A One-Book Author is the relatively uncommon phenomenon where a person or group produces one work in a specific field, but never forays into said field again. After all, if someone manages to finish their first work, they are probably passionate enough about the field to make a second one. Or at least willing to use their experience and skill set to make money.
This can happen because the author only really had one work in mind that they wanted to make, burned out after their first work, or was afraid that they had peaked on their first attempt (see Tough Act to Follow). For groups, maybe Creative Differences or Hostility on the Set struck early. And, unfortunately, sometimes a debut is such a critical or financial failure that it forces its creator to quit or discourages them from ever trying again.
Note that there are multiple fields even within one medium. In the world of literature, the author might have a couple additional short stories or poems that were published, but they still count if they only published one novel. In the world of films, there's a big difference between being an actor, a director and a screenwriter. And so on. Similarly, writing a screenplay is very different from writing a novel.
May overlap with Died During Production (where the author doesn't live long enough to compose another work), One-Hit Wonder (if the author's only work was a major success), Troubled Production (if it put the creator off ever creating another work), or at times with Short-Lived, Big Impact. Compare One-Song Bard. Contrast Author Usurpation for when the author did make more works, but they're only known for one while the rest are forgotten. Also contrast Stillborn Franchise for a franchise that only ever got one work.
If there seems to be little/no data on the author at all beyond their one work - especially if that work wound up bombing - expect Wild Mass Guessing that their name is actually a discarded Pen Name from someone who's stuck around in the industry after all.
No Recent Examples, Please! A creator can only be listed if they have retired/disbanded or gone five years without releasing anything. If the creator announces a second project, they can only be listed after 2 years with no updates on it (i.e. when you can probably assume it has been Quietly Cancelled).
Examples:
Hosts and announcers
- Wheel of Fortune has many examples:
- Host-hostess tandem Pat Sajak and Vanna White, who took over from Chuck Woolery and Susan Stafford in 1981 and 1982, respectively, originally met this trope: Pat was a former DJ and weatherman (although he hosted at least one unsold pilot before Wheel), and Vanna's only other TV "role" was as a contestant on The Price Is Right in 1980. However, their fame in these capacities led to other roles that now make them aversions.
- Former San Diego Chargers place kicker Rolf Benirschke hosted the daytime version from January 10 to June 30, 1989. This was his only TV role.
- The only TV role for Cynthia Washington (ex-wife of San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Gene Washington) was filling in for an injured Stafford for just over a week.
- Tricia Gist (now-wife of Wheel creator Merv Griffin's son Tony) filled in for Vanna for a few weeks in 1991, thus giving Gist her only TV role to date.
- The only on-camera role for Mike Reilly was hosting the short-lived 1990 game show adaptation of Monopoly. Series creator Merv Griffin chose Reilly after he was a Jeopardy! contestant.
- Both lovely assistants for Concentration did nothing else of note — Paola Diva, the original assistant, and Marjorie Goodson-Cutt, the assistant on the 1980s-1990s Classic Concentration, who was producer Mark Goodson's daughter.
- Many people have been prolific in other fields, but only hosted a game show once (well, games that made it to air, anyway). Among them are:
- Kevin O'Connell (a weatherman whose only hosting gig was Go, as well as the Keynotes and Money in the Blank pilots)
- Henry Polic II (aka Jerry Silver on Webster; only hosting gig was Double Talk, plus the Eye Q pilot). Polic also had his only gig as an announcer when he filled in for Johnny Gilbert on a few episodes of The $100,000 Pyramid during John Davidson's tenure as host.
- Chuck Henry (an LA news anchor whose only hosting gig was the 1989 revival of Now You See It, although he previously hosted an unsold pilot for Beat the Odds in 1975)
- Laurie Faso (a voice actor and occasional live-action actor as well; only hosting gig was I'm Telling!)
- Nick Clooney (George Clooney's father) (a long career as a broadcaster; only hosting gig was The Money Maze)
- Patrick Wayne (John Wayne's son) (several roles as an actor; only hosting gig was the 1990 revival of Tic-Tac-Dough)
- Singer/actor Adam Wade became the first African-American game show host when he hosted Musical Chairs in 1975. He never hosted another game show, but continued in his musical and acting careers.
