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He was trying to kill them at the time, but this happened instead.

"Let us remember that a traitor may betray himself, and do good that he does not intend."
Gandalf the White (discussing Gollum), The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

Basically, the heroes have a problem. It could range from personal, to being vital in their quests. Then an antagonist does something, either accidentally or deliberately but with an unintended effect, that instead fixes this problem nicely. It's like a Kick the Dog, but instead of hurting the dog, it pops one of the dog's dislocated bones back into place.

Sometimes it can be a single act. Sometimes it can be just one too many moves The Chessmaster makes, and the villain becomes their very own Spanner in the Works.

Say the Evil Overlord decides to smash the hero's Orphan's Plot Trinket just For the Evulz, and then it turns out that trinket was a Power Limiter that the hero wasn't able to break himself (or wasn't aware had that function), and now The Hero lays a No-Holds-Barred Beatdown on the overlord.

This is often Played for Laughs. Sometimes the Minion with an F in Evil is responsible for this.

This trope on its own just has the villain do this independently of the heroes. If the heroes trick the villain into fixing their problem, then this trope combines with either Briar Patching or a Batman Gambit.

May overlap with Dick Dastardly Stops to Cheat if the villain had victory in hand before he did whatever he did.

Compare Hoist by His Own Petard (when the villains foil their own plans), Villain Ball, Bad Guys Do the Dirty Work (like this, only intentional), Poke the Poodle, Phlebotinum Rebel (when the villain creates the hero), Tactical Suicide Boss (when an enemy can only be beaten by exploiting a certain move) and due to the G.I.F.T, Why Fandom Can't Have Nice Things (when fans do it).

Contrast Nice Job Breaking It, Hero, From Bad to Worse, Two Rights Make a Wrong.

Super-Trope to Create Your Own Hero.

This is not villains hurting their own plans or failing to break something (like resistance against them). "Fixing" in this case means solving a problem they did not know existed, or were trying to exploit.

WARNING: Unmarked spoilers ahead! noreallife


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    Asian Animation 
  • BoBoiBoy: Adu Du exploits BoBoiBoy Lightning's forgetfulness to make him attack his own friends and elemental counterparts, almost successfully making him take out his own grandfather. Adu Du's Robot Buddy Probe then exclaims "Awesome!" as a remark on the rogue elemental's tenacity, but it triggers a Regained Memories Sequence in him as "Awesome!" is BoBoiBoy's catchphrase, and he quickly turns on them.
  • Pleasant Goat and Big Big Wolf: In Great War in the Bizarre World episode 3, Wolffy summons the bees to test the command that Darton had just explained to them, calling them to appear where he is. Unfortunately, this happens to be right when they're attacking the goats, and Wolnie whacks him when she realizes this and orders him to send the bees after them again.

    Comic Strips 
  • In the Tournament Arc of Knights of the Dinner Table, the knights get a bunch of "Doomsday" dice by rubbing their dice against the dead body of the guy who made the game. Only they end up cursing their dice, every die in their possession and every die of every friend they lent dice to, meaning the dice now produce the worst results possible, making just about anything a critical fumble. Everyone on the Knights' team was given this and they seem to be in a hopeless position as they face their Smug Snake rival team... except she reveals she learned of their "advantage" and eBay'd some of the dice, believing they were blessed and very ironically leveling the playing field.

