Rewarding Inactivity

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"A strange game. The only winning move is not to play. How about a nice game of chess?"
JOSHUA, WarGames

Some games reward a character for not tackling the challenge in front of them. This could be a form of Dynamic Difficulty, where the player is given an advantage if they haven't managed to overcome an obstacle after a certain amount of time, or may be a solution to a puzzle. In some cases, especially with MMORPGs, they actually reward you for logging off entirely!

One unusual application of this idea is the Automatic Level: do nothing, and it plays itself out.

Related to Just Ignore It. Compare Sheathe Your Sword for the Puzzle Boss version of this.

Examples of Rewarding Inactivity include:


  • One of the hidden paths in Wario Land 2 requires you to have Wario sleep in, by simply not pressing a button to wake him up at the start of the first level. After a few minutes, the stage ends and you get the new story.
    • One of the microgame themes in Wario Ware Touched uses the DS' microphone and simply require you not to make a detectable noise for a few seconds.
    • Wario Ware Twisted! also featured a microgame where you weren't supposed to create any input through the motion sensor. This is hard when it comes up in a normal game, but easy to do in the dedicated album mode (just set the console down for a few minutes).
    • In the Wario Ware stage on Super Smash Bros.. Brawl, one of the microgames that may pop up is to stand still and do nothing. However, stomping over this trope with steel-shod boots it's sometimes better to suck down any punishment handed out for failing the Microgame... By landing some seriously heavy hits on your static opponents. Falcon PAWNCH!
      • The AI will actually try to follow the do nothing rule, unless you attack them.
  • Suikoden II, Dark Forces: Mysteries Of The Sith, Oblivion, and Xenogears all feature fights where you're supposed to do nothing but defend until your opponent gives up. Fighting back results in failure (or blocking off the best ending).
  • A common Secret Test of Character in some games involves the hero being given a morally dubious task. If he refuses to do it, he passes the test.
  • In Final Fantasy IV, this is how you get Cecil's class change.
    • In the Game Boy Advance re-release, Cecil is given some extra Paladin tasks to do in the Bonus Dungeon. One of them is standing guard in front of a door. No matter what kind of interesting, profitable, threatening or otherwise just plain funky things happen in front of you, you fail the quest if you step away.
  • In Final Fantasy V, one of the boss battles is Gogo the mimic who performs whatever attack you do. To win, you have to do nothing. For extra pressure to attack, the battle also takes place after an underwater dungeon with a time limit which continues counting down during the boss battle...
  • In Final Fantasy XI, the quest to obtain the ranger job requires you to deal with the Old Sabertooth... by simply waiting for it to die. You can kill it, and it isn't even particularly hard, but it has to be allowed to die peacefully of old age for you to actually complete the quest.
  • There's the famous example from EarthBound where you have to stand motionless in front of a waterfall for three minutes to proceed.
    • In this one LP of the game on Youtube, when the player got up to that part of the game, the video description said it all: "Three minutes of nothing. Now is the time to make yourself a sandwich."
  • In Escape from Monkey Island, you face a boss whose health regenerates too quickly for you to defeat him, while your own heath regenerates too quickly for him to defeat you. The only way to win is to get a tie (the fight is like rock-paper-scissors) three times in a row—it's been established earlier that three ties in a row will cause your opponent to clasp his head in annoyance, and when this boss does the same, it crushes the thing on its head controlling it and making it attack you.
  • For some Pokémon, choosing not to evolve at the "normal" times opens up new avenues of possibility. Pokemon earlier in an evolution line learn moves earlier, or learn moves that later evolutions can't learn at all.
  • In Quest for Glory II, if you pass the test to get into the Wizard's Institute of Technology, the game will ask you if you accept the invitation to become a member. If you accept, you get a game over because you have ignored your duties as a hero. If you decline, Erasmus rewards you by giving you the Reversal spell.
  • There was a brilliant FoxTrot comic a while back in which Jason was trying to figure out how to beat this huge boss in a video game, and it turned out all that was necessary was to walk past it. Hilarity ensued.
    • The really hilarious thing was that PAIGE had "beaten" it when he was away and he spent several strips begging her to tell him how.
  • Landstalker has this for a crypt puzzle. A bunch of monsters drop down and the way to solve the puzzle is to just stand there. The monsters won't attack you if you don't move. It can be a very frustrating puzzle as the player is pretty much trained to attack all monsters on sight and not to let them approach you.
  • The developers of City of Heroes added "day job rewards" as an Anti-Poopsocking measure. When you log off in certain areas of the game, you gain a temporary power. The longer you are logged off there, the better the power.
    • City of Heroes also features several badges that are rewards for basically just being in a particular zone for a long enough time. It's possible to acquire those badges just by entering the zone, finding a safe spot, and walking away from your computer.
    • Similarly, World of Warcraft gives you a temporary experience bonus for logging off in an inn or allied city.
  • There's a segment in Chrono Cross, while infiltrating an enemy base, where someone asks you for a password and a list of choices pops up. The correct answer is silence - leave it alone for a few seconds and they'll let you in.
  • Similarly, in Sakura Taisen you frequently have to choose from a list of three things you can make your character say, and in several cases the best choice is actually to say none of them.
