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{{trope}}
[[File:xkcd_693_-_Childrens_Fantasy_-_I_was_going_to_be_a_scientist_but_that_seems_silly_now_7654.png|link=Xkcd
{{quote|'''Arak:''' No more executions, torture, nothing.<br />
'''Etta:''' It's all changed. We're free.<br />
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* ''[[Gundam Wing]]'' does this in [[The Movie]] ''Endless Waltz''. Most of the pilots find normal lives after the war & seem to be enjoying themselves, but [[Arrogant Kung Fu Guy]] Wu Fei can't find meaning in his life without battles and ends up joining a rebel group so he can help start a new war. Post-Movie he joins the Preventers, an organization dedicated to stopping wars from breaking out in the first place.
* Kurau's human half in ''[[Kurau Phantom Memory]]'' has fond memories of the time she was taken over by her Rynax entity, but comes to terms with the fact that it is all over now.
* ''[[
* ''[[Tenchi Muyo!|Tenchi Universe]]'', as shown in the quote above, begins like this in a [[How We Got Here]] fashion, as Tenchi remembers the days before. {{spoiler|But when we catch back up in the final episode, Ryoko is there waiting for him, and tells him that, although carnivals do end, they eventually return. Cut to various scenes showing that the rest of the girls are already on their way back too.}} And this all leads straight into [[The Movie]]...
* Happens to {{spoiler|Simon}} from ''[[Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann]]'': after finally destroying the Anti-Spirals and bringing peace to the Universe, he puts on his cape, says goodbye, and spends the rest of his days [[Walking the Earth]]. {{spoiler|We then see him as a 40-something traveller helping a kid open a coconut with his drill key; the kid is all surprised with Simon's drilling skills, he calmly says "Of course, kid, who the hell do you think... (kid ignore him) Forget it, I'm just a nobody". Then we see the kid and Simon looking at the horizon as the Gurren Lagann is launched to outer space}}.
* Twisted in Saikoroshi-hen (Dice Killing Chapter), a bonus chapter for the ''[[Higurashi no Naku Koro
* After episode 5 of ''[[FLCL]]'', Haruko and Canti leave Mabase, and life for Naota briefly returns to normal. Naota is rather glad to have Haruko back in episode 6, well in time for the climactic showdown and the series' explosive finale.
* In the ending of both the anime and manga of ''[[Tokyo Mew Mew]]'', everyone seems to have returned to normal permanently. Their marks have disappeared, they can't talk to animals, and Ichigo stops turning into a [[Catgirl]]. Then one day, depending which version you're watching, either Ichigo's cat ears reappear just as Berii looks in the window or the girls are informed that their powers have returned and there's a new enemy to fight.
* Happens to ''[[Yu Yu Hakusho]]'' protagonist Yusuke after his final battles with Toguro and Sensui. Kuwabara smacked him for it. {{spoiler|When you consider that he had to fake his own death before Yusuke could find the motivation to defeat Toguro (AFTER he killed [[Old Master]] Genkai, mind), it's understandable.}}
* This is a major point of contention between ''[[Rurouni Kenshin]]'' and many of his antagonists. Unlike them, he's willing to settle for an ordinary life. Kenshin, for one, ends his adventure by {{spoiler|[[Happily Married|marrying Kaoru]] and [[Babies Ever After|having a child with her.]]}}
* ''[[Hime Chen! Otogi Chikku Idol Lilpri]]'' the girls transformation bracelets are taken away and the mapets return to Fairyland along with Wish after they save Fairyland. They're pretty bummed about it. In the end however Wish returns to Earth saying he liked being an Idol and the final shot shows the mapets sneaking up on the girls from behind.
== Comic Books ==
* ''[[Nextwave]]'' ends with the titular squad's members asking each other what they should do now that they've defeated the H.A.T.E organization, as they stand on the top of its former mothership. Monica's answer, {{spoiler|after she realizes the mothership is still ''fully operational'': "Anything we want."}}
* This is how the story ended for Link in the ''[[The Legend of Zelda (
* In the [[Marvel Universe]], Richard Rider aka Nova went through this situation when he choose to give up his powers to leave the planet Xandar to return home. As it happens, his life was completely ruined with a disrupted education, dead end jobs and no future. At best, Rider tried to live as best he can while wishing with all his heart that he could get the powers back and become a superhero again. Unfortunately, the planet Xandar was destroyed later, which seemed to mean that any chance of Rider [[Re-Power|getting repowered]] was gone forever. However, Night Thrasher, wanting a [[Flying Brick]] for his planned superhero team, deduced that there might be a way through a [[Die or Fly|high stress situation]]. To do so, Night Thrasher abducts Rider, drops him off a roof and sure enough, Rider's powers reignite before he hits the ground. Naturally, Rider overjoyed at this and even though he didn't care for the fact that Night Thrasher didn't know if his plan would work, Rider still owes him big time.
