Quicksand Sucks: Difference between revisions

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Originally a movie serial and B-film device, this trope has been carried over to television by way of programs that mimicked or paid homage to those films, or to pulp fiction in general. Then it also moved to [[Video Games]]. This trope is pretty much a [[Discredited Trope]] nowadays, although the [[Shifting Sand Land]] of video games is [[Grandfather Clause|still allowed]] to [[Undead Horse Trope|play it straight]], as a gameplay challenge if nothing else.
 
See also [[Sand Is Water]], [[Mucking in the Mud]], [[Swamps Are Evil]], and [[Bubblegloop Swamp]]... Also compare [[Unrealistic Black HoleHoles Suck]] because both black holes and quicksand are portrayed in media as pulling in anything nearby whereas both only consume things which have gotten too close in the first place.
 
{{examples}}
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* A scene of this happens in episode 5 of ''[[Deltora Quest]]''.
* A scene of this happens in episode 8 of a forgotten anime known as ''[[Fortune Quest L]]''.
* Sir Crocodile's "Desert Girasole" attack in ''[[One Piece]]'' involves him using his sand-controlling powers to create a giant whirlpool of quicksand. He does explain, however, that he's tapping into an underground water source to do this, and he's never seen doing it outside of a desert.
 
 
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* In ''[[The Mummy Trilogy|The Mummy]]'', a biplane sinks into a pit of quicksand... in the middle of a desert. The protagonists stand atop a dune and solemnly watch it sink. The sequence takes so long that it's hard to tell if it's [[Lampshade Hanging|Lampshading]] its own absurdity or just deathly oblivious to it.
** The same thing happened in [[Mad Max]]: Beyond Thunderdome, at least the desert-quicksand part.
*** It wasn't really quicksand, more of a sand pit, but it still sucked them in.
*** It's supposed to be a pothole with sand packed on top of it.
* ''[[Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull]]'' provides a [[Hand Wave]] for the inaccurate depiction by having Indy explain that what he and Marion are sinking into is not actually quicksand, but some sort of collapsing dry sand pit.
* ''[[Tank Girl]]''. A non-liquid version: the dust/sand covering the Rippers' subgates.
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== Literature ==
* Nick Cave's novel ''And The Ass Saw The Angel'' uses this as a framing device. The narrator recounts his story while sinking into a bog. The unlikelihood of this contingency is easy to swallow compared to some of the other stuff we're [[Magic Realism|asked to believe]], or [[Through the Eyes of Madness|asked not to believe]].
* During a stint of being [[Reassigned to Antarctica]] [[Vorkosigan Saga|Miles Vorkosigan]] runs across a nasty arctic version called a "Permofrost Inversion Zone"; this appears to be solid ground, but has the potentially lethal property of unexpectedly thawing into a gooey sea of mud. Miles manages to sink an entire "scat-cat" (a kind of arctic all-terrain jeep) in one after he parks on top of it rather than try to drive back to base at night, and very nearly dies because he chained his tent to it.
* In the [[Known Space]] stories of [[Larry Niven]] some areas of Mars have sand that is so fine that it essentially is a liquid and people can sink in it.
* Many older science fiction stories portrayed the Moon as having areas very fine dust that functioned like quicksand, ''A Fall of Moondust'' by [[Arthur C. Clarke]] being a good example.
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== Live-Action TV ==
* ''[[Tales of the Gold Monkey]]''
* This trope has been [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6BhVebTMiiY disproved] by the ''[[Myth BustersMythBusters]]''.
** And disproved earlier by ''[[Bill Nye the Science Guy]]''.
* Even [[Power Rangers]] has used this, a couple times over the years. "Ninja Quest" in season three, and "Fire Heart" in Mystic Force.
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== Tabletop Games ==
* ''[[Dungeons and& Dragons]]''
** Supplement I13 ''Adventure Pack I'', adventure "The Weird Woods of Baron Orchid". Several patches occur near a lake.
** Adventure Q1 ''Queen of the Demonweb Pits''. One of the rooms in Lolth's spider ship has a quicksand floor to trap unwary party members.
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** There's also a middle type that sucks Mario in quickly but not instantly. It's the most common type.
