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Clock King
- 432 statements
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The Clock King is the consummate planner. He doesn't just know when the guard change happens, but what routes they take, how long they spend in the lavatory, how long the cops will take to respond to a burglary alarm with 5:12 PM traffic on a rainy day, and that the 5:20 train will take two minutes and fifteen seconds longer than normal to leave the station, allowing them enough time to get on at 5:22:10. He has such millimetric precision and obsessive attention to detail that he will frequently boast of being "23 seconds ahead of schedule", or berate lackeys with "You're 17 seconds late". Expect the Clock King to always carry a pocketwatch and chain, or a very expensive-looking wristwatch with more hands than Shiva. For some reason, they dislike digital clocks. Maybe they feel those lack (villainous) personality? Also, it's worth noting most Clock Kings and Queens are villains. It's not that heroes can't be this obsessive at planning... they just tend to go with Indy Ploy instead. There's also the larger idea that the villains plan and scheme in secret ahead of time, and the heroes have to react to what villains initiate. Maybe an explanation for the reason why most Clock Kings and Queens are villains resides in the conflict Harmony Versus Discipline: they subscribe to the latter, the belief that mankind can and should master themselves and their environment for the betterment of all. This can lead to attitudes like Insufferable Genius at best to Lack of Empathy at worst, and all the range of The Jerk Index. Maybe the Universe just wants to be accepted and it favors those who follow harmony. Notice that the polar opposite of a Clock King would be an Idiot Hero, who excels at the Indy Ploy. He's almost the mirror of The Chessmaster. He can't manipulate people, but he can rely on their strict adherence to patterns and schedules. When they don't, depending on the Clock King, he sometimes goes off the rails (of course, a real planner will know the exact probabilities of each failure, and plan accordingly to win either case). These guys usually aren't that hot at Xanatos Speed Chess, but they are, however, often Awesome By Analysis. He's an example of what happens when a Schedule Fanatic starts to learn other people's schedules as well as his own. Common accessories and plots include the Magic Countdown and Time Bomb. Fond of Ludicrous Precision, sometimes to the extent that he suffers from being Obsessively Organized. Oh, and you had better pray they don't get their hands on Time Travel technology, or being a Time Master, one who can directly control time. See also Creature of Habit, who also likes punctuality, although rarely for nefarious plans. May overlap with Clocks of Control, which is about any clock-themed character who wants to keep things orderly. |
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Clock King / int_100d4e39 | type |
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Aladdin: The Series has Mechanicles. To get into further detail, this mad scientist/master planner once began an episode overlooking an invasion of Agrabah with an army of giant mechanical scorpions, listing off items off his schedule. When Aladdin and friends showed up, he nonchalantly crossed an item off his schedule, noting "Heroes' interference, 2:14. Yep, right on schedule!" | |
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In Cash on Demand, Colonel Gore Hepburn has his bank robbery planned almost down to the second; even asking the bank manager Fordyce the time as he is about to make his getaway, and then angrily demanding to know the exact time when Fordyce says it is 'about' twenty to eleven. | |
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Fillmore!: The villain in "Play On, Maestro, Play On" orchestrates crimes that rely on absolute precision timing. | |
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The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin: Inverted with Reggie Perrin, who is late to work by the same amount every day, but never twice for the same reason. | |
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The villain in the first episode of Alphas. He really doesn't appreciate it when you mess up his schedule. When a subordinate shows up four seconds late for a meeting, he gets subjected to Psychic-Assisted Suicide. | |
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Arrow features the Trope Namer as a minor villain in one episode. In addition to his obsession with detail, he's also a skilled hacker and reasonably good at improvising, to the point that when the heroes interrupt his plans for the first time he still gets his men out with some of the score by setting up a Sadistic Choice to buy himself time. He also kills a disobedient henchman with a large minute hand. | |
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Fringe had one in "The Plateau". Though strictly speaking, he only saw all the possible outcomes and predicted which one was most likely, but he still had to know when and how long it would take someone to get hit by a bus. Later, Peter Bishop, after having implanted Observer tech into his head, behaved rather much the same way, albeit with the assistance of a Wall of Crazy; this was calling "running futures" by the Observers. | |
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Clockwise: Headmaster Stimpson takes punctuality more seriously than anything else, and at the beginning of the film is seen chiding a teacher for being late even though it was due to circumstances beyond his control. Naturally, when the cosmos conspire to make him even a second late for his important speech, he frantically does everything in his power to get there on time. In a truly epic moment at the film's climax, after an entire movie's worth of chicanery, he arrives literally exactly on the hour, or in other words the last possible second before he would have been late. | |
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The Matt Helm movie The Wrecking Crew (1968). The Big Bad, Count Contini, constantly talks about the schedule for his crime and how far it's ahead of or behind schedule. | |
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Clock King / int_35c619e2 | type |
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Green Arrow: Both versions of Clock King; one is William Tockman, Insufferable Genius with a peerless ability to judge time to the second and use this to his advantage; the other is the current Clock King, with actual time-based powers. | |
