...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
Gaia's Lament
- 741 statements
- 143 feature instances
- 228 referencing feature instances
Gaia's Lament | type |
FeatureClass | |
Gaia's Lament | label |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament | page |
GaiasLament | |
Gaia's Lament | comment |
(Note: Empathic Music for an Empathic Environment!) On a futuristic Earth, or similar location, plants, animals, and naturally clean water are things of the past. Something terrible has happened — civilization's negligence of the environment, a strange natural disaster, or even a combination of both — to turn the world into a wasteland. This isn't (usually) the Earth That Was, as the planet is still populated (usually overpopulated), but it's on its way there. Real food is a luxury for only the rich while the general populace lives off of synthetic food, Food Pills, or a new kind of meat. Forests are gone, replaced by concrete and steel jungles, more commonly known as cities, which are dark and dirty. If there is any undeveloped land still left, it's a desert wasteland, spoiled beyond recovery. What was once coastline is now underwater. If the story takes place/has a scene in a coastal city, expect to see the tops of skyscrapers sticking out of the water. Sometimes this is reversed: seas become salt deserts, with the remains of beached ships scattered about. The problem of overpopulation may be solved with the promotion of suicide, or special clinics. The general populace is detached from the natural world, having had no experience with it. However, if a character has the chance to see what is left of the green, or what the world once was, expect it to be a powerful moment. If the world is really far gone, they may simply see it as strange or alien. A Sub-Trope of Dystopia and Crapsack World. Sister Trope to Just Before the End, Earth That Used to Be Better, and Green Aesop. "Cousin" Trope to After the End, as society is usually still hanging on, if barely, although it can go with it, (usually, this trope is either the reason why the world ended or whatever ended the world causes this trope). Frequently seen in Cyberpunk settings. Compare to Gaia's Vengeance, when the world fights back. Extinct in the Future is a Sub-Trope that deals specifically with species that have gone extinct. |
|
Gaia's Lament | fetched |
2024-04-28T12:17:33Z | |
Gaia's Lament | parsed |
2024-04-28T12:17:33Z | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to AlternateUniverse: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to AnachronicOrder: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to Cernunnos: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to DeathWorld: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to DownplayedTrope: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to EldritchAbomination: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to FilkSong: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to GlobalWarming: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to HonestJohnsDealership: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to HordeOfAlienLocusts: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to InvertedTrope: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to JoniMitchell: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to MarvinGaye: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to OrbitalBombardment: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to RecursivePrecursors: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to Transhuman: Not an Item - CAT | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to UnitedNationsIsASuperpower: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to Vocaloid: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
Gaia's Lament | processingComment |
Dropped link to ZigZaggingTrope: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Gaia's Lament | isPartOf |
DBTropes | |
Gaia's Lament / int_11e6bf74 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_11e6bf74 | comment |
In Sonic the Hedgehog CD, all of the Bad Future levels are either this, or in the process of becoming this. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_11e6bf74 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_11e6bf74 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Sonic the Hedgehog CD (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_11e6bf74 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1367ce42 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1367ce42 | comment |
In the Wool series, the world has been rendered literally unable to support life, and humanity must live in underground silos. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1367ce42 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1367ce42 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Wool | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_1367ce42 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_16c83de8 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_16c83de8 | comment |
Star Fox 64: The planet Zoness was once beautiful and lush, and served as a vacation spot, but later became a waste dump thanks to Andross's experiments. Also, in the intro, Corneria is mentioned to have been turned into a wasteland by Andross, but has recovered by the start of the game. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_16c83de8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_16c83de8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Fox 64 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_16c83de8 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_16d191f7 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_16d191f7 | comment |
Homefront: During North Korea's invasion of the United States, knowing that they don't have the resources or manpower to occupy the entire country, they opt instead to create an impenetrable barrier by poisoning the Mississippi River with nuclear material. The result is a massive irradiated zone stretching from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico, 300 miles wide, where the groundwater is also contaminated and the air is dangerous to breathe. An online fact sheet detailed that around 400 species in the region have been wiped out and, if America is liberated, the river won't recover for another 250 years. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_16d191f7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_16d191f7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Homefront (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_16d191f7 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_195f30bf | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_195f30bf | comment |
The Oblongs: The Valley portion of Hill Valley is a horribly polluted landscape thanks to runoff from Globocide. The air is toxic, the land befouled, there's garbage everywhere, and birth defects plague the residents. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_195f30bf | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_195f30bf | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Oblongs | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_195f30bf | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1a7918e3 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1a7918e3 | comment |
Earth in Terranigma starts out like this, but you restore it in the beginning of the game. Towards the end though, as humans become more powerful, dialogue reveals that the environment is starting to head downhill. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1a7918e3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1a7918e3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Terranigma (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_1a7918e3 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1dcc121d | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1dcc121d | comment |
In The Lotus War, the Shima islands are rapidly going this way. Growing Blood Lotus rapidly ruins the land it is grown on, absent fertilizers the growers cannot afford. The remaining pockets of wilderness are rapidly being destroyed by the Lotus Guild to replace depleted fields. It's processed into an oil-like substance called chi, and burning vast quantities of it has turned the rain black and the sky red. Virtually no one goes outdoors without a breathing mask and protective goggles, or at least a kerchief over their face. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1dcc121d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_1dcc121d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Lotus War | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_1dcc121d | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2187bf22 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2187bf22 | comment |
In Xeelee Sequence, as part of their systemic destruction of human culture and history, the Qax wiped out literally all plant and animal life on Earth, to the point of using nanites to poison the ground and destroy the fossil record, so there was no evidence it even existed at all, and even the memory of what once was got deleted from human knowledge. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2187bf22 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2187bf22 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Xeelee Sequence | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_2187bf22 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_22c338ea | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_22c338ea | comment |
The first incarnation of Earth in The Lathe of Heaven is wildly overpopulated, global warming appears to have disrupted the ecosystem (Mount Hood is said to be permanently snowless), and near-starvation appears to be the norm. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_22c338ea | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_22c338ea | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Lathe of Heaven | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_22c338ea | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2594ce60 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2594ce60 | comment |
The situation in Deus Ex: Invisible War isn't any better. Transgenic species have escaped from labs, causing trouble for people in cities and functioning as invasive species. Nanite Swells cause Grey Death-like (the plague in the original game) symptoms in their victims, and in the Omar ending, the environment is outright destroyed in the many wars that happen after the game ends. The Omar don't mind, because their plan is to get the strongest humans possible and make for the stars. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2594ce60 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2594ce60 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Deus Ex: Invisible War (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_2594ce60 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_25fd072b | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_25fd072b | comment |
When Angels Wept deals with the realistic aftermath of a nuclear exchange during the Cuban Missile Crisis. While there aren't enough nukes to cause a nuclear winter, the nitrous oxides in the resulting smoke and dust clouds damage the Ozone Layer, causing rates of skin cancer in humans and animals to increase a thousand-fold, also disrupting the life cycles of many plants. Additionally, while most cities hit by nukes are rebuilt, others — having faced groundburst bombs — are still too irradiated to safely inhabit decades later. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_25fd072b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_25fd072b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
When Angels Wept | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_25fd072b | |
Gaia's Lament / int_261c8d3f | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_261c8d3f | comment |
The Simpsons: Played for laughs in the episode "Lisa's Wedding", set in the future. Trees are apparently extinct, as shown by a holographic image of a tree, with the description: "In memory of a real tree." | |
Gaia's Lament / int_261c8d3f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_261c8d3f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Simpsons | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_261c8d3f | |
Gaia's Lament / int_28ea616c | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_28ea616c | comment |
It Could Happen Here: In the narration, the former United States is wrecked by the consequences of climate change (and the states that remain in the power vacuum are unable to deal with it as effectively as the federal government would have.) Wildfire season is said to be 6 months out of the year, the coastal areas are flooded by rising tides, and the South and Midwest are left uninhabitable by constant mudslides and tornadoes. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_28ea616c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_28ea616c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
It Could Happen Here (Podcast) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_28ea616c | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ae406c1 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ae406c1 | comment |
Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri: This is just one of the many things mentioned of Earth before its final destruction. The ending reveals that it is recolonized sometime later, though. Also possible on the new planet if you neglect Green technology, which you'll almost certainly be doing if you play as the Free Drones, who can't use Green economics at all. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ae406c1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ae406c1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ae406c1 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ba1d958 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ba1d958 | comment |
The Matrix: The Earth is completely covered in perpetual darkness caused by nanomachines which blot out the sun, while all plant and animal life is extinct from both that and the weapons of mass destruction that were used in the Robot War which defeated humanity. All that remains are the cold, endless ruins of human civilization and the hive-like machine cities. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ba1d958 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ba1d958 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Matrix | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ba1d958 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ddf611 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ddf611 | comment |