    Live-Action TV 
  • Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.: In "What They Become", Ward unties Skye from captivity (though she shoots him right after due to his previous betrayals of the team), and doing so allows her to stop Cal from beating Coulson to death for taking his kill of Whitehall from him.
  • Angel:
    • A flashback in the episode "Darla" shows that Spike murdered the family of the Romani mystic while Darla was holding them hostage, foiling her plan to blackmail the Romani mystic into removing Angel's soul.
    • In "Salvage", Angelus, being Chaotic Evil and all, decides to double-cross the Lawful Evil villain who'd blotted out the sun over Los Angeles. The Beast is nigh invulnerable, until Angelus uses a bone dagger made from its body to kill it. Unfortunately, as foreshadowed by a mystical dream Angel had earlier, that undoes the spell and brings the sun back. Hundreds of rampaging vampires die instantly, and Angelus is sent scrambling for the nearest safe shadow.
      Angelus: Aw crap! You mean killing the Beast really does bring back the sun? I thought that was Angel's retarded fantasy!
    • Then there's "Not Fade Away", where Hamilton, newly favored by the Senior Partners of Wolfram & Hart, beats the crap out of Angel... until his boasting reveals the source of his power, to a vampire.
      Hamilton: Let me make this as clear as I can. You cannot defeat me. I am part of them, the Wolf, the Ram, and the Hart. Their strength flows through my veins! My blood is filled with their ancient power!
      Angel: [grins and pops his fangs] Can you pick out the one word there you probably shouldn't have said?
    • Darla, in the long run is a tremendous case of this, as by turning Liam (Angelus/Angel as a human) into a vampire she unintentionally helped saved countless of lives in the future. Had Liam remained a drunken delinquent in Ireland he would've just died of disease, in a bar fight, or of old age, and he wouldn't have become so evil that a vengeful Romani would curse him with a soul and he'd spend the rest of his immortal life saving and protecting innocent lives, and preventing the apocalypse multiple times. For bonus points, she was the one who gifted a bound and gagged Romani girl to Angel, leading her clan to curse him in revenge. Darla said she "saw greatness in him", but it wasn't the kind of greatness a soulless vampire like her had in mind. She even does it again in "Reprise", as by sleeping with a recently Jumped Off The Slippery Slope Angel, she makes him realize how far he has fallen and go back to his True Companions Cordiela, Wesley and Gunn whom he had abandoned.
  • Babylon 5: In "Point of No Return", President Clark orders the Nightwatch to usurp control of security departments, including Babylon 5's. However, he makes a massive mistake that gives Sheridan a way to defy the order: he relays the order through the Political Office rather than the Joint Chiefs of Staff, rendering the orders null and void as the Political Office is a civilian agency with no authority over the military. Next episode, this ends up turning Babylon 5 into a safe haven for democracy-loyal ships, ultimately leading to the station breaking away from the Earth Alliance.
  • On Bewitched, most of the malicious pranks that Endora played on Darin often benefitted him. For instance, in one episode, where Samantha took an interest in sculpting and Darin was having his boss and a client (who was clearly an alcoholic) over for dinner, Endora made Sam's shabby bust of Darin a better likeness, added one of his boss, and then brought them to life. When the client saw them talking, he thought it was because he was drunk, and after making the deal, left quickly, swearing to quit drinking. ("When it goes from pink elephants to talking rocks, it's time to get on the wagon!") Unfortunately, Darin never seems able to say "thank you"...
    • With at least one exception, where he expresses not only humility but gratitude to Endora for temporarily turning him into a child (this is one of the episodes where Darrin was played by Dick Sargent instead of Dick York), because it was while he was in this state that he discovered that what was causing the slow sales of the food product he was promoting was not in the advertising, but in the taste itself.
  • Cold Case: In "Mind Hunters" George tauntingly refers to the childhood story which inspired his prisoner, DeeDee Cooper, to escape her rapist. Remembering this lets her summon the courage and boldness to escape from him too. It also causes the police to realize that the killer had to have access to police reports to know that detail about her original assault.
  • Control Z:
    • In 1.08, Sofia had deduced that Raúl has been the hacker all along due to some leads she had found during their time together: her stolen necklace, the same words said by the hacker while she was kidnapped, the mask under Raúl's bed and the password to his computer being the name of a dog Raúl owned.
    • In 2.06, Pablo broke the news about Raúl and, allegedly, Sofía's parts in harboring Gerry from the police, which had caused most of the students to accuse the latter of being a "traitor. However, with the incriminating evidence being out of context and Pablo's suspension from the school for beating Raúl up, they are no longer trash-talking Sofía by the next episode, thus leaving Pablo unable to fully explain his supposed side of the story. He did not even consider the fact of Raúl hiding Gerry at his house. Because of this, he had unwittingly cleared Sofía's name, supported by Raúl's absence from the school and Rosita telling everyone about Sofía's "accident".
    • In 2.08, thanks to a mistake the avenger made "out of love", as echoed previously by her father, Sofia learns that Alex is the perpetrator since she had stolen Raúl's money so she could start a new life with Gaby and initially considered abandoning her revenge plans. Most of the victims were inspired through Luis's drawings of violent fantasies, save for Gerry and Raúl. However, after Gaby left for Spain without her, Alex was heartbroken to the point of still going through with the act.
  • Doctor Who:
    • In “The Celestial Toymaker”, the Doctor only finds a way out of the Toymaker's realm because the Toymaker had already used verbal commands to skip ahead in the Trilogic Game he was forcing the Doctor to play, giving him the idea of imitating the Toymaker’s voice to make the final move.
    • The Green Death”;
      • The Doctor would never have stumbled across the BOSS's plan if the supercomputer in question hadn't dumped those chemicals in the mine, drawing UNIT's attention.
      • An armed guard is stopping the Doctor from entering Global Chemicals. BOSS then activates the brainwashing signal, causing the guard and the rest of the staff to blank out, enabling the Doctor to enter unhindered.
    • In “The Masque of Mandragora”, while a hypnotised Sarah Jane Smith is sneaking up behind the Doctor to stab him in the back with a poisoned needle, Hieronymous (the leader of the cult and the one who hypnotised her) calls on her to "Strike him down!", alerting the Doctor that she's there. However, the Doctor clearly knew Sarah was following him earlier, so it's likely he already knew about the attack.
    • In “The Sun Makers”, at one point the Fourth Doctor is captured by the Company that controls Pluto as a suspected criminal conspirator. However, Gatherer Hade, one of the high officials in the Company, has him released because he thinks the Doctor's part of a bigger plan and wants to use him to lure out the rest of the conspirators. As a result, Hade gives the Doctor the chance to not only put together a clearer plan to rescue his companion Leela (who was captured later), but subsequently rally the existing underground and stage a true revolution.
    • In “Remembrance of the Daleks”, by swiping the Renegade Daleks' time controller at the last moment, Ratcliffe and Mike inadvertently allowed the Imperial Daleks loyal to Davros to capture the Hand of Omega — just as the Doctor had intended (this triggered a trap he’d set where the Hand would destroy Skaro’s sun and thus Skaro itself).
    • In “The Greatest Show in the Galaxy”, Ace and Kingpin would never have retrieved the other part of the amulet needed to disrupt the power of the Gods of Ragnarok if the ticket collector robot hadn't accidentally broken its box open while trying to kill Ace.
    • "Daleks in Manhattan"/"Evolution of the Daleks": Dalek Caan's decision to betray Dalek Sec after the latter turns himself into a Half-Human Hybrid leads directly to the Daleks' plans being ruined and, at the end, Caan left the only Dalek alive before his escape.
    • "The Stolen Earth"/"Journey's End": After Donna and the metacrisis Doctor arrive in the Crucible with a plan to stop the Daleks, Davros takes out both of them by shooting electricity from his prosthetic hand. It works just fine on the Doctor-clone, but with Donna, it activates her half of the biological metacrisis and makes her half-Time Lord and making her smart enough to stop the Reality Bomb while unrestrained and with none of the villains paying attention to her.
    • "The End of Time": Things look bleak indeed. The Doctor has just crashed through the skylight of the Naismiths' mansion and is badly hurt, Rassilon and the Time Lords have escaped the Time Lock with the Master's help and plan to end time itself so they can Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence. They practically had victory in the bag, but Rassilon, the Lord President of the Time Lords, tells the Master he's outlived his usefulness. Not what you want to tell the Master, who isn't quite sane at the best of times and has just won the Superpower Lottery. Then Rassilon lets slip that he is responsible for the drumbeat that the Master's heard all his life and that has driven him steadily more crazy. The Master tells the Doctor to "get out of the way" and uses his life force to electrocute Rassilon, protecting the Doctor from him until they all disappeared back to the Time War.
      The Master: YOU DID THIS TO ME. ALL MY LIFE! ONE! TWO! THREE! FOUR!
    • "The Time of Angels"/"Flesh and Stone": The army of Weeping Angels are low on power from being stuck in the catacombs for eons, so they start draining power from the crashed ship they're currently on, the Byzantium, in order to survive. This has the side effect of deactivating the ship's artificial gravity, causing the unprepared Angels to fall into the crack in time and be erased from existence.
    • "The Pandorica Opens"/"The Big Bang" plays this in a complicated fashion. The Pandorica was built by a Legion of Doom in order to imprison the Doctor. However, the Doctor is then able to use the Pandorica to reboot the universe. But since the Pandorica was built to imprison the Doctor so the universe wouldn't be destroyed, building the Pandorica worked out alright for the Alliance in the end.
    • "The Day of the Doctor": A Zygon gets too into character impersonating Kate Lethbridge-Stewart, and forgets that when you're The Mole you're supposed to stop pretending to be on your enemy's side before giving them everything they need to stop you.
    • "Extremis": The Prophets of Truth have created multiple highly realistic simulations of Earth in preparation for their planned invasion, in order to account for all possible variables. However, in their latest simulation, as its version of the Doctor is all too happy to point out, they made it a little too realistic: the technology is good enough for the simulated Doctor to email the real Doctor a warning about the imminent invasion.
  • Dollhouse: Alpha's entire goal in "Briar Rose" and "Omega" was to turn Echo into a composite like himself. Composite!Echo's first act was to hit Alpha with a pipe. Justified in that, since he was a doll, most of his personalities are hopelessly lovelorn romantic rape-slaves specifically designed to put their assigned sexual interest on an absurdly high pedestal, and many of them were tailored to work with Echo specifically. Not all that many of the fractured components of his personality were dispassionate, experts in psychology and engineering, or particularly smart in any field but infiltration.
  • Game of Thrones:
    • Locke's maiming of Jaime, while removing his ability to fight with a sword, made him a much better person.
    • Myranda showing Reek to Sansa, and letting her know just what sort of monster Ramsay is, actually helps Sansa and Theon; it pushes Sansa into thinking of how to escape and spurs Theon's Heel–Face Turn, and they both end up escaping Winterfell, killing Myranda in the process.
    • Euron boasting about his plans to take the Ironborn's fleet and ply Dany's affections with it gives Theon and Yara the idea to do the same before he can get the chance to. They ultimately succeed in this, so Euron changes strategies with brutal efficiency.
  • In The Good Place, Michael's plan to eternally torture four selfish and deeply flawed humans by forcing them to spend time in each other's company a la No Exit backfires massively when the humans, instead of doing nothing but making each other miserable, end up motivating each other to become better people. If he hadn't forced Eleanor to live with Chidi, she would have likely stayed a self-centered misanthrope instead of starting to improve through Chidi's morality lessons and Chidi would have stayed a perpetual ditherer instead of gradually learning from Eleanor how to be more decisive, and something similar can be said of Tahani and Jason too. Season 2 makes this even worse on his end — he tries many different situations, learning from the mistakes of the previous ones, but the residents always become better people. The whole frustrating experience ends up ultimately turning Michael into a Defector from Decadence.
  • Gossip Girl has Blair, who seems to create this and Nice Job Breaking It, Hero in other people (depending on whether she's the good guy at that point or one of the bad ones). Chuck gets her latest boyfriend's mother to come break them up? In one party Blair gets her approval. Chuck tries to seduce her only to be caught by said boyfriend? Blair finally gets laid by new boyfriend. Jenny tries to beat Blair and become Queen B? Within a few weeks, she's back and dangerous. Vanessa tries to blackmail Blair? Humiliated by episode's end. Vanessa tries to break up her and Nate? They're closer than ever by episode's end. And most of this is just the first two seasons! She's still going — at the end of Season 4 Serena's attempt to hurt her actually leads to her relationship with the prince becoming public, her being approved by his mother, and finally her getting engaged to him. Lampshaded by Dan — "Only Chuck and Blair could go to war and end up happier than when they started." Also, his attempt to attack them that episode? Ended up with Chuck and Blair having fantastic sex on a piano. Let's face it, no one can hurt Blair without helping her.