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DC Animated Universe: Temple Fugate, the Batman: The Animated Series version of the Clock King, is quite an example. This is the guy who, in his introductory episode, stoically steps off a bridge because he knows that the train is always a little early. In fact, his extraordinary timing abilities, coupled with his analysis of hours of recorded footage of Batman in combat, allows him to dodge his every move, making him one of the few people Batman has never defeated in hand-to-hand combat. His name even sounds like the Latin phrase "tempus fugit" — meaning "time flies". His meticulous timing and scheduling is explained in his backstory; he owned a business efficiency company that was being sued, and the day of the hearing, the future mayor Hamilton Hill suggested he break schedule and take his coffee break earlier, so as to look more relaxed and presentable to the court. Murphy's Law kicked in: he ended up running late, his appeal was thrown out, ruining him, and the end result can be summed up thusly: In an example of the stunt casting the DCAU was famous for, Fugate was played by Alan Rachins, then best known for playing the punctilious managing partner Douglas Brachman on L.A. Law — a clock watcher's clock watcher. He later reappears as one of the Boxed Crooks in the Justice League episode "Task Force X". His plan allows the non-powered members of the Task Force to successfully infiltrate the Watchtower and steal an artifact from the Justice League. |
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Avalanche Sharks Randy, the ski resort's shuttle driver, is introduced when a couple of guests mule over his schedule for the trip out there, where he's gone to great lengths to list every possible thing that they'll be doing, which covers incredibly minute and barely distinct things that will only take about a minute. About the only time he can relax more and avoid this obsession with punctuality is when he's trying to impress pretty girls. | |
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Discworld: Malvolio Bent of Making Money, who resets the bank's clock every day when it falls two seconds behind. The novel's protagonist, Moist von Lipwig, demonstrates the capacity to memorize and exploit others' schedules when he breaks Owlswick Jenkins out of the Tanty, although he dislikes adhering to one himself. The earlier novel Thief of Time features Jeremy Clockson, a clockmaker who produces the world's most accurate timepieces and is implied to have assaulted or possibly even killed another member of the guild for deliberately setting his clock fast. He turns out to be the son of the anthropomorphic personification of Time itself. |
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Professor Paradox from Ben 10: Alien Force, though in his case he's more of a Time Master, given that he has the entire Time Space Continuum mapped out in his head, allowing him to Time Travel just as easily as one would walk down the sidewalk. | |
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Clock King / int_4e5b6428 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_4e5b6428 | comment |
Malvolio Bent of Making Money, who resets the bank's clock every day when it falls two seconds behind. The novel's protagonist, Moist von Lipwig, demonstrates the capacity to memorize and exploit others' schedules when he breaks Owlswick Jenkins out of the Tanty, although he dislikes adhering to one himself. | |
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Making Money | hasFeature |
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Clock King / int_4f7b8630 | type |
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The Great Train Robbery: The Crimean gold, when it's on the train to Folkestone, is heavily guarded in two heavy safes in the baggage car, each of which has two locks, requiring a total of four keys. Two of the keys are kept in the stationmaster's office at London Bridge behind lock and key and are guarded by a single guard. The window to make wax impressions of the keys is limited because the guard's routine is timed down to the second: he only leaves his post at the exact same time every night to relieve himself from the bottle of beer he drinks on duty, and his bathroom break is exactly 75 seconds long. | |
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Columbo: In "Try and Catch Me", Abigail Mitchell plans the murder down to the last second, even carrying a stopwatch, to ensure that Edmund is in the safe before Martin comes downstairs. | |
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Superhoodie on Misfits knows the time of all the events where he needs to intervene, and has digital clocks in his apartment/lair counting down to the exact second for each instance. He knows this information because he's from the future, but it's still insanely precise. | |
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In Spider-Man: The Animated Series, Jackson Weele uses precision timing both to conduct highly efficient robbery to the actual Clock King's level of precision, as well as making his devices work, especially the Big Wheel tank, which also requires precise timing (presumably, because its weapons are in proper firing position for a fraction of a second at a time, but frequently enough that with proper timing you can use them). The Big Wheel also exists in the comics, as C-List Fodder, but the timing obsession is unique to the series (as is his being an actually dangerous opponent). | |
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Giovanni shows shades of this in Pokémon Adventures during his battle with Red. He knows down to the second how long it takes his pokemon to attack and how long it would take Red to counterattack, emphasising his experience compared to his much newer opponent. He tries to use this information to make Red forfeit, believing his position to be unwinnable, but his assumption that he has all of the information turns out to be his undoing. Red uses the insulated gloves he took from Lt. Surge to allow his Pikachu to safely charge up electricity while still in his Pokeball, allowing them to counterattack faster than Giovanni was prepared for, winning Red the battle. | |
