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Necessary Fail
- 408 statements
- 78 feature instances
- 30 referencing feature instances
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A subtrope of the Butterfly of Doom; this trope is sometimes used to "prove" not why You Can't Fight Fate, but why you shouldn't necessarily want to. Whereas the Butterfly of Doom trope shows you everything that goes horribly wrong when you try to Set Right What Once Went Wrong, this trope demonstrates that what was once wrong was actually needed to make the present (or future) better. Perhaps that the whole village getting nuked caused folks to denounce war. Maybe losing his wife caused The Hero to launch into his crusade to save others. Or maybe being used by the villain gives the hero knowledge and experience that will come in handy later. This is almost certainly the case if the wrong involved Hitler. Note, this is not strictly a Time Travel Trope; sometimes the characters or narrator may simply reference the fail as a part of backstory. But it can indeed be used in time travel stories to demonstrate how removing that downer event can lead to things being much worse on a bigger, different scale. Naturally characters who suffered personally from it and lost everything aren't likely to agree that it was all for the better after all. This often leads to the conclusion that one should not attempt to change the wrongs of the past as the trade-off will not be worth it, but it may also be pointed out at the same time that this doesn't make those wrongs right and no one should have to suffer for the betterment of the flow of history. Life is a mixed bag like that. See also My Greatest Failure, Misery Builds Character, A Lesson in Defeat, It's a Wonderful Plot, Career-Building Blunder, Mistakes Are Not the End of the World, Enemy Mine, and Taught by Experience. Not to be confused with You Can't Thwart Stage One. |
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Necessary Fail / int_104b5e68 | type |
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In the third book of the The Pendragon Adventure, Bobby and fellow traveler Gunny suspect that Saint Dane is trying to cause the crash of the The Hindenburg in First Earth (which is Earth in 1937). Just to be sure, they travel to Third Earth (Earth in 5010) to speak with another Traveler named Patrick Mac, who uses an advanced supercomputer to simulate what would happen if the Hindenburg landed safely: namely that German spies would exit the aircraft and steal plans for the nuclear bomb, which they bring back to Nazi German and cause World War II to escalate into a nuclear conflict that still leaves Earth a ruined world in the 51st century. This changes the Traveler's plans to make sure the Hindenburg crashes like in proper history. | |
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Terminator: It seems that no matter how many Time Travel trips Skynet or The Resistance does, Judgment Day is doomed to happen. On a more positive note, John Connor seems to be always fated to survive the event. Zigzagged in Terminator: Dark Fate: even if Skynet kills John and John prevents Skynet's existence for keeps, Judgment Day will still happen, just with a different AI and different resistance leader. | |
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This line of thinking is the very crux of Adrian Veidt's master plan in Watchmen which is what leads him to decide to enforce such a turn of events. | |
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Watchmen (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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As pointed out by Donatello in the sole Clipshow, the mutation of the Turtles and master Splinter was thanks to the Utrom's failure to keep Ch'rell imprisoned. | |
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In Miami Vice, the two detectives come together over the loss of their partner/brother. | |
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Implied in the Mage Storms trilogy, where a medieval engineer is crippled by an accident with a prototype steam boiler. While he's lying in hospital, loopy from painkillers, he has an idea: what if he built a chair with wheels attached...? (This was likely inspired by Everest and Jennings, two engineers who invented the wheelchair as we know it when one of them was crippled in a mining accident.) | |
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The Guest Book had one episode invoke this. The episode revolves around drug addicts and their hitting rock bottom, but a couple points out that many addicts die before that happens. So they formed a company (fittingly called Rock Bottom Industries) where they make the addict think they have done something terrible because of their addiction and inspire them to seek treatment. It turns out that one of the proprietors of Rock Bottom Industries is an addict herself and their latest mark apparently dies as a result of her addiction compromising the scheme. Except it turns out her partner secretly conspired with the "clients" to perform the service on herself to send her to rehab. | |
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The Guest Book | hasFeature |
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In Circles, if Paulie had never accidentally contracted HIV, he would have never met the others or held the safe sex speech where he first met Doug. | |
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Circles (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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Many people consider The Night Gwen Stacy Died saga to be this for Spider-Man. Plus Peter indirectly letting Uncle Ben die. There's a What If? issue that shows what would have happened if Spider-Man had actually caught the Burglar. Uncle Ben survives, but Peter becomes a combination of arrogant Jerkass and Smug Super without any of the maturity and character he developed from being forced to accept the consequences of his actions. | |
