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Spelling/grammar fix(es), General clarification on work content


* ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'' pulls this with Kingseeker Frampt and Darkstalker Kaathe. Frampt says your destiny is to succeed Gwyn while Kaathe says it's to replace him. While either option at the end is ''technically'' true, succeeding Gwyn requires burning yourself alive as fuel for the Kiln of the First Flame and replacing him means taking up the mantle of the Dark Lord for the Age of Dark, despite the fact that Kaathe's guidance is what led to the destruction of New Londo to begin with. As a result, you can't honestly trust what either of the serpents is telling you to be true, [[ButThouMust yet you have to make a choice between which version of your "destiny" you're willing to believe in]].

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* ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'' pulls this with Kingseeker Frampt and Darkstalker Kaathe. Frampt says your destiny is to succeed Gwyn while Kaathe says it's to replace him. While either option at the end is ''technically'' true, succeeding Gwyn requires burning yourself alive as fuel for the Kiln of the First Flame and replacing him means taking up the mantle of the Dark Lord for the Age of Dark, despite the fact that Kaathe's guidance is what led to the destruction of New Londo (and, implicitly, Oolacile) to begin with. As a result, you can't honestly trust what either of the serpents is telling you to be true, [[ButThouMust yet you have to make a choice between which version of your "destiny" you're willing to believe in]].



* In ''VideoGame/HorizonZeroDawn'', the Nora tribe believe that their goddess, the All Mother, had created humanity, and saved them from the metal devils. They're right in a sense. [[spoiler:Its revealed that humanity was wiped out by the metal devils, when the robots went out of control in an event called the Faro Plague, and Gaia was created to create a virus that would shut down them down, and would rebuild the destroyed world with machines, and repopulate it with cloned humans.]]

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* In ''VideoGame/HorizonZeroDawn'', the Nora tribe believe that their goddess, the All Mother, All-Mother, had created humanity, and saved them from the metal devils. They're right in a sense. [[spoiler:Its [[spoiler:It's revealed that humanity was wiped out by the metal devils, when the robots went out of control in an event called the Faro Plague, and Gaia was created to create a virus that would shut down them down, and would rebuild the destroyed world with machines, and repopulate it with cloned humans.humans. One of the cloning facilities, in Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado, was eventually named the All-Mother by the Nora.]]
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* In the leadup to ''VideoGame/BatmanArkhamKnight'', Rocksteady claimed the titular Knight was designed "from the ground up" as a brand new villain who Batman has never fought before, which is true, [[spoiler: because the Knight usually goes by [[Characters/BatmanJasonTodd Red Hood]]]].
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* A rare positive version courtesy of ''VideoGame/AnotherCenturysEpisode'': When it was announced that the UsefulNotes/PlayStation3 installment would be limited to three [[HumongousMecha mecha]] per series, fans were upset - until the game's director posted on his blog, revealing that [[MidSeasonUpgrade Mid-Season Upgrades]] and {{Mecha Expansion Pack}}s would fall under the heading of their base machine and therefore only count as one, meaning they can fit in more playable while still maintaining the whole "three per series" idea.

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* A rare positive version courtesy of ''VideoGame/AnotherCenturysEpisode'': When it was announced that the UsefulNotes/PlayStation3 Platform/PlayStation3 installment would be limited to three [[HumongousMecha mecha]] per series, fans were upset - until the game's director posted on his blog, revealing that [[MidSeasonUpgrade Mid-Season Upgrades]] and {{Mecha Expansion Pack}}s would fall under the heading of their base machine and therefore only count as one, meaning they can fit in more playable while still maintaining the whole "three per series" idea.

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* ''VideoGame/FireEmblemThreeHouses'' has plenty of exposition that is technically true, but framed very differently, in large part because which house's story route you're on can drastically change what information is available to the characters. For example, in most routes, Seteth will claim [[spoiler:Edelgard took the Imperial throne in a bloodless coup]]. This isn't wrong, but playing that character's route will reveal [[spoiler:Edelgard politely asked her terminally ill father to hand over power, which he did willingly; Edelgard then promptly arrested any dissidents because she's acutely aware how little she could trust her own court, hence the "coup" rumor]].
** This crops up with respect to historical events as well, largely because [[spoiler:Seiros has been massaging the truth of the War Of Heroes and Crests to protect the last few Nabateans. To make matters worse, the only other source of information on events back then, "those who slither in the dark", do the same, but they're intentionally deceptive.]] For example, Edelgard states on her route that the Heroes' Relics are not gifts from the Goddess and were made by human hands. This is true, but it leaves out one very big detail that is only revealed on the Golden Deer route: [[spoiler: the Relics were made from ''the bones of the Nabateans'', who were massacred entirely for this purpose, and the humans who created them were backed by "those who slither in the dark".]]

