Sometimes, a Story Arc completely destroys the point of an earlier arc in the same story. It could contradict the early story's message, or it could reveal that the events we cared about never happened or weren't what they seemed. A hero's decisions don't seem so heroic if it turns out that they were manipulated every step of the way. And if a character goes through a Face–Heel Turn or Heel–Face Turn, their earlier stories become irrelevant when we know they'll disavow it all.
This trope can be used to set a story on the cynical end of the Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism — nothing lasts forever, and something that seems so important may be just a passing moment. Yes, the farm boy may have risen to become king and gotten the girl, but his life doesn't end there, and things can still go downhill. Another use for this is to deliberately shock the audience — a Face–Heel Turn hurts so much when the character we cheered for six seasons turns on us.
In general, it's more forgivable when it's done as an event, rather than as a Retcon. If a hero's efforts are undone, that's not as frustrating as if it turns out that they never mattered in the first place. The audience is also more likely to forgive it if we're shown the change, rather than it being done with Second-Hand Storytelling.
A storyline that is All For Nothing is not always a happy thing ruined by bad events. A tragic scene of people losing everything can feel very cheapened if things get better too easily; it's also not uncommon for this trope to come into play for villains after a Near-Villain Victory.
Remember, Tropes Are Tools, and when done properly, this can have a large impact on the audience, invoking things like Bait-and-Switch, Hope Spot, and Despair Event Horizon.
Common forms include Shoot the Shaggy Dog, Yank the Dog's Chain, Worthless Treasure Twist, and Happy Ending Override. If done too often, leads to the Broken Aesop, Lost Aesop, and Yo-Yo Plot Point.
Compare and contrast "Shaggy Dog" Story, in which the events of an entire story — either the main story or a subplot — ends up completely meaningless in the end but there's usually no changes to the status quo.
If this was on the villains' perspective, it would be Meaningless Villain Victory. May even involve Pyrrhic Victory.
Distinct from Status Quo Is God in that it doesn't always bring things back to where they started — it often leads to genuine change.
Not to be confused with All or Nothing. Possibly related to Hard Work Hardly Works.
The fortunate counterpart of this trope is Earn Your Happy Ending, when someone has achieved what they would truly desire from the start.
As this is an Ending Trope, unmarked spoilers abound. Beware.
Categories with their own pages:
Examples:
- In Pleasant Goat and Big Big Wolf: Joys of Seasons episode 45, Paddi wants to send Little Knife Goat some snow since he's never seen any before, being from the desert. Paddi goes far away into the desert just to deliver the snow, but at the end of the episode his effort is wasted because Mr. Slowy invited Little Knife Goat to the snow-covered Goat Village.
- In the Doctor Who audio spin-off "The Lady in the Lake", the character of Lake learned that he had the ability to regenerate after death as he was one of various 'proto Time Lords' cloned from River Song, and subsequently manipulated his fellows into giving up their own lives so that he could work out how long he himself would live. However, Lake eventually realised that this was pointless because the clones all have a different amount of regenerations, ranging from two to nine, and therefore there was no way to know how many lives Lake might have himself (he was ultimately shown regenerating four times before his final death, and the last life suffered Identity Amnesia and thought she was someone else).
- Mexican Game Show "En Familia con Chabelo" has the Catafixia at two moments of the show, one in the middle of the show for those who attended the show and yet not had participated in any other of the games and another, a bigger one, at the end of the show, for the games winners. The game consists to Chabelo asking the players if they want to exchange what they got (in the middle show, they got a cash prize just for attending the Catafixia) for something hidden inside the Catafixia, mystery boxes or even in Chabelo´s pockets. Once they chose to exchange (catafixiar) the prize the player would choose what they want to exchange his/her prize for and what is exchanged would lead to big prizes like TVs, big packages of furniture, bikes, cash money or... just a pile of empty boxes, an old camera, a trashed bike or a pile of balloons. While is rumored that still the "losers" did not leave empty handed it was enough to do a Walk of Shame.
- Spanish Game Show "Grand Prix" would lead to this trope a couple times. The game show put two teams representing small towns of Spain playing against each other in challenges similar to Takeshi´s Castle to get 3 points for every challenge they win and 1 point for every challenge lost.
- However, the toughest challenge is at the end, where the Major of the town and his Culture Councelor plays against their other town counterparts, where they have 5 chances to guess if a word exists or not in the R.A.E. dictionary, if they guess right they get 3 points, but if they fail, they lost them. So, if the Major and the Councelor are not good in Spanish rare words, the team would lost up to 15 points and lose the game.
- For 2024 rules, 14 towns are meant to play elimination games and only the best 4 scores in this round would pass to the Semifinals games. That would mean that the team would win the show and still be eliminated if the Major is not capable to score some more points to the team in the last challenge.
- This is rather common on Taskmaster, where a character will misinterpret the rules of a task and do it wrong, resulting in last place or an outright disqualification:
- "Slice The Loaf As Neatly As Possible" had a simple task: pick one tool from the caravan, go to the lab, and slice the loaf of bread. However, there was also a loaf of bread in the caravan where the task began. Aisling Bea brainfarted, grabbed the loaf in the caravan, and began slicing it, doing a decent job and cutting herself twice in the process (she used an aluminum can lid)... while Alex stood awkwardly in the lab waiting for her.
- The most notorious example was also poor Aisling Bea during the task (take a breath) "Make the tallest tower of cans on this table. Also, whilst building your tower, you must shake Alex's hand and say you're from a different country once every 10 seconds. Alex will blow his whistle every 10 seconds." Alex whistled for her to begin, and she mistook the instructions and thought she didn't have to shake his hand until the next whistle blow, and thus failed to shake his hand within the first 10 seconds. She didn't realize she missed the first one, continued on long enough to name 61 countries and got the tower 10 cans high, and thought she'd done well until she watched the playback months later on the show itself and realized all it was worth was one can high. All she got was a measly one point.
- Happened to a contestant named Matthew on the Press Your Luck revival's June 17, 2021 episode: he ended up the winner by default after the other two contestants hit four Whammies each, knocking them both out of the game, but had no money or prizes going into the Bonus Round. He reached the Big Bucks Bonanza and accrued nearly $140,000 in cash and prizes, only to lose it all to a Whammy
on his very last spin, becoming the first person in the history of this run of the show to leave with absolutely nothing.
- The 60s anti-war song One Tin Soldier tells of the Valley Folk who covet the great treasure of the Mountain Kingdom. The Kingdom are more than happy to share, but the Valley folk greedly want the whole stash, going to war with the Mountain and wiping them out. In the end, the "treasure" turns out to be a simple engraving of 'Peace on Earth' on the bottom of a rock.