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Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The 'freak mishap' Ranger 3 suffers is the only reason Captain Rogers survives the oncoming nuclear war that wipes out much of civilization and is able to return to help a newly united Earth battle its foes in the future. | |
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Buck Rogers in the 25th Century | hasFeature |
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Non-time-travel example that is both subversion and lampshading: in Chuck we learn that Chuck flunking out of Stanford was part of an attempt by his friend/rival to keep him from joining spy work. Of course, it didn't quite work out that way. | |
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Chuck | hasFeature |
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In Star Trek: Enterprise, the faction from the future specifically state while they could've warned Earth about the initial Xindi attack that kills 7 million people, they figured it would only be after the sneak attack that Starfleet would heed the greater danger. Notably it is the attack that leads to the Enterprise being retrofitted into a warship and the introduction of the famous photon torpedoes. | |
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Star Trek: Enterprise | hasFeature |
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The first season of Heroes demonstrates how this can overlap with Well-Intentioned Extremist. The episode explaining Linderman's motivations is titled ".07%" after the percent of the world's population he's going to wipe out as part of his plan for world peace. (Incidentally, in the scenes set in the future, it didn't work.) | |
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Middlegame: Roger and Dodger can rewind time but don't have Ripple-Effect-Proof Memory. At the finale, they learn just how many times they reset their lives and realize that all the tragedies they endured, from the murder of a friend to accidentally causing a catastrophic earthquake, were still the best-case scenario. | |
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Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003) has two: As pointed out by Donatello in the sole Clipshow, the mutation of the Turtles and master Splinter was thanks to the Utrom's failure to keep Ch'rell imprisoned. The only way to kill the Tengu Shredder for good was to have Master Yoshi's spirit making the killing blow. Had Master Yoshi not been killed by the Utrom Shredder, the Turtles and Splinter would not have become mutants and the world would have been conquered by the Tengu Shredder. This was all foreseen by the Ninja Tribunal |
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In Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, a mistake in the Earth's distant past caused an alien ship to explode and provided the energy that kick-started the evolution of life on the planet. Douglas Adams, who wrote the book, also wrote the Doctor Who serial "City of Death", which shared the same scenario. | |
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Mortal Kombat 11: In his arcade ending, past!Johnny Cage is tempted to use Kronika's hourglass to undo an upcoming low point in his life, marked by scandal and those closest to him losing respect for him. However, recalling the words of his future self, he decides not to meddle, since he ultimately came out of the experience a better man. He still uses the hourglass to save Sonya's life. After all, every Johnny Cage film has a happy ending. | |
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Hero Chat: While the creation of the Sentimonster feast led to the death of the other Guardians and Hawkmoth acquiring the Butterfly and Peacock Miraculous, it also meant that Fu couldn't have been indoctrinated to see the Kwamis as tools rather than individual beings. This would also lead the Kwamis to end up with Marinette and the others, with the former using the Eagle Miraculous to free them from the older Guardians' control. | |
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Milton, in Paradise Lost, suggests that an act of disobedience was necessary to give humanity free will, saving it from a meaningless existence. Jesus' birth is more of a way to fix the problems that went along with it, and apparently, He already existed anyway... It's complicated. | |
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Paradise Lost | hasFeature |
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Rush: The group had some early success with prog on their second album Fly By Night, but the longer suites on their follow-up Caress of Steel were aimless failures, and the album failed to produce a radio hit. The tour was also mired by poor attendance, getting nicknamed the "Down the Tubes" tour halfway through. Their label wanted them to go in a more conventional direction, hinting they might be dropped if they produced another flop. Incensed, they wrote a side-long, 21-minute middle finger to the record company in the form of "2112", which was a much more successful multi-part epic. The album 2112 would serve as Rush's major breakthrough, considered their seminal record alongside Moving Pictures. Rush would later try to expand on their synth-heavy sound with Grace Under Pressure, but results were mixed thanks to a prolonged recording time and little help from producer Peter Henderson. The follow-up, Power Windows, was produced by Peter Collins and integrated synths into the band's sound much more successfully. |
