...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
Apparently Powerless Puppetmaster
- 197 statements
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Appearances can be deceiving. Just ask those who unwittingly serve the Apparently Powerless Puppetmaster. When the game of politics is played with daggers and poison (and worse), sometimes the most advantageous place to be is off the board entirely. Playing the part of the witless, raving lunatic is a useful (and life-extending) tactic when surrounded by murderous schemers: rather than waste their energies eliminating the idiot, they spend their time instead betraying and sabotaging their more obvious rivals, leaving the Apparently Powerless Puppetmaster free to turn the players into pieces in his own game. When he makes a move, everyone assumes it's one of the other players manipulating him. Once the deception is complete, he can act with impunity. There are two main variations on this trope: The character is in a position of authority, but plays dumb so that his "loyal underlings" and political rivals believe he can be easily swayed in their favor. The character is in a position of no obvious authority at all, but which allows him to exercise influence over others regardless. A subtrope of Manipulative Bastard. Compare Not-So-Harmless Villain. Compare also with Decoy Leader, when a real leader uses an impersonator to literally take their place and feeds them instructions; Obfuscating Stupidity, when someone is actually smart or competent but pretends to be stupid for several different reasons; and The Dog Was the Mastermind, when someone or something Beneath Suspicion was pulling the strings all along. Contrast with Authority in Name Only, where someone insists they have authority when they really don't, and Puppet King, where a character really is in a seat of authority... it's just that someone else is pulling his strings. When this trope is combined or overlapped with the Apparently Powerless Puppetmaster also being in a seemingly minor or easily overlooked/disregarded position within the organisation, the Almighty Janitor might result. A No Recent Examples rule applies to Real Life examples of this trope. Real life examples shouldn't be added until 20 years after the person left office (or 20 years after their death, if they died in office). |
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Nineteen-year-old Emperor Shi Ryuuki in The Story of Saiunkoku is initially called "stupid emperor" by members of his court disgusted by his complete lack of interest in ruling his empire, and his habit of spending his days hiding from court officials and spending his nights sleeping with other men. When properly motivated, however, Ryuuki reveals that he has a much defter hand for political intrigue than anyone suspected, and that there's a very good reason that he is the only one of six brothers to survive the imperial court long enough to take the throne; he cultivated the "stupid emperor" image as a survival mechanism, and refuses to rule in the hopes that his exiled older brother Prince Seien will return to take his place. | |
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The Inheritance Cycle: After the death of Rebel Leader Ajihad, the Council of Elders select his teenage daughter Nasuada as successor. All according to her plan, as she drops the "naïve child" act pretty much immediately and wrestles power away from them. | |
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Discussed in Hetalia: Axis Powers fanfic Sold to the Highest Bidder: | |
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In the New Jedi Order, Onimi is Supreme Overlord Shimrra's court jester and personal slave, remarkable only for being an obnoxious Cloud Cuckoo Lander prone to lecherous behavior and speaking in Rhymes on a Dime, and who even lives only at Shimrra's sufferance. Most of the Yuuzhan Vong court try to ignore him as much as possible. Which works great for Onimi, since it means nobody suspected that he was actually telepathically controlling Shimrra, and through him, ruling the entire Yuuzhan Vong empire. | |
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The Dresden Files reveals in Turn Coat that the Big Bad of the novel is in fact the Council's secretary, who had laced the inks with a specialized mind control potion. Using certain key words, he has control over younger members and can somewhat influence the Senior Council. It's quite clever how he does it: instead of changing decisions outright, which would've gotten him killed, he influences decisions very slightly to avoid detection. For example, no-one would blink when a traditionalist makes a traditional decision, even if that's not what he wanted to do before he got mind-controlled. Keep in mind that wizards live for centuries... | |
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Discworld: It's suggested that Lord Vetinari was this early on; later his power had become secure enough that he didn't need to. His entry in the first Discworld Companion says: In Small Gods, two Omnian officials are described as among the more powerful members of the hierarchy, because they're far enough down it that it's still possible to get things done. In particular, one of them is Secretary to the Congress of Iams (equivalent to the College of Cardinals), and if that doesn't sound like a position of power, you've never taken the minutes for a meeting of deaf old men. |
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Persona: The Sougawa Files has Yuudai Honda, the true villain of the story. He appears as Nobuyuki's bumbling underling who doesn't even fight the Freedom Fighters, but is hiding a dangerously brilliant mind that he puts to good use once his boss is out of the way. | |