- The Portishead song "Mysterons" from Dummy uses this trope verbatim in its lyrics, to imply someone who had everything they could ever want or need and threw it all away.
All for nothing
Did you really want - Rainbow (UK band): The song "Stargazer" from the album Rising tells the story of a wizard who enslaves people to spend nine years building a tower in the desert for him so he can channel his magic to fly. His first attempt ends with him falling to his death, rendering the whole endevour completely pointless.
- Spanish balladeer Camilo Sesto has a song titled "Todo Por Nada"note .
- Devin Townsend's "Deconstruction": The protagonist's journey to find the true nature of reality is rendered pointless because what he was looking turned out to be a cheeseburger, which he wouldn't eat because he's a vegetarian.
- Between songs on the Aesop Rock and Rob Sonic album Bestiary, there are clips of Aes and Rob organizing a fundraiser concert to keep the local bowling alley from closing down. In the end, even though they raised $211, Rob finds out that the bowling alley already shut down nineteen years ago.
- In Machine's "There But For The Grace Of God Go I," two parents want to raise their daughter away from what they think are bad influences, so they move to a place with "no blacks, no Jews, and no gays" and do other things like banning rock and roll from the house. At age 16, she ends up leaving her family and moving in with an older man who got her pregnant.
- Happened at the main event of Survivor Series 2014. After a massive series of screwjobs, Dolph Ziggler finally gets the better of The Authority, complete with a Big Damn Heroes moment from Sting, and, as promised, the Authority is banished from WWE television… For all of five weeks before Seth Rollins manages to get them back via a hostage situation. Then the Authority fires all of Team Cena anyway, and for his troubles, Sting gets buried by Triple H.
- The New Orleans Saints' play known as the River City Relay has become infamous due to this trope. With the Saints trailing by 7 on the final drive of a game they needed to win to have any chance of staying in the playoff race, they pulled off one of the most incredible lateral plays of all time to score a last-second touchdown... only for usually-reliable kicker John Carney to miss the extra point that would have tied the game and forced overtime. Doubly fits the trope in that even if Carney had made the extra point, other results that day eliminated the Saints anyway.
- After decades of playoff futility normally involving clutch moments going against them, the Minnesota Vikings finally had a miracle play go their way in the 2018 Divisional Round against the Saints with the Minneapolis Miracle play
... only to get completely blown out in the NFC Championship Game one week later against the Philadelphia Eagles.
- In the 1975 World Series, Carson Fisk's walk-off foul-pole flirting home run in Game 6 saved his Boston Red Sox from elimination and would become one of the most iconic moments in World Series history. In the ensuing Game 7, the Red Sox would ultimately blow a 3-0 lead to the Cincinnati Reds, losing 4-3 and adding on to their infamous "Curse of the Bambino."
- The defining buzzer-beater shots in the NBA careers of both Michael Jordan and LeBron James happened in playoff campaigns their teams ultimately lost:
- For MJ, it was the series-clinching buzzer-beater against the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 5 of the 1989 Eastern Conference Quarterfinal. The Chicago Bulls would beat the New York Knicks in six games in the Conference Semifinal, then fall to the Detroit Pistons in six games in the Conference Final.
- For LeBron, it was the buzzer-beater against the Orlando Magic in Game 2 of the 2009 Eastern Conference Final. The Magic would ultimately win the series in six games.
- Spectacularly averted by the 1980 US Olympic hockey team (depicted in Miracle) thanks to a last-minute goal that salvaged a tie in the team's first Olympic game against Sweden. While that goal was a confidence builder for the rest of the tournament, it wound up avoiding what would have been the most baffling and anticlimactic result in sports history. Since 1992, the medal round has been played as a knockout tournament, as is standard in almost every other sports tournament in the world. Not so in 1980—the top two teams from the two pools advanced to the medal round and played the top two teams in the other pool. The medals would then be determined by the points standings after these games. Just to make it even more confusing, teams carried their points they’d earned against the team who also advanced in their pool into the medal round, but not the points against the teams that did not advance. Since the Soviets had beaten Finland in pool play they came into the medal round with two points, but the USA and Sweden entered with only one point since they had tied. Finland entered with zero points since it had lost to the Soviets. After Team USA's famous upset of the Soviets in its first medal-round game, it still had to beat Finland to win the gold medal, as correctly depicted in the film. But... had it not tied Sweden in the last minute of that first game, it would have finished the medal round with four points instead of five, meaning the USA and Soviets would be tied. Okay, so the USA gets the tiebreaker for beating the Soviets, right? Nope. The first tiebreaker is goal differential, which the Soviets had the edge in due to beating Sweden 9–2, giving them a +6 differential compared to just +3 for the USA. In other words, that one last-minute goal against Sweden spared the USA, and possibly the entire world, said anticlimactic result.
- The Apocalypse Stone was a Dungeons & Dragons adventure designed to destroy a Second Edition world to allow a fresh start with Third Edition. In the default ending, nothing the PCs do ultimately matters. Even if they succeed at every task flawlessly, by the time they confront the final villain, the world is too far gone to prevent an Earth-Shattering Kaboom. However, it did also allow alternate endings, such as the fabric of reality being altered in ways that would accommodate Third Edition mechanics.
- Downplayed in Sentinels of the Multiverse. The heroes Visionary and Omnitron-X supposedly travel back in time to Set Right What Once Went Wrong (saving her younger self from being Strapped to an Operating Table for Visionary, and destroying his past selves before they could do too much damage for Omnitron-X). Unfortunately, it turns out that neither of them actually traveled back in time, but instead to another reality (that reality being the timeline the game takes place in also known as the "Prime Timeline") meaning that they didn't change the future at all. On the other hand, they managed to do quite a bit of good in the prime timeline so it wasn't entirely for nothing.
- EPIC: The Musical: This is what finally breaks Odysseus during the Wisdom Saga - all of his sacrifices to get back home turn out to be pointless once he is stuck on Calypso's island, with no way to escape on his own power. He contemplates jumping off a cliff into the sea until Calypso unintentionally reminds him of his deceased friend Polites, leading to him praying to Athena for help after previously forsaking her. Having come to regret her choice to leave him, and moved by his decision to ask for her aid, Athena obliges and pleads with Zeus to free him, even taking a thunderbolt for her troubles.
- Both The Fantasticks and Into the Woods do this deliberately as a Deconstruction of fairy tales. The first act is a mythic tale with beginning and end, and the second act is life going on and not ending so neatly.
