If a year is related to your work, then name it after that!
Usually, that's because the year is relevant in some way, such as being the year of the events it depicts, but it doesn't have to be.
This trope is for whenever a year is mentioned in a title.
If the year in the title is the year of release, or plays on it, then it's the Sub-Trope, Annual Title.
It may occur in tandem with One-Word Title, for titles that are just numbers that are also years and are written in numerical form, like 1776. And also a lot of overlap with Event Title because a year is a span of time for things to happen in.
Examples:
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Anime & Manga
- Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040
- Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045
- Pokémon 2000, released in the year 1999.
- The manga X was released in English as X/1999, after the year in which it is set.
Comedy
- Mel Brooks and Carl Reiner performed an updated version of their "2000 Year Old Man" routine, titled "The 2000 Year Old Man in the Year 2000" (performed in 1997).
Comic Books
- 1963 was a miniseries by Alan Moore and some of his favorite collaborators published by Image Comics and parodying early Marvel Comics, like of the titular year.
- 2000 AD: Released in 1977, and continued to 2000, and beyond.
- Archie 3000!
: Set in the distant future of the Archie Comics franchise, it ran for 16 issues from May 1989 to July 1991.
- Armageddon 2001: A Crisis Crossover published in 1991 by DC Comics in which the heroes try to discover which one of them will turn into the evil dictator Monarch ten years in the future.
- Camelot 3000: Set in the year 3000, when King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table are reincarnated to fight invading aliens.
- DC Comics:
- Batman '66: Titled for the year in which the 60s TV series it is a comic book continuation of began.
- Wonder Woman '77: Set in the 70s, as a continuation/expansion of the TV series that ran from 1975 to 1979.
- Superman '78: Set in the 70s, as a continuation of Christopher Reeve's Superman.
- Batman '89: Set in the late 80s as a continuation of the Tim Burton Batman films.
- Magnus Robot Fighter originally bore the full title Magnus Robot Fighter: 4000 A.D. putting it so far into the future that nearly any change from the present could be justified.
- Marvel Comics:
- Neil Gaiman's comic Marvel 1602. Also an example of Exty Years from Publication, as it was published in 2002.
- The Marvel 2099 line, where every book has 2099 in its title (Spider-Man 2099, The Punisher 2099, Ghost Rider 2099, etc.).
- Transformers '84: A prequel to the original 80s Marvel comic released to celebrate the franchise's 35th anniversary. Despite the name, none of the events of the story take place in 1984.
Fan Works
- Homecoming, 2026: The 2026 in the title is the year of the Whateley Academy homecoming.
- Psychedelic Epiphany Series: The first chapter, Year 0: Hearthswarming Ephiphany
, about the beginning of the first year, or zeroth year, of Epiphany's life.
Films — Animation
- Automania 2000: About the future, released in the year 1963.
- Fantasia 2000, although it was technically released in December 1999.
- Heavy Metal 2000, follow up to the original 1981 film Heavy Metal, released in 2000.
Films — Live-Action
- '71: set in 1971, during The Troubles.
- 1. April 2000: This 1952 film is an Austrian satire in which the Allied occupation of Austria continues until 2000.
- 10,000 BC is an Anachronism Stew, but early scenes may be consistent with the title, invoking the End of the Ice Age.
- 1492: Conquest of Paradise.
- The Russian film 1612.
- 1776, the adaptation of the theatrical musical.
- The movie 1900 (Novecento in Italian, literally meaning "nine hundred," but idiomatically used as 1900, the turn of the century), released in 1976.
- The 1985 film 1914, about a town ravaged by influenza and the WWI soldiers who return there.
- 1917, a 2019 film about World War I, titled for a year where that war was happening and when the events of the story take place.
- 1922 is adapted from the Stephen King novella of the same title. It is set in the Nebraska farmlands during the title year.
- Steven Spielberg's 1941 (1979), scripted by Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale. Released in 1979, set a few days after the Pearl Harbor attacks.
- The film 1984, an adaptation of the book Nineteen Eighty-Four. Released in the title year, and starring John Hurt.
- The 1970 made-for-television mockumentary 1985 depicts a hypothetical near-future environmental crisis in the titular year.
- 1991: The Year Punk Broke: Released in 1992, about events in the preceding year.
