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Multiple-Choice Future
- 226 statements
- 43 feature instances
- 26 referencing feature instances
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Determinism is a philosophical category of theories that brings up the ideas of free will and its relationship with fate and destiny, and comes in a variety of flavors. Hard-Determinism suggests that there is no free will, that all actions and choices made were predestined and preprogrammed with no hope of escaping. Causality is king on the throne of Hard-Determinism and his word is set in stone. In-contrast, Soft-Determinism suggests that there is a balance between causality and free will, that there are many different outcomes and one's own choices that decide which outcome becomes true. There is also Indeterminism, but who cares about that, right? While it is impossible to divine the future in any meaningful way in Real Life, Seers in fiction usually see the future for real and are forced to choose between a multitude of prophecies. When the future is a multiple choice question with no wrong answers, one Self-Fulfilling Prophecy means a near-infinite supply of Self-Defeating Prophecies. In some cases, this can lead to Alternate Timelines, with various forms of media showing that each probable future (often caused by crucial decisions/different happenstances) has happened and live parallel with one another. Supertrope to Either/Or Prophecy, where there are exactly two possibilities. Subtrope of Sliding Scale of Free Will vs. Fate. Sounds similar but has nothing to do with Multiple-Choice Past. For more meta-examples, see Multiple Endings. See also Temporal Mutability when time travel is a factor. |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_112decbc | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_112decbc | comment |
The inability to see the future, but the need to take responsibility for it nonetheless, is a central theme in the original Planet of the Apes series, particularly in Escape from the Planet of the Apes and Battle for the Planet of the Apes. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_11d0af1 | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_11d0af1 | comment |
His Dark Materials: this seems to be how predicting the future works. There is a prophecy surrounding Lyra and her actions, but there are caveats in it that state certain things must happen in order for it to be fulfilled; if they don't, then the prophecy is moot. Another person says when using the alethiometer (a tool many factions use to try to predict events): "Please understand, the alethiometer does not forecast. It says 'if this happens, then the consequences will be...'", showing that there is no absolute future. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_1bdeba5a | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_1bdeba5a | comment |
X-Men: Destiny, a member of the the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, can see the future but makes it clear that what she sees are probabilities, not set-in-stone facts. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_31a48eed | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_31a48eed | comment |
The Outer Limits (1995): In "Final Appeal", Ezekiel tells the US Supreme Court that he has seen multiple possible futures during his travels through time. | |
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The Outer Limits (1995) | hasFeature |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_3aabfec3 | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_3aabfec3 | comment |
Captain Planet and the Planeteers: In "Two Futures", Wheeler has a Refusal of the Call moment and goes back in time to prevent his past self from joining the Planeteers. His interference leads to a nightmare future, so he returns to set things back to normal. After he does, the villains of the episode try to go back in time themselves to create a future which would benefit them, but Captain Planet instead sends them to an idyllic future. After witnessing the latter on MAL's screens, Gi asks if the vision means that everything will turn out alright, but Gaia doesn't give a straightforward answer. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_41e38a1c | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_41e38a1c | comment |
Brother on Brother, Daughter on Mother: Reshek Taryn, a Time Police officer, describes the overall timestream using the metaphor of a rope, made of strands of probabilistic outcomes. The author explains further in related forum posts that some outcomes are more probable than others (as a way of explaining alternate timelines' tendency towards In Spite of a Nail similarities). | |
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Brother on Brother, Daughter on Mother (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_498b77e9 | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_498b77e9 | comment |
This is Jonah Yu's superpower in Skin Horse. Having escaped a "Groundhog Day" Loop in which he lived through multiple versions of the same event, he now gets precognative flashes of multiple possible futures. While this is useful, there's often something disconcerting about him cheerfully assuring everyone that the disaster that just happened is the best thing that could have happened, because all the other options were worse. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_51a0ec9e | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_51a0ec9e | comment |
In The Carpet People, all wights can see the future and so they assume that Hard-Determinism is real and that their fates are fixed, and do what they've foreseen themselves doing because that's what they've foreseen — except for one, who can see multiple possible futures and knows that it's possible to choose between them. | |
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The Carpet People | hasFeature |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_530296a4 | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_530296a4 | comment |
