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* WhatTheHellHero: A lot of characters, especially during ''War Crimes'', was more or less people calling Batman out on his assholeishness.

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* WhatTheHellHero: A lot of characters, especially during ''War Crimes'', was were more or less people calling Batman out on his assholeishness.
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* EndOfAnEra: Meta example. While there have been [[BatFamilyCrossover Bat Family Crossovers]] aplenty since 2004, ''War Games'' remains (as of early 2023) the last traditional event to cycle through nearly each and every Bat title as part of a linear multi-book narrative. Following ''War Games'' (and possibly in response to it), the Bat books underwent an editorial shift. They've since opted for smaller scale crossovers (ex. ''The Resurrection of Ra's al Ghul'', ''Night of the Monster Men'', ''Shadow War''), or crossovers with the core storyline taking place in the pages of ''Batman'' and the tie-in books weaving in and out of it's narrative (ex. ''Night of the Owls'', ''Death of the Family'', ''Joker War'', ''Fear State'').

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* EndOfAnEra: Meta example. While there have been [[BatFamilyCrossover Bat Family Crossovers]] aplenty since 2004, ''War Games'' remains (as of early 2023) the last traditional event to cycle through nearly each and every Bat title as part of a linear multi-book narrative. Following ''War Games'' (and possibly in response to it), the Bat books underwent an editorial shift. They've have since opted for smaller scale crossovers (ex. ''The Resurrection of Ra's al Ghul'', ''Night of the Monster Men'', ''Shadow War''), or crossovers with the core storyline taking place in the pages of ''Batman'' and the tie-in books weaving in and out of it's the narrative (ex. ''Night of the Owls'', ''Death of the Family'', ''Joker War'', ''Fear State'').
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* EndOfAnEra: Meta example. While there have been [[BatFamilyCrossover Bat Family Crossovers] aplenty since 2004, as of 2023 ''War Games'' remains the last traditional one to cycle through nearly each and every Bat title as part of a linear multi-book narrative. Following this event (and possibly in response to it), the Bat books have since opted for smaller scale crossovers (ex. ''The Ressurection of Ra's al Ghul'', ''Night of the Monster Men'', ''Shadow War'', etc.), or crossovers with the core storyline taking place in ''Batman'' and the tie-in books weaving in and out of it (ex. ''Night of the Owls'', ''Death of the Family'', ''Joker War'', ''Fear State'', etc.).

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* EndOfAnEra: Meta example. While there have been [[BatFamilyCrossover Bat Family Crossovers] Crossovers]] aplenty since 2004, as of 2023 ''War Games'' remains (as of early 2023) the last traditional one event to cycle through nearly each and every Bat title as part of a linear multi-book narrative. Following this event ''War Games'' (and possibly in response to it), the Bat books have underwent an editorial shift. They've since opted for smaller scale crossovers (ex. ''The Ressurection Resurrection of Ra's al Ghul'', ''Night of the Monster Men'', ''Shadow War'', etc.), War''), or crossovers with the core storyline taking place in the pages of ''Batman'' and the tie-in books weaving in and out of it it's narrative (ex. ''Night of the Owls'', ''Death of the Family'', ''Joker War'', ''Fear State'', etc.).State'').
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* EndOfAnEra: Meta example. While there have been [[BatFamilyCrossover Bat Family Crossovers] aplenty since 2004, as of 2023 ''War Games'' remains the last traditional one to cycle through nearly each and every Bat title as part of a linear multi-book narrative. Following this event (and possibly in response to it), the Bat books have since opted for smaller scale crossovers (ex. ''The Ressurection of Ra's al Ghul'', ''Night of the Monster Men'', ''Shadow War'', etc.), or crossovers with the core storyline taking place in ''Batman'' and the tie-in books weaving in and out of it (ex. ''Night of the Owls'', ''Death of the Family'', ''Joker War'', ''Fear State'', etc.).
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* HesBack: Tim winds up retaking the Robin mantle after his school is taken hostage by Russian mob goons and [[MafiaPrincess Darla]] is killed.