- 2001: A Space Odyssey and its sequel 2010: The Year We Make Contact.
- 2012, a disaster film based on the Mayan Doomsday predictions, was released in 2009.
- The movie 2046, which refers to both a year and a hotel room.
- 2084
is a 2009 post-apocalyptic film involving a fatal virus, food and fuel shortages, and government collapse.
- Blade Runner 2049, as well as its companion shorts Black Out 2022, 2036: Nexus Dawn, and 2048: Nowhere to Run.
- Class of 1984, released in 1982. Has nothing to do with Class of 44'', mentioned below.
- Death Race 2000, released in 1975, set in 2000. It finally had a sequel, Death Race 2050, made in 2017.
- Dracula 3000, a sci-fi vampire film with no relation to the 1931 Bela Lugosi classic.
- The Fear Street trilogy installments are 1994, 1978, and 1666. A fourth film, Fear Street: Prom Queen becomes the oddly named sequel.
- Kalki 2898 AD, an Indian (Telugu language) dystopian science fiction epic, about a superhuman savior returned to fulfill a 6000-year prophecy.
- Kamikaze 1989, released in 1982 and set in 1989. Interestingly, the film correctly predicts the fall of the Berlin Wall and the reunification of Germany occurring that year, though it incorrectly predicts the result being a totalitarian Crapsaccharine World.
- One Million B.C., and its remake, One Million Years B.C..
- Paris 36 is set in 1936 and was made in 2008.
- Scanners: This film, released in 1981, had a Working Title of Telepathy 2000, reflecting its setting of 20 Minutes into the Future.
- September 30 1955, a movie from 1977, with the date being the day James Dean died.
- Summer of '42, released in 1971. Also Class of '44, the sequel released in 1973.
- The Unforgettable Year 1919, a Russian movie released in 1951.
- Winchester '73, a 1950 film referring to the Winchester rifle that first entered production in 1873.
- Wonder Woman 1984: A sequel to the 2017 film that takes place in 1984 (but was made in 2020).
- The title of Year One invokes this trope, but the story doesn't adhere to it at all, since the whole thing is a camp Anachronism Stew, and all of the Biblical references are strictly Old Testament.
Literature
- Eric Flint's 1632 books.
- Yoram Kaniuk's 1948, about his experiences as an Israeli soldier during the titular 1948 Arab-Israeli War.
- 2312 is Kim Stanley Robinson's sequel to his Red Mars Trilogy, and consists largely of an odyssey about the Colonized Solar System that has developed since the time of the original trilogy.
- Isaac Asimov's "2430 A.D.": The title is the year of the setting, when all of the world's animal biomass is predicted to consist entirely of human beings.
- Roberto Bolaño's 2666 could possibly be a year, although it is not mentioned in the novel itself. It is mentioned in one of his other novels, however.
- The America 2040 series of books, written from 1986 to 1988. Oddly enough, the title is a bit of a misnomer; most of the series takes place in space, and only a small portion of the first book is set in 2040.
- Battlefield Earth, by L. Ron Hubbard, is fully titled Battlefield Earth: A Saga of the Year 3000. It's hard to know how accurate that date is, though, since humans don't actually have calendars any more.
- New York 2140 is another from Kim Stanley Robinson. It looks at a New York City flooded by rising sea levels, a theme also included in his Red Mars Trilogy and 2312.
- Nineteen Eighty-Four. In-Universe, the protagonist thinks this is probably the current year, but due to the totalitarian state he lives and the nature in which it controls all information, he can't be sure. Out-of-universe, George Orwell planned to name it 1948 (the book was released a year after he finished it, in 1949), but he just flipped the last two digits to indicate a 20 Minutes into the Future timeframe.
- David Peace's "Red Riding Quartet" series of novels, adapted as the TV series Red Riding, are titled Nineteen Seventy-Four, Nineteen Seventy-Seven, Nineteen Eighty and Nineteen Eighty-Three. A later stand-alone novel by him was called GB84.
- The Space Odyssey Series: Multiple, following an Idiosyncratic Episode Naming pattern of "[Year]: [Phrase with "Odyssey" in it.]":
- 2001: A Space Odyssey.
- 2010: Odyssey Two.
- 2061: Odyssey Three.
- 3001: The Final Odyssey.
