Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / DidAnastasiaSurvive

Go To

1%%
2%% The examples on this page have been put into alphabetical order.
3%%
4%% Please add new examples in the correct order.
5%%
6
7%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1630731593033517300
8%% Previous thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1479047783056663700
9%% Please do not replace or remove without starting a new thread.
10%%
11[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/anastasia_63.jpg]]
12[[caption-width-right:350:Translation: ''Anastasia, the Youngest Daughter of the Tsar'']]
13%%
14->''"Have you heard\
15There's a rumor in St. Petersburg?\
16Have you heard\
17What they're saying on the street?\
18Although the Tsar did not survive\
19One daughter may be still alive\
20The Princess Anastasia!\
21But please do not repeat..."''
22-->-- "A Rumor In St. Petersburg", ''WesternAnimation/{{Anastasia}}'' (1997)
23
24One of the StockUnsolvedMysteries of the twentieth century, until it was solved in 2007 [[DownerEnding with a definite "no"]].
25
26Following the events of UsefulNotes/RedOctober, the abdicated UsefulNotes/{{Tsar|Tsar Autocrats}} UsefulNotes/NicholasII of UsefulNotes/{{Russia}} and his immediate family were exiled to the Siberian city of Yekaterinburg. On July 17, 1918, with the anti-communist White Army closing in on the city, the former Tsar, his wife Tsarina Alexandra, and their five children -- Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria, UsefulNotes/{{Anastasia|Nikolaevna Romanova}} and Tsarevich Alexei -- [[RulingFamilyMassacre were all executed]] by Bolshevik soldiers. Or were they? For many years, some people insisted that the Tsar's youngest daughter, then-seventeen-year-old Anastasia, survived and escaped. (Spoiler alert: Yes, they were killed. Yes, that included Anastasia - whose body is either one of the three women buried with the former Tsar, or the woman found buried with Alexei, much later.)
27
28Why the focus on Anastasia and not another of the Tsar's five children? In the [[UsefulNotes/SovietRussiaUkraineAndSoOn Soviet Union]], in fact, the daughter believed to have survived was generally either Tatiana or Maria rather than Anastasia; there were also some lesser-known rumors that Tsarevich Alexei might have also survived - after all, his body had never been found at this point - but these never gained much traction due to the fact that Alexei had a severe form of hemophilia that made it exceptionally unlikely that he could have survived being wounded[[note]]You're probably thinking "I bet he was related to UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria" after seeing the word hemophilia and you'd be right, Alexei was her great-grandson[[/note]], on top of which Alexei was unable to walk at the time of the shooting (due to a previous injury that was exacerbated by his hemophilia) and therefore would have had no way to even try to take cover.
29
30However, in 1920, two years after the execution of the Romanovs, a mysterious Slavic-accented woman turned up in UsefulNotes/{{Berlin}}. Suicidal and apparently amnesiac, she was admitted to a local mental hospital. History generally refers to this woman by the adopted name of Anna Anderson. Within a couple years, she would claim to be the Grand Duchess Anastasia. Anderson gained much publicity through a lengthy legal battle in which she sought to establish her identity as Anastasia in order to claim a share of the remaining Romanov fortune. Public opinion sided overwhelmingly with Anderson due to the inherent romance of a RagsToRoyalty story. The case was finally ended in 1970, with the inconclusive ruling that there was no proof either way, but nevertheless denying Anderson the Romanov riches. When Anderson died in 1984, still claiming that she was the lost Grand Duchess, there was still no way to be certain what the truth was. After all, DNA testing wasn't a thing at the time, so the argument for both sides ultimately rested on hearsay. And besides, the site of the Romanovs' murder was located deep behind the UsefulNotes/IronCurtain, hidden from the world by the Soviet Union's secretive government, so who could say for sure what had happened there?
