...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
Un-Installment
- 547 statements
- 103 feature instances
- 67 referencing feature instances
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An ongoing series skips an installment number (usually deliberately). Events from the missing installment may be referred to as if they had actually happened; there may even be an assurance that it was the highlight of the series. Reasons for doing this include: Some form of numeric significance, such as avoiding the number 13 or the number 4 To acknowledge a long hiatus between installments To get out of having written oneself into a corner, by pretending that it's already been solved, somehow, when nobody was looking It would be impossible to do the events of the phantom installment justice To set up a mystery about the events of the missing installment The creators are trying to be funny. When the non-existent episode is treated by subsequent episodes as if it existed, related to Secondhand Storytelling and perhaps to Noodle Incident. A related trick is to bring out a new work that claims to have been made years ago and then shelved or forgotten; we don't seem to have a trope page for that, but Garth Marenghis Darkplace is an example, and it's related to Retraux and Direct Line to the Author. When there's supposedly an entire series of non-existent episodes preceding the first that actually exists, it's Retroactive Legacy. See also Oddly Named Sequel 2: Electric Boogaloo, where a sequel might be given a strange numbering (such as The Naked Gun 33â…“ or Halloween H20) without meaning to imply a missing installment; and Unusual Chapter Numbers. Also Stopped Numbering Sequels which may predate Un Installment. If the creator maintains an air of mystery around the missing installment, this trope may give rise to Pop Culture Urban Legends. Not to be confused with Canon Discontinuity, in which the episode exists but is non-canon. |
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2024-04-15T03:17:47Z | |
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2024-04-15T03:17:47Z | |
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Dropped link to ABC: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to AprilFoolsDay: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to BeastieBoys: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to BobMarley: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to Boston: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to Bowdlerize: Not an Item - UNKNOWN | |
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Dropped link to Calexico: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to IanDuryAndTheBlockheads: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to MenWithoutHats: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to MissingFloor: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to PoliticalOvercorrectness: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to PreviouslyOn: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to RecycledTitle: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to StarTrekMovieCurse: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to Starflyer59: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to StuffBlowingUp: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to TheAquabats: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to TheTravelingWilburys: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to ThirteenIsUnlucky: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to ThrobbingGristle: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to UrbanLegendOfZelda: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to exaggeratedtrope: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to lampshadehanging: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to tuxedoandmartini: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Un-Installment / int_12192c96 | type |
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An interesting case in Space Tree, as after episode 57, the next episode released was numbered 59. However, episode 57 was the first part of a two-parter, being named "They Got Johnny, Part 1", with the second part presumably being the unmade episode 58. | |
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Space Tree (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
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There's a Spanish Dirty Harry spoof titled Vivancos 3: If It's Well Received, We'll Make The Previous Two. | |
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Dirty Harry | hasFeature |
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Fur Fighters (subtitled Viggo's Revenge at least in the PS2 version) starts with all the major characters retired after already defeating Viggo the first time. Throughout the game there are hints to their exploits but there never was another game, and sadly probably never will be. | |
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Samurai Jack numbers its episodes by Roman numeral, which are used as alternate titles, and the original run goes up to "LII" (52). For the fifth season, the numbers skipped up to "XCII" (92) at the start to reflect the long time since it was uncancelled and the Time Skip since season four. | |
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Nerd to the 3rd, a podcast for Channel Awesome hosted by Dr. Gonzo, the Cat, and Travis, skipped over its 18th episode. Its 18th episode was later released as 'The Lost Episode', in which they discussed the series finale of Lost with their guest Rollo T. | |
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Channel Awesome (Website) | hasFeature |
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Tales of Monkey Island doesn't follow on directly from Escape from Monkey Island, but instead from a non-existent (and reportedly "epic") fifth Monkey Island game, presumably as a nod to the previous game where some characters refer to their "five-game contract" with LucasArts. | |
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Perhaps not exactly this, but definitely related, the "missing" reels in Grindhouse. | |
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Alien Ant Farm's debut album was titled Greatest Hits, implying it was a compilation of earlier albums that don't exist. | |
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In The Dover Boys, while introducing the titular brothers, the narrator cites a fictional installment of the series called "The Dover Boys in the Everglades". | |
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The Simpsons had several gags referencing fake episodes: In "Behind the Laughter" (where the characters are portrayed as Animated Actors), due to behind-the-scenes issues, Bart had to go to rehab, and Richie Rich had to fill in for him. We are then shown a clip of a fake Simpsons episode called "Disorder in the Court", where Marge asks, "Bart, what do you mean you have jury duty?" "Bart" responds, "Don't have a cow, mother." "Weekend at Burnsies" had Marge make a scarecrow out of objects from earlier episodes, complete with on-screen captions identifying their origins a la Pop Up Video. When she gets to Grampa's hat (as seen in this infamous scene from "Bart After Dark"), it is identified as coming from "Who Shot Grampa's Hat?" At the end of "The Spy Who Learned Me", James Bond expy Stradivarius Cain promises the viewer he'll return in "Lisa Gets a B+." Ten seasons and counting onward, there is, naturally, no sign of such an episode. |
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Un-Installment / int_261c8d3f | featureApplicability |
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The Simpsons | hasFeature |
