Slap-On-The-Wrist Nuke

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

A Slap-On-The-Wrist Nuke is a powerful attack that is nonetheless far less damaging than it should be.

Partner in crime to the Overly-Long Fighting Animation, and with the help of cousins Made of Iron and Friendly Fireproof, this trope broke into Awesome but Impractical's house and stole the Awesome, but left the Impractical. You see, a Slap-On-The-Wrist Nuke is still a solid attack you'd gladly use on an enemy... it's just much, much less powerful than it ought to be, considering what it actually entails. When You Nuke'Em, you may find this diminishing your triumph, if only a little.

Using a Summon Magic Monster that destroys the moon to rain fiery Death From Above on enemies, or a Wave Motion Gun fueled by consuming Galaxies, and the nine hundred megaton Colony Drop that won't scorch your lawn but will disintegrate that Money Spider... only mildly damages the Final Boss. Also, expect any stellicidal attacks or planet busting techniques to be polite enough to rebuild the destroyed real estate after the CGI is done.

Explanatory rule of thumb: If dropping an asteroid the size of Russia on the Boss does less damage than slashing him once with the Infinity+1 Sword, which has the same animation as using the starting stick, you've fallen headlong into this trope.

Sometimes it's mostly because of programming issues. An attack may indeed be programmed to be powerful; but due to a problem with calculating the formula or some other factor, it's severely weakened.


Examples of Slap-On-The-Wrist Nuke include:

Video Game Examples

Fighting and Shooters

  • In Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi 2, a particularly strong attack will show an animation of half of the Earth exploding, and change the stage you're playing on to a "ruined" version - but will do 1 1/2 health bars of damage. Mind you, this is pretty much exactly how it happens in the series. The Budokai series did this, too but ultimate attacks were a bit harder to pull off, and only a handful of them did it. Tenkaichi 2 went a bit overboard as any energy blast ultimate would do it, as long as it hit the character while they were on the ground, or just hit the ground directly. Budokai Tenkaichi 3 had to tone it down a little by having this happen only once certain conditions are met.
  • Shadow Warrior is one of the few FPSs with nukes. Since the game is pretty silly to begin with, the nuke's ability to kill everything in the game's largest rooms is reasonably impressive.
  • Battle Tanx: Global Assault features a tactical nuke weapon whose blast wave will generally cover the entire level. Most tanks will be wiped out by the blast, however, the game's Mighty Glacier—the Goliath-class tank—can literally stand right on top of the nuke as it goes off, and it will survive with about a quarter of its health left.
    • Averted in Spiritual Successor War Jetz as the nuke WILL vaporize everybody within range at power levels 2 and 3. Drop it, turn, and RUN. Even then you'll sustain about half damage to a third damage if you didn't drop it from high enough.
  • Turok. All bosses shrug it off, though it does still do considerable damage. They just ACT as if they didn't feel it.
  • The Redeemer in the Unreal Tournament games is supposed to be a nuke, but its blast radius is only a few meters.
    • Its destructive power is about what you'd expect for anyone caught in it though.
  • Smoke's Finishing Move in Mortal Kombat 3 is made of this. He opens his chest and starts going Mad Bomber. Next shot is the Earthshattering Kaboom. And then? Next fight.
  • The Tactical Nuke in Modern Warfare 2. Getting a 25 killstreak in multiplayer with this equipped allows you to call in a nuclear warhead to end the match in your favor regardless of the current score. While it does kill every player on field regardless of team, the entire map remains intact and untouched.
    • Back again in Modern Warfare 3, this time called the M.O.A.B. (Mother of All Bombs). Unlike the Tactical Nuke, the M.O.A.B. only kills everyone on the opposing team upon detonation, as well as having an EMP-like effect on the other team for one minute and giving everything onscreen an orange tint. More importantly, it doesn't end the round, meaning everyone can still be fighting on a radioactive ground zero with everything intact.
  • Utsuho makes it literal. In her first appearance as the final boss of the 11th game, her signature bullet (Minisuns) were only more threatening than other bullets due to being much larger. They do not take multiple lives (fortunately.) In 12.3, they're damaging but (with the exception of Giga Flare for most charactesr) possible to avoid. They're not even the most powerful attack in the game. (but considering the most powerful attack is basically 7 hits to guaranteed victory....)
  • MDK has the "world's smallest nuclear bomb", which is used to open locked doors.
  • Fallout 3 introduces the Fat Man, which ballistically launches a miniature nuclear warhead that produces an explosion that a conventional explosive the size of a satchel charge could produce. But it mushrooms!

