Super Dickery: Difference between revisions

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** What's more? In her initial inquiries into his identity, word started spreading and Adam Peterson's house was blown up by the local mafia. Afterwards, she ''kept trying to prove he was Atomicus''.
** There was also a brief mention in another story of a situation that would seem rather familiar; Supersonic, after an adventure that temporarily gave him 16 exact doubles, took his Lois-type girlfriend Caroleen to a dance as Supersonic and had one of his doubles come as his secret identity of Dale Enright. He did this ''just to mess with Caroleen for no reason''.
* A cliffhanger ending in one issue of the ''[[City of Heroes]]'' comic book ([[Recursive Adaptation|yes, a comic book based on an MMORPG based on comic books]]), the [[Badass Normal]] of the super-team depicted in the book was shown killing the team's leader in the last panel. The catch? {{spoiler|He planned to have the man [[Back Fromfrom the Dead|returned to life]] as soon as possible and only killed him to appease the one person who could restore the powers of the rest of the team.}}
* Can be done on-panel: In the "Torn" [[Story Arc]] of [[Joss Whedon]]'s ''Astonishing X-Men'', a depowered Cyclops was casually gunning down villains and talking about it as if completely unconcerned. (This after the previous issue's [[Wham! Episode]] ending of him shooting Emma Frost.) {{spoiler|Turns out he's not crazy: he's the only one who's figured out that they're psychic projections created by a villain to move her [[Evil Plan]] along.}}
* Another on-panel version - the original introduction of the Skrulls had the Fantastic Four doing criminal acts, from the minor to the not very minor (like knocking over an oil rig). Soon after, it's - surprise - really the Skrulls causing trouble.
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** This trope was also used in another Fourth Doctor serial, ''The Deadly Assassin''. In Part 1, the Doctor experiences a vision of the Time Lord president being assassinated. Arriving on Gallifrey, he determines to prevent this from happening. He heads to the balcony overlooking the room where the murder is to take place so that he will be able to see what's going on, and finds a gun lying there. The Doctor picks up the gun, sights along it, and fires. The president falls over, dead! Cut to credits! In Part 2, as is standard in ''[[Doctor Who]]'', we see the last minute or so of the previous episode over again—only this time ''an extra shot'' is inserted that wasn't there before: that of a person in the crowd below holding a gun. It all becomes clear: the Doctor was ''trying'' to shoot at the assassin below, but his gun had been tampered with so that he would be unable to hit the assassin. The fact that he figures that out and convinces the investigating officer goes a long way towards clearing his name.
* ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'' did this with the episode called "The Enterprise Incident". Kirk, seemingly against Starfleet orders, invades Romulan space and gets the Enterprise captured. Spock then betrays the ship by siding with the Romulans, and testifies that Kirk has gone insane from the pressures of command, before killing Kirk in self defense. {{spoiler|This all turns out to be a plan set up by Starfleet to allow Kirk and Spock to steal a Romulan cloaking device, while providing Starfleet with plausible deniability should the deal go south.}}
** The old ''Star Trek: Next Voyage'' previews sometimes used this trope. For example, the trailer for "[[Star Trek/Recap/S3/E24 Turnabout Intruder|Turnabout Intruder]]" doesn't really explain that a [[Freaky Friday Flip]] happened and goes from there. Similarly, the trailer for "[[Star Trek/Recap/S2/E01 Amok Time|Amok Time]]" ends with Spock apparently killing Kirk. The trailer for "[[Star Trek/Recap/S2/E04 Mirror, Mirror|Mirror, Mirror]]" doesn't mention the [[Mirror Universe]] concept, etc.
* In an episode of ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'', Tuvok enters the mess hall and, driven just an inch too far by [[Alien Scrappy|Neelix's relentless good cheer]], [[Beware the Nice Ones|strangles him to death]]. It turns out to be [[All Just a Dream|a holodeck simulation]]; Tuvok was having difficulty controlling his emotions after [[Mind Meld|mind melding]] with a psychopathic member of the crew, and he'd hoped the simulation would let him work out his emotional imbalance.
** In the ''Voyager'' episode "Worst Case Scenario", the Maquis stage a mutiny and Torres joins them, but it turns out to be a holodeck simulation; Tuvok set up the simulation to counter a possible rebellion from the Maquis crew that had joined Voyager's crew, but the two crews integrated so well that he decided not to finish the simulation.