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First Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics

 First Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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First Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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FirstLawOfMetafictionalThermodynamics
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For any fictional system, the sum of the mass in the system and the energy in the system is a constant.
If a character or setting is added, then the plot will slow down so that the character or setting can be properly introduced, other characters or settings will fall Out of Focus, if not outright Put on a Bus. How long it takes to bring the plot up to speed, remember neglected characters, or otherwise regain a status quo depends on how much detail is added at a time; widely-spaced revelations can be worked in more quickly than large infodumps. Adding characters can also lead to Flanderization of existing characters.
This is self-evident for SitComs, where all changes are reversed by the Reset Button. But it applies to systems without the Reset Button, too.
If a character or setting is removed, then the plot will move faster or grow more complex to accommodate the development, or the remaining characters and settings will get more focus, or other characters will replace the ones that were removed to fill their niches. Adding energy by removing characters increases the possibilities for those who remain. Usually, some of those possibilities will crystallize quickly.
If a work gets Cerebus Syndrome, the work grows more massive, and energy must be removed. If the original work didn't have that much energy to start with, the transition to drama is likely to fail.
If a character is Flanderized or a work is converted to The Theme Park Version, the work becomes less massive, and more energy will be released into the system. This is why Flanderization and theme park versions are so widespread.
Strictly enforcing continuity adds mass as the amount of continuity increases. RetCons remove mass and release energy. This is why DC Comics is fond of Cosmic Ret Cons.
Soap Operas live on this trope; the more subplots and characters involved in them, the slower any of them advance.
This law is the force behind these tropes:

And You Were There
Cartwright Curse
Doomed Hometown
Economy Cast
Four Lines, All Waiting
It's Not You, It's My Enemies (to keep UST tense)
Kudzu Plot
The Law of Conservation of Detail
One-Neighbor Neighborhood
Pseudo-Crisis
Remember the New Guy?
Sudden Sequel Death Syndrome (so the love story in the sequel can be the same as the original)
Suspiciously Similar Substitute
Three Lines, Some Waiting
Throw-Away Country
Two Lines, No Waiting
Weirdness Censor
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Bleach is a textbook case of the results of suddenly introducing tons of characters since the start of the Soul Society arc: the plot slowed down as tons of secondary characters were briefly introduced, and in the Fake Karakura Town arc the plots slows down even more as many of these characters are given multi-chapter fights.
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Fringe: Seems to be utterly averted. As more characters (from the Alternate Universe) are added and the Arc becomes more dominant, the plot speeds up and there are events of major significance per episode; thus, a simultaneous increase in mass and energy.
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Heroes does this to no end. Any time a new character is introduced, an old one leaves. Usually one of the women. Often in an example of Put on a Bus or Stuffed in the Fridge.
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The Justice League show gets through story arcs in one or two when it was just the seven main characters, but once dozens of superheroes join in Unlimited, the show's arcs take longer to get going. Suddenly story lines take whole seasons to get through, or even two. The last story arc of season 2 is essentially a five-part episoded due to all the characters involved.
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The Divine Comedy: The more sub-divisions there are in a circle of Hell or sphere of Heaven, the longer it takes to go through. This is why half of Inferno is spent in the Eighth Circle with its ten sub-divisions and why the Eighth Sphere of Heaven takes a similar amount of time with its line-up of those who represent the theological virtues.
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Although very little emotional or character development occured in Arrested Development, Executive Meddling blamed the mountains of Continuity Nods for alienating new viewers. It's one reason that show was canceled, but also one reason fans loved it.
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New Laverne's appearance in Scrubs.
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Power Rangers: Generally averted, where the plots don't get going usually until the cast has been expanded from 3-5 rangers+allies+villains to 6-8 rangers+more allies+more villains. Played straight in RPM, where we get more plot than we have in years, after 99% of humanity has been destroyed.
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Acknowledged in Homestuck and avoided. Many characters are introduced slowly until Act 5, which introduced an avalanche of characters at once, which rendered many of the original characters Out of Focus. However, many characters, new and old, were Killed Off for Real during Act 5, and according to Word of God this was preplanned. However, Act 6 avoids this, despite also adding many new characters and still manages to bring characters previously Out of Focus back to prominence, at the cost of making the story twice as long.