Real Time Strategy

  • The nukes in Command & Conquer always were relatively weak for nukes, but those in the first Red Alert game were the worst of the bunch, having barely enough yield to take out a pair of power plants and being unable to even completely destroy a Medium Tank with a direct hit. Seeing the white flash of a nuke in the Allied campaign though - your base just disappeared.
    • Averted in Tiberium Wars, wherein a nuke will obliterate half of the enemy base.
      • The Ion Cannon is also arguably an example. An FMV in the first game the thing destroys a small base, in actual gameplay it's nowhere nearly that powerful. Subverted with Tiberium Wars where it's as powerful as the nuke.
    • Also averted in Red Alert 2, where a single nuke destroys Chicago in a cutscene.
    • The Chinese in Command & Conquer: Generals, however, do have an explicit Slap On The Wrist Nuke: an artillery cannon, probably based on the M-338 Davy Crockett, that fires nuke shells. It counts more as a Wave Motion Gun that fires Abnormal Ammo, though.
    • China's superweapon in Generals is also surprisingly weak, given it's an ICBM launched nuke. It's weaker than the GLA toxin-laced Scud Storm, has a longer cool-down timer, and (unlike the Storm) requires power.
      • The GLA scud storm is arguably a case since the missiles do nowhere nearly as much damage as they should for their size.
    • In Command & Conquer: Renegade, nukes (fired only by placing a beacon and waiting 30 seconds) had a pitifully, ridiculously small radius of effect. The damage it did at the center was incredible, killing almost any object in the game with that shot, but you could be literally standing 10 feet away from the nuke and not get a scratch. This gets a pass, partly for balance reasons (as it's the counterpart to GDI's ion cannon), and partly because the default setup allows for 'pedestal victories' where placing the nuke in the GDI barracks automatically wiped out the GDI base.
    • Also played straight in the third of the sister series Emperor, Battle For Dune, where the Harkonnen family atomics are only enough to topple a single building. and irradiate the ground beneath it for a while.
  • Played straight in World in Conflict, where multiplayer nukes are underpowered compared to their real counterparts, even if they do kill anything in the large blast radius barring Mercy Invincibility and radiate the area. In the campaign, meanwhile, it is averted: Launching a single one is treated as toying with the fate of the planet. The chronologically next mission features bands of rabble in ruined or smoldering forests, with the last mission's location visible in the distance through the enormous cloud of black smoke as it's still on fire. Characters are horrified for the rest of the campaign.
  • Some of the spells in Defense of the Ancients are like this - even though they might take away a significant number of HP, from the spell descriptions there ought to be no way the target can survive.
  • Handwaved in StarCraft by the back story: the game's nukes are ridiculously underpowered because, when the Confederacy used full-sized nukes against the rebels in Korhal, they nuked the hell out of it until the entire planet became a smoking ball of glass, and the Confederacy only allowed the game's teeny-tiny little nukes ever since.
    • Not that it really matters when the Protoss do pretty much the same thing to sterilize Zerg-infested planets.
    • The nukes in the sequel, Star Craft 2, are even weaker. This is justified by them being easier to research and produce.
  • Played straight with the Allied nuclear strike in War Front Turning Point's alternate history WWII. Despite the nuke's magnificent visual effects, it is wide enough only to conflagrate a tight nest of buildings and leave a glowing slagpile. The earthquake bomb, however, topples more, but does little to infantry. German V-2s have a similar blast radius (albeit sans nuke-slag) and cannot be intercepted with anti-aircraft flak.
  • The Orbital Bombardment ability in the Dawn of War games, in which the Space Marine faction directs an orbiting Battle Barge/Strike Cruiser to fire its weapons on a target. The ability is impressive and can kill almost anything in one shot, even the bosses in the second game's campaign suffering tremendous damage, except the weapons of these vessels are known to take entire chunks out of planets (and can render a planet lifeless when enough vessels fire them at once), so it is incredibly implausible that anything survives at all, including the Space Marines that ordered it.
    • Considering that the Strike Cruiser and Battle Barge are optimized for orbital bombardment and are using their secondary weapons, they probably just turned they power down a bunch.
  • Hearts of Iron features nuclear weapons. To access them, one faction has to research enough technology to build a nuclear reactor to a high enough level to produce a bomb, and then one is automatically added to your stockpile once a certain amount of time passes (which decreases the more technology you invest into it). Nuclear weapons have the following effects: they destroy all enemy troops in a province; they cause an amount of dissent directly proportional to the target country depending on the population levels, industry, infrastructure, etc.; they completely deplete all improvement levels (infrastructure, industry, etc.) to 0% and make it so it takes years to repair. And that's it. There is no fallout, nuclear winter, global warming, or anything else. Troops that occupy a province that was just nuked suffer no ill effects. Furthermore, most provinces have such a low population that it's nuking them isn't effective enough to change anything. The best cities to nuke are state capitals and some high-population provinces in China, and that's it. While the no fallout may be excused when you consider this depicts early nuclear weapons in the WWII era, the technology tree allows you to advance and develop better nuclear weapons that existed in the Cold War, but the basic effects stay the same. Nukes also do not affect diplomacy when one would think they really should. Finally, not only can the AI not handle nuclear weapons, there is no concept of 'deterrence': a country without nukes is just as likely to attack a country with nukes as without.
  • Subverted in Total Annihilation and its Spiritual Successor Supreme Commander, where nukes are extremely destructive, though in the case of the former a single nuke is still a slap on the wrist because of how quickly a base can be rebuilt after being hit with one.