Scootertrix the Abridged gives this a metafictional spin. Pinkie Pie knows she's a character in an abridged series and can see the future by Reading Ahead in the Script. But she also knows that the Script "changes all the time", in response to characters' choices: essentially the characters are creating the Script, rather than it controlling the characters. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_5319ce6c | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_5319ce6c | comment |
In Spy X Family, this turns out to be the case for Bond's future-seeing powers, with a person's actions or decisions leading to his visions changing. And since he's a dog, he obviously can't just inform people of things. And while the telepathic Anya can certainly help in matters because she can see his visions, she herself is a young child and trying to keep her own powers a secret, leading to her actions being the things that could alter the original vision. | |
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SPY×FAMILY (Manga) | hasFeature |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_5efbf032 | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_5efbf032 | comment |
The Asterisk War: This is how Claudia Enfield explains her Seer abilities (granted by her Orga Lux, Pan-Dora) in volume 7. Pan-Dora in essence gives her Mana Meter that allows her to expend accrued points (which accrue at a rate of one second of viewable future time for every three days that she experiences normally) to look an equal number of seconds into the future. This is unreliable, particularly when attacking, because how an opponent responds to her future attacks varies based on what she does. If she tries to preview the results of, for example, five different attacks lasting two seconds each, she consumes ten seconds of viewable time (5 attacks x 2 seconds). | |
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The Asterisk War | hasFeature |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_5f8df4f | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_5f8df4f | comment |
The Ultimates (2015): Galactus reveals an apparently simplified view of time to the Ultimates, including the sliding timescale (some events have a certain 'weight', so are always only a decade or so behind), and various futures struggle to realise themselves as they become more and more probable, with the 'Old King Thor', 'Maestro', '2099', and Days of Future Past futures among those shown. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_61a39969 | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_61a39969 | comment |
In Avengers: Infinity War, Doctor Strange uses the Eye of Agamotto to peer into the future to find an outcome where they come out winning against Thanos, sifting through over fourteen million probable futures and only finding one with such an outcome. It is even implied that him willingly giving Thanos the stone after their battle against him and Thanos succeeding in his near-omnicidal goal was all a part of that probable future. A theory Avengers: Endgame proved correct. Zig-Zagged due to the events of Loki, where its revealed that while Alternate Timelines and Futures do indeed exist, all of them except the "Main" one end up being pruned by the Time Variance Authority (at least until He Who Remains was killed). |
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Avengers: Infinity War | hasFeature |
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Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_66abe7c6 | comment |
Fate Series: As shown in Fate/Grand Order and Fate/Extella, history naturally "branches" into multiple timelines as it goes, following the different decisions and events in each part of history. However, the world - which is a supernatural, sentient being in this franchise - regularly cut off those branching timelines with something called "Quantum Time-Lock", which occurs every hundred years or so. The branches that are cut are those that strayed too far away from the "trunk of the history tree", i.e the correct history. | |
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Fate Series (Franchise) | hasFeature |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_68a2d652 | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_68a2d652 | comment |
The Meaning of Harmony: When Sunset is shown all pasts and futures by Destiny/Entropy/the 'dark force', she realizes that everyone is free to choose their own path in life. | |
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The Meaning Of Harmony / Fan Fic | hasFeature |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_6cb2d709 | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_6cb2d709 | comment |
It is strongly implied that there is no set destiny in the Harry Potter universe, with various character's choices and instances on fulfilling prophecies being the catalyst for many of such prophecies in the first place. Dumbledore flat-out states that the only reason Harry Potter became Voldemort's undoing was because he believed in the prophecy that he would be defeated by him so much that his own attempts at curtailing it led to his own undoing. Because of this, Divination is considered an especially fickle skill to master given that the future is constantly in flux, Hermione Granger once describing it as "woolly" and "a lot of guesswork." | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_755d59cb | comment |
God of War Ragnarök: The Norns reveal that no prophecy is absolute, but gods only appear to have inflexible fates because of a combination of their own magic enforcing their fate and their own stubborn nature pushing them towards it. The secret to defying prophecy is to defy yourself and act against / change your own nature, which can radically change your destiny to one of many paths. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_7832b74c | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_7832b74c | comment |
Steven Universe: Garnet possesses an ability called "Future Vision" which allows her to see into many different probable futures. Many of these range from mundane to incredibly improbable (ranging from various comical deaths to chasing away the Ruby Squadron with a game of baseball) and are selected by the choices people involved in such outcomes make. In-contrast, Sapphire's future vision is much more hard-deterministic in nature and can only see one possible outcome, implying that Ruby's passionate and impulsive personality enhances her future vision while fused together as Garnet. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_84823809 | comment |