- Longtime Denver television weatherman Ed Greene's only game show hosting gig was the short-lived interactive game Tele-Quest.
- Win, Lose or Draw:
- The versions between 1987 and 1992 had a combined four hosts: Bert Convy (1987-89, syndication), Robb Weller (1989-90, syndication), Vicki Lawrence (NBC), and Marc Price (Teen Win, Lose or Draw on Disney Channel, 1989-92). Among these four people, Convy is the only one of the four to have helmed any other game shows (most notably, Tattletales and Super Password). Lawrence was best known for her roles on The Carol Burnett Show and Mama's Family and was a panelist on several other game shows, but Win, Lose or Draw remains her only hosting gig to date (she also hosted two pilots for Mark Goodson and ABC called Body Talk in 1990). Weller's only other major role was a short gig as host on Entertainment Tonight (he hosted the 1986 pilot of Blackout, the failed 1990 pilot of Split Second (1972) and the 1993 pilot of Hollywood Teasers, a revision of All-Star Blitz), and Price's only other notable role was Irwin "Skippy" Handelman on Family Ties.
- The Disney Channel version, Teen Win, Lose or Draw, had a few different Mouseketeers from The Mickey Mouse Club announce, none of whom did any other announcing work (or in the case of Brandy Brown, much of anything at all). The exception was Mark L. Walberg, who was not a Mouseketeer, and who had experience in both announcing and hosting game shows for many years afterward (and, since 2006, of Antiques Roadshow).
- "Gorgeous George" Davidson, the Subverted Lovely Assistant on GSN's WinTuition, has no other credits.
- The only television role for Tony Pigg, primarily a radio DJ, was as The Announcer of Live! with (Regis and/or Kathie Lee/Kelly and/or Michael/Ryan), a role he held from the show's beginning in 1983 as The Morning Show (Regis heard him on the radio and liked the sound of his voice) until his retirement in 2019. He died five years later.
- Deejay Mark Driscoll announced the first few weeks of the 1989 revival of Now You See It before being replaced with Don Morrow. To date, Driscoll has not done any other television work.
- The game show The Cross Wits has two examples. The 1975-80 version was the only television role for Lovely Assistant Jerri Fiala; one week of episodes had her serve as a celebrity partner, while Kitty Hilton (then-wife of game show announcer Bob Hilton) got her only TV role taking Jerri's usual spot. The 1986 revival was also the only television role for announcer Michelle Roth.
- UK financial journalist Louise Noel's only TV hosting role was the stocks-and-shares game Show Me the Money.
- Kirk Fogg has no other television roles of note besides hosting the kids' game show Legends of the Hidden Temple.
- The only game show credit for Phil Hartman was as the announcer of The Pop 'N' Rocker Game in 1983. Hartman supposedly auditioned for Let's Make a Deal and The Price Is Right as well, but didn't make the cut for either.
- Brian Cummings' only on-screen role to date is the announcer on the first season of The All-New Let's Make a Deal in 1984 (although he also announced the pilot of Fun House (1988)). However, he is a prolific voice actor.
- Evan Davis is the longstanding host of The BBC's Dragons' Den. It is Davis' only role away from his usual position as a news anchor.
- The only on-camera role to date for voice actor Bob Bergen is Jep!, a short-lived children's spin-off of Jeopardy! which aired in 1997.
- The Russian adaptation of 1 vs. 100, Odin protiv vseh on TV Centr, is the only TV hosting credit for Alexander Nuzhdin, who is mostly known as a DJ and a radio personality.
- In 1977, Saturday Night Live ran an "Anybody Can Host" audience contest, the winner of which was a 80-year-old New Orleans grandmother named Miskel Spillman, who hosted the December 17, 1977 episode. This was not just her only hosting appearance (and SNL's only non-entertainer host to date), but her only national television appearance.
