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Dark Danny
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Hiro: I look upset.

Ando: Go talk to yourself.

Hiro: No way! I scare me; you do it.
Heroes, "Five Years Gone"
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So you're a travelin' in time, as you do, when suddenly! Ooh, it's future you! Only... you're different. And not in a good way. If you were cool, maybe The Hero (or the Alpha Bitch/Jerk Jock), then you discover you've become really lame. Conversely, if you're the Plucky Comic Relief or someone similar, older you is a badass... a scary badass. Or worse (arguably), your future self could be evil. Milder versions simply result in a persona change which bugs you.

Alternatively, you're the same as ever, and boy, can meeting yourself make you see why others are annoyed by you. Maybe it's not you that bugs you so much as your change in social standing. This may lead to you arguing with yourself.

Moral of the story? If you're a time traveller, never meet up with yourself. (And were you always that fat?)

Commonly used in concert with Bad Future. See also Mirror Universe, Evil Me Scares Me, Future Badass, Future Loser. Compare Amnesiac Dissonance, Other Me Annoys Me and I Hate Past Me, where your own past shocks you.

Examples of Future Me Scares Me include:


Advertising[]

  • A few of the Montana Meth Project ads have serious examples of this (i.e. Bathtub, Laundromat, and That Guy).

Anime and Manga[]

Audio[]

Comic Books[]

  • In a Story Arc of the Teen Titans comic, the Titans get dropped ten years in the future, and are more than a little disturbed to find that, in addition to replacing their mentors and becoming Darker and Edgier, their future selves are the dictatorial rulers of half of what used to be the United States. The future Titans are equally disturbed by meeting their "naive" past selves.
  • Played for all it is worth in a post-Zero Hour issue of DC's Legion of Super-Heroes when the Time Trapper confronted the Legion with just about every possible future and alternate reality version of themselves imaginable. Most of the duplicate Legionnaires get along fine, but others are either villainous, harder and more cynical than their counterparts, or just plain embarrassing.
    • Subverted in a pre-Zero Hour issue of LSH v.4 (#40, to be specific) wherein the younger version of sweet, shy, and very feminine Salu Digby, aka Shrinking Violet, is initially horrified at the sight of her older counterpart, a (very) butch lesbian. Once they get to talking, though, the younger Salu decides that "I guess I do hope I turn out a lot like you, after all." (There was no time travel involved, incidentally; one set of Legionnaires were clones of the other.)
  • The Incredible Hulk once had to overthrow his tyrannical future self, the Maestro.
  • Similarly, when Iron Man and Doctor Doom were stuck in 2093, they were not at all pleased with their future namesakes. The villainous future Iron Man was just a relative of Tony's, but the future Doom was Doom himself, a century older and much the worse for wear. Doom killed him without hesitation and walked away vowing never to become "that".
    • Victor wasn't pleased when he also met Doom 2099.
  • Most extreme version of this is done by the author Dan Abnett. And can be summed up as "Future self comes back to kill me" In the Durham Red comic, and also in a special edition of Warhammer Monthly comic, in this case, with the character Malus Darkblade.
  • Adam Warlock was captured by his mad future self The Magus; after escaping, he soul-sucked a nearer-future self to make sure The Magus was definitely dead.
  • A long running story in Black Panther had a sort of subversion and played straight with. The future Black Panther was an intentional throwback homage to a Silver Age characterization by creator Jack Kirby during Panther's original solo series, which was more light adventure, then his at the time serious personality. The problem was that said future Black Panther was at the final stages of a fatal brain aneurysm ailment, losing his mind and Panther at the time himself was just starting to get the same symptoms.
  • It turns out that Iron Lad of the Young Avengers is actually a teenaged Kang the Conqueror, who ran away from his future self because he didn't want to become a villain. Inverted in that his older self is the more established character, rather than vice versa, and it turns out that all the characters have to let him become evil, to even attempt to change the future would cause irreversible damage to the timestream.
  • Darkseid once met his future self. And was disappointed enough to kill him with Omega Beams.
  • Superboy Prime met and attacked his future self, because... he didn't like his old face and beard. If he hadn't judged people by their looks, he could have been amazed by the fact that his future self was the Time Trapper.
  • Impulse is not at all pleased to discover his future self in Dark Tomorrow is a violent, Darker and Edgier hero who is no longer on speaking terms with his then-girlfriend and seems to be more lenient about the Thou Shall Not Kill rule than present-Imp.
    • Although even evil future versions of Impulse (he's met several) tend to be nicer than the evil versions of his companions.
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer Comics: the Future Willow...'nuff said!
  • Though they haven't met, when young Marcus Langston got his hands on a book that contains all stories of everybody in the Universe, he read his own story and was horrified with the revelation that he was going to become a junkie and criminal, so he rewrote it, making himself a superhero and member of Youngblood - Sentinel
  • In Ed Brubaker's The Authority run, Midnighter is contacted by a future version of Apollo and warned that he has to leave the team or he will kill Jack Hawksmoor, go insane and become the undisputed genocidal ruler of future earth. It turns out to be part of a Evil Plan by Henry Bendix to disband the Authority, but still...
  • Subverted in Runaways: Most kids would be thrilled to hear that they're destined to lead the Avengers, but Gert calls her future self boring and insists that she'll never become that woman. Victor would be a straightforward example of this trope, except that he's never actually met his villainous future self. Just hearing about him is enough to give the boy nightmares, though.
  • Back to the time-traveling warlord Kang the Conqueror, for the longest, er, time, he shudders at the thought that he will eventually become the "doddering old scholar" Immortus. In the Avengers Forever limited series, this changes when Immortus is killed and then is brought back as Kang's alternate self and no longer as his future self. Needless to say, Kang is pleased by the turn of events.
    • And this trope is even played further by the limited series as particular characters aren't too happy with how things will turn out for them, or how they will turn into. Of particular note is Rick Jones, who meets a one-armed future version of him who is bonded with a Captain Marvel he doesn't like too well. Another version of this trope is how the Avengers find out the possible not-so-pleasant aspects of the legacy they will leave for the rest of the galaxy.
  • Subverted by Franklin Richards in Jonathan Hickman's Fantastic Four - Present Franklin and Future Adult Franklin get along great, happily calling each other Kid Franklin and Mister Franklin. Then again, Franklin has the power of being superhumanly well-adjusted, far more than any kid who's been repeatedly kidnapped, has seen every one of his relatives die at least once, sometimes possesses godlike powers, and was once trapped in hell has any right to be.
    • Played straight with his sister Valeria in the same story and her very similar adult self.
  • In Ultimate Fantastic Four, Susan Storm fears her future self, Kang the Conqueror.