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* ''VideoGame/FireEmblemThreeHouses'' has plenty of exposition that is technically true, but framed very differently, in large part because which house's story route you're on can drastically change what information is available to the characters. For example, in characters.
** In
most routes, Seteth will claim [[spoiler:Edelgard took the Imperial throne in a bloodless coup]]. This isn't wrong, but playing that character's route will reveal [[spoiler:Edelgard politely asked her terminally ill father to hand over power, which he did willingly; Edelgard then promptly arrested any dissidents because she's acutely aware how little she could trust her own court, hence the "coup" rumor]].
** This crops up with respect to historical events as well, largely because [[spoiler:Seiros has been massaging the truth of the War Of Heroes and Crests to protect the last few Nabateans. Children of the Goddess. To make matters worse, the only other source of information on events back then, "those those who slither in the dark", dark, do the same, but they're intentionally deceptive.]] For example, Edelgard states on her route the secret route, the Flame Emperor tells the player that the Heroes' Relics are not gifts from the Goddess and were made by human hands. This is true, but it leaves out one very big detail that is only revealed on the Golden Deer route: [[spoiler: the Relics were made from ''the bones of the Nabateans'', Children of the Goddess'', who were massacred entirely for this purpose, and the humans who created them were backed by "those those who slither in the dark".dark.]]
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Renamed trope


** In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'', one of Vivec's stories of his involvement in the death of Nerevar indicates that the official Temple stance of it not being his fault is a ''literal'' HalfTruth: Vehk the God was not to blame, but Vehk the Mortal is. Since Vivec ("V'vehk") is [[MindScrew both of those]]...

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** In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'', one of Vivec's stories of his involvement in the death of Nerevar indicates that the official Temple stance of it not being his fault is a ''literal'' HalfTruth: half-truth: Vehk the God was not to blame, but Vehk the Mortal is. Since Vivec ("V'vehk") is [[MindScrew both of those]]...
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* In ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'' canon, CuteWitch Marisa Kirisame notoriously steals books from the Scarlet Devil Mansion's library. She claims it's not stealing because all the inhabitants of the Scarlet Devil Mansion are youkai, who will live many times longer than her, and they can simply take the books back when she dies. She calls it "borrowing without permission". Luckily, the Youkai don't mind; or at least; don't mind beyond mind-boggling BulletHell duels, but that's the standard operating procedure. It's also worth pointing out that while Marisa claims the youkai can have their books back when her human life ends, in some games' backstories it's mentioned that she's working on an Elixer of Life, to prolong her life ''without losing her humanity''. Trust Marisa to pair a Metaphorically True with LoopholeAbuse.

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* In ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'' ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' canon, CuteWitch Marisa Kirisame notoriously steals books from the Scarlet Devil Mansion's library. She claims it's not stealing because all the inhabitants of the Scarlet Devil Mansion are youkai, who will live many times longer than her, and they can simply take the books back when she dies. She calls it "borrowing without permission". Luckily, the Youkai don't mind; or at least; don't mind beyond mind-boggling BulletHell duels, but that's the standard operating procedure. It's also worth pointing out that while Marisa claims the youkai can have their books back when her human life ends, in some games' backstories it's mentioned that she's working on an Elixer of Life, to prolong her life ''without losing her humanity''. Trust Marisa to pair a Metaphorically True with LoopholeAbuse.



* A rare positive version courtesy of ''VideoGame/AnotherCenturysEpisode'': When it was announced that the UsefulNotes/PlayStation3 installment would be limited to three [[HumongousMecha mecha]] per series, fans were upset - until the game's director posted on his blog, revealing that [[MidSeasonUpgrade Mid-Season Upgrades]] and [[MechaExpansionPack Mecha Expansion Packs]] would fall under the heading of their base machine and therefore only count as one, meaning they can fit in more playable while still maintaining the whole "three per series" idea.
* ''Videogame/CastlevaniaOrderOfEcclesia'' has Death's Ring, which massively increases your stats and whose description is "One hit kills instantly." It is indeed true. Take one hit and ''you'' will instantly die.

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* A rare positive version courtesy of ''VideoGame/AnotherCenturysEpisode'': When it was announced that the UsefulNotes/PlayStation3 installment would be limited to three [[HumongousMecha mecha]] per series, fans were upset - until the game's director posted on his blog, revealing that [[MidSeasonUpgrade Mid-Season Upgrades]] and [[MechaExpansionPack Mecha {{Mecha Expansion Packs]] Pack}}s would fall under the heading of their base machine and therefore only count as one, meaning they can fit in more playable while still maintaining the whole "three per series" idea.
* ''Videogame/CastlevaniaOrderOfEcclesia'' ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaOrderOfEcclesia'' has Death's Ring, which massively increases your stats and whose description is "One hit kills instantly." It is indeed true. Take one hit and ''you'' will instantly die.