31
32Then came the end of the UsefulNotes/ColdWar, and the Romanov burial site was revealed to the world. At first, it seemed there was hope for the legend, since the bodies of Tsarevich Alexei and one of his sisters were missing from the grave. Meanwhile, however, [[ScienceMarchesOn science marched on]] with advent of DNA testing, which finally proved that Anna Anderson not only had absolutely no relation to the Imperial family, but also was, in fact, ''not even Russian''. It is widely believed that Anderson was actually a Polish woman named Franziska Schanzkowska, a missing factory worker with a history of mental illness. She eventually married an American man and spent most of the rest of her life in and out of facilities, suggesting the impersonation could have been a NapoleonDelusion of some kind. In 1998, a team of scientists were able to extract some mitochondrial DNA from intestinal tissue she’d had removed to test it against both the Romanovs' closest living maternal relative, the Duke of Edinburgh and Schanzkowska‘s great-nephew, with the latter being a match. Later testing would more closely match her DNA to the great nephew’s.
33
34In 2007, another grave was discovered in Yekaterinburg, this one containing the remains of Alexei and his remaining sister, so at long last, all the Romanov children were accounted for. The last Romanov bodies were confirmed through DNA testing in 2009, establishing once and for all that the entire Romanov family, including Grand Duchess Anastasia, was killed in Yekaterinburg by Bolshevik guns on July 17, 1918. Case closed.
35
36During the 89 years it took to get there, however, the premise that Anastasia had survived became a perennial fixture of Western popular culture. This trope is technically an example of DatedHistory, but it shows every sign of continuing, at least in works which are either [[AlternateHistory exploring her survival as a deliberate counterfactual]] or [[ArtisticLicenseHistory taking significant liberties with historical fact anyway]].
37
38For a historical mystery that hasn't yet been solved by science or new information, see TheFateOfThePrincesInTheTower.
39
40Coincidentally, [[MeaningfulName the name Anastasia means "resurrection"]]. This will often be mentioned in works employing this trope. Also, the proper Russian pronunciation of her name is, "ah-nah-stah-SEE-yah," but many works will use the modern Anglo pronunciation of, "an-nah-STAY-zhah."
41
42Subtrope of LostOrphanedRoyalty, which covers the general case of the last remaining member of a royal line being hidden away in secret. Any examples not specifically connected to the 20th-century Romanovs should go there.
43
44----
45!!Examples
46[[foldercontrol]]
47
48[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
49* In ''Anime/BloodPlus'' Anastasia is an alias of the series BigBad Diva circa 1918. It's not clear when she assumed the Grand Duchess's identity or what happened to the real Anastasia, but Diva is fully capable of pulling a KillAndReplace and had Rasputin as one of her chevaliers during that period to help her.
50* At the end of one ''Manga/CaseClosed'' movie, ''The Last Wizard of the Century'', the protagonists find her as the solution of this film's mystery (Actually not Anastasia, but Maria).
51* In ''Manga/DanceInTheVampireBund'', UsefulNotes/RasputinTheMadMonk was a vampire who rescued Anastasia from being killed by the soldiers, but then turned her into a vampire and made her his slave. She eventually escaped him and took on the alias Natasha. Eventually, she resurfaces and helps the heroes kill him.
52* Addressed in ''Anime/LupinIIIFromSiberiaWithLove''; she managed to escape execution and fled to America. It becomes relevant to the story when its revealed [[spoiler: Judy is her granddaughter]] and wants the gold Lupin and Rasputon stole to rebuild Russia.
53[[/folder]]
54
55[[folder:Audio Drama]]
56* In the ''Series/DoctorWho'' spin-off audio "[[Recap/BigFinishDoctorWho1DAS4E2LastOfTheRomanovs Last of the Romanovs]]", the Doctor and his companions meet the Tsar and Anastasia the day before their execution, and the Doctor's granddaughter Susan attempts to teach Anastasia a meditative technique that may allow her to escape by feigning death at a crucial moment.
57[[/folder]]
58
59[[folder:Comic Books]]
60* In ''[[ComicBook/TheShadow The Shadow Strikes]]'', Anastasia has survived and [[spoiler:is on a campaign of revenge]].