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What makes Yuuki Terumi of BlazBlue fame fit this trope is that it is at the core of his deconstruction of gambiteering, and this trope is deconstructed, too. He does fancy himself a Chessmaster-cum-Magnificent Bastard due to his ability to seemingly effortlessly troll the cast for his own benefit, but when one looks at the series at large, it quickly becomes clear that such is a result of "repeating this worthless comedy more times than [he] can count" — as an instrument of Izanami and Takamagahara's agenda, he was allowed to witness multiple instances of the same century and, through Phantom, multiple possibilities of the continuum shift. When one takes that away, it becomes clear that he really doesn't understand the cast at all; not only does he fail to predict in Chronophantasma Arcade that Taokaka's interaction with Noel moved her away from the trap he set for the latter, but he so utterly fails to understand his own lieutenant that he cannot predict her movements without aforementioned assistance, all of which is completely nulled after Continuum Shift. Combine this with Rachel and Kokonoe adapting to his tricks and developing counters of their own, as well as Kagura joining the chess club, and it's easy to see how he ends Chronophantasma: Izanami leaving him at the station for his one-way ride on the Time Killer express, destination six feet under. | |
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"Repent, Harlequin!" Said the Ticktockman, a short story by Harlan Ellison, has the titular Ticktockman, more formally known as the Master Timekeeper. His job is to keep the world running on schedule. And if you get late one time too many, well. You will be turned off on Monday, please get your affairs in order. When an underling fearfully informs the Ticktockman that he is running late that day, he brushes it off, since it's obviously impossible. Making the Ticktockman run late is the only thing the protagonist's rebellion achieved. There's nothing funny about that. | |
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Ekko is a heroic example of this in Arcane. As befitting his future Time Master abilities, Ekko relies on the patterns of his foes and exploits windows of time down to the second, carrying a stopwatch that helps him coordinate the Firelights' raids. Exemplified in his duel with Jinx, where he predicts her pattern of attacks based on a game they would play as children, and plans accordingly to defeat her. | |
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The earlier novel Thief of Time features Jeremy Clockson, a clockmaker who produces the world's most accurate timepieces and is implied to have assaulted or possibly even killed another member of the guild for deliberately setting his clock fast. He turns out to be the son of the anthropomorphic personification of Time itself. | |
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Phineas and Ferb: When Linda commented it's been a long time ever since she and Lawrence went out together, he said it was 13 days, 22 hours, and 17 minutes. When asked how he knew it to such precision, he explained it was thanks to a device on his cell phone. | |
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The Flash (2014) has Leonard Snart a.k.a. Captain Cold who plans his crimes down to the second, having grown up near the Central Police Station and memorized their response times. The Clock King from Arrow also returns, conveniently when the Flash was occupied by another villain with actual superpowers, thus forcing non-powered secondary characters to handle him. Flash's Super-Speed would likely have trivialized the threat he posed otherwise. | |
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Mael Stronghart, the Chief Justice of England in The Great Ace Attorney. He always consults his pocketwatch and gives the amount of time remaining before he has to leave down to the seconds, and his giant office is located inside a surprisingly quiet Clock Tower. While he is quite the Schedule Fanatic when it comes to holding other people accountable, he sees no problem with showing up hours late himself. | |
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Fantastic Four: The main shtick of the Mad Thinker, predictive genius included. He once set a timebomb based on how quickly the Fantastic Four would fly into space (where he's never been), attack an alien base (that he's never seen), rescue a hostage (whom he's never personally met), spend time arguing over personal matters (none of which the FF have made public), and return to Earth's atmosphere (just in time for the bomb to go off). His Moment of Awesome. Another part of his shtick though, is that there is almost always one little thing he doesn't take into account that derails his carefully thought-out plans. In one of his schemes, he failed to account for the Fantastic Four's mailman. In early stories his disadvantages were his over-reliance on robot henchmen like the Awesome Android, which could follow his plans to the letter but couldn't think creatively enough to handle the plan failing, and his inability to account for "the human element". One early Avengers story has him trying to overcome this weakness by employing human henchmen. | |
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In Star Trek: Department of Temporal Investigations, we see that Lucsly is one of these, which makes him the best human DTI agent in the eyes of his superiors. The DTI doesn't like any adventures or time travel, so someone who is quite routine and orderly is right in their wheelhouse in making sure that temporal shenanigans don't occur, as well as putting things back the way they're "supposed" to be if things do go Off the Rails. His partner, Dulmur, isn't quite as fastidious, but we see that he still knows things down to the second, even if he doesn't say them out loud as Lucsly does. | |
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The general in Universal Soldier (1992) is one of these, thanks to the superhuman abilities of the UniSols, he can accurately predict how much time it takes for them to swim a mile and a half under four minutes, then comment that they're eight seconds behind schedule. | |
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The Thrawn Trilogy: Grand Admiral Thrawn is quite adept at Xanatos Speed Chess, but his initial plans often involve very precise timing. He acquires an ally (sort of) who has the ability to coordinate his forces to an even higher degree, but only rarely used him for that since his fleets could execute simultaneous attacks just fine. Notably in Heir To The Empire, he observed that two ships had connected for four minutes, fifty-three seconds, and knew not only that three people had transferred, but which people went to which ship and where they were going. Thrawn's scary like that. The comic page linked above can give the impression that Thrawn's deduction is an Ass Pull, but he shows his work in the novel by extrapolating out loud from what he knows of the heroes. It's quite impressive and cements Thrawn's claim to Awesomeness by Analysis. |