* The ending of Mark Waid's [[Empire]]. Golgoth has succeeded in conquering the world and {{spoiler|killed his daughter and his only friend}}. Now what?
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** The movie ''Rumor Has It'' is about the main character's discovery that ''The Graduate'' was based on her mother and grandmother's life.
** Heck, the whole movie could be seen as post-college "what do I do now" on the part of Ben Braddock.
* [[Jim Henson]]'s ''[[
* ''[[The Proposition]]''. Charlie didn't enjoy his adventure, but the ending just screams of indeterminacy. It doesn't help that {{spoiler|both his brothers, including the one he'd set out to save, are dead}}.
* The gangster spoof ''[[Johnny Dangerously]]'' has a [[Framing Device]] of the title character as a pet store owner, seemingly retired from his life of crime, and telling the story of his life to a kid--complete with [[The Aesop]] of "crime doesn't pay." Then a limo pulls up, and he remarks "Well, it paid a little..."
* In [[Prince Caspian]] Peter in particular is none too happy to be a young teen dealing with stupid schoolboys again, as opposed to a full-grown man and a king.
* Almost happened to Inigo in ''[[The Princess Bride (
* Kind of a central theme in [[The Hurt Locker]].
* Cheerfully averted in [[The Last Starfighter]].
* In ''[[L
* Subverted in Disney/Pixar's ''[[Up (
* [[The Stinger]] of ''[[
== Literature ==
* At the end of book three of ''Secret of the Unicorn Queen'', Sheila gets to go home. By page two of book four, she's decided she can't focus on algebra and baseball, or her "normal life", so she goes back.
* The soldiers in ''[[All Quiet
* In [[Dan Abnett]]'s [[
* The last of Bernard Cornwell's ''Sharpe'' books has this as a central theme; after a quarter of a century of bloody warfare, Europe is finally at peace - and the world is full of old soldiers who have done nothing but fight their entire adult lives. Many of them have come to enjoy it. So what next? Two solutions are presented; you can either head for South America and join the first rebellion you come across, or you can do what Sharpe does and walk away.
** The TV series solves the problem by sending him to India.
* At the end of E.R. Eddison's ''[[
* Last line of [[Alan Dean Foster]]'s ''[[Humanx Commonwealth|Flinx Transcendent]]'' -- {{spoiler|'''Flinx:''' "I'm bored."}}
* [[Neil Gaiman]]'s ''[[Neverwhere]]''. He gets to go back to the [[Magical Land]], though.
** The whole book revolves around the idea that the price of getting what you want is getting what you wanted.
* Norton Juster's book (and the cartoon based off of said book) ''[[The Phantom Tollbooth]]'' ends with Milo returning home. The next day, after school, he rushes back home to return to the tollbooth... and finds it's disappeared. In its place is a note saying it's moved on to the next kid that needs a dose of the fantastic, but that Milo knows how to find it. (Presumably this means his imagination.) After a moment's thought, he smiles and admits he does know how... and he doesn't need to go back just yet, there's so much to do where he is now!
* In the novel series ''[[
* Captain Vimes from the City Watch novels in the ''[[Discworld]]'' series nearly falls into this in ''[[Discworld
* ''[[The Vorkosigan Saga]]''. Miles found himself constantly increasing his challenges every time he succeeded, and realized it was becomes of "So What Do I Do Now?" He gave it a name: "playing wall". He was forcibly divorced from his Naismith identity in ''Memory'', which allowed him to get over his rut.