- In Henry V the titular king, unhindered by civil war, takes his "noblest English" into France and, despite overwhelming odds, defeats the French at Agincourt. Not only does he win the country (or a big chunk of it), he charmingly woos the French Princess Katherine to seal the deal and the last action has the two of them getting ready to be wed. Then the Chorus reminds the audience that, like in real life, Henry would be dead a few short years later, and his son's reign would see all those French territories lost and the country of England plunged into one of its most famous and bloody civil wars.
- Taken across the three Henry VI plays and Richard III itself, the actions of the House of York fall intot his. For years, Edward, George, and Richard fought to avenge their father and put a York on the throne in place of the Lancasters. But Edward proved feckless, George untrustworthy, and Richard disposed of them both so that he could get the crown and do it right. But his paranoia and indulgence in villainy continues after he becomes king, and rather than securing peace, he drives away most of the allies he didn't murder and gives Henry Tudor ample justification for declaring war. In the end, Richard's actions destroy not just York but Lancaster as well, leading to the end of the Plantagenet dynasty altogether.
- In legally blonde, Elle goes to great lengths to keep Brooke’s alibi of Liposuction a secret. Unfortunately, Brooke blurts said Alibi out.
- The entire plot of Tosca. In chronological order: Mario Cavaradossi's efforts to protect and hide his friend Cesare Angelotti, even under torture, are undone by their enemy Baron Scarpia bullying Mario's lover Floria Tosca into revealing Angelotti's location. Her unwilling betrayal of Mario's trust is then rendered worthless by Mario mocking Scarpia about Napoleon's victory at Marengo, sealing his fate. Napoleon's said victory also renders the risks that Angelotti took meaningless, as Angelotti was jailed for leading a pro-French rebellion, and Napoleon will take over Rome within days; if he'd just stayed put for a little while longer, he would have been freed anyway. Meanwhile, the very government that Scarpia works for will be overthrown as soon as the French take over, and Angelotti kills himself rather than be captured again, rendering the whole affair pointless. And finally, Tosca's daring murder of Scarpia, who planned to have Mario executed, achieves nothing, as Mario is executed by firing squad anyway. Broken and about to be arrested for killing Scarpia, Tosca has nothing left but suicide.
- Ace Attorney:
- The villain of Farewell, My Turnabout killed the victim to avoid a scandal becoming public. Even if he's found not guilty, the investigation and subsequent trial reveal the scandal to the world. And that's only if Phoenix gets the Bad Ending. If he gets the normal ending, then all Engarde has to look forward to is a Guilty verdict, or being hunted down by the assassin he hired. He chooses to face prison rather than the angry assassin.
- The main villain of Trials and Tribulations commits several murders to cover up a fake kidnapping scam. The valuable diamond that they were after is lost when the fake kidnapping goes wrong, and is never retrieved.
- In the flashback trial during Apollo Justice, Klavier asks the judge to clear the courtroom before accusing Phoenix of forging evidence because he knew that such an accusation could have serious ramifications for the legal system. Come Dual Destinies, we find out that despite his efforts, his accusation against Phoenix and subsequent disbarment was one of two incidents that kickstarted the Dark Age of the Law, where the public lost its faith in the legal system.
- The villain of Dual Destinies' second case wants to steal a gold ingot to solve their money problems, and creates a ridiculously complex plan to get to the chamber where the ingot was. The ingot was stolen by Phineas Filch's grandfather, so good luck to the bad guy paying down their debts with that empty room.
- Danganronpa
- In Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc, Monokuma loves this. After all, what's more despairing than going through hell and becoming a murderer to escape a Gilded Cage only to find out that the reason you did it never mattered at all? He outright gloats during the final trial that all his motives were meaningless, since the Tragedy ruined the outside world.
- The general motive is 'escape the school'. However, the students locked themselves in there willingly to wait out the Tragedy, and escaping would put them right back into the middle of it.
- The first motive is videos that imply the students' loved ones outside are in grave danger, which is why Sayaka snaps and tries to kill Leon, only to get killed herself. Problem is, it's been a year since the Tragedy. Whatever happened to said relatives, it's not like the students could do anything about it now (though Ultra Despair Girls reveals that many of the loved ones mentioned in the videos are alive).
- The second motive is promising to embarrassing secrets. While it's up in the air how the students themselves would judge each other with their secrets revealed, it's highly unlikely that anyone left in the outside world would care- for example, Mondo worries about his secret being revealed (which eventually leads to him murdering Chihiro) because the Crazy Diamonds would fall apart if they knew. It's highly unlikely that they made it through the Tragedy intact.
- The third motive is money. Money isn't all that useful in an apocalypse, and Celeste's dream of living in a castle with handsome butlers dressed like vampires now simply doesn't have the infrastructure to support it.
- The fourth motive is revealing the identity of The Mole: Sakura Oogami. By this point, Sakura had already turned against Monokuma, so killing her wouldn't hurt him at all and would in fact get rid of a powerful loose end.
- This happens again in the 4th case with Aoi trying to frame herself. She wants to get everyone killed out of revenge for dragging Sakura past the Despair Event Horizon, but Sakura never fell to despair; she killed herself for altruistic reasons, namely fulfilling her bargain with Monokuma (thus causing him to release his hostages) and so that the students wouldn't kill each other over her. Her suicide note begs Aoi to live for her, but Monokuma replaced it with a fake that claimed she died in despair. Had Aoi succeeded in her frame job, she'd have completely invalidated Sakura's Heroic Sacrifice.
- Junko's whole plan. Sure, she created a Villain World and trapped her classmates inside the school, but she also trapped herself inside the school (and restricted herself further by playing Monokuma in the killing game), and Makoto manages to rally her remaining classmates against the game and her. In the end, she loves this, since it allows her to feel the despair of such an important plan failing horribly. She then promptly executes herself to complete it.
- As usual, most of the murders in Danganronpa 2: Goodbye Despair are, on some level, meaningless. It's a Monokuma trademark. "Graduating" wouldn't even mean leaving the island, since they're in a VR game and their real bodies are in a Future Foundation compound and observed by the previous game's cast. Even if they woke up, they likely wouldn't get very far.
- Teruteru committed murder to be able to escape and see his mother. Aside from the above problems with escape, He was a member of Ultimate Despair, who were known for killing their loved ones so they could feel despair at their deaths. It's highly likely that either his mom died from the Tragedy or was killed by Teruteru himself.