Dark Sun: Corrupt magic and war have turned Athas, a once beautiful world, into a desert wasteland. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ddf611 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ddf611 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dark Sun (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ddf611 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2e11542 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2e11542 | comment |
Much like the movie, minus the pollution part, The Death of Grass by John Christopher has the Chung-Li virus, an Asian-originated, four-stage, grass-killing disease that serves as the story's omnipresent menace. It wipes out all the crops, and to make matters worse, society slowly degrades into barbarism. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2e11542 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2e11542 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
No Blade of Grass | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_2e11542 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ef7cb74 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ef7cb74 | comment |
Lyrical Nanoha has the planet Eltria, as seen in The Gears of Destiny and its movie adaptations Reflection and Detonation. Most of the planet has been reduced to a barren wasteland due to pollution and natural resource exhaustion, and almost the entire population has moved to a space colony that orbits the planet. The plot of both stories is set in motion when the younger daughter of a terminally ill scientist studying how to return life to Eltria comes to Earth looking for something called the Eternity Crystal, which supposedly has the power to heal both the planet and her father. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ef7cb74 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ef7cb74 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Lyrical Nanoha (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_2ef7cb74 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2f4271ed | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2f4271ed | comment |
The Night's Dawn Trilogy: Earth is so overpopulated, that minor crimes will get you sent off world, and pollution has forced cities to build domes. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2f4271ed | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_2f4271ed | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Night's Dawn Trilogy | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_2f4271ed | |
Gaia's Lament / int_33dd1d90 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_33dd1d90 | comment |
Half-Life 2: The Combine occupation of Earth has reduced much of it to a wasteland, populated by hostile alien life forms. Food has been reduced to synthetic rations, which must be very revolting, as one NPC says to the player "You gotta be damn hungry to wait in line for this crap." The Combine are also in the process of stripping the planet of all its resources, especially water. The canals and coastline around City 17 all show signs that the oceans have fallen by five meters, filled with garbage, rusting wrecks and radioactive waste everywhere. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_33dd1d90 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_33dd1d90 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Half-Life 2 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_33dd1d90 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_35ada324 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_35ada324 | comment |
Alien: Earth has been reduced to an over-polluted slum, and one character in Alien: Resurrection refers it to as a 'shithole'. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_35ada324 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_35ada324 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Alien (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_35ada324 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_3653b976 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_3653b976 | comment |
Metro: Metro 2033: The only place in game where you can breathe without a gas mask is in the titular Metro system (and there are even some places there where you need one!). The surface of the world is a frozen toxic wasteland, and you cannot survive up there for long without a mask. A side conversation heard between two NPCs reveals that the surface won't be habitable for at least 50 more years. Another side conversation reveals that outside of Moscow, the area is habitable, but still very dangerous and nothing like pre-war Earth. Played with in Metro: Last Light. Moscow's surface is starting to experience a "nuclear spring" with the snow and ice beginning to thaw and rain occurs. Marshes and other wetlands are beginning to develop on the surface and there is a thriving ecosystem... of nightmarish mutants. The air is still unbreathable to human beings. Moscow is recovering... in a new direction that is not necessarily hospitable to humans. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_3653b976 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_3653b976 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Metro (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_3653b976 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_3d6e4e50 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_3d6e4e50 | comment |
The Day the Earth Caught Fire is one of the earliest examples of this trope in cinema. Two simultaneous tests of nuclear bombs knock the Earth off its axis and completely ruin the climate, resulting in storms, floods, drought and the destruction of entire habitats. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_3d6e4e50 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_3d6e4e50 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Day the Earth Caught Fire | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_3d6e4e50 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40b716af | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40b716af | comment |
Never directly seen, but implied by the emails in Assassin's Creed. For example, the term "Hurricane Season" has been abandoned... because now, they can occur at any point during the year. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40b716af | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40b716af | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Assassin's Creed (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_40b716af | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40e44a7a | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40e44a7a | comment |
Judge Dredd: A public service robot goes about proclaiming how good recycled food is for the environment, or what's left of it. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40e44a7a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40e44a7a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Judge Dredd | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_40e44a7a | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40ed68a0 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40ed68a0 | comment |
In Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (filmed as Blade Runner), much of the Earth has been poisoned by nuclear fallout, and all but a tiny fraction of Earth's fauna has been wiped out. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40ed68a0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_40ed68a0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_40ed68a0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_418f78b9 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_418f78b9 | comment |
Most of Robinson's later novels are set on an environmentally deteriorating near-future Earth, such as Forty Signs of Rain, New York 2140, parts of 2312, and the last part of The Years of Rice and Salt — though it's always kept realistic according to current climate science, and they're not total apocalypse scenarios. The emphasis is on how human society might change in order to adapt to these problems and save what can still be saved. His novel Aurora (2015) is set in a giant Generation Ship where the carefully balanced nature-like environment is collapsing due to unforeseen microbial evolution and due to the system being forced to go on longer than planned, leading to starvation among the crew.note The author was making a point about the physical impossibility of colonizing planets in other solar system as a "backup option" when we mess up the Earth, at least as long as Faster-Than-Light Travel remains a fantasy. There is a reason he was named a "Hero of the Environment" by Time magazine and that he got awarded the Arthur C. Clarke Award for Imagination in Service to Society in 2018. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_418f78b9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_418f78b9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
2312 | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_418f78b9 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4272dc3e | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4272dc3e | comment |
On the Beach: The planet's biosphere is irreparably damaged by nuclear war, the northern hemisphere is already dead, and all life in the southern hemisphere will die as well from radiation poisoning in a few months. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4272dc3e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4272dc3e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
On the Beach | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_4272dc3e | |
Gaia's Lament / int_44fe781e | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_44fe781e | comment |
Neon Genesis Evangelion: Second Impact wiped out most of humanity and knocked off the Earth's orbit. Seasons no longer exist, and are only shown in flashbacks. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_44fe781e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_44fe781e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Neon Genesis Evangelion | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_44fe781e | |
Gaia's Lament / int_454d0351 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_454d0351 | comment |
Heavy Gear: Earth has been reduced to a nuclear wasteland after being devastated in World War III. The New Earth Commonwealth set their sights on reclaiming the abandoned colonies to rebuild Earth. In which they use military force to get the other worlds to agree to their demands. The planet of Utopia was once a verdant world was reduced to this after a nuclear war between its inhabitants. With most of the population now living in underground bunkers. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_454d0351 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_454d0351 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Heavy Gear (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_454d0351 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_463cfe3a | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_463cfe3a | comment |
Star Fox: According to the original game's manual, Venom once had "beauty second only to Corneria's" before Andross turned it into "a dark, polluted world". Star Fox 64: The planet Zoness was once beautiful and lush, and served as a vacation spot, but later became a waste dump thanks to Andross's experiments. Also, in the intro, Corneria is mentioned to have been turned into a wasteland by Andross, but has recovered by the start of the game. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_463cfe3a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_463cfe3a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Fox (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_463cfe3a | |
Gaia's Lament / int_46cfecdf | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_46cfecdf | comment |
In "When This World Is All On Fire", global warming leads to mass flooding and crop failures. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_46cfecdf | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_46cfecdf | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
When This World Is All On Fire | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_46cfecdf | |
Gaia's Lament / int_49a87cb3 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_49a87cb3 | comment |
Final Fantasy VII deals with a group of eco-terrorists named AVALANCHE fighting to liberate the world from the ruthless exploitation by the greedy MegaCorp Shinra who never stops draining the life energy of the planet (and thus the very cycle of life itself) for their own money and power. The trope is driven home when the player first leaves Midgar, and is able to see the surrounding lands are indeed grey and dead, there isn't even a blade of grass for miles around. Most of the rest of the world is still doing okay for now, but the underwater reactor at Junon has apparently wiped out the marine life that used to support the fishing town nearby. Just for emphasis, the land around other Mako reactors tend to look brown and craggy. The area immediately around Midgar is jet black. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_49a87cb3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_49a87cb3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Final Fantasy VII (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_49a87cb3 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_49a88442 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_49a88442 | comment |
Final Fantasy XIV has the Burn, a vast wasteland located between Doma and Garlemald. According to historical records, it was a verdant and fertile land until repeated summonings of primals left the area completely drained of aether. What remains now is a stark-white desert populated by only the most dangerous extremophilic life forms. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_49a88442 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_49a88442 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Final Fantasy XIV (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_49a88442 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4a6ef2c5 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4a6ef2c5 | comment |