RPGs

  • Final Fantasy became rife with these as soon as the graphics got far enough along to show it:
    • Sephiroth's Supernova in Final Fantasy VII is by far the best-known offender, not the least because the SFX gets tedious. Blowing up most of the solar system and engulfing of the planet within the flames of a tortured sun does less damage to each individual character than getting poked with a knife by a Tonberry. It's based on a percentage of their current HP - there's no way it can possibly kill. The weirdest part? This attack can even miss, and Sephiroth can attack by destroying the entire solar system and everything in it more than once.
    • Given how deep underground the final dungeon is, summoning Bahamut ZERO while inside it (which results in a giant dragon appearing in space and doing an orbital bombardment of the enemy) should logically cause much more damage to the planet than Sephiroth's plot-based Meteor spell.
    • Another one would be Bahamut Fury's Exa Flare from Crisis Core. You'd think melting the moon and causing a dust cloud covering half the planet would do some terrain or ally damage... though to be fair it does regularly do 9,999 to all enemies.
    • The third form of Final Fantasy VIII's final boss, a fusion of Ultimecia and the "strongest GF", Griever, has an attack called Great Attractor. It shows the boss pulling planets from across the solar system to collide with the players, and yet they survive! Supposedly it also does relatively little damage.
    • Ark, from Final Fantasy IX, whose attack animation shows it creating a crater that appears to be at least a mile in diameter, deals damage approximately equal to Zidane's Ultima Weapon blade.
    • Any of the Aeons' overdrives in Final Fantasy X, but especially Ifrit's. Being engulfed in a fireball, raised twenty feet in the air, hit with a chunk of floor and then dropped from a great height should by all rights be an instant kill, to anything, rather than causing a moderately severe bruise.
      • Subverted by Sin, whose Giga Graviton attack blows off half the planet if it's unleashed, resulting in an immediate Game Over.
      • In the international version, one of Penance's attacks is "Tera Gravitron", which, logically, should be even stronger than Sin's Giga Gravitron. But, here, it only does percentage-based damage! His other "ultimate" spell, Judgment Day, isn't much better either, since you can avoid it by summoning an aeon, unlike Sin's attack, which is an instant game over.
    • Final Fantasy I has WarMECH and its ability "NUCLEAR". It seems like this ought to destroy the entire dungeon, but it doesn't, and the Light Warriors can survive it (if you've grinded enough). There's also the player-usable spell "NUKE" (retitled "Flare" in later editions) which is stated to work by teleporting in a piece of the sun. Unfortunately, because practically everything on the game has ridiculous levels of magic defence, it will typically do a lot less than your Knight or Master's standard attacks (and the latter is attacking with his bare fists!).
    • The Emperor's Starfall attack in Final Fantasy II, despite looking intimidating, has an utterly pathetic damage output since damage spread across the entire party or opposition in this game gets reduced by an incredibly large factor compared to single-target attacks.
    • Final Fantasy XII's Esper final attacks often fall into this category. They all have long elaborate movies that typically show the Espers creating all kinds of natural disasters such as tornadoes, tsunamis, a meteor from space, and even an ion canon. Zodiark gets the best though, since his final attack seems to be an explosion on the scale of the big bang. This vid shows them all being used against a single tiny wolf enemy. Espers themselves are basically useless in this game, and the summons nowhere near the amount of damage your regular party would deal in the same amount of time.
  • Final Fantasy Tactics and its GBA counterpart have summons that literally destroy the entire battlefield, but unless you were level grinding, the targets only suffer bruises in a few HP damage.
    • In Tactics, the Meteor spell is almost as large as the battlefield, while Ultima (angelic version) engulfs the entire battlefield in "absolute energy" and Divine Ultima's explosion radius would probably cover fields twenty five times their size. This, despite their actual effect range being 3, 3 and 4 panels, respectively.
  • Square Enix in general seems to like the trope. In The World Ends With You, all three of the Level Three fusions qualify. Shiki's summons a Godzilla like cat monster, Beat's summons a huge tsunami out of nowhere, and Joshua's drops the freaking moon on the battlefield. It's actually justified that it doesn't damage the real world, since the Fight Woosh took you to a different plane of existence—but then you want to know why the Noise plane was also unaffected.
