Tropes you like

>protagonist and antagonist team up to take on an even greater threat and become bros

Other urls found in this thread:

tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/GreaterScopeVillain
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prestige_(film)
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/VillainousRescue
twitter.com/NSFWRedditGif

>"I say we take on the enemy ourselves who's with me?"
>"Yeeeah!" the team joins together with the protagonist
>The loner type of the group folds his arms and sighs.
>"Got nothin' better to do.. Let's do this."

>the evil Sup Forums-like (alt) right antagonist always loses and the good guys prevail

Name five... of anything, games included.
I really need more of this trope in my life.

>equally matched antagonist has hero at a huge disadvantage
>lets hero get back on the same level so they can have a fair fight
>share an understood nod

>anti-hero saves protagonist from the villain killing him at the last second
>"no one kills him except me"

>protagonist trying to defuse bomb
>does it with 1 second left

baldurs gate 2 throne of bhaal
21(shit film)

the training montage for some weak fuck to suddenly be able to beat the raid boss

I've had Baldur's gate 1 and 2 on my pc for ages now. I really need to get around to them. I heard two was kino.

Dragon Ball
Happens severaltimes if i remember correctly

this happens more frequently than you think btw

especially with ieds

Never happens, sounds awful

they are very old games but if you put in the effort i guarantee it will be one of the best gaming experiences of your life

literally every anime ever made

Berserk a few times

>Protagonist fights against big bad
>Wins
>Turns out big bad was there to protect against an ever bigger bad and protag was wrong to fight him.

It is, one of the best games ever

examples pls

Berserk, any animu basically.

>>protagonist trying to defuse bomb
>>does it with 007 seconds left

>two antagonists square off against each other (not to be confused with one of them turning good)

>nerd becomes cool to get guy/girl, but totally screws it up - they fall in love at the end anyway

>anime

WHAT WILL HE DO NEXT?!

>the message of the story is to just be yourself

>Protagonist is getting his shit pushed in by the villain, and begging for his life
>Is saved at the last second when his rival steps in, and incapacitates the villain
>Rival offers the protagonist a truce
>Protagonist rips his fucking spine out
>Protagonist then sticks a gun to the back of the disabled villain's head, who is now begging for his life, and executes him
>Protagonist is hailed as a hero to children everywhere

>hero or good character dies in a very unromantic blunt way

name 1 flick where this happens

I hope: go into rehab, swear off drinking and other drugs, get healthy and do something good with his time left on earth
I think: die in a gutter somewhere in the next 5 years

>"OPTIMUS NO, I HAVE CHILDREN."

>"No! Do you know what you've done?!" the villain exclaims horrified, knelt down clutching his chest to the confusion of the good guys
>An enormous shadow looms over the scene
>The main character slowly turns his head around to face the camera, eyes widening as his face turns upwards
>The other characters gradually do the same thing, one or two perhaps losing their footing as they stumble backwards
>One of the villains minions, a generally shallow and unlikable evil fuck who is closer to the monster suddenly panics and tries to escape, but is quickly devoured in a blood curdling scream
>"RUN!" the protagonist loudly exclaims, not failing to lift the still weakened villain up by the shoulders with the strong man of the team as they narrowly avoid falling debris and the ever present threat of the monster catching them

Off the top of my head:
Half-Life
Gurren Lagaan
Halo, technically
I know I've seen more to have it ingrained in my head. I tried searching Tvtropes and found the closest to it I could find:
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/GreaterScopeVillain

>Character who teamed up with protagonist you thought died comes and saves you from the antagonist

Chrono Trigger too, in a way

Dragons Dogma?
Nice trips.

>Was myself
>Started chatting with this one girl in the gym
>We're dating now
Feels good brehs

Fried Green Tomatoes

...

>game of thrones
>literally every fucking season post the wildlings joining the watch

batman vs superman. not worth watching though

>cop disregards the law in order to try catch a villain

>Get up, Prince of Troy. Get up. I won't let a stone take my glory.

>villain fights protagonist to the death
>both survive and get away
>villain later captures protagonist
>rather than instantly put a bullet in their head, keeps them hostage
>tied to chair in an isolated room by themself, devise a means of escape
>rinse and repeat

Resident Evil Extinction

not ww2 that's for sure

>stacy sees protagonist with another girl and immediately regrets not moving in when she had the chance

Does this trope have a name? Trying like balls to find it on TVtropes but to no avail.

logain in Da:o if you let him live

>Two characters keep trying to outwit each other to the point that things get out of control and one guy gets the other killed but it turns out that the guy that got killed has an identical twin who then kills the guy that originally got the other guy killed.

one of the Ocean's sequels

Battalion Wars gamecube

Name 0.5
That sounds too stupid to ever be in anything.