Space Battleship Yamato: In the original series, the surface of the earth is a radioactive desert and humanity is forced to live underground. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4a6ef2c5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4a6ef2c5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Space Battleship Yamato | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_4a6ef2c5 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4c2be998 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4c2be998 | comment |
In The Supernaturalist, the world drinks sim-coffee, the smog is always heavy, and the sky is never blue unless you fly out of the atmosphere (it is instead colored according to the chemicals in the smog). Also, there are no whales. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4c2be998 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_4c2be998 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Supernaturalist | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_4c2be998 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5030d3bb | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5030d3bb | comment |
A.I.: Artificial Intelligence: The human population has been reduced by ecological collaspe, and most of New York City is under water. It gets worse — at the end, all of Earth is frozen over, and humanity is extinct. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5030d3bb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5030d3bb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
A.I.: Artificial Intelligence | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_5030d3bb | |
Gaia's Lament / int_513f5832 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_513f5832 | comment |
In Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, while the Earth's condition is generally positive, some sort of environmental faux pax — probably related to the collapse of human civilization in the 21st century that preceded First Contact — resulted in humpback whales (and possibly blue whales) going extinct, which becomes a problem for Earth in the movie.note Other species of aquatic mammals are shown to still be alive and well, such as dolphins (official materials suggest that dolphins and whales serve aboard the Enterprise-D as navigators). | |
Gaia's Lament / int_513f5832 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_513f5832 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_513f5832 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_51c15d94 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_51c15d94 | comment |
In Risk 2210, players place down "devastation zones" on the map, which are nuclear fallout markers and are impassable. Other features included the Amazon Desert. Going by that, 23rd century Earth isn't doing so hot. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_51c15d94 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_51c15d94 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Risk (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_51c15d94 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_54a7dc07 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_54a7dc07 | comment |
In one Space: 1999 episode, the Alphans make contact with Earth, where several centuries have passed due to relativity or something. Everyone on Earth lives in domed cities because the atmosphere is now poisonous and nothing can live outside. Still, as they say, "who needs nature?" | |
Gaia's Lament / int_54a7dc07 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_54a7dc07 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Space: 1999 | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_54a7dc07 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_56fa0ea4 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_56fa0ea4 | comment |
In Civilization IV, the over-use of nuclear weapons can start to cause desertification across the world, not to mention all the radioactive fallout. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_56fa0ea4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_56fa0ea4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Civilization (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_56fa0ea4 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_594706c6 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_594706c6 | comment |
SimEarth: Sentient species can cause this if their energy uses favor fossil fuels, or they start a nuclear war. The player can do this by bombing the planet with nukes, asteroids, setting off volcanoes left and right, or messing around with the planet trait sliders. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_594706c6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_594706c6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
SimEarth (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_594706c6 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5bfa9c98 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5bfa9c98 | comment |
Warframe: While by the time of the game the Earth is covered in a vast forest, some journals from the time of the Orokin Empire imply that it was a polluted wasteland that had been abandoned long ago. It was an Orokin scientist who created the forest, mostly to make it useless for industrial purposes. Something of a scientific Gaia's Vengeance. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5bfa9c98 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5bfa9c98 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Warframe (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_5bfa9c98 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5d8f5ee8 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5d8f5ee8 | comment |
Subverted in Life After People. Humans disappear suddenly, resulting in ecological disaster when no one repairs hazardous waste storage facilities and the like, but centuries later, there is surprisingly little evidence that humans once ravaged the environment. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5d8f5ee8 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_5d8f5ee8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Life After People | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_5d8f5ee8 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6274efe4 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6274efe4 | comment |
Played for laughs in the MAD parody of The Lorax, "I am Lorax". Will Smith made so many action movies that include explosions that it left Thneedville(Hollywood) as a barren wasteland. It's all fixed in the end when all the trees are redrawn. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6274efe4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6274efe4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
MAD | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_6274efe4 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_649a6f49 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_649a6f49 | comment |
After Armageddon Gaiden takes place after a nuclear war as destroyed human civilization. The Earth has been left a barren wasteland where even trees are rare. The protagonists are later amazed when they get a glimpse of nature in its original form and restoring the Earth becomes one of the goals in defeating the villain. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_649a6f49 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_649a6f49 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
After Armageddon Gaiden (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_649a6f49 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_67b692cc | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_67b692cc | comment |
Battlefield 2142: The manual mentions that global warming hastened the Ice Age which has left most of Earth inhabitable. What is left is now being fought over in a global war. Meanwhile, sea level has gone down, in certain levels, you can find beached ships laying where water once was. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_67b692cc | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_67b692cc | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Battlefield 2142 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_67b692cc | |
Gaia's Lament / int_68a8d1da | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_68a8d1da | comment |
Played with in Metro: Last Light. Moscow's surface is starting to experience a "nuclear spring" with the snow and ice beginning to thaw and rain occurs. Marshes and other wetlands are beginning to develop on the surface and there is a thriving ecosystem... of nightmarish mutants. The air is still unbreathable to human beings. Moscow is recovering... in a new direction that is not necessarily hospitable to humans. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_68a8d1da | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_68a8d1da | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Metro: Last Light (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_68a8d1da | |
Gaia's Lament / int_696b75c2 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_696b75c2 | comment |
In A Brother's Price, it is possible that this could be the reason why so few boys are born, as male fetuses are known to be more vulnerable to pollution and other detrimental effects than female ones. Frequent male stillbirths point at the fact that this is not just an evolutionary quirk. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_696b75c2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_696b75c2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
A Brother's Price | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_696b75c2 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6aaa1fab | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6aaa1fab | comment |
City of No End takes place in the ruins of an advanced urbanized civilization so thoroughly developed that it's effectively impossible for anyone to know if nature ever existed. The one organic ecosystem known to have emerged is Mold Marsh, a Toxic Swamp of chemical spills that has sprouted a land of fungus and mutants. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6aaa1fab | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6aaa1fab | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
City of No End | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_6aaa1fab | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6ac55ec7 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6ac55ec7 | comment |
Even worse than Athas is the hellish realm of Maladomini in standard Dungeons & Dragons. According to ancient lore of the most recent edition, the campaign setting's version of Hell was once part of Heaven, and Maladomini was the most beautiful and ideal part of it and indeed, all of Heaven. When Asmodeus fell, he and the whole place was corrupted, and Maladomini fared worst. The insane archdevil who now rules it has made it one giant industrial wasteland full of smog, sludge, poisoned rivers, and continually decaying ruins. (As in, he keeps building upon the ruins with a concrete goal in mind, but is never satisfied with them, orders it torn down, and starts again.) Gaia no longer laments here, as she was murdered, and her body burned, spit on, and defecated on. But then, it is Hell. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6ac55ec7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6ac55ec7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeons & Dragons (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_6ac55ec7 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6b302cc3 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6b302cc3 | comment |
The video for Disturbed's "Another Way to Die" has the world depicted as this in the Bad Future. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6b302cc3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6b302cc3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Disturbed (Music) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_6b302cc3 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6c1d09b3 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6c1d09b3 | comment |
The Capital Wasteland of Fallout 3 is spectacular even by the setting's standard, to the point where it's not even realistic. There is virtually no living plant life, to the point where all the topsoil is gone. There is very little surface water, and the Potomac is abnormally low and choke-full of mud. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6c1d09b3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6c1d09b3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Fallout 3 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_6c1d09b3 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6c1d09b4 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6c1d09b4 | comment |
Speaking of Fallout 4, terminal notes in the Nahant Oceanological Society mention that pollution in the Atlantic has led to a growth of around 15% in shellfish populations (Foreshadowing the mutant Mirelurks that end up plaguing waterways in the game) which would inevitably lead to colony collapse due to food shortage. The media's reaction to this troubling news was that shellfish season that year would be even more exciting. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6c1d09b4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6c1d09b4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Fallout 4 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_6c1d09b4 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6e012371 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6e012371 | comment |
In Xandri Corelel, Earth's ecosystem has been almost completely destroyed. The planet is starting to recover, but it's still under strict Population Control, and many areas are infested with disease because of all the pollution. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6e012371 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6e012371 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Xandri Corelel | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_6e012371 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6f48e446 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6f48e446 | comment |