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Frank Martin from the first The Transporter movie does a little of this. For instance, while working a freelance job as a Getaway Driver, he knows exactly how long every street and turn will take and how quickly the cops will respond down to the second. He is also very good with the measurements of weights. He initially refuses to play along when the robbers bring another crew member with them, which will affect their getaway as he calculated for a specific number of passengers. The robbers have to dispose of that member before Frank will comply—and he still evades the cops successfully! | |
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The Transporter | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_86fa025f | |
Clock King / int_8ba4613a | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_8ba4613a | comment |
In Death Note, L is able to calculate Kira's thought process almost down to the second. | |
Clock King / int_8ba4613a | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_8ba4613a | featureConfidence |
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Death Note (Manga) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_8ba4613a | |
Clock King / int_8cd6b86f | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_8cd6b86f | comment |
Battle of the Bulge (1965). The German general in charge of the attack is constantly on Colonel Hessler's case about being on schedule. Justified because the Germans only have a limited amount of supplies and a short time before improving weather allows the Allies to use their overwhelming air superiority to crush them. | |
Clock King / int_8cd6b86f | featureApplicability |
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Battle of the Bulge | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_8cd6b86f | |
Clock King / int_8e2db8df | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_8e2db8df | comment |
Lampshaded by the nefarious Skate Club leader in Tony Hawk's American Wasteland; The second thing you have to do to join the Skate Club is "trick on all these objects before my stopwatch runs out." This is probably the only time the time limits you're given for missions are justified. | |
Clock King / int_8e2db8df | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_8e2db8df | featureConfidence |
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Tony Hawk Pro Skater (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_8e2db8df | |
Clock King / int_90b916ba | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_90b916ba | comment |
Temple Fugate, the Batman: The Animated Series version of the Clock King, is quite an example. This is the guy who, in his introductory episode, stoically steps off a bridge because he knows that the train is always a little early. In fact, his extraordinary timing abilities, coupled with his analysis of hours of recorded footage of Batman in combat, allows him to dodge his every move, making him one of the few people Batman has never defeated in hand-to-hand combat. His name even sounds like the Latin phrase "tempus fugit" — meaning "time flies". His meticulous timing and scheduling is explained in his backstory; he owned a business efficiency company that was being sued, and the day of the hearing, the future mayor Hamilton Hill suggested he break schedule and take his coffee break earlier, so as to look more relaxed and presentable to the court. Murphy's Law kicked in: he ended up running late, his appeal was thrown out, ruining him, and the end result can be summed up thusly: | |
Clock King / int_90b916ba | featureApplicability |
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Batman: The Animated Series | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_90b916ba | |
Clock King / int_914ddbfd | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_914ddbfd | comment |
In the latter parts of Groundhog Day, Phil has become this. Justified in that one couldn't live through the same day for 10 years without memorizing a thing or two. | |
Clock King / int_914ddbfd | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_914ddbfd | featureConfidence |
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Groundhog Day | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_914ddbfd | |
Clock King / int_94c0f487 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_94c0f487 | comment |
Voltron Force: Sky Marshal Wade does everything by the clock. Including using the bathroom. Lance uses this to the Voltron Force's advantage. | |
Clock King / int_94c0f487 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_94c0f487 | featureConfidence |
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Voltron Force | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_94c0f487 | |
Clock King / int_994af351 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_994af351 | comment |
Manfred von Karma in Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney — he throws a fit when a trial takes more than exactly three minutes, and the protagonist is clued to use Xanatos Speed Chess to beat him. Which is actually pretty close to Phoenix's usual method. | |
Clock King / int_994af351 | featureApplicability |
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Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney (Visual Novel) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_994af351 | |
Clock King / int_9a67b688 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_9a67b688 | comment |
Hakuba Saguru, a guest star in Case Closed and a main character in the sister anime Magic Kaito, a detective in pursuit of the elusive Phantom Thief Kaitou Kid. Hakuba carries around a gold pocket watch with which he notes the precise times of crimes down to a hundredth of a second. And apparently KID picked this up to a certain extent while fighting Conan. | |
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Case Closed (Manga) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_9a67b688 | |
Clock King / int_9a7088bc | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_9a7088bc | comment |
Star Trek: The Original Series: Spock, as part of his Ludicrous Precision. Lampshaded by Captains Sisko and Solok in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, after Solok times their previous meeting down to the exact day: Odo has an inherent need for order in his life, and therefore keeps to a strict routine and is extremely punctual. Shopkeepers set their clocks by him because they know exactly what time he will pass their establishments when he's on patrol. |