  • Isaac's most powerful summon in Golden Sun, Judgment, is the apocalypse, but most bosses at that stage in the game shrug it off like nothing at all.
    • Same could be said for the Meteor summon. Also done with the final boss's most powerful attack in the sequel, but the damage seems to be random, though deadly most of time.
    • Also in Golden Sun: The most powerful summon in the game, Iris, attacks by throwing the enemies into the sun. Bosses still survive, while most standard enemies probably won't.
      • The same summon also had the ability to fully restore your HP AND revive fallen members, even though there was nothing showing it. How a Slap-On-The-Wrist Nuke can heal is beyond me.
    • In addition, the unleash of the game's most powerful weapon, the Sol Blade, drops a miniaturized sun on the enemy. This doesn't even do triple the damage of a normal attack with the weapon, which is just a sword swing...
      • And for extra fun, it's another reference to Armageddon.
  • The Fireball, Blizzard, Lightning Storm, and Earthquake spells (the last one in particular) in Dragon Age seem like they ought to cause a lot of collateral damage when used inside the rotting wooden shantytown of the Alienage in the latter part of the game, and Earthquake really ought to cause some complications underground of the collapsing tunnels sort in Orzammar.
  • In Xenogears, Fei's final spell, Big Bang, is nearly as over the top as it gets, apparently focusing a beam of chi through the gravity lens of a galaxy, and blowing the moon into tiny pieces every time it's used, and yet he can do much more damage by repeatedly punching and kicking the enemy.
  • 'Prophecy' from Skies of Arcadia drops a moon onto the planet. It deals less damage than the protagonist's last special attack and doesn't cause anywhere near the effects you'd expect.
    • There is also Galcian's special: Terminal, which involves him diving at you with his sword and destroying armada ships along the way and plunging the sword into you creating a large explosion that shakes the Hydra. The targeted character is unlikely to die from this.
  • Games made by Nippon Ichi tend to have plenty of these.
    • Also subverted in the original Disgaea. Don Joaqina's Galactic Power summons a meteor which is pathetically weak, and is accompanied by a sound affect which sounds something like "plop".
  • One character's ultimate attack in Chrono Cross is the destruction of the entire universe. It does do a lot of damage, though, even compared to a giant Venus Fly Trap or a tidal wave.
    • Chrono Trigger did it better, though. The final boss, Lavos, has an attack that, in cutscenes, destroys the planet (or at least takes a good chunk out of the biosphere and makes it nigh-uninhabitable). In battle, it does about 400 damage to each party member (with the HP cap set at 999, that's quite terrifying). However; this depends on your characters; own defenses - enter Lavos when you're severely underleveled and very undergeared and it'll deal a thousand.
  • The nuke powers from City of Heroes top tier Blast powers look like they'd be rather impressive, and canonical uses treat said powers as being impressively deadly. They're called nukes by players. They still won't kill a same-level minion on their own, though.
    • Not only do nearly all of these "nuke" powers consume all of your endurance to use them and have some of the longest recharge times in the games, they can also miss your foes completely and leave you exhausted and defenseless in the middle of a pack of angry foes.
      • The whole "use all your endurance and be useless for the next minute or two" is fine for a Blaster with a team backing him/her up, but for a Defender or Corruptor who is also there to buff, debuff, and heal could end up getting teammates killed by taking themselves out of action like that. Hence why the nuke powers are common on Blasters but often skipped by Defenders and Corruptors.
    • A little work in the Warburg zone can also earn you the (one-time, until you earn it again) ability to call down an actual nuclear missile. It makes a depressingly small explosion and isn't much more powerful than the aforementioned Blaster nukes, but it can still help out in a pinch.
  • Legend of Dragoon gives you the ability to summon dragons capable of dealing far more damage than any other single spell, but given the mana requirements only one of them is actually any better then spamming the next most powerful spell, or the non-magical dragoon additions. Hell even entering dragoon mode at all means you'll deal less damage than with your strongest regular additions. Some bosses even impose further penalties on the use of these powers. They are still the most visually impressive moves in the whole game though. Also, a select few bosses need the defense boosts of that dragoon mode gives to be even remotely beatable.