Live-Action TV
- 1670 is a Polish Mockumentary and satire, set in the title year but presenting a modern spin on issues like feminism, labor rights, and environmentalism.
- 1899 is a German-international surrealist mystery thriller set aboard an ocean liner traveling from Europe to America in the title year. The time period eventually becomes more complicated.
- 2057 is a speculative docudrama that tried to predict technological advances that would occur by that year.
- American Horror Story: 1984, the ninth season of American Horror Story, primarily takes place in... wait for it...1984! It pays homage to the slasher genre popular in the '80s.
- The Arrowverse has a few episodes titled after the years in which they are (at least partially) set:
- Legends of Tomorrow episodes "Star City 2046" and "Camelot/3000" (a Shout-Out to the comic book series Camelot 3000).
- Arrow episode "Star City 2040."
- Beyond Tomorrow: This is an Australian science and invention documentary series based on The BBC's Tomorrow's World. Originally titled Towards 2000, the show got a make-over in 1985 and the producers decided 2000 was too close to be aiming "towards" any more. They changed it to Beyond 2000, but changed names again, to Beyond Tomorrow, since "Beyond 2000" now also seems old-fashioned...
- Cleopatra 2525 was a short-lived First-Run Syndication series. Set in the title year, it was a girl-power sci-fi action series, mainly notable for the skimpy costumes, skimpier plots, and a pre-Firefly Gina Torres.
- The German spy thriller series Deutschland 83, set in 1983, and its sequel series Deutschland '86 and Deutschland '89.
- Galactica 1980 was a short-lived Sequel Series to the original Battlestar Galactica, made in the title year, and showing the Galactica survivors reaching earth in that year.
- The Season 1 finale of Halt and Catch Fire was simply titled "1984" partly in reference to Apple's "1984" ad for the Macintosh.
- Heroes episode "1961".
- Korg: 70,000 B.C. was a rare live-action creation from Hanna-Barbera. Running on Saturday mornings for a single season, it was edutainment about a family of neanderthals, and an Acclaimed Flop.
- Laverne & Shirley: There's an episode called "New Year's Eve 1960".
- The HBO Latin America original series Magnifica 70.
- When Match Game was revived in 1973, it was revived as Match Game '73, with the year updated every New Year's Eve through the end of the CBS run in 1979. This did not apply to the concurrent syndicated run; since there was no guarantee when those episodes would air, or even if they'd air in the right order, adding the year would have been pointless.
- The Night Gallery episode "Class of '99," featuring Vincent Price in a bizarre dystopia 20 Minutes into the Future.
- Our Miss Brooks has "Christmas Show 1952".
- Space: 1999, created in 1975, begins in the far-future year of 1999, when radioactive waste stored on the moon explodes, and blasts the moon out of earth's orbit at superluminal speed.
- Space: Above and Beyond was retitled Space 2063 (after the year it kicks off) in several European countries.
- Stargate SG-1: Several episodes used a year as the title:
- "1969": A solar flare causes the gate to malfunction and strand the team in 1969.
- "2010": The episode is set in the year 2010, ten years ahead of the show's "present day" timeline at the time that it was aired, as well as referencing 2010: The Year We Make Contact.
- "2001": A prequel episode to "2010", and therefore referencing 2001: A Space Odyssey.
- Total Recall 2070
Music
- The 1975 is the self-titled debut album by English band The 1975. The band itself takes their name from an inscription in band member Matty Healy's copy of Jack Kerouac's On the Road that was dated “1 June, The 1975.”
- "Summer of '69" by Bryan Adams, released in 1985. It's actually a subversion: Word of God confirms the 69 is actually the sex act.
- "2002" by Anne-Marie, which begins in 2002 then skips forward to seven years later.
- "1997" by Ash, released in 1996 — named for the release year of A New Hope.
- "1973" by James Blunt.
- "1984" by David Bowie, inspired by Nineteen Eighty-Four and released in 1974.
- "1985" by Bowling for Soup, a cover of SR 71's, the latter of which was released in 2004.
- "Year 3000" by Busted, later Covered Up by The Jonas Brothers.
- 3030
: The sci-fi concept rap album by Dan the Automator and Del Tha Funkee Homosapien (Deltron in the album), which takes place in the same year. The followup album, Event II, takes place in the year 3040, although it was actually released closer to fifteen real-world years after the first than ten.
