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- Textbook subversion in this Dinosaur Comics strip.
- This Cult leader in Exterminatus Now goes straight past Tempting Fate to just plain asking for it.
- Earlier, this Mad Scientist takes it even further, asking for it.
- Schaefer "got that right".
- Lampshaded here in Nukees.
- This strip from Real Life Comics is Tempting Fate in the most distilled form possible.
- Lampshaded in Get Medieval here: "I'd say that now things can't get worse, but I know what'd happen." (They happen anyway.)
- In Captain SNES, whenever anyone says the words "I am invincible!" a treasure chest flies out of the sky and hits his or her head, causing no small amount of injury. Even if they were tricked into saying it. It Makes Sense in Context, sort of.
- Nedroid: Beartato contemplates his day and Reginald hangs up expired mistletoe.
- A Running Gag in Eight Bit Theater is the phrase "[situation] is X, X forever!" (e.g. "At last that Hell Door is vanquished, I'm safe. Safe forever!" — Black Mage, on getting past a door which was constantly opening and closing). Characters who have uttered these words always suffer in some way or other (for example in the last example, Black Mage was immediately attacked by the personification of Thief's greed.
- One of the more blatant cases: "Well, I'm safe. Probably forever. I'll celebrate by leaning against this landing gear. (beat) So very safe."
- "And now we're safe forever" is a Running Gag in itself, usually said by Red Mage right before something calamitous occurs. Near the end of the comic, he says they're "...safe forever. Again." while super-evil orb-charged omnipotent jackass wizard Sarda appears in the background, preparing to kill them all. Again.
- Also the gag of a character or characters saying something sickeningly ideal, often about how life finally stopped sucking for them, before they get hit by a Hadoken or a meteor or something.
- See also Onrac, "Where lightning can't strike thrice!"
- Subverted in this strip.
- One of the more blatant cases: "Well, I'm safe. Probably forever. I'll celebrate by leaning against this landing gear. (beat) So very safe."
- Lampshaded in Killroy and Tina: ""I thought you knew better than to utter such ominous clichés out loud."
- Thad in By the Saints jokingly says, "... for what we are about to receive..." while marching into battle. He isn't thankful for what he does receive a split-second later.
- In The Wotch, the team had an Unspoken Plan Guarantee, but then Miranda just had to say the words.
- Schlock Mercenary has made this into an inside joke. The entire cast is Genre Savvy and refers to doing this as "taunting/invoking Murphy". Every time a character tries to say "What could go wrong?" or "It's a guaranteed success" or the like, he/she/it/they is violently interrupted. It's generally foreshadowing that something will go wrong, but that's a sucker bet anyway.
Der Trihs: Trouble, sir? What kind of trouble could they - |
- In fact, there is even one point at which Captain Tagon says, "I don't see how things could possibly get any worse" (with Schlock hanging the lampshade) — and they don't.
Para Ventura: Oh, come on. What's the wo- |
- They still run into this, however. "bet our troubles are over."
- Goblins has a sub-comic called Tempts Fate[1] after the lead character, Tempts Fate. Why is he called that? The writer decided to have people's donations actually do something tangible, so he set up Tempts Fate as a sort of arcade game: if donations reach a certain goal by a certain date, Tempts Fate will pass the obstacle in his way; the more the donations exceed the goal, the more awesome Tempts Fate's victory will be. If people fail to donate enough money by the deadline, then Tempts Fate will fail, and die, and live on only in our memories.
- And so far, Tempts Fate has lived through 8 challenges in spectacular fashion. So much so that the author has added extra properties to the donations, including a sort of "dice" modifier based on the cents digit that decides which cool item Tempts Fate gets if the biggest goal is met.
- When he offered T-shirts for donations during the "Tempts Vs. The Really, Really poorly Made Characters" challenge, the donations skyrocketed, collecting more than enough for the fourth and final goal before the first goal's deadline. The result? Tempts killed the poorly made characters so hard that it killed the people playing those characters (except Elfgirl, as she didn't want to kill him or, indeed, even play D&D, so he just let her go; he killed the DM instead).
- And so far, Tempts Fate has lived through 8 challenges in spectacular fashion. So much so that the author has added extra properties to the donations, including a sort of "dice" modifier based on the cents digit that decides which cool item Tempts Fate gets if the biggest goal is met.
- Irregular Webcomic:
Mordekai: Oh c'mon! How many dinosaur models can one person have? |
- Combined with Historical In-Joke once, when an obstructive Ukrainian railway official mockingly asks Dr Smith "What will [Stalin] do? Purge entire country?"