* ''Videogame/FallenLondon'' may require your character to partake in this, with enough frequency that it even has its own stat, which handily provides a name for the capacity to "mislead the listener without a single false word": Mithridacy. The skill also covers ''spotting'' these misdirections when they're thrown at you.

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* ''Videogame/FallenLondon'' ''VideoGame/FallenLondon'' may require your character to partake in this, with enough frequency that it even has its own stat, which handily provides a name for the capacity to "mislead the listener without a single false word": Mithridacy. The skill also covers ''spotting'' these misdirections when they're thrown at you.
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* The Check text for the final boss of the Genocide run in ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'', [[spoiler:Sans, describes him as "the easiest enemy" who can only deal 1 point of damage and has 1 HP. While this is literally true, it greatly understates the problems his boss fight entails. For the former, Sans' attacks hit every frame, thereby bypassing MercyInvincibility, meaning that he hits for 1 damage ''thirty times per second'' and also applies a stacking DamageOverTime effect with every hit. For the latter, Sans is the only foe in the game who ''[[NonchalantDodge dodges your attacks]]''. All things combined, he is ''[[ThatOneBoss the]]'' single hardest boss in the game [[SNKBoss by a wide margin]]]].

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* The Check text for the final boss of the Genocide run in ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'', [[spoiler:Sans, describes him as "the easiest enemy" who can only deal 1 point of damage and has 1 HP. While this is literally true, it greatly understates the problems his boss fight entails. For the former, Sans' attacks hit every frame, thereby bypassing MercyInvincibility, meaning that he hits for 1 damage ''thirty times per second'' and also applies a stacking DamageOverTime effect with every hit. For the latter, Sans is the only foe in the game who ''[[NonchalantDodge dodges your attacks]]''. All things combined, he is ''[[ThatOneBoss the]]'' single hardest boss in the game [[SNKBoss by a wide margin]]]]. The statements that he can't dodge forever, and to keep attacking are both true, but quite misleading.
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Disregard that last reason, it was the right name, just wrong phrasing.


* At the end of ''VideoGame/SlyCooperAndTheThieviusRaccoonus'', when Sly defeats the BigBad, Clockwerk, his LastWords to Sly,''"Cooper! You will never be rid of me! Clockwerk is... Superior!!!"'', are mainly just that, until the [[VideoGame/Sly2BandOfThieves sequel]]. [[spoiler:Clockwerk, (or rather, his lifeless body frame piloted by a [[HijackedByGanon hate-filled Neyla]]) ends up collapsing on Bentley and as a result, paralyzes him. In the end, his final words become true as now Sly has to be reminded of him every time he looks at his friend who's now confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life.]]

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* At the end of ''VideoGame/SlyCooperAndTheThieviusRaccoonus'', when Sly defeats the BigBad, Clockwerk, his LastWords to Sly,''"Cooper! You will never be rid of me! Clockwerk is... Superior!!!"'', are mainly just that, until the [[VideoGame/Sly2BandOfThieves sequel]]. [[spoiler:Clockwerk, (or rather, his lifeless body frame piloted by a [[HijackedByGanon [[HijackingCthulhu hate-filled Neyla]]) ends up collapsing on Bentley and as a result, paralyzes him. In the end, his final words become true as now Sly has to be reminded of him every time he looks at his friend who's now confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life.]]
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Wrong name.


* At the end of ''VideoGame/SlyCooperAndTheThieviusRaccoonus'', when Sly defeats the BigBad, Clockwerk, his LastWords to Sly,''"Cooper! You will never be rid of me! Clockwerk is... Superior!!!"'', are mainly just that, until the [[VideoGame/Sly2BandOfThieves sequel]]. [[spoiler:Clockwerk, (or rather, his lifeless body frame piloted by a [[HijackedByCthullu hate-filled Neyla]]) ends up collapsing on Bentley and as a result, paralyzes him. In the end, his final words become true as now Sly has to be reminded of him every time he looks at his friend who's now confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life.]]

