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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics

 Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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 Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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SecondLawOfMetafictionalThermodynamics
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The entropy of a fictional system whose writer is not in emotional equilibrium will tend to increase over time, approaching a maximum value at the writer's emotional equilibrium.
There's no other way to say it: writers like killing and destroying. Nothing makes them happier than having people die or Stuff Blowing Up. (In their writing, not in their real-world behavior. We're sure about this. Mostly.) It's the quickest way to get drama, too.
Unfortunately, writers cannot destroy all their fictional creations without ruining the story. Some of those creations have Contractual Immortality. Even when they don't, killing characters off or nuking cities can change the flow of a story in rather unfortunate ways. And destroying everything means there's no more story, and thus no more paychecks for the writer.
As a result, when there is anything expendable, writers will expend it. If the writer can bring people back to life by pushing the Reset Button, then people will die as long as the button is there. If a city has been evacuated, that city will go down in flames. Atomic flames, preferably. If it hasn't been evacuated, the writers can blow it up anyway if no named characters are there. It's not like readers will be upset, right? After all, A Million Is a Statistic. And a character in a Prequel that wasn’t in the original work? Don’t get too attached to them.
The less often the writers get to do this, the more pyrotechnics they pack in. When everything is expendable (like in a show with Negative Continuity), the writers will increase their system's entropy at a leisurely pace. One death an episode or so will do. If almost everything has Contractual Immortality, then killable characters and inflammable places are rare treats, and the writers will spring on them like the proverbial hungry wolves on a sheep.
At times, some writers seem to be working out their stress by destroying fictional people and places. The carnage is always greatest at the moment the writer gets better, since they will increase the entropy until their self-therapy finally works. Needless to say, Creator Breakdown and Darker and Edgier almost inevitably leads to higher entropy.
This is the reason for the following tropes:

Actually a Doombot
Anyone Can Die
Climactic Battle Resurrection
C-List Fodder
Clone Angst
Conservation of Ninjutsu
Conveniently Empty Building
Expendable Alternate Universe
Expendable Clone
Good Thing You Can Heal
"Everybody Dies" Ending
It's Going Down
Opening a Can of Clones
Redshirt Army
Reset Button
Tonight, Someone Dies
Throw-Away Country
Uniqueness Value

The Trope Name is a reference to the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which states that everything in nature increasingly trends towards disorder (or entropy, to be more accurate.) A similar naming convention was used for the First Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics.
 Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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For this and many other disasters, the regular Marvel Universe has "Damage Control", a company that can apparently rebuild entire cities just by ... um ... being awesome. Or something. Don't look too closely.
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Puella Magi Madoka Magica references the actual Second Law of Thermodynamics in relation to its own Anyone Can Die and From Bad to Worse plot.
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It becomes clear that there are so many people with abilities in Heroes that the writers have lots of cool people to kill off in shocking ways. They take it one step further with their alternate futures where something is always about to be blown up, a virus will kill everyone, or some other cataclysm will take place, but thanks to the Reset Button, it never comes to pass. This of course allows for more alternate timelines to be created and averted.
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Gotham City in the comics. Every time The Joker slips loose from Arkham Asylum or the Scarecrow gets his crazy on or heck, there's just a party, something shows up and turns hundreds of people into crispy, fried corpses. And the police officers...does anyone train them? They go down when looked at hard.
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Resident Evil: Apocalypse: Alice and company are safely escaping in the helicopter. 99.44% of the rest of the city is zombies anyway. So Umbrella Corp nukes it.
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In Aqua Teen Hunger Force, anything that touches Master Shake and then a surface (wall, ceiling, or floor) will explode. With no effect on anything around it. Fans often speculate that this is Shake's superpower. Fortunately (for Meat Wad at least), neither Shake nor anybody else seem to really notice this effect.
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The intro sequence of Seven Days (where the entire plot -is- the Reset Button) uses a shot of missiles striking the White House. That was in the pilot episode, and things only get more dangerous from there.