Studios and Companies
- Patlabor is the only work by the artist collective Headgear, although Headgear's individual members have done various succesful works before and after Patlabor.
- Looking Up at the Half-Moon's anime adaptation was the only thing licensed by the short-lived distributor Crimson Star Media, who went out of business after only releasing one episode.
- Tokyo Media Connections only made the short anime Majo demo Steady in 1986. According to this video
by anime historian Kenny Lauderdale, it could have been a marketing ploy to promote the song sung by the female protagonist's voice actress, since it's featured in its entirety. Nobody who worked on this anime seem to have worked on anything else.
- The only production of Ichigo Animation, a subsidiary of real estate and clean energy firm Ichigo Inc., was the 2020 anime Vlad Love.
- Kroyer Films did animations for several films of other studios as well as the video game Pitfall: The Mayan Adventure, along with producing the short film Technological Threat, but only made one feature-length film of their own, FernGully: The Last Rainforest.
- A company called Elastic Productions made only one movie before going belly up: the Direct-to-Video film Bands on the Run.
- Summertime Entertainment's only film was Legends of Oz: Dorothy's Return. The company would later close in response to the film's resounding commercial and critical failure a few months later.
- Dinosaur was the only movie produced by Disney's now-defunct subsidiary studio The Secret Lab, which closed shortly after the movie's release. This is also the main reason why Disney now considers Dinosaur as being officially part of the Disney Animated Canon.
- Though CJ ENM Films & Television (formerly CJ Entertainment) is still in business, they only made two animated feature films, both in 2012; Padak and Dino Time.
- Ballerina (2016) (released under the Market-Based Title Leap! in U.S.) was the only film released under The Weinstein Company's short lived animated film label Mizchief, since that along with the rest of The Weinstein Company was brought down following the sexual abuse allegations towards company founder Harvey Weinstein.
- Deutsche Zeichenfilm Studio, an animation studio founded in 1941 by Joseph Goebbels to produce high-quality animated propaganda films for the Nazi government during World War II, only managed to release a single film, Armer Hansi, before getting abruptly shut down in 1944 due to the needs of the war effort. A second film that was in production ultimately got finished at another studio after the war.
- Prana Film, a German movie studio, produced only one film, the 1922 horror classic Nosferatu. The studio was forced into bankruptcy after being ordered to pay copyright damages to the estate of Bram Stoker.
- Tailor Made Productions, a production company run by Dan Lautner (Taylor's father). Setting out to make him into an action star thanks to the financial success of The Twilight Saga, Dan chose to start a series of action movie vehicles for his son, with the sole film made by the company being 2011's Abduction, which was both a critical and financial flop.
- The obscure 1995 film Goldilocks and the Three Bears appears to be the only sort of statement made by Twin Dolphin Filmed Entertainment.
- The one-off distribution company Shining Excalibur Films was created to release Kids, as Miramax, then owned by Disney, got cold feet over releasing an NC-17 film.
- Luscious Spirit Studios was an all-women yuri indie group with plans for comics, short stories and more all around the central theme of romance between women. However, after a successful Kickstarter of a compilation of short stories, the two writers left the group for reasons unexplained, taking their written works with them. The final member disappeared into the ether after that, leaving behind a pair of unfinished comics and a planned visual novel that will never see the light of day.
- 2030 CE:
- This is the only work by Angela Bruce Productions, particularly since the eponymous founder died from cancer during pre-production.
- Season 2 was co-produced by Yan Moore Productions which is also their only work.
- Italian Spiderman counts since Alrugo Entertainment, the collective that was formed to turn Dario Russo's student project into an actual web series, disbanded in 2010. Russo wasn't able to turn the show into a television series because of copyright issues, so he had to found another production company, Dinosaur, for his following projects.
- Man from Atlantis is the only series made by Solow Production Company.
- Cosmic Carnival was Suncoast Pinball's debut release. Less than a year after it came out, the company filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy
and ceased pinball manufacturing.
While they still make and distribute arcade video games, they have not attempted to make a second pinball game.