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Gul'dan from World of Warcraft is a master of this trope. He overthrew his mentor Ner'zul and took his plans to take over the Horde, and then when the warlocks of the Shadow Council are ousted and killed at the start of Warcraft II, he feigns helplessness and pledges fake servitude to Doomhammer, only to betray him and cost him the entire Second War at the eleventh hour. He only perishes after his plans culminate and he meddles with powers far too strong for him. His Alternate Timeline version introduced in Warlords of Draenor follows in the same vein spectacularly; even after Garrosh meddles with the timeline and convinces Grommash to throw Gul'dan to the dogs, Gul'dan manages to plot his escape and work behind the scenes, acting as if he's helplessly outmatched and on the run...only to reveal he was waiting for the Alliance and Horde to deal with the Iron Horde so he could sweep in and summon the Burning Legion, bringing their forces to Draenor en-masse and convincing the Iron Horde to throw their lot in with them as they did in the prime timeline. |
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I, Claudius: Claudius takes this advice - he's the only one of any standing left to survive both Tiberius's sidelining of wealthy rivals and Caligula's mad purges, by virtue of being Obviously Harmless, and thus survives to become Emperor. |
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Earth: Final Conflict has most everyone believing Ron Sandoval is in the back pocket of Taelon leader Zo'or, shackled by an alien implant. The truth is that Sandoval's "motivational imperative" hasn't been working since at least the top half of Season 2, he's playing every angle in the conflict (Taelons, Jaridians, human supporters, La Résistance) against one another, and he's letting Zo'or think (s)he's in charge so that Zo'or takes the fall when it all blows up. | |
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The Green Hornet: In the movie, anyone who hears Britt Reid speak for five minutes realizes he is a buffoonish Manchild. He is the heir to the Sentinel paper, but obviously Britt is an Upper-Class Twit who cannot do anything for himself. Then you realize he doesn't need to do anything for himself: he continuously and successfully manipulates people much more intelligent than him (Kato, Casey and Mike Axford) into doing exactly what Britt wants them to do. And, by the end of the movie, he can do at least something for himself. | |
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The Order of the Stick: Lord Shojo is possibly one of the most triumphant examples to date. He rules a kingdom with an extremely corrupt nobility and, more importantly, he knows it. It's implied that it took a few assassination attempts for him to realize he couldn't just throw his weight around and expect to live very long. Instead he pretends to be old and senile and continually refers to his cat for advice, pretending he gets useful advice from him and is following it. He eventually reveals to Roy that the nature of the situation is such that if he acts old and senile, he can do pretty much whatever he wants. It helps that the nobles are actively screwing each other over so much that they assume he's just being manipulated by everyone. | |
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Touch (2004): Cooper seems like just the business manager of the heroes, but he controls everything, and has the power to take it all away from them with just a touch. | |
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Regent Tepet Fokuf from Exalted spends his time masturbating to religious texts and rubber-stamping any proposal someone puts in front of him. Strongly implied to be pulling a Claudius (see above), as actually exerting any kind of power would get him assassinated and probably trigger a civil war. | |
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In G.I. Joe: Resolute, Cobra Commander admitted to his troops that he played this role in the '80s because he hoped it would motivate them "to think". When he realized that it wasn't motivating them to be cleverer henchmen, but instead motivated them to try to take over, he dropped the act and made it very clear to them and the world what a dangerous and competent commander he actually is. | |
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The Advisor in Total War: Warhammer proves himself a master in this trope, manipulating himself into becoming the advisor for each faction depending on who you're playing as. He takes it further in the third game, where the player gets to see him visit each of the game's major factions and using them as stepping stones to reach his true goal of acquiring a drop of blood from the god Ursun by simply offering them all what they want; Kislev wants to free their god, Cathay want knowledge that only Ursun possess, the daemons of chaos want parts of Ursun's body, the God Slayer wants to finish what he started, and the Ogre clans initially seem uninterested, until the Advisor offers them the flesh of a god to feast on. | |
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Hogan's Heroes: Hogan is a prisoner of war in a German POW camp, and doesn't appear to be resisting the Germans in any way. In reality, he's in charge of a massive sabotage and subterfuge operation that's been giving the Germans hell, and he is adept at manipulating the camp staff to get what he wants. | |
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The Wheel of Time: Egwene is unexpectedly elected leader of the Aes Sedai Magical Society, realizes she's being Promoted to Scapegoat, and invokes this trope to divert attention while she builds her own support base. She plays two powerful rivals in the Hall of the Tower against each other, letting each believe she's being puppeted by the other, until she's strong enough to bring them both to heel. The Chosen One Rand also utilizes this trope when he points out to Perrin that a divided White Tower is in his interests since they are too busy plotting against each other whilst trying to win him over to risk the backlash of interfering with him. He goes so far as to say that he wouldn't be able to get away with half of what he does if the Tower were unified, since he'd be forced to bow and scrape to the Aes Sedai and ask their permission for everything! |
