PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Breaking the Reviewers Wall
rdfs:comment
  • There are a lot of reviewers of video games, movies, cartoons and other media. Some of the comedic reviewers have unique gimmicks that go beyond simply reviewing the work in question, but instead take it a step further, coming up with unique ways to show off the work or interact with it. One of these ways it to actually enter the work in question, or interact with its characters! This is Breaking the Reviewers Wall. Instead of Breaking the Fourth Wall and talking to the audience, which they're already doing, they break another wall - the wall separating the reviewer from the work reviewed.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:all-the-tropes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:allthetropes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • There are a lot of reviewers of video games, movies, cartoons and other media. Some of the comedic reviewers have unique gimmicks that go beyond simply reviewing the work in question, but instead take it a step further, coming up with unique ways to show off the work or interact with it. One of these ways it to actually enter the work in question, or interact with its characters! This is Breaking the Reviewers Wall. Instead of Breaking the Fourth Wall and talking to the audience, which they're already doing, they break another wall - the wall separating the reviewer from the work reviewed. It's kinda like Trapped in TV Land, except they're usually not trapped, and in many cases, they're doing it to mock the work in question. In order to be this trope, the reviewer has to directly interact with the work in question, either by the character exiting the work to meet the reviewer, the reviewer entering the work, or some other direct interaction. Simply talking to a character who doesn't talk back doesn't count. Examples: