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Plot-Sensitive Button

 Plot-Sensitive Button
type
FeatureClass
 Plot-Sensitive Button
label
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button
page
PlotSensitiveButton
 Plot-Sensitive Button
comment
It's a decades-old geek joke that the perfect computer would only have one instruction: Do What I Want. In The Future, this will be achieved, so that a character can push the same button over and over and have it do something different each time. (Often a Big Red Button, but not always)
This is most commonly the result of a set constructed with lots of control panels, but no one keeping track of which button serves which purpose in the context of the story.
These are often used to control the Do-Anything Robot. Compare Action Commands, Swiss-Army Weapon, Magic Tool, Damn You, Muscle Memory!.
See also Context-Sensitive Button, in which the button is actively changing based on what's happening at the moment.
 Plot-Sensitive Button
fetched
2023-08-04T15:30:39Z
 Plot-Sensitive Button
parsed
2023-08-04T15:30:39Z
 Plot-Sensitive Button
processingComment
Dropped link to EverythingIsAnIPodInTheFuture: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Plot-Sensitive Button
processingComment
Dropped link to IdiotBall: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Plot-Sensitive Button
processingComment
Dropped link to MagicAIsMagicA: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Plot-Sensitive Button
processingComment
Dropped link to RenAndStimpy: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 Plot-Sensitive Button
processingComment
Dropped link to StarWars: Not an Item - CAT
 Plot-Sensitive Button
processingComment
Dropped link to playingwithatrope: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Plot-Sensitive Button
processingUnknown
RenAndStimpy
 Plot-Sensitive Button
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_117116ef
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_117116ef
comment
Rico in The Penguins of Madagascar has an extreme Stomach of Holding and is capable of vomiting up whatever is most useful at the time.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_117116ef
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_117116ef
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Penguins of Madagascar
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_117116ef
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_12ffd3e9
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_12ffd3e9
comment
Parodied in Megas XLR, as shown in the page image.
Coop activated a weapon with one button labeled "That Cool Giant Energy Sword Thing". He later activates a different weapon with the same button, and when he does the button is labeled "Exactly the Same Button Coop Just Used Like Five Minutes Ago."◊ This was a running gag in the show, where this same button would have different labels like "Do Something Stupid Coop", "Rip Arms Out of Sockets" and after Coop said, "Maybe you'd like this better, then!", it said "This Better Then". After announcing he was about to use Super Destructor Mode it said "You heard the man, kids! Super Destructor Mode!" Other labels were "Five Minutes until End of Episode" (because he'd always push it right then), "The Right Choice", and the one time the button was missing it was labeled "Save the World". Which was part of a selection which included "Destroy the World", "Smite the World", and "Destroy the World Worse". Then finally, there's the Deus ex Machina button used to solve up the episode's problems with no plausible explanation just because it's funnier that way.
In another episode, Megas is trapped in a giant cocoon by a moth-like alien, and his teammates argue which button he should press: "Destroy Giant Cocoon" or "Attack Moth-Like Bug". Unable to decide, he mashes both, encasing Megas in a giant firebird.
On at least one occasion he used the stick shift to go from Drive, past Neutral and Reverse all the way to Save Jamie. (Another time he shifted to SPACE.) Coop's speedometer usually reads as a normal speedometer, but once it measured from "Slow", "Fast", "Faster", and "GOOD CRIPES!".
Coop's oil gauge reads from "Empty", "Needs a Little", "Almost There", "Good Enough", "No really, I'm fine", and "PLEASE STOP!"'
The cheese-steak sandwich Coop stuffed in there had enough oil in it to ping the gauge all the way to full.
The slide-knob heater goes from "Warm" to "Hot" to "DANG!"