- Fuyuhiko and Peko fall into this in different ways. Fuyuhiko didn't get the chance to kill Mahiru, but he wanted to in order to avenge his sister. Mahiru really didn't have much to do with his sister's murder; Monokuma just implied this was the case to mess with Fuyuhiko. Peko killed Mahiru partially to protect Fuyuhiko (which did work) and partially because she saw herself as his tool and thought that he would be counted as responsible for anything she did (and thus he'd be the real Blackened and could escape at the cost of her life). However, neither Fuyuhiko nor Monokuma thought of Peko as a tool, so she gets executed as the sole culprit.
- It's heavily implied that the "love" Mikan killed for was Junko. Aside from being a psychopathic manipulator, she has also been dead for years, having killed herself at the end of the previous game.
- Nagito schemed to make The Mole the Blackened so that they, as the only non- Remnant of Despair, could escape. Thing is, the mole was there on behalf of the Future Foundation to rehabilitate the Remnants of Despair, so surviving at the cost of everyone else would be failing that mission (and incidentally handing the bodies of the students to Alter Ego Junko on a silver platter). And to top it all off, the mole is an AI and thus couldn't leave in any case. The mole ends up figuring out his plan and confesses in order to spare the other students, so the only one killed is the only one he didn't want to die.
- In Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc, Monokuma loves this. After all, what's more despairing than going through hell and becoming a murderer to escape a Gilded Cage only to find out that the reason you did it never mattered at all? He outright gloats during the final trial that all his motives were meaningless, since the Tragedy ruined the outside world.
- In GENBA no Kizuna, Himatsu, after learning that Ryuunosuke was deep in debt to the victim, a Loan Shark, proposes that Ryuunosuke killed the victim to get out of debt, but Ryuunosuke replies that if he did that, then not only would his debt not be erased, but the victim's associates would seek revenge on him and the rest of Raptor Pack Productions. It turns out that Ryuunosuke's Childhood Friend Shiku ended up killing the victim in self-defense, forcing her friends in Raptor Pack Productions to carry out a cover-up operation that would pass off the victim's death as an accident, as well as try to fool Shiku into thinking that, so she wouldn't have to live with the knowledge that she'd taken a life. However, the plan ended up failing due to the police's investigation, and in the good ending, so did the other members of Raptor Pack Productions' attempts to take the fall for Shiku. Shiku ends up realizing the truth and becoming guilt-stricken that her friends went so far for her sake, and while the killing is proved to be in self-defense, all four members of Raptor Pack Productions are arrested for obstructing the investigation. Luckily, though, the victim's associates choose not to go after Raptor Pack Productions, partly due to them being locked up and partly due to how the victim was Hated by All and not worth avenging.
- Katawa Shoujo does this on multiple occasions:
- Lampshaded in Hanako's Bad and Neutral Endings. In the Bad Ending, she screams how nothing has changed in her life before delivering a Player Punch and a Get Out!. In the Neutral Ending, she tentatively clarifies that nothing has changed, with Hisao agreeing.
- Played straight in Lilly's Neutral Ending: she leaves for Scotland, never to return. Hisao feels that his relationship with her was completely pointless.
- Subverted in Lilly's Good Ending. Hisao chases after Lilly as she's on her way to the airport. Mere meters from her, he has a heart attack and wakes up two days later in hospital. Resenting his condition and blaming himself for never helping Lilly with her issues beforehand, Hisao comes very close to crossing the Despair Event Horizon. The next scene (using a Chekhov's Gun) shows that Lilly never left Japan; she stayed behind to build her future with Hisao.
- In Rin's first bad ending, which you get by selecting "Then explain," Hisao and Rin break up after an argument, and the last line of Hisao's inner monologue is about how much time he wasted on their relationship.
- Tavern Talk:
- Everything Quasar has done has been to kill death. Quasar's motive for wanting to kill death was to resurrect his and the Inkeeper's deceased former companions and meet their souls. In the bad ending, it is revealed that while using the soul shattering spell on the necromancer that the spell also destroyed the souls of the former companions. With their souls destroyed there is no way for Quasar to ever see them again making everything he has done to see them, all the pain and death, even the destruction of the world, all for nothing.
- Both "Heir of Dragon Fire" and "The Twilight Chase" end in failure, no matter what you do, because Quasar had spied on both parties with his pet jackdaw and knew how to thwart their plans to stop him.
- The Amazing Digital Circus: "Candy Carrier Chaos!":
- Gummigoo goes through an extensive existential crisis and decides that he's willing to try living in the Circus with the rest of the cast. However, Caine blows up Gummigoo as soon as he does so due to him not wanting to risk mixing up real people with NPCs.
- To a lesser extent, the gang returning the Candy Canyon Kingdom's syrup is rendered moot when Jax intentionally leaves the front gate unlocked for the Fudge to sneak in and start devouring people again.
- Knights of Guinevere
- Andi's been ruining both her health and her reputation on the Surface slaving away for Park Planet, and does manage to finish a work task with only a fraction of the time she should have been given, but she's fired anyways the very next day for unspecified reasons.
- A very tragic and heartbreaking example. In the beginning of the plot, Orville Park showed his daughter Olivia Park the beautiful park he created along with a firework display for her birthday. Orville hints that something tragic happened to his daughter, Olivia, in the past, and he hopes that the park will heal her. He makes a beautiful speech to his daughter about how her future is bright, and that she should let the past fade away. His daughter, Olivia, remains emotionless, except for feeling sad when reminded of her past. However, she does genuinely thank her father, and she’s torturing a female robot named Guinevere with his permission. Decades later, it’s revealed that Olivia Park is an old woman who wasted her life torturing the female robot Guinevere, with the implication that she never recovered from her trauma that affected her for the rest of her life. Meaning that everything Orville did to help his daughter recover was ultimately meaningless, and his daughter grew up to be a miserable and broken old woman, despite his attempt to help her move on from her traumatic past.
- Murder Drones: J ultimately aids the Absolute Solver and burns all her bridges with everyone else for nothing. She indicates in her brief rant at V that she's chosen to wholly side with the Solver because she's given up hope of ever escaping it and implies she's convinced it's unbeatable, cutting her ties to V and N and trying to ensure their deaths with the rest of Copper 9 after V refuses to join her. Shortly thereafter, the Solver is successfully defeated and Copper 9 is saved, proving J's nihilism wrong, and leaving her completely alone because she's alienated everyone who might have helped her in service to that nihilism.