  • House: The Season 1 Arc Villain Edward Vogler fell victim to this, as his repeated attempts to fire/cow House into submission ends up making him look far worse to the hospital board than House himself. Had he simply ignored/put up with House's attitude, Vogler would've likely gotten full control of the hospital with little to no resistance.
  • It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia: In "How Mac Got Fat", Frank spends the night adding two Stop signs to back up traffic at the intersection near Paddy's For the Evulz. The result:
    Frank: Now there's four Stop signs, so no cars can go!
    Charlie: Frank, you just created a 4-way intersection. If anything, you've made this intersection safer.
    Frank: Oh shit. Huh.
  • More than a few Kamen Rider villains have done this sort of thing at least once:
    • Kamen Rider OOO sees Dr. Maki, growing impatient with the rate at which Eiji's purple Core Medals are corrupting him, forcibly stuff two more into him in order to make him go berserk. These and the five he already had become ammunition for the final attack that undoes Maki's plans.
    • Kamen Rider Ex-Aid has a rare example that's not meant sarcastically: throughout the show, Graphite makes numerous efforts to catch up to and surpass the heroes. These range from plugging a Gashat into himself to become a walking pandemic, to willingly infecting himself with the Gamedeus virus so that he can tap into its powers in order to stop the even more evil Kamen Rider Cronus. While none of these measures ultimately work out for Graphite's original goals, all of them end up being critical parts of the solution that actually brings Cronus down.
    • Kamen Rider Build lead villain Evolt deliberately created the hero, the hero's supporting cast, all of their equipment and all of the other villains, all for the purpose of empowering himself. For the most part it even works, he just doesn't know how to quit while he's ahead, and ultimately is foiled by the fake heroes he created.
    • Kamen Rider Zi-O could have ended at episode 16 with the hero willingly throwing away his powers and the other protagonists returning to the future, allowing the Time Jackers to run wild. Instead they decide to try and kill Sougo to absolutely guarantee that he won't become the king they're trying to overthrow, only for this to be what causes him to make a comeback. Unfortunately, this was all part of Swartz's plan to let Sougo become Ohma Zi-O, which also explains how he was able to reprogram future Ohma Zi-O's robot Elite Mook to follow his orders so that he will get his puppet king...with said king being Sougo.
  • Kingdom (2019): The Jerkass nobles and police lock away Yeong-shin in jail, but it becomes helpful when the zombies come. Almost all of the nobles and police involved in this end up getting killed when they try to use the jail cells while trying to escape the zombies, while Yeong-shin escapes unharmed.
  • In The Last Ship, the Chosen managed to find a hacker who was sympathetic to their cause to give them access to a network through which they could spread their virulent anti-Navy propaganda. Said propaganda ends up working a little too well, causing a bunch of riled-up, paranoid Americans to attack an oil platform after they spot a naval chopper landing on it. Said oil platform turns out to be the hub through which the propaganda network operates, and thus, not only is the propaganda network disabled, but the Chosen have also alienated the hacker.
  • In the LazyTown episode, "The Laziest Town", LazyTown must stay active all day to raise the energy meter to 100 in order to keep from being the laziest town on Earth before 5PM. Robbie believes that if LazyTown gets this title, Sportacus will leave LazyTown for good out of embarrassment. At literally the last second, when Sportacus finally loses all his energy and can no longer do tricks to keep the meter active, Robbie becomes overjoyed and does a victory dance that ends up being active enough to raise the bar instantly from 0 to 100, saving LazyTown. The Mayor, Stephanie, and the rest of the cast gather to congratulate and thank Robbie and give him three cheers. Robbie is overcome with regret and runs back to his lair.
  • The pilot for Leverage, has Victor Dubenich gather a team of crooks into robbing a rival. He then tricks them into the same spot to try to blow them up with a bomb. After they pull off their first con to ruin Dubenich and send him to jail, Nate calls the guy up to tell Victor that if he had simply paid them off, they'd have gone their separate ways and never given him a second thought. By trying to kill them, Dubenich made these strangers into a team who use this con to get wildly rich and then decide to keep it up. In short, Dubenich is the reason that scores of rich and corrupt scumbags are brought down by the Leverage team.
  • The serial arsonist in the first season of Lie to Me burns down two houses for revenge... but winds up accidentally doing the families in question a favor of sorts. The first family were up to their ears in debt, but their house was insured before the economic bubble burst. Burning it down not only gave them an economic fresh start, it also brought the family closer together by revealing that their daughter knew that mommy was cheating on daddy, pushing them to focus on the children and set aside their differences. The couple living in the second house were already divorced and stuck living together because they couldn't sell the house — again, since it now burned down, they could split the insurance money and go their separate ways.
    • Okay, so the first family DID lose their grandmother to the fire, but hey, we only see her for a few seconds right at the start, so as viewers, it's hard to feel sympathy on that count.
  • In the Lost Season 6 Finale, it turns out that the Big Bad's centuries-long Gambit Roulette worked exactly as planned except it also completely stripped him of all his powers and enabled Jack to beat him to death and toss him off a cliff. Also, his murder of Sayid, Jin, and Sun gives the others the Heroic Resolve to kill him instead of simply leaving him on the island like they had planned, leading to the above success of his plan.
  • In MythQuest, an evil god named Gorgos tries to destroy myths by causing the protagonists to accidentally change them. Unfortunately Gorgos says Alex's name a bit too soon and distracts Alex, which causes him to inadvertently re-enact the myth correctly and save the world.
  • In Once Upon a Time, if Regina had not been completely hellbent on running Emma out of town, she would have left completely of her own volition.
    • In the Season 1 finale Regina bakes a turnover with a poisoned apple to put Emma under the sleeping curse. To get the poison apple, she makes a deal with Jefferson. Henry winds up eating the turnover and falling into a coma, which leads to Emma breaking the curse! She also reneges on her agreement to erase Jefferson's memory of his fairytale life, causing him retaliate by releasing Belle and sending her to Mr. Gold. The real kicker on this was that she didn't give Emma the poisoned turnover until after Emma had already told Regina that she believed her presence was hurting Henry and was going to go away, leaving Henry to Regina: Regina had already won, and she knew it, but she still couldn't resist trying to poison Emma.
    • The candle Cora had given Snow allowed Snow to kill her and save Rumple's life. Also, she wanted to "turn Snow White's heart black as coal" for revenge against Snow's mother. She would succeed but it comes back to bite her hard.
      • Doubly so when you consider what caused the candle situation in the first place. She wound up screwing over Captain Hook, who wound up taking matters of revenge into his own hands and attacked Rumple with a slow-acting poison.
  • Sabrina the Teenage Witch: In the Season Finale of Season 3, Sabrina and her twin Katrina are subjected to several tests to figure out who the evil one was (all Spellman family members have an Evil Twin) Sabrina flunks two of the three, the one that clearly buried her chances being an act described as "selfish, involved civil disobedience, and was extremely messy". Even Sabrina herself believes she's the evil one, until Katrina proves otherwise by failing the final test (a Secret Test of Character) miserably. When told that the good twin had to shove the evil one into a volcano, she does so without hesitation, something no good twin has ever actually done. (Although the judge claims that Hilda had come awfully close.) Simply resisting this urge would have labeled Sabrina as "evil" forever and given Katrina free reign to accomplish any machinations she desired, but she is much too evil to resist.
  • Scream Queens (2015) has a twofold example in the Season 2 finale. The final killer, Nurse Hoffel, drains the swamp behind the CURE institute to fuel a bomb to blow up the rest of the cast with, and unplugs Dean Munsch's experimental cryo-chamber to power it. However, unplugging the chamber wakes up Denise, who was recuperating in it, and enables them to disarm the bomb. And then, while Hoffel is attempting to flee, they fall into a field of quicksand created by draining the swamp, drowning in it.
  • In Stranger Things:
    • During the Season 4 Flashback, Big Bad Henry Creel aka One under the facade of a friendly orderly helps Eleven out prior to her psychic duel against Two, telling her that memories that made One (him) angry boosted his Psychic Powers. This guidance royally comes back to bite him as when upon revealing his true colours and trying to kill El when she refuses to join him, Eleven is able to use what Henry taught her against him and with memories of being taken from her mother get a Heroic Second Wind and banish his ass to Upside Down.
    • Another more subtle Henry/Vecna example is when during the fateful night he killed his mother and sister, he unthinkingly turned on the radio which played a “Dream a Little Dream of Me” as a distraction. This not only inadvertently helped save his father Victor’s life since it was his favourite song and protected him from his son’s telepathy, but in the present while Victor recounts it to Nancy and Robin, they are able to figure out that it’s music that breaks Vecna’s Curse, which saves Max’s life during her Despair Event Horizon. In the long run, it was Henry who provided his own biggest weakness.
  • In Star Trek: Enterprise, the Romulans attempted to disrupt possible peace between the Andorians and Tellarites by using an advanced holoship which could disguise itself as any other ship to attack both sides. Because one of the Andorian ships they attacked happened to belong to Shran, a friend of Archer, Starfleet got involved and the ensuing mess resulted in the beginning of the Federation, their greatest foe for centuries to come. They really dropped the ball on that one.
  • The Umbrella Academy:
    • The Handler in Season 2 kills one of the Swedes brothers and pins the blame on Diego whom her adoptive/kidnapped daughter Lila has gotten attached to. This signs her own death warrant as the last remaining Swede figures out it was her and arrives in the climax to gun her down.
    • In Season 3, the Sparrows (led by Alternate Universe Jerkass Ben) believing the Umbrellas have taken their Number One Marcus hostage, kidnap Luther and hold him as ransom. While held captive, Luther gets to know one of them the sweet and gorgeous Gravity Master Sloane and they fall in love, which not only brings great joy to Luther’s so far pretty miserable life as he marries Sloane by the end of the season but also gives the heroes an extremely powerful and useful new ally/sister-in-law for the Final Battle.
    • Even The Chessmaster Sir Reginald Hargreeves majorly falls prey to this. His alternative universe father-son bonding with Klaus was naturally just a ruse in order to gain Klaus’s trust so that he’d help carry out The Plan, yet by helping Klaus improve and master his I See Dead People powers and his Resurrective Immortality, when Hargreeves reveals his true evil colours and kills Luther to inspire the others to go into the Pocket Dimesion machine built by Precursors while leaving Klaus to die by Kugelblitz, Klaus instead becomes a massive Spanner in the Works being able to now quickly come back from the afterlife (and bring Luther along) and warn the others of Reginald’s plotting and reveal his murder of them both. This in turn makes a Jumped Of The Slippery Slope Allison (who was working with him) pull a small Heel–Face Turn and kill Hargreeves just as he’s resetting the universe by draining the powers of the others with the machine, saving all their lives. When it comes to Klaus, Reggie truly shot himself in the foot and by the time he realises his blunder can only express annoyance and violence.
  • In VR Troopers, Grimlord does this with Dream Master, growing impatient at how long it was taking him to defeat Ryan Steele. At this point, Dream Master had weakened Ryan with mind games about his father and he had connected him to an electrocution chain. Had the gunbots and tankbots not interfered, Dream Master would have beaten Ryan Steele, since JB was occupied with another monster and Kaitlin was too weakened by Dream Master's nightmares. But after the gunbots interfered and the two of them escaped fire, Dream Master continued with his shock chain only for Ryan to find a chain in this new location to redirect the current before delivering a beatdown on what was supposed to be a Monster of the Week.
    • Similarly, different times, a Monster of the Week has a trooper on the ropes, then the air force comes in for a distraction, apparently hitting both the monster and the trooper, giving the Trooper time to think of a new battle plan while bazookaing down the air force.
    • Another time, Arachnobot nearly had the Troopers beaten, but Doom Master himself killed Arachnobot out of jealousy. Thankfully for his sake, he thought it was the Trooper that did it, not Doom Master.
  • In WandaVision Agatha while holding Wanda captive, in some Evil Gloating explains how magical runes work and how Wanda is powerless within them. This comes back to bite Agatha hard when Wanda makes use of her teachings to place her own runes all around the Hex, de-powering Agatha.
  • In Season 2 of The Wire, Frank's realization that the police are onto the dockworkers' smuggling/diversion operation results in a changeup to it that frustrates their investigation for a while...but not without giving them a lead to the inner circle of the criminal organization running it.