Kaeloo: There are multiple episodes that show the futures the main four could have, and each one is different because it's based on what the characters are doing in the present. The trope is even lampshaded in Episode 30, where witnessing a Bad Future makes them promise to actively take steps to avoid what caused it. | |
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Armageddon 2001: Waverider experiences numerous different versions of 2001 in his attempts to determine Monarch's true identity. For Superman and Batman, who have multiple books covering their stories, they seem to have two or three multiple choice futures apiece. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_8b6e621c | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_8b6e621c | comment |
Forms the backdrop to Theirs Not to Reason Why. Ia, the protagonist, is an impressively powerful precognitive who grew up tormented by visions of the entire galaxy being wiped out by a Horde of Alien Locusts 300 years in the future. She ultimately sets out to wind her way down the only possible combination of events where the Alien Locusts lose, which involves becoming a war hero instead of a musician like she wanted, while leaving messages for thousands upon thousands of people across the galaxy to nudge them onto the correct paths, too. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_8d32e966 | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_8d32e966 | comment |
Squadron Supreme: In Supreme Power, Arcanna has a limited ability to see possible futures and collapse them into a preferred outcome. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_8f24062f | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_8f24062f | comment |
In The Night Room, Argus is a computer program designed to predict the futures of high school and college students to allow them the freedom of choice to either pursue the prediction or stridently avoid it. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_90f42a9b | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_90f42a9b | comment |
In The Wheel of Time, Min has the gift of seeing cryptic visions of the future around people. Most of the ambiguous ones are Prophecy Twists that come true in unexpected ways, but on two occasions, she gets viewings with two possible outcomes depending on whether one person is present for another at a crucial time. Perrin takes the warning to heart and saves Rand's life, while Siuan and Gareth do not and are killed soon after they separate. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_a5b8b965 | comment |
The Iliad: Achilles' mother knew that he could either live a brief but glorious life as a hero or a long life of I Coulda Been a Contender!. While she tries her best to steer him towards the latter by disguising him as a girl, it doesn't work, and when she sees how easily he takes to the warrior's life she realizes she would rather he be happy rather than miserable for the rest of his days, so she stops trying to keep him safe. | |
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The Amazing World of Gumball: The episode "The Choices" has Nicole recalling how she first met Richard when they were children. While reminiscing, she imagines all the ways her life would be different if she had done different things in the moments leading up to their meeting. Several of the imagined outcomes are her suddenly dying. | |
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Mr. Nobody takes this to the logical extreme with a boy who can see all possible futures, in his life. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_b2d10fb2 | type |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_b2d10fb2 | comment |
Next: The Arc Words for the film discuss this: "Every time you look at the future, it changes, because you looked at it." Because Cris can see multiple possible short-term futures, he can select the one with the best outcome. | |
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Next (2007) | hasFeature |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_b565ccc5 | comment |
Zig-Zagged due to the events of Loki, where its revealed that while Alternate Timelines and Futures do indeed exist, all of them except the "Main" one end up being pruned by the Time Variance Authority (at least until He Who Remains was killed). | |
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Danny Phantom: Clockwork himself compares time to a parade, and while the Observants can only see the immediate future based upon present occurring events, he watches the "parade" from above, and can see every course it might or might not take. This makes Danny realize that rather than eliminating him to prevent Dark Danny's existence, Clockwork was helping him to change his future. | |
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Generation Zero: Telic has the ability to see the flow of time, giving her a limited ability to see multiple futures. | |
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Child of the Storm has multiple probabilities, though some are far stronger than others, and the future can be altered - in fact, Doctor Strange, a Time Master, world-class Seer and Magnificent Bastard without equal, makes a habit of this as part of his master plan to stop Thanos. He's also implied to not be the only one who's tried it, with the Norns of Yggdrasil previously having meddled the same way, and it's very strongly hinted that he 'persuaded' them not to. | |
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Men in Black 3 has the character Griffin, an alien who observes multiple future timelines as they're about to happen, but doesn't know which one will actually happen until it becomes the present, leaving a toll on him that manifests as his rather oddball behavior and outlook on life. As Jay and Kay ask him if he knows that Boris the Animal is out to kill him... | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_d07cd5b4 | comment |
