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* HerCodenameWasMarySue: When Angus wrote about his adventures, he changed them to show himself as TheAce who took on entire armies of Beagle Boys by himself, while Scrooge was relegated to the ButtMonkey comic relief.



* MartyStu: InUniverse-example- when Angus wrote about his adventures, he changed them to show himself as TheAce who took on entire armies of Beagle Boys by himself, while Scrooge was relegated to the ButtMonkey comic relief.
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Not just in the family tree, Elvira refers to him as her brother in Life and Times chapter 10.


The grandson of Cornelius and the son of Clinton Coot. According to the family tree by Don Rosa this also means he is Grandma Duck's brother. He's the one selling the piece of land where the Fort Duckburg stands to Scrooge [=McDuck=].

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The grandson of Cornelius and the son of Clinton Coot. According to the family tree by Don Rosa this also means he is Coot, as well as Grandma Duck's brother. He's the one selling the piece of land where the Fort Duckburg stands to Scrooge [=McDuck=].
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Page is getting too big, moving the Main seven ducks to their own page.


* [[Characters / DisneyDucksComicUniverseMainCharacters Click here to go to the main characters.]]



!Main members
[[folder: Donald Duck]]
!Donald Fauntleroy Duck
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_99.png]]
-> Debut: ''The Wise Little Hen'' (1934)
-> Voiced by: Clarence Nash (1934-1984), Creator/TonyAnselmo (1985-present), Daniel Ross (''WesternAnimation/MickeyAndTheRoadsterRacers'')

The [[{{Everyman}} Everyduck]] at the center of the duck comic universe. Unlike in the animated shorts, where his chief distinguishing features are his trademark violent rages and nigh-incomprehensible quacking, the Donald of the comics is articulate and has a more nuanced character, though he still has a temper and will not hesitate to get back at anyone who gets on his bad side (using underhanded tactics, if necessary). Despite his many, MANY flaws, he is often capable of great decency and even heroism at a pinch. Creator/CarlBarks once said that he liked writing Donald because whether he was a good guy or a bad guy could change from story to story.

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!Main members
!Ducks
[[folder: Donald Elvira "Grandma" Duck]]
!Donald Fauntleroy Duck
[[quoteright:300:https://static.
[[quoteright:145:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_99.org/pmwiki/pub/images/elvira_coot.png]]
-> Debut: ''The Wise Little Hen'' (1934)
''Grandma Duck gag'' (1943)
-> Voiced by: Clarence Nash (1934-1984), Creator/TonyAnselmo (1985-present), Daniel Ross (''WesternAnimation/MickeyAndTheRoadsterRacers'')

The [[{{Everyman}} Everyduck]]
Creator/JuneForay, Russi Taylor (''Sport Goofy in Soccermania'')

Born Elvira Coot, she is Casey's sister, Humperdink's wife, Donald, Fethry and Gladstone's grandmother and Huey, Dewey and Louie's great-grandmother. She lives
at a farm outside Duckburg with her gluttonous, incredibly lazy farmhand Gus Goose, Casey's grandson, and is renowned for her pie-baking skills. She is the center granddaughter of the duck comic universe. Unlike in the animated shorts, where his chief distinguishing features are his trademark violent rages and nigh-incomprehensible quacking, the Donald founder of the comics is articulate and has a more nuanced character, though he still has a temper and will not hesitate to get back at anyone who gets on his bad side (using underhanded tactics, if necessary). Despite his many, MANY flaws, he is often capable of great decency and even heroism at a pinch. Creator/CarlBarks once said that he liked writing Donald because whether he was a good guy or a bad guy could change from story to story.Duckburg, Cornelius Coot.



* AbusiveParents: It's kind of an universal staple that his violent tantrums extend to his nephews as well. In some cases it's outright intentional BlackComedy. Admittedly, a significant portion of it is ValuesDissonance, since during the heyday of the comics (and in the [[ComicBookTime perpetual 1950s]] of the Creator/DonRosa comics), it was perfectly normal for parents to use CorporalPunishment.
* AdaptationalBadass:
** Most notably as Paperinik/Duck Avenger, where he sometimes reaches near-Franchise/{{Batman}} levels of hyper-competence, even if it varies a lot DependingOnTheWriter. He hides this in his civilian identity by playing up his lazy layabout characteristics.
** In ''ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures'', he got his own series and was suddenly fighting alien invasions, mad scientists, and major disasters on a regular basis with new powerful weapons and gear.
** Also as super-spy in ''ComicBook/DoubleDuck'' (that is set in the same universe of PK).
* AdaptationalIntelligence: See above. Donald Duck in PKNA and DD is quite a bit smarter than the one we usually see.
* AlliterativeName: '''D'''onald '''D'''uck.
* AmazonChaser: Seems to have a thing for strong-willed and generally powerful women: Daisy's temper is known, and some stories present her as a spy (and Donald ''knows''); Reginella is extremely nice but strong-willed and [[BewareTheNiceOnes incredibly dangerous when pushed too far]] (it says everything that for her unleashing a berserking Donald on a villain is ''holding back''); [[ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures Lyla Lay]] is just as strong-willed, skilled, and [[SuperStrength incredibly strong]] as you'd expect from a TimePolice droid; [[ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures Xadhoom]] is a short-tempered ''PhysicalGoddess''; and [[ComicBook/DoubleDuck Kay K]] is a superspy, and skilled enough in combat she once ''wrecked Lyla''.
* AntiHero:
** Usually depicted as a ClassicalAntiHero, particularly in Carl Barks's stories. He's a ''very'' flawed individual, who nevertheless will step up to bat and display genuine heroism when it's called for.
** In the early stories, his superhero alter-ego Paperinik wasn't actually a superhero, but a straight up AntiHero, avenging wrongs that had been done to Donald, sometimes in blatantly illegal ways. The writers toned this aspect down later and turned him into a superhero instead. The character's methods did not change much but he started targeting the criminal population of Duckburg.
* BelligerentSexualTension: With Daisy Duck, DependingOnTheWriter. Donald can be a {{Jerkass}} at times, even with his [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold gold-hearted moments]], but Daisy is definitely a {{Tsundere}}.
** Italian comics add another layer to this with their {{Superhero}}/AntiHero alter egos: as Paperinik and Paperinika they vocally ''loathe'' each other, but, to their horror, can't deny to themselves they're also attracted to each other.
* BerserkButton: It would almost be easier to list what DOESN'T set him off, but you can probably put being disobeyed by his nephews or having to deal with Gladstone's infuriating luck on the top of the list.
** He also ''hates'' being pushed around. He will take a lot of shit, but he will eventually get tired of it, and you should better hope you are not caught in the resulting avalanche of violence.
** Also inverted in one case: His nephew pointing out how he's a screw-up, LoserProtagonist would send him into a breakdown.
* BigEater: Donald loves good food and can pack it away like nobody's business. Luckily, he's also quite a good cook, with some stories depicting him as a downright SupremeChef (see below).
* TheBigGuy: Surprisingly, this is actually his main role when out adventuring with Scrooge. Whenever strength is needed, it is usually up to Donald, since he is in his prime, and while Scrooge still has a lot of his old fighting skills, he is too old and the nephews are too young and lack the stamina and raw strength needed for a lot of demanding physical tasks. One of the more notable examples would be him singlehandedly sawing through a ''solid steel bar'' in a rapidly flooding chamber, and then right afterwards opening a series of floodgates with his bare hands in "Return To Xanadu".
** In his pilot role in ''[=DuckTales=]'', he is replaced by the BigGuy Launchpad.
** He plays this role with Mickey and Goofy as well (even in the few times they meet in the comics) and is usually the one seen carrying their stuff when they all go out on a trip.
** Despite being called a coward at different points (typically by his uncle), Donald is actually ready for a fight more often than not and willing to jump into the fray against any of the human/duck/anthropomorphic opponents that Barks and Rosa throw his way.
** ''Land of the Pygmy Indians'' and its sequel ''War of the Wendigo'' has Donald being identified as the Duck Family's ''noblest warrior'', by Scrooge no less.
** ''Return to Xanadu'' has the triplets note that Donald is the ''biggest and the strongest'' out of the group. They are right, as the nephews are just children, and Scrooge is well into his 80's by this point and has lost most of his physical strength.
* BornUnlucky: Probably even more so than in his cartoons, especially in Don Rosa's stories! Several stories revolve around his practically supernatural levels of misfortune.
** Donald is so unlucky that he cannot even capitalize on it (winning the "Unluckiest Man in the World"-contest, working as a ButtMonkey for hire). In both cases his luck completely turned around and he was exceedingly lucky--at least until his grumpy customers/spectators were out of eyesight. He had better success in another comic where he gave rich people expensive guided tours of his daily life, showing off how consistently unlucky he is to them to make them feel better about themselves.
** Though it's mostly in comparison to his cousin Gladstone Gander, the luckiest duck in the world and despite Donald's trend to get upset over his luck when compared to Gladstone's he's actually lived an extremely interesting life, has three nephews that adore him, good friends, and has even come into his share of treasure!
** Donald also has the problem that he combines his bad luck with inherent laziness, ego and short temper. Many of his problems and failures could have been avoided if he didn't make them worse by his impulsive behavior. Donald is a very hard, talented worker when he wants to be, but has a tendency to get a swell head if he is being successful, and THAT IS invariably when bad luck gets him.
* BrilliantButLazy: While Donald does work hard once he is at work, he wants to laze around as much as possible. He is however incredibly skilled at almost anything he does (him being fired is usually due to bad luck or just falling asleep at a bad time), to the degree that he is actually the best in the world at certain things... one of them being coin polishing, which had one of the most prestigious coin collectors make a journey just to learn from him!
** This could be identified as one of the biggest differences between Donald and his Uncle Scrooge. Whereas Scrooge will put 100% of his effort towards anything he attempts, there are times when Donald will slack off or fall asleep. Notably however in some stories when in competition with Scrooge, such as Barks' ''City of Golden Roofs'' Donald proves himself just as capable of matching Scrooge's work ethic and in his own way can even be superior to Scrooge. (In ''City of Golden Roofs'' salesman Donald has a good product to sell, good marketing skills, and a working knowledge of the customer's tastes. On the other hand, Scrooge is stuck with a useless product, and is too old-fashioned to recognize any of the modern (1950s) trends around him.)
** There are also certain times when he isn't lazy at all, as evidenced by the sheer number of different jobs that Donald has had over the years (Especially in Barks 10-page works). He's successfully been a farmer, rainmaker, barber, demolitions expert, and held numerous other occuptions as well, all of which he was quite successful at, at first. Typically, things will end up going wrong halfway through the story for some reason, such as Donald's jealousy or becoming overconfident. But the fact that he is ever able to achieve success in so many different areas says quite a lot about his abilities.
** Along with the many jobs he takes on, some of them require a surprising amount of work on his part to go along with his brilliance. Take Rosa's ''Master Landscapist'' for example. In it Donald trains rabbits "to munch grass down to exactly 3 centimeters", uses knitting needles to arrange rose vines, trims trees as if he's giving a person a hair cut, and files individuals blades of grass with an emory board! Needless to say this is a bit more work than the average landscapist could be expected to do.
** Perhaps it is better to say that Donald is an enthusiastic and hard worker, ''at the beginning.'' His problem is that he usually grows bored with his jobs and starts to slack off or find ways to make them more exciting.
* ButtMonkey: Dear Lord, '''Yes!''' He's one of the most famous examples of this trope in comic book history, alongside [[ComicBook/SpiderMan Peter Parker]] and [[ComicBook/AntMan Hank Pym]]. Almost everything he does goes wrong one way or another, especially if his [[SmugSnake cousin]] [[BornLucky Gladstone Gander]] is present for emphasis.
* ChasteToons: He has three nephews, but no children of his own.
* TheChewToy: It's generally toned down in the comics compared to the cartoons (DependingOnTheWriter, obviously), but he still tends to end up through the wringer. It's especially prominent in Don Rosa's stories, where it's a bit of a RunningGag that Donald ends up in dangerous or even life-threatening situations and Scrooge not caring at all -- such as in ''The Last Lord of Eldorado'' where Donald nearly falls to his death while hanging onto two seperates pieces of a rope attached to two ends of a mountain, and Scrooge proceeds to walk over to Donald (On top of the rope donald is holding onto, forming a makeshift bridge), only to retrieve the map Donald was holding in his shirt and literally leaving Donald hanging over the chasm as he returns to solid ground.
* ChickMagnet: Aside from his relationship with Daisy, he was paired or at least shipped with many different female characters that show interest in him. Notable example are Donna Duck, Reginella, Lola Duck, Princess Oona, Xadhoom and Lyla Lay (''Paperinik New Adventures''), Kay-K (''Double Duck'') and various one-shot characters.
* TheComplainerIsAlwaysWrong: Often in the adventures he shares with Scrooge and his nephews, Donald is the one most reluctant to come along, and who complains the most... so he's also the one who suffers the most hardships, though usually because his contrarian attitude makes things difficult for him.
** On occasion, though, he gets a chance to shine as either the OnlySaneMan or, at least, as ProperlyParanoid, especially when paired off with Scrooge. Don Rosa, in particular, tends to show Donald in a more sympathetic light than writers like Carl Barks, but it's not unheard of even in the classic Barks tales.
* CoolCar:
** Donald's old 313 (a 1934 Belchfire Runabout) straddles the line between this and TheAllegedCar, but more of the former, as it has taken him through quite a few adventures. Made even more noteworthy (and serving as one examples of Donald's expertise in different areas) is that, as Rosa reveals in ''Recalled Wreck'', Donald built the car himself and takes care of all the maintenance for it himself, completely taking apart the car and cleaning or repairing every part on a regular basis.
** As Paperinik, Donald started using a modified version of his 313 able to fly and equipped with a lot of high tech gadgets by Gyro Gearloose to combat crime.
* TheCowl: In his super-hero alter-ego, Paperinik. Sometimes played straight (especially in ''ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures''), sometimes as an AffectionateParody, and sometimes PlayedForLaughs.
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: Donald is a lazy, temperamental, often thoughtless and selfish braggart who has an unfortunate tendency to do the wrong thing or make a fatal mistake at crucial moments, and hence usually ends up with the short end of the stick and isn't really taken seriously by anyone. And yet, when properly motivated (either when his nephews are in genuine danger, or he's found something he ''really'' enjoys doing) he's a regular miracle worker, accomplishing feats that nobody else could even dream of. The problem with these bursts of badassery and hyper-competence is that they tend not to last; usually before the story is over he'll make another crucial mistake and slip back into being the ButtMonkey.
* DatingCatwoman: In the story ''Date With A Munchkin'' ("Uncle Scrooge #350"), he unwittingly spends a prolonged time dating familial adversary Magica De Spell, due to the latter being disguised as Daisy. Whilst Donald goes back to the real Daisy when she escapes, the story closes with Magica admitting to herself that she genuinely enjoyed dating Donald.
** A number of Paperinik stories had him in a romantic relationship with the thief Lola Duck, though this was troubled enough by them being on opposing sides of the law she eventually went and left for India.
* DeadGuyJunior: Implied to be named after his paternal great-grandfather Donald, a decorated hero of UsefulNotes/TheAmericanCivilWar.
* DeadpanSnarker: Part of his irascible personality is making snide remarks about his misfortunes.
* DemotedToExtra: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' he only appears in a handful of episodes.
** Averted in the 2017 reboot where he's part of the main cast (though his role is still much smaller than in the comics).
* {{Determinator}}: As soon as Donald starts to obsess about something, he'll go to any length. He never gives up.
* DitzyGenius: He's a duck of ''many'' talents. Unfortunately, his biggest and most consistent talent seems to be screwing things up for himself whenever things are going well.
* DontMakeMeTakeMyBeltOff: He doesn't have a belt, but in the older comics, he'd often chase his nephews with a stick.
* TheDragAlong: Donald is frequently this when treasure-hunting with Uncle Scrooge. Scrooge and the nephews might be excited at the prospect of a new adventure. Donald has to be coerced. Particularly evident in "The Twenty-four Carat Moon" (December, 1958) by Carl Barks. He doesn't want to go to a space-travel mission and proclaims "I want to keep my feet on good old Earth". [[GilliganCut Two panels later, he is in the space-traveling vehicle, chained to his seat and his feet are standing on a box of dirt.]] This doesn't stop Donald from being both useful and sarcastic.
* DudeWheresMyRespect: Specifically in regards to his treatment at the hands of Scrooge, though other characters like Gladstone can be included as well. Not only has Donald gone on numerous adventures of his own in which he's put his life on the line, but he helps his Uncle fight off the likes of the Beagle Boys and Magica De Spell on a regular basis. This then doesn't take into account the adventures he goes on with his Uncle, in which he's typically integral to the success of the mission/treasure hunt in some way. Yet his Uncle still tends to treat him as a lazy nuisance that can't do anything right and in some instances has even claimed that he didn't need Donald's help to secure some of his treasures.
** You could say that the entire purpose of ''The Duck Who Never Was'' is to point this out, as without Donald around Scrooge has long since fallen into poverty, due to losing his #1 dime to Magica and then being swindled by Flintheart shortly afterwards. Furthermore, Huey, Dewey, and Louie have become fat, lazy slobs under the care of Gladstone, instead of the adventurous intellectuals that they are living with Donald.
** One example of this is Rosa's ''Treasure Under Glass'', where it's Donald that figures out the method Scrooge can use to get to a sunken ship that contains a map of all the lost treasure that sank in the area of the Spanish Main! How does Scrooge repay him? By first blaming Donald's idea when the pictures he and his nephews take of the treasure map are stolen by pirates and then, after the crisis has been taken care of later and the pictures recovered, slapping Donald's hand with his cane when Donald asked for a reward (A reward which Scrooge had promised him at the story's start if he helped Scrooge get the treasure map and which he himself, rightfully, points out he deserves after risking his life once again to help his uncle). Why? Because one of the pictures taken on the camera was of Donald blowing a raspberry at Scrooge behind his back at the start of the story.
*** This example is probably made even worse because that map that Donald helps Scrooge recover? Some of the treasure they later find with it is what leads Scrooge to becoming ''The Last Lord of El Dorado''. In fact, in that story Donald's specifically the one that finds the plaque that gives Scrooge the right to be said ''Lord''. So even had he not been the one to come up with the idea for getting the map he would still deserve some credit for the second achievement.
** The climax of ''Return to Xanadu'' features Donald as the hero of the story, when he saws through a metal door, nearly drowning, and proceeds to open the sluice gate hat was causing the valley of Xanadu to quickly fill up with water, by which all of its inhabitants would have drowned.
** Say what you will about him being ''perpetually poor'', but Donald Duck has probably managed to attain more jobs than any other character in literary history. True, he often ends up losing said jobs for whatever reason. But the fact that he is able to attain them at all (And many times in fact, the job he gets is one he created for himself, showcasing a general talent in the field of business) displays many different admirable qualities on his part, such as adaptations, perseverance, ingenuity, etc.
** ''On Stolen Time'', by Don Rosa, features the Beagle Boys gaining the ability to stop time due to a new invention they stole from Gyro Gearloose. Whenever time is frozen they proceed to steal millions of dollars from Scrooge at a time. Their plot is only failed thanks to Donald pretending to be frozen at one point, following them back to their hideout, and then returning to the Money Bin to inform Scrooge where they are. Fairly quick thinking for a duck often considered to be lazy.
* EagleEyeDetection: Don Rosa gave Donald this in ''An Eye for Detail'' to explain how Donald is able to tell his nephews apart. Turns out that beyond just being able to do that Donald can easily notice the smallest details of most objects, such as whether or not a fly has walked over a donut and left footprints on it. At the end of the story he seems to lose the ability, but it turns out to be a trick to get his uncle to stop trying to force him to use it for profit. The ability turns up again in ''The Dutchman's Secret''.
** Strangely enough, though Scrooge thought Donald had lost the ability at the end of the first story he is once more aware that he has it during the second, asking Donald to use it to identify which lines on a wall drawing are new and which are old.
* TheEveryman: His characterization is ambiguous enough that anyone can identify with him.
* ExpertInUnderwaterBasketWeaving: In one comic, Donald is put in a machine meant to determine his greatest aptitude, which reveals that he has the innate gift for snake charming. He spends the rest of the stories moping about this trick of fate, only for the skill to [[ChekhovsSkill be useful]] when he gets attacked by a ''giant'' snake.
* {{Expy}}: His superhero alter-ego, Paperinik, started as the Disney version of ComicBook/{{Diabolik}} before evolving in a different direction. Some stories pay homage to this by having Lord Quackett aka Fantomius (the GentlemanThief who was the in-universe inspiration of Paperinik [[http://www.salimbeti.com/paperinik/images/fantomius70.jpg look like the Duckified version of Diabolik]].
* FatalFlaw: Depending on the author, as usual, but some of the more common are Arrogance, Ambition, and a comically short fuse.
* FarmBoy: Donald was raised by his Grandma Duck in the countryside, where he spent his childhood playing with the other kids out in the fields. His [[TheyJustDontGetIt skepticism of his nephews' new era toys and means of entertainment]] is a recurring trait in some comics.
* {{Flanderization}}: His portrayal in early Italian-produced comics exaggerated his character traits from the American comic of the time to comical extremes. Donald became a narcoleptic with a complete aversion to any kind of physical work and so dumb he genuinely believed two plus two equaled five point five. He treated his nephews more like slaves than family. Later stories keep his original characterization.
* TheFriendNobodyLikes: Donald has very few friends due to his obnoxious personality, short temper, and tendency to screw things up, and even then, they tolerate him at best and nearly despise him at worst. Most of his relatives treat him as a friend through Proximity, Necessity, Pity, Goodwill, and deep down Caring. Only Fethry, José, Panchito and Goofy are consistently portrayed as genuinely enjoying his company, though it varies how mutual this is (particularly when it comes to Fethry; in some stories Donald can barely stand him while in others he's perfectly happy to hang out with him).
* GetRichQuickScheme. A staple in Donald Duck stories, sometimes pairing him with his cousin Fethry. They work out on occasion, but StatusQuoIsGod, so...
** Falls somewhat into FridgeBrilliance when one considers that, unlike his Uncle Scrooge, Donald has three children who depend on him to provide for them, with numerous stories pointing this out. With the fact that you also often see him worrying about paying bills or loans back, it's not really surprising that he'd be interested in making large sums of money as fast as possible.
* HairTriggerTemper: Much less prominent in the comic book incarnation of Donald than in his animated counterpart, but still very much a part of his character -- after all, he wouldn't be WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck without it. His mother, Hortense [=McDuck=], and his father Quackmore Duck also had it, and this is why Donald has such a short temper.
* HardWorkHardlyWorks: Donald is capable of working incredibly hard when properly motivated, but this rarely brings him anything at all. It's also one of the main reasons he has such a bitter animosity towards his cousin Gladstone. Somewhat justified in that he almost completely lacks Scrooge's business sense, and his notorious bad luck usually trips him up.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: An alternate version of himself in "History of a Disappearance" inherits Scrooge's wealth after his uncle falls into despair over the loss of his #1 Dime. He's surprisingly competent at running the business, but his sense of heroism has taken a hit as he's more likely to give a victim of theft money to buy a replacement for what was stolen instead of pursuing the thief himself.
* HowDoIShotWeb: As Paperinik, he sometimes has troubles with his gadgets, both in PKNA and non-PKNA stories. It's downplayed in PKNA, given he has One to help him with those (but still doesn't know how to use the full potential of his [[MorphWeapon Extransformer shield]], and when One gets deactivated he finds out he has no idea how to fuel the [=PKar=]... Or what the fuel ''is''), but in non-PKNA stories he has some added problems because Gyro either forgets to explain how they work or gives him a ''gigantic'' user manual he cannot possibly read.
* InadequateInheritor: Whether or not Scrooge views Donald as this tends to vary across multiple stories. The Creator/CarlBarks story ''Some Heir Over the Rainbow'', written in 1953, had Scrooge declare Huey, Dewey, and Louie his heirs, due to viewing Donald as this because of how he spent $1,000 that Scrooge secretly gave him, Gladstone, and the triplets -- which Creator/DonRosa naturally reinforced/referenced with ''Nobody's Business''. Notably, that story features Scrooge even considering Gladstone to be a better successor than Donald. However, ''Race to the South Seas'', from 1949, had Scrooge declare Donald as his heir at that story's end. 1956 had the story ''Two is Company'' where Scrooge is again trying to decide between Donald and Gladstone as to who will inherit his business. Then, 1961's ''Bongo on the Congo'' has Scrooge trying to teach Donald how to be a chief because he will inherit his business empire one day, and no mention is even made of the nephews doing so. So there are some stories showing the triplets being Scrooge's heirs and others showing that Donald is.
** And in terms of business savvy, there are stories where Donald does indeed show that he has what it takes to turn a profit. ''City of Golden Roofs'', 1957, in fact had him competing against Scrooge to see who the better salesman was and he is extremely successful at it. Though the story treats it as if Donald lost, as he ends it with a pile of money and golden jewels in comparison to Scrooge having a large lump of gold this could be debated, since the actual craftsmanship that went into making all of Donald's golden objects would probably make them more valuable than what Scrooge has.
* InstantExpert: Donald in several stories. Granted, the duck ''is'' talented.
* InTheBlood: Donald inherited his awful temper from both his mother and father.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: No matter how fowl-tempered, self-centered, or otherwise annoying he may act, Donald isn't a bad person at heart. He may cheat or misbehave in small ways, but when things get ''serious'' he's usually well-intentioned and will go to great lengths to do the right thing or help people in need. Their relationship may be stormy at times but he [[ParentalSubstitute genuinely does care for his nephews and will sacrifice just about anything for their sake.]] In "A Christmas for Shacktown", Donald goes out of his way to throw a Christmas party for the poor kids of Shacktown, of course it was the triplets' idea but once Donald committed to it, he was entirely behind it.
* LadykillerInLove: He ''really'' used to take advantage of his status as a ChickMagnet before Daisy became ''the'' love interest...
* TheLancer: Serves this role when forced to accompany Uncle Scrooge.
* LovableCoward: Present in a ''lot'' of stories; Donald is all gung-ho as long as there's no ''actual'' danger, but when there ''is'' he's as likely as not to lose his nerve -- though [[DependingOnTheWriter writers tend to vary on]] whether this means he's an ''actual'' coward, or just the OnlySaneMan who actually recognizes the danger that his FearlessFool companions do not. This trait is almost absent from his animated counterpart, except in the movie ''WesternAnimation/MickeyDonaldGoofyTheThreeMusketeers'', where a lot of fans unfamiliar with the comics complained that Donald's cowardice came out of nowhere.
* MasterOfDisguise: As Paperinik he is rather good thanks to the use of LatexPerfection and very good acting skills, to the point that his ClarkKenting act holds because everyone just assumes he wears a Donald Duck mask under his DominoMask.
* MeaningfulName: A minor case. Obviously his surname reflects his species, but his given name, Donald, is Gaelic in origin, and he is half-Scottish on his mother's side.
* MilesGloriosus: While he often displays amazing talents, he's got a tendency to brag and exaggerate, promising more than he can deliver. Usually his faith in himself is unshakable -- until he's actually called upon to ''do'' all those things he's bragged about.
* NewJobEpisode: Donald has much trouble getting jobs. When not working for Scrooge, he is most commonly shown working in a skunk oil factory or a margarine factory, jobs he understandably despises.
** Even so, Donald seems to be doing very well for himself at the margarine factory, at least. He once took a test of skills, and the conclusion was that the ideal job for him would be packing margarine.
** ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' sent Donald off to the Navy for the length of the series, as a plot excuse to leave the three nephews with Uncle Scrooge.
** A common plot in comics is that Donald starts in a job, and is amazingly good at it, earning money and becoming famous – until he makes a huge mistake that destroys the house, the garden, the road or whatever he's a specialist in, and has to flee the town. Typically, it's his arrogance which causes the fateful mistake. He could be anything from a gardener to an explosions expert. He essentially creates works of art. His confidence increases with each successful assignment. Then he is offered a more demanding assignment, which seems to him like his crowning achievement. At this point he a) attempts to do by himself a job which would require one or more assistants, b) seriously underestimates the difficulties in accomplishing his goal or c) his single-minded pursuit of his goal prevents him from taking a rest, re-assessing the situation, etc. The scene is set for a spectacular disaster.
*** A common variation in Italian stories sees him often talked into various business ideas or new jobs by Fethry which often lead into a catastrophe. Alternativly, Scrooge hires Donald and Fethry for various jobs in which they similiary cause a lot of trouble.
** Notably, in Rosa's ''Return to Xanadu'', Donald notes that when he's free from the responsibilities and pressures of Duckburg he has no problem completing a job without screwing it up.
* NonPoweredCostumedHero: As Paperinik, the costumed hero alter ego of Donald Duck, who's popular in European Disney comics. He's basically the Batman of Duckburg: he has no powers, he fights crime in a costume, few people know he's actually Donald, and he uses all sorts of gadgets developed by Gyro Gearloose. The stories where Donald appears in this guise seem to be in a whole different continuity from all others, as his becoming a badass with a SecretIdentity would have huge ramifications for his character.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: If he's enraged but is keeping his temper in check, apologize and ''beg'': whatever he's planning is much worse than anything he'd do in a fit of rage, especially if this is a Paperinik story.
* OneManArmy: Not usually depicted as one, but in a number of comics he shows himself to be a dangerous fighter, capable of taking down multiple opponents much bigger than him. This trait is amplified in many Italian stories -- especially stories that are set in alternate continuities or settings, like the many MedievalEuropeanFantasy stories featuring the characters, where Donald (or at least his fantasy counterpart) has single-handedly taken on entire armies and won.
** [[https://www.scribd.com/doc/251816396/2-Paperin-Furioso-Topolino-0544 "Paperin Furioso"]] features a somewhat surreal dream world (brought on by Witch Hazel's magical pranks) where Donald is a knight in medieval times, with Gus as his squire. During the story, Donald goes insane with rage and becomes totally invincible. He not only only defeats a heavily armored knight ''with his bare hands,'' but he also uproots an enormous tree and bashes the Beagle Boys with it, then proceeds to hurl boulders at them, and for an encore he lifts an entire catapult and hurls it at the Beagle Boy army, before setting their camp on fire. And what does he say about any survivors barely left standing?
-->'''Donald:''' (with sword in hand) I feel my arm tremble with excitement to pierce the survivors! Who's next to fall?!
** Later in the same story, Donald also headbutts King Scrooge's palace when the latter tries to send his guards after him, nearly destroying it. Of course, this story is AllJustADream... though maybe not ''completely'', since it's heavily hinted that the story really ''did'' happen, just in a constructed universe.
** The story also got a sequel, [[https://www.scribd.com/doc/251816397/1-Paperino-Il-Paladino-Topolino-0247-0248 "Paperino Il Paladino,"]] which is set in the same medieval-time world, but without the dream sequence framing. Donald the knight is completely sane during this story, but no less invincible in battle; he single-handedly defeats an entire army, ''twice'', he merely shrugs off being flattened by a boulder, and he ends up fighting so furiously that his ''sword'' overheats and he has to blow on it to cool it down. In the second part of the story, he uses cleverness and tricks to sink as ship of invading Saracens -- and when they manage to get ashore anyway, he once again takes on the entire army and defeats them all single-handedly. (Of course, unfortunate circumstances means that ''Gladstone'' ends up getting all the credit.)
** In [[http://www.comicartcity.com/immagini/griglia/2011/12/16/bottaro-paperac-jpg-1.jpg "Paperin de Paperac",]] a musketeer version of Donald effortlessly disarms four Beagle Boys at the same time, stabbing one of them through the hat and just inches away from the Beagle's head. Needless to say, they [[VillainsWantMercy beg him for mercy.]]
** Even "regular" Donald sometimes gets in on the act. In "Donald Duck and Reginella's Wedding", he faces down an entire army of aliens (admittedly [[InsufficientlyAdvancedAlien only possessing Medieval weaponry]]) under the command of [[AndNowYouMustMarryMe the villain intent on marrying Reginella]], whilst armed with only a boombox and a double-barreled shotgun loaded with rock salt rounds. He not only ''routs'' the enemy, he later forces them to melt their weapons into agricultural tools under threat of "ruining everything healthy you still have".
* OnlySaneMan: Surprisingly enough given his hot-headed, stubborn personality, but he sometimes serves this role, as him being [[TheEveryman an Everyman]] allows him to have a more pragmatic view and a more average solution when weirdness arises, especially when he's on wacky adventures with Scrooge and the nephews.
* PapaWolf: He will fight ghosts, aliens, contraptions, and even a thunderstorm should his nephews fall in danger.
* PaperThinDisguise: As Paperinik nobody recognizes him, [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Paperinik.jpg even though the mask he wears barely covers anything]]. Justified, because in the early Paperinik stories a lot of people ''did'' have a tendency to assume that Donald and Paperinik were the same person, and Donald employed a lot of various tricks to "prove" otherwise -- using things like robots and holograms (and in one story, an unwitting Fethry in disguise) to make sure that he and Paperinik were seen together on multiple occasions. He also made sure to make it known that Paperinik has various [[LatexPerfection perfect masks]], including some of Donald himself. In a story there was a memorable incident of the Beagle Boys unmasking PK and discovering the face of billionaire John D. Rockerduck, then he sneezed away the mask revealing the face of Donald, then he sneezed away that mask too to reveal a monstrous face (he was having issues with the glue of his masks): after that, only people who are from outside the city would think they can discover his real identity that easily...
** In a few newer stories, it has been [[{{Lampshading}} lampshaded]], like in one AlternateTimeline story where a villain also discovers PK's secret identity.
--->''(looking at pictures of PK and Donald)'': Uhm... ''without'' mask and and ''with'' mask... It wasn't so hard, after all.
* ParentalAbandonment: The earlier comics such as [[http://coa.inducks.org/story.php?c=W+OS+1109-02#scans "This Is Your Life, Donald Duck!"]] has Donald raised by his Grandma Duck almost from the moment he hatched with his own parents, Quackmore and Hortense, nowhere to be found! And seeing that, his twin sister, Della, was not raised alongside him, really makes one wonder if his entire immediate family just abandoned him as an egg! Donald's parents and sister were last seen with him in Don Rosa's [[http://www.zocoi.com/books/171-scrooge-mcduck-the-life-and-times-of-scrooge-mcduck-11-the-empire-builder-from-calisota "The Empire Builder of Calisota"]] and then were never seen again. Donald's origins in the earlier Italian comics is even sadder and have him hatch from an egg bought at the market with Grandma Duck and Uncle Scrooge (who are brother and sister in that Italian origin story) adopting him!
* ParentalSubstitute: To Huey, Dewey and Louie, obviously. At least one story played a variation of this trope to a comical extreme, where he fought them - and even fought his uncle Scrooge - to make them sit their tails down and eat together as a family.
** In fact, Donald often does work hard to be a competent guardian for his nephews, and their opinion of him matters a great deal. In ''ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures'' the Raider, a time-traveling criminal who happens to be a single parent of one himself, actually compliments him on being such a good guardian without resorting to stealing to get the money he needs.
** It may be a matter of translations, but in the Egyptian versions of the comics, Donald will occasionally refer to his nephews as 'my boys' or 'my kids'.
* PassedOverInheritance: Invoked and Zigzagged in ''Nobody's Business''. Played Straight when Scrooge declares he's going to give all of his money to the triplets and not give one dime to his nephews Donald and Gladstone. Subverted when he admits to himself that such a decision isn't fair and he thus decides to award them with ownership of a company based on how they each invest $1000 he gives them.
* PerpetualPoverty: Typically not focused on that much, but Donald has had many of his own adventures where he's ended up with a good deal of treasure, such as ''The Looney Lunar Gold Rush'' by Carl Barks or ''The Crocodile Collector'' by Don Rosa, yet he forever seems to be forced to work for his uncle for only 15-30 cents an hour, along with his nephews as well depending on the story.
* PintSizedPowerhouse: Donald is of average size for a duck in his verse, which means he is often outmassed by many characters -- the dogfaces in particular tend to be significantly taller than him. Despite his small size, he has been seen to break free of strong ropes, pull a tractor with his bare hands, and fight off bigger enemies!
* PolarOppositeTwins: With his sister Della in one Dutch comic. He is a sailor. She is a pilot.
* ReallyFondOfSleeping: Donald ''really'' likes to catch some Z's, much to Scrooge's annoyance, as he has a tendency to try and nap during work hours. In fact, Donald is so devoted to sleep that he's allowed into the Halls of The Dead prematurely during the events of Creator/DonRosa's ''The Quest For Kalevala'' because Tuoni, the Finnish Grim Reaper, considers him worthy enough to get a preview of the eventual "eternal sleep".
* RealMenCook: One of his more consistent characterizations is that he's an excellent cook. He presumably learned from his grandmother, a famously good cook, and having to take care of three children while living in relative poverty means he knows how to cook well with cheap and easy ingredients.
* RenaissanceMan: Has shown ''awesome'' proficiency in fields as diverse as cleaning windows and coins (and is actually famous in-universe for the latter), cooking, demolitions, explosives (literally pulverized a condemned building with no collateral damage, and considered it a failure because two pebbles had come out of the designed demolition area), repairing bells and cymbals, bodyguard, shoemaking, butler, tax collector, truant officer, mall cop, [[UniversalDriversLicence driving everything]], and so on. Then there are the more exotic skills he demonstrates whenever he's dragged along to Scrooge's treasure hunts, such as jungle survival, mountain climbing or deep sea diving.
* SecretKeeper: In "A Letter from Home", it's revealed that Donald knew [[spoiler:that Matilda, Scrooge's estranged sister, was the caretaker he unknowingly hired to look out for his family castle]]. While Donald never revealed the secret, not even to his nephews, he had been subtly trying to push them to reconcile.
* SeenItAll: It doesn't come up often, but Donald Duck has been involved in finding El Dorado, Atlantis, the Lost Mines of the Incas ''and'' King Solomon, captured a unicorn, found the Vault of the Templars and the Holy Grail (that he broke in the head of a criminal), has an alien {{Love Interest|s}}, and so on, and [[DependingOnTheWriter when the authors remember it]] he's ready for everything.
* SiblingYinYang: He had a FoolishSiblingResponsibleSibling dynamic with Della when they were children with him usually getting up into all sorts of mischief that Della either had to fix or was the chief victim of. This makes his status as the ButtMonkey to Huey, Dewey, and Louie's antics quite karmic in retrospect. Ironically, in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', ''he'' is the Responsible Sibling to Della's Foolish Sibling.
* StraightMan: To Fethry Duck in the stories where both are the protagonists.
* StrangeMindsThinkAlike: He and Daisy at times come up with the same weird ideas, or at least understand them. For example, as spies they both infiltrated a villainous organization in disguise as a known member and let the other do the heavy lifting before revealing themselves at the right moment to save them, as superheroes they both justified their relationship with their superheroic alter ego by claiming to be friends, and when Donald decided the best way to get Daisy to stop complaining about his constant Paperinik-mandated lateness at their dates was to use a Paperinik gadget to send her half an hour forward in time and make ''her'' late to make her understand how he felt Daisy ''found it romantic''.
* StrongFamilyResemblance: At least if Don Rosa's stories are to be believed, he is the spitting image of his father, Quackmore. The early Barks story, "Voodoo Hoodoo" stated that he was one for Uncle Scrooge as well. This was minorly retconned in later stories where Scrooge was identified with his prominent sidewhiskers even as a young fowl, but aside from that, the resemblance between Scrooge and Donald is still quite strong.
** Used as a plot point in several stories, where (for one reason or another), Donald impersonates Scrooge, by simply wearing Scrooge's clothes, spectacles, and false sideburns. Depending on the story, Donald either does a spectacular job or forgets some of Scrooge's mannerisms. People who don't know Scrooge well are still fooled, the others can tell the difference. One story has Daisy having doubts whether the "Scrooge" who just talked to her was the genuine article. She throws a coin to the ground and waits for Scrooge's trained ear to react to the sound. When the male duck does not react at all, she unmasks him as Donald.
* SuperSenses: According to Don Rosa, the explanation of how Donald could tell his nephews apart was that he could see tiny details that differentiate them, examples being: a crooked freckle, a speck in an eye, an extra eyelash, even the shade of white of their feathers. It only works subconsciously however, it is impossible for him to do it when trying.
* SupremeChef: DependingOnTheWriter to a ''very'' high degree, and some comics even depict him as a LethalChef, but in most stories where it comes up, he's actually a good cook -- not quite in Grandma Duck's class, and often limited by the fact that he can't afford to buy the proper ingredients, but a talented enough chef that family members will come running when he's doing the cooking.
** [[FridgeBrilliance Since food is one of Donald's main interests, along with sleeping, it makes sense that he would have at least some cooking skills.]]
** One comic took it further by revealing his talent as a food critic, his reviews eventually leaving him great fame. It only went south when he had to review Daisy's food (from a cafè she had opened) on national television, when he couldn't stand her cooking.[[note]]Luckily, his nephews had called in Grandma Duck to do the cooking, so Donald was left greatly enjoying the food, only to later talk about how bad Daisy's cooking was while she was [[RightBehindMe standing right behind him.]] It ends with him having to leave town to avoid her beating.[[/note]]
* ThrowTheDogABone: On ''very'' rare occasions, Donald manages to be the one who gets the treasure in the end, such as "The Crocodile Collector" and "The Trail of the Unicorn." [[StatusQuoIsGod Don't expect him to still be rich in the next story, though.]]
* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Donald really enjoys drinking soda, and Scrooge is constantly berating him for wasting his money on them. In ''ComicBook/NobodysBusiness'', Donald is given one thousand dollars by his uncle to invest, and by the end of the challenge, he makes a business deal for a new invention which he sold for one thousand dollars plus a crate of sodas. To be fair, [[KnowWhenToFoldEm he'd had extremely bad luck]] with any investment ideas so far, and he was getting thirsty anyway.
** While soda is the most prominent, Donald really enjoys fast food in general, which was just becoming a thing when he gained popularity in the mid-20th century.
* TrueCompanions: His Latin Americam friends, Panchito Pistoles and Jose Carioca, are the only people who consistently treat Donald with respect rather than look down on or abuse him as his relatives frequently do. In fact, one story has the nephews send Donald to Brazil go adventuring with him when Donald gets depressed, because they're the only people who can bring a genuine smile on his face when he's down on the dumps.
* UnfazedEveryman: He's basically TheEveryman and a very average guy who struggles with everyday business like raising kids, keeping his love life with Daisy going and trying to find a job. However, he would also ocassionally accompany his uncle on treasure hunts and helps him defending his money bin against witches and other crooks, without finding that weird compared to his everyday struggles at all.
* TheUnintelligible: Subverted in the comics, since there his dialogue is written for us to read. The Paperinik stories also imply he is a VoiceChangeling (which even extends to the game ''PK: Out of the Shadows'', in which regular Donald is voiced by Tony Anselmo as usual, but when he's Paperinik, it's Creator/RobPaulsen who voices him), as [[MasterOfDisguise his disguises regularly fool people who know well whoever he is disguised as]].
** Played straight on ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', though, where it's a RunningGag for people to ask "What did he say?" In the pilot, Launchpad even considers it a sign of how bad things are getting when he finally manages to understand him. In the 2017 version, it's even revealed that his own nephews find him hard to understand, and part of them preparing to rescue Scrooge in the first season finale involves giving Donald a temporary voice-mod so he can be understood. The only person who is able to easily understand his regular voice is Daisy.
* UniversalDriversLicence: Actually applies. His actual 'competence' in piloting/driving/sailing varies, especially if it'd be funnier if he screwed up.
* UnluckyEverydude: Although not as bad as in the Disney animated canon, Donald still tends to have absolutely rotten luck. Don Rosa, however, took this further and some comics with Donald are often more depressing than anything as a result.
* UnluckilyLucky: DependingOnTheWriter. He was BornUnlucky and there is no story whatsoever where he is not put through a gauntlet of injuries and humiliation, but on some of them he managed to obtain a silver lining by staying around (sometimes because of determination, sometimes because of despair) when whoever was his rival for the tale had already taken the apparent prize and left and the real prize appeared afterwards (thus making the "lucky" rival someone who GaveUpTooSoon).
* UnstoppableRage: You guys think Scrooge [=McDuck=] is bad? Ha! Both in the animated feature as well as the comic, "This Is Your Life, Donald Duck," it's officially shown that Donald ''hatched ready to fight!'' And the comic version takes it even further by showing that even as a ''baby'' Donald could ''bash his head against a statue'' in anger and ''[[http://duckcomicsrevue.blogspot.com/2014/02/this-is-your-life-donald-duck.html cause more damage to the statue than to himself]]''! And when a baby Donald tried to take one sailor's hat, the sailor exclaimed, [[http://disneyweirdness.blogspot.com/2011/02/secret-origins.html "Whew! He's got a grip to put many a big man to shame!"]] And the only reason he doesn't attack or bash things with his head anymore is for fear of hurting his hat! He's also broken free of strong ropes, pulled a tractor with his bare hands, beaten up the Beagle Boys and his bigger Neighbor Jones, etc. In fact, in a Mickey Mouse/Donald Duck comics crossover parody of Lord of the Rings, Donald fights off an enormous spider with a machete that had already captured Mickey in its web before threatening ''Mickey'' to explain to him what's going on before he turns the machete on ''him!'' So it's clear that although this aspect of his personality is displayed more in his animated incarnation, it's still definitely there in the comics, too and it's best to ''never anger this duck!''
* UnsympatheticComedyProtagonist: In several stories, he tends to have a mean streak.
* ViolentGlaswegian: Downplayed, since he's only half Scottish, but Donald certainly inherited the [=McDuck=] temper.
* VitriolicBestBuds: Most consistently with Fethry -- though occasionally also with Gladstone, in "[[http://sarroora.tumblr.com/image/121659565584 stories like this one]]". In crossover stories, he tends to have this relationship with Mickey Mouse too.
* WholesomeCrossdresser: While most examples of Donald crossdressing have been played for laughs, there are also stories where he [[https://modmad.tumblr.com/post/642725075066503168/podle5-mr-mcduck-land-of-birds-and-comics voluntarily and even excitedly]] puts on dresses and feminine clothing.
* WhosLaughingNow: His Paperinik persona started out as a means for Donald to get back at Scrooge and Gladstone continuously tormenting and humiliating him, and the very first story features Paperinik stealing Scrooge's mattress as he sleeps on it for added humiliation factor.
** Some of the earliest Paperinik stories, had Paperinik committing crimes and framing Gladstone for them. Some of them have Gladstone doing decent detective work just to clear his name.
* WisdomFromTheGutter: Donald may not always be the brightest bulb, his impulsiveness does cause him problems, and Scrooge looks down on him for not having either his wealth or his business, but in many stories Donald is actually shown to have considerably more common sense than Scrooge does. In particular, Donald takes the sensible viewpoint that having money for its own sake is pointless and it's better to enjoy what it can actually get you, whilst Scrooge scrimps and saves like his life depends on it, living a lifestyle that varies between "austere" and "downright miserable" despite having the world's biggest fortune. In one story, a deliberate contrast is directly drawn between Donald, who is not very wealthy but has a healthy social life and no major worries, and Scrooge, who lives in seclusion and exists in a constant state of paranoia over being burglarized. In ''The Treasury of Croesus'', he also gets to call out both Scrooge and Magica, [[TheReasonYouSuckSpeech bluntly pointing out that their obsession with money just causes them to waste their lives and make themselves miserable]], which neither of them can muster an argument against.