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* ''[[Castlevania]] Symphony of the Night'': Why did the titular castle reappear a mere 5 years after Richter Belmont banished [[Dracula]]? It seems like Richter couldn't go back to a normal life after saving the world from the Prince of Darkness and he wants [[Dracula]] back so he can be the hero again. {{spoiler|Luckily he's just been brainwashed into thinking this, although you can get a [[Nonstandard Game Over]] by killing him.}}
* In the [[Multiple Endings|best ending]] of ''[[
* ''[[Final Fantasy X]]'''s sequel did this twice:
** After the ending of the first game, Spira enters the Eternal Calm. ''[[Final Fantasy X]]-2'', posits that {{spoiler|Yuna's life has settled into a routine, which is shaken up only after discovery of a sphere depicting images of "Tidus." This prompts her to become a [[Action Girl|Sphere Hunter]] to find the truth about this. While this happens, the rest of the world discover that being freed from Sin gives them the opportunity to squabble among each other, giving rise to religious and civilian factions which almost engage in civil war.}}
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''Maybe watch a video / Maybe press refresh and start again.'' }}
* ''[[Ratchet and Clank]]'' 2 starts by showing that the heroes haven't actually done very much since the last game ended.
* In the ''[[
* Happens in the time between [[Star Fox (
* Shaundi asks this after the main story ending of [[Saints Row|Saint's Row 2]]. {{spoiler|The answer, of course, is "whatever [[Cluster F-Bomb|the fuck]] we want".}}
* ''[[Final Fantasy VIII]]'' [[Fanon]] embraces this trope for [[Continuation|continuations]], usually featuring [[Anti-Hero|Squall]] trying to come to terms with life after the war and a job that, now [[Big Bad|Ultimecia]] is no more, [[Deconstruction|is mostly paperwork.]]
* Lance Boyle brings this up in the intro to ''[[Megarace]] 2'': "[The winner] is crowned King Megaracer 2, he experiences a sense of achievement, and returns in regal triumph to reality, where he will probably never readapt."
* [[Disgaea 3 Absence of Justice]] reveals that, after saving Veldime in [[Disgaea 2 Cursed Memories]], [[The Hero|Adell]] has pretty much jack-all to do. Turns out the Demon Hunter skill set doesn't transfer to other jobs very well.
* One of the earliest versions of this in videogames is ''[[Ultima IV]]'', and it's ''entirely based around it.'' Basically, in the past three games, ''all'' of the big evils have been destroyed (there are still dungeons full of monsters to fight, but nothing controlling them or threatening the world). So what do you do? Go on a quest to become the most shining example of pure good in the world as an example to everyone else!
** Said example then immediately departs the world, [[Ultima V|giving rise to a new great evil that kidnaps the king and corrupts the Avatar's philosophy, turning moral fortitude into utter totalitarianism]]. So, back to form. Of course, the kidnapping was partly a result of this trope, too (albeit offscreen) as Lord British decided that, having nothing better to do, he needed to wander down into the underworld and see what was up with that freaky place, only to have his party eaten alive by [[Demonic Spiders]]. This is why kings have champions in the first place.
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== Western Animation ==
* Season 2 of ''[[WITCH (
** {{spoiler|Plus she didn't have to worry about not being done as a Guardian as a new [[Big Bad]] was currently building her forces at the time}}.
** At the end of season 2 the heroes are relieved to have finally put that behind them and are eager to resume their normal lives, clearly excited at the prospect of [[So What Do We Do Now?]]... and then [[The Stinger]] shows one of the antagonists from the comics taking a position at their school, setting up the conflict for season three [[Too Good to Last|that will never happen]].
* In the episode "Make Love, Not Warcraft" of ''[[South Park]]'', [[That One Player|a griefer]] was killing each player discouraging them from playing, so in order to play again, the protagonists play for months, 21 hours a day, killing boars to gain experience points to achieve a level that allows them to beat him, and when they finally do with the help of the [[Infinity+1 Sword]], the question is dropped and the answer is: "Now we can play the game, I guess."
* [[Chuck Jones]]' latter-day [[Looney Tunes|Road Runner]] short ''Soup or Sonic'' ends with Wile E. Coyote finally catching his prey -- but unable to do anything with him due to {{spoiler|their difference in size}}. He holds up a [[Talking
* Averted at the end of ''[[Avatar: The Last Airbender]]''; even with the defeat of Ozai, Aang and Zuko are clear on the fact that there is a lot of rebuilding to do, both in terms of damage caused by the war and in relations between the nations. It was long theorized that if there ''had'' been a fourth season, it would have focused upon rebuilding the lost Air Tribe.
** The [[Interquel]] graphic novels ''[[
* Happens ''twice'' in ''[[The Real Ghostbusters]]'' episode "Crimebusters" - there's a dry spell of supernatural activity, so the guys modify their equipment to trap living beings and go into the crime-fighting business. Unfortunately they're too good at this, wiping out all crime...[[Status Quo Is God|right before another surge of ghosts]]. Egon even literally says "So what do we do now?" before the hauntings start getting called in.
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