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In Katsugeki/Touken Ranbu, Horikawa Kunihiro worries about the fate of his old master Hijikata Toshizou when he's sent to protect Sakamoto Ryouma from getting captured by the Shinsengumi. He thinks if the Shinsengumi catch Ryouma and execute him, then Hijikata's life won't be so filled with turmoil in the years to come; Izuminokami tells him that failing to capture (or even get a glimpse of) Ryouma was the way History went down, and without the Shinsengumi committing that failure, Ryouma would have never brought on the changes to Japan's political structure that he aided in. Hijikata's ongoing struggles after that event were part of the figure they were so fond of, and changing such fundamental parts of him would be a disservice to their memory of him. | |
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In Six Ages, the Riders never even consider allying with the Orlanthi until the disastrous Skyfall forces them to. This alliance is the only thing that saves their lives when the even more disastrous Darkness hits. | |
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In The 100, the group sent down to test whether Earth had recovered enough to be habitable were supposed to land near Mount Weather so they could take advantage of the site's shelter and supplies. They actually landed about twenty miles away — a good thing, since they would have been much easier prey for the Mountain Men if they had encountered them immediately upon landing. | |
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The 100 | hasFeature |
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In the Discworld novel Night Watch, Sam Vimes considers and rejects this idea. Even if it costs him his future happiness and success, he consciously chooses to change events and saves many lives. The ones he wanted to save the most still don't make it, but he does make a difference. | |
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Discworld | hasFeature |
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In World of Warcraft, this is half of the point behind the Caverns of Time. The Infinite Dragonflight is trying to manipulate the past to prevent Medivh from opening the portal for the Orcs to invade Azeroth, and your job is to guarantee the invasion is successful because it will later cause various races to put aside their differences and band together against the Burning Legion. One expansion later, they go into the past to prevent Prince Arthas from crossing the Moral Event Horizon by slaughtering the innocent people of Stratholme before it becomes a Zombie Apocalypse, and your job is to keep him alive so he can kill them all. The villains claim they are trying to help, but it is obvious they want a temporal paradox. | |
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The whole point of Slumdog Millionaire. If Jamal's life had sucked any less then he never would have been on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? let alone won the million and his happily ever after with Latika. | |
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Lilo & Stitch: The Series: The episode "Melty" had Lilo being embarrassed in front of her crush while trying to catch one of Stitch's cousins. She uses a time machine invented by Jumba to try and get a do-over, but each attempt ends with increasingly disastrous consequences that end with her and Stitch having to be saved from being stranded in another timeline by a Bad Future version of Jumba. | |
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In Time Scout, this is why paradox never happens. It's never explained, it's just there. | |
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Time Scout | hasFeature |
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In Homestuck, You Can't Fight Fate. This is because there is a predetermined Alpha Timeline, and any event that deviates from it creates a doomed offshoot timeline. Many events in the Alpha Timeline are, from the perspective of the characters, astounding failures, but must happen due to the nature of time in Homestuck. In addition, doomed timelines can exert influence on the Alpha Timeline. This influence is in fact necessary for the Alpha Timeline to exist. So the failure to create a Necessary Fail is itself a Necessary Fail. | |
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Homestuck (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
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Star Trek (2009): It is implied that the Kelvin's destruction at the hands of the Narada led to Starfleet developing a tougher, more combat-ready fleet, a trend that affected the Enterprise. Also subverted (and therefore ultimately zigzagged) in that one of the themes is, regardless of how their starting points had changed (particularly Kirk and Spock, whose circumstances had changed most significantly over the original universe), the entire main cast still wound up on the Enterprise in the same configuration as in the original universe. | |
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Star Trek (2009) | hasFeature |
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The Twilight Zone (1985): In "Profile in Silver", a 22nd-century Harvard history professor time-travels to observe the assassination of his ancestor John F. Kennedy. Unable to just stand by and watch, he intervenes and prevents the assassination, only to learn that his act will lead to nuclear war and the destruction of humanity. He finds a way to save JFK and prevent the war, making it a subversion, though it still involves a Heroic Sacrifice. | |
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The Twilight Zone (1985) | hasFeature |
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Green Lantern: Green Lantern Tomar-Re's greatest failure was failing to stop Superman's home planet of Krypton exploding. Krypton fell under Tomar-Re's jurisdiction, so he gathered a bunch of Stellarium to absorb the explosion but got blinded by a solar flare and did not make it in time. But the Guardians of the Universe reassured him that, though he didn't save Krypton, his failure led to the rise of Earth's greatest superhero, so he was able to retire in peace. | |