** Of course, quicksand first appeared in the Mario series in ''Mario 2'', probably one of the elements borrowed from its source material ''Doki Doki Panic''. At least one hidden area involved going through quicksand.
** And again in ''[[Super Mario Bros 3]]'' and ''[[New Super Mario Bros. Wii]]''.
** Subverted in ''Mario Teaches Typing 2.'' During a cutscene, Mario and Luigi fall through a hole in a bridge and are saved by a pool of quicksand below.
* ''Super [[Metroid]]'''s many quicksand pools present no danger at all, because Samus wears a sealed space suit and can't drown. If you don't feel like jumping out, you can sink all the way in and walk around on the bottom. In a few places this allows access to new areas.
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** In ''[[Skyward Sword]]'', Link can keep from getting sucked into the quicksand of Lanayru Desert if he [[Videogame Dashing|sprints across it]]. Also, the Timeshift Stones can change it back into the solid, grass-covered ground it once was [[Before the Dark Times]].
* Subverted in ''[[Banjo-Kazooie|Banjo-Tooie]]''. While there is quicksand in Mayahem Temple and Terrydactyland, it doesn't pull you down, the Dragundas living in it do, then spit you back onto solid ground. The wading boots are used to cross the quicksand. The Dragundas are also in Grunty Industries' toxic waste and polluted water.
* Used in an absolutely laughable manner in the [[Sonic the Hedgehog (2006 (video game)||Sonic the Hedgehog 2006]] game. Wherever sand appears, expect it to be quicksand. And if you fall in? You fall straight through like there's nothing there. In other words, another [[Bottomless Pit]] in disguise, much like water in that game.
* Appears in ''[[Toejam and Earl]]'' which makes the protagonists start sinking and move slower. The sand also resembles a desert, complete with [[All Deserts Have Cacti|cacti]].
* Used rather realistically (given the medium) in ''[[Sonic 3 and Knuckles]]''. In Sandopolis Zone (and the 2-player mode Desert Palace level), quicksand would slowly pull the character under but it could be escaped by jumping properly. Marble Garden Zone also featured surfaces that acted the same way, but looked like black water.
* In ''[[Mega Man X Command Mission]]'', one character falls into a quicksand trap, which pulls him and his two friends down into it. Which wouldn't make sense in the first place, but made even worse by the fact that all three are ''super-strong reploids'' that could have easily pulled themselves out (especially since one was still on firm ground). They even treat it like it's deadly, despite the fact they don't even need to breathe and would, at worst, just be stuck.
* In ''[[Mega Man (video game)|Mega Man]] 10'', Commando Man's level has Mega Man rushing through quicksand pits. Although he can move and shoot normally in them, even completely buried, he needs to jump to exit it, and if he's dragged to the bottom of the screen, he dies as if he had fallen in a bottomless pit.
** ''4'' has it as well.
* [[Ratchet and Clank]] has the planet Aridia, a desert planet with massive LAKES of quicksand. You can hop out, but only three times before you sink, for whatever reason.
* It doesn't pose a direct hazard to your player characters, but [[Final Fantasy VII|Corel Prison]] is described as "a natural prison in the middle of the desert... surrounded entirely by quicksand."
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* Shows up in ''[[Survival of the Fittest]]'', where it's used to kill both {{spoiler|Melina Frost}} and {{spoiler|Beth Vandelinder}}, one getting stuck in the sand long enough to be stabbed, the other being pulled in head first and drowned.
* [http://www.homestarrunner.com/answer14.html This] [[Homestar Runner]] cartoon involves Homestar making this type of overestimation, as applies to a sandbox crudely labeled "QUiCK SAnD". "If you have any vines or roots you can toss my way, I would be really, ''really'' still alive."
* [[Ninjai: The Little Ninja]] has the [[Big Bad]] leave people to sink in a "swamp" which, despite being explicitly referred to as quicksand, seems to be a very stick, viscous fluid.
 