61[[/folder]]
62
63[[folder:Fan Works]]
64* In the Literature/{{Discworld}} of Creator/AAPessimal, there is no doubt about it for people who can join the dots: (Olga) Anastacia Romanoff is alive and well and lives in Ankh-Morpork. She is in direct line of descent to the last acknowledged Tsar of [[UsefulNotes/{{Russia}} Rodinia]], a state which crumbled into lots of smaller regions and nations amidst much acrimony. Catching magic at the age of twelve and covertly educated as a Witch by the local Literature/BabaYaga, she ran away to Lancre to pursue a different destiny, much to her noble father's anger. Today, she is in her thirties and [[Fanfic/ThePriceOfFlight commands the Ankh-Morpork City Air Watch]]. This is all she ever wanted to do and all the Empire she needs. Anyone wanting her to become Little Mother to a New Rodinia will get very short shrift and she prefers to go her own way and make her own destiny.
65* ''FanWorks/HarryPotter'': In [[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/6747856/5/Forging-Destiny Chapter 5]] of ''Forging Destiny'', Anastasia survived by being a witch who apparated from her prison to Buckingham Palace and her brother's hemophilia was a result of his magical powers not being well balanced. Harry is revealed to be Anastasia's descendant.
66* The ''WesternAnimation/Frozen2013'' AU fic "[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/12610918/3/Grains-of-Sand-in-the-Passage-of-Time Grains of Sand in the Passage of Time]]" depicts an AU that reinvents Anna as Anastasia, who escaped from captivity and hid on the farm owned by Elsa and her grandmother.
67* In ''Roleplay/SemperAdMeliora'', it turns out that Anastasia did survive, and ended up emigrating to Britannia, where she joined the military forces. [[IKnewIt And as many people guessed]], [[spoiler:Anastasia is now known as Amastasia '''li Brittania''', and is Cornelia and Euphemia's mother]].
68* ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/9184213/1/The-Woman-Who-Counted The Woman Who Counted]]''- a ''Series/DoctorWho''/''Series/{{Sherlock}}'' crossover where the Tenth Doctor is travelling with Molly Hooper- sees the Doctor and Molly arrive in Russia a few days before the Romanovs are to be executed. The Doctor states that the Romanovs' deaths are a fixed point in time that can't be altered, [[spoiler:but when a group of alien invaders end up trapped as duplicates of the Romanovs, they allow Molly to take the original family away as the aliens believe that they can use the Bolsheviks to take over Russia. Molly is subsequently able to convince the real Romanovs to come with her, as well as persuade the Doctor to trust her after he's rendered unconscious for a few hours and misses the moment when the aliens were trapped. As a result of the aliens taking their place, while [[TrickedOutTime history still records the deaths of the Romanovs]], in reality Molly and the Doctor take the family to safety in the 1990s so that they can start new lives]].
69
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Film -- Animated]]
73* Creator/DonBluth[='s=] 1997 animated feature ''WesternAnimation/{{Anastasia}}'', which was a very loose (and very [[{{Disneyfication}} Disneyfied]]) remake of the Ingrid Bergman film and thus [[LostInImitation distantly adapted from the Marcelle Maurette play]]. It further fictionalizes the story with the inclusion of supernatural elements, adding in UsefulNotes/RasputinTheMadMonk as an undead sorcerer who is trying to kill off Anastasia in order to complete a curse he cast on the Romanov family.
74* The Don Bluth film inspired no less than three [[TheMockbuster Mockbusters]], one each from Creator/UAVEntertainment, Creator/GoldenFilms, and Creator/DingoPictures. ''WesternAnimation/TheSecretOfAnastasia'', the UAV one, has its own article here. To say that they are even less connected to the historical events than Bluth's film would be an understatement.
75[[/folder]]
76
77[[folder:Film -- Live Action]]
78* The 1956 film ''{{Film/Anastasia}}'', starring Creator/IngridBergman in her comeback from six years of exile from U.S. cinema and Creator/YulBrynner, is a straight adaptation of the Marcelle Maurette play (see the "Theatre" section for more information).