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* At the end of ''VideoGame/SlyCooperAndTheThieviusRaccoonus'', when Sly defeats the BigBad, Clockwerk, his LastWords to Sly,''"Cooper! You will never be rid of me! Clockwerk is... Superior!!!"'', are mainly just that, until the [[VideoGame/Sly2BandOfThieves sequel]]. [[spoiler:Clockwerk, (or rather, his lifeless body frame piloted by a [[HijackedByCthullu [[HijackedByGanon hate-filled Neyla]]) ends up collapsing on Bentley and as a result, paralyzes him. In the end, his final words become true as now Sly has to be reminded of him every time he looks at his friend who's now confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life.]]
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* In ''VideoGame/{{Hades}}'', [[LargeHam Theseus]] refers to Zagreus as a demon spawned from the lowest depths of hell, which Zagreus [[LampshadeHanging comments is not untrue]]. Zagreus is the son of Hades and was born in the House of Hades, located in Tartarus.
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* In ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'' canon, CuteWitch Marisa Kirisame notoriously steals books from the Scarlet Devil Mansion's library. She claims it's not stealing because all the inhabitants of the Scarlet Devil Mansion are youkai, who will live many times longer than her, and they can simply take the books back when she dies. She calls it "borrowing without permission". Luckily, the Youkai don't mind; or at least; don't mind beyond mind-boggling BulletHell duels, but that's the standard operating procedure. It's also worth pointing out that while Marisa claims the youkai can have their books back when her human life ends, in some games' backstories it's mentioned that she's working on an Elixer of Life, to prolong her life ''without losing her humanity''. Trust Marisa to pair a Metaphorically True with LoopholeAbuse.
* In the RogueLike game ''VideoGame/{{Ragnarok|Roguelike}}'', an Amulet of Eternal Life turns you to stone. That makes a certain kind of mythic sense, but it's not "life" as we'd recognize it.
* ''VideoGame/AncientDomainsOfMystery'', another RogueLike, has the gauntlets of peace -- and their artifact counterpart, the Gauntlets of Eternal Peace --, which make it almost impossible to hit anything while you're wearing them. The "peace" either means you can't kill anything, or you will die quickly and be at peace since (duh) [[EverythingTryingToKillYou Everything Is Trying To Kill You]] and you won't be able to fight back. Even better, the gauntlets are [[ClingyMacGuffin autocursing]]. At least they give you a moderate defense and armor boost while you search desperately for that scroll of uncursing.
* If you haven't played ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic'' it wouldn't be much of a spoiler to say that you shouldn't fully trust ''anything'' that ''any'' Jedi has to say to you. Indeed, their self-serving tendencies of filtering truth through "certain points of view" is significantly responsible for their eventual downfall.
** In the first game, on the other hand, the only real example of this trope is Jolee's claim that "the Jedi left me" (and he doesn't consider himself a Jedi any more at this point). The other Jedi certainly do tell some outright lies, but don't continue to defend them as 'true' once they're exposed as lies. There is also at least one case of ExactWords where a Jedi who knows about the biggest coming plot twist talks to you about something else in a way that passingly refers to the secret by necessity but sounds innocuous and avoids revealing it.
** While this an important plot point in the first game, [[VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublicIITheSithLords the second game]] takes it to the point of {{deconstruction}} with Kreia and the rest of the Council; almost everything a player may think they know about the background of this game has to pass the litmus test of "but did I hear that from [[UnreliableExpositor Kreia]]?". Similarly, Atton is often used as the writer's mouthpiece on any particular topic, but his word shouldn't be taken too seriously either, as [[spoiler:he used to be a Sith torturer who willingly and enjoyed torturing Jedi into turning to the Dark Side]].
** HK-47 gets in on it too, if you ask him about how many Jedi he's killed during the Jedi Civil War:
--->'''HK-47:''' I have found many Jedi to be arrogant practitioners of pacifism when it is convenient for them. Also, their tendency to never directly answer a question is rather annoying.
** Further twisted with Kreia, in that she only ''claims'' to always speak the truth. You can call her out on the fact that ''she could be lying about not lying'', and she is proud that you noticed without really discussing the point further. Most fan interpretations are built on which parts of Kreia's speeches are true, half-true, and outright false.
* ''VideoGame/TheWorldEndsWithYou'':
** Uzuki offers Neku a way out of the game if he kills his partner Shiki. However, before Neku can deliver the killing blow, he's stopped by Mr. H, who says that since his life is tied to his partner's, he'll die too...
--->'''Neku:''' All that about letting me out of the game -- that was all a lie!\\
'''Uzuki:''' Like, that is so rude! I do not lie. If I erased you, that's still letting you out of the Game!