  • Certain powerful spells in Fire Emblem games, especially those used by late game bosses, tend to have impressive animations involving planets, black holes, six foot pillars of light and other such eye candy. However, even if after all that your opponent doesn't outright dodge it, it may or may not be fatal and is guaranteed to only affect one person on the entire battlefield at a time.
    • You know what's awesome? Rexflame in Radiant Dawn. Turn off animations, and you'll still see the river of freaking lava swallow up the entire screen, but the only thing hurt is the enemy you were aiming at. Singular.
  • Super Robot Wars is the absolute king of this. Generally, the more powerful an attack is, the more over the top the animation. This gets especially crazy for final bosses. Although those attacks all meant instant death for the target, keep in mind the final one did damage to exactly ONE individual. And not even more than your characters are capable. This tends to get even more outrageous because of skills that will make attacks deal 1/4 damage to you, have the next one deal only 10 damage to you, no matter what it is, or even miss entirely! Yes, the attack that destroys countless planets just to try and kill one mech can be made to deal a measly 10 damage. Or even miss. There is nothing more satisfying in gaming then this.
  • In the Might and Magic series, the nuke spell (also called Armageddon) will do tremendous damage to everything in the same area, including the caster, and will kill all civilians instantly. Due to engine limitations it has no effect on buildings and terrain though.
    • The spin-off Heroes of Might and Magic has the same spell, and the icon for the spell is even a mushroom cloud. Despite this, it's quite easy to get hit by it and only lose half your forces. (Oh, and it can't touch Dragons. Apparently dragon-scale is nuke-proof.)
  • Toyed with in the later Wizardry games. Nuclear Blast, the "ultimate" fire spell for the Thaumatergy school, is explicitly described as a miniature fusion bomb, and it does inflict an enormous amount of damage to every enemy present (the distinguishing trait of all the "nuke" spells) and can oftentimes instantly kill several enemies, but most higher-end enemies, or those resistant to fire, will shrug it off.
  • Phantasy Star IV features combination attacks that play this trope straight. One of them is even called "Holocaust," which tries to kill every enemy you're fighting. The most powerful combo is appropriately called "Destruction," and is basically a huge bomb. It's powerful enough that one of the characters in the combo has to cast a shield spell to protect the party, but it still can't break the damage limit.
  • In EVE Online, battleships fitted for Titan-killing can withstand a hit or two from the Doomsday weapons that Titans use. This has led to a Lensman Arms Race, where multiple Doomsdays are necessary to ensure the destruction of the enemy fleet. The current record is 16 Doomsdays fired in succession just to prove a point.
    • This will change in the next expansion. Doomsdays will become a single-target weapon, instead of affecting everything on-grid (within 250 km), and the only things that won't be one-shot are supercapital ships (and possibly regular capital ships, if specifically set up to take a doomsday). Of course, now there will still be lots of Titans firing Doomsdays at the same time to kill lots of things, but it'll be one per target.
  • One of the Limit Breaks available in Epic Battle Fantasy 3 is a Nuke that deals moderate damage to your enemies, a tiny bit to your party, and poisons everyone. Often, the poison will outdamage the nuke within two turns. The Nuke itself CAN deal ludicrous damage to enemies who are weak to fire, though.
    • Epic Battle Fantasy likes it a lot, in fact. Lance especially. Besides the aforementioned Nuke he also possesses an Ion Cannon which also plows through the ground, obliterating it with no damage to the party at all and only decent damage to enemies. Natalie herself is not one to be outdone. Her attacks include a massive beam of Holy power visible from space itself (pardonable, since it's Holy after all) and a BLACK HOLE which does deal heavy damage to all enemies and players with a chance to kill, but does not do what black holes are meant to do, which is destroying the world.
  • Monster Girl Quest has this on both the heroes' and villains' sides. Daystar apparently involves dropping a miniature star on the target, which then explodes. Late-game enemies can survive more than one Daystar. The final boss's Big Bang is supposedly capable of destroying the entire world, yet your characters can survive it.