79* In the film ''Film/AnastasiaOnceUponATime'', Anastasia initially escapes her family's capture when Rasputin opens a portal to 1988, [[spoiler:but after a brainwashed Rasputin nearly captures her, Anastasia is able to go back and save her family, the film concluding with Anastasia [[TheSlowPath reuniting with her 1980s friend Megan after growing old and becoming a grandmother]]]].
80* The 1986 NBC MadeForTVMovie ''Anastasia: The Mystery of Anna'', starring Creator/AmyIrving as Anna Anderson. It's most notable for following Anna Anderson's actual life, more or less, instead of taking its cues from Marcelle Maurette. The movie leaves it as an open question as to whether Anderson was really Anastasia. (It's ''really'' most notable for being Creator/OliviaDeHavilland's last acting gig, playing Tsar Nicholas II's mom.)
81* The Anastasia legend got its cinematic start with the 1928 silent film ''Film/ClothesMakeTheWoman'', in which she is saved by a sympathetic Bolshevik soldier. Years later, they reunite in Hollywood, where the ex-Bolshevik is now a famous movie star, and he casts her in a movie about her own life. They fall in love, of course.
82* The 1996 HBO MadeForTVMovie ''Rasputin: Dark Servant of Destiny'', references this theory in its epilogue, which shows the Romanov family's execution, but ends just before Anastasia and Alexei are shot, leaving them to an UncertainDoom.
83* 1956 also saw a German movie called ''Film/TheStoryOfAnastasia'', again based on the life of Anna Anderson.
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:Literature]]
87* Discussed in ''Literature/AnastasiaKrupnik'', as the titular character learns that she was named after the historical Anastasia from her parents and promptly declares that she must be the missing Romanov. Her dreams are quickly dashed when her parents point out that as a 10-year-old in 1979, she is far too young to be ''that'' Anastasia.
88* ''Literature/BadNewsBallet'' #5, ''Blubberina'', has the gang introduced to--and later obsessed with--Miss Delacorte's "magical" Amber Stone of Anastasia, which Miss Delacorte says saved Anastasia from dying because [[ArtisticLicenseHistory when the Bolsheviks broke into the royal palace]] and murdered the Romanovs, the bullet meant for her heart glanced off the amber stone and she was the only one who lived.
89* ''Literature/TheDeathOfRussia'':
90** Referenced in what became of the town of Shaitanka, which during the collapse of Siberia into anarchy during the Second Russian Civil War turned into a microstate called the "Kingdom of Russia" led by an old woman who claimed to be Anastasia, despite not being nearly old enough, and had somehow convinced the starving town to go along with the delusion.
91** On another note, with what has become of Russia by the end of the war, there is little if any hope for the remains of Nicolas II and his family to be found like they were in our world, likely giving this trope more of a shelf life.
92* Suzanne Weyn's young adult novel ''The Diamond Secret'' from the ''Once Upon a Time'' collection (a series of YA retellings of popular fairy tales and legends, no relation to [[Series/OnceUponATime the TV series]]) retells the standard Marcelle Maurette-inspired plotline of two conmen trying to pass off an amnesiac girl as Anastasia, only to find that she just might be a GenuineImposter.
93* ''Literature/EventGroupAdventures'': Book 5, ''Primeval'' (released in 2010), states that yes, Anastasia and Alexei did indeed escape, with the aid of Russian soldiers loyal to their father (a pair of body doubles were left in their place), and made it to Canada, along with a whole lot of gold and two enormous diamonds (payment to the lead soldier). Most of the soldiers died in the fall of 1918 after attempting to betray their leader (believing the bad luck that had fallen on them was because of a curse on the Romanovs and wanting to kill the two children in order to save their own lives), and Alexei the following March, but Anastasia and the lead soldier not only survived, they married and lived out the rest of their lives in that area, dying of old age in the mid 1950s; they were survived by their daughter. Anastasia's daughter married at some point, but her own child and their spouse died later (one in childbirth, the other a few years later), and by the end of the book, only Anastasia's great-granddaughter remains, content to live out her life in peace and asking the protagonists to keep her ancestry a secret.
