Sliding Scale of Realistic Versus Fantastic: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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*** ''[[Metal Gear]]''
*** ''[[Metal Gear]]''
*** ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion]]''. [[Twenty Minutes Into the Future]] plus forty meter tall [[Eldritch Abomination]] clones disguised as [[Humongous Mecha]] fit this category rather snugly. ''End of Evangelion'' and ''[[Rebuild of Evangelion]] 2.0'' however take it to the next level '''at minimum'''.
*** ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion]]''. [[Twenty Minutes Into the Future]] plus forty meter tall [[Eldritch Abomination]] clones disguised as [[Humongous Mecha]] fit this category rather snugly. ''End of Evangelion'' and ''[[Rebuild of Evangelion]] 2.0'' however take it to the next level '''at minimum'''.
*** ''[[Orions Arm]]'' borders unusual and fantastic. Everything in it is possible though, albeit just, within known physics.
*** ''[[Orion's Arm]]'' borders unusual and fantastic. Everything in it is possible though, albeit just, within known physics.
*** ''[[Pippi Longstocking]]'', only the title character (save her father to a lesser extent) does possess any fantastic abilities while the rest of the characters and the world in which they inhabit seem to be rather mundane.
*** ''[[Pippi Longstocking]]'', only the title character (save her father to a lesser extent) does possess any fantastic abilities while the rest of the characters and the world in which they inhabit seem to be rather mundane.
*** ''[[Pushing Daisies]]'' may fit here since aside from the protagonist's power to bring people [[Back From the Dead]], the world is generally realistic.
*** ''[[Pushing Daisies]]'' may fit here since aside from the protagonist's power to bring people [[Back From the Dead]], the world is generally realistic.

Revision as of 14:06, 7 June 2014

Just as the Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism determines the 'mood' of a series, this scale determines how much a particular series is unlike reality in relation to the natural laws, general conditions, and probabilities of Real Life. Stories also vary greatly in their realism concerning human behavior, but that trope has yet to be created.

There are cases where the writers believe in something which most of the audience consider unrealistic; these should be judged according to the audience' standards, for no one knows exactly what a writer believes. There are cases of Did Not Do the Research. If it's obviously deliberate laziness, the work deserves a place at the fantastic end, even if it's unintended.

There are also stories in which the precise cause of things is never delineated: both a naturalistic (positivist) and a supernatural explanation is possible.

Not to be confused with Mohs Scale of Science Fiction Hardness - a time-travel story with rigorous rules can be fairly Hard but decidedly Fantastic, for example. Sliding Scale of Like Reality Unless Noted charts the degree to which a work of fiction set in what is ostensibly a "modern", Earthly environment departs from Real Life.

A story's way of dealing with Back From the Dead can be a good indicator:

  • Mundane: Death is final. No one comes back from the dead.
  • Unrealistic: If anyone comes back, it's from Not Quite Dead or from improbably surviving events that should have killed them (but, of course, they Never Found the Body).
  • Unusual: People can outright come Back From the Dead, but it's a rare occurrence.
  • Fantastic: It's difficult and has certain requirements.
  • Surreal: The afterlife has a revolving door.

Some series can rank one or two steps up or down this basic scale.

Please list examples in alphabetical order.