  • Chrono Trigger does this. At one point you're locked in a cell, awaiting execution. You can bait the guards into attacking you, beat them (they were stupid enough to leave you your weapon), and escape by fighting your way though the dungeon. Alternatively, you can wait in your cell quietly until the time for your scheduled execution arrives and be escorted to a guillotine. At which point one of your friends comes to bust you out, which means you have two characters to explore the dungeon with. Or if you feel that you don't need any of the items you can find there, you can just pretty much walk to the exit that's literally 2 rooms away and fight the next boss.
  • This is how you get one of the Secret Stars in Braid. You have to spend two hours waiting for a cloud to move across the level.
  • In the original Prince of Persia, to beat the Shadow Prince (or whatever he was called) when he attacked you, you had to sheath your sword.
  • The only way to open one of the locked corridors in The Guardian Legend is to wait for a specified amount of time.
  • In the videogame version of Monty Python's The Meaning of Life, the only way to get the Plot Coupon in the Japanese rock garden is to do nothing. Twice.
  • Lost Odyssey includes a battle in which the Big Bad turns one of your own party members into a People Puppet and forces him to attack you. There's no way to break the villain's control, and killing your friend results in an immediate Game Over, so the only option is to simply not act.
  • In the breakout game Ricochet (one of the earlier versions) there was a level that played itself out perfectly if you simply released the ball without moving the ship. If you changed the position of the ship at all before releasing the ball, you had to play the whole screen yourself, and probably wouldn't get all of the blocks.
  • Myst: Uru: Path of the Shell takes this trope to an Egregious level; you have to stand your character in a particular light, unmoving, for 15 minutes.
  • A Half Life mod Half Quake Amen had a part where you have to wait in some place that's supposed to be a train station of sorts for about 20 minutes. Appropriately enough, the said part is called Patience.
  • Required in one part of Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story. You have to simply wait until Bowser's back is healed before proceeding. The game even suggests that you enjoy a cup of tea while doing so.
  • Unintentionally introduced in Team Fortress 2 with Randomly Drops. The game (currently) has no way of telling if the player is actually, well, playing. This spawned a plethora of idling servers with small maps designed to prevent the afk-measures so the player can then minimize the game and do whatever else he wants while still enjoying the same chance to get new items as an active player.
  • One quest in Oblivion requires you to prove that you're peaceful by not fighting a giant bear that appears to you. You may need to run from it for a bit, though.
  • There's this section in The Legend of Zelda Phantom Hourglass where you have to close the DS to put the location of an important key on your map. The instructions are very unclear, however, leading many players to close the DS and give up. When they opened the DS again, the mark is now on the map!
  • In The World Ends With You, there are three types of XP used to level up pins (basically spells/attacks): Battle, Shutdown, and Mingle. The latter two can only be acquired by not playing the game, and since some pins require them to evolve, if you want 100% completion you'll have to stop playing at some point.
  • In Mario Adventure, a notable hack of Super Mario Bros 3, a few of the levels in Desert Dares (World 7) asks you to survive for about 30 seconds in a single-screen level with a Wakitu (a Lakitu that drops bombs instead of spines). One in particular seems impossible, until...
  • The Easy-difficulty CPUs in Mario Party games will sometimes make your job very easy. A rather impressive demonstration can be seen here.
  • This is the entire premise of Don't Shoot The Puppy.
  • You can beat one of the bosses, The End, in Metal Gear Solid 3 by just leaving the game for a week.
  • In Tales of Symphonia, one of Genis' "Dependent" title is obtained by finishing a battle with him doing absolutely nothing.
  • The entire concept behind IdleRPG, a game on IRC servers where the number of seconds you idle translate into Experience Points and levels. You actually get punished for taking any kind of action, such as speaking in the IdleRPG channel.
  • In Dawn of War, the Bloodthirster Greater Daemon takes persistent damage whenever it isn't engaged in close combat! In the campaign mode, because of the 'Thirster's rather boneheaded AI, all you need to do to kill it is to have it chase one unit in a circle while another unit opens fire, and wait for it to crumble away. Seriously.
    • No small surprise, but Daemon Prince Sindrii, though incapable of flight, is not nearly as stupid (considering that he was a Manipulative Bastard even when he was a mere mortal), and will lash out with various area-of-effect attacks if you try to pull that crap on him. "PATHETIC CREATURES!!!"
  • In Harvest Moon: Magical Melody, you acquire the Stationary Note by simply standing still for a minute.
  • One of the achievements for "The Saboteur" is for Sean to smoke fifty cigarettes. You can make him smoke by clicking the thumbstick, but Sean will light up if he's idle for a moment, so you can put the controller down and walk away for an hour.
  • A Sega Genesis Barney game had Barney complete the level himself if you didn't touch anything for awhile.
  • Portal 2 has an achievement for doing nothing in one of Wheatley's test chambers.
  • In Dark Forces: Mysteries of the Sith, the only way to beat Kyle Katarn is for Mara to disengage her lightsaber. There is a painting behind her that hints specifically at that.
  • In Sword of the Stars, it is inadvisable to destroy Von Neumann ships, as this leads to attacks by the more powerful Berserkers.
  • In The Sims Medieval you can actually take quests from Silver to Gold or Gold to Platinum by waiting a while between quest tasks, so long as all the Sims doing the quest have high Focus. Waiting too long gives you reminders that you're behind on your quest, the last one being "Dangerously Behind on Quest" which actually takes focus away, but waiting almost an entire in-game day does nothing but increase the Performance Meter.