By the time of Command & Conquer: Tiberium Wars, thanks to the titular alien substance, Earth was basically on its last legs until Kane's Evil Plan, an alliance with GDI, allowed the spread of tiberium to be reversed. Of course, before that, the world outside the blue zones was the epitome of a Crapsack World Fallout-style. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6f48e446 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_6f48e446 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_6f48e446 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_707b2eff | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_707b2eff | comment |
Make Room! Make Room!, the novel that inspired Soylent Green, features much of the features of this trope, sans the human meat part. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_707b2eff | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_707b2eff | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Make Room! Make Room! | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_707b2eff | |
Gaia's Lament / int_70814599 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_70814599 | comment |
Stargate SG-1: At least twice, SG-1 visits a planet where unchecked industrial growth has destroyed the environment. In one instance, the atmosphere is not just toxic, but downright caustic, and the last survivors are living inside a force-field dome, waiting for the planet to recover. In the other, the people on the planet have been kept in stasis to await the planet's recovery, and when SG-1 arrives, the planet is habitable, but the leader of the planet has been keeping this information hidden from everyone else. Another example is the Tollan. Their homeworld was ravaged by a disaster caused by sharing technology with the inhabitants of a neighbouring planet, who promptly weaponized it and blew up their world, throwing off the orbit of the Tollan homeworld. The characters who turn up on Earth have never seen any animals before. They move to somewhere nicer. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_70814599 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_70814599 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Stargate SG-1 | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_70814599 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_755b343f | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_755b343f | comment |
Halo: In the early days of the UNSC, Earth was suffering due to vast overpopulation. However, the burden was significantly eased after the invention of the Shaw-Fujikawa Translight Engine, which allowed humanity to spread its population across multiple star systems; by the 26th century, Earth's become a reasonably verdant planet again... at least until the Covenant invade. At least 100,000 years ago, the Grunt homeworld of Balaho suffered a total environmental collapse caused by overindustrialization. Even nowadays, Balaho has not yet never fully recovered from that disaster, as it is still a frigid Death World where the natives suffer horribly high death rates. Reach used to be a rough, but habitable world, with forests, deserts, and a thriving ecosystem. This came to an end when the Covenant glassed the planet. However, the Distant Finale of Halo: Reach shows that by the year 2589, the planet has been terraformed back into habitability. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_755b343f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_755b343f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Halo (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_755b343f | |
Gaia's Lament / int_76376304 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_76376304 | comment |
Metro 2033: The only place in game where you can breathe without a gas mask is in the titular Metro system (and there are even some places there where you need one!). The surface of the world is a frozen toxic wasteland, and you cannot survive up there for long without a mask. A side conversation heard between two NPCs reveals that the surface won't be habitable for at least 50 more years. Another side conversation reveals that outside of Moscow, the area is habitable, but still very dangerous and nothing like pre-war Earth. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_76376304 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_76376304 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Metro 2033 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_76376304 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_76b8cb10 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_76b8cb10 | comment |
Fallout: The war that created the setting has devastated the entire planet. By the time of Fallout: New Vegas, 200 years later, the Earth is starting to recover, but it's slow going. Some days after the Great War, rain began to fall in several places, but it was black, toxic and none of it was drinkable. It rained for several days, and the raindrops were laced by radioisotopes, soot and other contaminants. This was the real, permanent destruction of the environment brought by the nukes. The polluted rain killed most of the surviving animals, humans, plants and even microorganisms. With so much plant life dead, there was nothing holding back the topsoil, leading to desertification on a massive scale and making agriculture difficult. The remaining animals and plants were heavily mutated to adapt to the new, harsh climate. The black rain is a real thing, by the way, according to testimony of survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The Capital Wasteland of Fallout 3 is spectacular even by the setting's standard, to the point where it's not even realistic. There is virtually no living plant life, to the point where all the topsoil is gone. There is very little surface water, and the Potomac is abnormally low and choke-full of mud. Even before the war, the situation was really bad. US government cared little about where nuclear waste was dumped and what consequences it would have, for example they removed Grand Canyon's status as a national park and allowed careless Uranium mining which turned the entire canyon into a radioactive wasteland. Most of those barrels of nuclear waste you see in really weird and dangerous places have been sitting there since before the war. Downplayed with Fallout 4. The trees look dead, but the game begins in October, and dead leaves can be found, implying they're merely dormant. All surface water is radioactive, but water pumps and wells can access clean water aquifers. There is more biodiversity, but nearly all of it is mutated. The soil in many places can support subsistence farming, though crops are slightly irradiated until cooked. The Commonwealth surrounding Boston is a harsh place, but it's miles ahead of the Capital Wasteland. Speaking of Fallout 4, terminal notes in the Nahant Oceanological Society mention that pollution in the Atlantic has led to a growth of around 15% in shellfish populations (Foreshadowing the mutant Mirelurks that end up plaguing waterways in the game) which would inevitably lead to colony collapse due to food shortage. The media's reaction to this troubling news was that shellfish season that year would be even more exciting. Downplayed with Fallout 76. Compared to the rest of the US, the Appalachian region got off light and was spared the worst of the atomic holocaust, with plant and animal life being largely abundant throughout most of the region. If anything, it's the lack of human life, due to a mysterious plague, that's of concern. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_76b8cb10 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_76b8cb10 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Fallout (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_76b8cb10 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_77682bb8 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_77682bb8 | comment |
Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within: Thanks to the Phantoms roaming the Earth, nearly all life is dead, and mankind is limited to several shielded cities to protect themselves. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_77682bb8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_77682bb8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_77682bb8 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7832b74c | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7832b74c | comment |
Steven Universe: The Kindergarten, where Gems like Amethyst and Peridot are artificially grown, is a bleak, lifeless canyon due to the Gem production process draining the life force of the surrounding area. If the colonization project hadn't been shut down, the whole planet would've followed suit. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7832b74c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7832b74c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Steven Universe | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_7832b74c | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b039953 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b039953 | comment |
Avatar: While outdoors Earth is never seen in the theatrical cut, tidbits of information throughout the movie (and explicitly in Avatar: A Confidential Report on the Biological and Social History of Pandora) say that it is an ecological mess. The alternate opening from the extended cut shows that most people wear masks while walking outside. There is also a mention on how a species of tiger, which has been extinct outside of captivity, is making a comeback thanks to cloning. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b039953 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b039953 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Avatar | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b039953 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b0a9a70 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b0a9a70 | comment |
Silent Running: All natural life on Earth is dead, save for human beings, who at the beginning of the movie are on ships that are trying to save the last of the trees. Food has been reduced to some sort of artificial goop, and all of the characters except for the protagonist find real food disgusting. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b0a9a70 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b0a9a70 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Silent Running | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b0a9a70 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b6975f | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b6975f | comment |
In Conquest of the Planet of the Apes, dogs and cats have become extinct, and people use apes for pets and cheap labor. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b6975f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b6975f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_7b6975f | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7c4a9cd8 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7c4a9cd8 | comment |
Terminal City Ricochet: The weather report calmly warns viewers of nuclear winter, birds are near-extinct, meat is a rare item, and Terminal City is one of only six livable cities left on Earth. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7c4a9cd8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_7c4a9cd8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Terminal City Ricochet | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_7c4a9cd8 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_81341360 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_81341360 | comment |
Ice Age: In the short "No Time for Nuts", Scrat encounters a Time Machine that takes him and his acorn through several time periods. It ends in the shade of what appears to be a huge oak tree full of acorns, but Scrat discovers to his dismay that it's actually a bronze monument to the last oak tree. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_81341360 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_81341360 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ice Age | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_81341360 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_81706932 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_81706932 | comment |
The intro of The Running Man mentions that Earth's resources, such as food, are in short supply. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_81706932 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_81706932 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Running Man | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_81706932 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8203cde7 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8203cde7 | comment |
EDENS ZERO: The final arc reveals that several key characters come from an uncharted planet that lost its Ether due to endless war and deforestation, with the ensuing air pollution, deadly plague, and natural disasters causing a total societal meltdown. The bigger twist is that this planet was Earth All Along 20,000 years ago in the year 2025 (one real-life year away from this reveal), and that the planet's death has been stalled for the past millennia by being sent into Overdrive, which resulted in Earth's transformation into Mother, The Maker of the story's supposed "distant universe" setting. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8203cde7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8203cde7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
EDENS ZERO (Manga) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_8203cde7 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_83349c2a | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_83349c2a | comment |
Metal Walker's Rusted Land used to be pristine, but after the disaster the world is mostly desert and destroyed towns, with lakes full of mud or acid. There's only one spot in the entire game with trees and grass. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_83349c2a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_83349c2a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Metal Walker (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_83349c2a | |
Gaia's Lament / int_893f66b7 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_893f66b7 | comment |