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Averted with Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty, which had the Working Title of "MGS III", despite it being the second MGS game and fourth in the mainline canon. The Roman numeral III was intended to represent the twin towers, but also because the full title would've been rendered "Metal Gear S3" (after the S3 Plan that served as a key plot point in the game's story). | |
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In Season 2 of Thomas & Friends, Percy talks about an incident in which he braved a flood. The story he refers to, "Percy's Promise", wouldn't be adapted until Season 3. | |
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Thomas & Friends | hasFeature |
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The episode "Go God, Go" ended with Cartman recently arriving in the far future. The next episode is "Go God, Go XII", which began with a Buck Rogers opening parody leading to Cartman seemingly months later, as if there were ten episodes about Cartman in the future that were just skipped. | |
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Buck Rogers (Comic Strip) | hasFeature |
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Sad Panda Q&A skips episode 8. Apparently, it had cameos by a number of Channel Awesome contributors, as well as The Angry Video Game Nerd and Yahtzee. Episode 9 starts with Panda and Welshy unsure on how to follow it. | |
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Sad Panda Q&A (Web Video) | hasFeature |
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Un-Installment / int_2b79a93e | comment |
The SiIvaGunner rip "Main Theme - Kirby Fighters 2" is actually a parody of early 2000s sprite animations featuring Kirby characters, also titled Kirby Fighters 2. One of the two main Kirbies Breaks the Fourth Wall by calling out something the other Kirby said as rehashing a bit from "last episode"; while at the time this was the only episode available, a later rip based on Kirby Fighters Deluxe had its joke be the previous episode that Kirby was referring to (titled Kirby Fighters 1.5). | |
Un-Installment / int_2b79a93e | featureApplicability |
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SiIvaGunner (Music) | hasFeature |
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The Conan novel The Hour of the Dragon has no chapter 20. It has been speculated that when publishing arrangements in Britain fell through and the manuscript was returned to Robert E. Howard, the missing chapter was omitted. This theory is based on the word count of the published work and Howard's correspondence with Dennis Archer concerning the original. Whether this is so, or Howard deleted the chapter himself, both he and Weird Tales neglected to renumber the remaining chapters. It has also been suggested that Weird Tales simply made a mistake and skipped the number. The story does not suffer from the omission, and most reprintings renumber chapters 21-23 as 20-22. | |
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The Hour of the Dragon | hasFeature |
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Both of Fantômas' first two albums skip the 13th track. | |
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Fantômas (Music) | hasFeature |
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Dude Bro Party Massacre 3 claims to be the third part of a slasher franchise, with even a fake production history. | |
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Dude Bro Party Massacre 3 | hasFeature |
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Nobuhiko Horie, who was the editor-in-chief of Fist of the North Star, views the saga in four installments, with the original Fist of the North Star itself being Episode 4. Its prequel, Fist of the Blue Sky, serves as Episode 3, while two yet to be made prequels serve as Episodes 1 and 2. If these prequels ever get made, Episode 1 will be the story of Shuken (the Hokuto Shinken founder), while Episode 2 would deal with how the school immigrated to Japan during the feudal period. | |
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Paranoia has had (in order) 1st edition, 2nd edition, 5th edition (later declared an "unproduct"), and 3rd edition (unpublished). Starting with the revival, they Stopped Numbering Sequels, instead releasing XP (formally dropped after Microsoft complained, so this version was just called "Paranoia") and 25th Anniversary Edition (a reprint of XP with some additional material). | |
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Paranoia (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
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The Doctor Who Novelisations adaptation of The Day of the Doctor at one point has a Clue from Ed. directing the reader to the novelisation of "Silence in the Library"/"Forest of the Dead", which is available in all good parallel universes. And another referring to the novelisation of "Listen", to be published in 2195. There's also Chapter Nine, which is initially described by the Mysterious Narrator as the most dangerous chapter in the book, then as the one that gives the answers to all the questions about the Doctor's life, then as the one you've just read, only it wiped your memory. | |
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Un-Installment / int_3a9cf1cc | comment |
The story of Shenmue was planned out in roughly 16 chapters. The original game was just Chapter 1 (Yokozuka), while Shenmue II consists of Chapters 3 through 5 (Hong Kong, Kowloon and Guilin). Chapter 2 occurs off-screen between the events of the two games (during Ryo's cruise trip from Yokozuka to Hong Kong). Shenmue III picks up where the second game left off. | |
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Un-Installment / int_3c53ffa8 | comment |
The subtitle for the Rush instrumental from Roll the Bones, "Where's My Thing" is "(Part IV, 'Gangster of Boats' Trilogy)". There is no Gangster of Boats part I, II, or III. | |
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Goosebumps (1995) never adapted the first Night of the Living Dummy book, despite doing its sequels. This might be because Slappy wasn't its main villain. Similarly, book #5 (The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb) was never adapted, but its sequel Return of the Mummy was. | |
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Goosebumps (1995) | hasFeature |
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Rick and Morty has a Season 3 episode called "Vindicators 3: The Return of Worldender", but is the first episode of the series to feature the Vindicators. The first Vindicators installment is indicated by dialogue to have been one of Rick's and Morty's numerous offscreen adventures in the past ("we did it once, it was the big event of the summer"), and they find out later on that they weren't even invited to the second assembly (probably due to them all hating Rick), much to Morty's disappointment. A miniseries showing what happened during the Vindicators' second adventure, titled Vindicators 2, was released 5 years later. | |
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Episode 12 of Excel♡Saga is called "Big City, Part II". There is no Big City, Part I, as Excel explains in the preview for episode 12. | |
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Power Rangers has "Scorpion Rain", which straddles the line between this, Urban Legend of Zelda, and Ascended Fanon. A supposed 8 minute short that bridged Power Rangers Zeo and Turbo: A Power Rangers Movie, released only in Australia, the thing was supposed to be incredibly poorly done, but would fill in enough plot holes that the fandom went along with it. Eventually though, it was revealed as an elaborate prank. Later, in the Crossover "Forever Red", events of the battle "Scorpion Rain" supposedly depicted were referenced. Writer Amit Bhaumik, also one of the pranksters, admitted that he set out to make the darn thing canon. | |