Fan Fic[]

  • Though it's never outright addressed in the canon during a real meeting between the two versions (that I remember), in some Heroes fanfiction, both Peter Petrelli and Claire Bennet are depicted as mildly disturbed and/or fearful of their future selves, both of whom tend to be Types III and V (or something like that), respectively, on the Sliding Scale of Anti-Heroes, especially sometime during Volume 3. Conversely, Gabriel Gray (i.e. Sylar) has calmed considerably by the time the episode Butterfly Effect rolls around, and even has a beloved son.
  • In Kyon: Big Damn Hero, Kyon's future self is consistently rude and derogatory toward him. Of course, that's only because his past self is incompetent.
  • In Transformers Animated: The Mercy of Prime, the Big Bad, Gigatron, is a future version of Megatron who finally went through the Sanity Slippage of being constantly defeated and humiliated by a Ragtag Bunch of Misfits and dived right into Omnicidal Maniac territory following Starscream calling him out on petty vendettas and none of his Decepticons challenging Starscream's accusations. When he travels back in time to claim the AllSpark, he's unhinged enough to snap his present day self out of the Sanity Slippage.

Film[]

  • Lost Christmas has Goose and Anthony. Goose thinks Anthony is a nutter because of his powers, but they're really there to make sure Goose (good future) exists and Anthony (bad future) doesn't.
  • The Lost in Space movie had Doctor Smith who thought he was rather evil until he met himself 20 years in the future as a half-mutated spider bent on destroying all of humanity. His future self is also less than impressed with him: "I never liked me, anyway."
  • In Zathura, the Astronaut is a helpful if scarily intense young man who turns out to be the older self of one of the main characters, who came back in time to stop himself from wishing his younger brother out of existence and thus being trapped in the game world forever.
  • Back to The Future: Part II features Jennifer unwittingly running into her future self and passing out in shock after gasping "I'm old!" Also, Old Biff meets his teenage self.
    • Even funnier, Jennifer's future self happens to pass out in shock gasping, "I'm young!"
    • Jennifer also has a similar reaction to the sight of her future boyfriend/husband, Marty. Marty himself never sees his future self, but he learns enough in Part III to avert the accident that sent him down that path.
  • In Click, Adam Sandler's character is disgusted when he sees his future self cold-heartedly dismiss his father (twisting the knife even further, this is the last time he saw his dad, not even being there when he died). He even calls his future self "pathetic".
  • Triangle is pretty much made out of this trope. A woman on a boat trapped in a series of time loops becomes convinced that time only loops whenever everyone else on the ship is dead, so to save all her friends she has to kill all her friends. Naturally, Killer Jess comes off as an utter nutball to First-Time Jess, yet it seems like the Sanity Slippage is inevitable...
  • In The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part, Emmet Brickowski is helped in his quest to stop "Armammagedon" by Rex Dangervest who saved his life from a "glass-teroid" field. When Rex reveals himself to be Evil All Along and wanting to cause Armammagedon, he reveals that he's a Future Badass version of Emmet who went crazy from being forgotten in Undar of the Dryar (under the dryer) and is only after Revenge for being abandoned. Any feelings of Big Brother Worship that Emmet might have had dry up pretty quickly.