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On the Male Protagonist's route in Persona 3 and regardless of your choice, at rank nine the Moon will inevitably reverse. This is rectified shortly thereafter, though. | |
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Persona 3 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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In the Tower Social Link of Persona 4, Shu, an overachieving student who's obsessed with staying at the top of his class, to please his mother, sees getting caught for cheating on a test and being suspended for it as this. Said event caused him to have an argument with his mother, but they reconciled and talked through their issues. He also got a permanent black mark on his record, but because he's no longer able to be perfect, he feels able to branch out and try new things, such as baseball. He also becomes friends with the boy who'd transferred into his class, who'd defended him when he got in trouble. | |
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In the Persona 5 series fic Start Again, while Haru loathes the idea of letting Kamoshida remain active, she decides to let his Palace and thus his perverted desires remain standing. This is because the Place was the earliest known location where Morgana met Akira and Ryuji, and might be the only place where the latter two and Ann can regain their Personas and/or their memories of the future. | |
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Persona 5 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_5a3dae52 | comment |
In Misfits, former Olympic-standard athlete Curtis re-winds time to prevent himself from getting arrested for cocaine possession (an event that ruined his career) but after he does this, it becomes apparent that he was meant to get caught in order to save the lives of his girlfriend Alisha and their friends Kelly and Simon, all of whom he met while on community service. | |
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Misfits | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_5d354f8 | comment |
Red Dwarf: In "Dimension Jump", the difference between Ace Rimmer (what a guy!) and the loser Rimmer is that Ace was held back in school one year. It made him determined to succeed. Also, "Tikka To Ride" speculates on what would have happened had Oswald's attempt to assassinate John F. Kennedy been unsuccessful. The answer is not pretty. |
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Red Dwarf | hasFeature |
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Star Trek: Borg: When you're part of an Away Team beamed aboard a Borg cube, you have to take the option to disregard what your fandom sense tells you, and start a fight with a few Borg drones who would have ignored you otherwise, even though you inevitably lose and get assimilated. This means you get the access codes to the cube's systems, and once Q sends you back in time to try again you use them to your advantage. | |
Necessary Fail / int_5fe6150b | featureApplicability |
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Star Trek: Borg (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_605dd875 | comment |
Stargate: In Stargate SG-1 (and its movie), Jack O'Neill's son's death (he shot himself with Jack's own gun) is a major angst point, and it's clear that Jack blames himself for what's happened. However, it was because of Jack's suicidal depression in the movie that he was selected to go through the Stargate, and his history with the Stargate is what brings him back in the series. If his son hadn't died, SG-1 as we know it wouldn't have existed. And let's not even speculate what would have happened in episodes like Lost City, without the easy availability of, say, Jack's Ancient Technology Activation gene. John Sheppard in Stargate Atlantis, whose reputation was ruined by his ill-fated attempt to rescue his friends in Afghanistan against direct orders. Had this not happened, probably no one would've discovered that he has the ATA gene and a natural knack for using it (on par with O'Neill) and he wouldn't have ended up as part of the Atlantis mission. It would've likely failed without him. Eli Wallace in Stargate Universe, who was forced to drop out of MIT when his mother contracted HIV from a patient of hers. He probably wouldn't have spent his time playing MMORPGs and solving puzzles that the government had secretly planted there. He wouldn't have ended up on the Destiny and saved their hides multiple times. |
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Stargate-verse (Franchise) | hasFeature |
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In Dragon Age: Origins, Teyrn Loghain decides it's necessary for the battle of Ostagar to be lost, so that the King could be killed in the battle and he could begin his struggle for power. | |
Necessary Fail / int_629cd094 | featureApplicability |
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Dragon Age: Origins (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_66ea3059 | comment |
Everything bad that happens to the main characters in Kangaroo Jack turns out to be saving them from a hitman hired to kill them. Go Jackie Legs! | |
Necessary Fail / int_66ea3059 | featureApplicability |
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Kangaroo Jack | hasFeature |
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In Memento Vivere, a Final Fantasy X fanfiction, this is the general conclusion to Rikku’s frequent moments of reflection. | |
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Memento Vivere (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
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In Stargate SG-1 (and its movie), Jack O'Neill's son's death (he shot himself with Jack's own gun) is a major angst point, and it's clear that Jack blames himself for what's happened. However, it was because of Jack's suicidal depression in the movie that he was selected to go through the Stargate, and his history with the Stargate is what brings him back in the series. If his son hadn't died, SG-1 as we know it wouldn't have existed. And let's not even speculate what would have happened in episodes like Lost City, without the easy availability of, say, Jack's Ancient Technology Activation gene. | |