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_12ffd3e9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_12ffd3e9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Megas XLR
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_12ffd3e9
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_14f9297e
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_14f9297e
comment
One The Far Side comic was a fake advertisement for an all-purpose product called Stopit, which is stored in a aerosol can. It is shown being sprayed on various living and non-living things to make them stop doing something, for example, being sprayed on a smoker to make them stop smoking.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_14f9297e
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_14f9297e
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1.0
 The Far Side (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_14f9297e
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_261c8d3f
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_261c8d3f
comment
In The Simpsons episode "I, D'oh-Bot", Homer 'builds' a robot for Bart with one all-purpose button on the control, although the robot is actually Homer in disguise. As it turns out, the button gives him a mild electric shock when pushed.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_261c8d3f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_261c8d3f
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1.0
 The Simpsons
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_261c8d3f
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2b82b95f
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2b82b95f
comment
Justified in iCarly, in the episode "iStart a Fan War", at a convention panel for iCarly, one of the fans asks how Sam's remote control does different things on different shows. Freddy, the Tech Guru, states that he simply reprograms it as needed for each show.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2b82b95f
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2b82b95f
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 iCarly
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2b82b95f
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2bbcacd9
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2bbcacd9
comment
Looney Tunes:
In "Operation: Rabbit", Wile E. Coyote uses a guided missile to get Bugs Bunny by setting the dial to rabbit. Bugs distracts it by wearing a rooster mask, then writes coyote on the side and moves the dial there to send it back to Wile E.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2bbcacd9
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2bbcacd9
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1.0
 Looney Tunes
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2bbcacd9
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2fee008d
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2fee008d
comment
In Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, the Ganmen's controls don't have a clear connection to the operation. When asked how to operate one, Simon says you just move the levers back and forth and it does what you want.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2fee008d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2fee008d
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1.0
 Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_2fee008d
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_3653240d
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_3653240d
comment
On The Peter Serafinowicz Show appeared a spoof Apple ad, featuring the "Mactini" a computer so small it only has one key. To type A you press the button once. To press Z, you press it... 26 times. And you do not wanna know how to do punctuation.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_3653240d
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_3653240d
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1.0
 The Peter Serafinowicz Show
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Plot-Sensitive Button / int_3653240d
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_3b11106f
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_3b11106f
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When Aura teaches Flash Gordon to pilot a spaceship, she says the left lever controls direction and that the right controls altitude. Flash is later seen using them for the opposite purposes.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_3b11106f
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_3b11106f
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 Flash Gordon (1980)
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Plot-Sensitive Button / int_3b11106f
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type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_400469e
comment
In Calvin and Hobbes, Calvin's transmogrifier is a cardboard box with an indicator that points to whatever animal Calvin wants to turn into. If he wants to turn into something that is not listed, he just writes it on the side. The box itself is context-sensitive: crawl underneath it and it's a transmogrifier, go into it from the side and it's a duplicator, and climb in the top and it's a time machine.
Actually weaponized when Calvin gets rid of his clones by tricking them into running into the duplicator, then flipping it over to turn it into a transmogrifier, whose effect produces a "ZAP" sound instead of a "BOINK" sound.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_400469e
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_400469e
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1.0
 Calvin and Hobbes (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_400469e
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_439e0f17
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_439e0f17
comment
The buttons on Would I Lie to You? which the panellists press to reveal whether a story is true or a lie appear to know which graphic to bring up despite the fact each panellist only has one button. This is because they're purely for effect and not connected to anything; it's the job of the production team to time the graphics with the button being pressed. This trope was extensively parodied in an outtake where one of the panellists forgot to press the button but the graphics came up anyway.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_439e0f17
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_439e0f17
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 Would I Lie to You?
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Plot-Sensitive Button / int_439e0f17
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type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_468bebb0
comment
Discworld: Subverted in Witches Abroad, where Magrat tries to use a magic wand by just waving it and wishing really hard for what she wants. It turns things to pumpkins every single time. By the end of the novel, Granny Weatherwax has worked out that the apparently ornamental rings on the end can be twisted & clicked into different combinations for different results.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_468bebb0
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-0.3
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_468bebb0
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 Discworld
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_468bebb0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_48cf61a6
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_48cf61a6
comment
In one episode of Challenge of the Superfriends, Batman presses a button on his utility belt which summons the Batmobile. In a later episode, Batman presses the same button, and it projects a Bat Invisibility Ray.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_48cf61a6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_48cf61a6
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1.0
 Superfriends
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_48cf61a6
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_49ff762
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_49ff762
comment
Torchwood: Captain Jack Harkness' vortex manipulator seems to control just about everything in the Hub, not to mention being a teleporter and time travel device when working properly. Similarly, opponent Capt. John Hart has a device which appears to be exactly the same (including the limitation of not actually doing what it's meant to do, despite it never being stated that his VM is anything other than perfectly functional) with the added bonus of his being able to manipulate the rift, which Torchwood requires a massive machine draining huge amounts of power to do...