Literature[]

  • Serves as the main plot of William Sleator's The Green Futures Of Tycho. Tycho finds a Time Machine, doesn't like his future, and tries to fix it by changing the present and the past, only to make it worse. He repeats this until his future self is a tyrant selling out humanity to the aliens and planning some sort of invasion through time. He finally realizes why (the time machine and the power it gives him over events is corrupting him), but not before the tyrant version (who still has the time machine) starts chasing him through history, to prevent him from fucking up the tyrant's plans.
  • Double-inverted in The Time Traveler's Wife. Henry DeTamble rarely travels forward in time, but he is often zapped into the past randomly and without warning. On one such trip, he meets up with his future wife, then-girlfriend. He begs her to have patience with him, because he remembers how shallow and immature he was as a young man. Seeing how mature future-Henry is, Clare is reassured.
    • Also played straight: on one of his rare travels forward, Henry speaks with his now 10-year-old daughter (who his wife is pregnant with in the present) and learns that he's already dead in the future.
    • For a subversion, see The Time Traveler's Wife's entry under Screw Yourself.
  • Ebenezer Scrooge is not so much terrified at the sight of himself in the future, but by the realization that, upon his death, the only emotional reaction to the news will be happiness (with some mockery thrown in). So this is Older Than Radio.
  • Doctor Impossible of Soon I Will Be Invincible mentions meeting "the original villain team" The Delinquent Five when they came from the Fifties to seek help from their present selves, assuming they would be wealthy, powerful rulers by now. Dispiritingly, the heroes and governments are still in charge. He notes "Maybe that was the beginning of the end for them."
  • In Woken Furies, Takeshi Kovacs, the Anti-Hero of the sci-fi novels by Richard Morgan, finds himself up against an illegal copy of himself made when Kovacs was a good deal younger. More vicious and less world-weary, 'young' Kovacs is noticeably unimpressed that his future self hasn't made more of his life, like becoming a crime kingpin or suchlike.
  • Averted in Simon R. Green's "Nightside" books, since even though Suzie Shooter's(a.k.a. Shotgun Suzie, a.k.a. Oh Christ, It's Her, Run ) future self has had half her face ripped off by a spiked mace then cauterized with a flamethrower and one arm replaced by a grafted-on gun, nothing scares Suzie Shooter.
    • Done straight in a case where Taylor must help a man who's being pursued by his apparent past selves, who are disgusted by how his life turned out, and by future selves who either want to ensure he'll become them, or prevent him from doing so. For the past selves, he's this trope; for the future ones, he's its inversion.
  • Of Two Minds by Carol Matas and Perry Nodelman. It's established from the beginning that the protagonist is a Jerkass, and becoming more so as she exploits her Reality Warping abilities. The Big Bad is another reality warper, with an oddly familiar appearance . . .
  • In Animorphs number seven, The Stranger, the Ellimist transports the main characters to the future in order to influence their decision on an offer he made them. In the process they meet their current enemy, who's been promoted, and future Rachel, the present version of which is narrating, and she's been infested by a Yeerk. *cue dramatic music*
    • By the end of the series their enemy does get promoted before being defeated and getting put on trial, but Rachel is killed, rather than infested.
  • A sci-fi anthology contained a short story with an interesting subversion of this trope. The protagonist lives in a near-future world which experiences time-travelers from farther in the future. The premise is that adults from the future occasionally travel to the in-story present to impart some words of wisdom or practical advice. This is considered a highly desirable occurrence, and children live in anticipation of meeting their future selves. But the main character receives a visit from an alcoholic bum future self who turns out to be the boy's father in disguise, trying to help his son make better choices and become a better person than he ended up being.
    • Another SF anthology (The Year's Best SF 3) featured "The Nostalginauts" by S. N. Dyer. The story was about two high school outcasts waiting for their graduation. The SF element? Some 20 years in the future someone will invent a way to send a soundless and spectral image of oneself back exactly 25 years, and a trendy use is to go to your 25th high school reunion with pictures of your life's successes and then go back as a group to show them to your past selves at the senior prom. Turns out most of the kids are more horrified by their future baldness, paunches, and obvious plastic surgery than they are excited by their cars and big houses. And then the outcasts get the last laugh when it turns out the geekier of the two INVENTED the time travel technology, and is far richer than any of his former classmates. After all the other images have vanished, the geek sends back not only his image but the images of everyone at the party he's throwing, so they can all have a laugh at the kids who teased him when he was younger.
  • In Harry Harrison's The Technicolor Time Machine, the protagonist is approached by his future self with an important message. He notices that his future self has a nasty-looking bandage covering his right hand but when he asks his future self what caused the injury his future self just gives him an evil grin and ignores the question. He spends much of the rest of the book frightened about what's going to happen to his hand. Then, near the end of the book, he gets a bad sliver that a field medic has to use a scalpel to extract, and then the medic discovers that she doesn't have band-aids available and tells him she'll need to use gauze. The protagonist realizes that his future self tricked him into thinking he'd be facing a terrible injury and decides to get revenge on himself for being such a bastard by pulling the same deception. When he goes to visit his past self and we hear his internal monologue from the "other side" of the conversation he takes great joy in making his past self squirm. He's fully aware that his vengeance doesn't make logical sense.
  • Tim Powers' Three Days To Never features a lot of time wonk based on the central MacGuffin, a method of time travel (and Ret-Gone) devised by Einstein himself. At one point, the protagonist's future self shows up in 1980s Los Angeles after the protagonist saves his daughter from choking to death in an Italian restaurant; he's pissed that the timeline where the daughter died, he remarried and lived a happy life got erased in favor of a timeline where the daughter lived and grew up to resent him bitterly. He's come back to a) set the timeline right, and b) get his younger self to buy into Microsoft. His younger self has... issues with this plan, to say the least.
  • In the 9th Betsy the Vampire Queen book, Undead and Unfinished, Betsy & her sister Laura travel 1000 years into the future, where future Betsy is coldly presiding over a frozen post-apocolyptic wasteland. Present Betsy is more pissed off than scared, but the reader learns that Betsy has skinned her husband and literally bound him into The Book of the Dead , which is plenty scary.
  • The Doctor Who Expanded Universe novels gave us Grandfather Paradox, who plays this role to everyone. As in, he is literally the Anthropomorphic Personification of this trope.
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 The Grandfather was his future self. He was everyone's future self... He was what you swore you'd never become when you were an adventurous youth, and he was always watching, waiting to strike.