- The Hurler roller coasters at Carowinds and formerly at Kings Dominion were built by a company named International Coasters, Inc., which built nothing else.
- 3VR, Inc. was a Californian developer that only lasted one year (1997-98) and in that brief time window apparently only released The 3D Adventures of Sailor Moon for Windows, a collection of mini-games.
- Abuse, released in 1996 was the only game that Crack Dot Com made.
- The Adventure of Hourai High School is the only game released by a Japanese studio named Dynamite.
- The 1995 video game, The Adventures of Batman and Robin (Genesis) for Genesis and Sega CD was the only game released by Clockwork Tortoise, Inc.
- The original Japanese version of Adventures of Dino Riki, titled Shin Jinrui: The New Type, is the only game credited to Rix Soft. They were the software development branch of Ricoh Elemex Corporation, that makes precision manufacturing technology, but never made another game.
- Silicon Alley only released the bizarre multimedia "educational" "game" The Adventures of Ninja Nanny & Sherrloch Sheltie for Windows. It was supposed to be the first chapter of the story, but the following installments remained Vaporware.
- AMBER: Journeys Beyond was the only game published by by Hue Forest Entertainment.
- Aquaria, released in 2007 was the only game made by indie developer Bit Blot.
- Sunrise Games Ltd. has as their only credit the weird proto-Tower Defense game Attack of the Mutant Penguins.
- The Electronic Arts-published combat driving game Auto Destruct was the only title developed by Neurostone.
- Backlash, released in 1994 is Sanctuary Software's only video game.
- Beacon is Monothetic's only commercial release prior to its disbanding on August 30, 2024.
- Vodeo Games developed its first game, Beast Breaker, and then shut down a year later due to a lack of funding.
- Birdiy
(sic) was the only game by Japanese developer Mama Top. With its extremely repetitive gameplay and heaps of Fake Difficulty, it was a huge flop in arcades, so the other two games they were supposed to release never materialized.
- Studio Archcraft developed the 2009 Nintendo DS RPG Black Sigil: Blade of the Exiled, and quietly disappeared afterward. Some members of that team later resurfaced to make the SRPG Fell Seal: Arbiter's Mark, which includes a playable cameo from Black Sigil's hero, Kairu.
- The 1993 Blake Stone: Aliens of Gold was the only game ever released by JAM Productions.
- Companies ABM and Gecas are only credited for the bizarrely named Blomby Car, an arcade racing game that is a rip-off/clone of Gaelco's World Rally Championship.
- Dark Screen Games released in 2020 the battle royale-styled brawler Bounty Battle, featuring over 30 characters from the most popular indie games of the time. However, it was very poorly received for being buggy and barely playable, so the studio switched from video games to collectible card games soon after.
- Russian studio Moon Moose only developed 2022's Cartel Tycoon before shutting down in 2024 due to parent company tinyBuild's continued financial struggles.
- Chakan: The Forever Man is the only game that Extended Play Productions ever developed. That said, some of its staff members went to Western Technologies Inc. (the company behind the first X-Men game for Sega Genesis).
- Concord was the first and only title from Firewalk Studios. Having started production in 2016 as part of "incubation" studio ProbablyMonsters, Concord underwent development for eight years, with Firewalk being picked up as a first-party developer by Sony Interactive Entertainment in 2023 and the game finally being released in 2024, with an alleged budget of over $200 million (some allege even more when considering how much Sony spent on acquiring the studio). This ambitious live-service Hero Shooter proceeded to do disastrous numbers (only 25,000 worldwide sales, never breaking more than 700 players at a time), leading to the servers going down and the game removed from distribution less than two weeks after launch, and a month later, Sony announced they were shuttering Firewalk.
- Cosmic Race, released in 1995 was the only video game released by Neorex, a Japanese systems architecture and information technology firm.
- Looking Glass Software, who are unrelated to the more famous Looking Glass Studios, have only one game to their name, Creative Contraptions, released in 1985 for PC/MS-DOS, Apple II, and Commodore 64.