Jason X: Earth in 2455 is basically utterly dead. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_893f66b7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_893f66b7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Jason X | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_893f66b7 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8980c62b | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8980c62b | comment |
In the near-ish-future US shown in Incorporated, Global Warming is raging rampant, turning the southern US into barely inhabitable "dust states", and New York City had to be abandoned to the rising seas. Agricultural production depends on GMO seeds because of heat and drought, and real meat is too expensive even for middle class people. Canada has built a wall to keep out environmental refugees from the US and there are large camps for internally displaced refugees outside the still exiting northern US cities, with the cities themselves being split into walled "Green Zones" for corporate employees, and vast lawless slums without any public services called "Red Zones" for everyone else who is lucky enough to at least have local citizenship. FEMA has long since given up, the government is a sham that almost no-one still bothers voting for, and international megacorps have taken over as de-facto rulers, complete with sending out private armies to fight over the last fossil fuel resources in places like Siberia. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8980c62b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8980c62b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Incorporated | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_8980c62b | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8d1f3bc7 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8d1f3bc7 | comment |
According to the original game's manual, Venom once had "beauty second only to Corneria's" before Andross turned it into "a dark, polluted world". | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8d1f3bc7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_8d1f3bc7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Fox (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_8d1f3bc7 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9058ad7e | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9058ad7e | comment |
The Terminator: A deleted scene shows Kyle and Sarah getting into a fight and rolling into a wooded area. Kyle suffers a bit of a Heroic BSoD, and starts to cry when he sees how beautiful the world used to be. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9058ad7e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9058ad7e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Terminator | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_9058ad7e | |
Gaia's Lament / int_90e2f673 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_90e2f673 | comment |
In BattleTech, several planets have been reduced to this due to the massive battles of the Succession Wars. The planet Mallory's World was once a lush agricultural world — when the First Succession war began, it was fought over by the Successor States, which left three out of the four continents as war-torn wastelands. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_90e2f673 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_90e2f673 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
BattleTech (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_90e2f673 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_91bfc484 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_91bfc484 | comment |
In The Road and its film adaptation, an unspecified cataclysm has reduced the Earth to a lifeless rock, populated only by what is left of humanity, and the father and son protagonists must search through the ashes for what little supplies remain while evading cannibal gangs. This trope leads to Inferred Holocaust as well. Even though the boy is in presumably good hands at the end of the book, unless there is some part of the world that still contains life, the human survivors will be dead pretty soon. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_91bfc484 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_91bfc484 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Road | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_91bfc484 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_921c3ed5 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_921c3ed5 | comment |
In Hypocrisy's "Fractured Millennium", some rageguy from a parallel universe does the lamenting for Gaia, but it amounts to the same. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_921c3ed5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_921c3ed5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Hypocrisy (Music) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_921c3ed5 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_95226eb6 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_95226eb6 | comment |
Name any eco-disaster you can think of, and it's highly likely to have happened in Cyberpunk 2020. For example, the Middle East has been nuked into a glassy, irradiated wasteland. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_95226eb6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_95226eb6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Cyberpunk (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_95226eb6 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_96a4ad60 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_96a4ad60 | comment |
Fear, Loathing and Gumbo on the Campaign Trail '72: In his zeal to create a truly free market, Rumsfeld removes almost every environmental regulation, and actively encourages coal pollution and climate change. He even pushes for environmentalism to become recognised as a mental illness. The conflicts in Southern Africa see so many dirty bombs and chemical weapons detonated, that whole areas become uninhabitable wastelands. The Christian Values Party uses nukes with reckless abandon. Their attempts to stop Cuba from taking Florida and crush pockets of resistance have left large areas of the country severely irradiated. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_96a4ad60 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_96a4ad60 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Fear, Loathing and Gumbo on the Campaign Trail '72 | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_96a4ad60 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_96f8c98f | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_96f8c98f | comment |
In Earth 2100, not only have countless creatures been wiped out, but the worst part is that because knowledge has been lost, it will take thousands of years before humans can begin to repair what they've done. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_96f8c98f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_96f8c98f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Earth 2100 | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_96f8c98f | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9994a14f | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9994a14f | comment |
WALL•E: Earth is left almost completely lifeless after rampant consumerism, forcing humanity to leave on giant ships to the stars. Every inch of land is covered in piles of garbage, which a fleet of WALL-E robots were sent to clean up. While it was only supposed to take a short time, 700 years later, humanity is still confined to spaceships and only one WALL-E robot is still active, staying alive by replacing his broken parts with ones scavenged from other broken robots. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9994a14f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9994a14f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
WALL•E | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_9994a14f | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9ae4458f | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9ae4458f | comment |
Tiamat's Gaia progresses from this into Gaia's Vengeance: | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9ae4458f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9ae4458f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Tiamat (Music) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_9ae4458f | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9c40134f | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9c40134f | comment |
The intro to Red Planet tells us that "By the year 2000, we had begun to overpopulate, pollute, and poison our planet faster than we could clean it up. We ignored the problem for as long as we could, but we were kidding ourselves. By 2025, we knew we were in trouble and began to desperately search for a new home — Mars." There's a scene in which the younger astronauts question Chantilas about what the Earth used to look like, and at another point, it's mentioned that most amphibians are dead, simply because the environment is too toxic to support them. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9c40134f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9c40134f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Red Planet | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_9c40134f | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9d25491c | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9d25491c | comment |
The titles at the beginning of Pandorum indicate that the battle over Earth's resources reached a fever pitch before the Elysium was launched. In one of Corporal Bower's flashbacks, we see him wearing a Plexiglas visor and a head-wrap to shield from a sandstorm just a stone's throw away from the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9d25491c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9d25491c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Pandorum | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_9d25491c | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9e2f90f4 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9e2f90f4 | comment |
One Piece is famous for its Scenery Porn, because The World Is Just Awesome. But when the crew gets to the country of Wano, things changed. Because of toxic runoff from Kaido's factory, there's a huge wasteland where the animals and water are poisonous, which means the people are starving because the only source of clean food is a heavily guarded farm under the villains' control. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9e2f90f4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9e2f90f4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
One Piece (Manga) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_9e2f90f4 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9e52d282 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9e52d282 | comment |
Dystopia: Mentioned in the wiki's backstories, but implied in-game when you find a cafe with nothing but soy food. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9e52d282 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9e52d282 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dystopia (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_9e52d282 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9eb5d095 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9eb5d095 | comment |
The Titan: By 2048, the Earth's resources have been used up and wars are being fought over what's left. Prof. Martin Collingwood predicts that in ten years, half of Earth will become uninhabitable, and in fifteen years, half of the world's current population will die from starvation. That's why he's genetically altering Rick and the other test subjects to survive on Titan, as he claims that unless humanity moves to Titan, the children of the current generation will witness the end of the world. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9eb5d095 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_9eb5d095 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Titan | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_9eb5d095 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a183d57f | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a183d57f | comment |
According to various comments heard throughout Futurama, by the year 3000, pine trees, poodles, cows and anchovies will be extinct; there will be jungles on Mars but not on Earth; and with petroleum reserves depleted, cars will run on whale oil (the whales deserved it). | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a183d57f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a183d57f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Futurama | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_a183d57f | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a4ae80d6 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a4ae80d6 | comment |
A big theme in the Oddworld series is how the Magog Cartel facilities are absolutely destroying the world, hunting many species into extinction and polluting the environment into inhospitable wastelands. Seeing Oddworld's natural splendor (via huge amounts of Scenery Porn) as it used to be is one of the factors that spur Abe into returning to Rupture Farms 1029 to shut it down in Abe's Oddysee. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a4ae80d6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a4ae80d6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Oddworld (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_a4ae80d6 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a599305d | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a599305d | comment |
Mega Man Zero: The entire world was laid to ruin as a result of the Elf Wars before the start of the series. It isn't until the final game in the series that you see non-artificial nature. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a599305d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a599305d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Mega Man Zero (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_a599305d | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a5e47ee2 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a5e47ee2 | comment |
The Lorax is just one big book of this, as the ecology collapses as a result of Once-ler's actions. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a5e47ee2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a5e47ee2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Lorax | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_a5e47ee2 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a62983b | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a62983b | comment |