to:

* AbusiveParents: It's kind of AdaptationNameChange: Before Don Rosa solidated Grandma's name as "Elvira", an universal staple that his violent tantrums extend to his nephews alternative was "Abigail" as well. In some cases it's outright intentional BlackComedy. Admittedly, mentioned in a significant portion of it is ValuesDissonance, since during 1953 ''"Grandma Duck"'' comic and in ''"Ridin' the heyday of the comics (and in the [[ComicBookTime perpetual 1950s]] of the Creator/DonRosa comics), it was perfectly normal for parents to use CorporalPunishment.
* AdaptationalBadass:
** Most notably as Paperinik/Duck Avenger, where he sometimes reaches near-Franchise/{{Batman}} levels of hyper-competence, even if it varies a lot DependingOnTheWriter. He hides this in his civilian identity by playing up his lazy layabout characteristics.
** In ''ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures'', he got his own series and was suddenly fighting alien invasions, mad scientists, and major disasters on a regular basis with new powerful weapons and gear.
** Also as super-spy in ''ComicBook/DoubleDuck'' (that is set in the same universe of PK).
* AdaptationalIntelligence: See above. Donald Duck in PKNA and DD is quite a bit smarter than the one we usually see.
* AlliterativeName: '''D'''onald '''D'''uck.
* AmazonChaser: Seems to have a thing for strong-willed and generally powerful women: Daisy's temper is known, and some stories present her as a spy (and Donald ''knows''); Reginella is extremely nice but strong-willed and [[BewareTheNiceOnes incredibly dangerous when pushed too far]] (it says everything that for her unleashing a berserking Donald on a villain is ''holding back''); [[ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures Lyla Lay]] is just as strong-willed, skilled, and [[SuperStrength incredibly strong]] as you'd expect from a TimePolice droid; [[ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures Xadhoom]] is a short-tempered ''PhysicalGoddess''; and [[ComicBook/DoubleDuck Kay K]] is a superspy, and skilled enough in combat she once ''wrecked Lyla''.
* AntiHero:
** Usually depicted as a ClassicalAntiHero, particularly in Carl Barks's stories. He's a ''very'' flawed individual, who nevertheless will step up to bat and display genuine heroism when it's called for.
** In the early stories, his superhero alter-ego Paperinik wasn't actually a superhero, but a straight up AntiHero, avenging wrongs that had been done to Donald, sometimes in blatantly illegal ways. The writers toned this aspect down later and turned him into a superhero instead. The character's methods did not change much but he started targeting the criminal population of Duckburg.
* BelligerentSexualTension: With Daisy Duck, DependingOnTheWriter. Donald can be a {{Jerkass}} at times, even with his [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold gold-hearted moments]], but Daisy is definitely a {{Tsundere}}.
Rails"''.
* BewareTheNiceOnes: She is the kindest, most reasonable, and most generous member of the Duck family, but don't think for a moment that this means you can walk all over her; if provoked enough she'll show you ''exactly'' how tough an elderly lady who runs a farm almost by herself has to be. The fact that she is the only Duck family member who can make Scrooge back down with no effort whatsoever, really says everything.
** In one Italian comics add another layer to this with their {{Superhero}}/AntiHero alter egos: as Paperinik and Paperinika they vocally ''loathe'' each other, but, to their horror, can't deny to themselves they're also attracted to each other.
* BerserkButton: It would almost be easier to list what DOESN'T set him off, but you can probably put being disobeyed by his nephews or having to deal with Gladstone's infuriating luck on the top of the list.
** He also ''hates'' being pushed around. He will take a lot of shit, but he will eventually get tired of it, and you should better hope you are not caught in the resulting avalanche of violence.
** Also inverted in one case: His nephew pointing out how he's a screw-up, LoserProtagonist would send him into a breakdown.
* BigEater:
story, Donald loves good food finds a diary from her younger years, modifies it a bit, and can pack publishes it away like nobody's business. Luckily, he's also quite as a good cook, novel (in his own name). Grandma tells him exactly what she thinks of him, after sharing some of her most private moments with some the world.
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: In her early appearances in Al Taliaferro's newspaper strips, she comes off as somewhat senile and more comically old-fashioned and conservative than she has become since.
** Several 1950s
stories depicting him feature Grandma shunning "modern" inventions such as a downright SupremeChef (see below).
* TheBigGuy: Surprisingly, this
electricity, running water, and television. She also refuses to replace her car with something more modern. The car in question is a Detroit Electric from the 1910s (an electric automobile, running on a rechargeable lead acid battery).
* DependingOnTheWriter: According to Creator/DonRosa, she is Donald's paternal grandmother and therefore not related to Scrooge at all, but before that, in European comics, it was widely accepted that she was Scrooge's sister and
actually his main role when out adventuring with Scrooge. Whenever strength is needed, it is usually up to Donald, since he is in his prime, Donald's ''aunt'' -- and while Scrooge still has a lot of his old fighting skills, he is too old Huey, Dewey and Louie's real grandmother. With the nephews are too young and lack the stamina and raw strength needed for a lot publication of demanding physical tasks. One of the more notable examples would be him singlehandedly sawing through a ''solid steel bar'' in a rapidly flooding chamber, and then right afterwards opening a series of floodgates with his bare hands in "Return To Xanadu".
** In his pilot role in ''[=DuckTales=]'', he is replaced by the BigGuy Launchpad.
** He plays this role with Mickey and Goofy as well (even in the few times they meet in the comics) and is usually the one seen carrying their stuff when they all go out on a trip.
** Despite being called a coward at different points (typically by his uncle), Donald is actually ready for a fight more often than not and willing to jump into the fray against any of the human/duck/anthropomorphic opponents that Barks and Rosa throw his way.
** ''Land of the Pygmy Indians'' and its sequel ''War of the Wendigo'' has Donald being identified as
the Duck Family's ''noblest warrior'', by Scrooge no less.
** ''Return to Xanadu'' has the triplets note that Donald is the ''biggest and the strongest'' out of the group. They are right,
family tree which shows her as the nephews are just children, and Scrooge is well into his 80's by Donald's grandmother, this point and has lost most of his physical strength.largely been forgotten.
* BornUnlucky: Probably even more so than ** In part this was a problem in his cartoons, especially translation. In American stories, Scrooge and Grandma had different last names and no indication that they were related to each other (they also barely interacted in Don Rosa's stories! stories). Italian translations eliminated the name difference by naming Scrooge as "Paperone" and Grandma as "Nonna Papera", and some writers started writing stories with the assumption that they are siblings. Several stories revolve around his practically supernatural levels of misfortune.other translations followed this example.
** Her affection for Donald is so unlucky that he cannot even capitalize on it (winning differs in several stories. In the "Unluckiest Man in the World"-contest, working as a ButtMonkey for hire). In both cases "Paperino Paperotto" subseries (featuring Donald's childhood and school years), Grandma was his luck completely turned around and he was exceedingly lucky--at least until his grumpy customers/spectators were out of eyesight. He had better success in another comic where he gave rich people expensive guided tours of his daily life, showing off how consistently unlucky sole legal guardian, he is her favorite grandson, and she genuinely adores him. In several other stories (including interactions with an adult Donald), she is strict with him, all too eager to them to make them feel better about themselves.point out his faults, and she even finds him annoying.
** Though it's mostly in comparison to his cousin Gladstone Gander, the luckiest duck in the world and despite Donald's trend to get upset over his luck when compared to Gladstone's he's actually lived an extremely interesting life, has three nephews that adore him, good friends, and has even come into his share of treasure!
** Donald also has the problem that he combines his bad luck with inherent laziness, ego and short temper. Many of his problems and failures could have been avoided if he didn't make them worse by his impulsive behavior. Donald is a very hard, talented worker when he wants to be, but has a tendency to get a swell head if he is being successful, and THAT IS invariably when bad luck gets him.
* BrilliantButLazy: While Donald does work hard once he is at work, he wants to laze around as much as possible. He is however incredibly skilled at almost anything he does (him being fired is usually due to bad luck or just falling asleep at a bad time), to the degree that he is actually the best in the world at certain things... one of them being coin polishing, which had one of the most prestigious coin collectors make a journey just to learn from him!
** This could be identified as one of the biggest differences between Donald and his Uncle Scrooge. Whereas Scrooge will put 100% of his effort towards anything he attempts, there are times when Donald will slack off or fall asleep. Notably however in some stories when in competition with Scrooge, such as Barks' ''City of Golden Roofs'' Donald proves himself just as capable of matching Scrooge's work ethic and in his own way can even be superior to Scrooge. (In ''City of Golden Roofs'' salesman Donald has a good product to sell, good marketing skills, and a working knowledge of the customer's tastes. On the other hand, Scrooge is stuck with a useless product, and is too old-fashioned to recognize any of the modern (1950s) trends around him.)
** There are also certain times when he isn't lazy at all, as evidenced by the sheer number of different jobs that Donald has had over the years (Especially in Barks 10-page works). He's successfully been a farmer, rainmaker, barber, demolitions expert, and held numerous other occuptions as well, all of which he was quite successful at, at first. Typically, things will end up going wrong halfway through the story for some reason, such as Donald's jealousy or becoming overconfident. But the fact that he is ever able to achieve success in so many different areas says quite a lot about his abilities.
** Along with the many jobs he takes on, some of them require a surprising amount of work on his part to go along with his brilliance. Take Rosa's ''Master Landscapist'' for example. In it Donald trains rabbits "to munch grass down to exactly 3 centimeters", uses knitting needles to arrange rose vines, trims trees as if he's giving a person a hair cut, and files individuals blades of grass with an emory board! Needless to say this is a bit more work than the average landscapist could be expected to do.
** Perhaps it is better to say that Donald is an enthusiastic and hard worker, ''at the beginning.'' His problem is that he usually grows bored with his jobs and starts to slack off or find ways to make them more exciting.
* ButtMonkey: Dear Lord, '''Yes!''' He's one of the most famous examples of this trope in comic book history, alongside [[ComicBook/SpiderMan Peter Parker]] and [[ComicBook/AntMan Hank Pym]]. Almost everything he does goes wrong one way or another, especially if his [[SmugSnake cousin]] [[BornLucky Gladstone Gander]] is present for emphasis.
* ChasteToons: He has three nephews, but no children of his own.
* TheChewToy: It's generally toned down in the comics compared to the cartoons (DependingOnTheWriter, obviously), but he still tends to end up through the wringer. It's especially prominent in Don Rosa's stories, where it's a bit of a RunningGag that Donald ends up in dangerous or even life-threatening situations and Scrooge not caring at all -- such as in ''The Last Lord of Eldorado'' where Donald nearly falls to his death while hanging onto two seperates pieces of a rope attached to two ends of a mountain, and Scrooge proceeds to walk over to Donald (On top of the rope donald is holding onto, forming a makeshift bridge), only to retrieve the map Donald was holding in his shirt and literally leaving Donald hanging over the chasm as he returns to solid ground.
* ChickMagnet: Aside from his
How close her relationship is with Daisy, he was paired other Duck family members, or at least shipped their friends differs in stories. Several stories have her organizing family gatherings in her farm, and remaining in contact with many different female characters that show interest in him. Notable example are Donna Duck, Reginella, Lola Duck, Princess Oona, Xadhoom and Lyla Lay (''Paperinik New Adventures''), Kay-K (''Double Duck'') and various one-shot characters.
* TheComplainerIsAlwaysWrong: Often in the adventures he shares
almost everyone. Others have her interacting with Scrooge and his nephews, Donald is the one most reluctant to come along, and who complains the most... so he's also the one who suffers the most hardships, though usually because his contrarian attitude makes things difficult for him.
** On occasion, though, he gets a chance to shine as either the OnlySaneMan or, at least, as ProperlyParanoid, especially when paired off with Scrooge. Don Rosa, in particular, tends to show Donald in a more sympathetic light than writers like Carl Barks, but it's not unheard of even in the classic Barks tales.
* CoolCar:
** Donald's old 313 (a 1934 Belchfire Runabout) straddles the line between this and TheAllegedCar, but more of the former, as it has taken him through quite a few adventures. Made even more noteworthy (and serving as one examples of Donald's expertise in different areas) is that, as Rosa reveals in ''Recalled Wreck'', Donald built the car himself and takes care of all the maintenance for it himself, completely taking apart the car and cleaning or repairing every part
her family on a regular basis.
** As Paperinik, Donald started using a modified version of his 313 able to fly and equipped with a lot of high tech gadgets by Gyro Gearloose to combat crime.
* TheCowl: In his super-hero alter-ego, Paperinik. Sometimes played straight (especially in ''ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures''), sometimes as an AffectionateParody, and sometimes PlayedForLaughs.
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: Donald is a lazy, temperamental, often thoughtless and selfish braggart who has an unfortunate tendency to do the wrong thing or make a fatal mistake at crucial moments, and hence usually ends up with the short end of the stick and isn't really taken seriously by anyone. And yet, when properly motivated (either when his nephews are in genuine danger, or he's found something he ''really'' enjoys doing) he's a regular miracle worker, accomplishing feats that nobody else could even dream of. The problem with these bursts of badassery and hyper-competence is that they tend not to last; usually before the story is over he'll make another crucial mistake and slip back into being the ButtMonkey.
* DatingCatwoman: In the story ''Date With A Munchkin'' ("Uncle Scrooge #350"), he unwittingly spends a prolonged time dating familial adversary Magica De Spell, due to the latter being disguised as Daisy. Whilst Donald goes back to the real Daisy when she escapes, the story closes with Magica admitting to herself that she genuinely enjoyed dating Donald.
**
rare occasions. A number of Paperinik older stories had him in a romantic relationship have Grandma striking an IntergenerationalFriendship with the thief Lola Duck, though this was troubled enough by them being on opposing sides of the law she eventually went and left for India.
* DeadGuyJunior: Implied to be named after his paternal great-grandfather Donald, a decorated hero of UsefulNotes/TheAmericanCivilWar.
* DeadpanSnarker: Part of his irascible personality is making snide remarks about his misfortunes.
* DemotedToExtra: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' he only appears in a handful of episodes.
** Averted in the 2017 reboot where he's part of the main cast (though his role is still much smaller than in the comics).
* {{Determinator}}: As soon
Daisy and/or treating her as Donald starts to obsess about something, he'll go to any length. He never gives up.
* DitzyGenius: He's
a duck of ''many'' talents. Unfortunately, his biggest and surrogate granddaughter, but most consistent talent seems to be screwing things up for himself whenever things are going well.recent ones mention no special bond between them.
* DontMakeMeTakeMyBeltOff: He doesn't have a belt, but in the older comics, he'd often chase his nephews with a stick.
* TheDragAlong: Donald is frequently this when treasure-hunting with Uncle Scrooge. Scrooge and the nephews might be excited at the prospect of a new adventure. Donald has to be coerced. Particularly evident in "The Twenty-four Carat Moon" (December, 1958) by Carl Barks. He doesn't want to go to a space-travel mission and proclaims "I want to keep my feet on good old Earth". [[GilliganCut Two panels later, he is in the space-traveling vehicle, chained to his seat and his feet are standing on a box of dirt.]] This doesn't stop Donald from being both useful and sarcastic.
* DudeWheresMyRespect: Specifically in regards to his treatment at the hands of Scrooge, though other characters like Gladstone
CoolOldLady: While she can be included as well. Not only has Donald gone on numerous adventures of his own strict, especially in which he's put his life on the line, but he helps his Uncle fight off the likes of the Beagle Boys early stories, she is also kind and Magica De Spell on a regular basis. This then doesn't take into account the adventures he goes on with his Uncle, loving... not to mention, she can be tough as nails when she needs to be.
* DubNameChange: She's Anna
in which he's typically integral to the success of the mission/treasure hunt Norwegian comics.
%%* GrannyClassic: Both
in some way. Yet his Uncle still tends to treat him as a lazy nuisance that can't do anything right looks and in some instances has even claimed that he didn't need Donald's help to secure some of his treasures.
** You could say
manners.
* HopelessWithTech: Her biggest AchillesHeel; she can never figure out these "newfangled contraptions"
that the entire purpose of ''The Duck Who Never Was'' is to point this out, as without Donald around Scrooge has long since fallen into poverty, due to losing his #1 dime to Magica and then being swindled by Flintheart shortly afterwards. Furthermore, Huey, Dewey, and Louie have become fat, lazy slobs under the care of Gladstone, instead of the adventurous intellectuals that they are living with Donald.
** One example of this is Rosa's ''Treasure Under Glass'', where it's Donald that figures out the method Scrooge can use to get to a sunken ship that contains a map of all the lost treasure that sank in the area of the Spanish Main! How does Scrooge repay him? By first blaming Donald's idea when the pictures he and his nephews
city-dwellers take of the treasure map are stolen by pirates such pride in, and then, after the crisis has been taken care of later and the pictures recovered, slapping Donald's hand with his cane when Donald asked for a reward (A reward which Scrooge had promised him at the story's start if he helped Scrooge get the treasure map and which he himself, rightfully, points any attempt she makes to figure them out he deserves after risking his life once again to help his uncle). Why? Because one of the pictures taken on the camera was of Donald blowing a raspberry at Scrooge behind his back at the start of the story.
*** This example is probably made even worse because that map that Donald helps Scrooge recover? Some of the treasure they later find with it is what leads Scrooge to becoming ''The Last Lord of El Dorado''. In fact, in that story Donald's specifically the one that finds the plaque that gives Scrooge the right to be said ''Lord''. So even had he not been the one to come up with the idea for getting the map he would still deserve some credit for the second achievement.
** The climax of ''Return to Xanadu'' features Donald as the hero of the story, when he saws through a metal door, nearly drowning, and proceeds to open the sluice gate hat was causing the valley of Xanadu to quickly fill up with water, by which all of its inhabitants would have drowned.
** Say what you
will about him being ''perpetually poor'', but Donald Duck has probably managed lead to attain more jobs than any other character in literary history. True, he often ends up losing said jobs for whatever reason. But the fact that he is able to attain them at all (And inevitable disaster. In many times in fact, the job he gets she is one he created for himself, showcasing a general talent in the field of business) displays many different admirable qualities on his part, such as adaptations, perseverance, ingenuity, etc.
** ''On Stolen Time'', by Don Rosa, features the Beagle Boys gaining the ability to stop time due to a new invention they stole from Gyro Gearloose. Whenever time is frozen they proceed to steal millions of dollars from Scrooge at a time. Their plot is only failed thanks to Donald pretending to be frozen at one point, following them back to their hideout, and then returning to the Money Bin to inform Scrooge where they are. Fairly quick thinking for a duck often considered to be lazy.
* EagleEyeDetection: Don Rosa gave Donald this in ''An Eye for Detail'' to explain how Donald is able to tell his nephews apart. Turns out that beyond just being able to do that Donald can easily notice the smallest details of most objects, such as whether or not a fly has walked over a donut and left footprints on it. At the end of the story he seems to lose the ability, but it turns out to be a trick to get his uncle to stop trying to force him to use it for profit. The ability turns up again in ''The Dutchman's Secret''.
** Strangely enough, though Scrooge thought Donald had lost the ability at the end of the first story he is once more aware that he has it during the second, asking Donald to use it to identify which lines on a wall drawing are new and which are old.
* TheEveryman: His characterization is ambiguous enough that anyone can identify with him.
* ExpertInUnderwaterBasketWeaving: In one comic, Donald is put in a machine meant to determine his greatest aptitude, which reveals that he has the innate gift for snake charming. He spends the rest of the stories moping about this trick of fate, only for the skill to [[ChekhovsSkill be useful]] when he gets attacked by a ''giant'' snake.
* {{Expy}}: His superhero alter-ego, Paperinik, started as the Disney version of ComicBook/{{Diabolik}} before evolving in a different direction. Some stories pay homage to this by having Lord Quackett aka Fantomius (the GentlemanThief who was the in-universe inspiration of Paperinik [[http://www.salimbeti.com/paperinik/images/fantomius70.jpg look like the Duckified version of Diabolik]].
* FatalFlaw: Depending on the author, as usual, but some of the more common are Arrogance, Ambition, and a comically short fuse.
* FarmBoy: Donald was raised by his Grandma Duck in the countryside, where he spent his childhood playing with the other kids out in the fields. His [[TheyJustDontGetIt skepticism of his nephews' new era toys and means of entertainment]] is a recurring trait in some comics.
* {{Flanderization}}: His portrayal in early Italian-produced comics exaggerated his character traits from the American comic of the time to comical extremes. Donald became a narcoleptic with a complete aversion to any kind of physical work and so dumb he genuinely believed two plus two equaled five point five. He treated his nephews more like slaves than family. Later stories keep his original characterization.
* TheFriendNobodyLikes: Donald has very few friends due to his obnoxious personality, short temper, and tendency to screw things up, and even then, they tolerate him at best and nearly despise him at worst. Most of his relatives treat him as a friend through Proximity, Necessity, Pity, Goodwill, and deep down Caring. Only Fethry, José, Panchito and Goofy are consistently
portrayed as genuinely enjoying his company, though it varies how mutual this is (particularly when it comes to Fethry; [[TechnologicallyBlindElders distrusting and disliking modern tech]] and insisting on doing everything the old-fashioned way -- and in some all these stories Donald can barely stand him while in others he's perfectly happy to hang out it is repeatedly demonstrated that for her at least, the GoodOldWays ''[[LuddWasRight work]]''.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: Good friends
with him).
* GetRichQuickScheme. A staple in Donald Duck stories, sometimes pairing him
Daisy, Emily Quackfaster, and Brigitta. The age difference with his cousin Fethry. They work out on occasion, but StatusQuoIsGod, so...
** Falls somewhat into FridgeBrilliance when one considers that, unlike his Uncle Scrooge, Donald has three children who depend on him to provide for them, with numerous stories pointing this out. With the fact that you also often see him worrying about paying bills or loans back, it's not really surprising that he'd be interested in making large sums of money as fast as possible.
* HairTriggerTemper: Much less prominent in the comic book incarnation of Donald than in his animated counterpart, but still very much a part of his character -- after all, he wouldn't be WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck without it. His mother, Hortense [=McDuck=], and his father Quackmore Duck also had it, and this is why Donald has such a short temper.
* HardWorkHardlyWorks: Donald is capable of working incredibly hard when properly motivated, but this rarely brings him anything at all. It's also one of the main reasons he has such a bitter animosity towards his cousin Gladstone. Somewhat justified in that he almost completely lacks Scrooge's business sense, and his notorious bad luck usually trips him up.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: An alternate version of himself in "History of a Disappearance" inherits Scrooge's wealth after his uncle falls into despair over the loss of his #1 Dime. He's surprisingly competent at running the business, but his sense of heroism has taken a hit as he's more likely to give a victim of theft money to buy a replacement for what was stolen instead of pursuing the thief himself.
* HowDoIShotWeb: As Paperinik, he sometimes has troubles with his gadgets, both in PKNA and non-PKNA stories. It's downplayed in PKNA, given he has One to help him with those (but still doesn't know how to use the full potential of his [[MorphWeapon Extransformer shield]], and when One gets deactivated he finds out he has no idea how to fuel the [=PKar=]... Or what the fuel ''is''), but in non-PKNA stories he has some added problems because Gyro either forgets to explain how they work or gives him a ''gigantic'' user manual he cannot possibly read.
* InadequateInheritor: Whether or not Scrooge views Donald as this tends to vary across multiple stories. The Creator/CarlBarks story ''Some Heir Over the Rainbow'', written in 1953, had Scrooge declare Huey, Dewey, and Louie his heirs, due to viewing Donald as this because of how he spent $1,000 that Scrooge secretly gave him, Gladstone, and the triplets -- which Creator/DonRosa naturally reinforced/referenced with ''Nobody's Business''. Notably, that story features Scrooge even considering Gladstone to be a better successor than Donald. However, ''Race to the South Seas'', from 1949, had Scrooge declare Donald as his heir at that story's end. 1956 had the story ''Two is Company'' where Scrooge is again trying to decide between Donald and Gladstone as to who will inherit his business. Then, 1961's ''Bongo on the Congo'' has Scrooge trying to teach Donald how to be a chief because he will inherit his business empire one day, and no mention is even made of the nephews doing so. So there are some stories showing the triplets being Scrooge's heirs and others showing that Donald is.
** And in terms of business savvy, there are stories where Donald does indeed show that he has what it takes to turn a profit. ''City of Golden Roofs'', 1957, in fact had him competing against Scrooge to see who the better salesman was and he is extremely successful at it. Though the story treats it as if Donald lost, as he ends it with a pile of money and golden jewels in comparison to Scrooge having a large lump of gold this could be debated, since the actual craftsmanship that went into making all of Donald's golden objects would probably make them more valuable than what Scrooge has.
* InstantExpert: Donald in several stories. Granted, the duck ''is'' talented.
* InTheBlood: Donald inherited his awful temper from both his mother and father.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: No matter how fowl-tempered, self-centered, or otherwise annoying he may act, Donald isn't a bad person at heart. He may cheat or misbehave in small ways, but when things get ''serious'' he's usually well-intentioned and will go to great lengths to do the right thing or help people in need. Their relationship may be stormy at times but he [[ParentalSubstitute genuinely does care for his nephews and will sacrifice just about anything for their sake.]] In "A Christmas for Shacktown", Donald goes out of his way to throw a Christmas party for the poor kids of Shacktown, of course it was the triplets' idea but once Donald committed to it, he was entirely behind it.