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Clock King / int_9a7088bc | featureApplicability |
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Star Trek: The Original Series | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_9a7088bc | |
Clock King / int_9d37e993 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_9d37e993 | comment |
In Edge of Tomorrow, like in "Groundhog Day", the hero relives the same events countless times, eventually learning to predict them with perfect precision. | |
Clock King / int_9d37e993 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_9d37e993 | featureConfidence |
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Edge of Tomorrow | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_9d37e993 | |
Clock King / int_9d963831 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_9d963831 | comment |
Jillie Djinn in Septimus Heap. She's always punctual to the seconds, and expects everyone else to be. | |
Clock King / int_9d963831 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_9d963831 | featureConfidence |
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Septimus Heap | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_9d963831 | |
Clock King / int_9f89a5f0 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_9f89a5f0 | comment |
Ever try playing Pokémon competitively? Did you know that by being a Clock King you can force your mons to have perfect stats and shiny status with the right calculations? This takes some serious dedication. | |
Clock King / int_9f89a5f0 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_9f89a5f0 | featureConfidence |
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Pokémon (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_9f89a5f0 | |
Clock King / int_a33d74a4 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_a33d74a4 | comment |
In Sword of Truth, Kahlan causes her captors a great deal of frustration by observing her guards' schedules and picking them off one by one. | |
Clock King / int_a33d74a4 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_a33d74a4 | featureConfidence |
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Sword of Truth | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_a33d74a4 | |
Clock King / int_a92653e1 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_a92653e1 | comment |
The Executioner: Mack Bolan is always this way with the initial hit that starts off a 'Bolan Blitz', whether it's ambushing a Mafia convoy or sniping a group at incredible distances. As things get unpredictable beyond that point due to how his enemy reacts (and the inevitable unexpected arrival of the Girl of the Week) Bolan tends to improvise from then on. | |
Clock King / int_a92653e1 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_a92653e1 | featureConfidence |
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The Executioner | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_a92653e1 | |
Clock King / int_a9cb14fc | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_a9cb14fc | comment |
In the Ravenloft campaign, the Timepiece of Klorr came about because of a clockmaker who was obsessed with time, so obsessed that he struggled to control the one timepiece he could not set to perfect synchronization: his own heart. Research into dark magic and unspecified entities led him to create this pocket watch, which did indeed cause his heart to beat in perfect time, and also made him immortal, along with giving him access to several time-related powers (in game terms, the watch's spell-like abilities include Haste, Hold Person, and even Time Stop) but with a terrible price. The user must murder — not just kill — sentient beings to pay for this effect, or the watch takes his life, which is what presumably happened to its creator. | |
Clock King / int_a9cb14fc | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_a9cb14fc | featureConfidence |
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Ravenloft (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_a9cb14fc | |
Clock King / int_aa0c474 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_aa0c474 | comment |
Violine: The chauffeur who drives Violine around talks in numbers and measurements, and divides larger units into smaller ones in conversation. Violine herself also has shades of this. | |
Clock King / int_aa0c474 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_aa0c474 | featureConfidence |
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Violine (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_aa0c474 | |
Clock King / int_ab42c63a | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_ab42c63a | comment |
One episode of Get Smart featured a technological variant of this. Some crooks get their hands on a supercomputer capable of analyzing and predicting traffic patterns, which they use to plan bank robberies and ensure that they can make a clean getaway. | |
Clock King / int_ab42c63a | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_ab42c63a | featureConfidence |
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Get Smart | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_ab42c63a | |
Clock King / int_af604a95 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_af604a95 | comment |
The Awesomes have the Concierge, a Hypercompetent Sidekick whose "superpower" is superior time-management skills, background checks, and generally being the best secretary on the planet. | |
Clock King / int_af604a95 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_af604a95 | featureConfidence |
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The Awesomes | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_af604a95 | |
Clock King / int_b1902d6a | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_b1902d6a | comment |
Time Man from Megaman Powered Up is obsessed with schedules, to the point where he says that Megaman is 0.3 seconds early for their fight. | |
Clock King / int_b1902d6a | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_b1902d6a | featureConfidence |
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Mega Man Powered Up (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_b1902d6a | |
Clock King / int_b4996199 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_b4996199 | comment |
Spider-Man: Depending on the writer, the Black Cat is one of these, planning events so it looked like anyone going after her was having terrible luck. Later on, she develops powers that let her do this for real with just probability alteration. | |
