Character lies about himself to impress people. Midway through, everyone finds out he lies so they cast him out and everyone is all sad. Then later he comes back to save the day and everyone loves him again.
Character lies about himself to impress people. Midway through, everyone finds out he lies so they cast him out and everyone is all sad. Then later he comes back to save the day and everyone loves him again.
• Every male/female partnership or friendship or even mere acquaintanceship will always evolve into something "more". This mostly applies to… more heterosexual relationships (gay relationships are still sadly under-represented in media). I can't think of many shows where a guy and a girl become friends and remain friends without that pesky sexual tension making itself apparent sooner or later. One episode later, they're banging.
Well this is mainly in dystopian novels, probably already said...
You're in a corrupt society that's against you and you try to overthrow the government but obviously some important characters have to die to make you more emotional to distract you from the cliché plotline
You're special and different but you are humble about it (See: Tris Prior, Thomas from TMR)
And from telltale
At the point and click parts where you're looking around to solve a puzzle or talk to different people, I SWEAR, THE MAIN CHARACTER ALWAYS SAYS "Well that's a step in the right direction." Lol, just an overused line.
The cliche that the good guys always win. I want a good story based game where the villain wins, or at least if the villain dies, it doesn't feel like you REALLY won.
Comments
Character lies about himself to impress people. Midway through, everyone finds out he lies so they cast him out and everyone is all sad. Then later he comes back to save the day and everyone loves him again.
Ah yes, the ever present "Liar Revealed", I always feel uncomfortable knowing that someone is lying, especially if it's to a nice group of people.
The "bad character gone good because of the main protagonist and soon after betrays the bad people they worked with" cliche
I hate this cliche:
Villain builds a big machine in the sky to take over the world
It's happened in so many movies
Avengers Assemble
Ghostbusters
Suicide Squad
That was the only thing I didn't like about suicide squad
Seriously so tired of this!
example
Well this is mainly in dystopian novels, probably already said...
And from telltale
The cliche that the good guys always win. I want a good story based game where the villain wins, or at least if the villain dies, it doesn't feel like you REALLY won.