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_49ff762
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_49ff762
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1.0
 Torchwood
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_49ff762
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_4cc32015
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_4cc32015
comment
Space Ghost: Space Ghost's wristbands have three buttons on head arm. How many powers could he use with those again? Here's a hint, more than six. It didn't help that he usually pressed the same one or two buttons every time.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_4cc32015
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_4cc32015
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1.0
 Space Ghost
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_4cc32015
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_4dd54482
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_4dd54482
comment
The Rustbucket II in Ben 10: Alien Force features one of these in the second episode of season one, when Kevin "borrows" it. Justified, as it is alien technology.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_4dd54482
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_4dd54482
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ben 10: Alien Force
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_4dd54482
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_503d3d54
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_503d3d54
comment
In The Rocky Horror Picture Show, the Medusa device is operated by a single large switch which, when flipped, without any direction, turns to stone only the intended target.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_503d3d54
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_503d3d54
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1.0
 The Rocky Horror Picture Show
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_503d3d54
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_527a5949
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_527a5949
comment
In another episode, Megas is trapped in a giant cocoon by a moth-like alien, and his teammates argue which button he should press: "Destroy Giant Cocoon" or "Attack Moth-Like Bug". Unable to decide, he mashes both, encasing Megas in a giant firebird.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_527a5949
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_527a5949
featureConfidence
1.0
 Science Ninja Team Gatchaman
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_527a5949
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5286ec36
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5286ec36
comment
In Who Framed Roger Rabbit? While riding in Benny the Cab, Benny yelled, "Pull the lever!" "What lever?" "THAT one!" and a sign appeared, labeled "This lever, stupid!"
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5286ec36
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5286ec36
featureConfidence
1.0
 Who Framed Roger Rabbit
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5286ec36
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_52fca0e9
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_52fca0e9
comment
In Star Trek: Insurrection, Captain Picard pushes a button on his control console labeled "Calibrate", which is enough to call up the lyrics of "A British Tar" and engage it in karaoke mode (complete with bobbing ball).
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_52fca0e9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_52fca0e9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Star Trek: Insurrection
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_52fca0e9
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5690420f
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5690420f
comment
DuckTales (1987): Gyro Gearloose's popsicle-powered time machine (as opposed to his bathtub-shaped one) had a large dial for selecting a time period. Just as in the Calvin and Hobbes example above, an illiterate pilot (Bubba) was able to operate the machine by drawing a picture of Scooge (sic) and turning the dial to it. The dial even sprouted a camera so it could get a look at the picture.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5690420f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5690420f
featureConfidence
1.0
 DuckTales (1987)
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5690420f
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5d354f8
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5d354f8
comment
In the Red Dwarf episode "Parallel Universe", Holly invents the "Holly-Hop Drive", a device intended to move the ship instantly to any point in space (although it actually instead moves the ship into an Alternate Universe). Much to the crew's scorn, the drive is just a red box with two buttons: "Start" and "Stop". In the words of Holly: "If you want to start it, press Start, and you can work out the rest of the controls for yourself."
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5d354f8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5d354f8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Red Dwarf
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_5d354f8
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_607f6b7
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_607f6b7
comment
Inspector Gadget: Penny's watch could do a lot, from firing a laser, to remote controlling things, to being used as a phone. It only had three buttons.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_607f6b7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_607f6b7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inspector Gadget
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_607f6b7
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_60f02ddb
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_60f02ddb
comment
An episode of American Dad! featured a theme park which had three shutdown buttons: "Shut It Down", "Shut It All Down", and "Shut It Down, Shut It All Down". The third button is pressed by command of the theme park's founder, saying those exact words.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_60f02ddb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_60f02ddb
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1.0
 American Dad!