* LadykillerInLove: He ''really'' used to take advantage of his status as a ChickMagnet before Daisy became ''the'' love interest...
* TheLancer: Serves this role when forced to accompany Uncle Scrooge.
* LovableCoward: Present in a ''lot'' of stories; Donald is all gung-ho as long as there's no ''actual'' danger, but when there ''is'' he's as likely as not to lose his nerve -- though [[DependingOnTheWriter writers tend to vary on]] whether this means he's an ''actual'' coward, or just the OnlySaneMan who actually recognizes the danger that his FearlessFool companions do not. This trait is almost absent from his animated counterpart, except in the movie ''WesternAnimation/MickeyDonaldGoofyTheThreeMusketeers'', where a lot of fans unfamiliar with the comics complained that Donald's cowardice came out of nowhere.
* MasterOfDisguise: As Paperinik he is rather good thanks to the use of LatexPerfection and very good acting skills, to the point that his ClarkKenting act holds because everyone just assumes he wears a Donald Duck mask under his DominoMask.
* MeaningfulName: A minor case. Obviously his surname reflects his species, but his given name, Donald, is Gaelic in origin, and he is half-Scottish on his mother's side.
* MilesGloriosus: While he often displays amazing talents, he's got a tendency to brag and exaggerate, promising more than he can deliver. Usually his faith in himself is unshakable -- until he's actually called upon to ''do'' all those things he's bragged about.
* NewJobEpisode: Donald has much trouble getting jobs. When not working for Scrooge, he is most commonly shown working in a skunk oil factory or a margarine factory, jobs he understandably despises.
** Even so, Donald seems to be doing very well for himself at the margarine factory, at least. He once took a test of skills, and the conclusion was that the ideal job for him would be packing margarine.
** ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' sent Donald off to the Navy for the length of the series, as a plot excuse to leave the three nephews with Uncle Scrooge.
** A common plot in comics is that Donald starts in a job, and is amazingly good at it, earning money and becoming famous – until he makes a huge mistake that destroys the house, the garden, the road or whatever he's a specialist in, and has to flee the town. Typically, it's his arrogance which causes the fateful mistake. He could be anything from a gardener to an explosions expert. He essentially creates works of art. His confidence increases with each successful assignment. Then he is offered a more demanding assignment, which seems to him like his crowning achievement. At this point he a) attempts to do by himself a job which would require one or more assistants, b) seriously underestimates the difficulties in accomplishing his goal or c) his single-minded pursuit of his goal prevents him from taking a rest, re-assessing the situation, etc. The scene is set for a spectacular disaster.
*** A common variation in Italian stories sees him often talked into various business ideas or new jobs by Fethry which often lead into a catastrophe. Alternativly, Scrooge hires Donald and Fethry for various jobs in which they similiary cause a lot of trouble.
** Notably, in Rosa's ''Return to Xanadu'', Donald notes that when he's free from the responsibilities and pressures of Duckburg he has no problem completing a job without screwing it up.
* NonPoweredCostumedHero: As Paperinik, the costumed hero alter ego of Donald Duck, who's popular in European Disney comics. He's basically the Batman of Duckburg: he has no powers, he fights crime in a costume, few people know he's actually Donald, and he uses all sorts of gadgets developed by Gyro Gearloose. The stories where Donald appears in this guise seem to be in a whole different continuity from all others, as his becoming a badass with a SecretIdentity would have huge ramifications for his character.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: If he's enraged but is keeping his temper in check, apologize and ''beg'': whatever he's planning is much worse than anything he'd do in a fit of rage, especially if this is a Paperinik story.
* OneManArmy: Not usually depicted as one, but in a number of comics he shows himself to be a dangerous fighter, capable of taking down multiple opponents much bigger than him. This trait is amplified in many Italian stories -- especially stories that are set in alternate continuities or settings, like the many MedievalEuropeanFantasy stories featuring the characters, where Donald (or at least his fantasy counterpart) has single-handedly taken on entire armies and won.
** [[https://www.scribd.com/doc/251816396/2-Paperin-Furioso-Topolino-0544 "Paperin Furioso"]] features a somewhat surreal dream world (brought on by Witch Hazel's magical pranks) where Donald is a knight in medieval times, with Gus as his squire. During the story, Donald goes insane with rage and becomes totally invincible. He not only only defeats a heavily armored knight ''with his bare hands,'' but he also uproots an enormous tree and bashes the Beagle Boys with it, then proceeds to hurl boulders at them, and for an encore he lifts an entire catapult and hurls it at the Beagle Boy army, before setting their camp on fire. And what does he say about any survivors barely left standing?
-->'''Donald:''' (with sword in hand) I feel my arm tremble with excitement to pierce the survivors! Who's next to fall?!
** Later in the same story, Donald also headbutts King Scrooge's palace when
the latter tries to send his guards after him, nearly destroying it. Of course, this story is AllJustADream... though maybe not ''completely'', since it's heavily hinted that such Brigitta could be her ''daughter'', and she's the story really ''did'' happen, just in a constructed universe.
** The story also got a sequel, [[https://www.scribd.com/doc/251816397/1-Paperino-Il-Paladino-Topolino-0247-0248 "Paperino Il Paladino,"]] which is set in the same medieval-time world, but without the dream sequence framing. Donald the knight is completely sane during this story, but no less invincible in battle; he single-handedly defeats an entire army, ''twice'', he merely shrugs off being flattened by a boulder, and he ends up fighting so furiously that his ''sword'' overheats and he has to blow on it to cool it down. In the second part
oldest of the story, he uses cleverness and tricks to sink as ship three.
* LandPoor: She owns a rather large farm-that is what remains
of invading Saracens -- and when they manage to get ashore anyway, he once again takes on the entire army and defeats them all single-handedly. (Of course, unfortunate circumstances means Coot properties, that ''Gladstone'' ends up getting all used to cover ''all of modern-day Duckburg and much of the credit.)
** In [[http://www.comicartcity.com/immagini/griglia/2011/12/16/bottaro-paperac-jpg-1.jpg "Paperin de Paperac",]] a musketeer version of Donald effortlessly disarms four Beagle Boys at
nearby land'' before Scrooge started buying it to build the same time, stabbing one of them through the hat and just inches away from the Beagle's head. Needless city.
* MoralityPet: Interestingly enough,
to say, they [[VillainsWantMercy beg him for mercy.]]
** Even "regular" Donald sometimes gets in on the act. In "Donald Duck and Reginella's Wedding", he faces down an entire army of aliens (admittedly [[InsufficientlyAdvancedAlien only possessing Medieval weaponry]]) under the command of [[AndNowYouMustMarryMe the villain intent on marrying Reginella]], whilst armed with only a boombox and a double-barreled shotgun loaded with rock salt rounds. He not only ''routs'' the enemy, he later forces them to melt their weapons into agricultural tools under threat of "ruining everything healthy you still have".
* OnlySaneMan: Surprisingly enough given his hot-headed, stubborn personality, but he sometimes serves this role, as him being [[TheEveryman an Everyman]] allows him to have a more pragmatic view and a more average solution when weirdness arises, especially when
Scrooge. While he's on wacky adventures with Scrooge and the nephews.
* PapaWolf: He will fight ghosts, aliens, contraptions, and even a thunderstorm should his nephews fall in danger.
* PaperThinDisguise: As Paperinik nobody recognizes him, [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Paperinik.jpg even though the mask he wears barely covers anything]]. Justified, because in the early Paperinik stories a lot of people ''did'' have a tendency to assume that Donald and Paperinik were the same person, and Donald employed a lot of various tricks to "prove" otherwise -- using things like robots and holograms (and in one story, an unwitting Fethry in disguise) to make sure that he and Paperinik were seen together on multiple occasions. He also made sure to make it known that Paperinik has various [[LatexPerfection perfect masks]], including some of Donald himself. In a story there was a memorable incident of the Beagle Boys unmasking PK and discovering the face of billionaire John D. Rockerduck, then he sneezed away the mask revealing the face of Donald, then he sneezed away that mask too to reveal a monstrous face (he was having issues with the glue of his masks): after that, only people who are from outside the city would think they can discover his real identity that easily...
** In a few newer stories, it has been [[{{Lampshading}} lampshaded]], like in one AlternateTimeline story where a villain also discovers PK's secret identity.
--->''(looking at pictures of PK and Donald)'': Uhm... ''without'' mask and and ''with'' mask... It wasn't so hard, after all.
* ParentalAbandonment: The earlier comics such as [[http://coa.inducks.org/story.php?c=W+OS+1109-02#scans "This Is Your Life, Donald Duck!"]] has Donald raised by his
not above exploiting her hospitality for what its worth, Grandma Duck almost from the moment he hatched with his own parents, Quackmore and Hortense, nowhere to be found! And seeing that, his twin sister, Della, was not raised alongside him, really makes is one wonder if his entire immediate family just abandoned him as an egg! Donald's parents and sister were last seen with him in Don Rosa's [[http://www.zocoi.com/books/171-scrooge-mcduck-the-life-and-times-of-scrooge-mcduck-11-the-empire-builder-from-calisota "The Empire Builder of Calisota"]] and then were never seen again. Donald's origins in the earlier Italian comics is even sadder and have him hatch from an egg bought at the market with Grandma Duck and Uncle Scrooge (who are brother and sister in that Italian origin story) adopting him!
* ParentalSubstitute: To Huey, Dewey and Louie, obviously. At least one story played a variation of this trope to a comical extreme, where he fought them - and even fought his uncle Scrooge - to make them sit their tails down and eat together as a family.
** In fact, Donald often does work hard to be a competent guardian for his nephews, and their opinion of him matters a great deal. In ''ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures'' the Raider, a time-traveling criminal who happens to be a single parent of one himself, actually compliments him on being such a good guardian without resorting to stealing to get the money he needs.
** It may be a matter of translations, but in the Egyptian versions of the comics, Donald will occasionally refer to his nephews as 'my boys' or 'my kids'.
* PassedOverInheritance: Invoked and Zigzagged in ''Nobody's Business''. Played Straight when Scrooge declares he's going to give all of his money to the triplets and not give one dime to his nephews Donald and Gladstone. Subverted when he admits to himself that such a decision isn't fair and he thus decides to award them with ownership of a company based on how they each invest $1000 he gives them.
* PerpetualPoverty: Typically not focused on that much, but Donald has had many of his own adventures where he's ended up with a good deal of treasure, such as ''The Looney Lunar Gold Rush'' by Carl Barks or ''The Crocodile Collector'' by Don Rosa, yet he forever seems to be forced to work for his uncle for only 15-30 cents an hour, along with his nephews as well depending on the story.
* PintSizedPowerhouse: Donald is of average size for a duck in his verse, which means he is often outmassed by many characters -- the dogfaces in particular tend to be significantly taller than him. Despite his small size, he has been seen to break free of strong ropes, pull a tractor with his bare hands, and fight off bigger enemies!
* PolarOppositeTwins: With his sister Della in one Dutch comic. He is a sailor. She is a pilot.
* ReallyFondOfSleeping: Donald ''really'' likes to catch some Z's, much to Scrooge's annoyance, as he has a tendency to try and nap during work hours. In fact, Donald is so devoted to sleep that he's allowed into the Halls of The Dead prematurely during the events of Creator/DonRosa's ''The Quest For Kalevala'' because Tuoni, the Finnish Grim Reaper, considers him worthy enough to get a preview of the eventual "eternal sleep".
* RealMenCook: One of his more consistent characterizations is that he's an excellent cook. He presumably learned from his grandmother, a famously good cook, and having to take care of three children while living in relative poverty means he knows how to cook well with cheap and easy ingredients.
* RenaissanceMan: Has shown ''awesome'' proficiency in fields as diverse as cleaning windows and coins (and is actually famous in-universe for the latter), cooking, demolitions, explosives (literally pulverized a condemned building with no collateral damage, and considered it a failure because two pebbles had come out of the designed demolition area), repairing bells and cymbals, bodyguard, shoemaking, butler, tax collector, truant officer, mall cop, [[UniversalDriversLicence driving everything]], and so on. Then there are the more exotic skills he demonstrates whenever he's dragged along to Scrooge's treasure hunts, such as jungle survival, mountain climbing or deep sea diving.
* SecretKeeper: In "A Letter from Home", it's revealed that Donald knew [[spoiler:that Matilda, Scrooge's estranged sister, was the caretaker he unknowingly hired to look out for his family castle]]. While Donald never revealed the secret, not even to his nephews, he had been subtly trying to push them to reconcile.
* SeenItAll: It doesn't come up often, but Donald Duck has been involved in finding El Dorado, Atlantis, the Lost Mines of the Incas ''and'' King Solomon, captured a unicorn, found the Vault of the Templars and the Holy Grail (that he broke in the head of a criminal), has an alien {{Love Interest|s}}, and so on, and [[DependingOnTheWriter when the authors remember it]] he's ready for everything.
* SiblingYinYang: He had a FoolishSiblingResponsibleSibling dynamic with Della when they were children with him usually getting up into all sorts of mischief that Della either had to fix or was the chief victim of. This makes his status as the ButtMonkey to Huey, Dewey, and Louie's antics quite karmic in retrospect. Ironically, in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', ''he'' is the Responsible Sibling to Della's Foolish Sibling.
* StraightMan: To Fethry Duck in the stories where both are the protagonists.
* StrangeMindsThinkAlike: He and Daisy at times come up with the same weird ideas, or at least understand them. For example, as spies they both infiltrated a villainous organization in disguise as a known member and let the other do the heavy lifting before revealing themselves at the right moment to save them, as superheroes they both justified their relationship with their superheroic alter ego by claiming to be friends, and when Donald decided the best way to get Daisy to stop complaining about his constant Paperinik-mandated lateness at their dates was to use a Paperinik gadget to send her half an hour forward in time and make ''her'' late to make her understand how he felt Daisy ''found it romantic''.
* StrongFamilyResemblance: At least if Don Rosa's stories are to be believed, he is the spitting image of his father, Quackmore. The early Barks story, "Voodoo Hoodoo" stated that he was one for Uncle Scrooge as well. This was minorly retconned in later stories where Scrooge was identified with his prominent sidewhiskers even as a young fowl, but aside from that, the resemblance between Scrooge and Donald is still quite strong.
** Used as a plot point in several stories, where (for one reason or another), Donald impersonates Scrooge, by simply wearing Scrooge's clothes, spectacles, and false sideburns. Depending on the story, Donald either does a spectacular job or forgets some of Scrooge's mannerisms. People who don't know Scrooge well are still fooled, the others can tell the difference. One story has Daisy having doubts whether the "Scrooge" who just talked to her was the genuine article. She throws a coin to the ground and waits for Scrooge's trained ear to react to the sound. When the male duck does not react at all, she unmasks him as Donald.
* SuperSenses: According to Don Rosa, the explanation of how Donald could tell his nephews apart was that he could see tiny details that differentiate them, examples being: a crooked freckle, a speck in an eye, an extra eyelash, even the shade of white of their feathers. It only works subconsciously however, it is impossible for him to do it when trying.
* SupremeChef: DependingOnTheWriter to a
''very'' high degree, few people he'll always treat kindly. This might be because he knows [[NeverMessWithGranny exactly how tough she can be,]] or because he genuinely appreciates her kind nature... or a combination of both.
* NeverMessWithGranny: There's a reason she runs a largish farm almost by herself: she's ''that'' tough,
and some comics has no qualm grabbing the shotgun when it comes to defend her property.
* PunnyName: In Norwegian, her name is sometimes Anna, a homophone for Anda, "the duck."
* SecretSecretKeeper: At one point she stumbled on the fact her nephew Donald is the superhero Paperinik, and never told anyone.
* SupremeChef: Her cooking is famous;
even depict him as a LethalChef, hard-boiled criminals have been known to break down and promise to be better people if they could have just ''one more taste.''
* TeamMom: Well, Team Grandma,
but in most the effect is the same.
* {{Workaholic}}: She ''loves'' doing chores at the farm. There have been
stories where it comes up, he's actually a good cook -- not quite in her workload is diminished either by Gus Goose shaping up or getting additional help, and the result is always that Grandma Duck's class, and often limited by the fact that he can't afford to buy the proper ingredients, but a talented enough chef that family members will come running when he's doing the cooking.
** [[FridgeBrilliance Since food is one of Donald's main interests, along with sleeping, it makes sense that he would have at least some cooking skills.]]
** One comic took it further by revealing his talent as a food critic, his reviews eventually leaving him great fame. It only went south when he had to review Daisy's food (from a cafè she had opened) on national television, when he couldn't stand her cooking.[[note]]Luckily, his nephews had called in Grandma Duck to do the cooking, so Donald was left greatly enjoying the food, only to later talk about how bad Daisy's cooking was while she was [[RightBehindMe standing right behind him.]] It
ends with him having to leave town to avoid her beating.[[/note]]
* ThrowTheDogABone: On ''very'' rare occasions, Donald manages to be the one who gets the treasure in the end, such as "The Crocodile Collector" and "The Trail of the Unicorn." [[StatusQuoIsGod Don't expect him to still be rich in the next story, though.]]
* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Donald really enjoys drinking soda, and Scrooge is constantly berating him for wasting his money on them. In ''ComicBook/NobodysBusiness'', Donald is given one thousand dollars by his uncle to invest, and by the end of the challenge, he makes a business deal for a new invention which he sold for one thousand dollars plus a crate of sodas. To be fair, [[KnowWhenToFoldEm he'd had extremely bad luck]] with any investment ideas so far, and he was getting thirsty anyway.
** While soda is the most prominent, Donald really enjoys fast food in general, which was just becoming a thing when he gained popularity in the mid-20th century.
* TrueCompanions: His Latin Americam friends, Panchito Pistoles and Jose Carioca, are the only people who consistently treat Donald with respect rather than look down on or abuse him as his relatives frequently do. In fact, one story has the nephews send Donald to Brazil go adventuring with him when Donald gets depressed, because they're the only people who can bring a genuine smile on his face when he's down on the dumps.
* UnfazedEveryman: He's basically TheEveryman and a very average guy who struggles with everyday business like raising kids, keeping his love life with Daisy going and
up driving herself crazy trying to find a job. However, he would also ocassionally accompany his uncle on treasure hunts and helps him defending his money bin against witches and other crooks, without finding that weird compared to his everyday struggles at all.
* TheUnintelligible: Subverted in the comics, since there his dialogue is written for us to read. The Paperinik stories also imply he is a VoiceChangeling (which even extends to the game ''PK: Out of the Shadows'', in which regular Donald is voiced by Tony Anselmo as usual, but when he's Paperinik, it's Creator/RobPaulsen who voices him), as [[MasterOfDisguise his disguises regularly fool people who know well whoever he is disguised as]].
** Played straight on ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', though, where it's a RunningGag for people to ask "What did he say?" In the pilot, Launchpad even considers it a sign of how bad things are getting when he finally manages to understand him. In the 2017 version, it's even revealed that his own nephews find him hard to understand, and part of them preparing to rescue Scrooge in the first season finale involves giving Donald a temporary voice-mod so he can be understood. The only person who is able to easily understand his regular voice is Daisy.
* UniversalDriversLicence: Actually applies. His actual 'competence' in piloting/driving/sailing varies, especially if it'd be funnier if he screwed up.
* UnluckyEverydude: Although not as bad as in the Disney animated canon, Donald still tends to have absolutely rotten luck. Don Rosa, however, took this further and some comics
come up with Donald are often more depressing than anything as a result.
* UnluckilyLucky: DependingOnTheWriter. He was BornUnlucky and there is no story whatsoever where he is not put through a gauntlet of injuries and humiliation, but on some of them he managed
ways to obtain a silver lining by staying around (sometimes because of determination, sometimes because of despair) when whoever was his rival for the tale had already taken the apparent prize and left and the real prize appeared afterwards (thus making the "lucky" rival someone who GaveUpTooSoon).
* UnstoppableRage: You guys think Scrooge [=McDuck=] is bad? Ha! Both in the animated feature as well as the comic, "This Is Your Life, Donald Duck," it's officially shown that Donald ''hatched ready to fight!'' And the comic version takes it even further by showing that even as a ''baby'' Donald could ''bash his head against a statue'' in anger and ''[[http://duckcomicsrevue.blogspot.com/2014/02/this-is-your-life-donald-duck.html cause more damage to the statue than to himself]]''! And when a baby Donald tried to take one sailor's hat, the sailor exclaimed, [[http://disneyweirdness.blogspot.com/2011/02/secret-origins.html "Whew! He's got a grip to put many a big man to shame!"]] And the only reason he doesn't attack or bash things with his head anymore is for fear of hurting his hat! He's also broken
fill her free of strong ropes, pulled a tractor with his bare hands, beaten up the Beagle Boys and his bigger Neighbor Jones, etc. In fact, in a Mickey Mouse/Donald Duck comics crossover parody of Lord of the Rings, Donald fights off an enormous spider with a machete that had already captured Mickey in its web before threatening ''Mickey'' to explain to him what's going on before he turns the machete on ''him!'' So it's clear that although this aspect of his personality is displayed more in his animated incarnation, it's still definitely there in the comics, too and it's best to ''never anger this duck!''
* UnsympatheticComedyProtagonist: In several stories, he tends to have a mean streak.
* ViolentGlaswegian: Downplayed, since he's only half Scottish, but Donald certainly inherited the [=McDuck=] temper.
* VitriolicBestBuds: Most consistently with Fethry -- though occasionally also with Gladstone, in "[[http://sarroora.tumblr.com/image/121659565584 stories like this one]]". In crossover stories, he tends to have this relationship with Mickey Mouse too.
* WholesomeCrossdresser: While most examples of Donald crossdressing have been played for laughs, there are also stories where he [[https://modmad.tumblr.com/post/642725075066503168/podle5-mr-mcduck-land-of-birds-and-comics voluntarily and even excitedly]] puts on dresses and feminine clothing.
* WhosLaughingNow: His Paperinik persona started out as a means for Donald to get back at Scrooge and Gladstone continuously tormenting and humiliating him, and the very first story features Paperinik stealing Scrooge's mattress as he sleeps on it for added humiliation factor.
** Some of the earliest Paperinik stories, had Paperinik committing crimes and framing Gladstone for them. Some of them have Gladstone doing decent detective work just to clear his name.
* WisdomFromTheGutter: Donald may not always be the brightest bulb, his impulsiveness does cause him problems, and Scrooge looks down on him for not having either his wealth or his business, but in many stories Donald is actually shown to have considerably more common sense than Scrooge does. In particular, Donald takes the sensible viewpoint that having money for its own sake is pointless and it's better to enjoy what it can actually get you, whilst Scrooge scrimps and saves like his life depends on it, living a lifestyle that varies between "austere" and "downright miserable" despite having the world's biggest fortune. In one story, a deliberate contrast is directly drawn between Donald, who is not very wealthy but has a healthy social life and no major worries, and Scrooge, who lives in seclusion and exists in a constant state of paranoia over being burglarized. In ''The Treasury of Croesus'', he also gets to call out both Scrooge and Magica, [[TheReasonYouSuckSpeech bluntly pointing out that their obsession with money just causes them to waste their lives and make themselves miserable]], which neither of them can muster an argument against.
time.



[[folder: Huey, Dewey and Louie Duck]]
[[quoteright:292:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/duck_triplets.png]]
-> Debut: ''Donald's Nephews'' (1937)
-> All Voiced by: Clarence Nash (1938-1985), Russi Taylor (1987-2019), Tony Anselmo (''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'', ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse''), Hal Smith (''[=DuckTales=]'', adult selves in "Duck to the Future")\\
Huey Voiced by: Jeannie Elias (''WesternAnimation/QuackPack''), Danny Pudi (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')\\
Dewey Voiced by: Pamela Adlon (''Quack Pack''), Creator/BenSchwartz (''[=DuckTales=] (2017)'')\\
Louie Voiced by: [[Creator/ElizabethDaily E.G. Daily]] (''Quack Pack''), Bobby Moynihan (''[=DuckTales=] (2017)'')

Donald's triplet nephews, living with their "Unca Donald," rising within the ranks of the Junior Woodchucks, and causing trouble at home. However, as their adventures with their uncles progress, they grow to become true-blue heroes who are often a collective voice of sanity contrasted to their older relatives' quirks. In most of their incarnations they're completely identical in looks and behavior, but some incarnations have tried to give them individual traits. Individual tropes as mentioned here come mainly from either incarnation of ''[=DuckTales=]'' or ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', but have shown up in the occasional comic as well.

to:

[[folder: Huey, Dewey and Louie Humperdink "Grandpa" Duck]]
[[quoteright:292:https://static.[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/duck_triplets.png]]
-> Debut: ''Donald's Nephews'' (1937)
-> All Voiced by: Clarence Nash (1938-1985), Russi Taylor (1987-2019), Tony Anselmo (''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'', ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse''), Hal Smith (''[=DuckTales=]'', adult selves in "Duck to the Future")\\
Huey Voiced by: Jeannie Elias (''WesternAnimation/QuackPack''), Danny Pudi (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')\\
org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_grandpa_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Grandma Duck"'', 1951]]

Husband of Elvira Coot, as well as Donald, Fethry and Gladstone's grandfather and Huey,
Dewey Voiced by: Pamela Adlon (''Quack Pack''), Creator/BenSchwartz (''[=DuckTales=] (2017)'')\\
Louie Voiced by: [[Creator/ElizabethDaily E.G. Daily]] (''Quack Pack''), Bobby Moynihan (''[=DuckTales=] (2017)'')

Donald's triplet nephews, living with their "Unca Donald," rising within the ranks of the Junior Woodchucks,
and causing trouble at home. However, as their adventures with their uncles progress, they grow to become true-blue heroes who are often Louie's great-grandfather. He was a collective voice of sanity contrasted to their older relatives' quirks. In most of their incarnations they're completely identical farmer in looks and behavior, life, but some incarnations have tried to give them individual traits. Individual tropes as mentioned here come mainly from either incarnation has passed away of ''[=DuckTales=]'' or ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', but have shown up in the occasional comic as well.
old age.