Not him, but this magicians duel movie
I believe,it's this
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prestige_(film)

>Protagonist teams up with guy who is untrustworthy.
>While they're working together, guy who is untrustworthy tries to attack protagonist, but misses.
>"I knew I couldn't trust you!" yells the protagonist.
>Protagonist realizes that there was something about to attack him from behind, and the untrustworthy guy just saved him.
what is this trope called?

tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/VillainousRescue
I think, maybe?

Angel and Spike in Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

what ever the fuck I want

>untrustworthy guy pulls a gun on the protagonist
>click
>click click
>stares at the gun and realizes there are no bullets

Say anything about Furious series but the Rock and now Statham joining really revitalized the series.

>Antagonist and Protagonist have fist fight ontop of building or podium, villain dies in freak accident.

Based Vegeta.

Name one die hard film where this happens

...

The funny thing is that after the first click a irl unloaded gun wouldn't click anymore.
That's what makes this even more annoying.

>protagonist opens his palm, revealing the bullets

Red Dawn remake.

>I like these threads , but alas I am brain dead and can't think of anything to contribute

...

heroes of might and magic 5 campaign

>sequence of a hero training/getting into shape/overall improving

ah what an orgasm

like in crazy stupid love or limitless

fantastic4 silver surfer or something like that

ITT
things that never happened

It was supposed to happen like that in Goldfinger but someone realised they could have it stop at 007 instead.

Bloodborne

I LOVE THIS SHIT

Pure, unadulterated kino.

>When Stone Cold joined Team WWF to take on the WCW Invasion
>Mfw he betrayed them a few weeks later

HOW DID YOU RUIN EVERYTHING SO BADLY, VINCE

rocky 2

Thor Ragnorak
CoD: MW2
The Simpons episode where Bart and Skinner team up to get Flanders fired as principal

Jak 2 Renegade kinda has that moment

>spooky stuff happens to a bunch of scientists in a remote site
bonus points if it's snowing and cold outside

I hate that trope, OP! It's often a cop out when they can't decide who should win, especially when they market the movie as the ultimate fight between two famous characters.
I'm looking at you, Batman vs Spiderman

Actually Trustworthy Irishman saves Now Repentant Scotsman trope a la Braveheart

>Antagonist becomes super-undefeatable, and it seems, that there is no way to escape the situation
>Gets defeated by something, that was vaguely mentioned in the very beginning of the movie
Also, it makes sense in the movie universe

The line
>"See you on the other side."

Mitchum Bros aiding Dougie Dale Cooper Jones

The Hobbit

Elves vs. Dwarves until orcs show up.

Breaking Bad when Hank and Jesse team up to stop Walt.

NAME 1 MOVIE WHERE THIS HAPPENS YOU FUCKING FAGGOT

>protagonist uses dark superpowers to defeat antagonist AND is allowed to keep it afterwards
oh wait.

>bad ending

>NAME 1 MOVIE WHERE THIS HAPPENS YOU FUCKING FAGGOT
The Avengers (2012)?

>veteran member of the team: how bout we let the rookie take this one?
>leader: he isn't ready. He hasn't completed his training
>protagonist: I am too ready! Besides, you're a man down. Everyone else on the team is busy. I can do this!
>leader: dammit... alright kid. Show me watchu got!

TTGL

thats not even accurate

I've been looking for this pepe forever

thanks. here's a wojak

>no set design, feels empty and lifeless
>no interesting ideas for storylines and generally bad writing
>relies on gimmicks only instead
>those are unoriginal or just bad, unfortunately ("fuck you, albert", glove, andy and lucy, coordinates, riddles, ...)
>bad acting (Bell, Lynch, Horse, Robertson, Dern, ...)
>dull characters (one-dimensional at best)
>storylines and characters are introduced for no purpose
>everything is supposed to weirdly connect and make sense
>shot in digital in a way that doesn't compensate for the technology's disadvantages (looks bad)
>roadhouse scenes (out of place, badly shot, the songs, the bands, the extras, ...)
>student-tier storytelling/editing (characters are shown walking up complete sets of stairs)
>stretched out needlessly, long takes have no particular effect
>everything above is literally cringe-tier in concept and implementation
>obviously delusional and/or inexperienced fanbase perceiving it as particularly meaningful, complex or "deep"
>can't compare to the original series that doesn't have those problems (coherent/complex and beautiful sets, costumes and make-up/well shot/well acted/well written/magnificent multi-dimensional characters and character relations, music, storylines and gimmicks/creates a unique athmosphere as a result, changing the world of television forever whereas "the return" neither manages to do something established really good nor to invent something new)
>somehow the best thing in tv history

Person of Interest, I won't say who because it'll spoil the introduction of that antagonist which is one of the best episodes of season 1.

>Villain is the protagonists brother