Other

  • An odd example: the video game of Spider-Man 2 had a spinning pile driver attack that Spidey could pull on thugs. He could do this from any height, including from the top of the Empire State Building (provided he swung up this high, first). It would seldom kill any thug one shot, no matter how high you were.
  • Touhou Soccer. Earth-splitting attack animations just to score a goal.
  • In the Visual Novel Fate/stay night, one character possesses a sword said to be bound with the creation of the world. Its main attack is described as 'anti-world' in strength and thus presumably capable of destroying the world—except that whenever it is used, it never seems to do worse than knock the main characters around a bit and put a few dents in the local concrete. In fact, the only way it will ever kill you is you choose not to use Heroic Resolve to shrug it off.
    • Ea seems to have an adjustable destructive output depending on how much prana is put into the attack, and almost all of the times Gilgamesh uses it are in the Fate route, when he's trying to subdue -- not atomize -- Saber. When Gil uses it to more lethal effect in Hollow Ataraxia and Fate/Zero, Ea's usage rips holes in space-time, blows apart a pocket dimension, and massacres Alexander's army of heroic spirits with one shot.
  • Parodied in Psychonauts during the Kochamara boss battle. Before Kochamara attacks he charges up and shouts the name of the attack, as if he's ready to unleash the fury of Hell itself. Of course, with names like Overly Intricate Combination and Hard To Avoid Area Attack, you don't expect the end result to be very spectacular. And obviously, it isn't. Simply activating your shield saves you from any damage (which isn't a lot to begin with), not very dangerous.
  • In Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit (2010), getting hit with an EMP or a spike strip will not (normally) end the car that is hit. Not a nuke-power thing, but logically a car should not run with knocked out tyres/electronics.