- RWBY:
- Raven spends the fifth volume concocting plan to oppose Salem by obtaining the Relic of Knowledge for herself, and actually succeeds in it. However, the very act of her success reveals her entire plan was a lost cause, instantly undoing all the effort she went to. Raven is a Dirty Coward who wants Salem to leave her alone, but the Relic would make Raven an even bigger target. When Yang forces her to confront this, Raven is left to flee, having lost her brother (he disowned her for good), her lieutenant Vernal (died as a Maiden decoy), and revealed herself as the Spring Maiden in return for nothing whatsoever. Furthermore, the next volume we learn the relic attracts Grimm and the only way to counter this is to remain within the safety of the kingdoms. Raven is an outlaw who uses the wild to hide from Salem and taking the relic with her would cost her only hiding spot. Ironically, handing the Relic over to Yang only delayed it falling into Salem's hands for a few Volumes.
- James Ironwood spends the entire Atlas Arc attempting to save the city of Atlas from Salem and tried to stop her from getting the Relics in his possession. Unfortunately, this all ends in vain. Ironwood begins using extreme measures such as declaring martial law and abandoning the people of Mantle to die when Salem is on her way and orders Winter to kill the Winter Maiden. Team RWBY and the rest of the heroes turn against him because of it, Penny obtains the Winter Maiden's powers instead and goes with them and Salem eventually finds a way to get through Atlas' defenses and launches a Grimm attack on the city. After Salem is temporarily taken out, Ironwood decides to threaten the heroes with bombing Mantle himself in order to get what he wants and leads to his remaining allies in the military abandoning him as a result. Even when he planned on Winter becoming the next Winter Maiden, she turned against him by the point it happened as he is left to die on the falling city of Atlas with everyone else in the Kingdom being evacuated and Cinder and Salem claiming the two relics as he gives up when attempting to shoot them.
- RWBY spends the last third of the Atlas Arc on a risky play, sacrificing both Atlas and Mantle by using the Relic of Creation to turn Penny human and rid her of a virus that was slowly killing her. During an evacuation to ensure people are saved from the ensuing Colony Drop due to the staff's usage, Cinder interferes and kills Penny in the process. Even with Penny's idea to have Jaune Mercy Kill her to ensure Winter gets her powers, it doesn't matter much as Winter spends the vital time she has in her fight to save Weiss... and fails, causing Cinder to take the Relic of Creation and put an end to the evacuation. The ensuing Volume deconstructs this trope as part of the theme outright asks "why continue fighting if that's gonna be the result?". Ruby and Jaune make it well aware to their friends that this had made a huge enough blow to their mental health that one of them outright takes their own life. They got better.
- American High Digital:
- Hyde in "Doing Homework On The Bus" goes through the effort of trying to complete a long homework packet on a bumpy and bully-filled bus trip, only for it to turn out that the teacher isn't checking the homework that day.
- The students in "Doing A Video Project: Expectation Vs. Reality" go through a lot of stress trying to create a video for class, which all goes down the drain when the file gets corrupted.
- Courier's Mind: Rise of New Vegas:
- The Courier's attempts to get a disguise for his infiltration of the Powder Gangers' base turn out to be this, as they all see right through it and are willing to work with him anyway.
- During the clearing out the Nightkin part of the "Come Fly With Me" quest, The Courier goes out of his way to resolve things with the Davidson and the Nightkin diplomatically... only to end up killing them all along the way and as a result, Davidson at the end, anyway.
- Played for Drama in season thirteen, where The Courier goes out of his way to not only establish a good reputation with the isolationist, xenophobic, and dangerous Brotherhood of Steel, but find ways to subtly stack the deck in his employer, Mr. House's favor at the negotiating table, in hopes of swaying Mr. House into not outright destroying them and by extension, killing the "family" of his companion, Veronica. But when he brings this to Mr. House, his boss refuses to even consider anything but The Brotherhood's destruction. And demands The Courier follow his orders and destroy them. Making it clear that this isn't up for negotiation and he doesn't care about The Courier's input on his plans. This is when The Courier decides to kill Mr. House.
- Alice Grove: Both Alice and Jesper. Alice's efforts to keep her town low-tech in order to prevent another war is invalidated by the Praeses' escapees "awakening" humanity within a few years, while Jesper's plan to bully the Praeses into helping him uplift humanity is rendered moot by those same escapees doing exactly what he'd hoped for... which he doesn't even learn about before Alice kills him.
- Experience Boost:
- Orhan doesn't accomplish a single long-term objective of his master plan that the entire endgame of the comic is devoted to, and doesn't even accomplish much of his short-term objectives either. About the only thing he successfully managed to do is waste a bunch of players' time, but they were all having a blast with the massive inter-faction conflict, so nobody really cared.
- To a more minor extent, the Treasure Hunt Arc. Theron, Lysandra, and Zhusen spend dozens of strips in a high-stakes treasure hunt against both the Vanguard and the Legion that pushes Theron and Lysandra's patience with each other to the breaking point (and both of them seriously considering offing Zhusen to nab the treasure for themselves...only for them to find out that it's a lute- a weapon for bards that none of them can use.
- In Girl Genius Lady Margarella Selnikov kidnaps a monk and forces him to lead her through the vaults of his monastery, which contain various confiscated mad science inventions. When what's in one vault does not match her guide book, she panics and begins opening all the vaults in an effort to find it, eventually releasing The Beast, which kills her. We later learn she wasn't even in the right vaults to begin with, rendering her death and the damage caused by The Beast all for nothing as far as she was concerned. (Agatha got a great ally out of the mess.)
- In Latchkey Kingdom chapter "Titan", Willa does manage to defeat the Titan... but the reward for doing so was so small, it wouldn't cover the cost of replacing the how-to guide she destroyed in the process.
- Litterbox Comics: In "The Halloween Costume"
, Fran spends the whole night Vincent's requested Halloween costume because she encouraged him to go as one of his Original Characters, but the bonus panel reveals that Vincent's changed his mind about his costume, just when Fran's finally finished his old one.
- Played for laughs in Penny Arcade, where
Gabe had spent months bringing the Sea of Thieves experience to Dungeons & Dragons, painstakingly crafting rules for every aspect of it, only for an RPG of the game to come out. It takes Tycho a few moments to realize why Gabe isn't happy about it.
- Tomboy GF: When Shion's mom Akari recalls the time she met her husband back in high school, the latter was the class rep and tried constantly to get her, a notorious delinquent, to stop skipping school. Then, during a fight with a gang, Shion's dad took a blow to the head for Akari and that inspired her to finally start taking her classes more seriously. However, once she began a relationship with him, she refused to let him use a condom when they started having sex. That resulted in her getting pregnant with Shion and thus dropping out of school, making Shion's dad's efforts to get Akari to stop skipping class ultimately pointless.