- Yet another Historical In-Joke version here.
- In Order of the Stick, any such event will probably be lampshaded by one of the many Genre Savvy characters. Too many examples to count, so let's just start with this one:
Old Prisoner: HA! I knew I made the right call staying in prison. That Tsukiko chick is getting her ass kicked by an elemental! It's so much safer up here! |
- The fourth panel of this strip. "I guess it wouldn't kill us..." right on the next page. Lampshaded in this strip and played straight in this one.
- Inverted in On the Origins of PCs: Belkar breaks out of prison, murders a guard and exclaims, "Things can't get any better!" He promptly stumbles upon a 2-for-1 deal on whores.
- And now Yukyuk got "his lucky day", with a hostile wizard floating right behind him.
- Sequential Art had this jinx
Art: If I had to run away from something right now, I'd be so screwed.(...cue Flying Trashcans who came all the way from Mars just to get him). |
- Lampshaded in Narbonic: the characters are stranded in a raft at sea, with no food, no water, and no cigarettes, and Dave starts to say it couldn't be worse. Genre savvy Mell tries to stop him, but as the huge wave looms over the raft, Helen points out that it's too late. Dave's last words are "Well, MY face is red."
- Not only that, but Dave continues that insist that his statement makes sense even after Mell warns him not to say such a thing. It takes nothing short of a giant wave to make him realize his mistake.
- This strip of Dominic Deegan. Lack of scrying alerts aside, you would think a seer who has been through as much crap as Dominic has would know better than to even think the words "Nothing bad will happen."...
- To be fair, we find out later that "the bad thing" actually blocked his second sight so that he — nor any other seer — would spot him coming.
- Fate launches all salvos in this strip. Also combines a "Things can't get any worse." statement with a response in the next panel midsentence. Either Dominic needs his crystal balls polished or he has a really twisted definition of "Nothing bad will happen."
- And Dominic does it again here.
- Stunt does it twice in the space of a few strips; here and here.
- Lampshaded in this page of The Adventures of Dr. McNinja.
- Invoked here in Unshelved ("It was a boring week...").
- Either invoked or averted in Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures when Dan escapes the burlap sack in his first adventure.
Dan: Ha! Shows what you know, universe! Trying to bury me with girls only makes everything better! |
- Also in this comic, where Mab actually isn't sure if the next event to happen makes anything better or worse.
- Homestuck likes this one. Due to the high number of playable characters, the narrative is prone to sudden shifts in perspective, often at key dramatic moments. The fate-tempting is mostly hanging a lampshade on the whole affair.
- One astronaut in Mountain Time seems to be ordering his fate off a menu.
- Played with in Hellbound; mostly used straight, occasionally subverted, the best one occurring fairly early on:
Guy: At least things can't get any worse.... |
- This Questionable Content applies it to vaginas.
- Sluggy Freelance:
- Parodied one strip when Torg and Zoë are racing K'Z'K to the Book of Güd. (More specifically, Torg tries to invoke the opposite version — tempting fate to do something good — before Zoë mentions tempting fate the usual way, and that works.)
- There's a pretty over-the-top one early on.
Riff: I can fetch him back in a few hours. Torg will be fine as long as he didn't get zapped to a "Dimension of Pain" or something. |
- In the universe of Footloose, the Theory of Narrative Causality is real and extremely undesirable (e.g. the lead suffers from "Primary Protagonist Syndrome"), so it is only right and proper to stop any fool before they finish saying "What Could Possibly Go Wrong??"
- Finders Keepers used this in an interesting way. Cailyn and Card are in a magical market, looking for Fate. Cailyn suggests they split up in the middle of a market full of powerful and dangerous supernatural creatures. She figures if Fate doesn't want to be found, she can make it want to find her.
- Gunnerkrigg Court, Chapter 23 has an interesting variation on this. During the camping trip, students start mysteriously disappearing, and the remaining students deduce that it must be a prank the teachers are pulling. They come up with a plan to find the missing students and expose the prank, but it requires one more student to deliberately get kidnapped. Kat volunteers, because she's cool with being kidnapped by Mr. Eglamore. Cue Kat, sitting by herself, announcing to no-one in particular, "Oh boy! I sure hope nothing happens to me now that I'm here all alone!" As expected, she immediately gets kidnapped... but not by Mr. Eglamore.
- In Tweep, Milton barely escapes following the trope.
- Yahtzee Takes on the World adds a bit of spin by showing a flying saucer crashing into the characters' lair before it cuts to a very annoyed Yahtzee, who announces "As I was saying, it's nice to get back to normal."
