Return to Shooter

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

A character is being shot at. Multiple rounds are fired, but this is a reality where superpowers and high-tech shields exist and the bullets are stopped mid-flight, hovering in their place. The bad guys with the guns all watch as the rounds slowly turn in the mid-air and then...

WHAM!

All the expended rounds do a 180 and are fired on the foe who made the shot. The character (often the hero) has some superpower in the form of telekinesis that can stop the ammo before it even comes close, and then (usually) uses it against the opponents.

A subtrope of Attack Reflector.

Compare Bullet Catch, Bullet Dodges You, Playing Tennis With the Boss.

Examples of Return to Shooter include:


Anime and Manga

Comic Books

  • Magneto does this a few times in X-Men.
  • Nikolai Dante's Huntsman 5000 would turn the bullet around to kill anyone who was not programmed to use it.

Film

  • A nice feature of the mech armor in District 9.
  • The Matrix has a scene like this near the end, where Neo stops the Agents' bullets after resurrecting as The One, except that the bullets simply fall to the ground after being stopped rather than being reflected at the enemy. Path of Neo allows you to do the same exact thing, with the added ability to send the collected bullets right back at targets.
  • In the TV movie, The Girl, the Gold Watch & Everything, a man inherits a gold pocket watch that can stop time for everyone but the person holding it. Someone shoots at him and he manages to stop time with the bullets in the air. He then turns the bullets to face the shooter, changes his mind about killing them, and turns the bullets to just miss everyone.
  • Lara Croft does this with a thrown knife in the first Tomb Raider movie.
  • Barf does a variant of this in Spaceballs, with the laser blasts entering a tube and looping around to hit their shooters.
  • In Shanghai Noon, Jackie Chan's character pulls a throwing tomahawk out of a tree and throws it at the Native Americans chasing him. One of them catches the tomahawk in mid-flight and continues the chase, to Jackie's dismay.

Live Action TV

  • Sylar gets two: once with glass, to find an invisible foe, and once with an actual gun in the season one finale.
    • He also does it in Volume 3 with a bullet fired at someone else.
  • Prudence from Charmed plays this 100% straight in episode 9 of season 2 "Ms. Hellfire"

Tabletop Games

  • The Tabletop RPG Champions implements this with the power Missile Reflection (which is an advanced form of the power Missile Deflection). An even more advanced form exists, it allows the possessor to aim an incoming ranged attack at any other target.
  • The 3.5 Dungeons and Dragons supplement the Expanded Psionics Handbook introduces a psionic feat call "Return Shot.
    • Epic level monks in 3.5 can take a feat that lets them hit magic spells so hard they turn around and hit the caster.
    • There's also the (rather underwhelming) Peripety epic spell.

Video Games

  • The central mechanic of the arcade game Giga Wing.
    • rRootage attempts to simulate this with GW Mode, but instead, catching a bullet fires a laser at the boss.
    • Mars Matrix has a similar mechanic. Instead of immediately reflecting the bullets, your ship absorbs them and can be aimed by moving in the opposite direction of where you want to fire them.
    • Also the most central mechanic in Siter Skain's RefleX.
  • The 360 port of Mushihime-sama Futari has Arrange Mode, which allows you to reflect bullets. Instead of hitting enemies, however, they rain showers of gems.
  • The ability of the protagonist from the game Ubersoldier, which adds some variety to what is otherwise a bog-standard first-person shooter.
  • Iji's Resonance Reflector serves this purpose when bouncing the shots from mooks back at them, and is ultimately useful for playing tennis with the final boss.

Web Animation

  • Jesus from Madness Combat uses this ability when he becomes the episode's main character.

Web Comics

  • In Eight Bit Theater Sarda uses some very creative portals and teleportations to move an entire swarm of arrows, and the person that shot them at him, several hundred miles away in such a way that the shooter winds up on the receiving end of the arrow barrage he just fired. See?

Real Life

  • A Real Life example: On Sept 21, 1956, an American F-11 Tiger jet shot itself down during a test firing of its cannon in a shallow dive. The bullets slowed down enough that the plane managed to catch up with them.