- Willowyrm spends "The Nephews" running herself ragged trying to treat Stickywicket's allergic reaction after he eats almonds, which he has a fatal allergy to. At the end, Hummus and Dill - who had spent the story oblivious and wandering around town - reveal they made it up so their mother would let them eat Stickywicket's trail mix.
- The Angry Video Game Nerd goes through a lot of trouble to get the Atari 5200 set up: he tries to plug in the 5200 in the back of his main TV, then realizes that there's no room in the back, so he switches to another TV, but the cable is too short, so he gets an extension cord, then the 5200's adapter box doesn't reach, so he has to move the TV and drops it onto his foot. Finally, he gets the console to start up... and he can't even play any games because the controllers don't work. So he orders a third-party controller, but the plug isn't compatible with his console's ports.
- In the D-Railed Gaming playthrough of Octopath Traveler II, found here
, the uploader fights and defeats the Scourge of the Sea, an Optional Boss on par with the travelers' final bosses, while sailing around and searching for the Nameless Village, the location of Temenos' final chapter. After sailing around and finding some treasure in the area behind the boss, he realizes that there's nowhere to land his ship and he can't get there.How to actually reach the Nameless Village
"Oh, come on. Where's the entrance to this place? Did I just fight that thing for nothing?" - The Death of Russia:
- The reforms put into place by Gorbachev and thought to be solidified by Yeltsin died with the latter in a successful 1993 coup, which throws Russia through its own version of The Yugoslav Wars that result in the nation irreparably shattered. Even worse is Gorbachev surviving his time in NSF (later Fascist) captivity and being bartered off to the West for food and medicine, living to see what his failures had brought.
- Expressed during a "One Soldier’s War in Russia" segment, where a nameless old World War II veteran is captured while trying to desert from the Red Army. The old man cries to Babchenko's commissar that after surviving the Eastern Front and the years of praise he got from it, he simply can't bring himself to shoot at fellow Russians even if they are fascists and bemoans how Russia has been reduced to the state it's in.
Old Veteran: I can’t stand knowing all the work I did, my friends who died, the lives that were lost, that it was all in vain. Moscow is gone. The Fascists run Leningrad after we starved for a thousand days to make sure they’d never have it for one. The Union is gone. Ukraine and Belarus are gone. Even Siberia is gone. Why did we even bother fight Hitler if this was what it would all come to anyway? Why? Why?!
- Dream Shorts: In "Dream Team Stranded On An Island," Sapnap proposes they eat Patches, Dream's cat, so they don't starve. Though he resists at first, Dream eventually relents and lets Patches be killed, only for the team to be rescued mere seconds later.
- The Final Minutes: Zombie Plague eventually culminates in The United States deciding to "sterelize" Australia with nuclear weapons in a last-ditch effort to slow the spread of XMNV. Part Two reveals that these did nothing to slow the spread of XMNV, with Australia's post-devastation emergency broadcast even outright announcing that the strikes failed to wipe out the mutants.
- Heart of Elynthi:
- It is revealed that the ancient warforge found in the Pallitrios ruins was in fact just an automaton made to look like an ancient warforge as part of a death trap for explorers who came to explore the ruins. This upsets Sergi, as that means that his friends who explored the ruins died for nothing and the 'warforge's heart' is completely useless in helping him stop the Blot.
- This is Buck's greatest fear. It is revealed that, due to Buck's obsession of meeting Lady Luck again, he had been abandoning the relationships he made in order to continue search for Lady Luck. Buck is well aware that he basically rendered himself all alone, and that only serves to further push him into finding Lady Luck just to make sure all of this wasn't for nothing (even if it is at the cost of any further relationships he could make, like with the other party members).
- The Minecraft Multiverse makes it extremely clear that any and all attempts to create a monopoly on a Minecraft SMP will be in vain.
- 3rd Life SMP: At the start of the series, in an attempt to gain a monopoly over all the dark oak wood on the server, Grian and Scar spent an hour on Day 1 chopping down a dark oak forest to ensure they'd be the only one with saplings... not knowing that there was a second dark oak forest in a secluded corner of the map, right by Scott and Jimmy's base. When they hear on Day 2 that Scar scammed both Joel and Cleo out of their items by promising them dark oak saplings sometime in the future, they start distributing free dark oak saplings to everyone else out of spite.
- Minecraft SOS: Oli spends his entire 1st episode trying to make a monopoly on cherry trees and petals to scam everyone out of their resources. Within the same episode, the monopoly is broken twice — first by Lizzie bone-mealing the free pink petal sample she was given to obtain infinite petals and dye, then by the Blossom Bandits alliance raiding his supply for saplings, allowing them to grow cherry trees by themselves.
- Minecraft Utopia: Most of Utopia 1's citizens tried hard to protect the city from several threats and achieve their goals. Despite managing to survive the Upside-Down Dimension, defeat Evil Carlin, and being succesful to destroy the aliens' mothership, their efforts were in vain since Luiz got bored with them and just activated hardcore mode, killing most of the players and causing the abandonment of the city.
- The possibility is considered by Gaea in Noob: La Quête Légendaire, where the Cliffhanger from the previous movie could cause a Game Over in the fictional MMORPG in which the story is set. Gaea has just recently accomplished something that took four years of preparation and is hence worried about having it all vanish in just a few days.
- Party Crashers:
- In "The WORST Board in Mario Party 1...
", Nick throws Running of the Bulb to ensure that Sophist receives enough coins to steal a Star via Boo, putting Nick in dead last. This ends being pointless, as Sophist simply steals Nick's coins when he reaches the Boo, overtaking 3rd place through coins.
- In "Mario Party but we added TOO MANY ITEMS
", Brent throws Pair-a-Sailing while teamed up with Nick to ensure that Nick doesn't get the two coins he needs to use the Magic Lamp and purchase a Star. On the very next turn, the last five turns ceremony makes it so Stars are now free, rendering Brent's minigame throw pointless.
- In "The WORST Board in Mario Party 1...
- PBG Hardcore:
- Most series end with the cast failing to achieve their goal as the last men standing are killed off. The only exceptions to date are Minecraft #1, Diablo II, and Minecraft #4.
- In Minecraft #5, Ray, Dean and McJones risk their lives finding Nether Wart, ultimately dying in the process. When Jeff, who eventually becomes the Sole Survivor, tries to make potions in episode 22, he doesn't know how to do so and is unwilling to look it up. So he decides not to bother, rendering the hunt for the Nether Wart pointless.