** Unfortunately, there's no similar way to weasel out of her claim that Shiki was a spy for the Reapers. No-one calls her on this.
** At one point, Game Master Konishi tells Neku and Beat that she's going to hide in the same place for seven days, while they try to find her. However, she's able to move all over the city, because the "one place" she chose was [[spoiler:Beat's shadow]].
* A rare positive version courtesy of ''VideoGame/AnotherCenturysEpisode'': When it was announced that the UsefulNotes/PlayStation3 installment would be limited to three [[HumongousMecha mecha]] per series, fans were upset - until the game's director posted on his blog, revealing that [[MidSeasonUpgrade Mid-Season Upgrades]] and [[MechaExpansionPack Mecha Expansion Packs]] would fall under the heading of their base machine and therefore only count as one, meaning they can fit in more playable while still maintaining the whole "three per series" idea.
* ''Videogame/CastlevaniaOrderOfEcclesia'' has Death's Ring, which massively increases your stats and whose description is "One hit kills instantly." It is indeed true. Take one hit and ''you'' will instantly die.
* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'':
** Long ago, the continent of [[{{Wutai}} Akavir]] had its own race of Men a little different from those in Tamriel. However, it is said that these men were "devoured" by the Tsaesci, an Akaviri race of "[[SnakePeople snake vampires]]". One theory states that this means the men were ''[[ImAHumanitarian literally eaten]]'' by the Tsaesci. However, another source regarding the Tsaesci uses "devour" and "enslave" interchangeably when it comes to what the Tsaesci did to the red dragons of Akavir. "Devour" is likely just a colorful metaphor for enslavement and/or cultural absorption.
** In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'', one of Vivec's stories of his involvement in the death of Nerevar indicates that the official Temple stance of it not being his fault is a ''literal'' HalfTruth: Vehk the God was not to blame, but Vehk the Mortal is. Since Vivec ("V'vehk") is [[MindScrew both of those]]...
* In ''VideoGame/SkiesOfArcadia'', Belleza befriends the protagonists, who take her with them to Temple of Pyrynn to find the Red Moon Crystal. She gains their trust by telling them a sad story about herself: that her father was a sailor who was killed in the Valua-Nasr war, and she was left orphaned and with a hatred of war. This much is true. [[spoiler: What she did not mention at that point is that her father was a Valuan sailor, not Nasrean, and she is in fact an admiral of the Valuan Armada. Her hatred of war was also not a lie; she believes that Valuan hegemony will bring stability and end the war.]]
* In ''VideoGame/TheCurseOfMonkeyIsland'', Guybrush is told that Blood Island is the place where he will die. After drinking alcohol mixed with medicine, he goes into a coma-like state for a few hours. It doesn't actually kill him, but it is enough for the island to document him as legally dead (at least twice). The official explanation is that he does die, but because it's a family-friendly [=LucasArts=] adventure game, he recovers.
* [[OurAngelsAreDifferent Angels]] in ''[[VideoGame/HeroesOfMightAndMagic Might and Magic: Heroes VI]]'' are [[CannotTellALie incapable of lying]], but they are capable of deception by not telling you ''all'' of the truth. [[spoiler:Kiril learns this the hard way when he agrees to accompany the angel Sarah on her pilgrimage through hell as her protector, and ends up imprisoned in hell as a result; Sarah decided that the best way for Kiril to protect her is by her selling his soul, without his consent, to the demon sovereign Kha-Beleth in exchange for safe passage through his realm.]]
-->'''Sarah:''' I never lied to you, but certain truths had to be ignored to set Elrath's will in motion. Forgive me.
** Hilariously subverted in ''VideoGame/MightAndMagic X'', which takes place in the aftermath of ''Heroes VI'': the intro highlights this aspect (as well as [[ExactWords certain]] [[AmbiguousSyntax related tropes]]) of angels, and then at the end of the expansion (which acts as an additional chapter to the game) you meet a scheming angel responsible for a fair chunk of your troubles... who turns out to be quite bad at this, flubbing her attempts and making it obvious to everyone around her what's really going on. Her schemes only worked because she was [[BigBadDuumvirate working with a human who]], being human, could straight-up lie.
* The bulk of Niko's phony resume for Goldberg, Ligner, and Shyster in ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoIV'' -- although there are several outright lies to puff up his credentials, most of it is composed of statements that are technically true, but either worded so vaguely that they're meaningless or deliberately framed in a misleading matter.
* ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'':
** Fantastic convinced the NCR to give him a job fixing an advanced power plant through this trope:
--->'''Fantastic:''' They were going door to door asking if anyone knew any scientists. I said look no further. They asked me if I knew anything about power plants. I said as much as anyone I'd ever met. They asked me how well I understood theoretical physics. I said I had a theoretical degree in physics. They said welcome aboard.
** Dr. Borous in ''Old World Blues'' claims his genetically engineered [[MixAndMatchCritters Nightstalkers]] and [[WickedWasps Cazadores]] are as "docile as they are sterile". This is entirely true, though not in the context he intended (Borous believed the answer was "completely", whereas the PlayerCharacter at this point knows the answer to be [[GoneHorriblyWrong "not at all"]]).
** The King, who believes the School of Elvis Impersonation was in fact [[AllHailTheGreatGodMickey a temple]]. The reasoning behind it is... surprisingly coherent.
---> '''The King''': Near as I can tell, [this building] was some sort of religious institution. Oh, I know it says "school" out front, but everything in here seems to be related to the worship of some guy from back in the day. People used to come here to learn about him, to dress like him, to move like him. To BE him. If that's not worship, I don't know what is.