    Myths & Religion 
  • One folktale tells about a woman who was so beautiful, Satan himself became hopelessly enamored with her. After she refuses him one too many times, The Devil simply decides to Cut The Knot and steal her beauty for himself. After returning to earth, he finds that the same woman is now hideous as a boot, but is also now Happily Married with an equally ugly husband and child and free of stalkers.
  • In The Bible's Book of Esther, Haman goes to ask king Xerxes for a death warrant for his hated rival Mordecai, the representative of the Jews. Xerxes, who happens to have been reading the royal archives, asks Haman how he should reward a man who has done a great service to the king. Haman thinks he's talking about himself and proposes an elaborate celebration, only to find to his horror that the king is actually talking about Mordecai, who had saved the king's life a while back. Haman winds up having to carry out his own plan to publicly honor Mordecai. This is just the beginning of his Humiliation Conga.
  • In renditions of the part of The Bible where Jesus tells Judas that he's going to betray Him, it's often said that "at that moment, Satan entered into him" or something to that effect. So what we're saying here is that although Satan may have caused Judas to betray Jesus, the results of Jesus' death led to the cleansing of humanity's sins and the founding of Christianity, which means that Satan's plan (if there was one) failed. Nice job fixing it, Satan!

    Pro Wrestling 
  • Faarooq replacing Ahmed Johnson, who he felt was overshadowing him in The Nation of Domination with Rocky Maivia, who ended up taking over the group and kicking Faarooq outnote .
  • Ray González is the head of La Familia del Milenio, pretty much holds an iron grip on WWC until he starts antagonizing camera man Carly when he finds out he's the son of the company founder. Carly had no desire to be a wrestler prior but because of that he trained and beat every member of La Familia, including González for the WWC Universal Title.
  • During the Chavo and Chris Benoit feud on Smackdown, Chavo Guerrero used the lure of Kurt Angle, whom Benoit hated, to lure Benoit into a beat down in the locker room. Thing is, Angle didn't like the Guerreros too much either and soon he and Benoit were teaming up against them.
  • In 1997, Bret Hart reformed the Hart Foundation as an Anti American/Pro Canadian/European stable and immediately began going after Bret’s two biggest enemies: Stone Cold Steve Austin and The Heartbreak Kid Shawn Michaels, two patriotic, American wrestlers. Thing was, at this point, Shawn and Steve (on camera) BARELY tolerated each other and had little patience for one another. By giving them a common enemy, Bret indirectly helped them find common ground which lead to them teaming up and beating Owen Hart and Davey Boy Smith (Hart Foundation members) for the tag team titles. As Vince McMahon said in his commentary “Shawn and Steve’s hatred for each other is surpassed only by their mutual hatred for the Hart Foundation.” Jim Ross: “It’s like John Dillinger and Pretty Boy Floyd teaming up to rob the same bank.”
  • A.J. Lee'snote  efforts to torment all of her former lovers after becoming the general manager of Monday Night Raw. Did her efforts have the desired effect? Judging how successful they ended up being, Hell No!
  • Wink Vavasseur's punting assailANT into Chikara's Colony in 2012 for being the "weak link" of GEKIDO lead to assailANT's Face–Heel Turn and prevention of deviANT's attempt to burn down the Wrestle Factory.
  • Then nCw Femme Fatales International Champion Mercedes Martinez took two steps to fix the problem that was herself. First by offering an open four way challenge for a shot at her belt (which she won, admittedly) and then interfering Courtney Rush and Cheerleader Melissa's #1 contender match to keep either from getting a shot. Having already put the idea in their heads, she was put in another fatal fourway with both of them and Femme Fatales founder LuFisto (Rush won the belt).
  • Cody felt that Kenny Omega was not acting like a true leader of Bullet Club and turned on him at New Beginning in Sapporo. The leadership feud ultimately ended at Supercard of Honor XII with Cody beating Kenny, however it ultimately did nothing to fix the divide within Bullet Club (as well as the divide between his fellow BC/The Elite members which was caused by him) and nearly all of the members (including Kota Ibushi whom is not a BC member, rather one half of The Golden Lovers) have to face each other at Wrestling Dontaku. Way to go Cody.
  • Austin Aries's mistreatment of Team IPW allowed Stu Bennett to hire them as part of the Defiant Wrestling roster in the fallout to Defiant Chain Reaction. And while Aries eventually lost the World Title to Rampage at Defiant No Regrets, Mark Haskins (along with Jimmy Havoc) and Aussie Open (the first ones to turn on Aries) got to play Hot Potato with the Tag Team title ever since the latter team obtained it, putting every other team in the background.
  • Bray Wyatt's decision to go after John Cena at an inopportune time set off a chain of events that ended up wrecking The Authority's power base. The Wyatt Family interrupted a match involving The Shield vs. the team of Cena, Sheamus and Daniel Bryan, with the winning team earning spots in the 2014 Elimination Chamber for the WWE Title. They attacked Cena mid-match, thus causing the Shield to be disqualified through no fault of their own. This severely pissed off The Shield, leading to a direct, public clash with Triple H, as they demanded a match with the Family for revenge, and Trips wanted them to stay on task doing the Authority's dirty work. The Shield started to tire of being used as pawns, which earned Kane's ire, and made it next to impossible for The Authority to control him any longer either. Case in point: Kane accidentally outing Triple H as having tried to pull a You Have Outlived Your Usefulness on the Shield at one point. Predictably it was the last straw. The relationship between the Shield and the Authoritys was severed, leading the Shield to turn face, pound the New Age Outlaws back into retirement at Wrestlemania XXX, and directly cost Triple H the championship the next night on RAW. Triple H's only remaining in-ring hands were himself, Randy Orton, and a bunch of lower-card Mooks that had little to no investment in Trips's personal vendettas. Triple H had to take drastic measures in a last-ditch effort to keep any semblance of in-ring presence (or at least whatever's left of it), and even that didn't work quite as planned. And maybe, if The Wyatt Family had waited before or after Cena's match to beat the hell out of him that night, the first half of 2014 would have gone very differently.