94* In ''Fire Ice'' a spinoff of ''Literature/DirkPittAdventures'' the story shows that while the Romanov men were executed, the deaths of the women were faked due to loyalists smuggling them to an escape ship (as detailed in the prologue). When the communists chased down and destroyed that ship, Anastasia herself is killed, but one of her sisters is saved by the dying captain.
95* In the ''Heirs of Anton'' romance series, the heroines of the first three books turn out in the fourth book to be descended from the titular Anton and [[spoiler:Grand Duchess Olga, who changed places with her maid]].
96* ''The Romanov Cross'' by Robert Masello depicts Anastasia surviving the execution and escaping with the aid of a young soldier who had fallen for her, but a chain of events lead to her [[spoiler:being trapped and isolated on a distant island off the coast of a village in Alaska, shortly before the rest of the island's population are killed by UsefulNotes/TheSpanishFlu (it is all but explicitly stated that Anastasia's survival of these misfortunes is part of a 'gift' from Rasputin)]]. While written after the denouncement of the theory that Anastasia survived, characters note that the DNA evidence supporting the idea that Anastasia is dead is actually rather slim, considering that the remains of her sisters could have been mixed together and the decades since their deaths would make DNA test results sketchy at best, particularly when dealing with siblings who would have been genetically similar anyway.
97* In ''The Romanov Prophecy'' by Steve Berry, when the Russians decide to restore the monarchy, a lawyer named Miles Lord is hired to do a background check on the most likely candidate to be tsar. He finds evidence that Anastasia ''and'' Alexei might have made it out of Russia after all, and goes in search of their fate, being hounded by agents of the aforementioned candidate, who doesn't want a direct descendant of Nicholas II to come forward. [[spoiler: He discovers that they settled in America. Anastasia died childless, but Alexei had a son, meaning that son's son-Alexei's grandson-is the rightful heir.]] And to top it all off, everything in the book, from the fall of the Romanovs to the restoration of the monarchy, [[spoiler:even to the new tsar being a dead ringer for Nicolas II]] was foretold in possibly the one ''actual'' prophecy Rasputin had.
98* ''Literature/TheRoyalDiaries'': The epilogue of ''Anastasia: The Last Grand Duchess'' mentions the legend, as the book was released before the last two bodies were found. However, it also notes in the author's notes that whether or not Anastasia would've turned out differently from her parents is a mystery for the ages because of how suddenly her life ended, leaning definitively towards the answer of "No".
99* ''The Tsarina's Daughter'' by Carolly Erickson offers an unusual twist on the trope: [[spoiler: ''Tatiana'' was the one that escaped Russia, thanks to her Georgian lover and a revolutionary-turned-friend who looks like Tatiana taking her place after the royal family was caught trying to escape.]]
100[[/folder]]
101
102[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
103* ''Series/AmericanHorrorStoryApocalypse'' plays with the legend in "Fire and Reign", positing that Anastasia was [[BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy actually a witch]] who tried (and failed) to use her magic to save her family from their demise.
104* ''Series/DiveClub'': Despite being made more than a decade after Anastasia's survival was disproved, the series' backstory has her escaping to Australia.
105* ''Series/HistoryOfTheWorldPartII'', being ran on RuleOfFunny, spares an Anastasia who is basically a digital influencer a century too early.
106* The subject of an ''Series/InSearchOf'' episode, naturally. It included an interview with Anna Anderson, who was still living at the time.
107* This was the subject on the episode of ''Series/MysteryHunters''. Araya goes to Virginia to investigate about Anna Anderson, while Christina goes to Russia to find out if she did survive.
108* In the Canadian sketch show ''Series/TheRedGreenShow'', one of [[TheMunchausen Hap Shaughnessy]]'s many outrageous claims was that Anastasia not only survived, but was in fact his own mother, who, after fleeing Russia, immigrated to Canada. He even spun a survival story out of whole cloth shortly after proclaiming it.