[[AC:Tropes applying to all three]]
* AdultsAreUseless: Mostly {{Downplayed|Trope}} as Donald and Scrooge are very capable and competent in their own rights most of the time, nonetheless on many occasions it's on Huey, Dewey, and Louie to save the day or Scrooge's fortune. In Creator/CarlBarks's ''ComicBook/TheOldCastlesSecret'', they even mention that Donald and Scrooge wouldn't be a great help at the upcoming treasure hunt.
* AlwaysIdenticalTwins: Always Identical ''Triplets'', actually. The three of them are for the most part interchangeable and can just be told apart by the colours of their hats. PlayedWith by Creator/DonRosa in "An Eye For Detail", where it's revealed that Donald is the only one outside the nephews who can tell them apart.
* BrattyHalfPint: They were troublesome brats when they first appeared. [[CharacterizationMarchesOn Not so much nowadays.]]
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: They started out as absolute terrors who delighted in tormenting their uncle, but slowly became more sympathetic and mature until they arguably acted more "grown-up" than Donald in most situations. This change was actually deliberately invoked by Creator/CarlBarks, who reasoned that the audience would tire of the boys if they never became anything other than mischief-makers.
** In-story a large part of the change seems to have come from them joining the Junior Woodchuck organization, which as seen in Rosa's ''W.H.A.D.A.L.O.T.T.A.J.A.R.G.O.N'' was at the behest of Donald in hopes that it would straighten them up.
** For a short time in animation, and a long time in comics, they tended to share much of their dialogue, either speaking in unison or finishing each others' sentences. This trait was eventually phased out.
* ChromaticArrangement: Their colors have varied wildly, [[DependingOnTheArtist Depending on the Colorist]], but in the late 1980s it stabilized as Huey/red, Dewey/blue, and Louie/green.
** Another common combination in the comics is, or at least was, Huey/blue, Dewey/green, and Louie/Red. The change of colors was usually ignored, but sometimes [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] and explained as the boys sometimes borrowing each other's clothes. Also, possibly thanks to the fact that in their animation debut their colours were red/orange/yellow, Dewey is sometimes depicted with yellow clothes in certain European comics.
* DeadpanSnarker: In every incarnation, they are this in response to Donald or anything that they view as kind of lame.
* DependingOnTheWriter: In some of their more modern animated appearances, like in ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'' or ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse2013'', they can alternate between their original mischievous rascal persona (albeit toned down) or their more sympathetic and mature personality from the comics.
* DeusExMachina: Their Junior Woodchuck guidebook. There's an entry on how to make dragons sneeze in it, for crying out loud! One of Don Rosa's stories looked into the history of the book which revealed [[spoiler: it's the modern version of a book that contained all the unique information from the Library of Alexandria. The original book was MUCH bigger.]]
** [[LampshadeHanging Somewhere in the book there is an explanation of how to find and condense so much information in such a little volume.]]
* TheDividual: The twindividual variety, at least before ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'' and ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' made efforts to make them more distinguishable characters.
* DumbassNoMore: While not particullary dumbasses, the trio consists of average, maybe a bit bratty children with few interest in schooling and "normal" hobbies. However, that changed with the introduction of the Junior Woodchucks: Huey, Dewey, and Louie are now full-blown boyscouts with great knowledge about almost everything and with an all-knowing Junior Woodchuck Guidebook. Their cleverness often helps Donald and/or Scrooge out of misery.
* {{Expy}}: They actually started out as Expys for Mickey's two nephews, Morty and Ferdie, who until the introduction of Huey, Dewey, and Louie actually made several appearances in Donald's comic strip, sans Mickey, in order to torment him with pranks and childish mischief. After a while, it was decided to give Donald his own nephews -- and as a way of one-upping Mickey, Donald got ''three'' bratty, identical nephews instead of just ''two.'' [[ParodyDisplacement Of course, since they only had a couple of animated appearances and starred in far fewer comics, today Morty and Ferdie aren't one-tenth as well-known or popular as Huey, Dewey and Louie are.]]
* GreatBigBookOfEverything: The Junior Woodchuck Guidebook, see below.
* IdenticalTwinIDTag: The color of their clothes, at least nominally. In reality, the colorists often vary wildly on which boy wears which color, and since they also wear identical black shirts in the comics and often go hatless or are wearing identical Junior Woodchucks coonskin caps, it's often impossible to tell who is who.
* InsultOfEndearment: After their first appearance, Donald Duck would often call them "little devils" due to their mischief-making antics. Sometimes however he uses the term affectionately.
* MoralityPet: While he does have his moments towards them, Huey, Dewey, and Louie are consistently portrayed as being the characters Scrooge is nicest to. Even when he's being a huge jerk towards Donald, Scrooge is usually still nice towards the triplets. They are also portrayed as one of the biggest reasons he starts warming up towards family again and getting back his love of adventure in multiple series.
* NotAllowedToGrowUp: Oh, yeah! ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' made an attempt to age them by a few years, but most modern-day works featuring them [[CanonDiscontinuity disregard this]].
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Their common names? Nicknames. Their actual names are Hubert, Deuteronomy, and Louis.
* ParentalAbandonment: Their mother is Donald's sister Della, and she apparently asked Donald to take care of them while their unnamed father was spending time in a hospital. And she was never heard from again...
-->'''Scrooge:''' I'm not used to relatives either. The few I had seem to have... disappeared.
-->'''Huey, Dewey and Louie:''' We know how ''that'' feels, Unca Scrooge.
* SameSexTriplets: They're identical triplets who are all male.
* ScoutOut: In the comics, they are part of the Junior Woodchucks.
* ShipperOnDeck: Quite willing to help their uncle's relationship with Daisy.
* SingleMindedTwins: Single-Minded Triplets, in this case. It's more apparent in earlier stories, where they were often literally treated as one character with three separate bodies, to the point of sharing all their spoken lines. The trope is still in effect in later stories, but the boys seem to have at least stopped speaking in union and finishing each other's sentences.
** ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' occasionally subverted the trope by giving them individual character traits -- Huey as the energetic leader, Dewey as the smart guy and Louie as the gentle, good-natured tagalong. ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' took these traits and [[CharacterExaggeration ran with them]], making the three boys distinct individuals and completely averting the trope.
** ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'' goes further with giving them individual character traits -- albeit Huey is the intellect, Dewey's the energetic adventurer, and Louie is the easy-going one.
* SitcomArchNemesis: In the newspaper strips, some early Barks-comics as well as the very early Italian stories (especially written by Guido Martina) they act as antagonists against Donald, taking over their role from the WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts. While with the creation of the Junior Woodchucks the nephews [[CharacterizationMarchesOn generally get more mature and sympathic towards their Uncle Donald]], some writers like William van Horn still enjoy pitting Donald and the nephews against each other.
* TheSmartGuy: All three of them share this role when out adventuring with Donald and Scrooge, making for a team with one [[TheHero Hero]] (Scrooge), one [[TheLancer Lancer]] (Donald) and ''three'' [[TheSmartGuy Smart Guys.]]
** In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack,'' (and to a lesser extent in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'') Dewey is the Smart Guy of the trio.
** In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017,'' the title of Smart Guy goes to Huey.
* SpeakInUnison: They speak together sometimes, one speech balloon with three stems. In the animated shorts, they usually [[FinishingEachOthersSentences finish each other's sentences]] instead.
* SpeciesSurname: They have the same surname as their Uncle Donald (namely, Duck)
* ThemeTwinNaming: Theme Triplet Naming; all of their names {{rhyme|Theme Naming}}.
* {{Troll}}: How they ''love'' doing this to their poor Unca Donald in some stories, where they pretend to put themselves in a risky position and watch their uncle throw himself into danger.
* VagueAge: Their ages in the comics range from pre-teens to high schoolers. Even internally it's inconsistent who's the oldest and youngest of the three, some comics giving their order of births, while at least one source (a [=QnA=] section in a Norwegian comic) insists that, since ducks are hatched not born, they were all hatched at once.
* WiseBeyondTheirYears: It helps that as Woodchucks, they own [[GreatBigBookOfEverything a manual that covers basically everything in the Universe]].

[[AC:Tropes applying to Huey]]
* CasanovaWannabe: In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack,'' he was often trying to impress teenage girls, but not having much luck with them.
* {{Keet}}: The most enthusiastic and energetic of the boys. Taken further with his 2017 incarnation.
* RedIsHeroic: His signature color is red, and whenever the boys are depicted as having a leader it's him. He's also the most dedicated Junior Woodchuck (in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'' he seems to be the only one of the boys who's a Junior Woodchuck at all), and the quintessential "Good Scout."
* SmallNameBigEgo: In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack,'' he has style and charisma but is essentially useless.
* ThisIsSomethingHesGotToDoHimself: In ''ComicBook/{{Dragonlords}}'', he harvests and carries a clearly too heavy load of food for his wounded dragon Sniffles all by himself, despite his brothers and uncle being close by, implying that he wanted to care for his steed and friend by himself.

[[AC:Tropes applying to Dewey]]
* IJustWantToBeSpecial: Seems to be the nephew most prone to experience this, wanting to be seen as an individual instead of just one of three brothers. It comes up in both the original ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' and in ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', and even in a couple of comics (one Italian comic had him be the first one of the brothers to get a crush on a girl, and subsequently he made more of an effort to stand out... which annoyed Huey and Louie to no end), before it became a major part of his character in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017''. It probably ties in to his MiddleChildSyndrome.
* MiddleChildSyndrome: Confirmed by the creators of ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'' to have a bad case of this.
* TheSmartGuy: In the original ''{{WesternAnimation/DuckTales|1987}}'' and in ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', he's the smartest of the nephews. ''Quack Pack'' turned him into an InsufferableGenius who would gloat about his intelligence.

[[AC:Tropes applying to Louie]]
* DeadpanSnarker: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', he always seems to have some sort of snide or sarcastic comment for all occasions.
* LazyBum: As a part of CharacterExaggeration in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017''. Whereas Huey and Dewey are hard workers, Louie is happy to just kick back and watch TV.
* TagalongKid: Even if he's the same age as his two brothers, and never actually stopped from going along with them; whenever it comes up he's consistently depicted as the youngest of the three (by a few hours), and a follower rather than a leader.
* TheDitz: In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' and ''WesternAnimation/Ducktales1987'', he was portrayed as a naïve person who said or did dumb stuff.

[[AC:Tropes applying to Phooey]]
* AscendedMeme: Actually, Phooey isn't a character, but an artist's error. Occasionally, stressed-out comic artists would make a mistake and draw a fourth nephew who was suddenly there for one panel and then vanished again. Fans took to calling this fourth nephew "Phooey" (though "Barks," after Creator/CarlBarks, was a popular alternate name for him). In 1999, a story named "Much Ado About Phooey" canonized him by explaining that Huey, Dewey, and Louie had once been struck by lightning, and after that the image of a fourth nephew would occasionally materialize next to them only to vanish a few seconds later, and the family were so used to it that they basically didn't pay it any mind.

to:

\n[[AC:Tropes applying to all three]]\n* AdultsAreUseless: Mostly {{Downplayed|Trope}} as Donald and Scrooge are very capable and competent in their own rights most of the time, nonetheless on many occasions it's on Huey, Dewey, and Louie to save the day or Scrooge's fortune. In Creator/CarlBarks's ''ComicBook/TheOldCastlesSecret'', they even mention that Donald and Scrooge wouldn't be a great help at the upcoming treasure hunt.
* AlwaysIdenticalTwins: Always Identical ''Triplets'', actually. The three of them are for the most part interchangeable and can just be told apart by the colours of their hats. PlayedWith by Creator/DonRosa in "An Eye For Detail", where it's revealed that Donald
AdaptationNameChange: "Humperdink" is the only one outside the nephews who can tell them apart.
* BrattyHalfPint: They were troublesome brats when they first appeared. [[CharacterizationMarchesOn Not so much nowadays.]]
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: They started out as absolute terrors who delighted in tormenting their uncle, but slowly became more sympathetic and mature until they arguably acted more "grown-up" than Donald in most situations. This change was actually deliberately invoked by Creator/CarlBarks, who reasoned that the audience would tire of the boys if they never became anything other than mischief-makers.
** In-story a large part of the change seems to have come from them joining the Junior Woodchuck organization, which as seen in Rosa's ''W.H.A.D.A.L.O.T.T.A.J.A.R.G.O.N'' was at the behest of Donald in hopes that it would straighten them up.
** For a short time in animation, and a long time in comics, they tended to share much of their dialogue, either speaking in unison or finishing each others' sentences. This trait was eventually phased out.
* ChromaticArrangement: Their colors have varied wildly, [[DependingOnTheArtist Depending on the Colorist]], but
name given for Grandma's late husband in the late 1980s it stabilized as Huey/red, Dewey/blue, and Louie/green.
** Another common combination in the comics is, or at least was, Huey/blue, Dewey/green, and Louie/Red. The change of colors
50s ''Grandma Duck'' comics. Don Rosa was usually ignored, but sometimes [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] and explained as the boys sometimes borrowing each other's clothes. Also, possibly thanks to the fact that in their animation debut their colours were red/orange/yellow, Dewey is sometimes depicted with yellow clothes in certain European comics.
* DeadpanSnarker: In every incarnation, they are
not aware of this in response to Donald or anything that they view as kind of lame.
* DependingOnTheWriter: In some of their more modern animated appearances, like in ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'' or ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse2013'', they can alternate between their original mischievous rascal persona (albeit toned down) or their more sympathetic and mature personality from
when he created the comics.
* DeusExMachina: Their Junior Woodchuck guidebook. There's an entry on how to make dragons sneeze in it, for crying out loud! One of Don Rosa's stories looked into the history of the book which revealed [[spoiler: it's the modern
first version of a book that contained all the unique information from the Library of Alexandria. The original book was MUCH bigger.]]
** [[LampshadeHanging Somewhere in the book there is an explanation of how to find and condense so much information in such a little volume.]]
* TheDividual: The twindividual variety, at least before ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'' and ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' made efforts to make them more distinguishable characters.
* DumbassNoMore: While not particullary dumbasses, the trio consists of average, maybe a bit bratty children with few interest in schooling and "normal" hobbies. However, that changed with the introduction of the Junior Woodchucks: Huey, Dewey, and Louie are now full-blown boyscouts with great knowledge about almost everything and with an all-knowing Junior Woodchuck Guidebook. Their cleverness often helps Donald and/or Scrooge out of misery.
* {{Expy}}: They actually started out as Expys for Mickey's two nephews, Morty and Ferdie, who until the introduction of Huey, Dewey, and Louie actually made several appearances in Donald's comic strip, sans Mickey, in order to torment him with pranks and childish mischief. After a while, it was decided to give Donald his own nephews -- and as a way of one-upping Mickey, Donald got ''three'' bratty, identical nephews instead of just ''two.'' [[ParodyDisplacement Of course, since they only had a couple of animated appearances and starred in far fewer comics, today Morty and Ferdie aren't one-tenth as well-known or popular as Huey, Dewey and Louie are.]]
* GreatBigBookOfEverything: The Junior Woodchuck Guidebook, see below.
* IdenticalTwinIDTag: The color of their clothes, at least nominally. In reality, the colorists often vary wildly on which boy wears which color, and since they also wear identical black shirts in the comics and often go hatless or are wearing identical Junior Woodchucks coonskin caps, it's often impossible to tell who is who.
* InsultOfEndearment: After their first appearance, Donald
Duck would often call them "little devils" due to their mischief-making antics. Sometimes however he uses the term affectionately.
* MoralityPet: While he does have his moments towards them, Huey, Dewey, and Louie are consistently portrayed as being the characters Scrooge is nicest to. Even when he's being a huge jerk towards Donald, Scrooge is usually still nice towards the triplets. They are also portrayed as one of the biggest reasons he starts warming up towards
family again tree and getting back his love of adventure in multiple series.
* NotAllowedToGrowUp: Oh, yeah! ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' made an attempt to age them by a few years, but most modern-day works featuring them [[CanonDiscontinuity disregard this]].
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Their common names? Nicknames. Their actual names are Hubert, Deuteronomy, and Louis.
* ParentalAbandonment: Their mother is Donald's sister Della, and she apparently asked Donald to take care of them while their unnamed father was spending time in a hospital. And she was never heard from again...
-->'''Scrooge:''' I'm not used to relatives either. The few I had seem to have... disappeared.
-->'''Huey, Dewey and Louie:''' We know how ''that'' feels, Unca Scrooge.
* SameSexTriplets: They're identical triplets who are all male.
* ScoutOut: In
gave the comics, they are part of the Junior Woodchucks.
* ShipperOnDeck: Quite willing to help their uncle's relationship with Daisy.
* SingleMindedTwins: Single-Minded Triplets, in this case. It's more apparent in earlier stories, where they were often literally treated as one
character with three separate bodies, to another name, "Dabney". When he was informed, he changed the point of sharing all their spoken lines. The trope is still in effect in later stories, but the boys seem name to Humperdink to match prior canon. Both names have at least stopped speaking in union and finishing each other's sentences.
** ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' occasionally subverted the trope by giving them individual character traits -- Huey
since entered use, although "Humperdink" is more popular.
* HappilyMarried: As early
as the energetic leader, Dewey as 50s ''Grandma Duck'' comics, it was established that Grandma has nothing but loving memories of her husband. One 1951 comic has her find his love letters in the smart guy and Louie as the gentle, good-natured tagalong. ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' took these traits and [[CharacterExaggeration ran with them]], making the three boys distinct individuals and completely averting the trope.
** ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'' goes further with giving them individual character traits -- albeit Huey is the intellect, Dewey's the energetic adventurer, and Louie is the easy-going one.
* SitcomArchNemesis: In the newspaper strips, some early Barks-comics as well as the very early Italian stories (especially written by Guido Martina) they act as antagonists against Donald, taking over their role from the WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts. While with the creation of the Junior Woodchucks the nephews [[CharacterizationMarchesOn generally get more mature and sympathic towards their Uncle Donald]], some writers like William van Horn still enjoy pitting Donald
attic while searching for stuff to sell and the nephews against each other.
* TheSmartGuy: All three of them share this role when out adventuring with Donald and Scrooge, making for a team with one [[TheHero Hero]] (Scrooge), one [[TheLancer Lancer]] (Donald) and ''three'' [[TheSmartGuy Smart Guys.]]
** In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack,'' (and to a lesser extent in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'') Dewey is the Smart Guy
apparent loss of the trio.
** In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017,'' the title of Smart Guy goes to Huey.
* SpeakInUnison: They speak together sometimes, one speech balloon with three stems. In the animated shorts, they usually [[FinishingEachOthersSentences finish each other's sentences]] instead.
* SpeciesSurname: They have the same surname as their Uncle Donald (namely, Duck)
* ThemeTwinNaming: Theme Triplet Naming; all of their names {{rhyme|Theme Naming}}.
* {{Troll}}: How they ''love'' doing this to their poor Unca Donald in some stories, where they pretend to put themselves in a risky position and watch their uncle throw himself into danger.
* VagueAge: Their ages
letters in the comics range from pre-teens to high schoolers. Even internally it's inconsistent who's the oldest and youngest of the three, some comics giving their order of births, while at least one source (a [=QnA=] section in a Norwegian comic) insists that, since ducks are hatched not born, they were all hatched at once.
* WiseBeyondTheirYears: It helps that as Woodchucks, they own [[GreatBigBookOfEverything a manual that covers basically everything in the Universe]].

[[AC:Tropes applying to Huey]]
* CasanovaWannabe:
events following deeply upsets her. In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack,'' he was often trying to impress teenage girls, but not having much luck with them.
* {{Keet}}: The most enthusiastic and energetic of the boys. Taken further with his 2017 incarnation.
* RedIsHeroic: His signature color is red, and whenever the boys are depicted as having a leader it's him. He's also the most dedicated Junior Woodchuck (in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'' he seems to be the only one of the boys who's a Junior Woodchuck at all), and the quintessential "Good Scout."
* SmallNameBigEgo: In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack,'' he has style and charisma but is essentially useless.
* ThisIsSomethingHesGotToDoHimself: In ''ComicBook/{{Dragonlords}}'', he harvests and carries a clearly too heavy load of food for his wounded dragon Sniffles all by himself, despite his brothers and uncle being close by, implying that he wanted to care for his steed and friend by himself.

[[AC:Tropes applying to Dewey]]
* IJustWantToBeSpecial: Seems to be the nephew most prone to experience this, wanting to be seen as an individual instead of just one of three brothers. It comes up in both the original ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' and in ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', and even in a couple of comics (one Italian
another comic had him be the first one of the brothers to get a crush on a girl, and subsequently he made more of an effort to stand out... which annoyed Huey and Louie to no end), before it became a major part of his character in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017''. It probably ties in to his MiddleChildSyndrome.
* MiddleChildSyndrome: Confirmed by the creators of ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'' to have a bad case of this.
* TheSmartGuy: In the original ''{{WesternAnimation/DuckTales|1987}}'' and in ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', he's the smartest of the nephews. ''Quack Pack'' turned him
published that same year, Grandma is pressured into an InsufferableGenius who would gloat about his intelligence.

[[AC:Tropes applying to Louie]]
* DeadpanSnarker: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', he always seems to have some sort
dressing up by her new maid and she picks a dress that reminds her of snide or sarcastic comment for all occasions.
time spent with Humperdink.
* LazyBum: As a part According to ''"The Good Old Daze"'', he had the nasty habit of CharacterExaggeration in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017''. Whereas Huey and Dewey are hard workers, Louie is happy forcing Donald to just kick back and watch TV.
do all the chores when he was visiting. On top of that, he ate all the pies Grandma baked while Donald was at work, leaving nothing for his grandson.
* TagalongKid: Even if PosthumousCharacter: While not explicit, it's strongly implied that he's the same age as his two brothers, and never actually stopped from going along with them; whenever it comes up passed away, since he's consistently depicted as the youngest of the three (by a few hours), not present in any modern comic, and a follower rather than a leader.
* TheDitz: In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' and ''WesternAnimation/Ducktales1987'', he was portrayed as a naïve person who said or did dumb stuff.

[[AC:Tropes applying to Phooey]]
* AscendedMeme: Actually, Phooey isn't a character, but an artist's error. Occasionally, stressed-out comic artists would make a mistake and draw a fourth nephew who was suddenly there for one panel and then vanished again. Fans took to calling this fourth nephew "Phooey" (though "Barks," after Creator/CarlBarks, was a popular alternate name for him). In 1999, a story named "Much Ado About Phooey" canonized him by explaining that Huey, Dewey, and Louie had once been struck by lightning, and after that the image of a fourth nephew would occasionally materialize next to them only to vanish a few seconds later, and the
his family were so used to it that they basically didn't pay it any mind.rarely mention him.



[[folder: Scrooge [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:303:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lf_64.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''Christmas on Bear Mountain'' (1947)
-> Voiced by: Clarence Nash (1943); Dallas [=McKennon=] (1960), Bill Thompson (1967), Jack Wagner (1980's), Will Ryan (''Sport Goofy in Soccermania''), Creator/AlanYoung (1974-2016), Creator/PatFraley (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', Young Scrooge in "Once Upon a Dime"), John Kassir (''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse2013'', 2016-present), Creator/DavidTennant (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Donald's uncle, and Huey, Dewey and Louie's great uncle. The richest, and probably the cheapest duck in the world. [[CharacterCatchphrase He made his wealth by being tougher than the toughies and smarter than the smarties, and he made it square.]] He resides in a large bin full of money (which [[MoneyFetish he loves to dive around in like a porpoise, burrow through like a gopher, and toss it up and let it hit him on the head]]) in Duckburg, constantly seeking to increase his wealth.

to:

[[folder: Scrooge [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:303:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lf_64.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''Christmas on Bear Mountain'' (1947)
-> Voiced by: Clarence Nash (1943); Dallas [=McKennon=] (1960), Bill Thompson (1967), Jack Wagner (1980's), Will Ryan (''Sport Goofy in Soccermania''), Creator/AlanYoung (1974-2016), Creator/PatFraley (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', Young Scrooge in "Once Upon a Dime"), John Kassir (''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse2013'', 2016-present), Creator/DavidTennant (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Donald's uncle,
Quackmore Duck]]
[[AC: First appearance: ''"Carl Barks Duck Family Tree"'' (1950's/1981)]]
Donald
and Huey, Dewey Della Duck's father, Hortense's husband, and Louie's great uncle. The richest, Grandma and probably the cheapest duck Grandpa Duck's son, Quackmore first "appeared" as a simple name in a Duck family tree sketch made by Barks sometime in the world. [[CharacterCatchphrase He made his wealth by being tougher than the toughies and smarter than the smarties, and he made it square.]] He resides 1950's, which was eventually illustrated in 1981. His first true appearance as a large bin full of money (which [[MoneyFetish he loves to dive around character was in like a porpoise, burrow through like a gopher, and toss it up and let it hit him on the head]]) "The Invader Of Fort Duckburg" in Duckburg, constantly seeking to increase his wealth.1993.