Necessary Fail / int_70814599 | featureApplicability |
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Stargate SG-1 | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_72262aee | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_72262aee | comment |
In Avatar: The Last Airbender, Zuko spends most of the show angsting about his banishment, scar, and what a disappointment he's been to his father. Finally, at his Heel–Face Turn, he tells his father that the banishment was the greatest thing he ever could have done. It allowed Zuko to see the evil the war inflicted, have a Heel Realization, and realize that he could make his own honor. | |
Necessary Fail / int_72262aee | featureApplicability |
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Avatar: The Last Airbender | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_73d7930f | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_73d7930f | comment |
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: It is the defeat Starfleet suffered at the hands of the Borg that directly led to the design and construction of the Defiant class of ships. These came in handy when the war with the Dominion broke out. After the Vulcans nearly warred themselves to extinction, they embraced logic and became a major starfaring power in the quadrant. So too, the brutal third world war humanity survived caused humans to embrace peace and turn their science from war and violence to space exploration and other peaceful goals. The Klingons even get in on the act, as their history states that it was the Klingons overthrowing an alien race that enslaved them that led to them becoming the Proud Warrior Race. |
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Necessary Fail / int_73d7930f | featureApplicability |
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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_74059a6a | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_74059a6a | comment |
In The End of Eternity, the protagonist works for an organisation that tinkers with history in an attempt to create and maintain a perfect timeline. His realisation of the existence of this trope is an important part of the story. | |
Necessary Fail / int_74059a6a | featureApplicability |
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The End of Eternity | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_8125b468 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_8125b468 | comment |
Batman has this in its origin and then zigzags the trope in a story named "To Kill A Legend". The Phantom Stranger sent Batman to an Alternate Universe, giving him the chance to stop the murder of the parallel Thomas and Martha Wayne. At several points, Batman and Robin wonder if this means there will never be a Batman in this universe. But Batman, understandably, decides it doesn't matter and stops the shooting regardless. In the epilogue, the readers are informed that the parallel Bruce was inspired by the masked man who saved his family in the alleyway and would grow up to become a Batman fueled by hope instead of despair. | |
Necessary Fail / int_8125b468 | featureApplicability |
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Batman (Franchise) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_81478bdb | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_81478bdb | comment |
BROK the InvestiGator has multiple endings, with one labeled as "Canonical". However, the path to reach this ending requires protagonists Brok and Graff to actually fail their main goals at key moments, as the actions they take afterwards to fix their mistakes uncover vital information about Brok's case; if they instead succeed, it usually leads to a different ending where at least one of their friends suffers as a result. | |
Necessary Fail / int_81478bdb | featureApplicability |
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BROK the InvestiGator (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_81692f99 | comment |
Star Trek: In a non-time-travel example, Star Trek VI shows that it was the destruction of the Klingon moon Praxis that caused the Klingons to even consider peace with the Federation. Star Trek (2009): It is implied that the Kelvin's destruction at the hands of the Narada led to Starfleet developing a tougher, more combat-ready fleet, a trend that affected the Enterprise. Also subverted (and therefore ultimately zigzagged) in that one of the themes is, regardless of how their starting points had changed (particularly Kirk and Spock, whose circumstances had changed most significantly over the original universe), the entire main cast still wound up on the Enterprise in the same configuration as in the original universe. |
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Necessary Fail / int_81692f99 | featureApplicability |
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Star Trek (Franchise) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_83443877 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_83443877 | comment |
This is commonly referenced in many religions as an explanation/justification/excuse when bad things occur to followers, typically expressed as "God works in mysterious ways." | |
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God | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_86814e56 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_86814e56 | comment |
In Final Fantasy VI, Locke's failure to save his first love in his Backstory gave him his hatred of The Empire and his protective nature towards women in trouble, causing him to rescue two pivotal characters throughout the plotline. | |
Necessary Fail / int_86814e56 | featureApplicability |