- "Sexcrime (Nineteen Eighty Four)" by Eurythmics, released in 1984 as part of the soundtrack to... well, guess.
- "1848" by Galadriel.
- Jean-Michel Jarre's Sessions 2000: Released in 2002, it contained material recorded during something similar to electronic jam sessions in 2000.
- "1642 Inprisonment" by King Diamond.
- King Princess: "1950" is about hiding a queer relationship and is titled after a time period when LGBT people had to hide their love. It's also a nod to the song's inspiration, Patricia Highsmith's The Price Of Salt, which was released in 1952.
- "Overture 1383" by Yngwie Malmsteen.
- Paul McCartney and Wings did a B-Side titled "1985", released in 1974. It was released alongside the "Band on the Run" album.
- The Title Track of the Motörhead album 1916, about a soldier in World War I.
- The band Neon Trees released a song called "1983" in 2010.
- New Order's "1963" is named as such after the year when John F. Kennedy was assassinated, taking place in January of that year and using imagery related to the killing as an analogy for a man murdering his wife to elope with his mistress.
- Ninja Sex Party: In "6969", the band travels to the year 6969, hoping for some sex-related escapades.
- "1999" by Prince, released in 1982.
- Disco 2000, by Pulp, written in 1995. Uses the year 2000 as a Literal Metaphor for a fresh start with an unrequited childhood crush.
- "'39" by Queen.
- The album 2112 by Rush.
- Two Dmitri Shostakovich symphonies:
- Symphony No. 11 in G minor ("The Year 1905"), composed in 1957.
- Symphony No. 12 in D minor ("The Year 1917"), composed in 1961.
- "1979" by The Smashing Pumpkins, released in 1996.
- 1989, Taylor Swift's fifth studio album. The title refers to year Swift was born, as well as the album's 80's synth-pop influences.
- Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture, about Napoleon's 1812 invasion of Russia (there were a buttload of wars in that year).
- Van Halen released their album 1984 in that very year.
- T-POCKET's hit Vocaloid song "1925", released in 2009.
- The Zager & Evans hit "In the Year 2525" follows humanity's progress through the distant future. It starts in the titular year and continues through 3535, 4545, 5555, 6565, 7510, 8510, and 9595, ending at an unspecified date 10,000 years later.
Software
- Microsoft
- Microsoft Windows: Used for Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows 2000. Averted with subsequent releases of desktop Windows, but the server versions continue to play it straight.
- Almost all versions of Microsoft Office and its component applications.
- Used for most versions of Visual Studio as well, save for the one released in 1998, which was instead named Visual Studio 6.0.
- Ubuntu names its releases using the format {last 2 digits of year}.{2 digit month}. For instance, the version released in April 2022 is 22.04.
Tabletop Games
- 2300 AD, AKA Traveller 2300. The 2300 is the century in which the game takes place.
- Space 1889 sets planetary exploration in a an Alternate History Steampunk Victorian era, with the title being a riff on the TV series Space: 1999.
- Ticket to Ride released mini-expansions "U.S.A. 1910" and "Europa 1912," rules mods originally intended for use with the original (U.S.A.) and Europe maps, but compatible with other sets as well.
- Twilight: 2000, a game from the 1980s set in the war-torn future year 2000.
- Warhammer 40,000 goes twenty times better than the standard, although the current timeline is in or near the 42nd millennium.
Theatre
- 1776, the 1969 Broadway musical about the debates by the Second Continental Congress, over how, and whether, to adopt the Declaration of Independence and establish the United States as an independent nation.
- Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812, which is set in the stated year.
Toys
- G.I. Joe has a subteam called "Battle Force 2000", whose purpose is to "field-test experimental equipment under battlefield conditions." The figures and vehicles were introduced in 1987 and stayed in production for a few years, then were reissued as fan club exclusives in 2017.
- LEGO Dino Attack (which was released in 2005 and is set in 2010) has the Market-Based Title Dino 2010 in Europe.
Video Games
- 1942, which was remade in 2009 as 1942: Joint Strike.
- 198X, a retraux game from 2019 which is set in the titular year.
- 7554: Glorious Memories Revived, the title being a reference to May 7th, 1954, during the Việt Minh's victory over France at the Battle of Dien Bien Phu which the game is attempting to re-create.