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Devil Hunter Yohko has no episode 4, because Four Is Death. (In the US, ADV Films filled the gap with a collection of music videos it called "Devil Hunter Yohko 4 Ever".) | |
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Clerks: The Animated Series: The first episode begins with Randall announcing "Last week on Clerks..." and cuts to a test pattern. It never actually aired, so it only makes sense on DVD. | |
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I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue went from its 73rd series to its 75th; there are usually two series a year, but Series 73 was the only series of 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic interrupting the recordings (it was made up of the two episodes they managed to do before the UK went into lockdown, followed by four episodes recorded from the participants' homes with a virtual audience). This is generally thought to be a mistake that the BBC decided to double down on when it was pointed out to them, but nevertheless it remains the case that officially, there is no 74th series of the show, which is considered to have been cancelled. | |
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The Stranglers' debut album was intentionally titled Stranglers IV (Rattus Norvegicus) to confuse record buyers. | |
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The DOS versions of the Mega Man consists of only Mega Man and its sequel, Mega Man 3. Neither of the DOS versions were ports of the actual NES games. This is because one of the bosses in the second DOS game, Bit Man, resembles Spark Man from the box art of the NES Mega Man 3, so Capcom titled it Mega Man 3 to justify reusing the NES box art. | |
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Too Much Coffee Man: Issues #6 and #7 do not exist. Shannon Wheeler wanted to skip ahead in the story, saw no reason why he shouldn't, and took it as an opportunity to create "the rarest comics ever". #8 includes footnotes referring the reader to the missing issues. | |
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Hack Master, as a joke, released its first edition (a slightly tweaked version of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 1st Edition) under the moniker "Hackmaster 4th Edition". This led to the 2nd edition of the game (which had its own unique system) being released as "Hackmaster 5th Edition". | |
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Un-Installment / int_537f43e8 | featureConfidence |
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Hackmaster (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_537f43e8 | |
Un-Installment / int_58b57e58 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_58b57e58 | comment |
Eugene Onegin consists of numbered stanzas within each of its eight chapters, but some of these stanzas are left blank, e. g. Nos. 9, 13, 14, 39, 40 and 41 in the first chapter. | |
Un-Installment / int_58b57e58 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_58b57e58 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Eugene Onegin | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_58b57e58 | |
Un-Installment / int_59da62aa | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_59da62aa | comment |
The main NCR quest in Fallout: New Vegas is titled "For the Republic, Part 2", but there isn't a "Part 1", although the quest begins immediately after the quest "King's Gambit". | |
Un-Installment / int_59da62aa | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_59da62aa | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Fallout: New Vegas (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_59da62aa | |
Un-Installment / int_5d354f8 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_5d354f8 | comment |
Red Dwarf: Series VIII was followed by a ten-year hiatus and then by a three-part special, Back to Earth, which claimed to be set "after Series X" and referred to several significant events from the skipped-over Series IX. Done partly to acknowledge the hiatus and partly to avoid needing to spend time resolving Series VIII's cliffhanger ending. Series IX's absence is lampshaded in Back to Earth by the character Noddy: "Best season ever if you ask me. Awesome season! Best by miles!" However, the success of Back to Earth led to the production of a new full series. Taking place after Back to Earth, it was numbered Series X, as "Red Dwarf X" was felt to be a better title for marketing the next series. Back to Earth effectively took the place of Series IX in all but name. |
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Un-Installment / int_5d354f8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_5d354f8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Red Dwarf | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_5d354f8 | |
Un-Installment / int_5f47ffa9 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_5f47ffa9 | comment |
The original Kujibiki♡Unbalance probably has the highest ratio of Un-Installment episodes to real episodes: out of the 26-episode series, only three episodes (1, 21, and 25) were actually made, though episode 21 happens to be a Recap Episode. The episodes were released as bonus material on the DVDs of Genshiken, to which it is a Show Within a Show. | |
Un-Installment / int_5f47ffa9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_5f47ffa9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Kujibiki♡Unbalance | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_5f47ffa9 | |
Un-Installment / int_5fc1f6df | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_5fc1f6df | comment |
Spawn: The series skipped issue #19 and #20 after long delays from writers Andrew Grossenberg and Tom Orzechowski, eventually soldiering ahead with issue #21 by Todd McFarlane. The "missing" issues were published approximately six months later. Interestingly, Spawn had shown up with a stitched up face in issue 21 said to have been caused by "That Bozo In Black", an obvious reference to the Batarang that landed there in the Spawn-Batman Crossover that had happened just prior to the issue's release. However, the Crossover was considered so generally terrible, that #19 and #20 featured a completely different "Bozo In Black", Harry Houdini, and a completely different reason for a vertical scar down Spawn's face, protecting his friend Terry from a bullet... which made a scar completely different than the one in #21... But if you're looking for sensical continuity, why the hell are you reading 90s Image Comics?. | |
Un-Installment / int_5fc1f6df | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_5fc1f6df | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Spawn (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_5fc1f6df | |
Un-Installment / int_6059ad6b | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_6059ad6b | comment |
xkcd skips directly from #403 to #405. Attempts to view the URL where #404 would be if it existed result in HTTP error message 404 ("Page not found"). A strip did appear on the xkcd site between 403 and 405—but not an xkcd strip. 403 was posted on March 31, 2008, and 405 was posted on April 2. On April 1, the site displayed a (science-themed) Questionable Content strip, as part of a three-way switcheroo also involving Dinosaur Comics (which displayed an xkcd strip). |
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Un-Installment / int_6059ad6b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_6059ad6b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
xkcd (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_6059ad6b | |