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Neon Genesis Evangelion is actually famous for its Creator Breakdown and subsequent "Everybody Dies" Ending. It's a great example of this trope even before the ending, with more and more damage being done to Tokyo 3 and the cast each passing episode. This could also be tied to Hideaki Anno's building depression.
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24 without a doubt. The writers seem to create characters, buildings, and whole cities for the express purpose of killing or destroying them later.
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Rogue One heartily subscribes to the mentality that "anything that can be expended, will be expended". As such, most unnamed characters, whether they're rebels or stormtroopers, are killed in droves, often by violent explosives or waves of gunfire. And further than that, nearly everything new to this movie is destroyed; Jedha city, the Scarif base, the entire Rogue One crew, Orson Krennic, the Erso family, Saw Gererra, and all of Green Squadron, are all gone while the characters from A New Hope and on are safe because they have to be.
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One of the earliest scenes in the first Discworld novel, The Colour of Magic, had the main characters accidentally burn down the city of Ankh-Morpork. Pratchett later talked about how this would be impossible to do subsequently, what with all the main characters, side-characters and even just general culture that sprang up in the forty-odd books since.
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Ultimate Marvel has had millions killed by the various alien invasions (especially the worldwide mass suicides during the Ultimate Galactus Trilogy), Magneto's Brotherhood attacks, Proteus' Reality Warper rampage, and the Liberators' brief conquest of the United States.
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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The Infinity Gauntlet was an example of the reset button. Iron Man loses his head, Spider-Man's head is crushed, Thor is turned to stone, half the universe suddenly dies, etc.
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In relation to the comics above, The Dark Knight is an exception. In the comics, it's a rare, rare person who escapes the attentions of The Joker alive, much less un-maimed. In the movie, many do so, even cops who are usually the first to go. The Dark Knight and Batman Begins seem to be working very hard to present Batman and his world in a 'realistic' setting. In a superheroic setting where the main characters are far more powerful and capable than normal humans, The Joker can go omnicidal easily enough. But when you present Joker as a 'realistic' psycho, he's more limited.
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Subverted in Outbreak. The viewers were given plenty of information about the residents of the town about to be bombed. So naturally the day is saved.
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The Marvel Universe has also had its bloodbaths, with Manhattan being badly damaged by Onslaught (and later, mostly leveled by Magneto), Carnage and his troops turning the streets into killing fields, and the island of Genosha and its sixteen million mutants being killed.
For this and many other disasters, the regular Marvel Universe has "Damage Control", a company that can apparently rebuild entire cities just by ... um ... being awesome. Or something. Don't look too closely.
Ultimate Marvel has had millions killed by the various alien invasions (especially the worldwide mass suicides during the Ultimate Galactus Trilogy), Magneto's Brotherhood attacks, Proteus' Reality Warper rampage, and the Liberators' brief conquest of the United States.
Let's not forget the World War Hulk arc, where The Hulk caused a ludicrous amount of damage to New York City. Admittedly, it was (somewhat) justified. Well, kinda. OK, not really. He does ask for New York to be evacuated, and this is while he's almost as mad as he can get, due to his pregnant wife having been just killed. Regular people even sympathize and cheer him on while he brutalizes and humiliates the heroes he blames for this (Doctor Strange, Iron Man, Black Bolt, and Mister Fantastic), then spares them claiming he wants justice not vengeance.
It gets bad whenever Marvel has the heavier cosmic characters go at it. In one story simply waking the ruling Celestial destroyed two galaxies. Even planet eater Galactus was having trouble holding it in.
The Infinity Gauntlet was an example of the reset button. Iron Man loses his head, Spider-Man's head is crushed, Thor is turned to stone, half the universe suddenly dies, etc.
Early in Secret Wars (1984), the Beyonder destroys everything in a galaxy except for one star.
