Thundering Herd

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    Just one of those days.

    When a sufficiently large group of characters or extras in a comedy Anime or Animated Series are pursuing someone angrily, they appear as a Thundering Herd covered in a noisy budget-saving cloud of dust, optionally with torsos, heads, and arms sticking out. An alternate presentation, popular in anime and manga, presents a five-story-tall cloud of people chasing the protagonist. Sufficiently wound up single characters can also appear as a one-person Thundering Herd when pursuing or fleeing in panic.

    Members of a Harem or Love Dodecahedron sometimes chase the object(s) of their romantic desire down the street in a Thundering Herd.

    The Thundering Herd is generally accompanied by loud sound effects (rumbling, crashing, shouting, the cries of bystanders), and frequently by the Star Trek Shake. Sometimes it is visible only as a cloud of dust (or distinct geysers of dust) behind other scenery.

    A Sub-Trope of Everyone Chasing You. Often a variety of Escalating Chase.

    Compare Wheel-O-Feet, Big Ball of Violence.

    Examples of Thundering Herd include:

    Anime and Manga

    Comic Books

    • Gauls attacking the Romans in Asterix, specially in the movies.
    • In one Marvel Comics "What If" stories (in an issue that was spoofing the normal "Serious Business" nature of most "What If" stories), "What if Everyone Who Ever Was an Avenger Stayed an Avenger", the entire hundred-plus man superteam responds to a convenience store robbery... and exit Avengers Mansion in a Thundering Herd.

    Web Comics

    Western Animation

    • Ur-example: the Roadrunner from Looney Tunes.
    • Another serious example occurs in The Lion King with the wildebeest stampede. In fact, many viewers saw it as Nightmare Fuel.
    • On Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends, Cheese was understandably freaked out when seeing a horde of imaginary friends of all shapes and sizes bearing down on him.
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