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In Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney, Phoenix himself takes the reins of the overlaying story while Apollo works on his own cases. To wit, a lowly piano player with no actual skill whatsoever who appears at first to be homeless and partially also relies on his adoptive daughter's income joyrides his own trial concerning a murder case. He arranges the true culprit as his defense attorney to lock him in court and indict him, and spent the last seven years gathering evidence and upheaving the entire legal system just to clear his name over a Frame-Up with the usage of forged evidence despite the fact that he's shunned from the legal world for that. He seems to still have a lot of clout there. | |
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Daredevil: In season 3, Wilson Fisk manipulates the FBI into letting him out of prison and putting him under house arrest in a Manhattan hotel penthouse. Ray Nadeem, the agent who makes the deal with Fisk, is led to think Fisk is powerless since he's under round-the-clock surveillance and can't have outside contact with anyone other than his attorneys, and that he's just a cooperating prisoner giving up other criminals in exchange for Vanessa's freedom. In truth, Fisk is 100% in charge of everything, as he secretly owns the hotel, has in fact been manipulating Nadeem from behind bars for several years, and the FBI agents guarding him have been blackmailed, bribed or coerced into serving as his enforcers to extort other crime lords into paying him protection money. | |
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In The Elder Scrolls series, Downplayed in the latter portion of Emperor Uriel Septim VII's reign. While he was still Emperor of Tamriel, the Imperial Simulacrum severely fractured and weakened the Empire, with extreme unrest in the provinces. With his Imperial Legions no longer the fighting force they once were, his Empire was only maintained through his elaborate schemes, shrewd diplomacy, and political maneuvering, up until his death which kickstarted the Oblivion Crisis. | |
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A not-uncommon strategy in A Song of Ice and Fire (I, Claudius being one of author GRRM's favorite books), in which most rank-and-file nobles are quick to discount any source of power other than military force: Lord Varys, the Master of Whisperers, is a lord only by courtesy (the title being applied to anyone who sits on the Small Council), not because he actually holds any lands or commands any men. As a commoner, a foreigner, and a eunuch, he's seldom viewed as a serious threat by the heads of the major Houses, and he has a way of making himself indispensible to whatever party is currently in power, while secretly playing them all for his own ends. Lord Petyr "Littlefinger" Baelish uses much the same strategy. He's of the lowest possible nobility, being lord of a rundown keep, a flock of sheep, a handful of peasants and some rocks, and many see the Master of Coin as just a glorified tax collector. But his financial wizardry makes him a very useful ally, and while everyone knows he's dishonest, only the savviest characters realize the true heights of his ambitions or the danger posed by his Chronic Backstabbing Disorder. Many Hands of the King are this: on paper they are little more than a particularly trusted assistant, in practice many of them rule in all but name. This is nearly the mission statement and business plan of the Iron Bank of Braavos. Officially, they are merely usurers and market facilitators: wealthy, but without true physical or political power of their own as many rulers judge these things based on arms, land and vassals. Indeed, neutral financiers just interested in the interest are just what they actually are... unless and until you cross them. Then you'll find your liquidity mysteriously hamstrung as the debts of your past (and that of your vassals) suddenly are called in, all credit is withheld and foreign merchants suddenly evaporate while yours suffer new and interesting obstacles abroad. Meanwhile, your opponents magically find financial support and material backing beyond their wildest dreams. That is if you're lucky; you could simply suffer a regrettable heart attack care of a Faceless Man if you're not so lucky. Smart rulers know that "they own us all, whether we know it or not" as Tywin Lannister says in Game of Thrones, but smart rulers are the exception, not the rule. |
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The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power: One of the advantages of the Halbrand persona for Sauron is that posing as a human gives him the opportunity of deceiving everyone around him and hanging out with Elves without raising suspicions about him until is too late for the fooled party. After all, he is just a "low-man" from the back-water Southlands. | |
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In My Fellow Americans, two former Presidents battle a conspiracy which leads all the way up to the current President. After they expose the conspiracy and force the President to resign, they find out the real ringleader has been the apparently incompetent Vice-President, who has used this as an opportunity to get the top job. | |
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In Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Justice For All, Matt Engarde looks like a ditz who can't hurt a fly. He is actually a competent manipulator who had fooled a supernatural lie detector and used even Phoenix to get away with his crimes. His only big mistake came from being paranoid, not naïve as his façade would show him as. | |
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In Midnight Run, Jonathan Mardukas is a rather mild-natured accountant who spends most of the movie handcuffed and being dragged around by Jack Walsh (or whatever bounty hunter, cop or mobster has his hands on him at that particular moment), apparently subdued and incapable of any kind of meaningful resistance. However, he has a habit of passive-aggressive needling and asking awkward Armor Piercing Questions that gradually wear down Jack's defences without him even realising it. | |
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In The Cinder Spires the position of Spirearch is nominally the hereditary ruler of Spire Albion but everyone considers it a mostly ceremonial position with the real power being the Prime Minister and the noble houses. However, Spirearch Addison actually wields a lot of power behind the scenes mostly by influencing people who do wield official power into doing what he wants them to do for the good of the spire. | |