- The Anno Domini series are all named Anno [Year]: Anno 1602, Anno 1503, Anno 1701, Anno 1404, Anno 2070, Anno 2205, Anno 1800, and so on.
- Several such examples in the Battlefield series:
- Battlefield 1942 and 1943: Named after years during World War II, which is when the games take place. Released in 2002.
- Battlefield 2142: Named after a futuristic war set in a new ice age between two factions fighting to survive in 2142. Released in 2006.
- Battlefield 2042: Released in October 2021.
- Cyberball 2072.
- Cyberpunk 2077.
- Empire City: 1931, a shooting arcade game released in 1986. You take on NYC gangsters in the titular year.
- Hong Kong '97: Released in 1995.
- In an example that overlaps with Annual Title, we have the first ten games of The King of Fighters series, from The King of Fighters '94 to The King of Fighters 2003, though KOF '98 and KOF 2002 are officially non-canon Dream Match Games. SNK would abandon the cycle of yearly releases in favor of more spaced out Numbered Sequels thereafter, starting with The King of Fighters XI in 2005; in-universe acknowledgement of the actual year would be dropped from that point on as well (though the series already had been operating on Comic-Book Time for years by then). There's also The King of Fighters 2006, but that one is a localization retitle of KOF: Maximum Impact 2, the second installment of the Alternate Continuity Maximum Impact line and not a main series game.
- The Order: 1886 takes place in an Alternate History Steampunk version of London in 1886.
- Robotron: 2084, came out in 1982, with the name presumably inspired by the dystopian Nineteen Eighty-Four, as the game is set in a future ruled by machines.
- Spirit of Speed 1937 was a racing game originally released in 1999. It was set in 1937, using period-appropriate cars.
- Spyro: Year of the Dragon is a more subtle example than most. The game was released in 2000, an actual Year of The Dragon, and the story takes place on an in-universe Year of The Dragon, which in the setting is when fairies deliver Dragon Eggs, which are the main collectible in the game.
- Street Fighter 2010: Released in 1990 and set in the distant and terrifying future of the year 2010.
- Strikers 1945: Set in 1945 just after World War II, first released in 1995.
- The 1984 sequel to Time Pilot was titled, well...Time Pilot '84. Oddly, unlike the original game, you're never actually told what year(s) the action is set in.
- WipEout 2097 and 2048.
- YIIK: A Post-Modern RPG: Y (Year) - II (2) - K (1000).
- The original Japanese title of Zone of the Enders: The Fist of Mars is Zone of the Enders: 2173 Testament, signifying that it's a Gaiden Game taking place between the events of the original (set in 2172) and The 2nd Runner (set in 2174).
Visual Novels
- A Summer's End — Hong Kong, 1986 is set in 1986.
Web Original
- 17776 is set almost 16,000 years in the future; its sequel, 20020, also qualifies.
Western Animation
- Futurama has two episodes referencing the year they take place:
- "Space Pilot 3000": The pilot episode, showing how Fry was cryogenically frozen as midnight strikes on New Year's Eve 1999 and wakes up almost 1000 years later in New Year's Eve 2999. By the end of the episode, it's New Year's Day 3000.
- "Decision 3012" takes place during the 3012 Presidential election.
- Parodied in Gravity Falls, when Soos finds an old video game made by "Year 2000 Electronics", Soos doesn't realize that the year 2000 was more than a decade before his own time (2012).
Soos: Man, I can't wait for the year 2000!
- Phantom 2040, futuristic adaptation of The Phantom.
- Rugrats: An episode called "Reptar 2010", named for the Show Within a Show that's named for its future setting of 2010.
- Sealab 2020 by Hanna-Barbera Studios, about a marine research facility on the ocean floor. 2020 is said by the Opening Narration as the year it's set in:
This is the year two thousand and twenty.
- Sealab 2021 by Cartoon Network Studios is a parody of the above Sealab 2020, wherein an undersea community has Gone Horribly Wrong, implied that 2021 is the year it's set in.
- South Park parodied and mocked the trope in Season 4 by having the first four episodes end with 2000 for no reason other than to mock its overuse at the time.
- X-Men '97, named for the year the original series it's a Revival of ended (as well as the year it takes place In-Universe).