URL | http://tvtropes.org/ |
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Commercial? | Ad-supported |
Type of site | Wiki |
Registration | Required to edit |
Available language(s) | English, German (translation occurring slowly in French, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, Norwegian, Finnish, Danish, Swedish, Italian, Esperanto, Quenya and more) |
Launched | April 2004 |
Current status | Active |
TV Tropes, also known as Television Tropes and Idioms, is a wiki[1] which collects and expands on various conventions and devices (tropes) found within creative works. Since its establishment in 2004, the site has gone from covering only television and film tropes to also covering those in a number of other media such as literature, comics, video-games, and even things such as advertisements and toys.[2][3] It is known for approaching topics in a casual tone[4] — cyberpunk author Bruce Sterling once described its style as a "wry fanfic analysis."[5]
TV Tropes found its beginning with an initial focus on the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer,[1] and has since increased its scope to include thousands of other series, films, novels, plays, video games, anime, manga, comic strips and books, fan fiction, and other subjects, including Internet works such as Wikipedia, which is referred to in-wiki as "The Other Wiki".[6] TV Tropes does not have notability standards for its content, as it declares on the Main Page.[7]
The site includes entries on various series and tropes. An article on a work includes a brief summary of the work in question along with a list of associated tropes. In addition to the tropes, most articles about a work also have a "Your Mileage May Vary"[8] page with items that are deemed to be subjective. These items are not storytelling tropes, but audience reactions which have been defined and titled.
Trope pages are the inverse: after describing the trope itself, it lists the trope's appearance in various works of media. Trope pages are generally created through a standardized launching system, known as "You Know, That Thing Where...", in which other site members, who are referred to as "tropers", have the option of providing examples or suggesting refinements.
Considerable redesign of some aspects of content organization occurred in 2008, such as the introduction of namespaces, while 2009 saw the arrival of other languages, of which German is the most developed. In 2011, TV Tropes branched out into video production, and launched Echo Chamber, a web series about a TV Tropes vlogger explaining and demonstrating tropes.[9]
Use of TV Tropes teaches the user to analyze and dissect works of media. An unanticipated side effect is causing readers to become jaded and cynical about consuming media, "[replacing] surprise almost entirely with recognition".[10] This is referred to on the site as "TV Tropes Will Ruin Your Life", referring to the inability to consume media without identifying each trope as it occurs.
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