Clock King / int_b4996199 | featureApplicability |
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Spider-Man (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_b4996199 | |
Clock King / int_b8fc7376 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_b8fc7376 | comment |
The Pajama Game: Vernon Hines is a time study man at a pajama factory, and conducts his personal life with the same rigid efficiency. As detailed in the song "Think of the Time I Save," his absurd time-saving measures include sleeping in the next day's clothes, shaving in his bed, mashing different breakfast courses together into a paste, and even digging his own grave so he can get to Heaven faster. | |
Clock King / int_b8fc7376 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_b8fc7376 | featureConfidence |
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The Pajama Game (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_b8fc7376 | |
Clock King / int_bcb32dc6 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_bcb32dc6 | comment |
It's hard to think of any Shadowrun group which hasn't done this at one point. Everything, from the layout of the building to how many insects invade the facility on a regular basis, is carefully and overwhelmingly mapped out and planned, to the point where you'd expect your average 'runner to time herself on the composition of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich made to exact specification. Not that it's likely to help; the actual run will, in a best-case scenario, turn into Xanatos Speed Chess. More often, it'll devolve straight into an Indy Ploy. That is, if you even had a plan in the first place. The 5e supplement book, Run Faster includes the "Perfect Time" quality, allowing players to potentially become this trope mechanically by giving them a flawless perception of the passage of time (as long as they're conscious). | |
Clock King / int_bcb32dc6 | featureApplicability |
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Shadowrun (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_bcb32dc6 | |
Clock King / int_beac6ffb | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_beac6ffb | comment |
Anyone who managed to get 100% completion on The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask. You have to time things perfectly if you want to get everything, and you have only three days to complete every single task. It is entirely possible, if with enough skill at both this trope and the game itself, to beat all four temple bosses, save the Ranch Girls, reunite Anju and Kafei, save Lulu's eggs, rescue the family in Ikana and stop the moon all in the final cycle of three days. Incredibly, hair-pullingly, blood-boilingly difficult? Sure, but still entirely possible. | |
Clock King / int_beac6ffb | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_beac6ffb | featureConfidence |
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The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_beac6ffb | |
Clock King / int_c3c1f1d2 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_c3c1f1d2 | comment |
The Train Man in The Matrix Revolutions. Then again, he controls the trains (it's not so much he makes the trains run on time, but that in his world time is when the trains run!). | |
Clock King / int_c3c1f1d2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Clock King / int_c3c1f1d2 | featureConfidence |
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The Matrix Revolutions | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_c3c1f1d2 | |
Clock King / int_c43df4d8 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_c43df4d8 | comment |
Doctor Who: The Doctor is prone to this on occasion when he's particularly annoyed/in the mood to show off. It's born of a Time Lord's visceral relationship with time; in "The End of the World" the 9th Doctor timed his steps so as to walk between the blades of a spinning turbine. But it's not perfect. The 11th Doctor knew he was more than five minutes late to pick up Amelia because the sun had risen in the meantime, but he didn't realise that he was more than six months late until he tasted the garden shed. |
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Clock King / int_c43df4d8 | featureApplicability |
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Doctor Who | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_c43df4d8 | |
Clock King / int_cd34de67 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_cd34de67 | comment |
Tales of the Gold Monkey. In "God Save the Queen" the time-obsessed villain plants a Time Bomb on board the Queen Victoria. Our hero causes him to have a Villainous Breakdown by resetting his watch. | |
Clock King / int_cd34de67 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_cd34de67 | featureConfidence |
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Tales of the Gold Monkey | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_cd34de67 | |
Clock King / int_ced00507 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_ced00507 | comment |
Players of Pathologic will find that this trope applies to them. With the size of the town, the slowless of your gait, and the pressure of the ticking clock, they'll have to spend half the time analyzing their map, calculating whether to take the longer route or risk running through infected areas of town, especially when the Angels of Death show up in order to complete all the day's missions and still find time to sleep. It's even worse at night. | |
Clock King / int_ced00507 | featureApplicability |
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Pathologic (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_ced00507 | |
Clock King / int_d00adba4 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_d00adba4 | comment |
Trebla from Super Minion. His villainous schemes include huge numbers of contingency plans, all with precise timetables. Somewhat downplayed, as reality doesn't always cooperate with his precise planning. During the first job Tofu works for him on, the heroes are two minutes later than planned, so he runs out of material for his scripted monologue and starts (badly) ad-libbing. | |
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Super Minion | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_d00adba4 | |
Clock King / int_d2d6de50 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_d2d6de50 | comment |
In Ocean's Eleven, Terry Benedict is described as "a machine" because his schedule is so very precise, he even visits the men's room at the same time every day. | |
Clock King / int_d2d6de50 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_d2d6de50 | featureConfidence |