Un-Installment / int_60f02ddb | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_60f02ddb | comment |
American Dad!: "Merlot Down Dirty Shame" begins with a recap that shows Stan and Roger becoming best friends after being trapped in an elevator, complete with getting complimentary "best buddies" necklaces. It ends with a preview of the next episode, where Stan beats Roger into a bloody pulp and takes away his necklace, turning both into a pair of earrings for Francine. | |
Un-Installment / int_60f02ddb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_60f02ddb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
American Dad! | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_60f02ddb | |
Un-Installment / int_6c9193a1 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_6c9193a1 | comment |
The Venture Brothers: "Escape to the House of Mummies, Part Two" begins with a Previously on… that shows the best parts of Part One and ends with a On the Next for Part Three; neither actually exists. The creator commentary on the DVD edition of the episode features the creators claiming that the episodes exist as Easter eggs as a prank on the audience. | |
Un-Installment / int_6c9193a1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_6c9193a1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
TheVentureBrothers | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_6c9193a1 | |
Un-Installment / int_77d540dd | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_77d540dd | comment |
Nine Planets Without Intelligent Life originally skipped comic #69. Not because of the infamy of the number, but because what the artist had planned was too large and detailed (and unimportant to the plot) to be worth bothering with. After a long hiatus (during which time Pluto was demoted), he went back and made comic #69 an argument between the two protagonists over whether the solar system has nine planets or eight. | |
Un-Installment / int_77d540dd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_77d540dd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Nine Planets Without Intelligent Life (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_77d540dd | |
Un-Installment / int_7a5d818d | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_7a5d818d | comment |
Bonus Stage episode 4 was originally a preview of projects the creator was working on, and didn't have an actual Bonus Stage cartoon, but between the season 5 finale "Fickle Nickel" and the season 6 premiere "Last Exit To Charismaville" it was replaced with a cartoon making several references to things happening after the original episode 4. | |
Un-Installment / int_7a5d818d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_7a5d818d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Bonus Stage (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_7a5d818d | |
Un-Installment / int_7b2ce128 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_7b2ce128 | comment |
Centaurworld has the episodes "Holes: Part 2" and "Holes: Part 3", despite there not being a "Holes: Part 1". | |
Un-Installment / int_7b2ce128 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_7b2ce128 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Centaurworld | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_7b2ce128 | |
Un-Installment / int_7c038c18 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_7c038c18 | comment |
Phineas and Ferb: The second-season episode “The Chronicles of Meap� is billed as “Episode 38: More than Meaps the Eye� suggesting that there are 37 previous episodes. The episode ends with a trailer for a sequel episode called “Meapless in Seattle.� The episode would eventually be produced and air in season 3, but that episode would itself end with a trailer for its own sequel, “Meap Me in St. Louis�, which would never be made. | |
Un-Installment / int_7c038c18 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_7c038c18 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Phineas and Ferb | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_7c038c18 | |
Un-Installment / int_7f118ee9 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_7f118ee9 | comment |
Chapters 37 to 41 of Saga of the People of TattúÃn River Valley, which should cover the attack on the Daudstjarna/Death Star, battle for Hoth and Lúkr's training with Jóði/Yoda, are missing, to simulate an actual experience of a discovered 1000-year-old manuscript. | |
Un-Installment / int_7f118ee9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_7f118ee9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Saga of the People of Tattúín River Valley | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_7f118ee9 | |
Un-Installment / int_8078fcbd | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_8078fcbd | comment |
Supreme: The original series was deliberately identified in its indica (and on the first issue's cover) as "Supreme volume 2", as it featured the title character returning to Earth after fifty years' absence. Series creator Rob Liefeld wanted to eventually make a "volume 1" that would cover Supreme's exploits during World War II – this never ended up happening, with the glimpses of Supreme's Golden Age adventures being limited to occasional flashback stories. | |
Un-Installment / int_8078fcbd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_8078fcbd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Supreme (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_8078fcbd | |
Un-Installment / int_80d4924d | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_80d4924d | comment |
Heroes Reborn (2015) happens 5 years after Heroes was Left Hanging following its fourth season. Creator Tim Kring admitted that this trope is employed to explain the Time Skip: “We’re treating this as if this is not the fifth season. We’re actually treating it as like the tenth season, as though there were actually seasons in between." | |
Un-Installment / int_80d4924d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_80d4924d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Heroes Reborn (2015) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_80d4924d | |
Un-Installment / int_86814cd0 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_86814cd0 | comment |
Translation of the series into English started with Final Fantasy IV and Final Fantasy VI, which were released as II and III, respectively, then skipped ahead to VII. Later re-releases uses its original, correct numbers. | |
Un-Installment / int_86814cd0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_86814cd0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Final Fantasy IV (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_86814cd0 | |
Un-Installment / int_89726260 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_89726260 | comment |
Gaston Lagaffe originally had no volume 5, because the comic switched to the A4 format from volume 6 onward and the first four A4 volumes are compilations from small-format books. A fifth volume was eventually made in 1986, four years after the fourteenth volume, containing previously unpublished strips. | |
Un-Installment / int_89726260 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_89726260 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Gaston Lagaffe (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_89726260 | |
Un-Installment / int_8ac4e993 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_8ac4e993 | comment |