- shadypenguinn and TheKingNappy's playthrough of Pokémon Trading Card Game has one instance where Nappy sets up his Water types to take a trainer out, only to have him use his Kadabra to win the game.
- Another instance comes up during the battle against Murray, where Nappy gets a huge amount of damage on Murray's Pokemon. When Pokemon Center comes up...
TheKingNappy: "Remove all damage counters from all of your own Pokémon with damage counters on them, then discard all Ener-" WHAT?!
shadypenguinn: That's a broken deck.
TheKingNappy: His Kangaskhan and his Chansey...have 10 damage left before they're knocked out!
shadypenguinn: Wow...
TheKingNappy: And his Snorlax is at over half heath gone. THAT'S LIKE 200 POINTS OF DAMAGE...GONE!
shadypenguinn: That's so broken.
TheKingNappy: (laughs) What?! (Snorlax is healed) Healed 60 from him. (Abra is healed) Healed 20 from Abra. (Chansey is healed) Healed 100 from Chansey.
shadypenguinn: Wow...
TheKingNappy: I mean, they have no Energy. But I was about to- (beat) I have no words! This game hates me! - The Scott The Woz episode "Borderline Forever", which has Scott going on all sorts of adventures in an attempt to break free from the blue border in all of his videos, ends with Scott allowing himself to be contained by the border for good, with the knowledge that everyone else will be spared by it. Lampshaded by one of his friends who tagged along for the ride:
Jerry: THAT GOES AGAINST EVERYTHING WE'VE JUST DONE!!
- In Screen Rant Pitch Meetings, The Producer greenlights Fantastic Four (2015) despite its major problems in large part because it will keep the Fantastic Four out of Marvel's hands for a long time. Cue news article confirming that the Fantastic Four will join the MCU.
- Slimecicle Cinematic Universe: Slimecicle, Bizly, Condi, and Grizzly go through trial after trial trying to beat "The HARDEST Minecraft Difficulty", dealing with much deadlier enemies, unpredictable random events, and even Grizzly undergoing a Face–Heel Turn after being sent to Hell for making Diamond Pickaxes squeaky and single-use, mandating a detour to kill him off for good... only for it to be revealed that Eyes of Ender are now crafted from seeds and tree saplings.
- SpongeBob Conspiracy: Alex talks about how he spent three years in film school, only for him to end up making Spongebob videos.
- Yuro: In Yuro's video on the California, they discuss how the California (at least compared to the Colorado) gave up its essentials (AA fire, less healing, and the main guns struggling against cruisers) for thicker armor. Said armor is useless because of the shape of the California's superstructure that makes it a "shell magnet".
- Retching / dry heaving can often feel like this, especially if you tried to hold it in for some amount of time and made a dramatic dash to the bathroom, potentially causing a scene in front of others to only cough into a toilet a few times.
- Sparta is the Trope Namer for The Spartan Way due to harsh systems meant to make the majority of its male population into unstoppable military badasses. But the result was soldiers who were largely average despite the Training from Hell, and the harshness of those systems led to a steady decline of Spartan men. Sparta even conquered and enslaved another nation to do all the non-military work for them, but slave revolts happened so often that the Spartans frequently had to drop everything to get the slaves back under control. Worst of all was their Crippling Overspecialization with the phalanx — when they tried it against Thebes at the Battle of Leuctra in 371 BC, Thebes put Sparta on the end a Curb-Stomp Battle so bad that the Spartans only escaped because the Thebans let them go. From there, it was all downhill for Sparta. They would be conquered by Macedonia, a military power so strong that Alexander the Great would use it to conquer the known world. When the Spartans lost to one of Alexander the Great's least-competent generals, Alexander would call it "a battle of mice" due to how poorly the Spartans performed. By the time of the Roman Empire, Sparta had been reduced to a tourist attraction, and it ultimately got wiped off the map so effortlessly that it barely qualified as a fight. So all of Sparta's intensive efforts to try and create the best army possible proved fruitless, as they still got wiped out.
- The assassination of Julius Caesar could not have gone any worse for the people who had him killed. Caesar was no saint — the methods to get to the height of his power involved exploiting every weakness the Roman Republic had, along with the Third Servile War
. But Caesar was still a competent leader; and more importantly, he was a popular one. His opponents in the Senate feared Caesar would become king, which he basically already was, since Caesar had been appointed dictator for life. So the senators decided that killing Caesar would restore the Republic to how they believed it should be. Unfortunately for them, Caesar's assassination in 44 BC not only didn't restore the Republic, but it outright accelerated the Republic's demise. Caesar's supporters rallied the furious public against the "liberators" by chasing them out of Rome. Most of the conspirators were hunted down and killed; the few that weren't had already taken their own lives. And the Republic became ruled by kings by another name when Caesar's adopted son Augustus became the first emperor of Rome. So the only thing the "liberators" achieved was killing Caesar himself, but Rome became ruled by a Caesar anyway. And furthermore, Augustus was even more ruthless than his father was, since mercy didn't exactly work out well for his old man. The conspirators came away from the assassination with exactly nothing of what they wanted for Rome, for Caesar's legacy, and for themselves — it remains one of the biggest own goals in political history.
- This trope can be applied to the League of Nations. Created just after World War I by President Woodrow Wilson, it was intended to maintain world peace from then on. But although the League successfully mediated a number of disputes, especially surrounding borders, the opium trade and slavery, the United States never joined the League, much to Wilson's embarrassment. Perhaps not surprisingly, this led to problems for the League in the 1930s. To make a long story short, Germany turned to Adolf Hitler and Those Wacky Nazis, who repeatedly ignored the League's pleas for peace, and in 1939, World War II, which the League was trying to prevent in the first place, had begun.
- King Henry VIII and his attempts to preserve The House of Tudor by having a legitimate son — by any means necessary. His efforts included separating England from the Catholic Church and forming the Church of England just so he could get an annulment from his first wife Catherine of Aragon in order to marry his mistress Anne Boleyn (causing centuries of religious strife in the process), then executing Anne three years later on trumped up charges just because she couldn't give him a son fast enough, and then the Death by Childbirth of Anne's successor Jane Seymour. Henry's actions ended up condemning the Tudor dynasty for good, as Jane's son Edward was Delicate and Sickly and died at age 15 without any heirs of his own, and neither of his daughters, Mary Tudor and Elizabeth I had any children partly because of his behavior towards them and their mothers. Henry's obsession with continuing his dynasty with a male heir meant that he prevented Mary from marrying (and thus having kids who could potentially start a Succession Crisis with said male heir) until after he'd died and she'd ascended to the throne, and by that point she was 38 and past her biological prime. Mary died childess at the age of 42. Elizabeth, on the other hand, rejected the idea of marriage out of hand, both because Henry kinda soured her on it by killing her mum and Henry's clear preference for a male heir made it very clear to her that if she did marry, she would lose all her power in favor of her husband. And while Elizabeth had a long and prosperous reign, she ultimately died childless at age 69. The throne then passed to the The House of Stuart, descendants of Henry VIII's older sister Margaret.