    Puppet Shows 
  • In the Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons episode "Spectrum Strikes Back", the Mysterons try to kill a committee taking a look at some anti-Mysteron prototype equipment that could be useful. In the end, all the Mysterons essentially achieve is provide a spectacularly successful field test for the stuff that proves its worth.
    • Captain Scarlet himself is actually a Mysteron-created indestructible duplicate of the original Captain Scarlet, who was just an ordinary human being. Spectrum needs to thank those guys for giving them the super-agent they needed!

    Radio 
  • In the comedy fantasy series Elvenquest, Lord Darkness, the Big Bad, frequently ends up unintentionally saving the protagonists from the consequences of their own mistakes.

    Tabletop Games 
  • Chronicles of Darkness:
    • Mage: The Awakening: The primary conflict of the game focuses on a war between two factions of Mages, the Diamond Orders, who wish to free humanity from the tyranny of entities known as the Exarchs so everyone may use magic, and the Seers of the Throne, who serve the Exarchs and want to keep humanity under their servitude. At some point however, a third large faction of Neutral Good mages known as the Nameless, who were annoyed with the traditional approach of magic and wanted to try modern methods, developed. They initially didn't see eye to eye with the Diamond Orders, and were in fact on the verge of going at war with them... until the Seers of the Throne decided to step in and approach the Nameless, offering them a We Can Rule Together. As it turned out, they had fundamentally misunderstood their motivations, and the Nameless took it as a personal insult, to the point they formally allied themselves with the Diamond, renaming themselves Free Council in the process.
  • In Exalted, when the Great Contagion was killing the majority of Creation, The First and Forsaken Lion got The Fair Folk to invade, destroying fully half the territory and killing many of the Contagion's survivors. The problem? The Balorian Crusade was repulsed, and the infusion of Wyld energies may very well have helped Creation fight off the effects of the Contagion, thereby allowing it to survive. Falafel's Neverborn master was quite angry, to the point where it bound him into his armor. Painfully.
    • And exiled him to a fortress that was essentially in the middle of nowhere.
      • Which of course delayed and inconvenienced any number of his extremely effective war plans to destroy Creation more thoroughly this time. So... nice job fixing it...Cthulhu
    • The Neverborn seem to have a history of sabotaging their own plans to further the cause of Oblivion. Between the First and Forsaken Lion getting spot-welded into his own armor for not destroying enough of creation, and Princess Magnificent almost getting thrown headfirst into Oblivion for losing to the gods behind the city of Great Forks, there's a reason most of the other Deathlords have been twiddling their thumbs for millennia. They don't want to see what the Neverborn will do to the next guy who fucks up.
      • Alternative Character Interpretation: We're told, explicitly, that most of the Deathlords only agreed to kill the world so they could enjoy using the power they were given to rule over its dying husk. Is it really a surprise that most of them drag their heels? You can't rule the world if you kill it.
    • We also have the Ebon Dragon, the literal inventor of the concept of Card-Carrying Villain, existing to screw people over. Due to certain psychological problems this brings, this goes equally for the Ebon Dragon himself.
      • Here's a short list of the ways the Ebon Dragon bollocked up the Reclamation. First off, he included rules that make the Infernals have to act like B-movie villains every so often, but said nothing about who they have to do it to. Instead of granting the Infernals their own innate Charms, he and the other Yozis decided to make it so they share Charms with their patrons... which means not only do the Infernals get access to the high-level Charms that make the Yozis worlds/gods, they could conceivably make their own Charms and infect their own patrons with their particular mindset. Oh, and then there's the Heresy Charm Set... So basically, what you've got is a Hell-forged superpowered being who needs to act like a bastard to someone, has access to god-like power, and can sever the ties with their demonic masters. That sound you just heard was the Shadow of All Things realizing he just invented his Bastard Understudy... Which, again according to his basic nature, might be All According to Plan.
    • And, of course, the big one that sets the whole setting off. Creation has been in a precarious position for centuries, with the overworked Sidereals, the Lunars driven to the edge of the world, the heavily corrupt (or absent) gods, the almost equally corrupt Realm, the forces of the Underworld massing, and the Fair Folk being just barely kept in check. Into this comes the person controlling the Realm (and its big superweapon that keeps most of the other big enemies at bay) mysteriously disappearing, bringing it to the verge of a civil war that could tip Creation over the edge. And then... the Neverborn and the Yozis conspire to break open the Jade Prison, and use its captives to make their own Exalted. Half of those captives escape them. They become the Solar Exalted.
  • Heavy Gear: After the forces of Terra Nova have defeated the CEF, they resume their conflict with each other. The city of Peace River tries to mediate talks to get the North and South to stop fighting, ends up getting destroyed by an anti matter bomb by the CEF. This prompts the all of Terra Nova to stop fighting and unite against the Earth forces once more.
  • In the the world of Innistrad in Magic: The Gathering, the angel Avacyn used to lock demons away in an artifact called the Helvault, until she was tricked by the demon Griselband and the two were sealed together. Losing its guardian angel, lots of bad things happened in Innistrad, until the necromancer Liliana Vess decided to break the Helvault to kill Griselband without knowing that it would also release Avacyn.