This is standard operating procedure for mobile suit model numbers in Gundam works. In the original Mobile Suit Gundam the Zeon mobile suits we see start at MS-05 and end at (Y)MS-15, with several gaps along the way (and that's just the standard mobile suit line. Underwater, combat engineering and telepathically controlled models get their own numbering seriesnote As MSM-XX (Mobile Suit Marine), EMS-XX (Excavation Mobile Suit) and MSN-XX (Mobile Suit Newtype) respectively, as do the non-humanoid mobile armorsnote MA-XX and aforementioned variants of same) and most subsequent sequels and spinoffs have followed suit. This is mainly to leave room for new models to hawk in the voluminous collection of spin-off manga, OAV series, video games, model kits, etc. At this point said spinoffs have completely filled in the original Zeon MS series and even added new ones up to MS-18 (and various video games and manga of dodgy cononicity have started into the early 20s). The main trio from the original series (RX-75-4 Guntank, RX-77-2 Guncannon and RX-78-2 Gundam) also present an interesting example. The main numbers are actually a model year and the Earth Federation canonically didn't develop any mobile suits in UC 0076, but those secondary numbers indicate there are previous versions of the design (which, again have since been filled out and even expanded upon in spinoffs). | |
Un-Installment / int_8ac4e993 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_8ac4e993 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Gundam (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_8ac4e993 | |
Un-Installment / int_8f25225c | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_8f25225c | comment |
The Danganronpa franchise plays with this in Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony with the reveal that Danganronpa is an in-universe franchise with 52 installments including the previous games, making this game "Danganronpa 53". | |
Un-Installment / int_8f25225c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_8f25225c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Danganronpa (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_8f25225c | |
Un-Installment / int_8fd19467 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_8fd19467 | comment |
Grimtooth's Traps: As a joke, Flying Buffalo skipped over the number 3 and went from "Traps Too" to "Traps Fore", claiming in Fore's introduction that (the non-existent) "Traps Three" had been confiscated in a government raid on their office. Then a few years later Steve Jackson Games really was raided by the US government and an upcoming sourcebook confiscated. Flying Buffalo apologized for the no-longer-funny joke in the next printing of "Traps Fore". | |
Un-Installment / int_8fd19467 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_8fd19467 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Grimtooth's Traps (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_8fd19467 | |
Un-Installment / int_90e2f673 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_90e2f673 | comment |
BattleTech: When Technical Readout 3025 was published in 1986, it contained among other things the Hermes II Battlemech but no Hermes Battlemech. The Hermese wouldn't make its debut until the publication of Technical Readout 2750 in 1989. | |
Un-Installment / int_90e2f673 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_90e2f673 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
BattleTech (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_90e2f673 | |
Un-Installment / int_924b6d63 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_924b6d63 | comment |
Xenogears. The end credits reveal that the game is actually Episode 5, similar to how Star Wars started with Episode 4. The original team intended to do more sequels/prequels, however SquareSoft pulled the plug on the project; the team subsequently left Square and made a sort-of prequel series as Xenosaga .... which was itself cut short and only had 3 of the 6 planned episodes released. | |
Un-Installment / int_924b6d63 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_924b6d63 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Xenogears (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_924b6d63 | |
Un-Installment / int_980c3316 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_980c3316 | comment |
Shazam!: Captain Marvel first appeared in two Ashcan Copy comics titled Flash Comics #1 and Thunder Comics #1. Then his regular title, Whiz Comics, began with issue #2, and reprinted the whole of both ashcans. There is no Whiz Comics #1. | |
Un-Installment / int_980c3316 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_980c3316 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Shazam! (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_980c3316 | |
Un-Installment / int_984982f6 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_984982f6 | comment |
The "Ogre Battle Saga" was planned by creator Yasumi Matsuno to be an 8-episode saga, with Ogre Battle (March of the Black Queen) serving as Episode V, while Tactics Ogre (Let Us Cling Together) served as Episode VII. However, Matsuno left Quest (the developer of the series) to work for SquareSoft instead and Quest ended up developing Ogre Battle 64 (Episode VI) without his involvement and no more Ogre Battle games were made since then, aside from two side-stories (Ogre Battle: Prince of Zenobia for the Neo-Geo Pocket Color and Tactics Ogre: The Knight of Lodis for the Game Boy Advance). | |
Un-Installment / int_984982f6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_984982f6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ogre Battle (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_984982f6 | |
Un-Installment / int_9887078c | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_9887078c | comment |
SpyBoy originally had no issue 13. After the original run ended, a three-issue miniseries named Spyboy: The MANGA Affair was given the numbering #13.1, #13.2, #13.3. | |
Un-Installment / int_9887078c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_9887078c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
SpyBoy (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_9887078c | |
Un-Installment / int_98f107f3 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_98f107f3 | comment |
Bokurano has something of an example, appropriately enough. Most of the Dimensional Robots get Reporting Names in alphabetical order (first is Arachnid, second is Bayonet, etc.) but the 15th and final one skips straight to Z for Zearth II. | |
Un-Installment / int_98f107f3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_98f107f3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Bokurano (Manga) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_98f107f3 | |
Un-Installment / int_9f366a42 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_9f366a42 | comment |
The sequel to Lakeview Cabin, Lakeview Cabin Collection, have parts III through VI, but there is noticeably no second installment for the Show Within a Show. Turns out to be a subversion, as a later update includes II as an epilogue for completing the other parts. | |
Un-Installment / int_9f366a42 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_9f366a42 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Lakeview Cabin (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_9f366a42 | |
Un-Installment / int_9fcc8c53 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_9fcc8c53 | comment |
Power Punch II was originally going to be a direct sequel to Punch-Out!! titled Mike Tyson's Intergalactic Power Punch, but the combination of Nintendo's distaste at the game's quality and Tyson himself being convicted of rape forced Beam Software to change the title and give it to a different publisher. Why they decided to give a numeral "II" is anyone's guess. | |
Un-Installment / int_9fcc8c53 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_9fcc8c53 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Punch-Out!! (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_9fcc8c53 | |
Un-Installment / int_a54f4ded | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_a54f4ded | comment |