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Let's not forget the World War Hulk arc, where The Hulk caused a ludicrous amount of damage to New York City. Admittedly, it was (somewhat) justified. Well, kinda. OK, not really. He does ask for New York to be evacuated, and this is while he's almost as mad as he can get, due to his pregnant wife having been just killed. Regular people even sympathize and cheer him on while he brutalizes and humiliates the heroes he blames for this (Doctor Strange, Iron Man, Black Bolt, and Mister Fantastic), then spares them claiming he wants justice not vengeance.
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During the mostly-Superman event Our Worlds at War, the city of Topeka, Kansas was completely destroyed. Unlike Marvel and their New York setting, DC apparently didn't care whether the "Topeka" depicted in the book actually resembled the real-life Topeka.
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Anything not critical (anymore) to the plot in Armageddon (1998) blows up. The spacecraft visits MIR for refueling? It blows up right after they're done. There are 2 spacecrafts? One crashes. The drill of the crashed spacecraft survives? The one from the other spacecraft blows up.
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Random worldwide massacres. Mageddon comes along, thousands croak in the effects of his defeat. Cyborg comes back to life and eats the moon, the world shakes and shimmies and buildings collapse. Infinite Crisis had hurricanes chowing down all over the world, entire cities flooding and nearly every volcano ever blowing its top.
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In Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem, The Men in Black deal with the Alien infestation by blowing up the entire town, leaving only the heroes who were smart enough to ignore the government advice to stay in the position and wait for evacuation.
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Judge Dredd also followed this trend; from the early comics, where a Judge would risk his life to save a single child, to later when it was acceptable behavior to gun down one innocent if it meant hitting the two perps next to them, to some storylines where wholesale carnage was status quo. Graveyard Shift was about the riots and carnage in Mega-City that cost thousands of lives, and was assumed to happen nightly.
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Doctor Who: Granted, the point of "Turn Left" is to show how hopeless Earth would be in a timeline without the Doctor, but come on. The characters from Torchwood or The Sarah Jane Adventures have plenty of Plot Armour on their own shows but, as soon as they're thrown into an alternate timeline, the writers can't help but kill off those entire casts.
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Early in Secret Wars (1984), the Beyonder destroys everything in a galaxy except for one star.
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Narrowly averted by Jojos Bizarre Adventure Golden Wind... kind of. It certainly has the most brutal deaths and hero in the manga, but there was a plot point that Hirohiko Araki scrapped. During the mid-way point of the story, Fugo would not leave, but would instead stay as a mole in Bucciarati's group. Eventually, he would be outed and fought against, with Giorno giving himself immunity to Fugo's Purple Haze presumably being a Chekhov's Gun that would allow him to fight Fugo more directly than the others. However, Araki decided against this, as he was well aware that he was in a bad mental state and that this would be too much. As such, he simply wrote him out of the story instead, with Fugo staying behind out of fear that going against the boss would spell everybody's deaths, with his ultimate fate staying ambiguous in the manga.
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Beginning as a strange but mostly plausible story about what happens to retired secret agents, The Prisoner (1967) gets more bizarre over time until the last episode leaves viewers utterly dumbfounded.
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Buffy the Vampire Slayer liked to end seasons this way once a particular set became expendable: See Sunnydale High, the Initiative, to a lesser extent The Magic Box, and in the series finale the entire city of Sunnydale.
Story-wise, the entire city was designed so expendable humans could be safely eaten.
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Martin Gero, one of the writers on Stargate Atlantis has said in commentaries that he killed someone in every episode he wrote in season one since he was alone in a new city and girlfriend-less. Following with the trope, when he wrote season two episodes he was happy and in love so the carnage was scaled back.
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The Return of the Living Dead The army has no idea how to get rid of the zombies. They bomb the whole town. This proves to be ill-advised.
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The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Death Tropes
 Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Laws and Formulas
 Armageddon / int_b43754f1
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics
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Second Law of Metafictional Thermodynamics