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  • Skulduggery Pleasant has Darquesse, a mysterious figure who has been seen my many seers to destroy the world, and it turns out she's Valkyrie (or at least Valkyrie's true-name empowered alter-ego).

Live Action TV[]

  • Hiro Nakamura in Heroes; see the page quote (in fact, the trope is named based on it, with a clarity tweak).
    • Most of the future heroes are pretty scary. The exception is Sylar, who is considerably nicer...and is rather afraid of reverting to his past self (in one future, anyway; in another, he's President, and has just about everybody else's powers, and is about to top even himself by committing super-genocide.
      • Where the genocide points are doubled.
  • In the "multi-Doctor" episodes of Doctor Who, you often get this friction between regenerations:
    • In The Three Doctors, the three incarnations of the Doctor don't get on (especially not Three and Two; the First isn't impressed by either, but they appear to respect him).
    • Not so much in "The Five Doctors", where most of the past Doctors like Five, but Three and Two still bicker.
    • In the 2007 Children in Need special "Time Crash", the Fifth Doctor is initially weirded out and irritated by the Tenth Doctor, not realising that it's his future self. Eventually, Ten impresses him, at which point Five takes to him. The Tenth squees at his past-self throughout.
    • The most powerful villain in The Trial of a Time Lord, the Valeyard, was initially interpreted to be a normal Future Evil Self for the Doctor due to some confused dialogue. However it's now generally accepted by fans that he's actually a time-travelling Enemy Without from the future, created from all the potential and actual evil of the Doctor's first twelve incarnations.
    • Subverted when the first Doctor meets with any of his future incarnations. Despite being the youngest and least experience of them all, the first Doctor is somehow able to command great respect from his future selves, so much that they accepts his leadership and generally follows his orders without issues. Imagine yourself at eighty taking orders from yourself at five!
      • On the other hand, when the First Doctor, who was little more than a wandering young adult fresh out of college, sees his future, he's terrified. He's even trying to resist regenerating because he fears the change it will bring.
    • Both the Tenth and Twelfth Doctors were also quite resistant to regenerating, viewing the process as comparable to the death of their current persona and being tired of changing personalities.
    • Used to great effect in the 2010 Christmas Special, an awesome Yet Another Christmas Carol. The Doctor has tried to be The Ghost of Christmas Past, befriending a young Kazran and visiting him every Christmas for years in order to change him from the bitter shell of a man he is in the present. Amy then does her best being Ghost of Christmas Present, but no avail. Kazran, being Genre Savvy, challenges the Doctor to be his Ghost of Christmas Future.
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Kazran: Why are you here?

The Doctor: Because I am not finished with you yet. You have seen the past, present. And now you need to see the future.

Kazran: Fine. Do it. Show me. I die cold, alone and afraid. Of course I know, we all do! What difference does showing me make? Do you know why I am going to let all those people die? Not a plan. I don't get anything from it. It just that I don't care! I'm not like you, I don't even want to be like you. I don't and never, ever will care!

The Doctor: And I don't believe that.

Kazran: Then show me the future! Prove me wrong!

The Doctor: I am showing it to you. I am showing it to you right now. [To someone behind Kazran] So what do you think?!

[Kazran turns around and sees his twelve year old self looking back at him, with eleven different types of freak out written on his face]

The Doctor: Is this who you want to become, Kazran?