Zombi 2: Lucio Fulci's film based on a zombie epidemic on a tropical island. Despite its title implying that it is a sequel to another film, it's actually a standalone movie with no relation to any previous zombie films. The confusion comes from the fact that George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead (1978) was renamed Zombi in Italy. Fulci's film was only named Zombi 2 to cash in on the success of Romero's film, even though there's no connection between the two. | |
Un-Installment / int_a54f4ded | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_a54f4ded | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Zombi 2 | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_a54f4ded | |
Un-Installment / int_a81325d3 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_a81325d3 | comment |
Final Fantasy: Translation of the series into English started with Final Fantasy IV and Final Fantasy VI, which were released as II and III, respectively, then skipped ahead to VII. Later re-releases uses its original, correct numbers. Exploited in Final Fantasy X, where Tidus's father Jecht has a blitzball skill, the Sublimely Magnificent Jecht Shot Mark III. Tidus notes how there was never a Mark I or Mark II, and that it would entice fans to watch him play blitzball waiting for the earlier installments. And they did come back to watch. |
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Un-Installment / int_a81325d3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_a81325d3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Final Fantasy (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_a81325d3 | |
Un-Installment / int_a825da3e | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_a825da3e | comment |
The one-off Magic: The Gathering set Coldsnap is an example of the aforementioned trick where a new work is presented as a forgotten older one. Originally, the Ice Age block (released in 1995-96) consisted of Ice Age, Alliances, and the unrelated and universally reviled set Homelands, which was shoehorned into the block (mainly because this was before Wizards started doing blocks like we would know them today). When Coldsnap, which was designed to fit retroactively into Ice Age block as the "real" third set, was announced in 2006, Wizards claimed that it was based on a lost design file from 1995, uncovered when they moved their offices across the street. (The claim was intended to be tongue-in-cheek, but this didn't really come across and many players became annoyed, forcing them to come clean.) The idea of Coldsnap as the "real" third set, however, is Canon; it is legal for play in Ice Age Block Constructed, and Homelands is no longer acknowledged as part of the block. | |
Un-Installment / int_a825da3e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_a825da3e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Magic: The Gathering (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_a825da3e | |
Un-Installment / int_a8b3cc64 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_a8b3cc64 | comment |
Charles Ives composed two pieces titled Tone Roads No. 1 and Tone Roads No. 3. There is no Tone Roads No. 2. | |
Un-Installment / int_a8b3cc64 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_a8b3cc64 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Charles Ives (Music) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_a8b3cc64 | |
Un-Installment / int_ae11fb90 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_ae11fb90 | comment |
Arfenhouse Teh Movie 3 and 4 were both released as April Fools' Day pranks in 2005 and 2006 respectively. Finally, a proper sequel, Arfenhouse Teh Movie 6, was released later in 2006, with no 5th installment. | |
Un-Installment / int_ae11fb90 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_ae11fb90 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Arfenhouse (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_ae11fb90 | |
Un-Installment / int_afbed901 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_afbed901 | comment |
Played for Laughs in 50 Ways to Die in Minecraft. Part 4 was originally skipped over and went ahead to Part 5. Part 4 was later added, with the in-universe explanation being that people were having literal flame wars over the joke. | |
Un-Installment / int_afbed901 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_afbed901 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
50 Ways to Die in Minecraft (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_afbed901 | |
Un-Installment / int_b02fb9f6 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_b02fb9f6 | comment |
Goat Simulator spawned a sequel that is titled Goat Simulator 3, skipping over Goat Simulator 2. When the developers were making Goat Simulator 3, they thought they had made Goat Simulator 2, but when they realised they didn't it was too late to change the title. | |
Un-Installment / int_b02fb9f6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_b02fb9f6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Goat Simulator (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_b02fb9f6 | |
Un-Installment / int_b0329377 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_b0329377 | comment |
The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 is titled as such because it's the cartoon series adaption of Super Mario Bros. 3, but is actually the second Super Mario cartoon series. | |
Un-Installment / int_b0329377 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_b0329377 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_b0329377 | |
Un-Installment / int_b2e5d161 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_b2e5d161 | comment |
War Comes to America, part of the Why We Fight series, has a "Part One" but no "Part Two"—due to the untimely end of World War II, none was ever made. | |
Un-Installment / int_b2e5d161 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Un-Installment / int_b2e5d161 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Why We Fight | hasFeature |
Un-Installment / int_b2e5d161 | |
Un-Installment / int_b2fa9cf0 | type |
Un-Installment | |
Un-Installment / int_b2fa9cf0 | comment |
The preface to Moscow to the End of the LineAKAMoscow-Petushki, Moscow Stations or Moscow Circles says that in the first draft one chapter contained too many cuss words (appropriate for a philosophical drunk on a long boring train journey that has just started). The author had to add a warning for sensitive girls, but it had the opposite effect, thus he ended up removing all obscenities, leaving only "And he drank immediately." | |
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Man or Astro-man? got meta with it, releasing a song titled "Obligatory Part 2 Song in Which There Is No Presently Existing Part 1, Nor the Plans to Make One" (from their album A Spectrum of Infinite Scale). | |
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In-Universe example: It is agreed, that the world of The Dark Eye is in its 12th eon. However, there is no knowledge, evidence or hints about the 8th eon, which may have been erased from existence by the gods themselves. | |
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Ambush Bug: Ambush Bug: Year None ended with "issue #7 of a 6-issue limited series." There is no issue #6, or at least none that was ever published. Apparently issue #6 was completed (or nearly so), then shelved for reasons that still have not been made entirely clear. Issue #7 came out many months later, wrapping up the series. | |
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The episode There Is No Part 1: Part 2 from Welcome to Night Vale. | |
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Breath of Death VII, an indie throwback RPG, which follows the old-school formula pioneered by games such as Dragon Quest. | |
