The Grand List of Overused Science Fiction Clichés: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[Tropes Are Not Bad|Clichés are not in themselves necessarily bad]], but their overuse shows that the writer has forgotten what separates the strong tale from the hollow: "the human heart in conflict with itself," as Faulkner said. Where there is this conflict, the tale stands; where the conflict is absent, the tale falls flat, and in neither case does it matter [[Rule of Cool|how many ships get blown up]].
[[Tropes Are Not Bad|Clichés are not in themselves necessarily bad]], but their overuse shows that the writer has forgotten what separates the strong tale from the hollow: "the human heart in conflict with itself," as Faulkner said. Where there is this conflict, the tale stands; where the conflict is absent, the tale falls flat, and in neither case does it matter [[Rule of Cool|how many ships get blown up]].


The sophisticated reader will note that some of these clichés are [[Omnipresent Tropes|not found solely in SF]], but in other genres as well, and of course the [[Playing With a Trope|lampooning of clichés]] is a time-honored part of [[Rule of Funny|good comedy]].
The sophisticated reader will note that some of these clichés are [[Omnipresent Tropes|not found solely in SF]], but in other genres as well, and of course the [[Playing with a Trope|lampooning of clichés]] is a time-honored part of [[Rule of Funny|good comedy]].


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Revision as of 22:01, 15 April 2014

This is a page intended to blue-shift popular tropes used in Science Fiction that are documented on the wiki. All of the original entries come from The Grand List of Overused Science Fiction Clichés. On the original, clichés are further categorized with icons, but those are left out here due to formatting problems.

It should be noted that these are not "clichés" in the sense that we describe them. Clichés are a priori bad; trite and overused. What is described below is merely a list of Tropes, which are neither good nor bad.


Those of us who have read or seen a lot of Science Fiction have seen certain story elements pop up over and over and over. Some of these elements were actually pretty good ideas - indeed, some of them are even Truth in Television now, thanks to the marching on of science - and when handled well make for a pretty entertaining story, but have become hackneyed from overuse by the unimaginative. Others came into being through the deliberate effort to avoid another cliché. Still other ideas were lame from the get-go, and should have been dismissed from the author's thinking.

Clichés are not in themselves necessarily bad, but their overuse shows that the writer has forgotten what separates the strong tale from the hollow: "the human heart in conflict with itself," as Faulkner said. Where there is this conflict, the tale stands; where the conflict is absent, the tale falls flat, and in neither case does it matter how many ships get blown up.

The sophisticated reader will note that some of these clichés are not found solely in SF, but in other genres as well, and of course the lampooning of clichés is a time-honored part of good comedy.