- Besides two CD-ROM multimedia divination programs (!), Japanese developer Rodik, Inc. only made one game, the bizarre adventure Cookie's Bustle, then they turned into a research company before closing down in the early 2000s.
- LaserDisc arcade game Cube Quest
(1983) was the only game developed by Simutrek.
- Deep Silver Vienna, originally named Games That Matter, only developed Cursed Mountain before shutting down a few months later.
- Darkwood was the only finished game released by Acid Wizard Studio, as they would end up disbanding before they could release their second in-development game Soccer Kids. They would end up handing the reins for the development of Darkwood 2 over to a different studio entirely, Ice-Pick Lodge.
- Obscure Amiga platformer Donk! The Samurai Duck
is a two-for-one: both companies credited for it, The Hidden and Supervision Entertainment Ltd., have this as their only release. The Hidden were a trio of 20-something British developers who made a couple of non-profit games; Donk! was their first and only commercial release.
- Nintendo second-party developer Param only developed only one game, Doshin the Giant for the ill-fated Nintendo 64DD, and went defunct in 2003. The modest success of the Nintendo GameCube port in 2002 wasn't enough to save the company.
- The only game developed by the Squaresoft subsidiary Escape was Driving Emotion Type-S.
- Dr. Mario 64 is the only game developed by Newcom.
- Ultra Ultra, a studio started by former IO Interactive employees, were only able to release ECHO (2017) before shutting down a year later, with few of the employees coming back to their old company for their involvement on the Hitman World of Assassination Trilogy.
- Rhythm & Hues was a company specializing in movies and animation that worked on a few games but only ever made one game of their own: Eggs of Steel
.
- Ignition Tokyo, a subsidiary of British publisher UTV Ignition Games, only ever developed one game: El Shaddai: Ascension of the Metatron. Before the game was even released, UTV Ignition decided to halt all internal development; as a result, the Tokyo studio was closed.
- Escape From Tethys is a metroidvania made in 2018 by Whimsical. Despite ending on a definite Sequel Hook, and the authors promising more games to come, this remains their only production.
- Häus Teknikka produced Frantic Flea
for SNES, and nothing else.
- Frogger: The Great Quest is the only game credited to Papa Yeti Studio.
- Confounding Factor, founded by Tomb Raider co-creator Toby Gard, only ever developed the 2004 Xbox game Galleon. The studio shut down shortly after the game's release due to low sales.
- Generations Lost is the only game developed by Pacific SoftScape.
- Malaysian studio Motion Pixel is only credited for their work on Ghoul Patrol, the sequel to Zombies Ate My Neighbors, that however started its life as a completely unrelated project.
- Topheavy Studios's only release was The Guy Game, a 2004 FMV quiz game where the player's goal is to answer enough questions in order to make a bunch of drunken, unaware young women in bikinis strip fully naked. While already infamous at the time for using live footage in the course of taking advantage of intoxicated, random women on Spring Break, the game itself would end up being banned from North American retail because one of the girls so depicted turned out to be seventeen years old—and since live footage was used, the game was technically child pornography. This, combined with the game's poor sales, caused Topheavy Studios to close its doors within a year.
- Amazing Studio was founded in 1994 by Éric Chahi to finish Heart of Darkness, whose development started 2 years before. However the game suffered from a Troubled Production and was only completed in 1998. Chahi, exhausted by the long developing process, left the company which was then renamed "Amazing Digital Studio" and started working on CG animated music videos and film post-production.
- Dark Energy Digital only managed to create two games before going bust: Hydrophobia and the Updated Re-release Hydrophobia Prophecy.note
- The role-playing FPS Immercenary was the only game made by Dallas-based Five Miles Out, partly due to the failure of the 3DO console.
- Four Leaf Studio, the group of people behind Katawa Shoujo, was created specifically just for this one game and has not made any other projects. It was a collaborative effort by people from all over the world (many of whom were long gone when the final product was released) and it was five years in the making.
- Nintendo subsidiary Project Sora only made one game: Kid Icarus: Uprising, which was quite popular and a Killer App for the Nintendo 3DS that the company was established to develop. The company closed doors four months after the game's release.