Earth is described in The Dispossessed as having been reduced to a less-than-stellar state of existence. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a62983b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a62983b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Dispossessed | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_a62983b | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a8150af4 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a8150af4 | comment |
The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power: The once green and lush Southlands lie under the tones of Vulcanic matter from Orodruin, only to become the future heavily industrialized Mordor. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a8150af4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a8150af4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_a8150af4 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a8d867ba | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a8d867ba | comment |
Chronicles of the Emerged World: The Tyrant and his forces have no more regard for the natural world than they do for the people they subjugate, and their hunger for resources to fuel their constant warmongering strips new territories of resources in short order. Their rule over a Land is invariably marked by rampant deforestation and immense levels of pollution. The Land of Days, one of the most thoroughly subjugated lands, is a desolate, barren wasteland home only to the Tyrant's fortress-cities and a few hardy, twisted plants; some of its main geographical features, Merith Lake and the Forest of Bersith, have by the books' time vanished completely — nothing is left of them but an enormous, polluted swamp. The first thing Nihal notices when entering the subjugated Land of the Wind is how the Forest, once a vibrant mass of vegetation too thick to see more than a few meters from your position, has been reduced to a vast field of stumps and charred, lifeless trees. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_a8d867ba | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_a8d867ba | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Chronicles of the Emerged World | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_a8d867ba | |
Gaia's Lament / int_aeb8d25c | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_aeb8d25c | comment |
Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou: Played with. Due to the story being set in a Flooded Future World, starvation isn't an issue for anyone, and fruits and fish are plentiful, but grain-based agriculture seems to be very sparse due to a lack of available land for farming caused by the rising oceans. Alpha is once paid for an odd job with a persimmon bigger than her head, and another character has no trouble growing watermelons. However, in a meetup between two other characters, one is astonished that the other has a bag of rice, saying it's been so long that he can't remember what it tastes like. He then surprises the other person by giving him some vials of soy sauce, which are reacted to with the same astonishment, implying that soybeans are just as rare as rice. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_aeb8d25c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_aeb8d25c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou (Manga) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_aeb8d25c | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b08cba9e | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b08cba9e | comment |
Plastic Beach by Gorillaz is a Concept Album surrounding the ongoing decay of the environment through plastic trash and pollution. The titular "beach" is an enormous landmass of trash in the middle of the ocean that's been made into a recording studio, and almost every song touches on the uncomfortable reality that modern living will slowly, but irreparably consume the world unless humanity changes its habits. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b08cba9e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b08cba9e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Plastic Beach (Music) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_b08cba9e | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b1c64860 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b1c64860 | comment |
Antipodes: When Celestia and Luna disappeared, the Sun and Moon froze in place. This turned one side of Equestria into a barren desert that incinerates anything living, and the other into a frozen wasteland. Only a narrow strip of temperate land between the two celestial bodies is capable of supporting life. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b1c64860 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b1c64860 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Antipodes (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_b1c64860 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b30ae4db | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b30ae4db | comment |
Game of Thrones: The lands Beyond the Wall and the Lands of Always Winter weren't always blasted tundra; "The Door" reveals that these areas used to be lush and green, but whatever magic the Children of the Forest used to create the White Walkers also brought the eternal snow with it (or the Walkers brought it with them). Even worse is the implication that the creation of the White Walkers is also what fucked up Westeros' seasons. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b30ae4db | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b30ae4db | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Game of Thrones | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_b30ae4db | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b481533 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b481533 | comment |
In the Hainish cycle: Earth is described in The Dispossessed as having been reduced to a less-than-stellar state of existence. Although The Telling doesn't take place on Earth, the main character is a Terran, and through her we learn that in her time, Earth was both an ecological and social mess. The Word for World is Forest has humans stripping the peaceful forested planet Athshe of its valuable wood, having mined the Earth into barrenness. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_b481533 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b481533 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Hainish | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_b481533 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b9419bd1 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b9419bd1 | comment |
The prequel Deus Ex: Human Revolution shows the "Golden Age" of the augmentation revolution. Cities are bright and beautiful, and people are prosperous... as long as you're rich. There are strong rumblings in the background of bad things happening around the world environmentally, as well. The rumblings are strong enough that a gigantic undertaking in the Arctic Ocean involving a massive complex that essentially creates a hole in the ocean to aid with global warming not only seems like a fantastic idea, but is actually serving as a template for other facilities that are planned to be built throughout the world later. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b9419bd1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_b9419bd1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Deus Ex: Human Revolution (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_b9419bd1 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bcadd7cb | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bcadd7cb | comment |
Warhammer 40,000: Earth, or rather Holy Terra, has become the biggest Hive World in the galaxy, to the point that the "Hives" (giant conglomerations of skyscrapers that act as cities) have spread out to encompass the entire planet. All of its resources have been depleted (even the oceans are completely gone), and its atmosphere is choked with pollution. All that's left are layers and layers of cities, coating every inch of the planet in city, filled with countless holy relics and sites. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bcadd7cb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bcadd7cb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Warhammer 40,000 (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_bcadd7cb | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bcb32dc6 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bcb32dc6 | comment |
Shadowrun: Nuclear plant accidents, industrial pollution and side effects of the return of magic have caused massive environmental damage. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bcb32dc6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bcb32dc6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Shadowrun (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_bcb32dc6 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bef4b763 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bef4b763 | comment |
Lost in Space has the family searching for a new home for humanity after Earth has suffered irreversible ecological damage. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bef4b763 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bef4b763 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Lost in Space | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_bef4b763 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bf4a5e6c | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bf4a5e6c | comment |
In Rogue Trip, the Earth is an irradiated wasteland, and the only green spots left are vacation areas controlled by a thug named Big Daddy. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bf4a5e6c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_bf4a5e6c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Rogue Trip (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_bf4a5e6c | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c0a1c357 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c0a1c357 | comment |
Shrapnel takes place several thousands of years after the apocalypse, with the world effectively split into two halves: Always Night with an Endless Winter on one side, and Endless Daytime with a constant Deadly Dust Storm that blocks out the sun to varying degrees on the other. Neither are ideal for plants to grow naturally, and something as simple as flowers are stated to be hard to find. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c0a1c357 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c0a1c357 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Shrapnel (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c0a1c357 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c0c57462 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c0c57462 | comment |
Chrono Trigger: 2300 AD is a nightmarish Bad Future set about 400 years after Lavos emerges and destroys most of the world's cities. Mutants, killer robots and living slime abound, the skies are permanently ashy, humanity are miserable wretches reduced to hiding in shelters from the robots without food (relying on machines that keep them alive and healthy-ish but do nothing to prevent hunger), and an omnicidal AI keeps churning out more murderbots and converting people into fuel. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c0c57462 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c0c57462 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Chrono Trigger (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c0c57462 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c18bfdae | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c18bfdae | comment |
Blade Runner: Real animals are a luxury, and people are trying to get off of the dying Earth, which is polluted and irradiated. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c18bfdae | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c18bfdae | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Blade Runner | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c18bfdae | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c2100ee8 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c2100ee8 | comment |
After the Gold Rush by Neil Young: | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c2100ee8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c2100ee8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
After the Gold Rush (Music) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c2100ee8 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c23bb949 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c23bb949 | comment |
In Romantically Apocalyptic, the end of the world was going to be caused by the Good Directorate's refusal to stop the pollution of Earth and the dangers of highly advanced A.I. ANNET. Engineer's attempt to stop what he assumed was ANNET trying to Take Over the World (actually a desperate attempt to fix the damage) via nukes only sped it up. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c23bb949 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c23bb949 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Romantically Apocalyptic (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c23bb949 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c372d504 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c372d504 | comment |
The Priscilla Hutchins novels feature a mild version of this. Coastal areas are shrinking, deserts are growing, famines and foot riots are common. But it's not uniformly bleak: Canada and Siberia are becoming temperate, and are stepping up their food production. Nevertheless, much of the world is in a horrible state, and things look to be getting worse, and so far, only one potential new colony world has been found. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c372d504 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c372d504 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Priscilla Hutchins | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c372d504 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c66e0f1 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c66e0f1 | comment |