* NumberOneDime: TropeNamer, though whether he actually fits the trope varies from writer to writer -- Creator/CarlBarks and Creator/DonRosa portray the titular dime's only value as being sentimental (and, for Magica de Spell, sympathetic (or rather symbolic) - it's powerful because it belongs to Scrooge, it's not inherently magical), other writers avert the trope by making it a GoodLuckCharm.
* TheAce: Especially under Rosa's pen. World's richest duck, completely self-made, does Franchise/IndianaJones' job for fun, worked about twenty jobs over his lifetime and was impressively good at all of them, and a good enough scrapper to keep the world's most dangerous crooks on their toes- all while pushing ninety years old.
* ActionSurvivor: In his {{Backstory}}, he survived quite a lot of daring feats.
* AdaptationalNiceGuy: ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' and its [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 2017 revival]] gives him a loving and kind heart in place of the cold flint in the chest of his comic version. He's still acerbic and greedy, but it's far more harmless and restricted than his other incarnations, or at the very least he tends to [[JerkassRealization repent a lot easier]] whenever he gains his ruthlessness characteristic to the comics.
* AdventurerArchaeologist: Although not formally educated (he has learned far more than most scholars ever will just by being on the road), this is what he does in his spare time.
* AffectionateNickname: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', [[InterclassFriendship Launchpad]] likes to call him "Mr. [=McDee=]."
* AffluentAscetic: Scrooge earns money only to save it. He doesn't believe in ConspicuousConsumption and will do anything he can to avoid spending money. He'll pay for the bare essentials necessary to fund his adventures (while searching for the best bargains in the process), but don't expect him to share the lavish, expensive tastes of his fellow millionaires, which he finds ridiculous. Not afraid to pay his taxes though.
* ArbitrarilyLargeBankAccount: Just how much money he has is typically never stated, and when it is it's in made up nonsense terms. One story, ''Terror of the Beagle Boys'', has him mention that it would take him "thirteen years to count" how much money is in his safe. Occasionally an exact number will be placed on his wealth, but it still varies, since many of his stories involve him making more money, and it's always such a large amount (eg: "umpteen-gazillion, three-hundred-and-fifty-zillion, nine-hundred-forty-billion, six dollars and fourteen cents") that he may as well not have a limit placed on it anyways.
** It's a minor meme that his bin holds "three cubic acres of cash", although the exact worth of that is hard to say, given the bin contains everything from nickels and dimes to thousand-dollar bills to fist-sized diamonds. And also because an acre is two dimensions already, so three cubic acres would somehow have to be a [[AlienGeometries six-dimensional]] shape. Humanity is currently only aware of four dimensions, and the fourth one is time.
* ArchEnemy: He has several rivals, but the closest thing Scrooge has to a mortal enemy is without a doubt Flintheart Glomgold.
* ArtEvolution: It took about four years until Barks settled on the final design for the character.
* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: Offered the chance by [[Literature/TheKalevala Väinämöinen]] himself.
-->'''Väinämöinen:''' "I go beyond the northern lights! Have you courage for this journey? Is {{the Sampo}} worth that to you? If so, I grant thee, Scrooge, a gift, since from exile you did save me, and the Sampo did recreate! We are as one... I can feel it! Your love for lands of ice and snow... for the grandeur of the northland... Are you ready to come with me? Have prosperity eternal? Forsake your own Kalevala... [[spoiler: where a lost love still awaits you?]]"
-->'''Scrooge:''' [[spoiler: [[LittleNo "No."]]]]
-->'''Väinämöinen:''' [[spoiler: "Ah! Right choice! Congratulations! Hail and farewell, Sampo savior!"]]
* BadassBoast: Repeated with variants across Carl Barks's comics: ''"I'm Scrooge [=McDuck=], and if you don't [X], I'll buy this [Y] and fire you!"''
* BarefootCartoonAnimal: He wears spats, but no shoes.
* BeenThereShapedHistory: Especially in the comics, Scrooge is legendary for the number of famous historical figures he's interacted with, along with his own accomplishments. In-universe, he's been brought up as one of the few living legends still remaining from the frontier era.
* BenevolentBoss: In most continuities, while he won't spring for office luxuries like, say, break room coffee machines, (one comic shows his secretary had to buy and pay for the office coffee machine), he appreciates the talent and skills of his employees and pays them ''very'' well (which explains how the secretary was able to afford said coffee machine). Donald and the nephews are the only ones he really seems to cheap out on.
* BerserkButton: While he has a HairTriggerTemper to begin with, the one surefire way to get on Scrooge's bad side is theft or cheating of any kind, but particularly those who amass wealth by scamming or stealing from others, especially the ones weaker than themselves.
** Also, don't imply that he made his fortune through luck rather than hard work.
** Don't talk trash about his deceased parents. [[http://imgur.com/gallery/q2JNP No chains will restrain his fury.]]
* BigEater: While his frugal sensibilities keep him from indulging much on his own dime, Scrooge actually LOVES food, and will often stuff himself when others are footing the tab, usually when Donald cooks.
* BraveScot: He is Scottish and often goes on adventures with his nephew and grandnephews.
* BreakoutCharacter: He was introduced as just a wealthy miser uncle for WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck by Creator/CarlBarks, and took off in popularity to become a famous character in his own right.
* BrokenAce:
** For a while in the comics. The strain of doing all the impressive things he's done - and repeatedly losing everything he had - made him hard-hearted and mean-spirited, something that alienated him from his once-close family for decades. Adding to that is that since Scrooge ''worked'' for all his money, and he spent so much time doing so, he has no idea how to act in high-society circles someone as rich as him would be expected to participate in leaving him with no real friends.
** This continues in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''. Scrooge is the richest duck in the world and has more adventures in a year than most people have in a lifetime -- despite the fact that he's getting on in years. However, he's also quite insecure about his relationships with his friends and family, secretly fearing for at least part of the series that they're really interested in his money, not him.
* ByronicHero: Especially in ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''. He's physically capable, cunning, brave, and charismatic, and he manages to achieve his success by being "tougher than the toughies and sharper than the sharpies". Despite this, he feels alienated from the world because almost everyone around him are crooks who are ready to swindle/rob him or those who hate him out of jealousy.
* CaneFu: In the present era, as he needs to use a cane to get around but retains his fighting spirit and badass nature, he naturally uses it as his main weapon.
* CantGetAwayWithNuthin: Originally PlayedForDrama, with the one time Scrooge didn't make his money "square"; the destruction of Foola Zoola's village, widely considered to be the worst thing Scrooge did in his life and would haunt him for decades to come, not to mention destroying his relationship with his sisters. It still pales in comparison to the actions of virtually every other businessman during the Gilded Age, something Scrooge himself complains about before his HeelRealization.
** More comedic examples involve the backlash Scrooge receives when his greed starts to cross the line, even when it's not actually dishonest, such as in "His Majesty [=McDuck=], or pulling a dirty trick while competing with Glomgold, especially if Glomgold hasn't done anything himself yet, like in "The Island On the Edge of Time".
* CelibateHero: He's been in relationships (notably Goldie), but never married.
* CharacterCatchphrase: "I made it by being tougher than the toughies and smarter than the smarties! And I made it square!" This line was only used once by Carl Barks, but it was so memorable that other writers (e.g. Don Rosa) turned it into a catchphrase. It's also a BadassBoast, since Scrooge prides himself on being an HonestCorporateExecutive who never made his money unfairly.
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: Scrooge was introduced as a genuine {{Jerkass}}, a CorruptCorporateExecutive who was ruthlessly stingy and greedy, well surpassing the meanness and cruelty of his Creator/CharlesDickens namesake. As the character became more and more popular and Barks discovered how much potential he had as a protagonist, though, he became a much more heroic figure. This was the interpretation that Creator/DonRosa preferred, and he even used his magnum opus, ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'', to explain just how Scrooge could have gone from the hardnosed but good-hearted individual he was in his youth and who he returns to being in the "present" to being the crusty, curmudgeonly skinflint he is when he first appears in the Disney Duckiverse.
* CollectorOfTheStrange: Is one, but also strangely disdains collectors. He has rare and valuable coins in his bin that are worth far more than they were minted for, to the right buyer, but he'd rather have the coins than their actual worth; to Scrooge, their real worth is as a reminder of the hard work he did to earn them.
* ConfirmedBachelor: In his youth he seriously considered marrying Glittering Goldie, but since then has shown little interest in marriage (and at times, great antipathy to the idea).
* CoolOldGuy: Not only does he have a past stuffed fit to bursting with fabulous adventures, he keeps on adventuring despite his advanced age.
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: DependingOnTheWriter. While he is sometimes portrayed as [[UnclePennybags the exact opposite]], Scrooge can be this trope also, especially in the Italian Disney comics. Notably, in ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'', his StartOfDarkness is seen, turning him from the HonestCorporateExecutive he sought to be into this [[spoiler: and costing him his relationship with his family for decades.]]
** Invoked in the story ''Zio Paperone e il Grande Papero'' where he has a JerkassRealization after reading ''[[Literature/NineteenEightyFour 1984]]'' and dreams of being an evil dictator until he cross the line and Donald leads a rebellion against him.
* CuttingCorners: Surprisingly averted with Scrooge: he'll of course try to economize on projects, but will ultimately yield to necessary expenses to avoid substandard results that could lead to greater costs undoing the negligence. For instance, Scrooge might ask if each rivet in an building construction is necessary, but will not argue with his construction crew when they firmly assert what is necessary for a properly built structure.
* DeadpanSnarker: Not ''quite'' on Donald's level, but he can snark with the best of them, often making cutting remarks about how clueless and clumsy his allies are.
* DependingOnTheWriter: Scrooge's ruthlessness and adherence to ethics. Older Italian comics (particularly those written by Guido Martina) tended to portray Scrooge much more in line with his initial {{Jerkass}} characterization, veering into CorruptCorporateExecutive territory. Barks himself went back to a more ruthless Scrooge in a few Donald-centered gag stories.
** ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', notably, goes the other way, turning Scrooge LighterAndSofter by giving him an openly sentimental streak and sense of family values that he seldom, if ever, displayed in the comics.
** Even his NumberOneDime is portrayed as a {{good luck charm}}, depending on the writer -- [[BerserkButton don't let Scrooge know about this!]]
** Scrooge's relationship with his staff varies as well. In one comics story where Donald was experiencing a world without himself, Scrooge invited his staff to a dinner, only to find that none of them wanted to spend any more time with him than necessary. ''[=DuckTales=]'', perhaps as part of the LighterAndSofter nature of the story, has Scrooge having a vitriolic (on his side) but overall positive relationship with his staff, who (as he himself seems to realize) are some of the only good friends he has.
** The role of artillery in the Money Bin's defenses: while the Bin ''always'' has four carronades, their importance for the defense against attacks compared to Gyro's more technological defenses, or even different kinds of artillery (that include a residuate from the Boer War and an Italian WWII residuate) varies with the story. The only constant is that the cannons are what he uses when he wants to ''destroy'' something or for longer range (Gyro's gadgets are usually made to immobilize attackers, and are relatively short-ranged).
** His relationship with women and his attachment to his own celibacy differs. A number of stories have elderly Scrooge maintaining a long-distance relationship with his old flame Glittering Goldie [=O'Gilt=], while other depict their relationship as having ended a long time ago. His relationship with his stalker/love interest Brigitta [=MacBridge=] has variously been depicted as a one-sided attraction, a business rivalry fueled by their emotions, genuine companionship, to a love-hate relationship. A running gag is that Scrooge turns into an overly jealous boyfriend whenever any other male character shows interest in Brigitta. A number of Italian stories have added a love interest for Scrooge called Molly [=McGold=], a workaholic businesswoman who turned down Scrooge's marriage proposals but is not against dating him. (Only three appearances between 1989 and 1997). The story "Zio Paperone e le grandi conquiste" (Uncle Scrooge and the Great Conquests, December, 1997) has a female reporter investigating Scrooge's love life and discovering that he still has genuinely affectionate relationships with Goldie, Brigitta, Molly, and Magica! The story ends with the reporter falling for Scrooge and chasing after him, while an intimidated Scrooge wonders who she is.
* DespairEventHorizon:
** In the alternate universe that Paperinik visits in ''History of a Disappearance'', Scrooge's Number One dime is accidentally destroyed by a criminal, putting Scrooge in such a sorry state that he cedes almost all of his wealth and corporate holdings to that dimension's ''Donald''. He then becomes the new guardian of Huey, Dewey, and Louie after his nephew ditches them to enjoy his newfound money and power.
** Also happens in ''ComicBook/TheDuckWhoNeverWas''; in an alternate universe where Donald was never born, Gus Goose became Scrooge's assistant, and was soon tricked into handing over his NumberOneDime by Magica De Spell (she disguised herself as a street vendor selling hamburgers for a dime a piece). With the loss of his dime, Scrooge's spirit was broken, and easily crushed by Flintheart Glomgold, who swindled him out of the rest of his fortune.
* {{Determinator}}: He didn't become this rich by giving up, after all.
* DramaQueen: Grew a bit of a dramatic streak in his old age, such as fainting when he loses out on a treasure, acting like paying for something causes him physical pain, and gets ''really'' theatrical whenever his fortune is threatened.
* DrivenByEnvy: ''Return To Forbidden Valley'' implies that at least part of the reason for Scrooge's harsh treatment of Donald, despite the many times Donald has helped him attain a treasure or to defend his money, is that Scrooge envies Donald's life. Despite his poverty, Donald has a family and the freedom Scrooge had in his youth to seek new adventures and new accomplishments without the constant demands and worries that running a massive financial empire brings.
* DubNameChange:
** In Swedish, he's famously known as "Joakim Von Anka", as the clan name [=McDuck=] does not translate well (Anka is Duck in Swedish). The family is still a Scottish clan, but is identified as the "Von Anka" clan in all comics and supplementary materials.
** In French, he is known as "Balthazar Picsou", with his first name being chosen for its ressemblance to "Ebenezer" and his last name coming from the expression "pique-sou" meaning miser. Interestingly enough, in French, Scrooge is usullay called by his [[LastNameBasis last name]] by everyone, even Donald or his great-nephews.
* DudeWheresMyRespect: The people of Duckburg tend to forget that Scrooge single-handedly turned Duckburg from a small village into a mayor city, and later fixed the economy in the middle of the Great Depression.
* EarlyBirdCameo: Though it may be a pure coincidence, a character closely resembling Scrooge made an appearance in the [[WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts short]] ''The Spirit of '43'' as Donald's "thrifty saver" conscience four years before Scrooge's actual debut in comics, though whether Scrooge as we know him was based on this character is presumably something that only Creator/CarlBarks himself would have known.
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: Scrooge in his early appearances in Barks' run on Donald Duck comics was not as hypercompetent as his later roles and his adaptations would have you believe. He was at times as clumsy and klutzy as Donald and the latter was not easily cowed by his uncle as later stories would have you believe. He was also simply wealthy, not the richest duck in the world. In "The Old Castle's Secret" he is in danger of going bankrupt and needs a few measly millions in the form of the family treasure to save his company.
** While ''The Old Castle's Secret'' (June 1948) is Scrooge's first major appearance and fleshed out his character and background, it still has some rather peculiar moments. Early in the story, Huey, Louie, and Dewey want to test their uncles' courage and simulate the sound of an explosion. Both Scrooge and Donald faint out of fear. Later, Donald and Scrooge are trapped behind a locked door for quite a while. When Donald learns that Scrooge has a loaded gun in his pocket, he asks why didn't his uncle try to shoot the lock. Scrooge admits that he did not think about it, and asks Donald to kick him for his mistake.
** Another peculiar early story is ''Voodoo Hoodoo'' (August, 1949). According to this story, in 1879 an adult and already wealthy Scrooge managed to displace a native African tribe from their hereditary lands, in order to claim the land as his own. And that he was cursed to be followed by a vengeful zombie for 70 years. A few years later, Creator/CarlBarks established that young Scrooge earned his fortune in the Klondike Gold Rush (1896-1899) and that he was previously impoverished. Trying to reconcile ''Voodoo Hoodoo'' with the rest of Scrooge's origin stories, Creator/DonRosa retconned the dare from 1879 to 1909.
* EideticMemory: He remembers the history of each and every coin in his Money Bin. [[spoiler: Also his HiddenDepths; he is so protective of his coins not for their monetary value, but because each of them is a treasured memory.]]
** Though some stories portray his memory at not being exactly perfect. ''Back to the Klondike'' (March 1953) for example has him suffering memory lapses, to the point that he is forgetting who Donald and his other nephews are. The story has him take medication to restore his memory, and he suddenly has flashbacks to forgotten memories from the 1890s. ''The Coin'' also provides another example, where the titular coin that he gives to Donald turns out to be extremely important, but Scrooge is unable to remember this right away. A somewhat more comedic example comes from the Italian story "The Search for the Zodiac Stone: An Epic Yarn of Mice and Ducks!" (1990) where several characters have allied in search of the pieces of a valuable Zodiac Circle. One of the pieces used to belong to an old friend and business partner of Scrooge, but its current whereabouts are unknown. Scrooge gives detailed descriptions of decades-old journeys to Donald and Mickey Mouse, as they attempt to retrace the career of the missing friend. Donald and Mickey soon find that Scrooge's faulty memory had mixed up essential details, landing them in trouble again and again. When they return empty-handed from their travels, they discover that Scrooge had forgotten another key piece of information. When Scrooge and the missing man's partnership ended, Scrooge had received the piece of the Zodiac Circle as a parting gift. The missing piece was in the Money Bin for over 50 years, and Scrooge had forgotten that he owned it.
* TheFettered: A point of pride for Uncle Scrooge is that he made his money honestly.
* Fiction500: Scrooge is the wealthiest duck in the world, has an enormous building holding his cash, his fortune exceeds trillions in worth, and his financial empire spans the world.
* {{Flanderization}}: His portrayal in early Italian-produced comics exaggerated his character traits from the American comic of the time to comical extremes. Scrooge was stunningly violent and cruel towards absolutely everyone, with zero aversions towards outright criminal acts. One story mentioning he made a lot of his fortune from running an opium smuggling cartel. He usually got away with anything and everything purely because he was rich.
* FriendlyEnemy: He gets surpringly good along with most of his enemies, especially the Beagle Boys and to a lesser degree Magica [=DeSpell=] and John D. Rockerduck (Flintheart Glomgold being a rare exception). He's rather fast to help them out, [[EnemyMine especially against bigger threats]]. As someone with a few loyal friends outside of his family, it sometimes seems that Scrooges rivalries and fiendships would count as some of his deepest relationship with others.
* GoodIsNotNice: After he fully grows into his mainstream characterization, Scrooge is an honest man who does care for his family and holds onto his scruples with an iron grip... but he's also cranky, bad-tempered, and a major skinflint.
* GoneHorriblyRight: Memorable double example in "The Secret of Atlantis". Scrooge has ASimplePlan to become the owner of the world's rarest coin by purchasing every minted copy of the 1916 quarter, then dump all but one into the ocean, thus ensuring that if anyone ever wants one (that's not the one he's putting up for sale), they will have to go through hell to get it. Guess who promptly has their rare coin run over by a steamroller? After much adventuring, Scrooge finally gets a replacement... and then learns that his orchestrated scarcity has made the quarter so valuable that there is only one person in the world who could possibly afford it. No prizes for guessing who.
* {{Greed}}: His defining negative character trait. But maybe not. See HiddenDepths below.
* GreenEyedEpiphany: In his relationship with Brigitta, Scrooge typically avoids her. But when he sees other males interested in her, he surprisingly often (DependingOnTheWriter) turns into an CrazyJealousGuy.
* GuileHero: As part of his childhood BadassCreed to "be tougher than the toughies and sharper than the sharpies", Scrooge is an expert at Gambits of various kinds, and will usually resort to his brains rather than his brawns when dealing with enemies.
* HairTriggerTemper: A family trait of the [=McDucks=], though he still has nothing on his sister Hortense and her son Donald.
* HatOfAuthority: He didn't have the top hat in his first appearances, but now it's basically an IconicItem given it's a visual indicator of Scrooge being rich and elegant.
* HeroAntagonist: Early appearances aside, Scrooge is usually portrayed as good guy - at least in his own stories. In some European stories, Scrooge acts still antagonistic towards Donald. Many Donald stories revolve around Donald either wanting to be let alone and is forced by Scrooge to go along on his adventures or Scrooge trying to trick Donald to pay his debts and his rent and pressing him into jobs and activities Donald clearly doesn't want. Those stories are usually told from Donald's perspective, as in his own stories he appears nicer towards Donald and Donald is the one not carrying about his uncle.
* HeroWithBadPublicity: Because of his bad attitude, people are afraid of him, even though he's really not a bad person. His family members and a handful of outsiders know what he's really like.
* HiddenDepths: While most people (including Donald, at times) see him as nothing but a greedy miser, stories that focus on his POV shows that he's far more than just that.
** In ''The Quest for Kalevala'', he was offered a chance for eternal prosperity in another realm. When it was implied that he will have to abandon [[spoiler: Goldie]], he simply said no.
** ''A Dream of a Lifetime'' has the Beagle Boys try to invade Scrooge's dream to find the code for his vaults. They initially assume that Scrooge ''must'' be dreaming about money, riches, and treasure, and is surprised that he keeps dream-jumping into dangerous adventures that they mistook as nightmares. Indeed, Scrooge loves money, but he loved the experiences and adventures he's been through to obtain them even more.
** ''"A Letter from Home [=/=] The Castle's Other Secret"'' laid it bare for readers to see. For one, he considered Donald to be ''richer'' than him, due to his love for his family and the thrill he still has from adventure, and considers himself to have become too caught up in the pursuit of money for its own sake and to have lost sight of his original goals.
--->'''Scrooge, in front of his parents' gravestones:''' Momma... Poppa... did you ''approve'' of my mission in life? Were you ''proud'' that I traveled the globe seeking my fortune? Did you ''understand'' my passion for ''adventure'' on the world's frontiers? Or the ''thrill'' I got from ''matching wits'' with the sharpiest of sharpies -- and ''winning''? Or did you think I was only on it for the ''money''? What ''did'' you think? I'll never know... I was always on the move, so you couldn't send me a letter from home!
* HoardingTheProfits: In stories where Scrooge McDuck is hit with AdaptationalJerkass and AdaptationalVillainy treatment, he often steals riches that his nephews hardly earned.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: And proud of it. Call him a greedy bargainer, call him a slavedriving taskmaster, call him an exploitative manipulator... but he prides himself on earning his fortune "square" without being a dishonest and immoral businessman -- unlike his EvilCounterpart, Flintheart Glomgold. Typical DependingOnTheWriter and CharacterizationMarchesOn caveats apply.
** He only deviated from this once in his lifetime... and it cost him dearly and ended up turning him into the bitter lonely miser we saw him as in the beginning before meeting his grandnephews and began redeeming himself.
** He also apparently reports his income 100% honestly and pays all his taxes in full.
* HypercompetentSidekick: Anyone working at the Money Bin directly under him is this, a result of his work ethics and actually making sure his subordinates are as skilled as they're supposed to be.
* ItsTheJourneyThatCounts: Played with time and time again in multiple stories. It's often shown that though Scrooge certainly enjoys being rich and staying that way that it's the numerous memories attached to his money that he truly cherishes. We see a few times in fact that he's able to remember how he earned every single coin in his Money Bin.
** Could take this a step further too, because Don Rosa especially often has Scrooge go on some amazing adventure for treasure, only to not actually attain the treasure in the end. Yet Scrooge still ends the story perfectly content.
** ''Son of the Sun'' ends in such a way, though Scrooge is partially satisfied as the entire purpose of chasing after the remaining Incan treasure was as part of a race against Glomgold. Though the treasure is beyond Scrooge's reach, at the bottom of a lake, Scrooge does buy the lake and everything in it. Meaning that even though he can't physically touch the treasure he technically owns it, which as he points out to Flintheart was the purpose of their contest.
** ''Treasure of the Ten Avatars'' might be a more straightforward example. The treasure that eluded Alexander the Great is lost, but Scrooge seems perfectly satisfied with the fact that it was the descendants of the original owners of said treasure who claimed it.
** Definitely seems to be on a case-by-case basis as there are times when we see Scrooge distraught over some lost treasure, despite the amazing journey that led him to it. Two examples are Barks' ''Fabulous Philosopher's Stone'', which Scrooge has to give up at the story's end, and the ''Lost Crown of Genghis Khan''. The first Scrooge is forced to give to the International Money Council and the second he loses, after having already gained it on one adventure, while chasing after another treasure. His distress over the second one even serves to inspire him to go searching for its counterpart in Rosa's ''Crown of the Crusader Kings'', which he also loses. (In ''Fabulous Philosopher's Stone'', Scrooge has to give up the philosopher's stone for his own safety. The stone genuinely turns all objects into gold, but it is also slowly killing whoever uses it. And Scrooge was the one using it last.)
** This can definitely be applied to how Scrooge feels about his time in the Klondike at least. Rosa's ''Last Sled to Dawson'' has him reciting a poem about this very thing when he is leaving the Klondike to return to Scotland:
--> '''Scrooge:''' There's gold, and it's haunting and haunting, it's luring me on as of old! Yet it isn't the gold that I'm wanting so much as just finding the gold! It's the great, big, broad land 'way up yonder! It's the forest where silence has lease! It's the beauty that thrills me with wonder! It's the stillness that fills me with peace!
** ''Attack of the Hideous Space Varmints'' opens and ends with Scrooge being depressed at the fact that he's thoroughly searched through all the frontiers and possibilites of making money on Earth, so he craves a new frontier, specifically that of space and the opportunities it can offer him. He craves it so much in fact that he nearly ends up staying in space altogether.
--> '''Scrooge:''' It's the final frontier! It's just what I've felt a... yearning for! It's... wonderful!
* {{Jerkass}}: Started as one and is still occasionally written as such. Italian comics in particular tend to exaggerate his negative traits for comedic purposes. His default personality is incredibly abrasive, miserly and cold in general. For example he regularly forces Donald and his nephews to polish the coins one by one in order to pay off Donald's debts.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Once character development takes him away from being an actual jerk and one learns to see through his act. Formally established in in the Barks comic "Back to the Klondike." He likes people to think he's a heartless skinflint, because it means that less people try to beg or mooch off him. In one story, disillusioned by how many people outright hated him, he tried to drop the facade and become a philanthropist, only to have everyone walk all over him to such an extreme that he immediately put the facade back up. The only people he's consistently comfortable dropping the facade with is Huey, Dewey and Louie. Even Donald doesn't often get to see his soft side, he's afraid that Donald would lose any respect he has for Scrooge if he ever realized that the cold exterior isn't all there is.
* KarmaHoudini: He rarely gets the comeuppance he deserves for his extreme pettiness and poor treatment of his family and workers. Though it's arguable how poor it actually is, since most of it is PlayedForLaughs.
* KnightInSourArmor: Scrooge is quite a heroic character, for all his sour, cynical outlook on life.
* LastOfHisKind: The last (male) member of the once great Clan [=McDuck=]. Even with Donald and the nephews now with him, he is the last person alive still using the clan name.
* LonelyAtTheTop: One of Scrooge's most important life lessons; if you do get wealthy and powerful, friendship is something you'll have to forsake.
-->'''Scrooge:''' Hiya, Lem! Hiya, Joe!\\
'''Lem:''' NUTS TO YOU!\\
'''Joe:''' Get lost, Mr. Big-Shot Copper King!\\
'''Scrooge:''' They were my '''friends!''' What did I '''do?'''\\
'''Rockerduck:''' You got '''rich,''' son! Best get used to it like ⚞''sigh''⚟ I did! You'll have their '''respect,''' but no longer their '''love!'''\\
'''Scrooge:''' Ah, who needs 'em? I'll have '''money!'''\\
'''Rockerduck:''' I hope I wasn't '''wrong''' about you, son!
--->-- ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'', "Chapter 4: The Raider of the Copper Hill"
* MadeOfIron: In more than one way. Physically, he's survived getting hit by his multitude of traps, including cannons, electrocution and minefield (''Guardians of the Lost Library''). ''Physiologically'', no realistic person could have worked as hard as Scrooge and live to that age.
* ManipulativeBastard: He's ''very'' good at manipulating people to get what he wants (hence the "smarter than the smarties" part of his iconic boast), and while how much of an asshole he can be about it is something that [[DependingOnTheWriter depends on the story]], he ''always'' does his best to profit by it.
* MaybeEverAfter: In Don Rosa's stories at least. He has hinted in some of his comments both in- and out of universe that his imagined "last Scrooge [=McDuck=] adventure", which "Disney would never let him write", involves Scrooge going back to White Agony Creek to spend his final days. And he wouldn't be alone.
* MeaningfulName: In the Egyptian translations, his name is ''Aam Dahab'', which literally means Uncle Gold.
* MoralityChain: [[spoiler: His Sisters until [[JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope 1909]] and finally left after [[IgnoredEpiphany 1930]].]]
* MoralityPet : Donald and the triplets in the present are the people he cares about the most.
* MrViceGuy: Former and rightful TropeNamer. He's for the most part a decent person, but he's one greedy duck, and his greed often causes problems for both himself and his nephews.
* MoneyFetish: So much so that one of his favorite pastimes is ''swimming'' in it. He's also been shown bathing in it on occasion.
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: When Scrooge finally realizes what he's become after he has an African village destroyed to trick their voodoo chief into giving him their lands, he rushes out to try and make amends - but it's too late. The voodoo priest, a magician named Foola Zoola, sends an unrelenting zombie after him, carrying a voodoo curse, then rushes off into the night. Scrooge would be able to dodge the zombie on-and-off for decades to come, but does not make amends with Zoola until almost 50 years later.
** This is also the infamous incident where Scrooge fails in making his money "square" and the event that leads to the falling out between him and his sisters, resulting in ''decades'' of loneliness and becoming a bitter miserable old duck until he meets Donald and his nephews.
* NoGuyWantsToBeChased: His relationship with Brigitta. She is usually seen chasing after Scrooge, trying to get him to fall in love with her and Scrooge rejects her time and time again.
* NoHistoricalFiguresWereHarmed: He appears to be (to some extent) an exaggerated parody of Andrew Carnegie, another wealthy Scottish émigré who [[RagsToRiches rose from humble origins]] to become one of the world's richest men. Much like Scrooge, Carnegie relocated to America at a young age to seek a better life, and he was known for controlling a vast and diverse empire of unrelated business interests (pioneering the concept of "horizontal integration").
* NonIdleRich: Scrooge has to keep earning money - business deals, treasure hunts, lucrative gambles - or else he sinks into depression.
* OldWindbag: Not that he hasn't genuinely lived an interesting life, but he tends to be characterised as this anyway, boring his family and workers with pompous tales of his youthful grit, often with the same oft-repeated stock phrases.
* {{Omniglot}}: Due to the decades he spent traveling the world while earning his fortune he can speak nearly every language (and those he doesn't he can work his way around using similar languages he does know).
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Scrooge got his name for a reason; he seriously loves money. If he reaches the point of not caring if he loses his cash (or a treasure he's been chasing), it's a sign things have gone pretty seriously downhill.
* OohMeAccentsSlipping: The eighties ''Ducktales'' episode "Blue Collar Scrooge" has Scrooge get amnesia, and at first he asks "Who am I?" in a not-quite-Scottish accent, before sounding American with "And why am I talking in this funny accent?"
* PapaWolf: His most noble and admirable attribute is his love for Huey, Dewey, and Louie, and how he is willing to forsake his life, and even his ''money'' to protect them in stories such as "The Mysterious Stone Ray." This also transfers to Donald in the comics, though Donald rarely needs protection as much as the nephews.
* {{Pride}}: While most people would associate Scrooge with Greed, Pride is actually a fairly strong character flaw in him as well. It was Pride that kept him from reconciling with his sisters for all those years, and it was pure luck that he did not spend the remainder of his life alone in a dark old house.
** Not so much luck when you take into account that he's the one that got into contact with Donald, Huey, Dewey, and Louie for the events of ''Christmas on Bear Mountain'' and ''The Richest Duck in the World''. As he admits to his sister in ''"A Letter from Home"'' he ended up doing so because his loneliness had finally grown to be too much for him, so it could be said that it outweighed whatever pride he still had.
** It's notable that while he does love Donald he'll often be loathe to admit it because above all else he values Donald's respect and would hate for him to learn his old uncle is just a big softie deep down.
* PrivateMilitaryContractors: While officially not, he might as well have the Duckburg National Guard at his beck and call. In one story, he ordered a missile strike. The soldier in charge of the missile silo compared it akin to a pizza delivery service, but his superior told him to comply, saying [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney Scrooge's taxes cover 97.3% of the military budget.]]
* {{Prospector}}: Scrooge's first big break came while he was prospecting, though it took him years of hard work. He's prospected for gold, copper, oil, silver, uranium, and just about anything that one can prospect for.
* RagsToRiches: At the core of Scrooge's character. He started out as a poor boy in Scotland with his family not even being able to afford to live on their ancestral lands, but over the course of a lifetime of hard work, he managed to become the richest man in the world. And he did it square!
* RetiredBadass: Carl Barks's "Back to the Klondike" revealed his past as an intimidating, fiery youth and is what inspired Don Rosa's ''Life and Times''. Present time he's still a badass, but the fact that he used to be a badass among badasses is something most people wouldn't have guessed at first glance.
* RichesToRags: A few stories, such as ''A Financial Fable'', will have this happen to Scrooge in the event that the Beagle Boys or some natural disaster causes him to lose all of his money. He always ends up getting his money back in the end though.
** In the original ''{{WesternAnimation/DuckTales|1987}}'' episode "Blue Collar Scrooge" he gets amnesia and briefly appears in shabbier clothing as he can't remember who he really is.
* RichInDollarsPoorInSense: Subverted; Scrooge got and maintains his enormous fortune by virtue of the fact that he is incredibly smart and has lots of common sense -- there's a reason two of his three favorite boasts are about being "smarter than the smarties" and "sharper than the sharpies". Arguably also zigzagged, in that despite this intelligence, Scrooge's obsession with money is sometimes implied to go a bit beyond sensible -- namely, his tendency to alienate other people through his stinginess, or living in miserably austere conditions despite having more than enough money to live a comfortable lower-class lifestyle.
* ScrewTheMoneyIHaveRules: His third favorite boast, of course, is that he "made it all square". And because he ''has'' rules, he's able to earn even ''more'' money.
* TheScrooge: He's named the way he is for a reason. He is as big a skinflint as his namesake from ''Literature/AChristmasCarol''... though that doesn't mean he's not an admirable member of the NonIdleRich. Which, at least in Don Rosa's works, is actually a family trait of the entire [=McDuck=] Clan. Scrooge routinely pays his nephews 15 to 30 cents for adventures that take them around the globe and require them to risk their lives.
* SecretKeeper: He's the only duck on Earth to know about Donald and Reginella's relationship after [[spoiler:[[LaserGuidedAmnesia they had to erase their memories of each other]]]].
* SelfMadeMan: And he's extremely proud of this fact. In fact, this is why he despairs at the thought of ever willing his fortune to Donald Duck or to Gladstone Gander. Donald is hard-working, certainly more so than his cousin, but also bumbling, impulsive, and prone to wasting money when he has it. Gladstone, on the other hand, has a knack for earning money and certainly wouldn't waste it... but that's because he's too lazy to buy most things and he generally coasts by on his supernaturally good luck, which offends Scrooge.
** In his younger days after striking rich in Klondike, he would lend money to gold prospectors in return for 50% of the profit (a fairly reasonable rate for the gold rush days). When a sleazy entrepreneur showed up with the idea to hire workers to mine FOR him (at a rate that could easily be described as a slave's wages), Scrooge approved his loan - in return for ''95% of his profit'', 45% of which would go right to his workers. Scrooge values intelligence, but he values hard work far more.
* ShipperOnDeck: Has been shown supporting Donald's potential relationship with Reginella, even ''funding'' him with no expectation to get back the money.
* SimpleYetOpulent: Surprisingly enough he keeps around more than a few expensive things, though they aren't really ostentatious. Most notably is the Money Bin itself: it's just a plain cube defended by a few well-maintained old artillery pieces, but the simple fact he can ''afford'' to keep "three cubic acres" of cash and defend it with guns whose parts and ammo have to be custom made (the most recent mentioned, the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannone_da_149/40_modello_35 Cannone da 149/40 modello 35]], went out of production in 1944) speaks volumes about his wealth.
* SkewedPriorities: In the 2017 animated reboot, he's shown to be tolerant and indulgent of his nephews using his mansion for "an elaborate series of cutthroat war-games", but snaps into a cold TranquilFury when he discovers Donald taking a bath and doing his laundry in Scrooge's personal bathroom.
** He would rather blow holes in his office walls hunting money-eating moths with a shogun than pay $10 to fix the window.
* SpecsOfAwesome: The pince-nez glasses are certainly necessary given how old he is, and thus help him be such an intrepid duck. According to Creator/DonRosa, Scrooge originally had perfect vision, but his early years of cattle drives and prospecting in the bright, open plains of Montana led to him needing reading glasses by age 18. His six years in the frozen tundra of Klondike finished the job, requiring him to wear glasses permanently at 35.
* StrangerInAFamiliarLand: Scrooge left home at age 12, and only returned briefly at 18. When he finally returned home to settle down for good at age 35, he had a hard time assimilating to highlander culture.
* StrongFamilyResemblance: In Don Rosa's stories, Scrooge's father Fergus looks identical to his son as an adult.
** As seen in Carl Barks' ''Voodoo Hoodoo'' a young Scrooge [=McDuck=] looked identical to Donald, which is why Bombie the Zombie and Foola Zoola both mistake Donald for Scrooge when they see him. Rosa would go on to explain this, in his ''Life and Times'' as Scrooge tucking his whiskers in.
* TakingTheBullet: Almost, for his sister Matilda in ''"A Letter from Home"''. Fortunately, the pistol blew up on the gunman due to having been turned to gold by the Philosopher's Stone.
* ThriftyScot: In the Creator/DonRosa canon, this is a family trait of the [=McDuck=] Clan, and it's one they're very proud of -- the ghosts of Scrooge's ancestors ensure he survives a would-have-been fatal injury when they discover his destiny is to become the most tightfisted tightward the world will ever see. In fact, one of Scrooge's ancestors lost a battle (and his life) because he was too cheap to buy arrows for his archers. Another lost a major battle because his army wouldn't fight for the measly wages he was paying them. When Angus Whiskerville insults the clan, referring to them as "liars, cowards and tightwads", Scrooge and Fergus are furious... at the first two insults, not the third.
* TookALevelInCynic: As shown in the original series episode "Once Upon a Dime", Scrooge started his career trusting enough to be scammed more than once. By the start of the series, he's a cynic. One of the points of the story is his friends and family sending him through a level in idealism; while he remains more guarded than some of the other characters, he learns there are some people he can rely on and opens up to them.
* TookALevelInJerkass: Many Italian comic writers make him look far, far, ''worse'' than even Creator/CarlBarks ever portrayed him. Also, while his first comic appearance ended with Scrooge warming up to his family, even valuing Donald for his supposed bravery, his following appearances in Donald Duck-comics see him once again being a mean, antagonistic force with a low opinion on his nephew.
* TyrannicalTownTycoon: A more benevolent example than most, but the whole of Duckburg built is around his financial empire and he holds lease with the majority of the city. This trope is even invoked by Donald in ''ComicBook/ALittleSomethingSpecial'', when he points out to the Mayor that Scrooge has never tried to tell anyone how to run the town, even though Scrooge could basically rule it like a king if he wanted to.
* UnclePennybags: When in a good mood, or when he's investing in a worthy cause or honest entrepreneur (the trick, however, is ''convincing'' him). It's expecting him to give you money for the asking that he won't truck with. One storybook where Donald and the Nephews were having a charity sale to save their grandmother's farm showed Scrooge applauding their hard work, and promising to match every dollar they made 2-to-1.
* UngratefulBastard: Falls into this sometimes with his treatment of Donald and tendency to ignore or forget just how much his nephews helped him along the way when it came to collecting many of the treasures he's so proud of.
** The opening of ''Return to Xanadu'' has Donald calling Scrooge out on this after his Uncle continually uses language to imply that he found many of his prizes, such as the Crown of Genghis Khan, by himself.
*** The ending of the same story features Scrooge yelling at Donald for opening a sluice gate that was causing the valley of Xanadu to slowly fill up with water, which would've destroyed everything there and caused the citizens to drown, because Donald opened the gate before Scrooge and the triplets were back on dry land. This leads to them getting sucked into the whirpool inthe middle of the lake, which the sluice gate was plugging up. So despite the fact that Donald saved an entire valley and as far as he knew was saving his family as well, Scrooge still berates him when he see's him again. In comparison, Huey, Dewey, and Louie are happy to see Donald and the people of Xanadu proclaim Donald a hero (Along with the rest of the Duck Family as well in fact).
** The beginning of ''Cash Flow'' has a similar scene, with Scrooge mocking Donald for not being able to hold onto his money. Then when Donald points out that he's still helped Scrooge keep his money out of the hands of thieves time and again Scrooge outright states that he doesn't need Donald's help to keep his money at all. This comes back to bite Scrooge later when the Beagle Boys have him backed into a corner and he's forced to beg Donald for help.
** It could be argued that Rosa has a tendency to highlight this trait at the start of many of his stories, dating back to the first one, ''"The Son of the Sun"''. The beginning has Scrooge, as in the other stories mentioned above, going on about the amazing treasures ''he's'' found, such as The Crown of Genghis Khan, The Philosopher's Stone, and King Solomon's Mines. When Louie points out that they (The Duck Family) know all of this because they were with Scrooge on each of his adventure's Scrooge's reply is to complain about how he knows since he paid each of them 30 cents an hour every time. He then goes on to claim that he's the world's champion treasure hunter. Ironic since, based on the fact Louie pointed out, that's really a title that the entire family should share.
** One of these occurs at the end of Rosa's ''War of the Wendigo''. Perhaps more surprising than anything is the fact that someone else calls Scrooge out on this besides Donald. After the pollution and chemicals one of his mill's produces ends up leaving a surrounding area of land barren, Scrooge is angry since he believes that he could have stopped all of this from happening had the Peeweegah, from Barks' ''Land of the Pygmy Indians'' not stopped him and claims that ''mother nature had no right to take it all away from'' him. The Peeweegah Chief, who's been informed of Scrooge's history by his nephews then gives a completely epic response:
-->'''Chief:''' Did man fill your mines with diamonds? Did man fill your wells with oil? Did man plant the ancient forests that turned to coal for your digging? Scrooge Mac-Duck, you owe your riches to the Mother Nature Spirit! This day Spirit has decided to take back this tiny portion!
* UnstoppableRage: There is a story where at one point, Scrooge is chained up in a riverboat, with his enemies gloating over him and reading out loud one of his letters from his mother and mocking it. [[TemptingFate Then, reading another letter (which Scrooge had not yet had the opportunity to read himself) from his father, establishing that his mother had died in the interim since the previous letter]]. And then [[BullyingTheDragon mocking that one]]. This sends him off the deep end. What followed ended up becoming a LEGEND in later years: he ripped apart the riverboat with his BARE HANDS (including hurling two smokestacks and throwing a piano out the window) and dragged the baddies off to jail. In present times, no one is even sure if that incident even happened. Scrooge himself claims that the riverboat was destroyed by a timely boiler explosion, and that he took out Soapy and his men in the resulting commotion. Whether he's just trying to downplay events, or if the scene we see is a case of UnreliableNarrator is up to the reader. But all in all, ''[[MemeticBadass don't fuck with McDuck.]]''
** It's worth noting the letter that truly set Scrooge off was not a letter from his mother, but a recent one from his ''father'' that had bad news within. You can see the moment that Scrooge snaps when Soapy mockingly chides his men not to be mean "to a poor little ''motherless'' lad." Soapy should consider himself lucky that Scrooge let him ''live''.
* ViolentGlaswegian: He's Scottish, has a real short temper, and won't hesitate to get violent. And according to Creator/DonRosa's stories, Scrooge was actually born and raised in Glasgow, so it's a literal example of the trope.
* WantingIsBetterThanHaving: While he does love money, it is shown several times that Scrooge was at his happiest ''earning'' that money, and that it was his adventures and experiences that actually made him happy.
* WouldHitAGirl: Usually adopts this attitude towards Magica de Spell, whom he has no compunction fighting physically with. Fair, considering that Magica makes up for her lack in physical strength with her magic abilities.
* WouldRatherSuffer: Scrooge would rather be kidnapped and killed than pay a ransom, [[http://www.angelfire.com/comics/disney/e7te6af.htm as this story goes]]. Thankfully, he comes to his senses.
* YankTheDogsChain: Until he struck it rich in Klondike, he had one or two close calls with striking it rich, but was prevented from keeping it for one reason or another.

to:

* NumberOneDime: TropeNamer, though whether he actually fits the trope varies from writer AmazonChaser: He fell in love with Hortense while she was yelling at him in rage.
* DisappearedDad: Like his wife Hortense, there is no record of exactly what happened
to writer -- Creator/CarlBarks and Creator/DonRosa portray the titular dime's only value as him, his last appearance being sentimental (and, for Magica de Spell, sympathetic (or rather symbolic) - it's powerful because it belongs to Scrooge, it's not inherently magical), other writers avert the trope by making it a GoodLuckCharm.
* TheAce: Especially under Rosa's pen. World's richest duck, completely self-made, does Franchise/IndianaJones' job for fun, worked about twenty jobs over his lifetime and was impressively good at all of them, and a good enough scrapper to keep the world's most dangerous crooks on their toes- all while pushing ninety years old.
* ActionSurvivor: In his {{Backstory}}, he survived quite a lot of daring feats.
* AdaptationalNiceGuy: ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' and its [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 2017 revival]] gives him a loving and kind heart in place of the cold flint in the chest of his comic version. He's still acerbic and greedy, but it's far more harmless and restricted than his other incarnations, or
disastrous family reunion at the very least end of "The Empire Builder from Calisota" where he tends and Hortense tried to [[JerkassRealization repent a lot easier]] whenever he gains his ruthlessness characteristic to the comics.
* AdventurerArchaeologist: Although not formally educated (he has learned far more than most scholars ever will just by being on the road), this is what he does in his spare time.
* AffectionateNickname: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', [[InterclassFriendship Launchpad]] likes to call him "Mr. [=McDee=]."
* AffluentAscetic:
introduce Scrooge earns money only to save it. He doesn't believe in ConspicuousConsumption his niece and will do anything he can to avoid spending money. He'll pay for nephew. By the bare essentials necessary to fund his adventures (while searching for the best bargains in the process), but don't expect him to share the lavish, expensive tastes of his fellow millionaires, which he finds ridiculous. Not afraid to pay his taxes though.
* ArbitrarilyLargeBankAccount: Just how much money he has is typically never stated, and when it is it's in made up nonsense terms. One story, ''Terror of the Beagle Boys'', has him mention that it would take him "thirteen years to count" how much money is in his safe. Occasionally an exact number will be placed on his wealth, but it still varies, since many of his stories involve him making more money, and it's always such a large amount (eg: "umpteen-gazillion, three-hundred-and-fifty-zillion, nine-hundred-forty-billion, six dollars and fourteen cents") that he may as well not have a limit placed on it anyways.
** It's a minor meme that his bin holds "three cubic acres of cash", although the exact worth of that is hard to say, given the bin contains everything from nickels and dimes to thousand-dollar bills to fist-sized diamonds. And also because an acre is two dimensions already, so three cubic acres would somehow have to be a [[AlienGeometries six-dimensional]] shape. Humanity is currently only aware of four dimensions, and the fourth one is time.
* ArchEnemy: He has several rivals, but the closest thing Scrooge has to a mortal enemy is without a doubt Flintheart Glomgold.
* ArtEvolution: It took about four years until Barks settled on the final design for the character.
* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: Offered the chance by [[Literature/TheKalevala Väinämöinen]] himself.
-->'''Väinämöinen:''' "I go beyond the northern lights! Have you courage for this journey? Is {{the Sampo}} worth that to you? If so, I grant thee, Scrooge, a gift, since from exile you did save me, and the Sampo did recreate! We are as one... I can feel it! Your love for lands of ice and snow... for the grandeur of the northland... Are you ready to come with me? Have prosperity eternal? Forsake your own Kalevala... [[spoiler: where a lost love still awaits you?]]"
-->'''Scrooge:''' [[spoiler: [[LittleNo "No."]]]]
-->'''Väinämöinen:''' [[spoiler: "Ah! Right choice! Congratulations! Hail and farewell, Sampo savior!"]]
* BadassBoast: Repeated with variants across Carl Barks's comics: ''"I'm Scrooge [=McDuck=], and if you don't [X], I'll buy this [Y] and fire you!"''
* BarefootCartoonAnimal: He wears spats, but no shoes.
* BeenThereShapedHistory: Especially in the comics, Scrooge is legendary for the number of famous historical figures
comics present, he's interacted with, along with presumed long-dead.
* GenerationXerox: Don Rosa depicts him as looking virtually identical to
his own accomplishments. In-universe, he's been brought up as one of the few living legends still remaining from the frontier era.
* BenevolentBoss: In most continuities, while he won't spring for office luxuries like, say, break room coffee machines, (one comic shows his secretary had to buy and pay for the office coffee machine), he appreciates the talent and skills of his employees and pays them ''very'' well (which explains how the secretary was able to afford said coffee machine). Donald and the nephews are the only ones he really seems to cheap out on.
* BerserkButton: While he has a HairTriggerTemper to begin with, the one surefire way to get on Scrooge's bad side is theft or cheating of any kind, but particularly those who amass wealth by scamming or stealing from others,
son, especially the ones weaker than themselves.
** Also, don't imply that he made his fortune through luck rather than hard work.
** Don't talk trash about his deceased parents. [[http://imgur.com/gallery/q2JNP No chains will restrain his fury.]]
* BigEater: While his frugal sensibilities keep him from indulging much on his own dime, Scrooge actually LOVES food, and will often stuff himself when others are footing the tab, usually when Donald cooks.
* BraveScot: He is Scottish and often goes on adventures with his nephew and grandnephews.
* BreakoutCharacter: He was introduced as just a wealthy miser uncle for WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck by Creator/CarlBarks, and took off in popularity to become a famous character
in his own right.
youth.
* BrokenAce:
** For a while in the comics. The strain of doing all the impressive things he's done - and repeatedly losing everything he had - made him hard-hearted and mean-spirited, something that alienated him from his once-close family for decades. Adding to that is that since Scrooge ''worked'' for all his money, and he spent so much time doing so, he has no idea how to act in high-society circles someone as rich as him would be expected to participate in leaving him with no real friends.
** This continues in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''. Scrooge is the richest duck in the world and has more adventures in a year than most people have in a lifetime -- despite the fact that he's getting on in years. However, he's also quite insecure about his relationships with his friends and family, secretly fearing for at least part of the series that they're really interested in his money, not him.
* ByronicHero: Especially in ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''. He's physically capable, cunning, brave, and charismatic, and he manages to achieve his success by being "tougher than the toughies and sharper than the sharpies". Despite this, he feels alienated from the world because almost everyone around him are crooks who are ready to swindle/rob him or those who hate him out of jealousy.
* CaneFu: In the present era, as he needs to use a cane to get around but retains his fighting spirit and badass nature, he naturally uses it as his main weapon.
* CantGetAwayWithNuthin: Originally PlayedForDrama, with the one time Scrooge didn't make his money "square"; the destruction of Foola Zoola's village, widely considered to be the worst thing Scrooge did in his life and would haunt him for decades to come, not to mention destroying his relationship with his sisters. It still pales in comparison to the actions of virtually every other businessman during the Gilded Age, something Scrooge himself complains about before his HeelRealization.
** More comedic examples involve the backlash Scrooge receives when his greed starts to cross the line, even when it's not actually dishonest, such as in "His Majesty [=McDuck=], or pulling a dirty trick while competing with Glomgold, especially if Glomgold hasn't done anything himself yet, like in "The Island On the Edge of Time".
* CelibateHero: He's been in relationships (notably Goldie), but never married.
* CharacterCatchphrase: "I made it by being tougher than the toughies and smarter than the smarties! And I made it square!" This line
HairTriggerTemper: A massive one, which was matched only used once by Carl Barks, but it was so memorable that other writers (e.g. Don Rosa) turned it into a catchphrase. It's also a BadassBoast, since Scrooge prides himself on being an HonestCorporateExecutive who never made his money unfairly.
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: Scrooge was introduced as a genuine {{Jerkass}}, a CorruptCorporateExecutive who was ruthlessly stingy and greedy, well surpassing the meanness and cruelty of his Creator/CharlesDickens namesake. As the character became more and more popular and Barks discovered how much potential he had as a protagonist, though, he became a much more heroic figure. This was the interpretation that Creator/DonRosa preferred, and he even used his magnum opus, ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'', to explain just how Scrooge could have gone from the hardnosed but good-hearted individual he was in his youth and who he returns to being in the "present" to being the crusty, curmudgeonly skinflint he is when he first appears in the Disney Duckiverse.
* CollectorOfTheStrange: Is one, but also strangely disdains collectors. He has rare and valuable coins in his bin that are worth far more than they were minted for, to the right buyer, but he'd rather have the coins than their actual worth; to Scrooge, their real worth is as a reminder of the hard work he did to earn them.
Hortense.
* ConfirmedBachelor: In his youth he seriously considered marrying Glittering Goldie, but since then has shown little interest in marriage (and at times, great antipathy to the idea).
* CoolOldGuy: Not only does he have a past stuffed fit to bursting with fabulous adventures, he keeps on adventuring despite his advanced age.
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: DependingOnTheWriter. While he is sometimes portrayed as [[UnclePennybags the exact opposite]], Scrooge can be this trope also, especially in the Italian Disney comics. Notably, in ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'', his StartOfDarkness is seen, turning him from the HonestCorporateExecutive he sought to be into this [[spoiler: and costing him his relationship with his family for decades.]]
** Invoked in the story ''Zio Paperone e il Grande Papero'' where he has a JerkassRealization after reading ''[[Literature/NineteenEightyFour 1984]]'' and dreams of being an evil dictator until he cross the line and Donald leads a rebellion against him.
* CuttingCorners: Surprisingly averted with Scrooge: he'll of course try to economize on projects, but will ultimately yield to necessary expenses to avoid substandard results that could lead to greater costs undoing the negligence. For instance, Scrooge might ask if each rivet in an building construction is necessary, but will not argue with his construction crew when they firmly assert what is necessary for a properly built structure.
* DeadpanSnarker: Not ''quite'' on Donald's level, but he can snark with the best of them, often making cutting remarks about how clueless and clumsy his allies are.
* DependingOnTheWriter: Scrooge's ruthlessness and adherence to ethics. Older Italian comics (particularly those written by Guido Martina) tended to portray Scrooge much more in line with his initial {{Jerkass}} characterization, veering into CorruptCorporateExecutive territory. Barks himself went back to a more ruthless Scrooge in a few Donald-centered gag stories.
** ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', notably, goes the other way, turning Scrooge LighterAndSofter by giving him an openly sentimental streak and sense of family values that he seldom, if ever, displayed in the comics.
** Even his NumberOneDime is portrayed as a {{good luck charm}}, depending on the writer -- [[BerserkButton don't let Scrooge know about this!]]
** Scrooge's relationship with his staff varies as well. In one comics story where Donald was experiencing a world without himself, Scrooge invited his staff to a dinner, only to find that none of them wanted to spend any more time with him than necessary. ''[=DuckTales=]'', perhaps as part of the LighterAndSofter nature of the story, has Scrooge having a vitriolic (on his side) but overall positive relationship with his staff, who (as he himself seems to realize) are some of the only good friends he has.
** The role of artillery in the Money Bin's defenses: while the Bin ''always'' has four carronades, their importance for the defense against attacks compared to Gyro's more technological defenses, or even different kinds of artillery (that include a residuate from the Boer War and an Italian WWII residuate) varies with the story. The only constant is that the cannons are what he uses when he wants to ''destroy'' something or for longer range (Gyro's gadgets are usually made to immobilize attackers, and are relatively short-ranged).
** His relationship with women and his attachment to his own celibacy differs. A number of stories have elderly Scrooge maintaining a long-distance relationship with his old flame Glittering Goldie [=O'Gilt=], while other depict their relationship as having ended a long time ago. His relationship with his stalker/love interest Brigitta [=MacBridge=] has variously been depicted as a one-sided attraction, a business rivalry fueled by their emotions, genuine companionship, to a love-hate relationship. A running gag is that Scrooge turns into an overly jealous boyfriend whenever any other male character shows interest in Brigitta. A number of Italian stories have added a love interest for Scrooge called Molly [=McGold=], a workaholic businesswoman who turned down Scrooge's marriage proposals but is not against dating him. (Only three appearances between 1989 and 1997). The story "Zio Paperone e le grandi conquiste" (Uncle Scrooge and the Great Conquests, December, 1997) has a female reporter investigating Scrooge's love life and discovering that he still has genuinely affectionate relationships with Goldie, Brigitta, Molly, and Magica! The story ends with the reporter falling for Scrooge and chasing after him, while an intimidated Scrooge wonders who she is.
* DespairEventHorizon:
** In the alternate universe that Paperinik visits in ''History of a Disappearance'', Scrooge's Number One dime is accidentally destroyed by a criminal, putting Scrooge in such a sorry state that he cedes almost all of his wealth and corporate holdings to that dimension's ''Donald''. He then becomes the new guardian of Huey, Dewey, and Louie after his nephew ditches them to enjoy his newfound money and power.
** Also happens in ''ComicBook/TheDuckWhoNeverWas''; in an alternate universe where Donald was never born, Gus Goose became Scrooge's assistant, and was soon tricked into handing over his NumberOneDime by Magica De Spell (she disguised herself as a street vendor selling hamburgers for a dime a piece). With the loss of his dime, Scrooge's spirit was broken, and easily crushed by Flintheart Glomgold, who swindled him out of the rest of his fortune.
* {{Determinator}}: He didn't become this rich by giving up, after all.
* DramaQueen: Grew a bit of a dramatic streak in his old age, such as fainting when he loses out on a treasure, acting like paying for something causes him physical pain, and gets ''really'' theatrical whenever his fortune is threatened.
* DrivenByEnvy: ''Return To Forbidden Valley'' implies that at least part of the reason for Scrooge's harsh treatment of Donald, despite the many times Donald has helped him attain a treasure or to defend his money, is that Scrooge envies Donald's life. Despite his poverty, Donald has a family and the freedom Scrooge had in his youth to seek new adventures and new accomplishments without the constant demands and worries that running a massive financial empire brings.
* DubNameChange:
** In Swedish, he's famously known as "Joakim Von Anka", as the clan name [=McDuck=] does not translate well (Anka is Duck in Swedish). The family is still a Scottish clan, but is identified as the "Von Anka" clan in all comics and supplementary materials.
** In French, he is known as "Balthazar Picsou", with his first name being chosen for its ressemblance to "Ebenezer" and his last name coming from the expression "pique-sou" meaning miser. Interestingly enough, in French, Scrooge is usullay called by his [[LastNameBasis last name]] by everyone, even Donald or his great-nephews.
* DudeWheresMyRespect: The people of Duckburg tend to forget that Scrooge single-handedly turned Duckburg from a small village into a mayor city, and later fixed the economy in the middle of the Great Depression.
* EarlyBirdCameo: Though it may be a pure coincidence, a character closely resembling Scrooge made an appearance in the [[WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts short]] ''The Spirit of '43'' as Donald's "thrifty saver" conscience four years before Scrooge's actual debut in comics, though whether Scrooge as we know him was based on this character is presumably something that only Creator/CarlBarks himself would have known.
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: Scrooge in his early appearances in Barks' run on Donald Duck comics was not as hypercompetent as his later roles and his adaptations would have you believe. He was at times as clumsy and klutzy as Donald and the latter was not easily cowed by his uncle as later stories would have you believe. He was also simply wealthy, not the richest duck in the world. In "The Old Castle's Secret" he is in danger of going bankrupt and needs a few measly millions in the form of the family treasure to save his company.
** While ''The Old Castle's Secret'' (June 1948) is Scrooge's first major appearance and fleshed out his character and background, it still has some rather peculiar moments. Early in the story, Huey, Louie, and Dewey want to test their uncles' courage and simulate the sound of an explosion. Both Scrooge and Donald faint out of fear. Later, Donald and Scrooge are trapped behind a locked door for quite a while. When Donald learns that Scrooge has a loaded gun in his pocket, he asks why didn't his uncle try to shoot the lock. Scrooge admits that he did not think about it, and asks Donald to kick him for his mistake.
** Another peculiar early story is ''Voodoo Hoodoo'' (August, 1949). According to this story, in 1879 an adult and already wealthy Scrooge managed to displace a native African tribe from their hereditary lands, in order to claim the land as his own. And that he was cursed to be followed by a vengeful zombie for 70 years. A few years later, Creator/CarlBarks established that young Scrooge earned his fortune in the Klondike Gold Rush (1896-1899) and that he was previously impoverished. Trying to reconcile ''Voodoo Hoodoo'' with the rest of Scrooge's origin stories, Creator/DonRosa retconned the dare from 1879 to 1909.
* EideticMemory: He remembers the history of each and every coin in his Money Bin. [[spoiler: Also his HiddenDepths; he is so protective of his coins not for their monetary value, but because each of them is a treasured memory.]]
** Though some stories portray his memory at not being exactly perfect. ''Back to the Klondike'' (March 1953) for example has him suffering memory lapses, to the point that he is forgetting who Donald and his other nephews are. The story has him take medication to restore his memory, and he suddenly has flashbacks to forgotten memories from the 1890s. ''The Coin'' also provides another example, where the titular coin that he gives to Donald turns out to be extremely important, but Scrooge is unable to remember this right away. A somewhat more comedic example comes from the Italian story "The Search for the Zodiac Stone: An Epic Yarn of Mice and Ducks!" (1990) where several characters have allied in search of the pieces of a valuable Zodiac Circle. One of the pieces used to belong to an old friend and business partner of Scrooge, but its current whereabouts are unknown. Scrooge gives detailed descriptions of decades-old journeys to Donald and Mickey Mouse, as they attempt to retrace the career of the missing friend. Donald and Mickey soon find that Scrooge's faulty memory had mixed up essential details, landing them in trouble again and again. When they return empty-handed from their travels, they discover that Scrooge had forgotten another key piece of information. When Scrooge and the missing man's partnership ended, Scrooge had received the piece of the Zodiac Circle as a parting gift. The missing piece was in the Money Bin for over 50 years, and Scrooge had forgotten that he owned it.
* TheFettered: A point of pride for Uncle Scrooge is that he made his money honestly.
* Fiction500: Scrooge is the wealthiest duck in the world, has an enormous building holding his cash, his fortune exceeds trillions in worth, and his financial empire spans the world.
* {{Flanderization}}: His portrayal in early Italian-produced comics exaggerated his character traits from the American comic of the time to comical extremes. Scrooge was stunningly violent and cruel towards absolutely everyone, with zero aversions towards outright criminal acts. One story mentioning he made a lot of his fortune from running an opium smuggling cartel. He usually got away with anything and everything purely because he was rich.
* FriendlyEnemy: He gets surpringly good along with most of his enemies, especially the Beagle Boys and to a lesser degree Magica [=DeSpell=] and John D. Rockerduck (Flintheart Glomgold being a rare exception). He's rather fast to help them out, [[EnemyMine especially against bigger threats]]. As someone with a few loyal friends outside of his family, it sometimes seems that Scrooges rivalries and fiendships would count as some of his deepest relationship with others.
* GoodIsNotNice: After he fully grows into his mainstream characterization, Scrooge is an honest man who does care for his family and holds onto his scruples with an iron grip... but he's also cranky, bad-tempered, and a major skinflint.
* GoneHorriblyRight: Memorable double example in "The Secret of Atlantis". Scrooge has ASimplePlan to become the owner of the world's rarest coin by purchasing every minted copy of the 1916 quarter, then dump all but one into the ocean, thus ensuring that if anyone ever wants one (that's not the one he's putting up for sale), they will have to go through hell to get it. Guess who promptly has their rare coin run over by a steamroller? After much adventuring, Scrooge finally gets a replacement... and then learns that his orchestrated scarcity has made the quarter so valuable that there is only one person in the world who could possibly afford it. No prizes for guessing who.
* {{Greed}}: His defining negative character trait. But maybe not. See HiddenDepths below.
* GreenEyedEpiphany: In his relationship with Brigitta, Scrooge typically avoids her. But when he sees other males interested in her, he surprisingly often (DependingOnTheWriter) turns into an CrazyJealousGuy.
* GuileHero: As part of his childhood BadassCreed to "be tougher than the toughies and sharper than the sharpies", Scrooge is an expert at Gambits of various kinds, and will usually resort to his brains rather than his brawns when dealing with enemies.
* HairTriggerTemper: A family trait of the [=McDucks=], though he still has nothing on his sister Hortense and her son Donald.
* HatOfAuthority: He didn't have the top hat in his first appearances, but now it's basically an IconicItem given it's a visual indicator of Scrooge being rich and elegant.
* HeroAntagonist: Early appearances aside, Scrooge is usually portrayed as good guy - at least in his own stories. In some European stories, Scrooge acts still antagonistic towards Donald. Many Donald stories revolve around Donald either wanting to be let alone and is forced by Scrooge to go along on his adventures or Scrooge trying to trick Donald to pay his debts and his rent and pressing him into jobs and activities Donald clearly doesn't want. Those stories are usually told from Donald's perspective, as in his own stories he appears nicer towards Donald and Donald is the one not carrying about his uncle.
* HeroWithBadPublicity: Because of his bad attitude, people are afraid of him, even though he's really not a bad person. His family members and a handful of outsiders know what he's really like.
* HiddenDepths: While most people (including Donald, at times) see him Grew up as nothing a simple farmer, but spent decades as a greedy miser, stories that focus on his POV shows that high-ranking worker for Scrooge.
* ImportantHaircut: When he reappears in "The Empire Builder of Calisota",
he's far more than just that.
** In ''The Quest for Kalevala'', he was offered a chance for eternal prosperity in another realm. When it was implied that he will have to abandon [[spoiler: Goldie]], he simply said no.
** ''A Dream
begun neatly combing his head feathers as part of a Lifetime'' has the Beagle Boys try to invade joining Scrooge's dream to find the code for empire, which shows him shedding his vaults. They initially assume that FarmBoy past.
* LikeFatherLikeSon: He looks and behaves almost like his son Donald when he first meets his eventual wife Hortense.
* ObnoxiousInLaws:
Scrooge ''must'' be dreaming about money, riches, and treasure, and is surprised that he keeps dream-jumping into dangerous adventures that they mistook as nightmares. Indeed, Scrooge loves money, but he loved the experiences and adventures he's been through to obtain them even more.
** ''"A Letter from Home [=/=] The Castle's Other Secret"'' laid it bare for readers to see. For one, he considered Donald to be ''richer'' than him, due to his love for his family and the thrill he still has from adventure, and considers himself to have become too caught up in the pursuit of money for its own sake and to have lost sight
never thought highly of his original goals.
--->'''Scrooge, in front of his parents' gravestones:''' Momma... Poppa... did you ''approve'' of my mission in life? Were you ''proud'' that I traveled the globe seeking my fortune? Did you ''understand'' my passion for ''adventure'' on the world's frontiers? Or the ''thrill'' I got from ''matching wits''
brother-in-law, even with the sharpiest of sharpies -- and ''winning''? Or did you think I was only on it for the ''money''? What ''did'' you think? I'll never know... I was always on the move, so you couldn't send me a letter from home!
* HoardingTheProfits: In stories where Scrooge McDuck is hit with AdaptationalJerkass and AdaptationalVillainy treatment, he often steals riches that his nephews hardly earned.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: And proud of it. Call him a greedy bargainer, call him a slavedriving taskmaster, call him an exploitative manipulator... but he prides himself on earning his fortune "square" without being a dishonest and immoral businessman -- unlike his EvilCounterpart, Flintheart Glomgold. Typical DependingOnTheWriter and CharacterizationMarchesOn caveats apply.
** He only deviated from this once in his lifetime...
very limited panel time they shared, and it cost him dearly and ended up turning him into the bitter lonely miser we saw him as in the beginning before meeting his grandnephews and began redeeming himself.
** He also apparently reports his income 100% honestly and pays all his taxes in full.
shows.
* HypercompetentSidekick: Anyone working at the Money Bin directly under him is this, a result of his work ethics and actually making sure his subordinates are as skilled as they're supposed SatelliteLoveInterest: Compared to be.
* ItsTheJourneyThatCounts: Played with time and time again in multiple stories. It's often shown that though Scrooge certainly enjoys being rich and staying that way that it's the numerous memories attached to his money that
Hortense, he truly cherishes. We see a few times in fact that he's able to remember how he earned every single coin in his Money Bin.
** Could take this a step further too, because Don Rosa especially often
has Scrooge go on some amazing adventure for treasure, only next to not actually attain the treasure in the end. Yet Scrooge still ends the story perfectly content.
** ''Son of the Sun'' ends in such a way, though Scrooge is partially satisfied as the entire purpose of chasing after the remaining Incan treasure was as part of a race against Glomgold. Though the treasure is beyond Scrooge's reach, at the bottom of a lake, Scrooge does buy the lake and everything in it. Meaning that even though he can't physically touch the treasure he technically owns it, which as he points out to Flintheart was the purpose of their contest.
** ''Treasure of the Ten Avatars'' might be a more straightforward example. The treasure that eluded Alexander the Great is lost, but Scrooge seems perfectly satisfied with the fact that it was the descendants of the original owners of said treasure who claimed it.
** Definitely seems to be on a case-by-case basis as there are times when we see Scrooge distraught over some lost treasure, despite the amazing journey that led him to it. Two examples are Barks' ''Fabulous Philosopher's Stone'', which Scrooge has to give up at the story's end, and the ''Lost Crown of Genghis Khan''. The first Scrooge is forced to give to the International Money Council and the second he loses, after having already gained it on one adventure, while chasing after another treasure. His distress over the second one even serves to inspire him to go searching for its counterpart in Rosa's ''Crown of the Crusader Kings'', which he also loses. (In ''Fabulous Philosopher's Stone'', Scrooge has to give up the philosopher's stone for his own safety. The stone genuinely turns all objects into gold, but it is also slowly killing whoever uses it. And Scrooge was the one using it last.)
** This can definitely be applied to how Scrooge feels about his time in the Klondike at least. Rosa's ''Last Sled to Dawson'' has him reciting a poem about this very thing when he is leaving the Klondike to return to Scotland:
--> '''Scrooge:''' There's gold, and it's haunting and haunting, it's luring me on as of old! Yet it isn't the gold that I'm wanting so much as just finding the gold! It's the great, big, broad land 'way up yonder! It's the forest where silence has lease! It's the beauty that thrills me with wonder! It's the stillness that fills me with peace!
** ''Attack of the Hideous Space Varmints'' opens and ends with Scrooge being depressed at the fact that he's thoroughly searched through all the frontiers and possibilites of making money on Earth, so he craves a new frontier, specifically that of space and the opportunities it can offer him. He craves it so much in fact that he nearly ends up staying in space altogether.
--> '''Scrooge:''' It's the final frontier! It's just what I've felt a... yearning for! It's... wonderful!
* {{Jerkass}}: Started as one and is still occasionally written as such. Italian comics in particular tend to exaggerate his negative traits for comedic purposes. His default
no personality is incredibly abrasive, miserly and cold in general. For example he regularly forces Donald and his nephews to polish the coins one by one in order to pay off Donald's debts.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Once character development takes him away
aside from being an actual jerk a HairTriggerTemper and one learns to see through his act. Formally established in in the Barks comic "Back to the Klondike." He likes people to think he's a heartless skinflint, because it means that less people try to beg or mooch off him. In one story, disillusioned by how many people outright hated him, he tried to drop the facade and become a philanthropist, only to have everyone walk all over him to such an extreme that he immediately put the facade back up. The only people he's consistently comfortable dropping the facade with is Huey, Dewey and Louie. Even Donald doesn't often get to see his soft side, he's afraid that Donald would lose any respect he has for Scrooge if he ever realized that the cold exterior isn't all there is.
* KarmaHoudini: He rarely gets the comeuppance he deserves for his extreme pettiness and poor treatment of his family and workers. Though it's arguable how poor it actually is, since most of it is PlayedForLaughs.
* KnightInSourArmor: Scrooge is quite a heroic character, for all his sour, cynical outlook on life.
* LastOfHisKind: The last (male) member of the once great Clan [=McDuck=]. Even with Donald and the nephews now with him, he is the last person alive still using the clan name.
* LonelyAtTheTop: One of Scrooge's most important life lessons; if you do get wealthy and powerful, friendship is something you'll have to forsake.
-->'''Scrooge:''' Hiya, Lem! Hiya, Joe!\\
'''Lem:''' NUTS TO YOU!\\
'''Joe:''' Get lost, Mr. Big-Shot Copper King!\\
'''Scrooge:''' They were my '''friends!''' What did I '''do?'''\\
'''Rockerduck:''' You got '''rich,''' son! Best get used to it like ⚞''sigh''⚟ I did! You'll have their '''respect,''' but no longer their '''love!'''\\
'''Scrooge:''' Ah, who needs 'em? I'll have '''money!'''\\
'''Rockerduck:''' I hope I wasn't '''wrong''' about you, son!
--->-- ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'', "Chapter 4: The Raider of the Copper Hill"
* MadeOfIron: In more than one way. Physically, he's survived getting hit by his multitude of traps, including cannons, electrocution and minefield (''Guardians of the Lost Library''). ''Physiologically'', no realistic person could have worked as hard as Scrooge and live to that age.
* ManipulativeBastard: He's ''very'' good at manipulating people to get what he wants (hence the "smarter than the smarties" part of his iconic boast), and while how much of an asshole he can be about it is something that [[DependingOnTheWriter depends on the story]], he ''always'' does his best to profit by it.
* MaybeEverAfter: In Don Rosa's stories at least. He has hinted in some of his comments both in- and out of universe that his imagined "last Scrooge [=McDuck=] adventure", which "Disney would never let him write", involves Scrooge going back to White Agony Creek to spend his final days. And he wouldn't be alone.
* MeaningfulName: In the Egyptian translations, his name is ''Aam Dahab'', which literally means Uncle Gold.
* MoralityChain: [[spoiler: His Sisters until [[JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope 1909]] and finally left after [[IgnoredEpiphany 1930]].]]
* MoralityPet : Donald and the triplets in the present are the people he cares about the most.
* MrViceGuy: Former and rightful TropeNamer. He's for the most part a decent person, but he's one greedy duck, and his greed often causes problems for both himself and his nephews.
* MoneyFetish: So much so that one of his favorite pastimes is ''swimming'' in it. He's also been shown bathing in it on occasion.
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: When Scrooge finally realizes what he's become after he has an African village destroyed to trick their voodoo chief into giving him their lands, he rushes out to try and make amends - but it's too late. The voodoo priest, a magician named Foola Zoola, sends an unrelenting zombie after him, carrying a voodoo curse, then rushes off into the night. Scrooge would be able to dodge the zombie on-and-off for decades to come, but does not make amends with Zoola until almost 50 years later.
** This is also the infamous incident where Scrooge fails in making his money "square" and the event that leads to the falling out between him and his sisters, resulting in ''decades'' of loneliness and becoming a bitter miserable old duck until he meets Donald and his nephews.
* NoGuyWantsToBeChased: His relationship with Brigitta. She is usually seen chasing after Scrooge, trying to get him to fall in love with her and Scrooge rejects her time and time again.
* NoHistoricalFiguresWereHarmed: He appears to be (to some extent) an exaggerated parody of Andrew Carnegie, another wealthy Scottish émigré who [[RagsToRiches rose from humble origins]] to become one of the world's richest men. Much like Scrooge, Carnegie relocated to America at a young age to seek a better life, and he was known for controlling a vast and diverse empire of unrelated business interests (pioneering the concept of "horizontal integration").
* NonIdleRich: Scrooge has to keep earning money - business deals, treasure hunts, lucrative gambles - or else he sinks into depression.
* OldWindbag: Not that he hasn't genuinely lived an interesting life, but he tends to be characterised as this anyway, boring his family and workers with pompous tales of his youthful grit, often with the same oft-repeated stock phrases.
* {{Omniglot}}: Due to the decades he spent traveling the world while earning his fortune he can speak nearly every language (and those he doesn't he can work his way around using similar languages he does know).
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Scrooge got his name for a reason; he seriously loves money. If he reaches the point of not caring if he loses his cash (or a treasure he's been chasing), it's a sign things have gone pretty seriously downhill.
* OohMeAccentsSlipping: The eighties ''Ducktales'' episode "Blue Collar Scrooge" has Scrooge get amnesia, and at first he asks "Who am I?" in a not-quite-Scottish accent, before sounding American with "And why am I talking in this funny accent?"
* PapaWolf: His most noble and admirable attribute is his love for Huey, Dewey, and Louie, and how he is willing to forsake his life, and even his ''money'' to protect them in stories such as "The Mysterious Stone Ray." This also transfers to Donald in the comics, though Donald rarely needs protection as much as the nephews.
* {{Pride}}: While most people would associate Scrooge with Greed, Pride is actually a fairly strong character flaw in him as well. It was Pride that kept him from reconciling with his sisters for all those years, and it was pure luck that he did not spend the remainder of his life alone in a dark old house.
** Not so much luck when you take into account that he's the one that got into contact with Donald, Huey, Dewey, and Louie for the events of ''Christmas on Bear Mountain'' and ''The Richest Duck in the World''. As he admits to his sister in ''"A Letter from Home"'' he ended up doing so because his loneliness had finally grown to be too much for him, so it could be said that it outweighed whatever pride he still had.
** It's notable that while he does love Donald he'll often be loathe to admit it because above all else he values Donald's respect and would hate for him to learn his old uncle is just a big softie deep down.
* PrivateMilitaryContractors: While officially not, he might as well have the Duckburg National Guard at his beck and call. In one story, he ordered a missile strike. The soldier in charge of the missile silo compared it akin to a pizza delivery service, but his superior told him to comply, saying [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney Scrooge's taxes cover 97.3% of the military budget.]]
* {{Prospector}}: Scrooge's first big break came while he was prospecting, though it took him years of hard work. He's prospected for gold, copper, oil, silver, uranium, and just about anything that one can prospect for.
* RagsToRiches: At the core of Scrooge's character. He started out as a poor boy in Scotland with his family not even being able to afford to live on their ancestral lands, but over the course of a lifetime of hard work, he managed to become the richest man in the world. And he did it square!
* RetiredBadass: Carl Barks's "Back to the Klondike" revealed his past as an intimidating, fiery youth and is what inspired Don Rosa's ''Life and Times''. Present time he's still a badass, but the fact that he used to be a badass among badasses is something most people wouldn't have guessed at first glance.
* RichesToRags: A few stories, such as ''A Financial Fable'', will have this happen to Scrooge in the event that the Beagle Boys or some natural disaster causes him to lose all of his money. He always ends up getting his money back in the end though.
** In the original ''{{WesternAnimation/DuckTales|1987}}'' episode "Blue Collar Scrooge" he gets amnesia and briefly appears in shabbier clothing as he can't remember who he really is.
* RichInDollarsPoorInSense: Subverted; Scrooge got and maintains his enormous fortune by virtue of the fact that he is incredibly smart and has lots of common sense -- there's a reason two of his three favorite boasts are about being "smarter than the smarties" and "sharper than the sharpies". Arguably also zigzagged, in that despite this intelligence, Scrooge's obsession with money is sometimes implied to go a bit beyond sensible -- namely, his tendency to alienate other people through his stinginess, or living in miserably austere conditions despite having more than enough money to live a comfortable lower-class lifestyle.
* ScrewTheMoneyIHaveRules: His third favorite boast, of course, is that he "made it all square". And because he ''has'' rules, he's able to earn even ''more'' money.
* TheScrooge: He's named the way he is for a reason. He is as big a skinflint as his namesake from ''Literature/AChristmasCarol''... though that doesn't mean he's not an admirable member of the NonIdleRich. Which, at least in Don Rosa's works, is actually a family trait of the entire [=McDuck=] Clan. Scrooge routinely pays his nephews 15 to 30 cents for adventures that take them around the globe and require them to risk their lives.
* SecretKeeper: He's the only duck on Earth to know about Donald and Reginella's relationship after [[spoiler:[[LaserGuidedAmnesia they had to erase their memories of each other]]]].
* SelfMadeMan: And he's extremely proud of this fact. In fact, this is why he despairs at the thought of ever willing his fortune to Donald Duck or to Gladstone Gander. Donald is hard-working, certainly more so than his cousin, but also bumbling, impulsive, and prone to wasting money when he has it. Gladstone, on the other hand, has a knack for earning money and certainly wouldn't waste it... but that's because he's too lazy to buy most things and he generally coasts by on his supernaturally good luck, which offends Scrooge.
** In his younger days after striking rich in Klondike, he would lend money to gold prospectors in return for 50% of the profit (a fairly reasonable rate for the gold rush days). When a sleazy entrepreneur showed up with the idea to hire workers to mine FOR him (at a rate that could easily be described as a slave's wages), Scrooge approved his loan - in return for ''95% of his profit'', 45% of which would go right to his workers. Scrooge values intelligence, but he values hard work far more.
* ShipperOnDeck: Has been shown supporting Donald's potential relationship with Reginella, even ''funding'' him with no expectation to get back the money.
* SimpleYetOpulent: Surprisingly enough he keeps around more than a few expensive things, though they aren't really ostentatious. Most notably is the Money Bin itself: it's just a plain cube defended by a few well-maintained old artillery pieces, but the simple fact he can ''afford'' to keep "three cubic acres" of cash and defend it with guns whose parts and ammo have to be custom made (the most recent mentioned, the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannone_da_149/40_modello_35 Cannone da 149/40 modello 35]], went out of production in 1944) speaks volumes about his wealth.
* SkewedPriorities: In the 2017 animated reboot, he's shown to be tolerant and indulgent of his nephews using his mansion for "an elaborate series of cutthroat war-games", but snaps into a cold TranquilFury when he discovers Donald taking a bath and doing his laundry in Scrooge's personal bathroom.
** He would rather blow holes in his office walls hunting money-eating moths with a shogun than pay $10 to fix the window.
* SpecsOfAwesome: The pince-nez glasses are certainly necessary given how old he is, and thus help him be such an intrepid duck. According to Creator/DonRosa, Scrooge originally had perfect vision, but his early years of cattle drives and prospecting in the bright, open plains of Montana led to him needing reading glasses by age 18. His six years in the frozen tundra of Klondike finished the job, requiring him to wear glasses permanently at 35.
* StrangerInAFamiliarLand: Scrooge left home at age 12, and only returned briefly at 18. When he finally returned home to settle down for good at age 35, he had a hard time assimilating to highlander culture.
* StrongFamilyResemblance: In Don Rosa's stories, Scrooge's father Fergus looks identical to his son as an adult.
** As seen in Carl Barks' ''Voodoo Hoodoo'' a young Scrooge [=McDuck=] looked identical to Donald, which is why Bombie the Zombie and Foola Zoola both mistake Donald for Scrooge when they see him. Rosa would go on to explain this, in his ''Life and Times'' as Scrooge tucking his whiskers in.
* TakingTheBullet: Almost, for his sister Matilda in ''"A Letter from Home"''. Fortunately, the pistol blew up on the gunman due to having been turned to gold by the Philosopher's Stone.
* ThriftyScot: In the Creator/DonRosa canon, this is a family trait of the [=McDuck=] Clan, and it's one they're very proud of -- the ghosts of Scrooge's ancestors ensure he survives a would-have-been fatal injury when they discover his destiny is to become the most tightfisted tightward the world will ever see. In fact, one of Scrooge's ancestors lost a battle (and his life) because he was too cheap to buy arrows for his archers. Another lost a major battle because his army wouldn't fight for the measly wages he was paying them. When Angus Whiskerville insults the clan, referring to them as "liars, cowards and tightwads", Scrooge and Fergus are furious... at the first two insults, not the third.
* TookALevelInCynic: As shown in the original series episode "Once Upon a Dime", Scrooge started his career trusting enough to be scammed more than once. By the start of the series, he's a cynic. One of the points of the story is his friends and family sending him through a level in idealism; while he remains more guarded than some of the other characters, he learns there are some people he can rely on and opens up to them.
* TookALevelInJerkass: Many Italian comic writers make him look far, far, ''worse'' than even Creator/CarlBarks ever portrayed him. Also, while his first comic appearance ended with Scrooge warming up to his family, even valuing Donald for his supposed bravery, his following appearances in Donald Duck-comics see him once again being a mean, antagonistic force with a low opinion on his nephew.
* TyrannicalTownTycoon: A more benevolent example than most, but the whole of Duckburg built is around his financial empire and he holds lease with the majority of the city. This trope is even invoked by Donald in ''ComicBook/ALittleSomethingSpecial'', when he points out to the Mayor that Scrooge has never tried to tell anyone how to run the town, even though Scrooge could basically rule it like a king if he wanted to.
* UnclePennybags: When in
possibly a good mood, or when he's investing in a worthy cause or honest entrepreneur (the trick, however, is ''convincing'' him). It's expecting him to give you money for the asking that he won't truck with. One storybook where Donald and the Nephews were having a charity sale to save their grandmother's farm showed Scrooge applauding their hard work, and promising to match every dollar they made 2-to-1.
* UngratefulBastard: Falls into this sometimes with his treatment
sense of Donald and tendency to ignore or forget just how much his nephews helped him along the way when it came to collecting many of the treasures he's so proud of.
** The opening of ''Return to Xanadu'' has Donald calling Scrooge out on this after his Uncle continually uses language to imply that he found many of his prizes, such as the Crown of Genghis Khan, by himself.
*** The ending of the same story features Scrooge yelling at Donald for opening a sluice gate that was causing the valley of Xanadu to slowly fill up with water, which would've destroyed everything there and caused the citizens to drown, because Donald opened the gate before Scrooge and the triplets were back on dry land. This leads to them getting sucked into the whirpool inthe middle of the lake, which the sluice gate was plugging up. So despite the fact that Donald saved an entire valley and as far as he knew was saving his family as well, Scrooge still berates him when he see's him again. In comparison, Huey, Dewey, and Louie are happy to see Donald and the people of Xanadu proclaim Donald a hero (Along with the rest of the Duck Family as well in fact).
** The beginning of ''Cash Flow'' has a similar scene, with Scrooge mocking Donald for not being able to hold onto his money. Then when Donald points out that he's still helped Scrooge keep his money out of the hands of thieves time and again Scrooge outright states that he doesn't need Donald's help to keep his money at all. This comes back to bite Scrooge later when the Beagle Boys have him backed into a corner and he's forced to beg Donald for help.
** It could be argued that Rosa has a tendency to highlight this trait at the start of many of his stories, dating back to the first one, ''"The Son of the Sun"''. The beginning has Scrooge, as in the other stories mentioned above, going on about the amazing treasures ''he's'' found, such as The Crown of Genghis Khan, The Philosopher's Stone, and King Solomon's Mines. When Louie points out that they (The Duck Family) know all of this because they were with Scrooge on each of his adventure's Scrooge's reply is to complain about how he knows since he paid each of them 30 cents an hour every time. He then goes on to claim that he's the world's champion treasure hunter. Ironic since, based on the fact Louie pointed out, that's really a title that the entire family should share.
** One of these occurs at the end of Rosa's ''War of the Wendigo''. Perhaps more surprising than anything is the fact that someone else calls Scrooge out on this besides Donald. After the pollution and chemicals one of his mill's produces ends up leaving a surrounding area of land barren, Scrooge is angry since he believes that he could have stopped all of this from happening had the Peeweegah, from Barks' ''Land of the Pygmy Indians'' not stopped him and claims that ''mother nature had no right to take it all away from'' him. The Peeweegah Chief, who's been informed of Scrooge's history by his nephews then gives a completely epic response:
-->'''Chief:''' Did man fill your mines with diamonds? Did man fill your wells with oil? Did man plant the ancient forests that turned to coal for your digging? Scrooge Mac-Duck, you owe your riches to the Mother Nature Spirit! This day Spirit has decided to take back this tiny portion!
* UnstoppableRage: There is a story where at one point, Scrooge is chained up in a riverboat, with his enemies gloating over him and reading out loud one of his letters from his mother and mocking it. [[TemptingFate Then, reading another letter (which Scrooge had not yet had the opportunity to read himself) from his father, establishing that his mother had died in the interim since the previous letter]]. And then [[BullyingTheDragon mocking that one]]. This sends him off the deep end. What followed ended up becoming a LEGEND in later years: he ripped apart the riverboat with his BARE HANDS (including hurling two smokestacks and throwing a piano out the window) and dragged the baddies off to jail. In present times, no one is even sure if that incident even happened. Scrooge himself claims that the riverboat was destroyed by a timely boiler explosion, and that he took out Soapy and his men in the resulting commotion. Whether he's just trying to downplay events, or if the scene we see is a case of UnreliableNarrator is up to the reader. But all in all, ''[[MemeticBadass don't fuck with McDuck.]]''
** It's worth noting the letter that truly set Scrooge off was not a letter from his mother, but a recent one from his ''father'' that had bad news within. You can see the moment that Scrooge snaps when Soapy mockingly chides his men not to be mean "to a poor little ''motherless'' lad." Soapy should consider himself lucky that Scrooge let him ''live''.
* ViolentGlaswegian: He's Scottish, has a real short temper, and won't hesitate to get violent. And according to Creator/DonRosa's stories, Scrooge was actually born and raised in Glasgow, so it's a literal example of the trope.
* WantingIsBetterThanHaving: While he does love money, it is shown several times that Scrooge was at his happiest ''earning'' that money, and that it was his adventures and experiences that actually made him happy.
* WouldHitAGirl: Usually adopts this attitude towards Magica de Spell, whom he has no compunction fighting physically with. Fair, considering that Magica makes up for her lack in physical strength with her magic abilities.
* WouldRatherSuffer: Scrooge would rather be kidnapped and killed than pay a ransom, [[http://www.angelfire.com/comics/disney/e7te6af.htm as this story goes]]. Thankfully, he comes to his senses.
* YankTheDogsChain: Until he struck it rich in Klondike, he had one or two close calls with striking it rich, but was prevented from keeping it for one reason or another.
business.