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An accidental case of this occurred in Minecraft during its early days. The 0.25_04 SURVIVAL TEST version of the game never existed, but a user mistakenly changed the version on the wiki to 0.25_04. This lead Notch to believe that it was the current update, so he called the next update 0.25_05 SURVIVAL TEST. | |
Un-Installment / int_c19c6efa | featureApplicability |
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Minecraft (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Exploited in Final Fantasy X, where Tidus's father Jecht has a blitzball skill, the Sublimely Magnificent Jecht Shot Mark III. Tidus notes how there was never a Mark I or Mark II, and that it would entice fans to watch him play blitzball waiting for the earlier installments. And they did come back to watch. | |
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The title screen of Apidya suggests that the game is called "Apidya II", which has led many people to wonder what the first Apidya game was. The developers later admitted that the "II" was supposed to be a joke in attempt to stir excitement. | |
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Although it was just a joke, it led to various rumors about why there was no Volume Two. Two outtakes from Volume Three were bootlegged extensively before being officially released in 2007, and it was sometimes claimed that they were from the "missing" Volume Two. A fan theory also held that Tom Petty's Full Moon Fever and/or Roy Orbison's Mystery Girl comprised "Volume Two" — both were solo albums by Traveling Wilburys members released between Volume One and Volume Three, both were produced by Jeff Lynne, and both included guest appearances by other Wilburys members, with only Bob Dylan not appearing on either. | |
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Doctor Who: "Season 6B", a bunch of postulated Second Doctor stories set after Season 6 but before the Time Lords forced his regeneration into the Third Doctor, based on the idea that what we see at the end of Season 6 is not actually the Doctor's regeneration. It's strongly alluded to in "The Two Doctors" and contemporary comic strips, and more recent Expanded Universe material delve into this period in detail. "Shada", the Season 17 season finale, was abandoned when about two thirds done thanks to industrial action. Some footage of it was eventually incorporated into the show, edited in order to bring the Fourth Doctor into "The Five Doctors" as a Fake Shemp. This has caused its canonical status to be ambiguous, which the Expanded Universe has happily exploited, especially in the audio drama version of the story — in which the Eighth Doctor has to go through the events, because the events of "The Five Doctors" erased it from the timeline. A novelisation that presented the story with the Fourth Doctor but with lots of new-series-compatible details added came out in 2012, and in the 90s a VHS reconstruction of the story was released, and even that might be a bit canonical as Tom Baker's narrator character ends up becoming a Canon Immigrant in "The Day of the Doctor" (of all things). No-one knows which version of "Shada" actually happened — maybe they all did, maybe none at all — and everyone is comfortable keeping it that way. Add in that the writer of Shada, Douglas Adams, used characters and plot elements in his novel, Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency. The Timey-Wimey Ball is at its most complex with this particular story. The new series concept of the Time War, and The War Doctor in "The Day of the Doctor", are both Watsonian metaphors for the "Wilderness Years" during which the show was cancelled. The Time War is an apocalyptic Great Offscreen War that threw reality itself into confusion and permanently darkened the Doctor as a person, much like the branching arms and Darker and Edgier excursions of the Expanded Universe did. The War Doctor is supposed to represent the Doctor we could have had during the Wilderness Years, and Steven Moffat has said his intention was to cause annoyance and frustration — viewers are supposed to feel that they could have had decades of adventures of John Hurt, but instead we got nothing. The producers of the classic series gave each story an alphabetical production code, starting with story A. (If you were wondering, story Z was followed by story AA, but story ZZZ was followed by story 4A. In a weird coincidence, both ZZ and ZZZ were the final stories for the incumbent doctor at the time—Two and Three, respectively.) To avoid any confusion between I, J, and 1 and between O, Q, and 0, story codes I and O were skipped. Not surprisingly, given the number of times the series changed producers and the overall passivity regarding long-term continuity, the pattern of which letters were skipped varied over the years: I was always skipped, but O was sometimes retained (there's a story OO, but no story OOO), and variations were introduced. For example, VVV was skipped, perhaps to avoid confusing U and V, or perhaps to ensure ZZZ lined up with the end of the Third Doctor's run; the next time around, 4U was skipped instead and 4V retained, the pattern persisting thereafter with 5U and 6U skipped and 5V and 6V retained (the last code to be used was 7Q). This is played with in short story "Thief of Sherwood", which is written as the paratext for a fictional Hartnell serial with the story code I. |
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In Pretty Cure All Stars F, our heroines are introduced to Preme and her companion Puca. Preme claims that she's part of a team known as the Another Dimension Pretty Cure, fighting an mysterious entity known as Arc. When Arc goes down, it turns out that he isn't the enemy, Preme is and she's ready to destroy the Cures once again. | |
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The 1984 sequel to Galaga, Gaplus, had conversion kits that changed its name to Galaga 3 in North America. There was no Galaga 2, though the number 3 may have counted Galaga's predecessor Galaxian as an entry. | |
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Sideways Stories from Wayside School has no nineteenth chapter, because the builders forgot to build a nineteenth story. | |
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Wayside School | hasFeature |
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On Round the Horne, one of the show's spoof dramas jumped from part one to part three, with the explanation that "you wouldn't have liked part two — it was all plot." On another occasion, a Three Musketeers spoof stretched over two shows; in the show after that, it was announced "At this point we were going to do The Three Musketeers part three... But we got fed up with that." | |
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Al Lowe envisioned Leisure Suit Larry 3: Passionate Patti in Pursuit of the Pulsating Pectorals as the definitive end to the Leisure Suit Larry trilogy, and the game ended with Larry and Patti stuck in the real world, living happily together and coding adventure games based on Larry's adventures. Whenever anyone would ask if his next project would be Larry 4, he would respond that there would never be a Larry 4. Instead, he and the rest of Sierra focused their efforts on creating a new online platform, which eventually fell through. However, when the time came for Al Lowe to make a real sequel to Larry 3, he found he'd written himself into a creative corner with Larry 3's airtight ending, so he decided to stay true to his promise and skipped right to Leisure Suit Larry 5: Passionate Patti Does a Little Undercover Work, where Larry and Patti are separated again, and suffering from amnesia. The missing game eventually becomes a major plot point in Larry 5, where it's revealed that the Big Bad, Julius Bigg, stole the master floppies to Larry 4, causing Larry and Patti to lose their memories. The game's non-existence is a running joke in the series, and the game (under the title Leisure Suit Larry 4: The Missing Floppies) appears in Space Quest IV: Roger Wilco and the Time Rippers and Leisure Suit Larry: Magna Cum Laude. Ken Willaims also advertises The Missing Floppies in the SCI remake of the first game, saying that he would sell the game to the public if only he could actually find out where it was. | |