The Sheep Look Up is all about this. The oceans are dying. An entire generation of American middle-class children is growing up with birth defects. People must wear filter-masks when walking outside in most of the country due to air pollution. Real food is sold at a premium, and even then, it isn't guaranteed to be free of contamination. Outside of America, the Mekong Delta is just gone, the entire area having been rendered uninhabitable by the use of chemical weapons during the Vietnam War. Starvation in Africa is worse than ever, with the West resorting to shipments of artificial food for relief efforts, and famine is beginning to spread into Europe as well. All of this is just the setting; the novel proper recounts events going From Bad to Worse. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c66e0f1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c66e0f1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Sheep Look Up | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c66e0f1 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c72021c5 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c72021c5 | comment |
While not as prominent as other fiction, it's implied through in-game media in Deus Ex that the Earth could have a better ecological record. Coastal flooding has become common, and the majority of food the player can pick up seems to be artificial, or made with Human Resources. A conversation heard between two NPCs reveals that grizzly bears have been extinct for decades (the game is set in the 2050s). If you read an email on Paul's computer, an advertisement, citing "dwindling resources", talks about a suicide clinic that offers its user's family 10,000 credits. A book found in Paul's apartment also reveals that India and Pakistan, after a series of escalating conflicts and political upheaval, collapsed into a nuclear exchange. News articles read that the East River had a massive chlorine spill, killing almost all life in it, and that water supplies may be contaminated. Baja California is also missing from world maps — background information reveals that a massive earthquake took place on the west coast in the 2030s, and everything south of Lompoc sank into the ocean. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c72021c5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c72021c5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Deus Ex (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c72021c5 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c720f71e | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c720f71e | comment |
The YouTube songwriter Ruth Mundy wrote "Love in the Time of Coral Reefs" for her future children, thinking it would speak to them when they reach her age. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c720f71e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c720f71e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
YouTube (Website) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c720f71e | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c817238f | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c817238f | comment |
Call of Duty: Zombies has the characters inadvertently destroying the Earth and most of humanity, but as the missiles were full of Element 115, which reanimates dead cells, the Zombie Apocalypse has begun. The Zombies mode of Black Ops II is about the characters working to survive and save humanity. The Earth is now a fractured, lava-filled wasteland. It's pretty sad to see the blue marble reduced to a black sphere of charcoal with only the lava to make a difference in color. The main cast must choose to aid either Dr. Maxis or Richtofen in healing the Earth. It turns out that it was Evil Versus Evil all along: Richtofen doesn't do a thing to help humanity and ends up trapped in a human body anyway, and Maxis has had his followers help him so he may completely destroy the Earth to reach Agartha. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c817238f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c817238f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Call of Duty: Zombies (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c817238f | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c9617c05 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c9617c05 | comment |
Blade Runner: Blade Runner: Real animals are a luxury, and people are trying to get off of the dying Earth, which is polluted and irradiated. Blade Runner 2049 indicates that things have gotten even worse over the decades: the entire biosphere has all but died off, the only animals left on the planet are artificial, and everywhere outside the smog-filled cities is a desolate wasteland. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_c9617c05 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_c9617c05 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Blade Runner (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_c9617c05 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cbc10473 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cbc10473 | comment |
In The 6th World, humans must colonize Mars because Earth is unusable. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cbc10473 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cbc10473 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Sixth World | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_cbc10473 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cc5e15b2 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cc5e15b2 | comment |
Provides the story background in Geostorm. The climate balance on Earth had deteriorated so much so rapidly that rampaging weather disasters were threatening the survival of humanity as a species, which ultimately convinced the most powerful nations to team up and build Dutch Boy. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cc5e15b2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cc5e15b2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Geostorm | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_cc5e15b2 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cd9ec312 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cd9ec312 | comment |
Somewhat implied in House of the Scorpion. The Rio Grande is so polluted that Tam Lin berates Matt when he simply just goes near it. The Gulf of California has been drained to a small river, and Matt finds skeletons of whales within it. The sequel, The Lord of Opium, outright states that the rest of the planet is garbage, except the titular nation. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cd9ec312 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_cd9ec312 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
House of the Scorpion | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_cd9ec312 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d036e404 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d036e404 | comment |
Oryx and Crake and its companion novel The Year of the Flood have the ecosystem devastated by climate change and overpopulation. The near-total lack of any food neither based on soybeans nor heavily genetically engineered is frequently mentioned. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d036e404 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d036e404 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Oryx and Crake | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_d036e404 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d2d45d16 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d2d45d16 | comment |
Between Contra III: The Alien Wars and Contra: Shattered Soldier, the Triumvirate set off a superweapon that caused "environmental collapse on a global scale", for which Bill Rizer was falsely convicted and sentenced to cryo-prison. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d2d45d16 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d2d45d16 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Contra III: The Alien Wars (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_d2d45d16 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d30ee3b3 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d30ee3b3 | comment |
Kenshi takes place in a Death World rendered this way in great part due to industry and a cataclysmic war that almost wiped humanity from the planet. Fertile, temperate land is pretty much restricted to a tiny valley in the middle of the continent; everything else ended up at best as a dry, barren desert, in the middle as a black toxic wasteland with permanent acid rain, at worst a place where no life can exist because it's constantly bombarded by Kill Sats. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d30ee3b3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d30ee3b3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Kenshi (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_d30ee3b3 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d5b84b32 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d5b84b32 | comment |
Can be invoked by the player in Spore with a hostile use of terraforming tools. Depending on the strength of the player during the attack, can be an effective way to easily conquer or destroy an enemy colony in lieu of powerful weapons, or just flashy, but fun as reducing the T score to 0 will destroy all but one city. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d5b84b32 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d5b84b32 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Spore (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_d5b84b32 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d93636c5 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d93636c5 | comment |
In Travelers, the titular time travelers come from such a future and are trying to prevent it — ultimately without success. Details are only alluded at for most of the series, but we know that there were both massive natural catastrophes and resource wars, until the human population had been much reduced in numbers and that they are forced to live in hermetically sealed shelters under thick glaciers, where they are endlessly recycling their air and grow food gruel in vats. And their energy resources are running out. The Travelers that are newly arrived in our time are always filled with wonder at seeing trees and animals and eating even crappy hospital food. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d93636c5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d93636c5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Travelers | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_d93636c5 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d9e5ee89 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d9e5ee89 | comment |
An alternate-future interlude from Hellblazer has scenes set in a coastal city's flooded-out ruins, and characters mention a "Storm Decade" in which climate upheaval caused hurricanes that contributed to the damage. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d9e5ee89 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_d9e5ee89 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Hellblazer (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_d9e5ee89 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e235270c | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e235270c | comment |
In Stellaris, there are a number of ways the player can encounter worlds that once supported thriving ecosystems, or outright cause this: The Terraforming Candidate worlds are Barren worlds that once supported life, but for whatever reason, no longer do. As the name suggests, terraforming them is a possibility. The Mass Extinction event chain is all about surveying worlds that were rendered uninhabitable by either massive disasters or their natives' negligence, in order to ensure the surveying species does not suffer a similar fate. Several of the various possible precursor event chains reveal that the species' homeworld was annihilated by the same disaster that caused their fall. The fate of any world taken by the Prethyon Scourge; they devour the entire ecosystem, and the planet must be glassed to remove them. (The world can be terraformed back into habitability, however.) Tomb Worlds, the result of a nuclear war. These can be colonized, but unless a species is radiation-resistant (a rare trait found on uplifted species or player species with the Post-Apocalyptic Origin), robotic, blessed by the Worm, or just incredibly resilient, they'll take massive penalties to happiness and population growth. It's possible for every planet in a system that isn't a Gas Giant to be turned into a Tomb World by the Worm. This is a mixed affair, especially since it makes previously barren worlds technically habitable and the Worm also grants Tomb World habitability to its favored species. Machine Empires in Synthetic Dawn can, with an Ascension Perk, deliberately glass planets into Machine Worlds that are completely inhabitable to even the most basic of biological life but serve the needs of synthetics perfectly. Among the preset empires, the Chinorr Combine's description says that their homeworld was Chicora was once covered in verdant rainforest and they evolved as canopy-dwelling ambush predators, swinging through the trees with their powerful limbs and dropping down on prey to inject a deadly neurotoxin. They ruthlessly strip-mined their planet into an Arid World as they civilised and are wholly unsentimental about the destruction they caused, claiming it to be a necessary sacrifice for progress. Earth with the preset United Nations at the start of the game isn't in the best of shape: Scandinavia is abandoned due to an unspecified nuclear accident, Alberta is just a giant crater due to a meteor strike in 2072, the Mauritania Security Zone is a minefield of yet-to-be-disposed weapons from a Last Stand by a general resentful of the UN's rise to power, Mumbai is still full of slums, and the Great Pacific Garbage Patch haa grown to more than half of said ocean. Things are looking up, though: the latter two items can be addressed from game start to clean up the Pacific once and for all and turn Mumbai into another shining city alongside the Pearl River Delta (which has already been cleaned up). Downplayed and implied late-game. With enough Galactic Community decisions prioritizing industrial development, and the planetary administration passing the "Project Cornucopia" decision, planets can take a -45% Habitability penalty. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_e235270c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e235270c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Stellaris (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_e235270c | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e6267766 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e6267766 | comment |