Ignited Spark: Forty years before the events of canon, All for One stole a precognition Quirk from woman that allowed him to see five possible futures, of which only one would become reality. This eventually helped him prepare his survival after the fight on Endor Forest. | |
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In Andromeda Trance Gemini can see multiple timelines and pick the best one possible. One episode focused on her shows her reviewing different possibilities and rejecting them by pruning one of her plants. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_d22d1495 | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_d22d1495 | comment |
In the Sulien novels, all seers can see multiple possible futures, and have to weigh up which one seems most likely to come true and what they can do to bring it about. In a twist, it's said that what they're actually seeing is the futures of alternate timelines, meaning that the one future no seer will ever see is the one that's actually about to happen to them. Most of the time this makes no practical difference, since they will see futures that are like their real future in every relevant detail, but they can be blindsided if a god intervenes to cause something impossible to happen, since that won't be reflected in any other timeline. (Sulien herself has her life saved by divine intervention early in the series, with the result that seers have no idea what to make of her because she never appears in the futures they see.) | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_e2bb8bee | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_e2bb8bee | comment |
In The Cosmere, some entities have the power to see into the Spiritual Realm, a Place Beyond Time and Space where Connections into the past and future are tangible. The Shards, Pieces of God who exist primarily in the Spiritual Realm and have the Super-Intelligence to process all those Connections, can use that to project potential futures to a greater or lesser degree: it seems to be a matter of incredibly complex, highly interdependent probability distributions rather than a definitive image of the future. | |
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The Cosmere | hasFeature |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_e8cbe564 | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_e8cbe564 | comment |
The Hand of Thrawn: Luke at one point uses the Force to meditate on the future and try to decide his next move. He perceives nearly infinite possible futures and wonders if this is what Yoda saw while Luke was fixated on his vision of Darth Vader capturing Han and Leia at Cloud City back in The Empire Strikes Back. He ultimately selects the only course of action he saw that didn't appear to lead to complete chaos: leaving the Caamas crisis to Han and Leia and following Mara Jade into the Unknown Regions. The result: First Contact with the Chiss and the Empire of the Hand, recovery of an intact copy of the Caamas Document which allows the actual perpetrators to be punished, and he and Mara having a Relationship Upgrade and deciding to get married. | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_e8cbe564 | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_e951212 | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_e951212 | comment |
In Dawn of a New Age: Oldport Blues, Finn is granted the power of pre-cognition and is randomly struck with flashes of the future. However, the future is not set in stone, and instead the future that he sees at any given point is merely the most likely outcome if a significant enough change isn't implemented to move away from it. At one point he looks into the future, only to see it dissolve and be replaced with a different one as a result of other character's actions. | |
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Dawn of a New Age: Oldport Blues / Role Play | hasFeature |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_e951212 | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_efccb9da | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_efccb9da | comment |
Voltron: Legendary Defender: There are countless realities that are the result of diverging paths at different points in time. It's implied that Slav has the ability to see all these different realities, along with future ones, and is easily overwhelmed by them. | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_efccb9da | featureApplicability |
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Voltron: Legendary Defender | hasFeature |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_efccb9da | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_f3c58c73 | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_f3c58c73 | comment |
In King's Quest VI: Heir Today, Gone Tomorrow the Oracle of the Winged Ones invokes this as a subtle hint that there are two major ways to finish the game: | |
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Multiple-Choice Future / int_f4abd380 | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_f4abd380 | comment |
Much like BlazBlue above, Zero Escape runs on the many-world theory — there are countless universes out there, each being created as one of the results of any decision. Once trained, SHIFTers can move through them at will, and this becomes a requirement for reaching the Golden Ending. | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_f4abd380 | featureApplicability |
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BlazBlue (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_f4abd380 | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_ff9ab17f | type |
Multiple-Choice Future | |
Multiple-Choice Future / int_ff9ab17f | comment |
Star Trek: The Next Generation: Discussed in "A Matter of Time" when Captain Picard is arguing with Berlinghoff Rasmussen, who claims to be a Time Traveler from the future (he's actually from the past), and whom Picard is currently trying to convince to give him some clue about the optimal solution for the Problem of the Week. | |
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