- In Something Positive, one of Davan's friends says that he won't have a costume unless they have one in a can waiting for him. They do.
- In Pokémon-X, they do it here, here, and here. And that's just one storyline.
- In Kevin and Kell, Danielle believes that Rabbit's Revenge won't go through Kell's house to get to her. They don't; they burrow directly into her room. Similarly, during the 2000 election Arc, Lindesfarne is confident that Kevin "has the election in the bag," until his opponent claims that Kell ate his campaign manager, which causes Kevin to lose the election, but Lindesfarne finds the wife and interspecies child, causing Sheldon to admit Coney into the youth league.
- In a recent strip, Sheila asks "how hard can it be to catch dumb plant-eaters" while planning on hunting in Kell's place to help her meet quota. Suddenly, an icy cold blast out of nowhere freezes all the vegetation.
- Subverted in Antihero for Hire:
Dechs: (while waiting on a rooftop for something interesting to happen) I'm bored. |
- Gastrophobia: "-- And nothing short of a barrage of arrows could make me move from this spot!" Now, Phobia, that's beyond merely Tempting Fate and simply asking for it.
- Erfworld: Prince Tramennis asks King Slately about parleying with Parson: "Come! What's the worst that could happen?" The King's response: "The worst? The Titans could hear you ask such a question."
- A few pages later, the King asks "Evacuate? In our moment of triumph? I think you overestimate their chances." Tramennis calls him on this.
- During the battle with King's invincible army in Two Evil Scientists, one of King's robots points out how a battle against weak enemies is no fun when you can't get hurt. In the very next panel, the severed head of another supposedly invincible robot bounces by him. Cue Oh Crap face.
- In El Goonish Shive Mr. Raven approves being careful in this regard. Abe adds this trope to his long list of mistakes and stupid decisions here.
- This is a Running Gag on Bob and George.
Ran: The way I see it, we've broken every law of physics except the third law of thermodynamics. |
- In Wapsi Square, Shelly discovers that taunting mother nature is a bad idea.
- In addition, Monica learns that it is a bad idea to utter the phrase "Geesus Bud, it's not like it's magic," before touching a mysterious object.
- Girl Genius has Genre Savvy characters who realize what was just said.
- Which makes it all but certain that uncle Barry will show up in the Castle arc.
- Oggie's great-great-grandson. Also, Oggie himself:
Maxim: Oh, now hyu iz just asking for it. |
- The commander of the heliolux airfleet (communication systems/roasting) after was informed that contact with several units was lost mid-sentence and then the contact with a bay of their own ship is lost right now. She couldn't finish the next sentence with anything better than "We'll miss the fighting!". Cue a Jägermonster walking in right behind her and happily screaming "Wrong!".
- The commander of Armorpants was asking for it, too.
- In Demon Eater, the main character is clearly not Genre Savvy, and provides us a very naïve line after this strip
- This Shortpacked strip takes it to new heights.
Faz: But I will never tell you where they have the others, unless you do something that hurts me a lot, like punch me in the face repeatedly. |
Dustin: You worry too much. I think it's a safe bet there's no monsters... AAAUGH!!! (jumps on Mark's hands) |
- In Impure Blood, Dara says they've been lucky.
- Exiern: After narrowly escaping with his life, Neils says he thinks his luck is getting better. That was a mistake.
- Bobwhite: Marlene observes that, given enough time, things revert back to their natural order. At which point her roommate Ivy calls to say that they can't be roommates next semester.
Marlene: What? Why-- Ivy, how is it that you always pick the most ironic moments to ruin my life? |
- Lampshaded in the Anti-HEROES webcomic.
Lana: We can see the tower from here, it's not like something totally unexpected is going to suddenly jump out and stop us from getting there. |
- Sinfest had this happening to Author Avatar, who really should know better.
- In A Miracle of Science Caprice says "We're perfectly fine" right before her ship is attacked by the weapon from which it got no protection. And repeats just before it explodes. Benjamin shuts her up before she says this the third time. Though it was after he taunted killer bots himself.
- Later she had it Played for Laughs intentionally.
- Spacetrawler. This page. Yuri ends her A God Am I speech with...
Yuri: I can move large objects, be willful, and am now the perfect killing machine. Nothing can stop me. |
- In Kaspall, Sam, reassuring Alex. Lampshaded in the Alt Text.
- Far From Home: Yeah, I bet there's not a pirate within fifty light-years of this pile of rocks.