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Final Fantasy VI (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_89bf8ce | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_89bf8ce | comment |
On 30 Rock, Liz called Jack a "class A moron" in front of a reporter. After she was quoted anonymously in print, Jack told Liz that as a child he was, coincidentally enough, labeled a "Class A Moron" by the Massachusetts Public School System and subsequently put in a weird special education class. Liz invokes this trope by telling him that having to overcome that made him the man he is today. Subverted at the end of the episode, when it's revealed Jack knew it was Liz all along and made up the whole story to guilt trip her into confessing. | |
Necessary Fail / int_89bf8ce | featureApplicability |
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30 Rock | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_8b55fd36 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_8b55fd36 | comment |
Command & Conquer: Red Alert Series The series as a whole essentially invokes this, by having the plot of the games be the huge global conflict and Timey-Wimey Ball repercussions that result when Einstein prevents World War II. Furthermore, at the start of Red Alert 3, the Soviets erase Einstein himself from history after he removes Hitler, to prevent their own defeat. This works in the short term... but both end up creating a new faction even more dangerous to them than the Allies were, and wiping out some of the most powerful weapons in their arsenal because nuclear technology was never developed without Einstein. |
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Command & Conquer: Red Alert Series (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_8d817ccb | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_8d817ccb | comment |
In the Lost episode "The Little Prince", the time-flashing characters discover they've jumped to the night Boone died and Aaron was born. Locke sees the light from the hatch and knows the earlier version of himself is nearby, but walks away. | |
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Lost | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_8f794c68 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_8f794c68 | comment |
Wings of Fire: This is often the case with animus magic. When you have the power to do or create anything you want, you tend to stop thinking about what you really need. For example, the animus mage Darkstalker desperately tries to create a simulacrum of his lost love, who died centuries ago. If he were a normal dragon, he would have had to accept his grief and move on, but having magic gave him the false hope that he could "fix" things, even though all of his attempts have failed miserably. Disadvantaged Teen Genius Qibli is forever thinking that if only he had animus magic, he could solve all his problems. But the fact that he doesn't, and therefore had to be saved from poverty by someone else, is what taught him to trust and love other dragons. If he had been able to fulfill his fantasy of being completely independent, everything that gives his life meaning in the present day- his loyalty to Thorn, his friendships with the protagonists, his commitment to bettering Wretched Hives- would be gone or less valuable to him. Notably, when he gets his talons on a magical weapon in book 10, it doesn't help him at all, because he reverts to just smashing through problems instead of thinking up real, sustainable solutions to them. Unlike the vast majority of dragons, the Dragonets of Destiny do not fear other tribes, because they were trapped together in a situation where their only comfort was each other. This lack of xenophobia gives them the courage to travel the world and talk to all the tribes- making the diplomatic ties that were necessary to end the War of SandWing Succession. |
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Wings of Fire | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_90c73dda | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_90c73dda | comment |
Played dead straight in Animorphs when Visser Four goes back in time to change history and make Earth easier to conquer. However, he screws himself when he gets to D-Day and realizes that Hitler is a nobody and there aren't Allies or Axis the way we usually think of them. When our heroes get the Time Matrix back, they struggle with changing things back so there was a Holocaust and think that maybe they should check out the current future and see if things are better. Eventually they come to the realization that some things are Necessary Fails and they shouldn't mess around with the past. | |
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Animorphs | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_9a7088bc | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_9a7088bc | comment |
In the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "The City on the Edge of Forever", Kirk prevents his Love Interest Edith Keeler from being hit by a car, only to discover that she would go on to campaign against the US getting involved in World War II, which would in turn give Nazi Germany the opportunity to develop the atomic bomb and use it to win the war. He then realizes that he has to let her die in order to prevent millions more deaths. | |
Necessary Fail / int_9a7088bc | featureApplicability |
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Star Trek: The Original Series | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_a068f8a1 | comment |
Doctor Strange's story begins when he injures his hands and loses his career as a surgeon — unable to find a quick fix, he learns selflessness and, consequently, magic. One What If? issue shows what would have happened if he'd found the miracle cure he was looking for: He became an increasingly arrogant Dr. Jerk, alienated everyone, and eventually lost his license due to a malpractice suit. | |