* Coming up to the reveal, Creator/{{Capcom}} had said that the 5th character for ''[[UpdatedRerelease Ultra]] VideoGame/StreetFighterIV'' had '''never''' appeared in a ''Street Fighter'' game before. Decapre had actually appeared in a cutscene for ''VideoGame/StreetFighterAlpha 3'', and looks and plays similarly to Cammy, but otherwise she's never been playable before, meaning that Capcom wasn't lying for the most part.
* In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaSkywardSword'', [[ExpositionFairy Fi]] tells you that the environment [[spoiler:in which the final boss is faced]] disables your [[SwordBeam Skyward Strike]]. This is correct; a different, lightning-charged projectile attack that can be performed in that environment, though activated and utilized in much the same manner, is distinct from a Skyward Strike.
* ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'': The developer claims that its conclusion "has provoked a bigger fan reaction than any other video games' conclusion in history." It's true. They fail to mention, however, that it was a hugely ''[[BrokenBase negative]]'' reaction.
* At the beginning of ''VideoGame/JurassicParkTheGame'', when Nima Cruz and Miles Chadwick need to trek further into Isla Nublar to make contact with Denis Nedry and suddenly come across a huge electric fence, Nima, unaware of what [=InGen=] has been doing lately, expresses surprise at such a structure having been built on the island. Miles tells Nima that the place is "kind of like a zoo" with "all sorts of animals". Of course, if they had just looked a few meters to the right, they would have seen that the zoo pen they have just come across belongs to ''Dilophosaurus''.
* At the end of ''VideoGame/SlyCooperAndTheThieviusRaccoonus'', when Sly defeats the BigBad, Clockwerk, his LastWords to Sly,''"Cooper! You will never be rid of me! Clockwerk is... Superior!!!"'', are mainly just that, until the [[VideoGame/Sly2BandOfThieves sequel]]. [[spoiler:Clockwerk, (or rather, his lifeless body frame piloted by a [[HijackedByCthullu hate-filled Neyla]]) ends up collapsing on Bentley and as a result, paralyzes him. In the end, his final words become true as now Sly has to be reminded of him every time he looks at his friend who's now confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life.]]
* In ''VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog2006'', Mephiles tells Silver that Sonic is the Iblis trigger, and therefore the cause of Silver's current BadFuture. After being warped back in time by Mephiles, Silver tries to kill Sonic to prevent his BadFuture from ever occurring. [[spoiler:However, it is Sonic's death that is the event that causes Iblis' awakening in the first place.]]
* ''VideoGame/SphinxAndTheCursedMummy'' has Sphinx be given a magic Gem of Invisibility. He's then immediately warned by his mentor that the gem is a trap. It will ''technically'' turn him invisible...and then kill him right afterward. Fortunately, the Mummy is already dead and can get around this little problem.
* In ''VideoGame/SonicChronicles'', the role of Emerl the Gizoid in the destruction of the Nocturnus Clan (as the person who was previously accepted to have caused the event in question) is called into question with the revelation that [[spoiler:the Nocturnus Clan was pulled into the Twilight Cage]]. Nestor the Wise theorizes in-game that it was with the creation of Gizoids as powerful as Emerl that the Nocturnus Clan became sufficiently dangerous to justify what was done to them - so Emerl ''inadvertently'' caused the Clan's destruction, rather than the conventional meaning.
* In ''VideoGame/RuneScape'' quest "Death to the Dorgeshuun", Zanik initially earns the sympathy of the [[FantasticRacism Human Against Monsters]] group by telling them that the city she's from is full of goblins. Zanik is a cave goblin in disguise, and the city she's referring to is [[MonsterTown Dorgesh-Kaan]].
** The quest "Temple at Senntisten" begins with Azzanadra trying to gain permission from the Digsite administrators to restore a long-abandoned temple of Zaros. You have to convince the administrators that Azzanadra's human disguise is a respectable archaeologist and worth entrusting with the project, by recommending his expertise in ancient magicks and pyramid interiors, and omitting the part where he's actually a Mahjarrat who was [[SealedBadassInACan sealed in said pyramid]] untold centuries ago for [[PersonOfMassDestruction practicing said ancient magicks]].
* The Check text for the final boss of the Genocide run in ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'', [[spoiler:Sans, describes him as "the easiest enemy" who can only deal 1 point of damage and has 1 HP. While this is literally true, it greatly understates the problems his boss fight entails. For the former, Sans' attacks hit every frame, thereby bypassing MercyInvincibility, meaning that he hits for 1 damage ''thirty times per second'' and also applies a stacking DamageOverTime effect with every hit. For the latter, Sans is the only foe in the game who ''[[NonchalantDodge dodges your attacks]]''. All things combined, he is ''[[ThatOneBoss the]]'' single hardest boss in the game [[SNKBoss by a wide margin]]]].
