http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ConservationOfNinjutsu

You can have three guesses who's going to win. The first two don't count.

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In any martial arts fight, there is only a finite amount of ninjutsu available to each side in a given encounter. As a result, one Ninja is a deadly threat, but an army of them are cannon fodder.

A specific form of Plot Armor, this trope is very common due to the numerous storytelling considerations fueling it. Drama thrives on conflict, and having the few put up a fight against the many is basically a free conflict coupon that's automatically viable during any few vs. many confrontation. Why have the superhero team curb stomp the villain if you can make him powerful enough to force them into Teeth-Clenched Teamwork? Why have the dozens of Mooks club The Hero unconscious three seconds into an encounter if you can let him take down seven or eight of them before he collapses, to show how much of a badass he is? That would be letting some perfectly good dramatic tension go to waste.

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That said, there is some Truth in Television here. Ninja were predominantly spies in reality, focused on gathering intel without being seen. Such jobs were best done by highly trained individuals, since if one person was found, the whole group would be jeopardized. Keeping the job to one well trained and prepared ninja ensured minimal risk.

As the number disparity grows larger, another factor comes into playthere's strength in numbers, but also anonymity, which in fiction is a crippling weakness. Characterization is a precious, rare resource that is difficult to set up, which means most characters are not going to get any. Since characters often travel in homogeneous packs in terms of characterization depth, the larger a group is, the less characterization its members probably have.

In other words, if Team Meager is up against Team Gargantuan, we probably know something about Team Meager and at least care how well they're going to do in this fightmaybe we even outright sympathize with them and root for them to win. Team Gargantuan, on the other hand, is likely a faceless blob of Mooks or Red Shirts that we don't care about on any personal level. Letting Team Gargantuan steamroll over Team Meager in this scenario would be anticlimactic; not letting Team Gargantuan do that means playing this trope straight almost by definition. Often Team Gargantuan instead of applying their numbers, tends to get in line waiting to get beat in turn.

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Hence, you end up with the few gaining an almost-automatic boost to their capabilities when pitted against the many. Extra points if, when presented with their multiple adversaries, one character notes that "We barely were able to handle one, how on earth are we going to handle this many?" right before successfully doing just that.

This can, of course, apply to Elite Mooks other than ninjas. Vampires are particularly susceptible to Conservation of Ninjutsu, as are werewolves, alien monsters, Special Forces commandos and Super-Powered Robot Meter Maids.

There are a few conceivable ways in which this trope can be Justified:

The most obvious one is adhering to Magic A Is Magic Aif you consistently portray someone as powerful enough to take on a large number of people by their own and put an explicit limit on what they can and can't do, the Willing Suspension of Disbelief will not suffer nearly as much. How to establish the superiority of small numbers in concrete terms is another issue. Alternately, if you have some Magic A Is Magic A reason why the Monster of the Week explicitly grows less powerful in larger numbers. Perhaps there is literally a fixed pool of monstrous power, or perhaps the Hive Mind gets distracted trying to control a large number of drones.

Another is to introduce some superior technology or art, available to the small group but not the larger group, that evens the odds (think the armies of Saladin vs. an M1 Abrams Tank). If stealth specialists are forced to fight head-on heavy hitters who excel exactly at this jobwhich is usually the case with the "ninja" form of the tropeit's a bad strategy, and heavy losses are expectable, too. This is where conservation of tool came into play. The fewer enemies that know your tricks, the bigger your advantage. Real ninja were masters of technology in their time, but if their enemy knew about their tools and tricks from past experience, the ninja was likely dead after they were captured and tortured for information.

One more plausible scenario for this trope is if a smaller group of people is simply better coordinated than a larger group of opponents, and tries to stack the odds in their favour, however they can—cutting off paths for reinforcements, luring enemies into ambushes or traps, or disrupting their communications. This relies heavily on the element of surprise, as well as considerable planning and ability to adapt to situations on the fly, and would be considerably more effective if the group had some of the previously-mentioned advantages. In any case, if the element of surprise is lost or if the plan starts to fall apart, you can expect things to get very bad. A subset of this trope that occasionally shows up in more fantastical works is to introduce the idea of a mastermind who can remotely control one or more puppet-bodies. If he's only controlling a single body, then he can focus all his attention on that one body and fight very well in it, but if he's trying to control ten different bodies doing ten different things at once, he's going to be pretty distracted and none of the individual bodies will be very competent.

In video games, this trope is often employed for balancing purposes. If you encounter a particular enemy as a boss and you also encounter it at some other point en masse in one place, each individual enemy in the mass will usually be much weaker than the one who's fought by themselves, so as to keep the fight from being excessively difficult or lengthy.

Despite all of those possible justifications, this trope is generally a result of the Theory of Narrative Causality more than anything elsefights are won one way or the other because the plot says they should and not because of any relevant In-Universe factors. In Real Life, there is strength in numbers more often than not; large groups of fighters have probably been trained to fight as a group and take advantage of their superior numbers if they ever manage to corner a single foe, and in some creations of mother nature this is a natural-born instinct (as a pack of wolves would be happy to demonstrate on any unfortunate prey). Quality over Quantity has lost a great many more fights in reality than it has in fiction.

See also Too Many Cooks Spoil the Soup, Strong as They Need to Be, Fixed Relative Strength and The Worf Effect. Compare Conservation of Competence and Kill One, Others Get Stronger. This trope is a reason the Zerg Rush may fail. Hydra Problem and Asteroids Monster usually lead to this trope. Beware, however, in case Reality Ensues, and this trope doesn't apply. If the system doesn't use this, The Minion Master will capitalize on it, as will the Wolfpack Boss. Contrast Elite Army (in that the one Ninja is a deadly threat while an army of them are almost invincible.) and One-Man Army (for characters who are strong enough to take on large numbers of enemies). An aversion may result in a Bolivian Army Ending.

Also known as The Law of Inverse Ninja Strength : Threat Per Mook = O(1/N) where N = number of Ninjas (or other "Elite Adversaries"), that is, the threat per mook tends to decrease fast enough so total ninjutsu cannot grow, assuming arithmetic additivity of threat.

Subtrope of both Quantity vs. Quality and Quality over Quantity.

Examples