- 38 Studios (created by baseball star Curt Schilling) only released one game, Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning, before going down in a blaze of loan default to the state of Rhode Island.
- The Labyrinth of Time was the only game made by Terra Nova Development.
- L.A. Noire was the only work of developer Team Bondi. Despite critical and commercial success, the game's Troubled Production ultimately bankrupted the company.
- Smoking Car Productions, the company formed by Prince of Persia creator Jordan Mechner to develop The Last Express, shut its doors after that game's commercial failure.
- Limbo of the Lost was the only game by British developer Majestic Studios, which spent 13 years in Development Hell. It was pulled from stores for copious stolen assets. This is despite The Stinger showing that the developers intended to make a sequel titled Limbo of the Lost II: Flight to Freedom.
- Made Man was the only game released by Silverback Studios, a company set up by employees of Acclaim's Manchester studio to rescue projects that were in production when Acclaim filled for bankruptcy. When Made Man flopped, their other project (a third game in the ATV Quad Power Racing series) could not find a buyer.
- Wintechno Co. Ltd. only made the arcade platformer Magical Cat Adventure
in 1993.
- Golgoth Studio was a French company with ambitious projects: making HD sequels and remakes of famous arcade games on PC. However, it went pretty badly for them. The only game they actually released was the mediocre and unfinished Magical Drop V for Steam; their Joe & Mac remake never got past character designs and the Toki remake was released... a decade after the initial announcements by a third party, when Golgoth already closed up shop.
- Metal Arms: Glitch in the System was the sole game released by developer Swingin' Ape Studios. Their next game was to have been StarCraft: Ghost; Blizzard even acquired the studio before disbanding it and canceling the game.
- It appears that Italo Games didn't make anything after their debut game Milanoir.
- Parker Brothers (yes, THAT Parker Brothers) made plenty of different games, which were usually good, but the only video game they made that was not an arcade/computer port or a licensed game was Montezuma's Revenge.
- Amiga beat 'em up Motörhead, based on the eponymous group, is the only game ever developed by Kaitsu Software.
- Gavaking was a Japanese company that mostly made pachinko and sticker machines, and only co-produced the arcade game Nightmare in the Dark in 2000 with Eleven and AM Factory before closing up shop.
- Hi-Bit Studios funded 198X through Kickstarter, and shortly after its release they revealed it was actually an episodic game; however, sequels to the game (as well as the Xbox One port) remained Vaporware and the team became radio silent on social media and official pages since 2021, so it appears 198X Part 1 is going to be their only game.
- Mujo Games is a group of Swedish people that released in 2019 the minimalistic textual adventure Ord.
for all major consoles and operating systems, then simply parted ways.
- Too Kind Studio from France released their platforming adventure Pankapu in 2016. However, their social media went silent soon after and their official site was taken by domain squatters, so it seems that Pankapu will be the studio's only production.
- Mathilda is a game company that was created primarily by special effects wizard Screaming Mad George to make the Japan-only Paranoia Scape.
- Amstar Electronics' only credit was as the North American distributor for Phoenix (1980).
- SuperBot Entertainment (formerly known as Broodwork, Inc.) was an American studio founded by Sony in 2009 to make exclusive games for their consoles. They made PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale in 2012 and, despite the positive critical reception, Sony cut ties with them since they felt the game's sales were "inadequate". They tried to pitch other projects, but couldn't find a publisher, so they had to disband in 2013.
- Cellius, a joint venture between Sony and Bandai Namco, only had one game in their portfolio, which was the critically-panned (at least in the West; its Japanese release was somewhat better received) Ridge Racer for the PlayStation Vita in 2011.
- Apogee's team Developers of Incredible Power created the original Rise of the Triad in 1994-1995. The team disbanded while working on their second game, Prey (2006), which was eventually outsourced to another company.
- Recoil Games's only release was Rochard (2011), a critical success but a financial failure. They began development on a sequel, but never finished it due to lack of funding, and eventually folded completely.