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Leisure Suit Larry 3: Passionate Patti in Pursuit of the Pulsating Pectorals (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Grezzo 2 lead many to believe that the title was trolling or a reference to whatsoever. The author later revealed that he really made a "Grezzo 1", but he doesn't want to upload it online, as it's filled with in-jokes and references that only himself and few friends of him would understand. | |
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Ed, Edd n Eddy: "The Good Ol' Ed" looks like it's setting up for a Clip Show, but the "flashbacks" are instead to never-before-seen escapades involving the Eds, such as Edd using a fake time machine to send Jimmy and Johnny 2x4 on a Fauxtastic Voyage to prehistoric times, Edd getting a bad case of the hiccups and trying to cure them, and the Eds trying to make the world's biggest pancake using the entire cul-de-sac as the griddle. | |
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South Park: The episode "AWESOM-O" mentioned a lost Lemmiwinks sequel that never actually existed; the disclaimer claims it was lost because of the "disaster in Hawaii". The Season 10 premire, "The Return of Chef", opens with a Previously on… depicting Chef leaving South Park to join the Super Adventure Club and his friends being upset over him doing this. The episode "Go God, Go" ended with Cartman recently arriving in the far future. The next episode is "Go God, Go XII", which began with a Buck Rogers opening parody leading to Cartman seemingly months later, as if there were ten episodes about Cartman in the future that were just skipped. |
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Inverted with History of the World Part I, deceptively titled to create the illusion of an eventual sequel. It even ends with a trailer for Part II. This was part of an homage to Walter Raleigh's The History of the World, written while he was awaiting execution in the Tower of London and he only managed to complete the first volume before his sentence was carried out. The second part was eventually made 40 years later as a TV series, and of course, contains a teaser for History of the World: Part III. | |
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Volume 4 of Tristram Shandy has no chapter 24. Chapter 25 helpfully starts by describing what would have been in chapter 24, if it had existed. | |
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HIM's first album is called Greatest Love Songs Vol. 666. The number was only used for its occult connotations; it goes without saying that these guys aren't following up a series of albums 665 entries in the making, let alone albums of love songs, albums by HIM, or albums of love songs by HIM. | |
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Homestar Runner was originally missing Strong Bad Email #22 in the original order, going straight from 21 to 23. Many episodes later, an e-mail was put into the slot, referred to as "The Lost E-mail", and explained that it had been "banned in the UK" for making fun of the English. Strong Bad showed the viewers the gang's homemade action movie, Dangeresque 2: This Time It's Not Dangeresque 1, almost a year before showing them Dangeresque 1: Dangeresque, Too? |
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The sequel to Thanks Killing is titled ThanksKilling 3, with the absence of a ThanksKilling 2 justified in-universe because the movie was deemed so horrible that it was pulled from distribution and all known copies have been destroyed. The main plot of ThanksKilling 3 had Turkie try to find a copy of ThanksKilling 2 so he can use it to curse everyone. | |
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Paperinik New Adventures' issue 0/1 has a complex history. The first issues were numbered 0, 0/2 and 0/3, which convinced some readers there was an issue 0/1 they missed. After denying the issue's existence for a while, Paperinik included it in a "past issues" catalog as a joke (with a blank white cover). Eventually, they published it as one of the annual specials, with stories dealing with Paperinik's transition from his old life to his new one. | |
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Winamp 3 was criticized by users for being buggier and more resource hungry than the 2.x series, and for missing features such as backwards compatibility with Winamp 2 skins. The next version, Winamp 5, was named to signify the fact that it was based off the 2.0 version and incorporated features from the 3.0 version (such as the new skinning system), and because they did not want people making Winamp 4 skins. | |
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Double Entendre | hasFeature |
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Un-Installment / int_ee6c1abc | comment |
The Strong Bad Email "personal favorites" had Strong Bad list a number of favorite emails from episodes that never happened, like Strong Bad getting drunk on soy sauce and trying to fly Bubs' Concession Stand, Coach Z and Pom Pom getting into a knife fight, or Strong Bad making a prank call so epic it made Marzipan's answering machine explode. Oddly enough, some of the elements from this email were shown to be Real After All, like the Grape-Nuts Robot and the stone bridge seen in the knife-fight scene. | |
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ClickHole has two variants: It often references articles that don't exist. Typically this is its weekly "Next Week on Clickhole" (where the articles in question never appear), but also things like this list of corrections for the fictional "13 Hedgehogs Who Need A Vacation". Articles that skewer Political Overcorrectness, such as "The Ability To Play As Bowser Has Made Our Society More Evil", frequently invite the reader to "join the discussion" in the site's comment section. The site has no comments section. |
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Back in 2000, the Yu-Gi-Oh! card game released a card called The Legendary Fisherman (originally used by Mako Tsunami in the original series). 15 years later, they came out with The Legendary Fisherman III, which was used by Trout in Yu-Gi-Oh! ARC-V. After that, The Legendary Fisherman II was released as a game-original card. | |
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The sequel to McPixel, McPixel 3. There is no McPixel 2, but people wouldn't blame you for not knowing. | |
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McPixel (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes: The final episode, "Thank You For Watching The Show", is mostly composed of a Time-Passes Montage consisting of peeks at hypothetical future adventures that occurred between the Grand Finale "Let's Fight To The End" and the episode's Distant Finale. | |
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Data Design Interactive's Rig Racer 2: There was never a Rig Racer 1, although the name echoes an equally horrible rig "racing" game. | |
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Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.
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