In Star Wars Legends continuity, this is what happened to Nal Hutta, the current homeworld of the Hutts, once they got ahold of it. Formerly called Evocar and home to a race called the Evocii, it was once a lush jungle paradise. Sadly, the Hutts bought up property on it until they owned the whole planet, kicked the Evocii out, and eventually turned into a polluted and barren wasteland, due to strip mining and other foul industries. (Ironically, "Nal Hutta" means "Glorious Jewel" in Huttese.) The Yuuzhan Vong later conquered Nal Hutta during their invasion and terraformed it to suit their own needs; into what, exactly, is not yet known. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e6267766 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e6267766 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Wars Legends (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_e6267766 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e7827035 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e7827035 | comment |
In the Bounders series, much of Earth is covered by uninhabitable wastelands called blast zones. Most of what's left consists of either mega-cities or circles of farmland, with few wild areas left. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e7827035 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_e7827035 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Bounders | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_e7827035 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_eb068245 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_eb068245 | comment |
Schoolhouse Rock!: "The Energy Blues" is a literal example. The Earth itself, played by Jack "I'm Just a Bill" Sheldon, sings about the history of energy consumption, the depletion of its energy resources, and the need for conservation until alternatives are found. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_eb068245 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_eb068245 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Schoolhouse Rock! | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_eb068245 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ecdaf2bd | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ecdaf2bd | comment |
Touched upon in Illusion of Gaia. When Will sees the vision of modern society, he seems to be a bit disturbed at the concept of natural environments being replaced by sprawling cities. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ecdaf2bd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ecdaf2bd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Illusion of Gaia (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_ecdaf2bd | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ed33ec82 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ed33ec82 | comment |
Toward the Terra: In a distant future, humankind has destroyed the natural habitat of its homeplanet Terra and colonized other stars. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ed33ec82 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ed33ec82 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Toward the Terra (Manga) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_ed33ec82 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ee04f49a | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ee04f49a | comment |
Deus Ex Universe: While not as prominent as other fiction, it's implied through in-game media in Deus Ex that the Earth could have a better ecological record. Coastal flooding has become common, and the majority of food the player can pick up seems to be artificial, or made with Human Resources. A conversation heard between two NPCs reveals that grizzly bears have been extinct for decades (the game is set in the 2050s). If you read an email on Paul's computer, an advertisement, citing "dwindling resources", talks about a suicide clinic that offers its user's family 10,000 credits. A book found in Paul's apartment also reveals that India and Pakistan, after a series of escalating conflicts and political upheaval, collapsed into a nuclear exchange. News articles read that the East River had a massive chlorine spill, killing almost all life in it, and that water supplies may be contaminated. Baja California is also missing from world maps — background information reveals that a massive earthquake took place on the west coast in the 2030s, and everything south of Lompoc sank into the ocean. The situation in Deus Ex: Invisible War isn't any better. Transgenic species have escaped from labs, causing trouble for people in cities and functioning as invasive species. Nanite Swells cause Grey Death-like (the plague in the original game) symptoms in their victims, and in the Omar ending, the environment is outright destroyed in the many wars that happen after the game ends. The Omar don't mind, because their plan is to get the strongest humans possible and make for the stars. The prequel Deus Ex: Human Revolution shows the "Golden Age" of the augmentation revolution. Cities are bright and beautiful, and people are prosperous... as long as you're rich. There are strong rumblings in the background of bad things happening around the world environmentally, as well. The rumblings are strong enough that a gigantic undertaking in the Arctic Ocean involving a massive complex that essentially creates a hole in the ocean to aid with global warming not only seems like a fantastic idea, but is actually serving as a template for other facilities that are planned to be built throughout the world later. |
|
Gaia's Lament / int_ee04f49a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ee04f49a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Deus Ex Universe (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_ee04f49a | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ee384546 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ee384546 | comment |
Cyberpunk 2077: This world has it bad. There are mentions of sharks having gone extinct in the wild a decade earlier, a pet iguana is a valuable worth executing a highly elaborate heist to steal, and the urban animals in Night City were deliberately hunted to extinction in order to prevent the spread of disease. However, what really hammers it home is that next to no-one seems to think this is a bad thing. When a conservationist goes on TV to advocate for not hunting seagulls to complete extinction, she is forced to debate a mother who lost children to Avian Flu, and is pretty much booed off-stage. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ee384546 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ee384546 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Cyberpunk 2077 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_ee384546 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ef7a115 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ef7a115 | comment |
Terra Nova: Earth in 2149 is slowly choking to death from pollutants, and the only hope for humanity is travelling back in time to the prehistoric era. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ef7a115 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ef7a115 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Terra Nova | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_ef7a115 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f01bdca3 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f01bdca3 | comment |
Eva takes place in a future where most of Earth's wild animals have been wiped out by the growing human population, and by the end, human civilisation is heading towards its final collapse, with mass suicides occurring. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f01bdca3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f01bdca3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Eva | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_f01bdca3 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f0dd8f0b | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f0dd8f0b | comment |
Reversed Star seems to have this, with characters in some settings being forced to wear gas masks outside. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f0dd8f0b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f0dd8f0b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Reversed Star (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_f0dd8f0b | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f35ff085 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f35ff085 | comment |
The Brotherhood of the Conch: In Shadowland, Anand and Nisha visit the city of Coal which is really Kolkata several hundred years into the future. The seas have retreated, the rain has stopped, and the air is brown with pollution, requiring people to wear breathing masks. The city is surrounded by miles of uninhabitable wasteland where people who break the rules are left to die. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f35ff085 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f35ff085 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Brotherhood of the Conch | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_f35ff085 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f5db9072 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f5db9072 | comment |
Werewolf: The Apocalypse — Earthblood: One of the trailers starts with newsreels of deforestation and strip mining. Another follows some red leaves blowing across a torn-up field into an industrial zone until the protagonist picks one up only for it to turn to ash in his hand, and then cuts back to the tree bleeding. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f5db9072 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f5db9072 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Werewolf: The Apocalypse — Earthblood (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_f5db9072 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f7303747 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f7303747 | comment |
This happens at some points in Red Mars Trilogy — the rampant population growth on Earth necessitates mass movement to Mars. However, this may not be as severe an example as several others on this page for various reasons, such as the fact that it gets somewhat better by the end of the trilogy. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f7303747 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f7303747 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Red Mars Trilogy | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_f7303747 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f8911af4 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f8911af4 | comment |
Terra Nil features a bleak and desolate planet that must be terraformed back to its former glory bit by bit. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f8911af4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_f8911af4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Terra Nil (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_f8911af4 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_faf0ebf1 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_faf0ebf1 | comment |
Blade Runner 2049 indicates that things have gotten even worse over the decades: the entire biosphere has all but died off, the only animals left on the planet are artificial, and everywhere outside the smog-filled cities is a desolate wasteland. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_faf0ebf1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_faf0ebf1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Blade Runner 2049 | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_faf0ebf1 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_fe724d7f | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_fe724d7f | comment |
Rammstein's Donaukinder ("Children of Danube") is a song about the ecological disaster in Baia Mare, Romania. In January 2000, a dam at a gold processing plant broke and released 70 tons of cyanide and other toxic waste into Tisza, a river tributary to Danube. As a result, countless animals died of poisoning, five species of fish went completely extinct and water supplies of many cities in several countries were polluted. While the chorus of the song is ostensibly the lament of the poisoned people, it can be interpreted as the river's grievance as well, mourning its countless "children" killed by humanity's greed and stupidity. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_fe724d7f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_fe724d7f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Rammstein (Music) | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_fe724d7f | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ffc9bcc1 | type |
Gaia's Lament | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ffc9bcc1 | comment |
Soylent Green: There's a year-long heat wave, New York City is home to fifty million people, real food is precious, and cheap food is either processed soy, plankton, or... well. One very emotional scene involves Sol and a tearful Thorn watching videos of what the world used to be as Sol commits suicide.Random tidbit of informationThorn's actor, Charlton Heston, really was crying, as Sol's actor Edward G. Robinson was dying of cancer. Only Heston knew. | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ffc9bcc1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Gaia's Lament / int_ffc9bcc1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Soylent Green | hasFeature |
Gaia's Lament / int_ffc9bcc1 |
The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.
Copyright of DBTropes.org wrapper 2009-2013 DFKI Knowledge Management. Imprint. - Thanks to Bakken&Baeck for hosting. Contact.
Copyright of data TVTropes.org contributors under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Copyright of data TVTropes.org contributors under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.