    Theatre 
  • In the musical 1776, Judge Wilson (who is against independence) mentions that they must first "define the nature of the beast." Later, when it looks like the move might be defeated, Adams and Franklin use this as the means to delay the vote until they write The Declaration.
    • If Dickinson (the face of the anti-independence faction) hadn't basically begun gloating about how his vote would kill the independence vote, Franklin wouldn't have had enough time to call for a delegation poll, leaving the final vote (and the fate of the United States) in the hands of his toady Wilson, who sides with the independence voters because he doesn't want to be remembered by history as the man who killed American independence.
  • As a meta-example, Mephistopheles in Goethe's Faust proclaims that he is "Part of that Power which would The Evil ever do, and ever does the Good."
  • Opera villains (like many other characters in opera) often tend to be Too Dumb to Live:
    • Paolo Albiani in Simon Boccanegra, a skilled politician who has been in the limelight for more than 25 years, seems to have grabbed an Idiot Ball somewhere after his first meeting with Amelia Grimaldi. He kidnaps Amelia after she rejects him and leaves her in the house of a rather cowardly mook, enabling Amelia to run away and make an appeal to Simon. Then, vowing revenge on Simon, he slips a very slow-acting poison into his drink, so that Simon would suffer for long. Between drinking the poisoned water and finally dying, Simon: reconciles himself with Gabriele Adorno and Jacopo Fiesco, revealing them Amelia's true parentage, crushes a rebellion, makes himself a favorite with the crowds again, appoints Adorno as the next Doge, and sends Albiani to the gallows, on his way to which he is forced to hear the choir at Adorno and Amelia/Maria's wedding. Thank you, Paolo, for allowing the Doge to organize a proper happy ending.
    • Ptolemy in Giulio Cesare by George Frederic Handel has grand plans and an actually competent army. But his actual acts ruin whatever potential he has. He sends Pompey’s head to Caesar, and Caesar denounces him as a murderous tyrant and wages war on him. He insults and degrades his sister, causing her to join Caesar’s cause. He tries to rape Pompey’s widow, which results in his own right-hand man who’s in love with her deserting him and aiding the heroes. Finally, he lets Pompey’s son live (when the latter practically waltzes into the palace, too) and doesn’t even keep him under a good guard, and, big surprise, the boy ends up killing him.
    • In The Magic Flute, the Queen of the Night and the Three Ladies do more helpful deeds than evil ones. They save Tamino from a giant snake and send him to "rescue" the Queen's daughter Pamina from her enemy Sarastro, not realizing that Tamino is destined to join Sarastro and strengthen his community against them. They also give Tamino the titular magic flute, thinking it will help him defeat Sarastro, but instead he and Pamina use it to succeed in Sarastro's trials and join his brotherhood. At the same time they give Papageno the magic bells that bring his true love to him in the end, and they entrust the young men to the Three Boys' wisdom, only for the Boys to give them pro-Sarastro guidance throughout.

    Visual Novels 
  • Ace Attorney:
    • This becomes useful in solving case 4 of Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Spirit of Justice. A dying message is left in order to implicate the client you're representing, but it soon comes to light that a witness rearranged the cards from the original message, which also implicated an innocent party. The fact that the second party in question is part of the witness's Split Personality that the defendant didn't know existed paves the way to proving his innocence and pointing to the real culprit's identity.
    • In case 5 of Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Dual Destinies, the phantom trying to frame Athena ends up both proving their own involvement, and later that they were the true culprit behind the murder Simon was accused of. True culprit gets caught, Simon is exonerated, and Athena gets some much needed closure.
    • The 3rd defendant of The Great Ace Attorney Adventures, Magnus McGilded, is a slimy person overall, but some plot twists in the sequel show that he did manage to benefit England in spite of himself when he tampered with evidence in his trial. See, Lord Mael Stronghart didn't want Ryunosuke Naruhodo to replace Kazuma as a lawyer (because Kazuma was supposed to be an assassin, and Ryunosuke isn't), so he gave him the Impossible Task of successfully defending the clearly guilty Magnus. Ryunosuke manages to do it because of Magnus's shenanigans, leaving Stronghart with no reason to deny him as a law student... which caused problems when Ryunosuke started to uncover the massive Government Conspiracy Stronghart led.
  • In the fourth case of Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc, Monokuma replaced a suicide note from Sakura Oogami to make it seem that she killed herself out of despair from everyone suspicion of her being his spy to make her closest friend Aoi Asahina manipulate the crime scene and make herself look like the Blackened. After Makoto and Kyoko deduce that Sakura had killed herself, Aoi reveals the suicide note she found, only for Monokuma to brag that it was a fake and reveal the real reason Sakura took her life was out of defiance against Monokuma's orders to kill one of her classmates. He expected that this would turn everyone against Aoi because she went against her friend's dying wish and played right into Monokuma's hands. It actually has the exact opposite effect, as everyone realizes that Aoi was also a victim of Monokuma, since she wouldn't have done anything if he hadn't forged a suicide note. The students then decide to rally against Monokuma, just as Sakura wanted. Even Togami, the most ruthless participant, realizes that Monokuma isn't playing fair and is tampering with the crime scene, leading him to abandon his plans of playing the game (he wants to be sure of his victory, and there's no chance of that when Monokuma might just go and write 'TOGAMI DID IT' all over the room) and siding with his fellow students.
  • In Heart of the Woods, Evelyn makes two crucial mistakes that seem innocuous by themselves, but end up causing her downfall. The first mistake is when, after Tara and Madison come to investigate paranormal phenomena in Eysenfeld, and show no intention of leaving, Evelyn tricks Madison into pursuing an illusionary Tara into a blizzard, resulting in Madison freezing to death. The second mistake is destroying the ancestral tree of the forest, thereby dooming the rest of the forest. By killing Madison, Evelyn enables Abigail to bring Madison back as a ghost, resulting in Madison meeting the fairies and learning about their missing queen, whom they believe Madison can replace. After the ancestral tree is destroyed, Madison decides to accept the fairies' offer, enabling her to temporarily become fairy queen and play a crucial role in defeating Evelyn. If Evelyn hadn't made both those mistakes, she might have gotten away with her evil schemes.
  • In The Pirate's Fate's DLC path, after Mila and the villainous pirates led by Rourkie have been captured together and slated for execution, they get an opportunity to use the Queen's magic crown, which has been enchanted so that whoever wears it becomes the Queen's younger sister. Rourkie snatches it up and puts it on, fully intending to use his new royal status to escape while leaving the others to die. What he didn't count on, however, was that the coin operates by Cosmic Retcon. Since she was suddenly always a princess, Rourkie the pirate simply never existed, and thus he managed to undo every single act of murder and destruction that he ever performed, and in the process wound up making some of his rivals very happy.

    Web Animation 
  • DEATH BATTLE!: Michael Myers's demise at the hands of Jason Voorhees inadvertently on the latter's end rids Haddonfield of the infamous Serial Killer terrorizing its residents.
  • In the Meta Runner episode "Overload", Evelyn is about to finish off Tari, but she decides to make her suffer more in her final moments by revealing that she's also responsible for killing Theo. Masa, who's under the villains' mind control, hears Tari crying due to this revelation, and the emotions this triggers are strong enough to restore his free will, and also pull a Taking You with Me on Sheridan in the real world. This in turn frees Belle from Sheridan’s control, who then stabs the mind-controlled Lucinia, which transfers Tari’s extracted data fragments back to her, restoring her to full power and allowing her to hand Evelyn another crushing defeat.
  • RWBY:
    • Blake was facing an impossible task trying to recruit a Menagerie militia to save the humans of Haven Academy from an attack by the White Fang, as the Menagerie citizens just wanted to be left alone to escape the discrimination they've experienced from humanity. By ordering the assassination of Blake's family, Adam cements his downfall. Not only does the attempted assassination fail, but it also gives Blake the means to rally the people of Menagerie. She succeeds in creating the militia needed to defend Haven. By calling in the Mistral Police Force to help them save Haven, the militia earns Mistral's gratitude, improving local relations between humanity and the Faunus and turning the remnants of the White Fang against Adam.
    • The heroes only have a month to prepare for Salem's attack on Haven Academy, but they don't have the ability to take on such powerful villains. However, Cinder ruins Salem's original plan by eagerly accepting a deal with Raven because it will give her a chance at revenge against Ruby for being maimed at Beacon. This gives Blake time to arrive with both a Faunus militia and the Mistral Police to stop the White Fang, ensures Jaune's exceptionally useful Semblance awakens, allows Raven to blindside Cinder's attempt to steal the Spring Maiden's power and allows the heroes to save the academy and Relic. Cinder is effectively exiled from Salem until she has redeemed herself, which occurs in Volume 8.
    • In Volume 9, Neo attempts to get her revenge in a way that ends up completely undoing her initial goal, thereby helping solve the heroes' dilemma over the Tree. She physically and psychologically tortures Ruby into Ascending, believing that it will cause her to be Deader than Dead. Instead, the Tree grants Ruby some much needed perspective and healing, guiding her out of her Heroic Breakdown and into accepting herself and her mistakes. The crisis over Ruby also helps the rest of her companions realise what the truth about the Tree is, enabling them to reach the Tree as well. In trying to kill Ruby, Neo inadvertantly gives Ruby and, more indirectly, the rest of Ruby's companions exactly what they need to defeat both Neo and the Curious Cat. Unusually, the success of the heroes enables Neo to also understand how the Tree can help her, enabling her to choose Ascension to solvfe her own problems.
  • In the SuperThings episode "When Enigma Discovered The Secret Of Professor K", Professor K. had an opportunity to kill off Enigma when he was a child for learning the truth about Clank Corp. and the villains when he was acting as Professor K.'s assistant. When Enigma escaped, instead of going after him, Mr. King instead dismissed the situation, believing no one would believe "a simple sidekick". Turns out, that "simple sidekick" would become one of Kaboom City's biggest heroes, also becoming the key to the creation of the villains' defeat.