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Doctor Strange (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_a61bda23 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_a61bda23 | comment |
Life Is Strange: Chloe's father must die in a car accident. When Max changes the timeline to save his life, he gives Chloe a car as a gift, and Chloe gets into an accident herself, which leaves her quadriplegic and dependent on expensive medicine. This alternate Chloe feels so guilty about the burden she's putting on her parents that she'll ask Max to give her a Mercy Kill. The final episode reveals that Chloe's death at the very beginning was this, and that saving her life will somehow cause a tornado to destroy Arcadia Bay. |
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Life Is Strange (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_b1666874 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_b1666874 | comment |
Used in Booster Gold. His purpose is to travel time and Set Right What Once Went Wrong, but there's some kind of technobabble saying that some things have become so important to the timeline that they can't be changed. For instance, there's nothing he can do to keep Barbara Gordon from being assaulted by the Joker, because her resulting paralysis helped lead her to become information broker and super-hacker Oracle. He continues to be conflicted when Mission Control Rip Hunter tells him to let a disaster happen around him in order to preserve history. | |
Necessary Fail / int_b1666874 | featureApplicability |
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Booster Gold (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_b9b796cf | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_b9b796cf | comment |
In Fate/stay night Saber believes that the fall of her kingdom is proof that she was not the right choice of king and wants the Grail so she can undo her reign. In the Fate route, Shirou attempts to convince her that this trope applies and in doing so comes to an epiphany about his own Survivor's Guilt. The necessity of destroying the Grail makes this moot. | |
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Fate/stay night (Visual Novel) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_bec16cfb | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_bec16cfb | comment |
WILL: A Wonderful World combines this with Do Well, But Not Perfect, as the story is about multiple characters praying to gods (the player) in order to alter history and change their fate, but the outcomes they consider "perfect" are not always the ones that lead to the happiest endings. For example, Spottie the stray cat prays for his "Daddie" to avoid dying in a traffic accident, and averting it does lead to a decent life on the streets, but letting it happen leads to Spottie meeting a child that will grow up to adopt him in the future, with said human accidentally preventing nuclear war in the process. | |
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WILL: A Wonderful World (Visual Novel) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_c0aa8ea9 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_c0aa8ea9 | comment |
Eli Wallace in Stargate Universe, who was forced to drop out of MIT when his mother contracted HIV from a patient of hers. He probably wouldn't have spent his time playing MMORPGs and solving puzzles that the government had secretly planted there. He wouldn't have ended up on the Destiny and saved their hides multiple times. | |
Necessary Fail / int_c0aa8ea9 | featureApplicability |
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Stargate Universe | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_c0c57462 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_c0c57462 | comment |
In Chrono Trigger Lucca fails to rescue her mother from being maimed by a machine. Her failure drives her to become a mechanical genius so that she will never fail again. If the player manages to save the mother through time travel, she still studies science and machinery and becomes a mechanical genius - according to Young!Lucca's diary, it's in order to make sure close calls like that never happen again, ultimately averting the trope. | |
Necessary Fail / int_c0c57462 | featureApplicability |
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Chrono Trigger (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_c1f5e7f2 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_c1f5e7f2 | comment |
Jaco the Galactic Patrolman follows the titular patrolman as he crashes on Earth trying to intercept and kill a dangerous alien that recently landed there, though he fails to do so by the end of the mini-series. Given that this is a Stealth Prequel to Dragon Ball and said alien was an infant Goku, it was the best for the galaxy and beyond that Jaco failed his mission. | |
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Jaco the Galactic Patrolman (Manga) | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_c4282b71 | type |
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Necessary Fail / int_c4282b71 | comment |
In My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, Fluttershy was teased by bullies at flight camp for being a weak flyer. If she hadn't been teased by them, Rainbow Dash wouldn't have challenged them to a race to defend Fluttershy's honor and wouldn't have made the sonic rainboom that caused the two pegasi and their future earth pony and unicorn friends to get their cutie marks at the same time, which is apparently critical to their ability to wield the Elements of Harmony. In the Season 5 finale, Starlight Glimmer uses a time travel spell to disrupt the race in several different ways, resulting in one bad alternate present after another. In one trip through the spell, she simply told the bullies to be nice, creating a timeline where the Changelings overpowered Equestria. The Cutie Map episodes tend to have this in mind when the map chooses which ponies to do the mission. In particular, Starlight's tendency for impulsive magic ultimately causes Celestia and Luna to eventually reconcile by switching their Cutie Marks. | |