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    • While human, the Doctor completely forgets who he used to be and who he's supposed to turn into again after his stint as a human is over. When his Motor Mouth accidentally kicks in and starts rambling in Time Lord mode, he's horrified to hear himself talk. Becoming the Doctor again is essentually suicide, which he's fully aware of.
    • Amy, when meeting their ruthless, cynical, Future Badass self in The Girl Who Waited.
    • In the show's first multi-Master story "World Enough and Time"/"The Doctor Falls", the Harold Saxon Master is horrified that his successor, Missy, might pull a Heel Face Turn and stand with the Doctor one day. When she triggers his regeneration into her, he pulls a Mutual Kill he's so against siding with the Doctor.
  • In The Sarah Jane Adventures story "The Mad Woman in the Attic", the titular character is a future version of Rani, who is appalled at the sight of her.
  • Inverted in Red Dwarf, where in "Timeslides", Lister tries to make his past self super-rich by giving him the idea for a hit invention before the real inventor patents it. His younger self doesn't want to be rich, and says he'd rather be a broke musician. Played straight in the later episode "Out of Time", where the crew meet themselves from fifteen years in the future. The two sets of crew hate each other so much that they end up killing each other (with the "present" set surviving through Temporal Paradox).
    • And in trying to explain the paradox to the audience, the camera melts, as it can't handle the paradox.
  • Ugly Betty where Betty sees a vision of her past self. The earlier Betty is horrified by her future counterpart's lack of optimism and the morally questionable things she does since joining MODE.
  • The Farscape episode "My Three Crichtons" features a variation on this, with hyper-smart, vaguely-reptilian, highly evolved Crichton being sociopathically self-interested in his own survival, rather than the logic he claims to employ to help the rest of the Moya's crew.
  • The Whitest kids U'Know- Time Travel Skit
    • Notable in that Present him is not afraid of Future him (seeing him as more of a Future Loser ), but Future him is afraid of future Future him who's going to beat Future him's kneecaps.
  • The Movie of Kamen Rider Den-O (well, the first one...) features Ryotaro meeting his past self. Much like Jennifer in Back to The Future, they both faint upon first seeing one another.
    • Second Rider Yuuto Sakurai has a very uneasy relationship with his Mysterious Watcher future self. The series treats them as separate entities for the most part, referring to the younger by his first name and the older by his surname.
      • During the episodes leading into the first movie, we have several moments where "Yuuto" yanks Ryotaro away seemingly at random and then drops him back where he came from. Ryotaro is obviously pretty upset, but when confronted Yuuto insists he hasn't done anything. Then it turns out that the version of Yuuto from a few days in the future is the one to blame, and he confronts his slightly-more-past self to explain the situation.
  • Dean Winchester gets sent into the future in Season 5, and meets his future self. They're more or less alike, except that the future one has finally completely snapped under the pressure of all the crap that is constantly raining down on Dean, and abandoned all his remaining morals and standards. Seeing as Dean is already a quite pragmatic and cynical person, you can imagine what that looks like. (He meets future-Castiel too, who also scares him, having gone from a guy who wouldn't know a joke if it bit him to a drugged-out sex guru.)
    • Not forgetting that in that episode, Sam has been possessed by Lucifer for the last 5 years and is orchestrating a full on Zombie Apocalypse.
  • In Timeslip, Liz and Simon both meet future counterparts of themselves. Neither of them thinks much of Liz's first counterpart, who has become inhumanly cold-hearted and clinical in the "Ice Box" research center of the far-off year 1990. Liz prefers her "hippie" future self from the alternative "Burn-Up" future of 1999, though she's troubled by her future self's seeming inability to act responsibly. Simon's future counterpart has given up his name in favor of an number, and has become opportunistic and ultra-rational to compete in the emotionless clone-dominated scientific community of the future. Simon, for some reason, likes and respects this future version of himself, until he turns out to be a bit of a tool.
  • The Twilight Zone episode Spur of the Moment
  • An episode of Nikita had this happen to Alex when, while under the influence of ibogaine (and in withdrawal from heroin), she hallucinated a version of herself that had beaten Division and taken back control of her father's company Zetrov.
  • In Star Trek: Voyager, as noted by SF Debris, if you get more than one Janeway in the same room, they will inevitably begin to argue with each other.

Video Games[]