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* LockedOutOfTheLoop: Batman not telling Steph about Matches Malone is seen as this by Selina, regardless of her having been a Robin for about 15 minutes.
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Stephanie's reaction to finding out the truth.
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* OhCrap: This is basically Selina's reaction when she learns what Stephanie did and why the plan failed, realising that the whole plan hinged on the idea that Matches Malone would be present at the gang meeting to take control when Batman didn't know about said meeting to play his part.
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* CorruptedContingency: After Bruce fires her from being Robin, Stephanie Brown tries to prove herself to him by stealing and executing one of his plans to take down Gotham's underworld. Unfortunately, this plan relies on the presence of Matches Malone, who unbeknownst to Stephanie is an alias of Bruce Wayne. The plan quickly spins out of control and results in a citywide gang war.
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Stuffed Into The Fridge is now a Fan Speak disambiguation


* StuffedInTheFridge: An infamous example with Stephanie Brown's torture at the hands of Black Mask.
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* PoorCommunicationKills: If Batman told Steph about his Matches Malone alter ego, something he'd have no reason to keep from her, none of this would have happened.
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/batman_war_games_act_1_tp.jpg]]
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This story is not to be confused with the film ''Film/WarGames'', which is a lot better than this.

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This story is not to be confused with the film ''Film/WarGames'', which is a lot better than this.
''Film/WarGames''.
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* ReplacementScrappy: InUniverse as Batman had no use of her outside of his Gambit and when she showed up in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans'', they didn't want her around, especially Tim's best friend ComicBook/{{Superboy}}.

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* ReplacementScrappy: Steph is this InUniverse as Batman had no use of her outside of his Gambit and when she showed up in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans'', they didn't want her around, especially Tim's best friend ComicBook/{{Superboy}}.
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Status Quo redirects to a band not a trope.


The storyline is quite infamous for its [[StuffedInTheFridge flagrant abuse]] towards Stephanie Brown, who was heavily disliked within the Batman editorial group despite being beloved by the fandom. The StatusQuo caused by this story would last for two years and the events of ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'', with Stephanie Brown returning just in time for ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis''. When it was released in trade paperback form, the storyline was split up into three parts: ''War Drums'', ''War Games'' and ''War Crimes''.

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The storyline is quite infamous for its [[StuffedInTheFridge flagrant abuse]] towards Stephanie Brown, who was heavily disliked within the Batman editorial group despite being beloved by the fandom. The StatusQuo Status Quo caused by this story would last for two years and the events of ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'', with Stephanie Brown returning just in time for ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis''. When it was released in trade paperback form, the storyline was split up into three parts: ''War Drums'', ''War Games'' and ''War Crimes''.
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character derailment is a Flame Bait


The storyline is quite infamous for its [[StuffedInTheFridge flagrant abuse]] towards Stephanie Brown, who was heavily disliked within the Batman editorial group despite being beloved by the fandom. It is also infamous for the heavy CharacterDerailment of beloved mainstay Dr. Leslie Thompkins. The StatusQuo caused by this story would last for two years and the events of ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'', with Stephanie Brown returning just in time for ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis''. When it was released in trade paperback form, the storyline was split up into three parts: ''War Drums'', ''War Games'' and ''War Crimes''.

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The storyline is quite infamous for its [[StuffedInTheFridge flagrant abuse]] towards Stephanie Brown, who was heavily disliked within the Batman editorial group despite being beloved by the fandom. It is also infamous for the heavy CharacterDerailment of beloved mainstay Dr. Leslie Thompkins. The StatusQuo caused by this story would last for two years and the events of ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'', with Stephanie Brown returning just in time for ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis''. When it was released in trade paperback form, the storyline was split up into three parts: ''War Drums'', ''War Games'' and ''War Crimes''.