* Nintendo did this with their trailer for ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaBreathOfTheWild'', which showed Zelda crying into Link's arms in the middle of a rainstorm. Many fans believed that they were going to witness why Zelda was crying over how everything she did was a failure and some fans hoped Link would do something to comfort her. In actuality, it's a flashback showing [[spoiler: Link and Zelda fleeing from the Guardians corrupted by Calamity Ganon, followed by Zelda breaking down over how she couldn't awaken her powers in time to save the champions, her father, and the entire Hyrule kingdom. By the time Link holds Zelda in his arms, the flashback ends and the player doesn't get to see what happens after]]. While Nintendo wasn't exactly lying in the trailer, the scene was just presented out of context for the sake of hype.
* In ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsBirthBySleep'', Master Xehanort warns Terra that his mentor Master Eraqus plans to kill his friend Ventus, sending Terra off on a rescue mission. And it's true, Master Eraqus was about to murder the young man before Terra intervened. What Xehanort left out was the motive. [[spoiler:Master Xehanort planned to use Ventus in a ritual of sorts to obtain the X-Blade and Kingdom Hearts. Master Eraqus, grief-stricken, felt he [[NecessarilyEvil had to kill Ven]] to thwart Xehanort's plans. Terra's battle with Eraqus due to [[PoorCommunicationKills their mutual refusal to explain themselves in the heat of the moment]] weakened the master enough for Xehanort to finish him off.]]
* ''VideoGame/GoldenSun'' have you go on a quest to save the world by preventing the seal on alchemy from being broken, less the world be destroyed by its sheer power. When a priest asks you if you will accept the responsibility of saving the world, choosing no has the game state that [[NonStandardGameOver the world slowly drifted towards its fated destruction.]] The sequel reveals that not saving the world would destroy it, but [[spoiler: it would be from the world crumbling into nothingness ''because'' alchemy was sealed. In other words, alchemy is the world's life force and without it, the world starts to wither and break apart piece by piece. You're also told that releasing alchemy ''could'' destroy the world as well, which leaves the party with a big catch-22; do nothing and let the world wither away or release alchemy and risk destroying the world anyway. Thankfully, the sequel after shows that everything worked out once alchemy came back, though ''The Lost Age''[='s=] ending shows it required divine intervention]].
** Near the end of the first game, Saturos offers to exchange captive Sheba's safety for Ivan's [[OrphansPlotTrinket Shaman Rod]]. When your party gives up the Rod, Saturos turns around and orders Felix to bodyguard Sheba with his life-- he never said anything about setting her ''free'', just that he would ensure her safety. [[note]]since Sheba starts the next game enthusiastic about continuing Saturos's mission, it's also possible that if she'd been set free she would have joined him willingly[[/note]]
* For the teaser of patch 4.3 in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'', the developers were insistent that they would not show the patch's new trial because it contains massive spoilers. The trailer shows the player character fighting a pair of elderly civilians, a familiar antagonistic person, and then it's followed by a supporting character appearing to fend off a major villain. All the above ''is'' a part of the new trial, but the spoiler itself is still hidden since the trailer never shows who you would be actually fighting. [[spoiler: The trial is against Yotsuyu who has transformed into a primal. The second phase of the fight has her memories of people that antagonized her materializing and attacking her, which is what the trailer showed while keeping her off-screen.]]
* Most of the villains in the ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'' series aren't wrong in what they say at all. They just derail their morals into insane, radical variants that would inevitably bring forth suffering to others.
* In ''VideoGame/Persona5'', The CorruptPolitician BigBad Masayoshi Shido [[spoiler:[[NotSoDifferentRemark claims that he's not that different]] from the Phantom Thieves that they wanted to reform society and asks him to join them. While it's obviously a ruse, he's actually trying to reform society by getting himself elected... but if he gets elected, he will turn Japan into a dictatorship and there will be hell to pay for it alongside the world]].
* ''VideoGame/PersonaQ2NewCinemaLabyrinth'' uses this as its ''entire'' premise.
** All of the movies in the game are not inherently wrong in their settings; they follow the tropes of their genres strictly. It's just that they are derailed and twisted into perverse versions of what they actually are.
*** ''Kamoshidaman'' is a superhero movie about a superhero punishing evil in the city and fighting villains...except that the "superhero" decides who is evil and who isn't, and anyone who opposes or disagrees with him are the evil villains threatening his city. To make things worse, he bullies his citizens into absolute submission by silencing all critique.
*** ''Junessic Land'' features a group of [[HerbivoresAreFriendly herbivorous dinosaurs]] trying to gather ThePowerOfFriendship in order to fight against the stronger carnivores... except ThePowerOfFriendship, in this case, is actually being used ''against'' any herbivores who disagree with their plan.
*** ''A.I.G.I.S'' features a robot resisting against an A.I. god... who is the [[DesignatedHero "Hero"]] of the movie, and the robot is the [[DesignatedVillain "Villain."]] This is always the other way around in these movies.