Turn-Based Strategy

  • Though Nukes in Civilization games are incredibly powerful, heavily damaging things and trashing the landscape, in IV they can't kill anything with 100% certainty. This doesn't stop your computer rivals from scorning your name should you use them yourself, however.
    • Contrast with the ICBM in Civilization: Revolutions. It will completely destroy anything in the region it is launched at and all units adjacent to it. If used against a capital, it will destroy everything except for the Palace and one unit of population. On the other hand, only one can ever be built.
    • Probably because nuclear shelters and bunkers are buildable long before nukes hit the table; completing the Manhattan Project unlocks nuclear weapons for everyone, including your enemies. Therefore - if a nuclear war is inevitable - players will stall from building the Project and build up their defenses beforehand, significantly reducing the potential impact of nuclear weaponry when it does occur. On the other hand, throwing half a dozen nukes around will cause rampant global warming, rapidly terraforming random plains and grassland tiles into inhospitable desert tiles, and so on. The Fallout effect also reduces a tile's resource output until scrubbed by workers, so a city can suffer a gradual decline as an after effect even if it survives the initial attack.
    • Heavily averted in Alpha Centauri however. Planetbusters do exactly that, killing everything in a 1-16 square area, destroying land so water fills it in and destroying any cities caught in the blast radius. Also pisses the planet off immensely, expect the mind worm attacks to increase after every use. And oh, yeah, everyone declares war on you.
      • Technically, the use of planet busters is a Major Atrocity. The other factions ignoring it is possible, but requires revoking the UN Charter. Revoking it requires a majority vote of the Planetary Council. Even Brother Pravin Lal of the Peacekeepers, the alleged "ethical" member, can vote to revoke and may threaten the other faction leaders into voting this way, and may commit any atrocity before or after doing so. Strangely, a lower Integrity rating carries no unique consequences for Lal, who may then go on to achieve all victory conditions and just plain win the game. Maybe their Integrity ratings weren't that high to begin with.
  • Empire and its derivatives likewise have nukes kill everything in their blast radius, but cities are merely depopulated instead of being destroyed (the ability to destroy cities would be a Game Breaker, since cities can not be built, only captured).
  • In Advance Wars, Sturm's CO Power drops a meteor onto the field. This power can only drop a unit 5 HP, whether it's an infantry or a battleship, and it cannot kill a unit, only making it drop to 1.
    • Same in Advance Wars 2, and in Advance Wars 2 and Dual Strike there's the addition of giant cannons, lasers, and missiles that all have the same effect.
      • Also, in the final mission of 2, you can fail and let a doomsday missile be launched, but due to the game's Non Lethal KOs when losing, Sturm can drop the missile as many times as he wants and the world looks unscarred and the allied forces can just keep coming back.
  • Pokémon Battle Revolution turns Seismic Toss into this. While the other games had a more modest animation for this, Seismic Toss shows the opponent's Pokemon being thrown into space and colliding back into the ground. Despite such an animation, it's not very strong (it's level-based, meaning the best you can do with it is 100 damage). Here's an example of it.
    • In the handheld games, the move is described as throwing the Earth at the enemy.
    • In the main games, there are attacks like Earthquake and Surf, which are Exactly What It Says on the Tin and a tidal wave respectively, and are decent attacks, and can be used inside buildings and the like. Then we also have things like tearing through space or the wrath of God, in the same power range as the previous moves... or an explosive egg. Or Bug Buzz, the sound of buzzing of an insect's wings.
      • The move Incinerate sounds like a devastating Fire move, and its animations are similarly dazzling, but it's weaker than Tackle or Pound, two moves most Pokémon begin with.

Tabletop Games

  • In Dungeons & Dragons 3.5, there was a spell in an official Splatbook that basically ripped the target's entire circulatory system (other than its heart) out of its body (an a slightly higher level version that then used said veins and arteries to entangle nearby targets!) - and yet it did exactly half the target's hit points in damage. No more, no less. Funny, one would think losing your entire means of carrying blood to the brain, not to mention the rest of the body, would do a bit more damage than THAT.
    • One monster has an attack in which they reach inside you and claw out your lungs, dealing... 1d4 damage, which is on-par with what you take from a dagger wielded by someone with average strength.
  • Used constantly on a smaller scale in Warhammer 40,000 and its various adaptations, with weapons that should cause incredible amounts of damage, if not merely instantly killing the target, causing rather standard damage instead. A lot of the time it's justified by the target being equally incredibly resilient, but when Bolters (firing a .75 caliber rocket assisted shell meant to explode a split second after penetrating the target) is used against normal humans without them exploding it gets a bit puzzling.
  • The default nuclear weapon in the second edition of the superhero RPG Villains and Vigilantes does a mere 2d100 points of damage -- meaning even an unpowered normal can smother a nuclear explosion by jumping on the bomb and walk away under their own power afterward, if the die roll is low enough. And since the game has no rules for radiation poisoning or other side-effects, the raw hit-point damage is the only thing he'll suffer.
  • Thoroughly averted in GURPS, where nuke damage (at ground zero) is determined by rolling several six-sided dice and then multiplying the result by a million -- or more.

Web Animation

  • Mocked by Weebl and Bob in their Final Fantasy VII parody: The 'super special attack' drops the moon onto the planet, which itself causes three separate mushroom clouds from the explosion, and finally deals... 7 damage. To a random encounter.

Web Comics

  • In Adventurers!, the mostly flashy magic attack shatters the entire planet, the solar system, the galaxy, and even the game's CD. The damage is fairly good but far less than what those events would entail.
    • Also lampshaded in an earlier strip. "You'd think that destroying the entire planet would be more damaging..."
  • Spoofed in Flaky Pastry, where a ludicrously overpowered spell called Omega Murder Blast literally obliterates all terrain in a huge radius, annihilates whoever it was aimed at, but does not affect any other living creature in said huge radius because "it is a single-target spell".
  • Brawl in the Family demonstrates. "Gyarados used Hyper Beam!" [Colossal pillar of light visible on an intergalactic scale.] "Pidgey fainted!"