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The Stormlight Archive: Brandon Sanderson has extensively Discussed this trope, and the measures he has taken to keep the narrative mass of Stormlight books for expanding out of control, in his interviews.
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In Stargate SG-1, when they were considering adding Vala to the team, one objection is that with Vala there'd be five members of the team. It seemed a good objection until someone asked why that was a bad thing.
This was noted by O'Neill in season 6, after Daniel had gone missing, and the Russians wanted someone on SG-1. "Who decided every team that goes through the Gate has to have four people?"
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The plot of Final Fantasy VII Remake screeches to a halt so that the story can properly introduce Aerith, Reno, Rude, Aerith's budding romance with Cloud, and the people and culture of the Sector 5 slums. It takes about four full chapters for Cloud to fully reunite with AVALANCHE and continue the main plot of their terrorist campaign against Shinra.
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George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire demonstrates this trope nicely. As more and more POV characters are introduced, the plot has slowed down considerably as time and space is used to develop each POV. The first three books are very well written and gripping whereas the fourth is slower paced and focuses mostly on sideplots with hardly any of the series' main protagonists featuring. The fifth gets things back on track but is still very slow.
Martin is very much aware of this trope. He's stated that there will be no more new POV characters in future books. And half-jokingly claims that he needs to start killing off more characters in The Winds of Winter.
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In Serenity, things pick up speed after Book dies, and really hurtle towards a conclusion after Wash dies.
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Sonic the Hedgehog games are great examples of this trope in action. Games which focus solely on Sonic and his enemy Eggman (like Sonic Unleashed and Sonic Colors) tend to have pretty short cutscenes and stories that get right into the meat of the conflict and gameplay. Meanwhile, games with multiple playable characters and antagonists allied with Eggman like Sonic Adventure and Sonic the Hedgehog (2006) tend to be loaded with cutscenes and tutorials to establish each character even before Sonic and co. can properly start their adventure. This even appears in the classic games, where the solo title Sonic the Hedgehog has little to no story while Sonic the Hedgehog 3 has to take away gameplay time to play cutscenes to establish Sonic, Tails, and Knuckles.
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Original Doctor Who, which had 2-3 companions at any given time, moved languorously, frequently taking several episodes to resolve any given storyline; New Doctor Who usually only has the Doctor and 1 companion (2 in series 6), not including brief guests, as most plots are finished in a single episode.
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David Weber's Safehold series is a good example too: in first book (one main POV) action took two years in-story. Book six (after adding many, many POVs during previous ones) in longer, but concerns only five months. As to NIE/Bnote Number of Important Events per Book, zig-zagged: in book two it's less than in book one, then book three has more, then books four and five see steady fall and in books six and seven NIE/B rises.
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In The Legend of Korra, the more characters a season introduces, the longer it takes for the show to get to the start of the main conflict. For example, the first season sees the hero and villain meet after three episodes, then the second season can have the bad guy meet Korra in episode 1 since the main cast is already established from season 1. Then in season 3, which has to set up a whole nation's worth of benders, the entire extended family of three of the leads, and four main villains, the heroes and bad guys don't actually meet up until episode 7 of 13!
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Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Dawn is introduced, an episode or two are spent explaining her relationship with the rest of the group. Also when Cordelia left the show, Anya was brought back to fill the "Xander's Love Interest /Deadpan Snarker" role.
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The Kingdom Hearts games all take their time establishing characters at the beginning of the game, but the more each game introduces, the longer it takes to get to the main story. Kingdom Hearts II and Kingdom Hearts: 358/2 Days are the most extreme example. The former has an extended five hour opening to tease the 13 villains and deuteragonist before bringing in the main character, while the latter takes time to go deeper into the characterization of those 13 villains and an important new character over the course of a dozens of missions before the main plot reveals itself.
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Night Court: Endemic through most of it. The strident young feminist prosecutor was replaced with another strident young feminist prosecutor. The sarcastic elderly bailiff was replaced with another sarcastic elderly bailiff (though this was averted when the show's third bailiff was the much younger Roz to avert another incident of Died During Production).
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The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 First Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Laws and Formulas
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