power over other planets. Several novels have story arcs where someone attempts (unsuccessfully) to break the Arrakis monopoly on spice by transplanting a Sand Worm to another planet, creating a spice substitute, etc.
  • The Lord of the Rings: The Ring, obviously.
    • Except the Ring is not what the war is about. It is about whether or not people of Middle Earth will be ruled by Sauron. The ring is just one of the weapons.
    • Also Mithril in the supplemental material, and the eponymous silmarils in The Silmarillion. And the dwarven treasure horde taken by Smaug in The Hobbit.
  • Pynvium in Janice Hardy's The Shifter can absorb pain. Its mines are important enough to fight over, but it's when the healers run out of it that the plot kicks in.

Live-Action TV

  • In the Star Trek universe, the Klingons and Federation sometimes fought over sources of dilithium crystals (e.g. the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Elaan of Troyius"). In Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, Scotty and Spock invent a way to "recycle" it with particles stolen from "nuclear wessels", thus making it less rare by the Next Generation era.
    • In an episode of Star Trek: Enterprise, a planet was raided for deuterium. The writers Did Not Do the Research... although given the existence of things like the Oklo natural nuclear reactors in Gabon, who's to say that there isn't some way the planet could have produced and/or received abnormally large amounts of heavy hydrogen?
    • In the first Star Trek Shatnerverse novel, Chekov and Uhura are engaged in an undercover operation and pretend to deal with a shady Klingon. He offers dilithium as payment. Chekov brushes him off, saying it's nearly worthless now, ever since the whole "nuclear wessels" discovery (i.e. ships can run forever on a single set of dilithium crystals without needing to replace them).
    • Somewhat bizarrely, in Star Trek: Voyager, the Kazon, an oxygen-breathing species traveling in hydrogen-powered ships, will kill, steal, or trade hostages for water. When he first arrives on the ship, Neelix seems similarly surprised by Alpha quadrant water technology.
      • That's mainly because the Kazon are Too Dumb to Live. The Borg refuse to assimilate them because of that.
  • A classic Doctor Who had one of these, in the episode "The Caves of Androzani". It was over spectrox, "the most valuable substance in the universe."

Music

  • "Roadkill (...or Be Killed)" by Steelwing:

The scavengers soon will rule
Waging war for a tank of fuel

Tabletop Games

  • Warhammer 40,000
    • Promethium (a catch-all term for oil-like flammable substances) is critical to the war machines of at least three factions - the Orks, the Imperium, and Chaos. Expect frequent conflicts over promethium mines and refineries, since the Imperium is the only group that bothers to build them instead of just stealing the stuff from everyone else.
    • The same goes for many natural resources, from less common ores to Nephium (a toxic exotic substance with variety of uses, mined on some planetoids) - in Rogue Trader had two strongest dynasties come to blows over a rich source of the latter until they had to settle on division.
    • The "Archeotech" (among the Human factions) and various more ancient artifacts (in general).
  • Dungeons & Dragons in various settings have a lot of wars in various settings over a local source of something valuable or trade route allowing access to it.
    • Dark Sun over... well, just about anything that can help to survive or give one an edge, from water sources to obsidian mines.
    • Forgotten Realms has Zhentarim trying to control trade over the whole continent, thus their fortified bases (like Darkhold) tend to sit in a spitting distance of some or other trade route.
    • Spelljammer has kindori fat used for e.g. lamps, and most Greek Fire made from it. As a result, kindori riders occasionally clash with space whalers; they collect and sell fat only when kindori die of natural causes, of course - the creatures that can carry a village don't reproduce like rabbits and are just too valuable.

Toys

  • The whole Bionicle story has its roots in the Core War, a massive world war over Energized Protodermis that emerged from the core of the planet, the unstable nature of which ended up splitting Spherus Magna into three.

Video Games

  • The Command & Conquer Tiberium series revolves around an alien crystal that's extremely rich in resources, leading to several Tiberium Wars fueled by or fought over the stuff. Of course, it's the fight against tiberium that's the real danger...
  • Humans fought a really big war over Imulsion in the Backstory to Gears of War, before the scary underground alien invasion.
  • "Ragnite" was one of the reasons behind the war in Valkyria Chronicles, with the player's small neutral country caught right in the middle due to its large natural deposits of it.
  • Tarydium in the Unreal series.
  • "Nectar" in Haze. Not in any way a stand-in for a certain other resource found in South America.
  • Practically inevitable in the later installments of Civilization if you want your faction to prosper, unless you get really lucky with city placement or allies. If you do not have era-appropriate strategic resources, expect to be invaded by other civilizations who do and consider you easy pickings. If you have era-appropriate strategic resources, expect to be invaded by other civilizations who do not have it and desperately want it. Either way, wars are almost certainly going to be fought over it.
  • Final Fantasy VII features the miracle substance Mako. Generated from the essences of creatures long-since dead and pumped from the ground, it has allowed the company controlling it to control world politics, and its overuse creates serious consequences for the planet... similar to a certain black substance that the people of Earth have been using for several decades with similar results. This certain black substance is later treated as a viable alternative to mako in Advent Children.
    • There's a bit in Shinra's headquarters where they have a set of advertisements for the line of cars that they make (represented during the opening FMV). The video clearly shows the engines of said cars using Mako in a way that is analogous to the use of the... distillates of the aforementioned black substance. (And "The Aforementioned Black Substance" would make a great band name.)
  • The Fallout series' backstory mentions conflicts over the world's dwindling oil reserves between the 2050's and 70's. The European Coalition invaded the Middle East once oil prices rose too high, though these Resource Wars ended suddenly once the last of the petroleum in the region was tapped out. With Alaska containing the last oil on the whole planet, China invaded America in a conflict that led to a global nuclear war, hence the game's post-apocalyptic setting.