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_60f02ddb
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_61d4e874
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_61d4e874
comment
Conker's Bad Fur Day featured the Context Sensitive Buttons, this trope's previous name. They were big, B-labelled buttons on the ground that did whatever the plot called for.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_61d4e874
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_61d4e874
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1.0
 Conker's Bad Fur Day (Video Game)
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_61d4e874
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_694ab80
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_694ab80
comment
In Batman Beyond, Mad Stan had a detonator with only one button on it, yet pressing it only set off the bombs he wanted it to.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_694ab80
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_694ab80
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 Batman Beyond
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_694ab80
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_6b3cfe38
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_6b3cfe38
comment
Humorously inverted in Bob and George: George's time suit only has one button, but its operation turns out to be anything but simple. Later, George screws with Dr. Light's mind by taking the same approach to a completely normal button.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_6b3cfe38
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_6b3cfe38
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 Bob and George (Webcomic)
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Plot-Sensitive Button / int_6b3cfe38
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7950b30f
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Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7950b30f
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On The Colbert Report, Colbert has a segment named "Bears and Balls", a riff on Jim Cramer's Mad Money. While Cramer has a panel full of buttons which all play different sound effects, Colbert instead has one big red button, which plays a different sound effect whenever he hits it.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7950b30f
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7950b30f
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 The Colbert Report
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7950b30f
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7fc53da4
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7fc53da4
comment
In The Magic School Bus there was a context-sensitive lever that Ms. Frizzle would pull to get the bus to turn into whatever the episode called for. Mind you, that may be justified by the fact that the bus was sentient.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7fc53da4
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7fc53da4
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 TheMagicSchoolBus
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7fc53da4
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7fd403f8
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7fd403f8
comment
Galaxy Quest plays with this. The pilot knew just what buttons on the control panel did what, because when he was working on the fake ship, he personally assigned 'X Task To Y Button', being a child star (enjoying his work!) when he was initially on the TV show. In Real Life Wil Wheaton did this when working on Star Trek: The Next Generation, inventing imaginary things he had to push to send the commands he'd logically need to send, like 'propulsion', 'impulse', 'to 50%'. This is probably the basis of the scene in Galaxy Quest.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7fd403f8
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1.0
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 Galaxy Quest
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Plot-Sensitive Button / int_7fd403f8
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_800c952c
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_800c952c
comment
William Hartnell was the first Doctor to specifically make sure that he always used the same controls to perform the same actions, being a notorious stickler about it. This gets a major scene in An Adventure in Space and Time where Hartnell yells at his production crew for expecting him to use a button on a cinematically-appropriate side of the console rather than the actual switch, as if they should know better.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_800c952c
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_800c952c
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 An Adventure in Space and Time
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_800c952c
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_81692f99
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_81692f99
comment
Jon Pertwee once said that, like the Star Trek example, he'd assigned functions to every one of the panels on the console. Also, for a New Series example, the Series One Companion Guide states that "the Doctor's got it rigged so that when he pushes a button on one side, it unlocks a lever on the other side," and that's why he's madly dashing about.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_81692f99
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_81692f99
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 Star Trek (Franchise)
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_81692f99
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_847a1ace
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_847a1ace
comment
In Attack of the Clones, Padmé Amidala pressed a red button on her ship control panel to transmit Obi-Wan's message to the Jedi Council, and later pressed the same button to show Anakin the holographic map of Geonosis.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_847a1ace
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_847a1ace
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1.0
 Attack of the Clones
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_847a1ace
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_87b55b5d
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_87b55b5d
comment
Parodied in The Onion's report on the MacBook Wheel, which uses a single iPod-style click wheel for all input.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_87b55b5d
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_87b55b5d
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1.0
 The Onion (Website)
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_87b55b5d
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_909ca4b1
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_909ca4b1
comment
In ReBoot, the character Bob uses a keytool called Glitch which has all sorts of functions and transforms into different machines in response to voice commands such as "Glitch! Zipline!" or "Glitch! Scan!" However when Bob panics, he usually just cries "Glitch... ANYTHING!" And Glitch always seems to come up with something that works. Glitch is an intelligent being in its own right, though, so it's justified.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_909ca4b1
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1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_909ca4b1
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 ReBoot
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Plot-Sensitive Button / int_909ca4b1
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_90a3a7f4
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_90a3a7f4
comment
Kim Possible: Lampshaded with a Weather-Control Machine: Dr. Drakken keeps hitting the same button because, as he says, "These controls are supposed to work intuitively!"