109[[/folder]]
110
111[[folder:Music]]
112* Stuck around St. Petersburg/ When I saw it was a time for a change/ Killed the Tsar and his ministers/ Anastasia screamed in vain...
113--> "Sympathy for the Devil," Music/TheRollingStones
114[[/folder]]
115
116[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
117* In the ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'' adventure ''Rasputin Must Die'' (part of the Reign of Winter adventure path) Anastasia is the daughter of Rasputin, and thus the granddaughter of the ancient witch Literature/BabaYaga. She was indeed shot dead, but was resurrected by Rasputin's magic. She can potentially leave Earth for Golarion in the company of the [[PlayerCharacter PCs]], and at the end of the adventure path she can claim the throne of Irrisen. Second Edition makes this option canon.
118* In the ''TabletopGame/WerewolfTheApocalypse'' sourcebook ''Rage Across Russia'', Anastasia is said to have escaped with the help of her werewolf relatives.
119[[/folder]]
120
121[[folder:Theatre]]
122* Marcelle Maurette's 1952 play ''Anastasia'' is notable as the origin of what has become the standard Anastasia plotline. This involves an amnesiac waif being hired by a conman to impersonate Anastasia, only for it to turn out that said amnesiac waif [[GenuineImposter was the real Anastasia all along]] ([[RiddleForTheAges or at least might be her]]) and has fallen in love with the conman to boot. This is a highly fictionalized take on Anna Anderson's life, essentially just using it as a jumping-off point for a romantic fantasy. The play also invented the concept of her winning over Anastasia's grandmother, the Dowager Empress Marie Feodorovna Romanova, who actually never even met Anderson in real life.
123* Kenneth [=MacMillan's=] 1967 {{ballet}} ''Anastasia'' focuses on Anna Anderson struggling to remember her past while in a Berlin mental hospital. In 1971, [=MacMillan=] [[AdaptationExpansion expanded]] the ballet by adding two acts set before and during the Revolution, with the original material becoming the third act.
124* Creator/NatalieWood was set to play the role of famous impostor Anna Anderson in ''Anastasia'', a play that was to open in Los Angeles in February 1982. Alas, Wood was found dead at sea in November 1981 and the whole thing was cancelled as a result.
125* ''Theatre/{{Anastasia}}'', a 2016 Broadway musical, this one based on the Creator/DonBluth film (so just to be clear, this is [[RecursiveAdaptation a play based on a movie which was a remake of another movie which was itself based on a play]]). It removes the supernatural elements, with a [[UsefulNotes/MoscowCentre Chekist officer]] taking Rasputin's place as the antagonist, so HammerAndSickleRemovedForYourProtection doesn't apply here for once.
126* ''Anya'', a 1965 Broadway musical based on the Marcelle Maurette play and the Ingrid Bergman film. It flopped.
127[[/folder]]
128
129[[folder:Video Games]]
130* The third part of ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedChronicles'' is set in Russia after the October Revolution, and not only does Anastasia survive, she becomes a PlayerCharacter, gets HistoricalBadassUpgrade and fights and kills her way to freedom taking on the identity of Anna Anderson as a HistoricalInJoke. Notable for being the first 21st Century work to revive this trope well after the facts had corrected it finally. Given that the series deals heavily with the AncientConspiracy of the Templar Order having [[WrittenByTheWinners rewritten history to suit their needs and hide the truth]], it makes sense that the series would explore the urban legend as yet another coverup.
131* ''VideoGame/ChickenPolice:'' It's speculated throughout that Natasha Catzenko may in fact be the in-universe equivalent of Princess Anastasia, the sole survivor of a famously massacred foreign royal family who escaped to Clawville under a new identity. This would then explain where she came from prior to meeting Madame Zaiwass.