- Amiga run 'n' gun Ruff 'n' Tumble is the only game ever developed by Wunderkind.
- iRock Interactive's sole game was the PlayStation 2 exclusive Dark Fantasy combat flight sim Savage Skies. It was going to be a licenced game featuring the likeness and music of Ozzy Osbourne under the title Ozzy's Dark Skies, but the prohibitive licensing expense and other complications forced iRock to drop the tie-in with Osbourne and retool it as a generic Panzer Dragoon clone sans the on-rails movement.
- Secret of Evermore was the only game developed by Square USA.
- The 2001 Severance: Blade of Darkness is the only video game released by Rebel Act Studios.
- Digital Tome only made one game, Siege of Avalon, before disbanding.
- Spyro: Enter the Dragonfly was the only game developed by Check Six Studios. The game's critical and commercial failure ensured they wouldn't make another game.
- Steel Reign was the only game by Chantemar Creations. Shortly after its release, most of the company's staff joined EverQuest developer Verant Interactive.
- Super Columbine Massacre RPG! is the only game by Danny Ledonne, who is a professional filmmaker and professor, and the controversy surrounding the game due to its alleged glamorization of the massacre caused Ledonne to never develop another game again.
- Dan & Gary Games only made the bizarre comical metroidvania Super Daryl Deluxe in 2018. Their web page
mentions another title, but there's absolutely no info on it anywhere, so it appears that Daryl will remain their lone effort.
- Tales of Legendia was the only game developed by Project MelFes.
- Recreational Brainware only helmed one game in its lifetime: The first Taz-Mania game for Sega Genesis.
- Twin Goddesses was the only game made by PolyGram K.K.
- An unknown company named Diatec only released arcade game Uncle Poo in late 1983, an autoscrolling maze game featuring an old man who has to pick up treasure while avoiding a flood and defeats enemies by farting. No, really
.
- The MMORPG WildStar was the only game developed by Carbine Studios, who closed down shortly before the game went offline.
- Amiga platformer Yo! Joe! Beat the Ghosts is the only game ever developed by Scipio.
- Swedish developers Villa Gorilla have made only one game, and it's called Yoku's Island Express. Justified in that they're a small studio and developing the game took them five years instead of one, as they originally thought.
- NoClip is a French game development studio that was founded specifically to develop and release Zombie Night Terror. Thus far, Zombie Night Terror is the only video game credited to NoClip.
- Three episodes of Tiny Toon Adventures were animated by a company called Encore Cartoons, which appears never to have done anything else.
- Two episodes of Peter Pan & the Pirates were animated by a company named Red Apple Group. This show is their only known work.
- British company Molitor Productions co-produced the Redwall animated series. All the company has really done otherwise is documentaries, including one on Saint Catherine's Monastery.
- Children's Television Trust International, a joint-venture comprising an All-Star Cast of European, Australasian, African, Asian & American broadcasters, produced the series Animated Tales of the World and did nothing else afterwards.
- Cyberchase:
- A company called Chaung Sul Media did work on the show starting with the second half of season 3 (replacing RG Prince Films) and all of season 4. This show is their only known work.
- Season 4 was co-produced by a company named Flying Minds, which appears to have done nothing else.
- The Orphanage opened a subsidiary called Orphanage Animation Studios. OAS co-produced Sym-Bionic Titan and did nothing else (a sequel to The Dark Crystal was planned, but it never came to fruition).
- Armer Hansi is the only animated short film that Joseph Goebbels' studio Deutsche Zeichenfilm managed to complete before it was shut down.
Authors of non-fiction
- Edmund Gettier was an analytic philosopher looking for tenure at Wayne State University. To help with this, he was encouraged to publish any ideas he had, so he published a 3-page paper called Is Justified True Belief Knowledge? which completely changed epistemology (the study of knowledge) by arguing that it wasn't, contrary to everything since Plato, because someone can have good reasons to believe something and still be right by coincidence (e.g., someone looks at a clock that says it's 12:10 PM and correctly thinks so, despite not knowing that the clock was broken at the time). Gettier never touched epistemology again, and his other publications are a review of John Passmore's book Philosophical Reasoning and comments on "The Concept of Person", an essay by A. J. Ayer.
