
Made of Iron counts as a subtrope of Plot Armor, while Slap-on-the-Wrist Nuke doesn't. The latter involves the weapon being underwhelming, yet still powerful the former involves the target being unusually sturdy, but not quite Nigh Invulnerable. note Made of Iron should not be confused with Slap-on-the-Wrist Nuke. Made of Iron: Enemy attacks are effective, but not quite as much as you'd expect.Iron Butt Monkey: A character repeatedly survives various improbable tortures just to be laughed at because he or she is a Butt-Monkey.Immune to Slapstick: A character never gets hurt by a gag.Distress Ball: A character's level of danger increases, but his odds of surviving it increase even more, to get him to the scripted rescue or resolution.(If this features in the story, ensure there is a good reason for it.) Hitler's Time Travel Exemption Act: Hitler has unbreakable Plot Armor, to the point where any timey-wimey attempt to assassinate him will either fail or make things even worse.Joker Immunity: Plot-mandated protection given to a particularly series-defining recurring villain.Contractual Boss Immunity: The same thing but for major villains.It is suspended when the Hero Killer is present and it is the main reason the Imperial Stormtrooper Marksmanship Academy is still in business (along with a handful of other tropes). Typically absent in episodes involving an Expendable Alternate Universe, Time Travel, or any other guaranteed- Reset Button situation. And his inability to prevent his own death may seem just as illogical as his ability to avoid it was forty pages ago, but alas, the plot gods giveth and the plot gods taketh away. The downside to all this, of course, is that when it is Bob's time to die, nothing can save him.
#Dmpc pro couldnt read game file movie#
When Indiana Jones survives the same thing, that's Plot Armor - the only explanation for his survival is that it's only halfway through the movie and you know he can't die yet. When Superman takes a bullet to the eye and survives, that's his superhuman nature - there's an explanation, albeit a fantastic one, for how he comes out unharmed. If only one person is going to survive the story, that person has to be Bob for there to be a story.īear in mind that having Plot Armor is not the same as being Nigh Invulnerable.

note A typical explanation is that Bob survived through sheer luck on the basis of the Anthropic Principle. Therefore, whenever Bob is in a situation where he could be killed (or at the least very seriously injured), he comes out unharmed with no logical, In-Universe explanation. Sometimes referred to as "Script Immunity" or a "Character Shield", Plot Armor is when a main character's life and health are safeguarded by the fact that he's the one person who can't be removed from the story.