132* Alluded to in ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerRedAlert2'', where the Soviet Premier is Alexander ''Romanov''. And to put any guesses that his surname is a coincidence aside, when President Dugan is confronting him over Soviet aggression against the continental United States, Romanov states that he's no mere puppet leader appointed by Dugan, stating that "We Romanovs have a legacy to consider." In this timeline where Adolf Hitler was removed and Germany was a part of the western Allies united against the Soviet war machine, it's possible that Anastasia survived Red October and one of her descendants became a Bolshevik.
133* ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder''[='s=] depiction of Anastasia averts the trope. She was gunned down with the rest of her family, and the only mention of the survival theories is almost a footnote in the story, where Sherlock Holmes mentions the rumours about her survival but DNA testing has made those theories disappear. However, she was recorded in the Throne of Heroes as a Heroic Spirit, meaning that she can be summoned as a Caster-class Servant, due to the Romanov family being mages in Nasuverse and the last thing she did before dying was make a contract with an elemental called Viy. However, she's the only one of her immediate family recorded in the Throne, which causes her a bit of angst since there's no hope of her meeting any of them again as Servants.
134* The DS game ''Literature/TheHardyBoys: Treasure on the Tracks'' has the final twist of the story involve this. Borrowing from the 1997 animated film, Anastasia had survived and traveled to France, where she married and had a daughter. That daughter later became a grandmother to one of the passengers on the Royal Express: [[spoiler: Isabelle]]. What's more, the game depicts Anastasia ''still alive'' and meeting her great-grandchild at the end of the game.
135* The fourth ''VideoGame/HeartsOfIron'' game is a clear aversion - while a woman calling herself Anastasia Romanov will show up to claim the Throne of Poland should one reject all other candidates twice[[note]]in-universe, Poland can pursue an elective monarchy; said candidates include a one of the Habsburgs, Friedrich Christian (who was the preferred candidate of the Central Powers), King Michael I of Romania, and a Georgian Prince; if one rejects Anastasia, they'll start over[[/note]] the game makes it very clear that it's actually the aforementioned Anna Anderson, with many text prompts even having her status doubted in universe. Since it's very possible for Poland to actually ''defeat'' the Soviet Union, the true fate of Anastasia can be discovered if the player has met certain conditions[[note]]namely, having Wojtek the Bear as a commander - doing so allows for either Wojtek to be crowned king of Poland, or the player can bury the evidence[[/note]].
136* ''VideoGame/TheNewOrderLastDaysOfEurope'' offers an interesting variation with Tsarevich Alexei (Anastasia's brother). Sergey Taboritsky, possible leader of the Komi Republic, fervently believes that Alexei survived, but will only return when Russia is sufficiently purified. If Taboritsky unifies West Russia, he initiates a reign of terror that rivals or even exceeds what the [[AlternateHistoryNaziVictory victorious Nazis]] have done in Europe. In reality, Alexei is very dead, making this an aversion. [[spoiler:Eventually, if he is not defeated by another unifier, Taboritsky realizes that Alexei is never coming back and all his killing was for nothing. This epiphany kills him, and his Holy Russian Empire collapses.]]
137** A further subversion comes from the "After Midnight" update. After [[spoiler:Taboritsky dies and the Holy Russian Empire collapses]], one of the factions that emerges is led by a man who claims to be Alexei returned. In reality, he's Michał Goleniewski, a Polish-born NKVD agent using the Alexei persona to try and restore some kind of sanity to Russia.
138* Anastasia is a playable party member in ''VideoGame/ShadowHeartsCovenant'', which takes place in a ''very'' fictionalized alternate UsefulNotes/WorldWarOne. After the main cast defeat the demon-possessed Rasputin, Anastasia joins them to help protect Russia and the rest of the world. The mystery isn't directly referenced, but in the good ending [[spoiler:playable characters are scattered to different parts of the timeline, unable to return back to their time, meaning that from the perspective of her contemporaries Grand Duchess Anastasia Romanov disappeared mysteriously, and would be unaccounted for in whatever happens to the rest of her family. An ending still shows her alongside Kurando, alive and happy, but in an unspecified location and time period]].
139[[/folder]]
140

Top