    Web Comics 
  • Agents of the Realm has a bear-bleed attack Norah after she discarded her Transformation Trinket. This causes the amulet to return to her and her to change into Magical Girl Warrior, which is definitely against the intentions of Ruby, who may be behind the recent incursion of bleeds.
  • Captain SNES: The Game Masta features this trope in spades. When fighting Milon, he offhandedly says that he's invincible as his unobserved power is infinite — which causes Lucca to use her SightScope to observe his power and turn it into a finite number. Later on, Palom casts Virus on Milon, enraging him and making him use his "Eternity In A Second" attack to take the next few thousand turns. He says that he'll enjoy watching everyone squirm, unable to do anything — and then dies. (Turns out Virus inflicts Sap, which depletes a little HP each turn — and when Milon takes thousands of turns in a row...)
  • Casey and Andy: "No! Wait! My inventions must not be used for peace!"
  • In Darths & Droids, Pete gets egotistical and gives everyone a +1 morale bonus just by watching R2-D2 fly. This gives Annie enough of a stat boost to dodge a quintuple guillotine.
  • In an early story arc in Dominic Deegan, Greg, a white mage, is infected with the "Blight of the Undead", a curse that would essentially turn him into an undead abomination. It was kept in check by his devout use of White Magic. Later on, in a confrontation with his eldest brother Jacob (a Necromancer), he rips the blight out of his body through his un-blighted parts. Jacob then learns the hard way that the Blight was acting as a magical Restraining Bolt, and with it gone, Gregory's magical power increased exponentially. And have we mentioned that White Magic is already exceptionally effective against necromancy, and that just to set the tin lid on it, Gregory (who'd been making excuses for Jacob for years) is now extremely pissed off? The ensuing fight is very short and very one-sided.
    • During the battle between Dominic and Celesto in the Storm of Souls arc, Celesto uses his powers as the Champion of Chaos to trap Dominic and try to use him as fuel for the Weapon of Mass Destruction. Cue Dominic gaining a level in badass when it turns out he's actually the Champion of Balance and chaos was the last force he needed to experience in order to gain full power, beat Celesto, stop the Storm, and save the world.
  • In Dragon City, during an Arc that explored the relationship between Kim and Jonas, Erin (not an antagonist Per ser, but still a very callous and selfish character that only occasionally display a good heart) finds out about their relationship. While tolerant about it, Erin, being the former's best friend and the latter's big sisters, isn't amused with the situation and warns them that with either broke the other's heart, she will beat them up. Given her temperament, neither protested, but as noticed by Rachel, scaring them into commitment will only get them closer, much to Erin's chagrin.
  • Freefall:
  • Girl Genius:
    • The main character, an orphaned young lady named Agatha, wears a locket-type amulet with pictures of her parents in it. The locket is her most prized possession, given to her by her paternal uncle Barry shortly before he mysteriously departed, leaving Agatha in the care of her adoptive parents, the Clays. She never removes the amulet for very long and is never far away from it. Agatha struggles to be an engineer and inventor, like her beloved uncle, but fails constantly due to the severe and sudden migraine headaches she suffers whenever she tries to concentrate. Near the beginning of the story, a pair of drunken soldiers accost Agatha on the street. One snatches her locket, planning to sell it for a little quick cash. It turns out Barry designed the locket to suppress Agatha's "spark", her innate intelligence and engineering talent. With the amulet gone, Agatha becomes a super-genius. She converts a steam-powered tractor into a complex robot programmed to seek out the amulet and return it to her, an impressive feat in and of itself made even more so by the fact she literally does this in her sleep!
    • It also turns out the waves emanating from the amulet are extremely dangerous to anyone other than Agatha, as the loutish soldier who stole it soon finds out. The amulet ends up killing him by slowly destroying his brain. His fellow soldier, actually his younger brother, realizes the amulet is the source of his brother's demise when it is accidentally broken open, revealing the mechanism within. The young soldier uses the address engraved on the back of the locket to track Agatha down, looking for vengeance. Normally, the amulet would dampen Agatha's genius ability when brought in close proximity to her, but the young soldier broke it by throwing it against a wall in a fit of rage. The now brilliant, clear-headed and more confident Agatha easily out-smarts and overpowers her would-be attacker and turns the tables on him, tying him up and reclaiming her beloved keepsake.
    • Later in the story, an evil entity known as "The Other" possesses Agatha and gloats over an incapacitated Baron Klaus Wulfenbach, sworn enemy of The Other who is also hunting down Agatha so he can lobotomize her and permanently destroy her spark. The Other notices Klaus is carrying Agatha's amulet, which has a trilobite design on it, the symbol of Agatha's real family, the Heterodynes. The Other decides to use the amulet to pass itself off as a legitimate Heterodyne heir and lay claim to their family castle, stuffed full of amazing and highly dangerous technology and research. As soon as The Other slips the amulet around Agatha's neck, however, she is able to regain control. That's TWO villains each cancelling the other out.
  • Homestuck: Jack Noir can't bring himself to kill Jade Harley because the prototyping of her dog Becquerel caused Jack to inherit his Undying Loyalty to her. Instead, with no other options open to him, he orders the Courtyard Droll to kill her. Much later, during which time Jack has started following Jade around like a lost, harmless dog, the Droll actually succeeds... right in front of Jack, who promptly flips his shit and kills the Droll. Visibly saddened and enraged by Jade's death, he takes her body to her Quest Bed, causing her to ascend to the God Tiers, gain power well beyond Jack's, and use it to escape their dying session.
  • Raul's abduction of Kayn'dar in Inverloch was initially a huge blow to the elves. For decades, more and more children were born Severed, with white hair, gold eyes, no ability to use magic, and mortality—a punishment from the spirits for their corruption and arrogance. Kayn'dar, born with the mark of the Severed but able to use magic, was viewed as The Chosen One who could save them. Ironically, Raul had no idea he had kidnapped the most important elf kid in his quest for vengeance on the elves. By transposing Kayn'dar's soul into a child from another race, Kayn'dar grew up understanding prejudice, learning empathy towards others, and ultimately being in a much better position to reform the elves' isolationist and bigoted society than if he had been raised by them.
  • In Kevin & Kell, Bentley Kindle, Kevin's father, is a serial miscreant and habitual criminal. He never liked Kevin growing up because he was the Black Sheep (in rabbit terms), and initially disowned him when he married Kell Dewclaw. But along the way, he had an online fling with a lady rabbit. That rabbit turned out to be Angelique, Kevin's first wife, and it ended their marriage. Given how awful Angelique was (and continues to be), Bentley inadvertently did Kevin a solid there.
  • In the backstory of MegaTokyo, Tohya Miho used a hidden statistic in the Endgames servers to enslave large portions of the in-game populace, even doing so to a certain extent with the in-game identity of one of the protagonists of MegaTokyo, Piro. Only she made the mistake of manipulating Piro by founding a real life relationship with him, trying to take control of his in-game character while breaking his heart in the process. The result? Piro broke the in-game emotional control she used, ultimately whipped her ass in-game, destroyed the character she used, and got her completely and totally banned from the game in which she tried to take control. Nice job, Miho.
  • The Order of the Stick:
    • Xykon breaking Roy's beloved sword both fills the fighter with a vengeful resolve, and forces him to grapple the lich bare-handed. He promptly hurls Xykon into a trap-warded gateway, which blows the undead sorcerer's body to pieces: something Roy certainly wasn't powerful enough (yet) to accomplish with sword strikes.
    • Also, Xykon is an epic-level sorcerer, the Order has no chance of defeating him. Except, Xykon broke Roy's sword, and Nale sent Roy on a dangerous sidequest to get it fixed, which has resulted in Roy's sword being made of a material that is very effective against undead.
    • One arc concludes with Xykon's attempt to Breaking Lecture the recently defeated Vaarsuvius not only failing, but actually lifting V out of a pre-existing case of Heroic BSoD, and giving V advice that's made him/her more effective than s/he'd been even before the Heroic BSoD.
    • Nale's actually pretty good at this. Elan took a level in the Dashing Swordsman prestige class because Nale stole his identity. Later, one of his more impressive momentsnote  backfires doubly: It gives Vampire-Durkon his free will back. Durkon immediately kills one of Nale's teammates and rejoins his friends. Then he throws the feat back in Tarquin's face as proof of how he doesn't need or want Tarquin's protection. Malack was Tarquin's best friend and fellow party member. Filicide ensues and the Order is down one recurring nemesis. On the other hand, with his free will restored, The Corpse Formerly Known As Durkon turned out to be more dangerous than ever, so YMMV.
    • When Bozzok had Crystal turned into a flesh golem, he paid extra to have her retain her sentience. This allows Haley to reason with her and turn Crystal against Bozzok.
    • Instead of turning to incorporeal mist and hiding, the High Priest of Hel possessing Durkon's body decides to fight with Roy instead, and attempt a Breaking Speech. This has two consequences. First, Roy realizes that the High Priest is not actually Durkon, and so stops holding back. Second, Roy wills the Greenhilt Sword into a Weapon of Legacy.
  • One Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal comic shows a mad scientist mixing poison to kill all the world's children, and the subtitle states that coincidentally, he released it on the same day that aliens secretly took over the bodies of all of Earth's children. His face is being added to Mt. Rushmore as we speak.
  • Slightly Damned: All that was needed to remove Kieri's magic restraining cuffs & collar was for her name to be spoken. Guess what the villain shouts out between swears at the top of her lungs.
  • Sluggy Freelance: In "The Stormbreaker Saga", Zoë, trapped in the past, is prophesied to defeat the demon K'Z'K but also about to be executed by the fairly dim-witted King Sighard of Trent. All she has left is a shotgun (they let her keep it because no-one has any idea what it is) with one shot. That wouldn't do much good, except that K'Z'K has turned the executioner into one of his undead minions, and he tries to kill the king instead — giving Zoë a chance to use that one shot to save the king and impress everyone with her "magic", convincing them that she is The Chosen One. Thus, K'Z'K unknowingly helps a far more dangerous enemy survive when trying to eliminate a lesser one.