  • Silent Hill:
    • In Silent Hill 2 James stumbles into a room with a man in a chair, staring into a tv that has nothing on it. Upon examination, he looks and see's its him, brutally murdered. The creators said they put this there to scare players by showing that this could very well happen to James.
    • In Silent Hill 4: The Room Young Walter is terrified when he meets the serial killer he will eventually become.
  • In Sam and Max Freelance Police, the duo travel 100 years forward in time to find that Sam is then wheelchair bound and suffers from dementia. Although present Sam is not visibly perturbed, he does remark later: "Good. Just wanted to check my dementia wasn't setting in early."
  • In Mega Man II for the Game Boy, Wily travels to the future and kidnaps Mega Man, brings him back, and reprograms him into the villainous Quint. One wonders what would have happened to the space-time continuum if Quint had successfully destroyed the present Mega Man...
  • World of Warcraft has a quest in which you meet Future You (who is wearing the same gear you are, of course). After the success of the battle he tells you to "get better gear," which one could find annoying.
    • Bizarrely, one of Future You's comments is, "I can't believe I used to wear that."
    • Future You can say other things as well, like "When you get to the party with the gnome and the furblog, DON'T DRINK THE PUNCH!"
    • Past You can say stuff like "Ew. Look at your gear. Have you even been raiding?" and parts with you with "Thanks. No offense, but I'm gonna make sure I turn out better than you."
    • Other random conversations have Future You admit to a drinking problem because of how much a loser they were at your level. Inversely Past You may complain about how bad your gear is still and say they're gonna get drunk.
    • It is possible to do these two quests immediately back-to-back. WoW characters are vigorously and formidably psychotic.
    • Another example is the Infinite Dragonflight, who are bronze dragons corrupted by the Old Gods after a Bad Future. Their leader is Murozond AKA Nozdormu, driven insane by being cursed to see the future up to and including his death.
  • A similar case in the fourth Final Fantasy XI expansion, Wings of the Goddess, in which Lady Lilith is an evil alternate dark future version of Lilisette and her fourth Spitewarden is you, wearing the same gear from the waist up.
  • Played with in Retro Game Challenge, where a young Shinya Arino is shocked when you go back in time and tell him about the Evil Overlord-lite he grows up to become in your era.
  • Averted in Jak II: Renegade. Old Samos and Young Samos never stop arguing, and Young Jak is one of the few people to get along with Older, Phlebotinum Rebel Jak.
  • Bayonetta: Cereza, Bayonetta's past self, seems a bit scared of Bayonetta from time to time.
    • Cereza is oblivious of the fact Bayonetta is her future self though. Not only that, but she also likes Bayonetta, seeing her as a mother figure ("You're the best, mommy!")
  • Fate/stay night has an example of Future Me Annoys Me: Even though he is unaware of his true identity, Shirou has enormous problems getting along with his future self, Archer, on a purely instinctual level (although the great personality differences may have something to do with it too). The future version, on the other hand, has some very well thought-out reasons for despising the other.
  • It's a spoiler to even be on this page, but here goes: At the very end of In Famous, just before he dies, the Big Bad Kessler reveals to Cole that he's actually Cole from the future. This shocks Cole, for obvious reasons.
  • Video Games can hide that they use Time Travel as a motif quite well. Like the above example, just reading the title of this game on this page is a spoiler in its own right. Proceed at your discretion. In Blaz Blue, there are very few people that give the cold as ice Jin Kisaragi pause. One of them is the Knight in Shining Armor, Hakumen, who's been around for the last century or so: a being that Jin became in an alternate version of the Groundhog Day Loop. In another way, Ragna the Bloodedge also has this issue. He's actually one of the two components of the Black Beast, the Eldritch Abomination that destroyed half of the world in the distant past. When he's sent back in time in one of the sidestories, he dies by being absorbed into it while keeping it at bay for a whole year.
  • In the first Marvel Ultimate Alliance game, Doctor Doom--in addition to being being the Big Bad--is also a downloadable character or can be gotten through the Gold Edition (both exclusive to the X-Box 360). If you have the playable Doom in your party when you meet the boss Doom, it's revealed that boss Doom is from the future. As mentioned in the examples in "Comic Books", playable Doom wasn't happy with his future self.
  • In Spider-Man Edge of Time, the Big Bad is revealed to be Peter Parker's future self, who has gone insane due to the death of all of his loved ones and the use of an anti-aging drug he used to allow himself to be alive in 2099. He planned on reshaping the universe in his own image in order to fix his past mistakes.
  • A bizarre variant occurs in Raidou Kuzunoha vs. the Soulless Army: the villain is a Raidou Kuzunoha from a post-Shin Megami Tensei II future, trying to prevent said future from coming about by turning Taisho-era Japan into a world superpower through supernatural means.
  • In Super Robot Wars Z, during the Dark History reveal, Ryoma Nagare from Getter Robo sees a fearsome machine that resembles a Getter, and a wild-eyed, ferocious version of himself who actually scares him. The prevalent fan theory was that he saw Batshit Ryoma and Shin Getter from Getter Robo Armageddon; this was confirmed when Armageddon was announced for the sequel.
  • In Tales of Maj Eyal when playing as a time warden, your psychotic future self shows up to kill you. If he succeeds it also counts as a Grandfather Paradox.
  • Even Dr. Robotnik/Dr. Eggman gets this in Sonic Generations. Even though the two of them are working together and are collectively the game's Big Bad, Robotnik looks at Eggman's behavior with puzzlement and asks "Wow. Will I really get that crazy?" At the very end of the game when Robotnik learns that Eggman has never defeated Sonic, he gets depressed and decides to go for a teaching degree instead.
  • Played for Laughs in Yoshi's Island DS: Baby Bowser throws a tantrum upon learning that, when he grows up, he'll still be a loser wanting to take over the world.
  • In the ending to Sonic Generations, Past Eggman hates his future self after learning his future self is a constant failure, not even succeeding in defeating Sonic.