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Ocean's Eleven | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_d2d6de50 | |
Clock King / int_d5e9a8ed | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_d5e9a8ed | comment |
The Ultimates: Herr Kleiser and Loki; both pull off complex plans and deceive the heroes into moving according to their wishes without a hitch (and in Loki's case, warping reality to accommodate his plans)...until the hitch comes, at which time they're both caught completely flat-footed. | |
Clock King / int_d5e9a8ed | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_d5e9a8ed | featureConfidence |
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The Ultimates (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_d5e9a8ed | |
Clock King / int_d7aaafee | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_d7aaafee | comment |
Non-villainous: the order of chronomasters of Chronomistress: Out of Time, who practically treat every millisecond as a sacred treasure in its own right. They are, in fact, responsible for making sure that time in Equestria adds up perfectly—-something necessary in a land where the passage of nights and days must be regulated by hand. | |
Clock King / int_d7aaafee | featureApplicability |
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ChronomistressOutOfTime | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_d7aaafee | |
Clock King / int_d7c9f170 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_d7c9f170 | comment |
The Architect in The Matrix Reloaded, who factors in the unpredictability of others to make his predictions more accurate. | |
Clock King / int_d7c9f170 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_d7c9f170 | featureConfidence |
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The Matrix Reloaded | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_d7c9f170 | |
Clock King / int_e1a2f696 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_e1a2f696 | comment |
L-Elf from Valvrave the Liberator makes predictions whose precision borders on supernatural, at times. | |
Clock King / int_e1a2f696 | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_e1a2f696 | featureConfidence |
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Valvrave the Liberator | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_e1a2f696 | |
Clock King / int_e21bc91e | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_e21bc91e | comment |
The Adjusters in The Adjustment Bureau rely on other people adhering to strict schedules, timetables, and patterns. When their target starts to improvise (or, worse, one of them fails to act at the exact time prescribed by the plan), a Spanner in the Works is inevitable. | |
Clock King / int_e21bc91e | featureApplicability |
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The Adjustment Bureau | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_e21bc91e | |
Clock King / int_e251c6c5 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_e251c6c5 | comment |
In The Big Clock, publishing magnate Earl Janoth is obsessed with times and clocks, and runs his life planned down to the second, and insists that all of his employees do the same. He even has all of the clocks in the building synced to the eponymous big clock, which not only shows local time but the time in every time zone in the world. | |
Clock King / int_e251c6c5 | featureApplicability |
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The Big Clock | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_e251c6c5 | |
Clock King / int_e58a9c23 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_e58a9c23 | comment |
Ditto Egon Olsen in Olsen-banden, the Danish original that Jönssonligan was based on — right down to the same catchphrase "Det hele er timet og tilrettelagt". | |
Clock King / int_e58a9c23 | featureApplicability |
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Olsen-banden | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_e58a9c23 | |
Clock King / int_e5feb1e | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_e5feb1e | comment |
Ace Attorney: Manfred von Karma in Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney — he throws a fit when a trial takes more than exactly three minutes, and the protagonist is clued to use Xanatos Speed Chess to beat him. Which is actually pretty close to Phoenix's usual method. Mael Stronghart, the Chief Justice of England in The Great Ace Attorney. He always consults his pocketwatch and gives the amount of time remaining before he has to leave down to the seconds, and his giant office is located inside a surprisingly quiet Clock Tower. While he is quite the Schedule Fanatic when it comes to holding other people accountable, he sees no problem with showing up hours late himself. In the Fan Game Ace Attorney Ultimate Justice, Warm-Up Boss Jutaro Akafuku was a Gentleman Thief who meticulously planned out his crimes and daily life, even accounting for things outside his control like bus delays in his day planner. He stalked his victim and the boy he planned to frame for days if not weeks to learn their schedules for his scheme, only to have a Villainous Breakdown upon realizing that his perfect plan was foiled by something as simple as luck. |
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Clock King / int_e5feb1e | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_e5feb1e | featureConfidence |
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Ace Attorney (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_e5feb1e | |
Clock King / int_e66220af | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_e66220af | comment |
Captain Vidal in Pan's Labyrinth was obsessed with time, especially since his pocketwatch belonged to his late father. He purposely repaired it and kept it in perfect condition to spite his father's memory, who broke the watch to stop it at the time of his death so his son "would know how a brave man dies." When he is about to be executed by the rebels, he calmly requests that his son be told what time he died, only for Mercedes to cut him off and say that his son "won't even know [his] name" followed by her brother shooting him in the head. | |
Clock King / int_e66220af | featureApplicability |
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Pan's Labyrinth | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_e66220af | |
Clock King / int_e75c6d45 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_e75c6d45 | comment |