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The Viscount in Dragon Age II is universally regarded as a weakling when, in fact, he is one of the few Reasonable Authority Figures in Kirkwall who has kept violence in the city at bay for many years through subtle manipulation and maintaining the balance of power. However, due to Meredith's influence he can't directly act out, in which case he gets Hawke to try and stem the trouble. | |
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In the Mordant's Need novels by Stephen R. Donaldson, this is a trick used by both King Joyse and Adept Havelock. In Joyse's case, he's spent years pretending to be completely senile to test his allies and lure all of his enemies out so they can be destroyed in a single decisive blow. In Havelock's case, while he really is insane due to a magical accident, he has a number of moments of greater lucidity during which he can make his own moves and support Joyse's plans. Both work together quite effectively, with almost no one catching on until it's too late. | |
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In Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation: Mo Dao Zu Shi, who was it that set up the necessary pieces for the protagonist's return, the solving of the mystery of the dismembered corpse, and the downfall of the murderer? None other than Nie Huaisang, the murder victim's younger brother, who spent somewhere around a decade purposely building a reputation as a helpless moron to the point that he was commonly known by a moniker mocking the fact that he "answers one question with three I don't knows". | |
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Ace Attorney: In Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Justice For All, Matt Engarde looks like a ditz who can't hurt a fly. He is actually a competent manipulator who had fooled a supernatural lie detector and used even Phoenix to get away with his crimes. His only big mistake came from being paranoid, not naïve as his façade would show him as. In Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney, Phoenix himself takes the reins of the overlaying story while Apollo works on his own cases. To wit, a lowly piano player with no actual skill whatsoever who appears at first to be homeless and partially also relies on his adoptive daughter's income joyrides his own trial concerning a murder case. He arranges the true culprit as his defense attorney to lock him in court and indict him, and spent the last seven years gathering evidence and upheaving the entire legal system just to clear his name over a Frame-Up with the usage of forged evidence despite the fact that he's shunned from the legal world for that. He seems to still have a lot of clout there. The Big Bad of the second Ace Attorney Investigations may as well be the poster child for this trope. Literally everything in the game turns out to be all part of their plan. Who do they introduce themselves as? A perpetually nervous apprentice animal tamer and clown at the local circus. They did such a good job of Obfuscating Stupidity even Edgeworth was fooled! |
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Governor Grice in the Ciaphas Cain novel For the Emperor. Everyone thinks that he's merely a puppet being controlled by the Tau, or just plain incompetent, but he's really a member of the Genestealer cult that thrives in Gravalax's underground, which is trying to play the Tau and the Imperium against each other to soften them up for the coming wave of Tyranid invasions. | |
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In his concert film Bill Cosby: Himself, this is how Bill Cosby describes fathers' use of Obfuscating Stupidity to make sure everything works out right in the end. All he wants is to sleep in, but his wife wants him to go down and cook breakfast for the kids. He instead gives in to their request for chocolate cake "since it has eggs, and wheat, and milk! That's nutrition!" Oh, and he needs a breakfasty drink, so they get grapefruit juice. They sit around the table eating chocolate cake and listening to music and having a ball, at which point his wife comes down and "has a conniption fit" that sounds more like Demonic Possession. After she bellows in rage demanding to know why they're eating chocolate cake, his children turn on him, saying he forced them to eat it. So his wife comes to the conclusion that he's utterly useless and can't be trusted with even the simplest task, makes a real breakfast herself, and sends him back to his room. "Which is where I wanted to be in the first place." They are dumb, but they are not so dumb, indeed. | |
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In Small Gods, two Omnian officials are described as among the more powerful members of the hierarchy, because they're far enough down it that it's still possible to get things done. In particular, one of them is Secretary to the Congress of Iams (equivalent to the College of Cardinals), and if that doesn't sound like a position of power, you've never taken the minutes for a meeting of deaf old men. | |
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Who's the most manipulative human puppetmaster in the cut-throat world of British magicians' politics in The Bartimaeus Trilogy: Quentin Makepeace, the prime minister's favorite playwright. He's primarily known for writing popular plays for the unsophisticated public and amusing the Prime Minister with his flamboyant, jolly ways. He also has a serious axe to grind against the British government and ultimately succeeds in kidnapping them all at the premiere of his last play about the Prime Minister's life. The scholar Hopkins also deserves an honorary mention for manipulating the Resistance into robbing a dangerously well-guarded tomb and unknowingly stealing a powerful artifact for his patron in the process. In fact, he deserves bonus points because he has the uncanny knack for being so blandly ordinary that, lacking any distinguishing characteristics, he is very hard to describe or even think about for long. |
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