    Web Original 
  • This Cracked List tells this all.
    • RoboCop: The Big Bad had a secret directive planted in RoboCop's programming. Instead of using it to shut the android down, he tells RoboCop exactly what it is and how it works, knowing RoboCop records everything. RoboCop is later able to reveal the directive's instructions to the one man who can say the two words that stop the directive applying to the Big Bad.
    • Star Wars: Emperor Palpatine sets a trap for the Rebellion by leaking the location of the shield generator for the unfinished Death Star... and he uses the actual shield generator for bait.
    • The Lord of the Rings: Sauron lets Gollum go after torturing him for we don't even know how long. Books or film, Sauron wasn't using Gollum as bait or an assassin; he just let Gollum go. And if it weren't for Gollum, the Ring wouldn't have wound up in Mt. Doom.
    • Total Recall: The bad guys don't sedate Douglas for the brain reprogramming — even though, according to them, he's a trained killer. That allows him to go mildly berserk and escape. Made worse because last time they did properly sedate him.
    • The Running Man: Instead of pulling a Why Don't You Just Shoot Him? on Amber, the bad guys stick her in their televised-everywhere games. This gives the rebellion time to rescue her, retrieve the tape with the evidence of just how badly corrupt the government is, and broadcast it. (They also suck at searching her — this was an old-style VCR tape, and they made her change her clothes before dumping her in the arena.)
    • Raiders of the Lost Ark: Belloq fails to read all the material on the Ark, which includes the stuff in the Bible. 1 Samuel 6:19 explicitly saying that men were struck down for looking in it.
  • New Deal Coalition Retained:
    • Iran's military gasses unarmed Kurdish civilians in an attempt to warn off others from rebelling. All they do is horrify and anger just about the whole world (including their own allies), give Iraq a massive PR victory, and convince the entire Kurdish population to rise up against them.
    • During World War III, the Soviets launch coordinated air raids (referred to as the Second Blitz) on several NATO nations in an attempt to break their spirit and bring them to the negotiation table. Instead, it just enrages the various nations and makes them even more determined to fight back.
    • Following onto the above, the Soviets retaliate against South Korea's material support of Japan's Siberian invasion by launching an air raid which devastates Seoul, which causes South Korea and all the other anti-communist nations of Asia to abandon neutrality and declare war on the Soviets. And on top of that, China — which had been planning to declare war on Japan, counting on NATO not wanting to expand the war further by getting involved directly — realizes that it's now not a viable option, so has to resort to merely sending volunteers to fight for the Soviets.
    • The Bolivians practice a particularly hardline version of communism, which involves arresting anyone who even remotely disagrees with those in power. When they do this to a popular army captain in command of a frontline division one the eve of a major battle with the Allies, the whole division mutinies and defects, opening a massive hole in the communists' defenses. This turns the whole battle into a Curb-Stomp Battle in the Allies' favor.
  • Saga of Soul: For several chapters, Soul feels growing doubts about her own humanity. Downfall is able to sense it, and prepares a massive speech to break her spirit. But he ends up being so heavy-handed about it, he ends up accomplishing the exact opposite, showing Soul exactly how silly her doubts were in the first place. Cue Curbstomp Battle.
  • SCP Foundation:
    • SCP-4357-J, "Cooperative Demon", is the embodiment of this trope Played for Laughs. He underestimates the Foundation's ability to contain him to the point where he straight up tells them how to do it while boasting.
    • SCP-6140 has a Children of the Scarlet King cult, in attempting to return the Daevite Empire to the present, accidentally erase them from existence by summoning the real country that existed before the author of SCP-140 forcibly replaced them in history with the Daevites as described in 140. The Republic of Daevastan is peaceful, cooperative with the Foundation, and nothing like the Daevites everyone was expecting.
  • Worm has the ABB. Their actions cause Skitter to join the Undersiders, the superheroes and supervillains of the city to join forces against them, and Lung's second loss to Skitter when he attempts revenge for their first fight. It also allows her to carve out his eyes when she beat him again, making him easier to capture by the heroes. This wipes out the ABB.

    Web Videos 
  • Noob:
    • In Season 3 finale of the webseries, Roxana, just For the Evulz, decides to kill Sparadrap's pets in front of him. That's how we find out that the series Stupid Good Kindhearted Simpleton has a Berserk Button. The novel version of the scene reveals that The Cavalry arrived in time due to Roxana taking time to Kick the Dog rather than immediately killing Sparadrap and his teammates (which she could have done easily).
    • That season / novel also has the leader of Relic Hunter guild get Caught on Tape from gloating about his plans in front of the very people who ended up in a Frame-Up because of him. That group includes a player that is frequently loading videos of in-game events on her blog.
  • Parodied in this video by ProZD, where all of the evil deeds the villain does only ends up helping the city in some form or another (putting a pathogen in the city water supply reveals the pipe infrastructure needed major upgrades, the security system he snuck past was crap because their funding was being embezzled, and while the pathogen does cause diarrhea, it also provides vitamin C) all as informed by Commander Fistfight. The villain shoots Fistfight in response, hitting him in the shoulder. The impact of the shot ends up fixing a previous injury Fistfight sustained to his shoulder.
  • In his video in "I tried a cursed troll but it backfired... (Ft. Technoblade)", Skeppy gives Technoblade an ender pearl which Techno used to skip the parkour. Skeppy teleports him back to where he was stuck and gives him another ender pearl... which he uses to escape the map.

 
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Sir Pentious' Redemption

(SPOILER WARNING) Sir Pentious tries to take out Adam with a suicide run of his Airship, but Adam vaporizes him and the ship without even realizing what was happening. Luckily, it wasn't in vain.

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