 
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* Duke falls into a pit of quicksand while escaping from Cobra in an episode of ''[[G.I. Joe]]'' and goes in over his head in a matter of seconds.
* Happens in the form of dry desert quicksand ''[[The Transformers (animation)|The Transformers]]'' episode "Countdown to Extinction".
* Happened to the whole cast of [[Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends]]. They were rescued by BEES. A bit perplexing, even if you DO accept imaginary beings springing into life for no explained reason.
** The ending of the episode implied it was [[All Just a Dream]], with the whole camping trip being imaginary, but, possibly, [[Your Mind Makes It Real]]. Not that that makes it any less perplexing, as imagination, despite its life-giving powers in the setting, was never shown to have power to that degree before or since.
* ''[[Max Steel]]'' both plays this straight and partially subverts it. In season two, Max and Berto walk in to quicksand and start sinking, having to use a vine to pull themselves out. In season three, Berto and Kat walk in to quicksand; however, Berto says that the human body is lighter and they manage to swim out of it.
* Happens two different times in [[Totally Spies!]].
* Crossing the line between [[Did Not Do the Research]] and [[Rule of Cool]], the [[Recycled: the Series]] of ''[[The Little Mermaid]]'' had ''underwater'' quicksand.
* Catwoman leaves [[Batman]] and Robin in a quicksand [[Death Trap]] in the Filmation series episode "The Nine Lives of Batman".
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* [[Subverted Trope|Subverted]] harshly in [[Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy|Ed Edd & Eddy's Big Picture Show]]. Ed and Eddy at first appear to be sinking in quicksand, and appear to die as Edd attempts to save them. However, as Edd mourns their deaths, it turns out it was [[Kick the Dog|just a joke that Ed and Eddy played on him.]] Naturally, Edd gets [[Screw This, I'm Outta Here|pissed off at the two and immediately leaves them to return to the cul-de-sac,]] [[Lesser of Two Evils|preferring to be punished by the kids for]] [[Noodle Incident|the scam that backfired and sent them on the run in to first place]] rather then continue on the journey with [[Jerkass|Ed and Eddy]].
* [[Aladdin (Disney film)|Mozenrath's]] Black Sand. The heroes didn't even have to step in it, it ''reached out'' to suck them in, an act that was, in one episode, disturbingly referred to as ''eating''.
* In ''[[Scooby -Doo on Zombie Island]]'', the gang loses footage of all the paranormal things they witnessed after their camera falls into quicksand.
 
 
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*** That's why gravel traps are so common at racing circuits. No matter if a car that goes screaming off the tarmac is doing it forwards, backwards or sideways, loose sand and gravel stop it up since the vehicle digs into the gravel, pulling itself in and creating resistance. However, since this also tends to ruin the underbody and wheels of a car, another option that's become popular in recent years is to create a large tarmac runoff area so a driver can recover from a loss of control or error in judgment and quickly rejoin the race. On cars with slicks, especially light ones such as [[Formula One]] cars, they're so grippy that gravel traps actually cause ''more'' slippage in comparison.
* An interesting article on the rise and fall of this trope (it's now [[Discredited Trope|discredited]]) can be found [http://www.slate.com/id/2264312/ here].
** Alan Davies, incidentally, laments the decline of quicksand in a recent episode of ''[[QI]]''.
* Non-Newtonian fluids behave in a similar way; they are so viscous that if a great deal of force is applied to them in a brief time, they behave like solids, but if the same force is applied slower it will allow it to pass through. It can be very difficult to get something out from being trapped in a pool of a non-Newtonian fluid.
* Soil liquefaction, a rare phenomenon associated with earthquakes, can cause water-saturated sandy ground to temporarily turn so slippery and unstable that it becomes too weak to support buildings' foundations.
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[[Category:Action Adventure Tropes]]
[[Category:Discredited Trope]]
[[Category:Quicksand Sucks]]
[[Category:Tropes Examined by the Mythbusters]]
[[Category:Quicksand Sucks{{PAGENAME}}]]