*** The fourth movie [[spoiler:mixes elements of a biopic and a musical, and it surely appears as cheery as a standard musical. It's just that all of its lyrics are about a LossOfIdentity and it depicts a biopic of someone getting their life ruined instead of a success story]].
** Then there's the BigBad [[spoiler:Nagi/Enlil. Much like Zen in the prequel, she genuinely wishes for the happiness of the people that she protects from pain and suffering; she just does it by having them watch movies of pure negativity with absolutely no encouraging morals and positivity, with all of the people they depict being portrayed as failures in an unsympathetic fashion]].
* ''VideoGame/FireEmblemThreeHouses'' has plenty of exposition that is technically true, but framed very differently, in large part because which house's story route you're on can drastically change what information is available to the characters. For example, in most routes, Seteth will claim [[spoiler:Edelgard took the Imperial throne in a bloodless coup]]. This isn't wrong, but playing that character's route will reveal [[spoiler:Edelgard politely asked her terminally ill father to hand over power, which he did willingly; Edelgard then promptly arrested any dissidents because she's acutely aware how little she could trust her own court, hence the "coup" rumor]].
** This crops up with respect to historical events as well, largely because [[spoiler:Seiros has been massaging the truth of the War Of Heroes and Crests to protect the last few Nabateans. To make matters worse, the only other source of information on events back then, "those who slither in the dark", do the same, but they're intentionally deceptive.]] For example, Edelgard states on her route that the Heroes' Relics are not gifts from the Goddess and were made by human hands. This is true, but it leaves out one very big detail that is only revealed on the Golden Deer route: [[spoiler: the Relics were made from ''the bones of the Nabateans'', who were massacred entirely for this purpose, and the humans who created them were backed by "those who slither in the dark".]]
* In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrailsOfColdSteel I'', when Machias asks as to whether Rean, Gaius, or Elliot were nobles whatsoever, the latter two denied it fully but Rean's response is that "he doesn't have any noble blood on him" which Machias does buy (since Machias was introduced in the story as hating all nobles) but Elliot notices the dodge. Rean does feel bad about it later and does come clean (he's adopted by nobles but as far as Rean knows at the time, he was a commoner) but to Machias, he felt that he was lied to. Notably, under the rules of Erebeonia's class system, an adoptive noble has all the rights and privileges of somebody born into the nobility, so Rean is for all intents and purposes a noble.
* ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'' pulls this with Kingseeker Frampt and Darkstalker Kaathe. Frampt says your destiny is to succeed Gwyn while Kaathe says it's to replace him. While either option at the end is ''technically'' true, succeeding Gwyn requires burning yourself alive as fuel for the Kiln of the First Flame and replacing him means taking up the mantle of the Dark Lord for the Age of Dark, despite the fact that Kaathe's guidance is what led to the destruction of New Londo to begin with. As a result, you can't honestly trust what either of the serpents is telling you to be true, [[ButThouMust yet you have to make a choice between which version of your "destiny" you're willing to believe in]].
* ''Videogame/FallenLondon'' may require your character to partake in this, with enough frequency that it even has its own stat, which handily provides a name for the capacity to "mislead the listener without a single false word": Mithridacy. The skill also covers ''spotting'' these misdirections when they're thrown at you.
-->'''Descriptor for high Mithridacy:''' You are an artist of implication, allowing people to think what you are not able to say.
* ''VideoGame/PokemonSwordAndShield'': In the Isle of Armor expansion, you have to earn the "secret armor of the Master Dojo," which turns out to be [[spoiler:the legendary Pokémon Kubfu]]. Not a suit of armor in any sense, but it's meant to stand by you and protect you ''like'' a suit of armor.
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVIIRemake'', as the party is touring Shin-Ra Headquarters, they come across holographic presentations from the Shin-Ra executives. One of them belongs to [[MadScientist Professor Hojo]], who [[BrutalHonesty very bluntly]] tells the tourists that his research is beyond their comprehension. Given that his research involves creating bioweapons using the [=DNA=] of an EldritchAbomination, he’s not completely wrong.
* ''VideoGame/ReturnOfTheObraDinn:'' You can get the hidden achievement "Captain Did It" by blaming Captain Witterel for all the deaths aboard the Obra Dinn. This is, according to the achievement description, "Loosely true, in the eyes of Company and Crown". As the captain of the ship, the safety of his crew and passengers was legally his responsibility, so in the eyes of the Crown their deaths ''are'' on his hands.
* In ''VideoGame/HorizonZeroDawn'', the Nora tribe believe that their goddess, the All Mother, had created humanity, and saved them from the metal devils. They’re right in a sense. [[spoiler:Its revealed that humanity was wiped out by the metal devils, when the robots went out of control in an event called the Faro Plague, and Gaia was created to create a virus that would shut down them down, and would rebuild the destroyed world with machines, and repopulate it with cloned humans.]]
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