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* CharacterDerailment: One of the worst examples here concerning Leslie Thompkins, [[spoiler:who purposely lets Stephanie die of her wounds to teach Batman a lesson.]]
* InspirationalMatyr:

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* CharacterDerailment: One of the worst examples here concerning Leslie Thompkins, [[spoiler:who purposely lets Stephanie die of her wounds to teach Batman a lesson.]]
* InspirationalMatyr:
InspirationalMartyr:
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''War Games'' was a BatFamilyCrossover released in 2004 that ran through virtually every ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'' title at the time.

The entire plot started off as a JerkAss BatmanGambit. Jack Drake, father of the third ComicBook/{{Robin}} Tim Drake, had learned his son was Robin and deduced that Bruce Wayne was Batman. Furious, Jack threatened the two with a shotgun, forcing Tim to retire as Robin or he'd reveal Bruce's secret. Tim, however, took becoming a civilian again quite well, but this didn't satisfy his on-again-off-again girlfriend, Stephanie Brown, alias The Spoiler. Determined to prove her worth, she broke into the Batcave with a homemade Robin costume and demanded to take over. Batman, however, saw things differently. He made her Robin on the condition she was fired if she ever broke a rule, but it was a ploy to get Tim back into the costume, either out of jealousy or fear. Tim didn't take the bait and Steph was fired for breaking a rule that actually saved his life. However, Steph wasn't ready to give up. Breaking back into the Batcave, she stole a plan that would gather the gangs of Gotham under the control of one Matches Malone. What she didn't know was that Matches was actually one of Batman's aliases and when the gathered gangs got nervous, they began firing on each other. The resulting massacre left a power vacuum that everyone wanted a piece of...

The storyline is quite infamous for its [[StuffedInTheFridge flagrant abuse]] towards Stephanie Brown, who was heavily disliked within the Batman editorial group despite being beloved by the fandom. It is also infamous for the heavy CharacterDerailment of beloved mainstay Dr. Leslie Thompkins. The StatusQuo caused by this story would last for two years and the events of ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'', with Stephanie Brown returning just in time for ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis''. When it was released in trade paperback form, the storyline was split up into three parts: ''War Drums'', ''War Games'' and ''War Crimes''.

This story is not to be confused with the film ''Film/WarGames'', which is a lot better than this.

!!The story provides examples of the following:
* AnyoneCanDie: Outside of Stephanie Brown, a few named people were killed, though they were more along the lines of CListFodder.
* TheBadGuyWins: [[spoiler:Black Mask ends up filling in the vacuum, murdering one vigilante and nearly killing a second]].
* BatmanGambit: The story kicks off because of two of these that failed.
* CharacterDerailment: One of the worst examples here concerning Leslie Thompkins, [[spoiler:who purposely lets Stephanie die of her wounds to teach Batman a lesson.]]
* InspirationalMatyr:
** When [[spoiler:the vigilante Orpheus is killed by the Black Mask]], another vigilante, Onyx, takes over his gang and unites others in keeping the Black Mask's gang in check.
** [[spoiler:Leslie Thompkins does this with Stephanie Brown to teach Batman a lesson. This is thankfully retconned.]]
* NothingIsTheSameAnymore: The status quo here is changed up due to events here, leading to virtually every vigilante besides Batman leaving Gotham, either because he said so or because they were pissed off at him, vigilantes being banned from Gotham and a whole new gang powerhouse in charge.
* {{Retcon}}: [[spoiler:Whoo, boy, Steph's death is this. It's first implied that Batman kept her back from getting medical treatment, allowing her to die. It's then changed that Leslie Thompkin's purposely withheld treatment to teach Batman a lesson. Years later, it's revealed that Steph never died and was FakingTheDead to protect her from Black Mask.]]
* ReplacementScrappy: InUniverse as Batman had no use of her outside of his Gambit and when she showed up in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans'', they didn't want her around, especially Tim's best friend ComicBook/{{Superboy}}.
* StormingTheCastle: Oracle's Watchtower is invaded and destroyed near the end.
* StuffedInTheFridge: An infamous example with Stephanie Brown's torture at the hands of Black Mask.
* WhatTheHellHero: A lot of characters, especially during ''War Crimes'', was more or less people calling Batman out on his assholeishness.

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