Necessary Fail / int_c4282b71 | featureApplicability |
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My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic | hasFeature |
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Necessary Fail / int_c43df4d8 | type |
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Doctor Who: In the famous serial "Genesis of the Daleks", the Doctor states that although the creation of his archenemies the Daleks will have horrific consequences for the universe, there is good that will come of it, namely the many species that will join forces out of necessity to defeat them. In "The Waters of Mars", the destruction of the first station on Mars and all of its crew inspired the mission leader's granddaughter to explore space, leading to a long family line of people who would eventually help Earth make peaceful contact with other alien races and eventually become an intergalactic power. Still doesn't make it any easier to tell the people on the Mars station that they're all about to die. |
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Despite the stigma of the "cursed jacket" from an episode of Better with You, the characters realize that the horrible failures they suffered while wearing it actually led to something better. In one story, if his jacket hadn't fallen, interfering with the game and causing the Yankees to lose, giving him the stigma of "that guy who screwed the Yankees," he would have fallen to his death instead. | |
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There would've been no Superman without the destruction of Krypton and the near extinction of their race. It was a little boy watching his parents get killed in front of him that led to the rise of Batman. | |
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John Sheppard in Stargate Atlantis, whose reputation was ruined by his ill-fated attempt to rescue his friends in Afghanistan against direct orders. Had this not happened, probably no one would've discovered that he has the ATA gene and a natural knack for using it (on par with O'Neill) and he wouldn't have ended up as part of the Atlantis mission. It would've likely failed without him. | |
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In a non-time-travel example, Star Trek VI shows that it was the destruction of the Klingon moon Praxis that caused the Klingons to even consider peace with the Federation. | |
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In The Time Machine (2002) the protagonist invents the machine so he could save his fiancée's life. So, since if not for her death he wouldn't have invented it, she has to die in every timeline in which he and his machine appear. Consequently, his successive failures to save her life put him on a quest to the future in search of answers, ending with him both saving the Eloi from his enslavement at the hands of the Morloks and finding a new place where he belongs. | |
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How I Met Your Mother goes into this occasionally: for example, "Lucky Penny" shows how Ted needed to miss out on his dream job because it would have moved him to Chicago, meaning that he would not have met his future wife. | |
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In the Charmed episode "There's Something About Leo", Leo, who had recently become an Avatar, wanted to be able to convince Piper that the Avatars were not a threat (or at least not as far as he was aware at the time) by revealing to her that he had become one. Though the other Avatars did not agree with this decision (on the grounds that it would be better for her and her sisters to discover on their own), they allowed him to try. This all led to a chain of events that resulted in Leo nearly being killed by a potion designed to kill Avatars. And, so, when Alpha and Beta used some of their gathered power to reverse time to just before Leo had told Piper about his allegiance, he kept quiet about it this time. | |
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In Katawa Shoujo, Hisao's condition revealing itself at the worst possible time costs him any chance of a relationship with Iwanako, but if the player makes the right choices, he gets a deeper and more fulfilling relationship with a Yamaku schoolmate he most likely otherwise would not have met. | |
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One Sabrina the Teenage Witch episode had Sabrina go back to the past to try to stop the event that made her and Harvey have a fallout. She is unsuccessful, but eventually learns that the event was necessary for her and Harvey to understand each other better, so she just apologizes and they make out. | |
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In the Gravity Falls episode "The Time Traveler's Pig", Dipper uses a time machine to go back in time and undo a mistake he made that led to his crush Wendy going out with his Sitcom Arch-Nemesis Robbie Valentino. Unfortunately, the only way to accomplish this would result in Mabel being beaten to winning her pet pig Waddles in a carnival game... by her Sitcom Arch-Nemesis Pacifica. | |
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Star Trek: The Next Generation: In "Tapestry", Captain Picard expresses regret for his hot-headed ways which led to him getting stabbed in a bar fight. Of course, he learns that if not for that bar fight, he wouldn't have become The Captain that everybody came to know and love. Played with this again in "Yesterday's Enterprise" where it is discovered that the destruction of an earlier Enterprisenote The featured ship was the -D, the earlier Enterprise was the -C. helped lead to peace between the Klingons and the Federation. |
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