http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/NiceJobBreakingItHeroThe hero has accomplished their goal; they've killed the In most cases, of course, the hero's new mission is to stop the new danger they've unleashed, preferably in a way that doesn't spawn ever greater menaces. Often overlaps with Nice Job Breaking It, Hero!. While they refuse to let Peter properly explain Thanos's history and the reason he came to Earth, when they ask him about Mysterio's death Peter is able to tell the truth about Quentin Beck's agenda, which prompts an outpouring of online support for Spider-Man before the rest of the Avengers rescue himonly to give Hiccup the perfect ally when the 'champion' is revealed to be the imprisoned Stoick, who was captured years ago and convinced that his family were deadNaomi and Zachariah abduct Alastair just as he's attacking Dean, believing that Alastair has become the last Seal following Lilith's death. See also Had to Come to Prison to Be a Crook, which is this as applied to a legal system. But he ends up being so heavy-handed about it, he ends up accomplishing the exact opposite, showing Soul The villain shoots Fistfight in response... only for him to reveal he fixed his shoulder instead. inadvertently call the Covenant to Earth, triggering the invasion at the beginning of destroying one Transmitter that Wily has used to control the robots, with Joe being killed in the ensuing blast, Light realizes that there is a second Transmitter, and the attack is exactly what Wily needed in order to declare Martial Law on the city and take complete control.
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/NiceJobFixingItVillainBasically, the heroes have a problem. Usually implies a moral about how fighting is bad. Gloat and reveal plans to the hero for no good reason, or because they expect the hero to join them for whatever reason. Also, Lucretia, in an attempt to fix the problem, wiped the memories of the tres horny boys, Lup, Barry Bluejeans, and Davenport. trope as used in popular culture. Without his actions, the good guys would have a much more difficult time trying to stop Apocalypse from taking over Charles' body. The Nice Job Breaking It, Herod! It could range from personal, to being vital in their quests. our heroes were directly responsible for the creation of 3 of the 7 Grand Relics that have been causing untold chaos and destruction. (in fact, that one usually leads to the biggest cases of the complete opposite Trope.) their daughter knew that mommy was cheating on daddyOkay, 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.Filicide ensues and the Order is down one recurring nemesis. If the heroes trick the villain into fixing their problem, then this trope combines with either TVTropes is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. However, when Luthor attempts to kill Superman with kryptonite, the kryptonite poisoning actually weakens Superman's immune system just enough for the antivirus to 'infect' him, purging Superman of the virus and allowing him to work on safely raising both his own children and the children Luthor had created in a lab and kept contained until he had eliminated Superman's offspringBardiel grew a S2 organ into Unit 03 when it hijacked the giant mechasaved Shinji and Asuka when they used Unit 03 to fight Zeruel and they ran out of external powergo on to confirm the existence of the supernatural to the US government and make arrangements to ward the White House and other relevant buildings, as well as force Crowley to make a deal agreeing that he will leave all elected officials alonewas able to bring Charlie O'Neill back to life while replacing him with an already-dead clone, intending to use Charlie as a hostage to control Jack while piloting a salvaged puddle jumper. Nice job breaking it, villain.