The Psionic Minmax who features heavily in the 'Maze of Many' arc in Goblins has found a way to bypass the Maze's mechanic of wiping your memory each time you attempt to finish the Maze and fail. As a result, over the course of 817 journeys through the maze he's built up a very clear mental image of the Maze and its mechanics, and can predict, down to the minute, how each of the other parties competing with him to complete the maze will behave. | |
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Goblins (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_e75c6d45 | |
Clock King / int_eaeeea9b | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_eaeeea9b | comment |
StarCraft II multiplayer is particularly built on this. For one example, Terran players playing Zerg opponents will typically start building missile turrets around the 11-minute mark, because they know this is the earliest their Zerg opponents typically mass air units. | |
Clock King / int_eaeeea9b | featureApplicability |
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StarCraft II (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_eaeeea9b | |
Clock King / int_ee66462b | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_ee66462b | comment |
In Dr. STONE, Senku was petrified into a statue in an area with no sunlight, but knew exactly the date and time he was finally freed by counting every second during the thousands of years he was stuck. As insane as that sounds, to him, it was necessary to synchronize with time so he wouldn't risk waking up and dying in the winter. He also has a keen sense of how long it takes people he is merely passingly familiar with to do certain things or to catch on to what he's up to, evening the odds against enemies stronger than he is. In the Treasure Island arc, he's able to use a line of his allies willingly letting themselves be petrified to calculate the exact moment to toss a jar of revival fluid into the air so it lands on him and immediately depetrifies him. This is an on-the-fly plan implemented in a matter of seconds. |
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Clock King / int_ee66462b | featureApplicability |
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Clock King / int_ee66462b | featureConfidence |
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Dr. STONE (Manga) | hasFeature |
Clock King / int_ee66462b | |
Clock King / int_efcd8723 | type |
Clock King | |
Clock King / int_efcd8723 | comment |
This is part of Funtime Foxy's mechanic in Ultimate Custom Night. He spends all his time on his stage, with his 'showtime' (read: Jump Scare time') printed on a placard. To prevent his attack, you have to be looking at his camera the moment the clock ticks over to the hour his show is at (he gets stage fright and delays it by a couple hours). Fail to do so, and it's curtains for you. Even 6 AM, the traditional Instant-Win Condition, is not safe if Foxy has a show at that time. | |
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The Batman: The episode "Seconds" has a variation on this with Francis Grey, a pudgy guy who can rewind time to fix his mistakes, allowing him to effortlessly dodge Batman's punches, high-speed traffic, and undo his embarrassing attempts at banter. Unlike most examples of this trope, he doesn't really plan ahead of time, but he knows what's going to happen because he's been there before. | |
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Cheaper by the Dozen has a benevolent real-life version in Frank Bunker Gilbreth, who is always trying to find the most efficient way to do needed tasks ... so that you have more time to spend on the things you want to do. | |
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Bob & Ray's Mr. Trace, Keener than Most Persons admonished his valet, Rudy "when I call for you, I want you now, not seven or eight seconds from now." | |
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Phileas Fogg from Around the World in Eighty Days. He knows exactly how many steps it is from his favorite haunt to his home. He follows the same daily routine meticulously, expecting the hired help to do the same; he even fires a servant for giving him shaving water that was two degrees too cold. After betting his fortune on being able to carry out the titular feat, he plans out a route that will take him exactly 80 days to complete. Phileas Fogg is the Unbuilt Trope: published in 1872, his case is the Trope Maker but also explores all the ramifications of that trope: Being a Mysterious Stranger, the readers never know any of his Back Story, and only in the very last chapters the reader realizes that Fogg’s extreme reserve was not an Evil Brit case, but only a severe case of British Stuffiness. Unlike all his imitators, Fogg is very good at Xanatos Speed Chess and the Indy Ploy, because that’s the only way he can win The Bet. Fogg’s plan didn’t work, but it didn’t work in his favor: the Universe rewards him granting him almost an extra day. And the one obsessed with his clock was not him, but his employee, Jean Passepartout. His servant later points out to him that he could have done it with time to spare if had they not gone through India; Fogg admits that he's right, but if they had done that, Fogg would have not rescued Aouda, fallen in love and married her; his point is, some things are more important than being punctual. | |
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Mrs. Appleyard in Picnic at Hanging Rock. | |
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Dexter's Laboratory: Dexter once bought an expensive popsicle and paid with pennies. When the ice cream man asked Dexter how long it took him to count the pennies, Dexter answered the question with pinpoint precision. | |
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Subverted in Kathryn Hulme's The Nun's Story. Gabrielle/Sister Luke frequently resists the strict schedules that govern the convents she lives in. To make matters worse, the one time she deliberately makes a show of arriving perfectly on time, she actually arrives too late to prevent another nun from being murdered. To nuns, the bell must be respected as the voice of God calling them to prayers, meals, etc. Sister Luke points out the conflict between being a good nun and being a healer, as the bell often stops a nursing sister from caring for or counseling patients. |
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Star Trek: The Next Generation: Data is equally precise as Spock, though it comes from being an android with an internal clock to go by, and thus he has no choice but to be so precise. When he actually turns off his internal clock, Data is implied to perceive time as irrationally as humans do. | |
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