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_90a3a7f4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_90a3a7f4
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1.0
 Kim Possible
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_90a3a7f4
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_976efc02
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_976efc02
comment
Mystery Science Theater 3000: Whenever Joel or Mike needed to see what was happening outside the Satellite Of Love, they'd ask Cambot to "Give me rocket number nine!" The camera would then cut to a view outside the satellite; it would be a completely different angle every time.
Rocket Number 9 does not have eight siblings; Joel named it after this song by the band Sun Ra.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_976efc02
featureApplicability
1.0
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_976efc02
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1.0
 Mystery Science Theater 3000
hasFeature
Plot-Sensitive Button / int_976efc02
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_9a7088bc
type
Plot-Sensitive Button
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_9a7088bc
comment
In the famous (for all the wrong reasons) Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Spock's Brain", the torture wristband magically knows exactly who its user wants to hurt when the single button is pressed. Probably the same technology that allows the transporter chief to know which three to beam up.
 Plot-Sensitive Button / int_9a7088bc
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1.0
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type
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Futurama:
Bender's antenna. However, it might be more a case of the antenna being the start button for whatever program Bender loads for his needs. No telling for sure.
Fry once used a can of "all purpose spray" to paint an entire army uniform on himself, including boots.
Amy uses the "all purpose spray" in a different episode to make herself another bikini top, after Nibbler steals her original one.
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1.0
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type
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Strongly averted in Apollo 13. NASA sent them Dave Scott, the commander of Apollo 15, to ensure that they used all of the Billions of Buttons correctly.
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In Code Geass, Lelouch has a switch shaped vaguely like a chess piece that serves multiple functions, ranging from remote controlling guns of a freshly hijacked mecha, detonating planted explosives, causing his Humongous Mecha to launch chaff, and causing Mount Fuji to erupt. Points two and three are especially notable because he did them in the same battle, when he couldn't have conceivably altered its function beforehand. As one might expect from this example, Memetic Mutation has turned the switch into the anime equivalent of Batman's utility belt.
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In Heroman, the remote control that Joey uses to control Heroman only has one button. Justified in that Heroman is pretty much a robotic Bond Creature.
Played with. The button is the same every time, however the setup of the device changes the label of the button, and thus what signals it sends to Heroman. Being sentient, he has also "suggested" what should be pressed a few times, and even when he doesn't the exact interpretation changes.
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In "Operation: Rabbit", Wile E. Coyote uses a guided missile to get Bugs Bunny by setting the dial to rabbit. Bugs distracts it by wearing a rooster mask, then writes coyote on the side and moves the dial there to send it back to Wile E.
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The second Aquila novel says that actions can be reassigned to any button by simply asking the ship's computer.
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Certain Super Sentai and/or Power Rangers series have these in the mecha/Zord cockpits; Choujin Sentai Jetman would sometimes have Jet Icarus' (impressive) arsenal summoned up by seemingly pressing the same couple of buttons every time. (Admittedly they call out the name of the weapon, so it's possible voice commands are used in conjunction. They also only have a few other attacks in the other modes and combinations used later on, little of which have any button pressing.)
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The Incredibles: There are four buttons seen on Syndrome's remote. They all are able to control the Omnidroid, whether by disengaging its limbs, stop it from attacking, or activate its claws. Try to figure out which button on the remote does what.
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One Tiny Toon Adventures episode had a water pump, whose control lever changed between "Lo - Med - Hi" and "Forward - Reverse" whenever the plot called for a Reverse mode or a "FULL POWER!" mode.
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Steelgrip Starkey and the All-Purpose Power Tool: The eponymous Power Tool appears as a grayish box with a big handle until Steelgrip grabs hold of the handle and thinks about what he needs to accomplish his task. Then the tool somehow becomes what he needs, and he will somehow know how to operate it using the same handle.