- Philosophy and Science Fiction: The editor, Michael Phillips, is a professor emeritus of philosophy at Portland State University, and is not to be mistaken for the Christian Mystery/Romance author or the several other
authors by the same name. This Michael Phillips has only published this one anthology.
- While Bernhard Riemann published many papers, he only published one single paper
on number theory. It is considered one of the most important and influential papers ever published on that field.
Fictional Examples
- In JSA: The Golden Age, Jonathan Law (Tarantula) had only one book to his name that he wrote and published, Behind The Mask, after which he was unable to come up with anything else. Libby Lawrence's mentioning him being a "one-book, one-hit wonder" ended up being what broke up their relationship with each other. During the battle with Dynaman near the end of the story, Tarantula dies thinking that this battle would have made for a great book to write.
- Throw Momma from the Train: Larry's wife Margret seems to be milking the hell out of the one book she's credited with writing, Hot Fire, with adaptations galore. However, she'll likely remain a one-book author because she stole it — and she might become a no book author if and when she's caught.
- The premise of Finding Forrester involves Forrester being a One Book Author. In the end, he writes a second book.
- The end of the film Croupier has the protagonist, a novelist and casino dealer, having completed and published his Roman à Clef, realize that it is probably better for him to quit while he's ahead and not write another novel.
- Stone Reader is a documentary following a dedicated reader who tracks down an obscure but brilliant One Book Author and helps get his book republished.
- The plot for the indie movie The Kiss is even more restrictive: The protagonist finds the author's one book in manuscript form without an ending. She seeks him out to persuade him to become a One Book Author.
- In the Teenage Worrier series, Letty's father is the author of a widely acclaimed novel called "Moving On", but since his daughter's birth it has taken him almost sixteen years to finish his next work (and, it is implied, he probably never will.)
- The Teenage Worrier example is similar to the father in I Capture the Castle, but at the end, we learn the father in that book has begun creating another work.
- Sharyn McCrumb's Bimbos of the Death Sun: the author of the titular book apparently has no interest in writing another as he makes more money as a scientist.
- Toni L.P. Kelner's series Where Are They Now? follows journalist Tilda Harper, who specializes in hunting down former stars - most of whom only ever did one real work (or at most minor guest star roles) and then left the business. The very first book, Curse of the Kissing Cousins, involves her work in tracking down the cast of an in-universe series, Kissing Cousins; at least three of the actors fall under this trope, including one who left the business to run a motorcycle shop until he died in an accident, one who tried to continue her career but eventually gave up and went into real estate, and Mercy Ashford, who was cast in a single film role after the show ended but left the set after about a week's work one day and disappeared. It turns out she was attacked and beaten by an abusive ex-boyfriend with connections and an If I Can't Have You… attitude, and afterward went into hiding because she knew he wouldn't give up on her; even after his arrest, she chooses to stay out of the public eye.
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: One possible future for Jake Sisko has him write Anslem as his sole novel. (He also writes an anthology of short stories, though that is his only other literary work). In fact, the way we find out about this is exactly as given in the example at top.
- Frasier: An author whose only work (that he hates to talk about) was a landmark success befriends Martin. Niles and Frasier discover a manuscript for his planned second novel. When the author catches them reading it, he asks for their opinion. However, while praising it, they unintentionally make him realise he ripped off Dante's The Divine Comedy and throws the manuscript into the fire.
- In Fable I, there's a weapon called "The Dollmaker's Mace" which is apparently the only time they ever made a weapon. It's a pretty damn good one too, with high speed and a satisfying damage rating.
- Larry Butz of Ace Attorney apparently achieved some success as "Laurice Deauxnim" with his picture book, Franzy's Whippity-Whip Trip. But it seems that's all he's released, even after the eight-year Time Skip between the original trilogy and the rest of the series.