Webcomics[]

  • In Superosity, character Boardy (an amnesiac super-being who isn't sure if he's an alien or a robot) has met a future version of himself who is a crazy, obnoxious jerk, and a further future version who is pure unadulterated evil. He was alarmed to find out the first future him is, according to it, from a very near future, and there have been signs recently in the comic that his sense of right and wrong is beginning to slip. These are only a couple of the futures the cast has visited; Boardy always seems to be either evil or dead. He's remarked on how annoying this is.
  • Subverted in Fans!, where the present day characters encounter their past selves, and their past selves mistake their present selves' character development as being a Face Heel Turn. The present characters then wipe the floor with the past characters, taking advantage of everything they've learned.
  • Happens in a future arc of Coga Suro with Steve and his grimmer future self.
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 Steve: I don't wanna be scarred and stubbly!

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  • Narbonic parodies this with Mell's reaction to her future self. She wants to avoid that future happening not to save the world, but because she thinks that her future self looks lame with contacts.
  • Played with on multiple occasions in TRU-Life Adventures. First, upon meeting his alternate older self, Bob's disturbed most by the fact he's bald. Later, even Old Jack gets annoyed by his younger self.
  • In the fanmade online comic special The Ten Doctors, the ninth Doctor at first refuses to believe that Ten is his future self ( "Where's Rose?"), the first Doctor has no respect for any of the others besides the tenth, Three thinks Seven and Two are complete dunces, and nobody likes Six.
  • In the Bad Karma arc of Magellan, time-traveling superheroes come back to Magellan Island to stop two supervillains. The first-year cadets are impressed. But these time travelers are some of the main characters, just aged and tempered. Bill is horrified to meet his future self and discover chronic hair loss. Kaycee Jones finds out that her future self went Darth Vader and killed a supervillain, was discharged from the team, went rogue, had half her face burned off in a superbattle, ...
  • During the 'Surreptitious Machinations' arc of General Protection Fault, Trudy Trueheart encounters her future self - a ruthless empress who rules the world with an iron fist. While she IS scared by what her future shows she is capable of, her first reaction - much to Empress Trudy's annoyance - is to be horrified by how OLD she's gotten.
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 Trudy: I have to start coloring my hair... and a diet, got to lose weight... plastic surgery... facelift... got to fix THESE...

Empress Trudy: I LOOK MARVELOUS FOR MY AGE, MORON!

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  • More like "Alternate Me Scares Me", but here's Lord Tedd. Courtesy of El Goonish Shive.
  • Averted in Homestuck: Dave takes meeting his future self entirely in stride. It doesn't hurt that he gets awesome stuff from it.
    • Karkat however hates his past and future selves. Karkat is an especially ludicrous example, since the time difference is usually a matter of minutes.
      • FCG: GOD I CAN'T WAIT FOR YOU TO BE FUTURE YOU, SLIGHTLY LESS FUTURE YOU IS SUCH A GOD DAMN PILL
  • This kid.
  • In a sort The Legend of Spyro fan comic, Cynder's Final Battle? presents a situation were it turns out Spyro's evil future self is really the Dark Master come back in time needless to say Spyro doesn't take this well.


Web Original[]

Western Animation[]