[[folder: Daisy Duck]]
[[quoteright:167:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Dolly_866.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''Mr. Duck Steps Out'' (in animation), ''Donald makes a hit'' (in comics) (both 1940)
-> Voiced by: Clarence Nash (1940), Gloria Blondell (1945-1950), Ruth Clifford (1948), Vivi Janiss (1954), Creator/JuneForay (1960), Creator/KathSoucie (1986-1998), Diane Michelle (1998-1999), Creator/TressMacNeille (1999-present)

Donald's girlfriend, who is almost as temperamental as he is, but does have somewhat better self-control.

to:

[[folder: Daisy Della "Dumbella" Duck]]
[[quoteright:167:https://static.-> Voiced by: Creator/PagetBrewster (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Dolly_866.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''Mr. Duck Steps Out'' (in animation), ''Donald makes a hit'' (in comics) (both 1940)
-> Voiced by: Clarence Nash (1940), Gloria Blondell (1945-1950), Ruth Clifford (1948), Vivi Janiss (1954), Creator/JuneForay (1960), Creator/KathSoucie (1986-1998), Diane Michelle (1998-1999), Creator/TressMacNeille (1999-present)

org/pmwiki/pub/images/dumbella_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Donald's Nephews"'', 1937]]

Donald's girlfriend, who is almost as temperamental as he is, but does have somewhat better self-control.twin sister, and mother of Huey, Dewey and Louie.



* AdaptationalBadass: As ''Paperinika'' (Super Daisy), the DistaffCounterpart of Donald superhero-alter ego. While the character was prominent in Brazilian comics (in the '80s), in Italy she was quickly DemotedToExtra because she was AlwaysSomeoneBetter to Donald and an unlikeable feminist (these traits are toned down in the modern appearances). On ''rare'' occasions, her regular civilian self has also been updated into an ActionGirl, even going on adventures with Donald.
** In some stories, Daisy replaces Donald as Scrooge's assistant and follows him in adventures.
** At the end of the classic spy-themed "Moldfinger, or, The Spy Who Ducked-Out On Me", it turns out that not only Daisy has a side job as a spy for Scrooge, but had it for quite some time. This story was published ''seven years before Paperinika's debut''.
* AdaptationPersonalityChange: Daisy is usually the responsible and down-to-earth foil to Donald, but in ''Mickey Mouse Works'' and ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'', she becomes a self-centered kook who obliviously makes things difficult for her friends.
* AlliterativeName: '''D'''aisy '''D'''uck.
* AmbiguouslyRelated: Despite being only Donald's fiancee, she shares a last name with him and is generally considered a fixed part in the family even when she and Donald (temporally) broke up. Furthermore, she is often seen having familiar ties to Grandma Duck and Scrooge (mostly in Dutch comics) independently from her involvement with Donald. Some figure her a distant cousin of Donald's.
* BelligerentSexualTension: With Donald Duck, DependingOnTheWriter. Donald can be a {{Jerkass}} at times, even with his [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold gold-hearted moments]], but Daisy is definitely a {{Tsundere}}.
** Italian comics add another layer to this with their {{Superhero}}/AntiHero alter egos: as Paperinik and Paperinika they vocally ''loathe'' each other, but, to their horror, can't deny to themselves they're also attracted to each other..
* ClingyJealousGirl: She definitely does not take well finding Donald with another girl.
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: Some cartoons tend to reinterpret Daisy as this.
* DependingOnTheArtist: Usually has black eyes, like Donald. Sometimes depicted with blue eyes. Sometimes has longer "hair".
* DependingOnTheWriter:
** Can be nasty and impulsive or kind and understanding. Sometimes both.
** She and Donald met for the first time as adults. Some stories show them having met as teenagers. Others as kids. Or even as ''infants''.
** What does she do for a living can change a lot between stories. Several stories depict her as one of Scrooge's secretaries (or even his right-hand-woman at the office), a journalist, or give her various short-liver careers. Most stories do not depict her working at all.
** Her relationship with Gladstone also depends on the writer: Does she has true interest in Gladstone till the point she sees Donald and Gladstone as equal boyfriends? Is it really a LoveTriangle and she hasn't really decided between Donald and Gladstone yet? Or does she only truly love Donald and uses Gladstone only to make Donald angry or to get material things Donald couldn't afford?
* DoubleStandard:
** Daisy often gets away with leaving Donald for Gladstone whenever it suits her (often as part of an OperationJealousy), making ridiculous demands from and sometimes downright mistreating Donald.
** She is rarely punctual, but when Donald is late...
** Many Italian stories depict both Donald and Gladstone as her boyfriends, and relying on her whim to get a date. But she gets very jealous whenever either of them pays attention to another woman.
* FlawlessToken: In the Brazilian comic stories about the [=McDuck=] TV channel, Daisy is a way more savvy and effective reporter than Donald and Fethry. Donald gets close to her level sometimes, but Fethry never does.
* GoldDigger: Some stories show her being this towards Gladstone Gander.
* HalfDressedCartoonAnimal: Among the Disney Ducks, Daisy is the one that plays the most with this trope: when half-dressed (like in the picture) her rear feathers resemble bloomers, and sometimes she even wears dresses or pants (while everyone else keeps their traditional wardrobe).
* HeadTurningBeauty: InUniverse, she is so beautiful that her sight is enough to calm Donald from one of his rage fits (in fact, that is the very first thing she does).
* HiddenDepths: Turns out that, when properly motivated, she is just as brilliant as Donald and Scrooge, if not more. A classic example is the story "Mission: Bob Fingher", where Scrooge hires Donald as a spy to stop the titular master thief from robbing him... And once the day is saved it is revealed that ''Daisy'' was Scrooge's main agent, who had been around the whole time disguised as Fingher's niece and Donald hired as an (unknowing) support when it turned out Fingher would not confide with his niece.
** In "Ruling the Roost" (December, 1960), Daisy is Scrooge's hardworking secretary. When Scrooge disappears for a while, there is no one to take care of the executive decisions. Daisy takes over the office and starts taking initiatives. When Scrooge returns (he was accidentally trapped in a room of the Money Bin), Scrooge is quite impressed with her decision-making. But he is secretly worried that Daisy is gunning for his own position.
* HowDoIShotWeb: In her debut as Paperinika, she had some serious problems at using her skating boots, and the first attempt ended with a ridiculous pratfall. Averted for the other gadgets, as her supplier has the common sense to explain how to use the things and provide sensibly-sized user manuals... Or simply provides gadgets that are based on something she already knows how to use (such as her bike).
* IntrepidReporter: In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' and Brazilian comics.
* NonMammalMammaries: DependingOnTheArtist. She has appeared on occasion in the [[WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts old cartoons]] to have breasts in shorts like ''Mr. Duck Steps Out'' and ''Donald's Double Trouble.'' Obviously, this wasn't permanent, and except for a few instances like ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', she's been dodging the trope since then. She does, however, have a body shape that ''suggests'' womanly curves.
* OddFriendship: With Minnie.
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: You have to wonder how Daisy manages to squeeze duck feet into those little high-heels she always wears.
* OutdatedOutfit: Is still famous for her 1940s tailor suit. The Brazilian comics usually avert this, and this is even the focus of one story, where Donald expresses sadness that she is no longer wearing this outfit which he has grown attached to.
* PinkMeansFeminine: The colors of her clothes change very often, but her signature colors are usually purple and pink.
* StrangeMindsThinkAlike: She and Donald tend to come up with the strange crazy ideas.
* TertiarySexualCharacteristics: Though DependingOnTheArtist she can feature additional physical differences from Donald, like a smaller beak and a somewhat curvaceous upper body.
* {{Tsundere}}: She often gets furious at Donald's shortcomings, but she does love him deep down.
* TheUnfairSex: Daisy's treatment of Donald can, in some stories, progress from Tsundere to just blatantly unfair. A perfect example of this comes up in ''The Magnificent 7 (Minus 4) Caballeros'', where in the span of three panels she accuses Donald of deliberately dirtying the shirt she washed for him (Scrooge had just bodily thrown him down the stairs into the street moments beforehand), screaming her accusation at him in the middle of the street, punches him down whilst declaring that she never wants to see him again -- and then walks off whilst calling back to him that he is ''still'' going to pick her up for dinner at the Ritz that night (which, per the [[ComicBookTime perpetual 1950s standards of]] Creator/DonRosa stories, means ''he'' will be paying for the very expensive meal). This is actually the last straw for Donald's nephews, who finally ask him why he lets everybody treat him like that -- and it's why they arrange for him to go to Brazil and meet up with Jose and Panchito for some much-needed R&R.
* WomenAreWiser: The reason behind the creation of ''Paperinika'' (Super Daisy), the DistaffCounterpart of Donald superhero-alter ego. A great deal of stories involved working together with Paperinik. Unfortunately, not only did they end up constantly bickering and hating each other in their secret identities, which was annoying enough on its own, but every time they were together, Paperinik suddenly lost all competence and reverted to JerkAss bungling Donald Duck in a costume. Seeing as the whole point of Paperinik's creation was responding to fans' complaints that Donald was always a ButtMonkey loser, the fans were not pleased at this development, leading to Italy axing Paperinika all together (though she is still used in the Brazilian comics).
** Thankfull this trait is toned down in the modern appearances like in the ''Ultraheroes'' storyline. This time she's been written as even more incompetent than Donald when the two get together; mainly because she is so driven to prove herself Paperinik's equal that she worries about that more than the job at hand, and they end up bickering when they should be saving the day.

to:

* AdaptationalBadass: As ''Paperinika'' (Super Daisy), the DistaffCounterpart of AcePilot: According to ''"80 Jaar"''. It serves to make her a {{Foil}} to Donald superhero-alter ego. While being a sailor. Eventually, she became an astronaut, dropping the triplets with Donald when she went on a deep space mission. Her depiction in a painting in WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 also shows her wearing pilot gear.
* AlliterativeName: '''D'''ella '''D'''uck.
* AlwaysIdenticalTwins: Don Rosa made her Donald's twin. And basically Donald with blonde hair, down to the sailor suit.
* AscendedExtra: With a sprinkling of TheBusCameBack. For decades, Della went unseen, existing solely through the presence of her sons. Della's first steps into the spotlight occured in ''The Life and Times of Scrooge [=McDuck=]'' in 1994, 57 years after first being mentioned (she was given an appearance a year prior in the family tree), and that spotlight was limited to her childhood years. In 2014, the Dutch branch of Disney comics was given permission to star Della as an adult for Donald's eightieth birthday as long as it didn't interfere with the status quo. This formed the inspiration for the 2017 series ''Donald's Eerste...'' (''Donald's First...''), which is the first time Della is featured as an equal to Donald. In addition, her absence in the Triplets' lives is now a key plot point for the [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 2017 reboot]], which puts the series as her animated debut, and she later becomes a main
character was prominent in Brazilian comics (in the '80s), in Italy she was quickly DemotedToExtra because she was AlwaysSomeoneBetter to Donald and an unlikeable feminist (these traits are toned down in the modern appearances). On ''rare'' occasions, her regular civilian self has also been updated into an ActionGirl, even going on adventures with Donald.
** In some stories, Daisy replaces Donald
later half of its second season as Scrooge's assistant well as the third and follows him in adventures.
** At the end of the classic spy-themed "Moldfinger, or,
finale season.
* BrotherSisterTeam:
The Spy Who Ducked-Out On Me", it turns out that not only Daisy has a side job as a spy for Scrooge, but had it for quite some time. This story was published ''seven years before Paperinika's debut''.
* AdaptationPersonalityChange: Daisy is usually the responsible
Dutch series ''Donald's Eerste...'' details Donald's and down-to-earth foil to Donald, but in ''Mickey Mouse Works'' and ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'', she becomes a self-centered kook who obliviously makes things difficult for her friends.Della's childhood.
* AlliterativeName: '''D'''aisy '''D'''uck.
* AmbiguouslyRelated: Despite being only Donald's fiancee, she shares a last name with him and is generally considered a fixed part
CoolBigSis: She's his twin, but ahead of her brother in the family even when she and maturity. In ''"80 Jaar"'', Donald (temporally) broke up. Furthermore, she is often seen having familiar ties spares no words to Grandma Duck and Scrooge (mostly in Dutch comics) independently from her involvement with Donald. Some figure her a distant cousin of Donald's.
convey how much he admires her.
* BelligerentSexualTension: With Donald Duck, DependingOnTheWriter. Donald can {{Determinator}}: From early childhood, Della wanted to be a {{Jerkass}} at times, even with his [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold gold-hearted moments]], pilot and knew that being a woman made her wish unconventional, but Daisy is definitely she set her mind to it anyway. She was good enough that at the age of 22 in 1958, she was picked to man an experimental rocket for a {{Tsundere}}.test flight...
* GoneToTheFuture: What happened according to ''"80 Jaar"''. Experimental rocket fuel sent Della buzzing at lightspeed through her deep space mission, which due to TimeDilation means that for Della just 5 minutes (of an intended 20) have passed, while [[ComicBookTime who-knows-how-many-years went by on Earth]]. Thanks to Gyro, the nephews get a chance to contact her. She notes that they remind her of her infant sons and they haven't the heart to tell her they are them and that circumstances have made her miss out on years of their lives.

** Italian comics add another layer * InSeriesNickname: Dumbella is Della's nickname. In ''"Donald's Eerste Liedje"'', Della says she dislikes her name so to this with their {{Superhero}}/AntiHero alter egos: as Paperinik cheer her up Donald composes a song making fun of her name, his own name, and Paperinika they vocally ''loathe'' each other, but, to their horror, Gyro's name. Della likes it so much she takes the "Dumbella" part of the song as her nickname.
* MissingMom: Don Rosa's thoughts on the matter are that you
can't deny to themselves they're also attracted to each other..
* ClingyJealousGirl: She definitely does not take well finding Donald with another girl.
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: Some cartoons tend to reinterpret Daisy as this.
* DependingOnTheArtist: Usually has black eyes, like Donald. Sometimes depicted with blue eyes. Sometimes has longer "hair".
* DependingOnTheWriter:
** Can be nasty and impulsive or kind and understanding. Sometimes both.
** She and Donald met for the first time as adults. Some stories show them having met as teenagers. Others as kids. Or even as ''infants''.
** What does she do for a living can change a lot between stories. Several stories depict her as one of Scrooge's secretaries (or even his right-hand-woman at the office), a journalist, or give her various short-liver careers. Most stories do not depict her working at all.
** Her relationship with Gladstone also depends on the writer: Does she has true interest in Gladstone till the point she sees Donald and Gladstone as equal boyfriends? Is it really a LoveTriangle and she hasn't really decided between Donald and Gladstone yet? Or does she only truly love Donald and uses Gladstone only to make Donald angry or to get material things Donald couldn't afford?
* DoubleStandard:
** Daisy often gets away with leaving Donald for Gladstone whenever it suits her (often as part of an OperationJealousy), making ridiculous demands from and sometimes downright mistreating Donald.
** She is rarely punctual, but when Donald is late...
** Many Italian stories depict both Donald and Gladstone as her boyfriends, and relying on her whim to get a date. But she gets very jealous whenever either of them pays attention to another woman.
* FlawlessToken: In the Brazilian comic stories about the [=McDuck=] TV channel, Daisy is a way more savvy and effective reporter than Donald and Fethry. Donald gets close to her level sometimes, but Fethry never does.
* GoldDigger: Some stories show her being this towards Gladstone Gander.
* HalfDressedCartoonAnimal: Among the Disney Ducks, Daisy is the one that plays the most with this trope: when half-dressed (like in the picture) her rear feathers resemble bloomers, and sometimes she even wears dresses or pants (while everyone else keeps their traditional wardrobe).
* HeadTurningBeauty: InUniverse, she is so beautiful that her sight is enough to calm Donald from one of his rage fits (in fact, that is the very first thing she does).
* HiddenDepths: Turns out that, when properly motivated, she is just as brilliant as Donald and Scrooge, if not more. A classic example is the story "Mission: Bob Fingher", where Scrooge hires Donald as a spy to stop the titular master thief from robbing him... And once the day is saved it is revealed that ''Daisy'' was Scrooge's main agent, who had been around the whole time disguised as Fingher's niece and Donald hired as an (unknowing) support when it turned out Fingher would not confide with his niece.
** In "Ruling the Roost" (December, 1960), Daisy is Scrooge's hardworking secretary. When Scrooge disappears for a while, there is no one to take care of the executive decisions. Daisy takes over the office and starts taking initiatives. When Scrooge returns (he was accidentally trapped in a room of the Money Bin), Scrooge is quite impressed with her decision-making. But he is secretly worried that Daisy is gunning for his own position.
* HowDoIShotWeb: In her debut as Paperinika, she had some serious problems at using her skating boots, and the first attempt ended with a ridiculous pratfall. Averted for the other gadgets, as her supplier has the common sense to
explain how to use where Della is without being [[ShaggyDogStory pointless]]; [[{{Nephewism}} Donald (and Scrooge) are the things and provide sensibly-sized user manuals... Or simply provides gadgets that are based on something she already knows how triplets' father figures,]] [[StatusQuoIsGod no need to use (such add the parents!]].
* ParentalNeglect: Leaving your prankster sons with your short-tempered brother can be seen
as her bike).
* IntrepidReporter: In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' and Brazilian comics.
* NonMammalMammaries: DependingOnTheArtist. She has appeared on occasion
this. Even more in the [[WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts old cartoons]] comics, where Della's letter details that the [[SarcasmMode "angels"]] had just hospitalized their father by blowing him with firecrackers.
** A Dutch comic though established that Della never meant
to have breasts be gone for more than an hour, but because of the strange time effects going nearly the speed of light caused she thinks its only been 15 minutes since she left earth when in shorts like ''Mr. Duck Steps Out'' and reality it has been years. Sadly by the time Della returns, her boys will be older than she is.
* {{Retcon}}: With elements of RelatedDifferentlyInTheAdaptation. In the comic ''"Donald's Nephews"'', the letter indicates that ''Della'' is Donald's ''cousin''. In the short
''Donald's Double Trouble.'' Obviously, this wasn't permanent, and except for Nephews'', released a few instances like ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', she's been dodging year later, the trope since then. She does, however, have a body shape letter indicates that ''suggests'' womanly curves.
* OddFriendship: With Minnie.
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: You have to wonder how Daisy manages to squeeze duck feet into those little high-heels she always wears.
* OutdatedOutfit: Is still famous for her 1940s tailor suit. The Brazilian comics usually avert this, and this
''Dumbella'' is even the focus of one story, where Donald expresses sadness that she is no longer wearing this outfit which he has grown attached to.
* PinkMeansFeminine: The colors of her clothes change very often, but her signature colors are usually purple and pink.
* StrangeMindsThinkAlike: She and Donald tend to come up with the strange crazy ideas.
* TertiarySexualCharacteristics: Though DependingOnTheArtist she can feature additional physical differences from Donald, like a smaller beak and a somewhat curvaceous upper body.
* {{Tsundere}}: She often gets furious at
Donald's shortcomings, but ''sister''. In general, Della has been taken as the character's name, Dumbella is her InSeriesNickname, and she does love him deep down.
* TheUnfairSex: Daisy's treatment of Donald can, in some stories, progress from Tsundere to just blatantly unfair. A perfect example of this comes up in ''The Magnificent 7 (Minus 4) Caballeros'', where in the span of three panels she accuses Donald of deliberately dirtying the shirt she washed for him (Scrooge had just bodily thrown him down the stairs into the street moments beforehand), screaming her accusation at him in the middle of the street, punches him down whilst declaring that she never wants to see him again -- and then walks off whilst calling back to him that he
is ''still'' going to pick her up for dinner at the Ritz that night (which, per the [[ComicBookTime perpetual 1950s standards of]] Creator/DonRosa stories, means ''he'' will be paying for the very expensive meal). This is actually the last straw for Donald's nephews, who finally ask him why sister -- twin sister ever since Don Rosa wrote about her.
* RiddleForTheAges: The identity of the father of her children. 80 years after first being mentioned, and
he lets everybody treat him like has never made an on-screen appearance, never been named, and his face is missing even from family trees depicting obscure relatives. A few writers (and fans) have toyed with the idea that -- and he is Daisy Duck's brother, but nothing has been confirmed about him. In Creator/CarlBarks stories, Daisy has mentioned having an (unseen) sister, but mentions nothing about a brother. Since he's never brought up, it's why they arrange for him quite possible that he was just a boyfriend that Della has since moved on from.
* SiblingYinYang: In regards
to go to Brazil and meet up with Jose and Panchito for some much-needed R&R.
* WomenAreWiser: The reason behind the creation of ''Paperinika'' (Super Daisy), the DistaffCounterpart of
their professions: Donald superhero-alter ego. A great deal of stories involved working together with Paperinik. Unfortunately, not only did they end up constantly bickering and hating each other in their secret identities, which was annoying enough on its own, but every time they were together, Paperinik suddenly lost all competence and reverted to JerkAss bungling Donald Duck in a costume. Seeing as the whole point of Paperinik's creation was responding to fans' complaints that Donald was always a ButtMonkey loser, the fans were not pleased at this development, leading to Italy axing Paperinika all together (though she is still used in the Brazilian comics).
** Thankfull this trait
a sailor (and possibly marine), Della is toned down in the modern appearances like in the ''Ultraheroes'' storyline. This time she's been written as even more incompetent than Donald when the two get together; mainly because she is so driven to prove herself Paperinik's equal that she worries about that more than the job at hand, and they end up bickering when they should be saving the day. a pilot and/or astronaut.



[[folder: Gladstone Gander]]
[[quoteright:216:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gladstone_gander.png]]
-> Debut: ''Wintertime Wager'' (1948)
-> Voiced by: Creator/RobPaulsen (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''), Creator/CoreyBurton (''VideoGame/DonaldDuckGoinQuackers''), Paul F. Tompkins (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Donald's impossibly lucky cousin, on his father's side of the family. Gladstone's incredible luck allows him to live a life of leisure without ever doing anything resembling working, much to Donald's chagrin. He is Donald's heated rival in almost everything, including Daisy's affections.

to:

[[folder: Gladstone Gander]]
[[quoteright:216:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gladstone_gander.png]]
-> Debut: ''Wintertime Wager'' (1948)
-> Voiced by: Creator/RobPaulsen (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''), Creator/CoreyBurton (''VideoGame/DonaldDuckGoinQuackers''), Paul F. Tompkins (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Donald's impossibly lucky cousin, on his father's side
???? Duck (Huey, Dewey and Louie's father)]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Donald's Nephews"'', 1937]]

The mysterious husband of Della Duck and father of Huey Dewey and Louey, this duck is by far one
of the family. Gladstone's incredible luck allows him to live a life of leisure without ever doing anything resembling working, much to Donald's chagrin. He is Donald's heated rival biggest unknowns in the entire Ducks universe. Mentioned exactly ''once'' in almost everything, a century, everything about the man is a mystery, including Daisy's affections.his name and his appearance.