- Rudolf Hess, Hitler's deputy leader,note found out about Operation Barbarossa in 1941, and became concerned that Germany could not feasibly fight a war on two fronts. He had heard through his contacts that there was enough desire for peace in Britain that King George VI would dismiss Winston Churchill's government and give the Prime Minister's job to Lord Halifax — who had nearly become PM in Churchill's place the previous year and was known to be more open to negotiating with Hitler — should Germany make an acceptable offer, and that the Duke of Hamilton would be a good person to serve as an intermediary. Hess therefore flew to Britain on a self-assigned peace mission, but evading radar caused him to use up all of his fuel and crash before he could find a safe landing spot. When he was caught, he was arrested and informed by the British authorities that Hitler had publicly disavowed him and sentenced him to death for treason, meaning he had no entitlement to diplomatic immunity, and would be executed if he returned to Germany. Worst of all, the underlying rationale for his mission had been wrong on nearly every count; Hamilton was not (and never had been) in favour of negotiating with Hitler, the general population were just as opposed to any peace agreement that favoured Germany, and Halifax was in no position to form a government even had anyone wanted him to, having been sent to Washington, D.C. to serve as ambassador. Operation Barbarossa went ahead anyway, and was just as much of a disaster as Hess had feared; his actions would probably have made it even worse if not for Stalin stubbornly refusing to believe warnings from his advisors that the only reason Hess could possibly have had for wanting to make peace with Britain would be if Hitler needed the troops to attack the Soviets.
- The Vietnam War is one of the prime examples of this tropes in real life, at least in the Anglosphere. After nearly a decade of deploying troops to fight in Vietnam and nearly twenty years of supporting the South, the North Vietnamese eventually won out. This is doubly so in the sense that the official reason for fighting the war in the first place was to hold back the tide of communism that geopolitical experts at the time believed would spread if Saigon fell. However, in the end, not only would the now-reunified Vietnam end up fighting other communist states (first Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, and then later China) but would also become trade partners and unofficial allies with the U.S. despite their nominal ideological difference.
- This trope applies to the 2001-2021 Afghanistan war very well. After 9/11, the United States and NATO invaded Afghanistan to topple the Taliban government, which was on good terms with al-Qaeda. What followed was an almost twenty year-long nation-building mission with the aims of combatting the Taliban and implementing democracy in a previously totalitarian Afghanistan. These efforts proved to be very difficult, given widespread corruption, poor training among the Afghan military and apathy towards the idea of democracy among the populace. It was gradually deemed an unwinnable war, and the U.S. and NATO eventually began withdrawing troops after the Donald Trump administration negotiated a peace agreement with the Taliban. When President Joe Biden pulled America out of the war once and for all in 2021, everything that the U.S. and NATO worked for in twenty years was put to an end in just ten days. The Taliban launched a massive offensive and recaptured key provinces and, eventually, secured Kabul, putting them back in control of nearly all of Afghanistan as terrified Afghan civilians fled to the airport to escape alongside withdrawing Americans. It drew many comparisons to the Fall of Saigon. Cracks began to show in the Taliban shortly thereafter, and republican rebels began combatting them, but the Taliban still maintain strong control over practically all of Afghanistan and the previous coalition nations, exhausted from twenty years of war, have maintained neutrality. The U.S. is even alleged to have provided limited support to the Taliban in efforts to combat ISIS. However, rumors have surfaced that the Taliban were willing to send athletes to compete in the 2024 Summer Olympics, the first since they returned to power in Afghanistan, indicating they are willing to be more diplomatic and negotiable compared to their previous regime before 9/11.
- There's also the matter of the American Civil War. Eleven states seceded from the United States to protect their rights to slavery, forming the Confederate States of America, but after four bloody years, the Confederacy was doomed to fail at gaining independent sovereignty from the Union. Europe had no need to support the Confederacy as We Have Reserves in terms of the exports they got from the South from other sources to keep them sustained, the Union's industry was more efficient compared to the Confederacy having relied on King Cotton alone to support them, and the use of clever tactics by Lincoln, such as the Anaconda Plan, made it so when Lee was surrounded after losing Richmond, he agreed to surrender to Grant, so the Confederacy was dissolved, their slavery rights abolished, and the rebel states readmitted to the U.S. to make the country whole again, but not without the consequences that followed with the Reconstruction period to rebuild everything that was destroyed during the war, including several cities/state capitols.
- This would be repeated 100 years later when many Southern States tried to preserve segregation - famously Alabama Governor George Wallace tried to block the integration of the University of Alabama and Governor Orval Fabous tried to block the "Little Rock Nine" from enrolling in an Arkansas school. Both moments were the last gasps of the Jim Crow era south as the Civil Rights Movement gained momentum. Despite the riots, police brutality and the assination of Martin Luther King Jr., segregation would lose in the court of law and the court of public opinion. Despite the efforts of Southern politicans, Jim Crow laws would be repealed and their actions and their era would be Condemned by History.
- The infamous November 2000 Millennium Dome diamond robbery would have been this for the thieves in the (unlikely) event they had succeeded. De Beers had replaced the diamonds with fakes a month earlier so all that effort would only have net them a few pieces of glass.
- On De Beers end they had spent £56,000 on an armoured display case which was then defeated by...a 200 pound nail gun. If the cops hadn't been on the ball De Beers would have lost their diamonds.
- True for many a heist gone wrong. The Great Train Robbery of 1963 ended with the gang in jail for decades and while the money wasn't recovered they certainly never got to enjoy their ill-gotten gains. The only major exception was Ronnie Biggs, who escaped from jail after 15 months, and even then he had to use nearly all of his share of the money to escape the country and purchase a new life and identity in Australia and then Brazil.
- This is, at least according to Nihilism, what everything is eventually going to boil down to: Everything everyone's accomplished, everything everyone's done, every hardship conquered, every triumph enjoyed, every tragedy suffered, they are all going to be for nothing once you die. If not when you die, then when everyone has died and there are no humans left. If not when there are no humans left, then when everything has died and there is no life left. If not when there is no life left, then when the Natural End of Time comes along and reduces everything to inert molecular dust forever trapped in entropic stasis