  • Ben Tennyson and Adult Ben in the Ben 10 episode "Ben 10,000", where older Ben has No Sense of Humor and can't lighten up, but younger Ben's presence gives him an attitude adjustment.
  • Something similar happens in the second future Jade episode of Jackie Chan Adventures with a one-off character; he grows up to be evil, but Jade changes this. In the first future Jade episode, it happened with Jade herself. Both episodes offer a different version of Jade, the first being a badass and the other punished for being too much of a badass.
  • Taken to extremes in the second Made for TV Movie of Danny Phantom, where the eponymous boy travels 10 years into the future and finds himself turned into the biggest and baddest of all Ghosts, who also happens to be a mass-murdering psychopath more than willing to kill his own family in order to preserve his existence.
    • It should be noted that "Dark Danny" (aka "Dan") is a Complete Monster because after original Danny's family dies, he goes to Vlad, the only one who could understand him. Vlad then separates Ghost Danny from his Human Danny, somehow keeping all the compassion and whatnot in Human Danny. Ghost Danny then rips Ghost Vlad from Human Vlad and combines with him, then kills Human Danny.
      • It should ALSO be noted that Ghost Danny, after combining with Ghost Vlad, looks very much in pain and, according to much of the fandom, was fighting for control of himself; a battle he apparently lost.
  • In Gargoyles, Demona uses the Phoenix Gate to return to the past, where she tries to convince her younger self to Kill All Humans before the gargoyles are sealed. Young Demona cries "I don't want to become you!"
    • Subverted because young Demona's fear of the humans smashing her clan leads to her organizing the events that lead up to it. You Can't Fight Fate; the basic premise of the Phoenix Gate is that it can't be used to actually change the past. Using it always creates a Stable Time Loop, no matter what. Since the past has already happened, if you use the Phoenix Gate to travel back in time, your trip is part of the past and thus has also already happened.
    • A variant is the episode "Future Tense," where Goliath has a horrifying vision of a future dystopic Manhattan about to put under the control of a older, megalomaniacal Lexington. Fortunately, series creator, Greg Weisman, has stated that he is safe from turning into that in the true future, however his clone, Brentwood is liable to go that way instead.
  • The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles are disappointed by elderly selves in an episode of the first animated series.
  • The Dexter's Laboratory Made for TV Movie "Ego Trip" involved a weak, wimpy future Dexter that the present Dexter is greatly disappointed by. Later in the future, though, he finds that he transforms into a Future Badass — but then degenerates into a feeble, senile old man, albeit one revered by the entire world. (Interestingly, we actually get to see the point of badassification.)
  • In the fourth season of Re Boot, Enzo (who grew up into the Darker and Edgier Matrix in season 3) has a younger version of himself restored from a backup. At first, Little Enzo looks up to Matrix and wants to be just like him, while Matrix is irritated by Enzo as a reminder of how weak and naive he used to be. As time goes on, Enzo despises Matrix for the bitter and cynical Anti-Hero he's turned into, and Matrix realizes how much he has strayed from his more idealistic youth.
  • Although it was technically a Mirror Universe, when Coop meets his alternate self in the last episode of Megas XLR, it's still a dimension a decade or two in the future relative to his own — and Coop is a tyrannical (and muscular) despot. However, the regular Coop is unconcerned about turning into him — maybe just a little too much so.
  • In Jimmy Neutron, Jimmy is shocked to find that his future self is not a renowned scientist as he had hoped, but a stay-at-home slacker who, worst of all, is married to Cindy! Of course, this is because he accidentally changed the timeline to create a dystopia.
  • In the Family Guy movie, Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story, Stewie visits his future self and finds that he has become a lame momma's boy.
  • When Batman and a few Leaguers end up in the future on Justice League, it's discovered that the only thing more brooding and scary than Batman is an aged, cane-wielding, cruel Bruce Wayne. (The same one seen in Batman Beyond, in fact.)
    • A variation shows up in another episode, after the League meet their Alternate Universe counterparts, the Justice Lords, who took over the world and rule it with an iron fist. They're not the least bit scared — but the rest of their world is terrified when they find out, and the US government starts to take action to destroy their world's version. This ultimately ends as up the focus of Justice League Unlimited's second-season arc.
  • The South Park episode "My Future Self 'n' Me" is based on this trope. However, it turns out that Stan's loser future self is just an actor paid by Stan's parents to try to convince him not to do drugs.
    • Ironically, at the end of the episode a REAL future Cartman, who has become so immensely rich he can afford time travel, tells past Cartman that this was the moment he realized that he had to work hard and get healthy to become a success. Past Cartman, thinking its a trap, declares that he's never going to read again and only eat junk food. After a few seconds Future Cartman is morphed into an obese, and apparently very poor, loser.
    • Subverted in another episode, in that it's not their future selves, but just the sheer amount of phlebotinum involved, they should've just built a time machine.
  • In an episode of Duckman, Duckman meets his future self, who warns him not to go to his sons' science show, telling him something bad will happen. Then another future version of him appears and tells him something bad will happen if he doesn't go. This happens several times, back and forth, until finally, he's afraid to do anything.
  • An inversion is done in Static Shock when Static is sent to the future by mistake. After hearing so much about how responsible and powerful his future self is, he begins to feel rather inadequate. Until he manages to save the day and win approval and all.
  • One episode of the second Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series has Donatello be transported to the future, where the Shredder has taken over. It's more "My Future Brothers Scare Me", especially when he sees that Mikey, laid-back and sweet in the present, is a badass with several mechanical limbs.
  • Averted in Teen Titans, despite a fairly typical Bad Future episode. While all the Titans (except Starfire) have fallen into decay (much to the dismay of their past counterparts when Starfire recounts her solo adventure), Robin is fairly pleased with his future.
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  Robin: So… "Nightwing", huh?

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    • Beast Boy is pretty upset when he finds out he's going to go bald.
  • American Dad!:
    • In "May the Best Stan Win", a cyborg Stan came back from 1000 years in the future to steal Francine from his past self. He first tries to do so by making Stan look like an (even worse) Jerkass, but when Stan realizes what he's doing, Cyborg Stan decides to just plain abduct Francine, and ends up getting thrown into the world's largest hot chocolate, yielding the immortal line "You choc-blocked me!"
    • In "The Unincludeds", Steve and Snot are in awe of their Ridiculously Successful Future Selves before a series of butterfly effects causes Snot to have a progressively worse future (homeless, then prisoner, then feral turtle hybrid) much to the horror of the present Snot. It's eventually sorted.