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The Rod of Versatility in The Way of the Metagamer specifically works this way.
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Doctor Who:
The sonic screwdriver seems able to perform any and all tasks required, just by pointing and buzzing. It has cut, welded, unlocked locks both electronic and mechanical, detonated marsh gas, disabled androids, changed channels on a military communications screen, manipulated multiple computer systems and, of course, unfastened screws. No explanation for its versatility-sans-external-controls has ever been advanced onscreen, but when Amy Pond had to use the screwdriver in "Let's Kill Hitler", Rory commented that it (at least that incarnation of it anyway) had a psychic interface. Specific settings have been referenced. In "The Doctor Dances", the Ninth Doctor tells Rose which one reattaches barbed wire. We don't know how settings are selected. In "The Keeper of Traken", however, the Doctor explicitly states that it can't do anything against purely mechanical locks (although this seems to have been quietly retconned, since the Doctor uses it on mechanical locks all the time in the new series). Also, since it can only manipulate one device at a time, it can't open deadlocks.
On occasion, the Doctor gives the screwdriver to a companion to use. Their instructions (except for the barbed wire case, and when Martha used it in "The Lazarus Experiment") are never more complicated than "point and click", though.
Oddly, in the TARDIS we have the inverse: the same function is sometimes activated by different controls. The Doctor and Adric use different controls to open the TARDIS doors in "Logopolis", the 9th Doctor dematerialised the TARDIS by twisting a dial whereas the 10th Doctor does it by throwing a particular lever (despite both using the same version of the console room), and so on. "The Lodger" had a control that only worked when Amy took two paces to the right and tried again.
According to Matt Smith, the crew actually have a TARDIS operations manual that he was required to read when he became the Doctor. Therefore, yes, the TARDIS controls do have specific functions that the special effects crew have worked out, and the actor isn't just randomly flipping levers and pushing buttons when operating the TARDIS.
Jon Pertwee once said that, like the Star Trek example, he'd assigned functions to every one of the panels on the console. Also, for a New Series example, the Series One Companion Guide states that "the Doctor's got it rigged so that when he pushes a button on one side, it unlocks a lever on the other side," and that's why he's madly dashing about.
William Hartnell was the first Doctor to specifically make sure that he always used the same controls to perform the same actions, being a notorious stickler about it. This gets a major scene in An Adventure in Space and Time where Hartnell yells at his production crew for expecting him to use a button on a cinematically-appropriate side of the console rather than the actual switch, as if they should know better.
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Yu-Gi-Oh!: Any time Kaiba uses his hax skills. Summed up quite nicely in the abridged series:
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The Ed, Edd n Eddy episode "Robbin' Ed" featured "The Thingamajig", which provides exactly what the character needs when they push the button, even if the object is bigger than the Thingamajig. It's used at the end of the episode to resolve the plot.
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In Trace some of the red buttons in the large room turn on the machines, some don't, but they're all a part of a larger puzzle.
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In Firefly there are three switches that the pilot, Wash, always flips whenever he starts doing something. This is remarked on by the actor in one of the commentaries.
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Megas, pictured above, appears in the fan comic Powerpuff Girls Doujinshi. On this page of the webcomic, Megas' "Super Desperation Moves" consist of "Raging Fury Final Attack", "Megablast Ultimate Weapon", "Armageddon", and "WTF!!? o_O".
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In Dragon Ball Z, Bulma's Dragon Radar only has a single button on the top. In the anime at least, said button is zoom, pan, on, and off all in one. Very rarely someone will twist the button, but only when the radar seems to be broken. The scouters the Saiyans and Frieza's henchmen use to search for and measure characters' Power Levels also have only one button.
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Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country: A modified torpedo is launched by someone pressing a button — an actual solid button — labelled "Mode Select".
To be fair to the movie, they had just finished jury-rigging the torpedo, so maybe they just wired it into a handy nearby button.
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In Revenge of the Sith, this was referenced when Padmé pressed the same button to start the ship. It was further parodied in Rifftrax:
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The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

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 Flash Gordon (1980) / int_b8429842
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