* AdaptationalNiceGuy:
** His original 1987 ''[=DuckTales=]'' incarnation is far less self-serving and smug. Furthermore, his FatalFlaw is that he is overreliant on his supernatural luck (rather than arrogance or rubbing it in others' faces). Heck, in his first episode, he even tries to use his luck to do nice things for other people, like taking his uncle out to a nice lunch. While he never interacts with Donald in ''[=DuckTales=]'', he does respect Uncle Scrooge and eventually takes his advice of actually getting a job to heart.
** The 2017 incarnation retains the original's arrogance and self-serving nature, but is outwardly less smug and more friendly and generous. The nephews even consider him a CoolUncle at first.
* AlliterativeName: '''G'''ladstone '''G'''ander.
* BarrierMaiden: "Gladstone and the Solitude of the Four-Leaved Cloverleaf" reveals that his luck has protected Duckburg from so many bad events that if he were to leave for an extended period the city would be hit by a biblical-scale flooding. After finding out he worked out a schedule to let the city get hit by bad luck a bit at a time, as he knows he's not immortal.
* BigEgoHiddenDepths: There are a number of comics where Gladstone mentions his insecurites surrounding his enormous wealth of luck. He knows he has not one genuine friend among all his acquaintances, and is envious of Donald for having such a loving circle of friends and family. One ''Paperinik'' comic even suggests that Gladstone acts the way he does because he feels he's fated to do so and that his luck might leave him if he doesn't.
* BirthdayHater: In "The Sign of the Triple Distelfink", because this is the one day of the year he loses his luck. He loses the weakness and the trait at the story's end.
* BlessedWithSuck: His luck ironically can fall into this sometimes. One story in the Brazilian comic books in particular shows Gladstone struggling to buy common items (like corkscrews) because his luck keeps getting him selected for prizes on the way to the store to such a time-consuming extent that it's closed by the time he gets there, and it's inconvenient to a point he actually needs Donald to do the shopping for him. When Donald says he's surprised his luck doesn't just help him with that, Gladstone makes a point about how luck wouldn't waste itself on matters so common. The same story also has him comment on how most of the time he doesn't have any interest or use for the prizes he gets.
* BornLucky: Literally. The Creator/DonRosa story "The Sign of the Triple Distelfink" attributes his supernatural luck to a magical sign painted for his mother's blessing before he was born. As for the "Lucky" part of things... Gladstone basically gets to cruise through life carefree because his luck provides him with absolutely everything he could ever want or need. In the Creator/DonRosa story ''Nobody's Business'', Scrooge actually comes to ''fear'' the idea of giving Gladstone his own company because he's just figured out that all of the profits Gladstone made with his string of investments came at the cost of losses to Scrooge's own business. That's right; according to Rosa, Gladstone would '''bankrupt Scrooge''' if they were direct business rivals! How fortunate for everybody that Gladstone is such an unambitious LazyBum.
* BrilliantButLazy: Gladstone is so ridiculously lucky he could probably become richer than Scrooge with no effort but lacks the ambition to do so. Gladstone could even become Scrooge's heir if he weren't so lazy. Scrooge considers him potentially a better heir than Donald in that Gladstone is less likely to squander the money (of course Scrooge has a very skewered idea of what entails squandering), but Gladstone's carefree luck-based cruising through life offends the SelfMadeMan to the very core of his principles.
* BroughtDownToNormal:
** Happens once in ''[=DuckTales=]''. Although to be more accurate, he isn't just brought down to ''normal'' - he continues further below that because he's cursed with bad luck. Also happens whenever he and Feather Mallard, one of his love interests, are together.
** "Gladstone and the Solitude of the Four-Leaf Clover" makes him a perfectly normal duck the moment he steps outside of Duckburg.
* ButtMonkey:
** He becomes this in the video game ''VideoGame/DonaldDuckGoinQuackers''. Every cutscene prior to a boss battle has him get comedically injured and by the end of the game, he is in a full-body cast.
** Gets this treatment when put against Paperinik, the one character cunning enough to overcome his outrageous luck-and takes full advantage of this, with pranks that include ''making him believe Donald has cursed away his luck'' (and then selling him the fake charm and the book ostensibly used for the curse at an outrageous price).
* TheCameo: Aside from two episodes of ''[=DuckTales=]'' and the video game ''Donald Duck: Goin' Qu@ckers'', Gladstone's only appearances outside of the comics to date are his name appearing in a ''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'' short and a cameo in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse''.
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: In some of Gladstone's earlier appearances, his luck is not yet present, and he's basically a (slightly) more obnoxious version of Donald. Later, he got his infamous good fortune, and became that much more insufferable.
** There were even stories such as ''"The Easter Election"'', written by Carl Barks in 1953, which was after Gladstone's extremely lucky nature had been established, that didn't focus on said luck at all. In ''Easter Election'' in fact, Gladstone only triumphs over Donald at various points in the story because he is outright sabotaging his cousin, which could be argued to be another change the character went through. The effort Gladstone puts into ruining Donald's chances of winning their competition is something that the later version of the character would be sickened by.
* CursedWithAwesome: As mentioned below, some writers try and portray Gladstone's luck as not being entirely positive, as others resent and dislike Gladstone because of his luck. Readers rarely see it this way, since A: Gladstone still gets to coast effortlessly through life, being so lucky he literally never has to work to get anything, even being able to feed and house himself entirely through winning raffles, gifts from rich patrons, etc, and B: Gladstone is resented and disliked less because of his luck and more because he's such a smug bastard about it and how it makes him "better" than less-lucky people, C: However, his luck CAN work against him; for example, a story had him pursue his lifelong dream of being a bullfighter...only to find out that since his luck keeps him from animals being hostile to him, that meant he was figuratively invisible to all bulls, who simply ignore him or don't even notice his presence. The story ends with Grandma Duck's huge but gentle bull stepping on Gladstone's foot because of that very same invisibility.
** It is worth mentioning that this actually caused him heartbreak once. Feather Mallard is a girl just as lucky as he is that he meets, but despite both of them really loving each other, they have to separate because both of their lucks are so strong they actually cancel each other out. This causes both of them to end up in dangerous accidents, with Gladstone usually taking the brunt of the damage as he protects Feather. Eventually, Feather breaks the relationship off and leaves. Gladstone ends the comic by saying that he would've preferred a life of bad luck to losing her. In fact, the one area of life where Gladstone seem to have no luck at all is romance, as there are multiple stories that has him end up without someone he found he loved, such as an unlucky woman named Linda and even Magica! As such, him actually not having flopped entirely on his relationship with Daisy may be less his luck, and more Donald's bad luck. And her fickleness if it counts as something independent of either.
* TheDandy: Always well dressed as he is of course well-to-do and not afraid to flaunt it, thank you very much.
* DarkSecret: One story reveals that Gladstone has a hidden shame that he's concealed for years, terrified of anyone finding out; he keeps a memento of that time in his life as a grisly souvenir. It's eventually discovered the memento is...a single dime. It turns out that there was an instance in Gladstone's past where his good luck failed him, and he was left with no choice but to take an honest job and work for a living. Since his luck eventually kicked back in, the dime was his first and only truly earned wage, and he's embarrassed to death about it.
* DependingOnTheWriter: Gladstone's personality. Some had him as a simple jerk and either a KarmaHoudini or someone on whom Donald will get the last laugh. Some had him as more genial and less rude to Donald, making the latter's hate for him seem more one-sided.
** Some stories cast him as a good-natured character, others as an outright villain. Some stories depict him as a relatively competent adventurer, who can compete against Scrooge and Donald, others as incredibly lazy and incompetent. Some have him deeply caring for Daisy and his family, and others have him as indifferent to what happens to them. Some depict him as a courageous character, others depict him as a spineless coward.
* {{Flanderization}}: Gladstone's laziness and the potency of his luck actually both grew in subtle but potent ways after he passed on to the hands of other writers from those of Creator/CarlBarks. Barks depicted Gladstone's luck as being potent, [[NotSoInvincibleAfterAll but not invincible,]] to the extent that Gladstone was often wiling to deliberately cheat to help his luck along. He also did ''not'' adhere to a specific formula of "Gladstone always beats Donald through sheer luck"; in Gladstone's 45 Creator/CarlBarks stories, he:
** ''Loses'' to Donald 14 times.
** ''Beats'' Donald 12 times.
** Achieves a ''Mutual Loss'' 9 times.
** Achieves a ''Mutual Win'' 3 times.
** ''Doesn't Compete with Donald'' 7 times.
* HateSink: Though this varies somewhat depending on country, in general, the readers ''despise'' Gladstone since he is a smug, selfish, arrogant layabout who always has everything go right for him, while his much harder working cousin struggles and scrapes by, tending to fail more often than not.
** It's telling that one of the Creator/DonRosa stories usually considered his worst is ''"The Sign of the Triple Distelfink"'', where it is first revealed that the titular sign means Gladstone's luck reverses itself for one day of the year... and then removes that weakness so he's lucky 24/7, 365 days a year.
* HeroicBystander: While he's certainly not out to save people or so, he's quite often in places where people are in life-threatening danger. When this is the case, he doesn't give a damn if it's exhausting, he WILL save the person involved, by luck or by strength. This heroic side of his is perhaps his most redeeming feature.
** Tellingly, Paperinik stories show outright that when Donald needs a temporary replacement for his role as a superhero Gladstone is his ''first'' choice, and Gladstone accepts without asking anything in exchange. This is in spite of Paperinik targeting him whenever he crosses the line in his fights with Donald.
* HiddenDepths: In most stories he averts this, but there have been stories where it's revealed that his constant good luck isn't ''always'' a good thing -- when it comes down to it, Gladstone's lifestyle and attitude has left him with absolutely no friends and only marginal support from his family. A few stories have speculated that this is the ''real'' reason he enjoys riling Donald up so much; it's the closest thing he has to a friendship. These stories portray his luck as almost being BlessedWithSuck.
** That would also explain why he willingly goes with Daisy's occasional suggestions/demands that he hang out with his cousin Donald on the condition that they don't kill each other. He must actually value their friendship.
** In a couple stories, Gladstone is shown to be surprisingly affectionate about things relating to family. In one comic, he fights Donald to get back an old family chandelier that was displaced. It has no monetary value and is definitely not a luck charm - he only wanted it back for its sentimental familial value.
** In another story, Scrooge pulls him along to search for a princess' hidden treasure. The treasure turns out to be a small chest of old toys, and it brings tears to Gladstone's eyes and evokes a double facepalm from Scrooge.
** One story establishes that he's actually quite willing to learn how to rough it out when he wants to. He fully intended on staying in the countryside and away from Duckburg, eventually becoming a competent farmer with a lot of research and assistance.
** In "The Hundred Gates Tournament" Gladstone is working as the coach of Scrooge's kid soccer team in a tournament when his luck is hijacked by Jeeves for the match with Rockerduck's team by interfering in his propitiatory ritual with a fake fortune. Gladstone quickly figures out what happened and that he can remove luck from the equation by ripping the fortune, but fears he'd lose his good luck forever by doing so... And still rips the fortune, giving his team the win ''and'' retaining the fortune. [[ProperlyParanoid He also had the sense of having a proper coach train the team anyway just in case his luck somehow didn't work]].
** In "Gladstone and the Solitude of the Four-Leaved Cloverleaf", Gladstone moves out of Duckburg upon finding out that his family can barely suffer him... But the moment he hears that without him the city is being hit by all the disasters his luck had been keeping at bay all at once he comes back. He also works out a schedule to allow the trouble to happen at a controllable pace, so when he dies the city won't be destroyed by a biblical flooding.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: The triplets found a way to turn his luck against him. His luck always wins ''against'' the odds. So in ''Oolated Luck'', when he's confident that he will win a lottery simply by having one submission out of 10000, the triplets flooded the ballot box with his name. Now that his chance of winning is 9999 to 1, ''Donald's'' name got taken instead and he lost the lottery. [[spoiler: Of course, losing the lottery turned out to be a good thing later on...]]
** Jeeves pulled this too: in "The Hundred Gates Tournament" they were training opposing kids soccer teams for Scrooge and Rockerduck, and Jeeves, knowing that Gladstone's luck made Scrooge's team invincible, spied him to try and find a way around it and discovered Gladstone was using a complicated propitiatory ritual that included receiving a fortune for the day. Fortune that Jeeves replaced with a fake one that said Gladstone's team would lose the match that day. Doesn't work fully, as Gladstone figures out what had happened and takes luck out of the equation by ripping the fake fortune, at which point [[ProperlyParanoid Gladstone having his assistants train the team properly just in case]] means that [[CurbStompBattle they mop the floor with Rockerduck's team]] that [[{{Irony}} had lazed around confiding in luck to win]]...
* InadequateInheritor: Out of the people in the immediate line of inheritance Scrooge considers Gladstone the last person he wants inheriting his wealth, purely because he has no respect for how Gladstone abhors doing honest, hard work.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: His mother, Daphne, also had the same unnatural luck. Unlike him, Daphne was a [[NiceGirl nice person]]. His uglier personality traits are from his father's side. His nephew Shamrock also is ridiculously lucky along with his nieces/cousins (depending on the source), while his cousin Disraeli has an unnatural ability to garner pity, giving him nearly the same advantages in life as Gladstone. A lot of Gladstone's family members also have his hair.
* {{Jerkass}}: In the comics. The big reason why many readers -- and, InUniverse, his cousin Donald -- hate him. It's not only that he has such incredible luck that he can coast through life, it's that he openly enjoys doing so, and loves to rub it in to other people that no matter how hard they might work, they'll always lose to his sheer luckiness.
* JerkWithAHeartOfJerk[=/=]JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Very much DependingOnTheWriter. Several comics have him saving Donald's life, and not in a lucky way either, but through actual physical labor. A prime example is "Donald's Lucky Day", where he doesn't hesitate for a second to throw himself into a river to save Donald from drowning.
** It seems pretty easy to tell if he has a heart of gold based on where the comic is made. The European (primarily Italian) take on him is notably less of an outright jerk, and is always portrayed with at least some shreds of decency. The American version seldom has him as anything but JerkWithAHeartOfJerk.
** For all his smug, jerkass behaviour, Gladstone will drop everything to help anyone, not just Donald, who is in genuine danger. Finding out that his good luck has led to a backup of bad luck for Duckburg itself, he takes the time to work out a schedule so that he can leave and come back in order to bleed off the excess relatively safely, so that the city doesn't get obliterated when he dies or is away for too long.
* LazyBum: Because he never has to work, things always going his way, he abhors physical labor and avoids it wherever possible. This has led to some of the rare occasions where his luck hasn't worked, notably one story where Donald and the boys spend the day digging up a beachside in search of a treasure, whilst Gladstone just lounges around waiting for it to fall into his hands. When he decides it mustn't be on that beach and moves on, the others dig the place up where he was sitting and find it; his luck had provided, if only he wasn't so lazy.
* LetsGetDangerous: On a few occasions he actually ''puts effort'' in what he's doing, showing himself quite intelligent and adding that to his luck, becoming effectively unbeatable.
** Especially shown in his role as coach of Scrooge's futsal team in "The Hundred Gates Tournament":
*** Jeeves had figured out a way to hijack his luck... Except Gladstone had not only hired a deputy to actually train the team [[ProperlyParanoid just in case]], he quickly figures out what Jeeves had pulled and how and turns the tables on him.
*** In the final game it turns out Donald's team has grown stronger than his, to the point they could win through sheer skill, putting them on par in terms of victories (Donald's team having lost their first game) and winning the tournament thanks to the dozens of goals scored against the Beagle Brats... Then Gladstone shuts them down by ordering the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catenaccio Catenaccio]] and forcing a draw, as he only needed that to win the tournament.
** The time Paperinik disguised him as Scrooge set him against Rockerduck's casino to give him a lesson for the plan to turn Scrooge in a [[TheGamblingAddict Gambling Addict]] Gladstone noticed and countered all attempts at cheating from a number of professional gamblers. He walked out with ''all'' the money in the casino.
* LogicalWeakness: While his luck seemingly defies all logic, there ''is'' a logic to it. And whenever someone figures out that logic, they can work around it:
** In one story, Huey, Dewey and Louie exploited the fact that Gladstone always defies the odds by making sure the odds were in his favor for once. Sure enough, Gladstone defies the odds and actually loses.
** In "The Hundred Gates Tournament" Scrooge and Rockerduck, among others, were sponsoring five-a-side kids football teams, with Gladstone working as Scrooge's coach and thus having his luck benefit the team... And Jeeves, coaching Rockerduck's team, sees he has a complicated propitiatory ritual and interferes in it so that he ''hijacks Gladstone's luck for his team''... At least until Gladstone [[TaughtByExperience who knew by experience that his luck wasn't invincible]], figured out what had happened and how and turned the tables on them.
* NiceJobBreakingItHero: In one story, he happily sells the [[ArtifactOfDoom golden helmet]] to a villain who intends to use it to take over america. This was not done out of ignorance either, Donald had already told him about the helmet's true value and ''begged'' him to throw it to the sea. Gladstone simply didn't think about the implications.
* NotMyLuckyDay: According to Don Rosa's ''The Sign of the Triple Distelfink'', his birthday is the one day of the year his lucky streak stops. At the story's end, however, this flaw in his luck is removed -- much to the chagrin of many readers.
* NotSoInvincibleAfterAll: Gladstone's luck ''can'' be defeated with enough cunning or sheer skill:
** Paperinik can reliably defeat him through his cunning and stubborness, having once convinced him his luck had been cursed away, among other tricks.
*** This can only be done by Paperinik, as Gladstone has learned from the experience and is quick to recognize and counter attempts at outsmarting his luck, and only Paperinik is able to still pull this off.
** "The Mondor's Cup" shows that while he's a ''fantastic'' soccer goalkeeper [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlo_Parola Carlo Parola]] can still score on him with his signature bicycle kick.
** If Gladstone were ever to face Magica he'd find himself ''helpless'' against her, as she has a spell capable of turning his good luck into ''bad'' luck just lying around.
* PassedOverInheritance: Invoked and Zigzagged in ''Nobody's Business''. Played Straight when Scrooge declares he's going to give all of his money to the triplets and not give one dime to his nephews Donald and Gladstone. Subverted when he admits to himself that such a decision isn't fair and he thus decides to award them with ownership of a company based on how they each invest $1000 he gives them.
* PetTheDog: Occasionally -- ''very'' occasionally -- he'll have a few moments where he does this and employs his incredible luck for the benefit of others and not just himself. Notable examples are [[http://disneycomics.free.fr/Ducks/Barks/show.php?num=18&loc=1952/W_OS_367-02R&s=date ''Christmas for Shacktown'']] and [[http://disneycomics.free.fr/Ducks/Rosa/show.php?num=25&loc=D96325&s=date ''A Little Something Special.'']]
* RichInDollarsPoorInSense: Gladstone's luck allows him to coast through life and he exploits that shamelessly, amassing money, property and everything he could desire just by winning contests. This has come at the cost of him lacking basic life skills, however. One story shows that he has no idea how to cook eggs.
** He only ever worked once, during a dry spell in his luck, earning a dime. That job and the dime are his greatest shame.
** Which is an interesting contrast to Scrooge [=McDuck=] who values his trademark NumberOneDime because it was the [[SelfMadeMan first dime he made on his first day of honest work on the job, even 20 years before he became rich.]]
* SharpDressedMan: The coiffe cannot leave the house without being perfectly curled. In his trademark favourite green naturally, to honour shamrock, his personal symbol.
* SmallNameBigEgo: He thinks that being lucky means he's the best guy around, but his cousin Donald's reaction to his attitude says otherwise.
* SmugSnake:
** In the comics, this is ultimately why people really hate him. It's less that he's supernaturally lucky and more that he's such an arrogant bastard about it who loves rubbing it in others' faces.
** Subverted in his appearance in the 1987 cartoon. While still very lucky, he's actually pretty genial and his first bit was taking out Uncle Scrooge for a nice dinner. His FatalFlaw is instead his overreliance on his supernatural luck.
* ATasteOfDefeat: Done ''very'' rarely, for already specified reasons, but it's happened. Him magically losing his luck was the entire plot of an episode of ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''.
** Gladstone, even after having his incredible luck established, did not usually outright win in Barks stories where he was pitted against Donald. Typically, Gladstone either wins but finds that victory isn't really desirable, or wins the apparent prize/conflict and then quits prematurely, allowing Donald to score some less obvious, but more meaningful, victory. On the occasions where Gladstone does outright win (such as in "Gemstone Hunters"), Donald himself is generally behaving in some ethically dubious manner, making the loss more karmic than anything.
** When Italian stories have him dealing with Paperinik, he either loses (with such gems as Paperinik making him believe [[ItMakesSenseInContext Donald's curse with the Mail Shaman's charm]] made him lose his luck before showing up as Donald and selling him the useless charm), or finds out the prize isn't worth it (he was once mistaken for Paperinik, and the real one couldn't prove he wasn't while he enjoyed dating half the girls in the city. Then criminals started gunning for him...).
** A notable early defeat for Gladstone is ''Trail of the Unicorn'' (February, 1950), because it relies on his lack of foresight. Scrooge has offered a reward to Donald for the capture of a fierce unicorn. Gladstone spies on them, and competes with Donald. While Donald and the nephews do all the hard work, Gladstone captures the unicorn and leaves them behind. Scrooge gives him the reward. However, Gladstone did not bring back anything for the unicorn to eat, nor did he care about that. Scrooge is increasingly desperate that his unicorn is dying of starvation. When Donald and the nephews return with information on the unicorn's eating habits, and rescue its life, Scrooge is overjoyed. Donald ends up with a much larger reward than Gladstone, who ends up looking like a poor relative.
* TokenEvilTeammate: A milder example than most, being that he is more amoral than evil, but he is the only regularly appearing member of the Duck family who is pretty consistently an unsympathetic character.
* TooDumbToFool: He's one of the rare characters who's so completely disinterested in power that even the [[ArtifactOfDoom Golden Helmet]] has no hold on him because he's too lazy to ever try to take what it's offering. Deconstructed when it turns out that just being incorruptible does not mean he's IncorruptiblePurePureness. He happily sells the helmet to someone far more malicious than him just because he needed some cash and didn't care about the consequences.
* UselessBystanderParent: In Don Rosa's story 'The Duck Who Never Was', the triplets live with Gladstone in an alternate universe where Donald never existed. All three are immensely fat and too lazy to even turn in their chairs, which tells readers everything they need to know about Gladstone's parenting skills. Although Gladstone failed at teaching them ''any'' valuable life lessons and could even come across as [[ParentalNeglect neglectful]], he didn't seem to hold back on things like food, toys, or affection.
** In another story, Donald is swallowed by a huge fish, and the boys try to stir Gladstone into action by threatening to come live with him if their Unca Donald died. Gladstone's initial reaction is confusion and horror. He starts off thinking to himself that he doesn't want them in his house for extended periods of time because he's afraid Donald's bad luck has imprinted upon them. Then he worries that even if he does take them in, he'd probably not be a very good parent.
* VitriolicBestBuds: with Donald, in "[[http://sarroora.tumblr.com/image/121659565584 stories like this one]]".
** In a comic where Huey, Dewey and Louie ask Gladstone if he'll miss Donald if he dies before him, he answers:
-->'''Trnsl from Arabic:''' Of course I'll miss him! His recklessness is endearing! And he's funny when you tick him off!

to:

* AdaptationalNiceGuy:
** His original 1987 ''[=DuckTales=]'' incarnation is far less self-serving and smug. Furthermore, his FatalFlaw
AmbiguouslyRelated: Creator/DonRosa's theory is that he is overreliant on his supernatural luck (rather than arrogance or rubbing it in others' faces). Heck, in his first episode, he even tries to use his luck to do nice things for other people, like taking his uncle out to a nice lunch. While he never interacts with Donald in ''[=DuckTales=]'', he does respect Uncle Scrooge and eventually takes his advice of actually getting a job to heart.
** The 2017 incarnation retains the original's arrogance and self-serving nature, but is outwardly less smug and more friendly and generous. The nephews even consider him a CoolUncle at first.
* AlliterativeName: '''G'''ladstone '''G'''ander.
* BarrierMaiden: "Gladstone and the Solitude of the Four-Leaved Cloverleaf" reveals that his luck has protected Duckburg from so many bad events that if he were to leave for an extended period the city would be hit by a biblical-scale flooding. After finding out he worked out a schedule to let the city get hit by bad luck a bit at a time, as he knows
he's not immortal.
* BigEgoHiddenDepths: There are a number of comics where Gladstone mentions his insecurites surrounding his enormous wealth of luck. He knows he has not one genuine friend among all his acquaintances, and is envious of Donald for having such a loving circle of friends and family. One ''Paperinik'' comic even suggests that Gladstone acts
related to Daisy, possibly her brother, which would explain how the way he does because he feels he's fated to do so and that his luck might leave him if he doesn't.
* BirthdayHater: In "The Sign of the Triple Distelfink", because
triplets call her Aunt. He never put this is in a story, however, so for now it remains SchrodingersCanon.
* DisappearedDad: Was last mentioned in a cartoon in 1937 and that's
the one day all we know of the year he loses his luck. He loses the weakness and the trait at the story's end.
* BlessedWithSuck: His luck ironically can fall into this sometimes. One story in the Brazilian comic books in particular shows Gladstone struggling to buy common items (like corkscrews) because his luck keeps getting him selected for prizes on the way to the store to such a time-consuming extent that it's closed by the time he gets there, and it's inconvenient to a point he actually needs Donald to do the shopping for
him. When Donald says he's surprised his luck doesn't just help Unlike Della, there's never been any sort of hint of what happened to him with that, Gladstone makes a point about how luck wouldn't waste itself on matters so common. The same story also has him comment on how most of the time afterwards or why he doesn't have any interest or use for the prizes he gets.
* BornLucky: Literally. The Creator/DonRosa story "The Sign of the Triple Distelfink" attributes his supernatural luck to a magical sign painted
never returned for his mother's blessing before he was born. As for the "Lucky" part of things... Gladstone basically gets to cruise through life carefree because his luck provides him with absolutely everything he could ever want or need. In sons.
* TheFaceless: His spot on
the Creator/DonRosa story ''Nobody's Business'', Scrooge actually comes to ''fear'' the idea of giving Gladstone his own company because he's just figured out that all of the profits Gladstone made with his string of investments came at the cost of losses to Scrooge's own business. That's right; according to Rosa, Gladstone would '''bankrupt Scrooge''' if they were direct business rivals! How fortunate for everybody that Gladstone Duck Family tree is such an unambitious LazyBum.
* BrilliantButLazy: Gladstone is so ridiculously lucky he could probably become richer than Scrooge with no effort but lacks the ambition to do so. Gladstone could even become Scrooge's heir if he weren't so lazy. Scrooge considers him potentially a better heir than Donald in that Gladstone is less likely to squander the money (of course Scrooge has a very skewered idea of what entails squandering), but Gladstone's carefree luck-based cruising through life offends the SelfMadeMan to the very core of his principles.
* BroughtDownToNormal:
** Happens once in ''[=DuckTales=]''. Although to be more accurate, he isn't just brought down to ''normal'' - he continues further below that because he's cursed with bad luck. Also happens whenever he and Feather Mallard, one of his love interests, are together.
** "Gladstone
blocked off by branches and the Solitude of the Four-Leaf Clover" makes him a perfectly normal duck the moment he steps outside of Duckburg.
* ButtMonkey:
** He becomes this in the video game ''VideoGame/DonaldDuckGoinQuackers''. Every cutscene prior to a boss battle has him get comedically injured and by the end of the game, he is in a full-body cast.
** Gets this treatment when put against Paperinik, the one character cunning enough to overcome his outrageous luck-and takes full advantage of this, with pranks that include ''making him believe Donald has cursed away his luck'' (and then selling him the fake charm and the book ostensibly used for the curse at an outrageous price).
* TheCameo: Aside from two episodes of ''[=DuckTales=]'' and the video game ''Donald Duck: Goin' Qu@ckers'', Gladstone's only appearances outside of the comics to date are his name appearing in a ''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'' short and a cameo in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse''.
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: In some of Gladstone's earlier appearances, his luck is not yet present, and he's basically a (slightly) more obnoxious version of Donald. Later, he got his infamous good fortune, and became that much more insufferable.
** There were even stories such as ''"The Easter Election"'', written by Carl Barks in 1953, which was after Gladstone's extremely lucky nature had been established, that didn't focus
bird standing on said luck at all. In ''Easter Election'' in fact, Gladstone only triumphs over Donald at various points in the story because he is outright sabotaging his cousin, which could be argued to be another change the character went through. The effort Gladstone puts into ruining Donald's chances of winning their competition is something that the later version of the character would be sickened by.
* CursedWithAwesome: As mentioned below, some writers try and portray Gladstone's luck as not being entirely positive, as others resent and dislike Gladstone because of his luck. Readers rarely see it this way, since A: Gladstone still gets to coast effortlessly through life, being so lucky he literally never has to work to get anything, even being able to feed and house himself entirely through winning raffles, gifts from rich patrons, etc, and B: Gladstone is resented and disliked less because of his luck and more because he's such a smug bastard about it and how it makes him "better" than less-lucky people, C: However, his luck CAN work against him; for example, a story had him pursue his lifelong dream of being a bullfighter...only to find out that since his luck keeps him from animals being hostile to him, that meant he was figuratively invisible to all bulls, who simply ignore him or don't even notice his presence. The story ends with Grandma Duck's huge but gentle bull stepping on Gladstone's foot because of that very same invisibility.
** It is worth mentioning that this actually caused him heartbreak once. Feather Mallard is a girl just as lucky as he is that he meets, but despite both of them really loving each other, they have to separate because both of their lucks are so strong they actually cancel each other out. This causes both of them to end up in dangerous accidents, with Gladstone usually taking the brunt of the damage as he protects Feather. Eventually, Feather breaks the relationship off and leaves. Gladstone ends the comic by saying that he would've preferred a life of bad luck to losing her. In fact, the one area of life where Gladstone seem to have no luck at all is romance, as there are multiple stories that has him end up without someone he found he loved, such as an unlucky woman named Linda and even Magica! As such, him actually not having flopped entirely on his relationship with Daisy may be less his luck, and more Donald's bad luck. And her fickleness if it counts as something independent of either.
* TheDandy: Always well dressed as he is of course well-to-do and not afraid to flaunt it, thank you very much.
* DarkSecret: One story reveals that Gladstone has a hidden shame that he's concealed for years, terrified of anyone finding out; he keeps a memento of that time in his life as a grisly souvenir. It's eventually discovered the memento is...a single dime. It turns out that there was an instance in Gladstone's past where his good luck failed him, and he was left with no choice but to take an honest job and work for a living. Since his luck eventually kicked back in, the dime was his first and only truly earned wage, and he's embarrassed to death about it.
* DependingOnTheWriter: Gladstone's personality. Some had him as a simple jerk and either a KarmaHoudini or someone on whom Donald will get the last laugh. Some had him as more genial and less rude to Donald, making the latter's hate for him seem more one-sided.
** Some stories cast him as a good-natured character, others as an outright villain. Some stories depict him as a relatively competent adventurer, who can compete against Scrooge and Donald, others as incredibly lazy and incompetent. Some have him deeply caring for Daisy and his family, and others have him as indifferent to what happens to
them. Some depict him as a courageous character, others depict him as a spineless coward.
* {{Flanderization}}: Gladstone's laziness and the potency of his luck actually both grew in subtle
What little can be seen shows [[TheUnreveal nothing but potent ways after he passed on to the hands general indicators of other writers from those of Creator/CarlBarks. Barks depicted Gladstone's luck as being potent, [[NotSoInvincibleAfterAll but not invincible,]] to the extent that Gladstone was often wiling to deliberately cheat to help his luck along. He also did ''not'' adhere to a specific formula of "Gladstone always beats Donald through sheer luck"; in Gladstone's 45 Creator/CarlBarks stories, he:
** ''Loses'' to Donald 14 times.
** ''Beats'' Donald 12 times.
** Achieves a ''Mutual Loss'' 9 times.
** Achieves a ''Mutual Win'' 3 times.
** ''Doesn't Compete
male duck with Donald'' 7 times.
* HateSink: Though this varies somewhat depending on country, in general, the readers ''despise'' Gladstone since he is a smug, selfish, arrogant layabout who always has everything go right for him, while his much harder working cousin struggles and scrapes by, tending to fail more often than not.
** It's telling that one of the Creator/DonRosa stories usually considered his worst is ''"The Sign of the Triple Distelfink"'', where it is first revealed that the titular sign means Gladstone's luck reverses itself for one day of the year... and then removes that weakness so he's lucky 24/7, 365 days a year.
* HeroicBystander: While he's certainly not out to save people or so, he's quite often in places where people are in life-threatening danger. When this is the case, he doesn't give a damn if it's exhausting, he WILL save the person involved, by luck or by strength. This heroic side of his is perhaps his most redeeming feature.
** Tellingly, Paperinik stories show outright that when Donald needs a temporary replacement for his role as a superhero Gladstone is his ''first'' choice, and Gladstone accepts without asking anything in exchange. This is in spite of Paperinik targeting him whenever he crosses the line in his fights with Donald.
* HiddenDepths: In most stories he averts this, but there have been stories where it's revealed that his constant good luck isn't ''always'' a good thing -- when it comes down to it, Gladstone's lifestyle and attitude has left him with absolutely no friends and only marginal support from his family. A few stories have speculated that this is the ''real'' reason he enjoys riling Donald up so much; it's the closest thing he has to a friendship. These stories portray his luck as almost being BlessedWithSuck.
** That would also explain why he willingly goes with Daisy's occasional suggestions/demands that he hang out with his cousin Donald on the condition that they don't kill each other. He must actually value their friendship.
** In a couple stories, Gladstone is shown to be surprisingly affectionate about things relating to family. In one comic, he fights Donald to get back an old family chandelier that was displaced. It has no monetary value and is definitely not a luck charm - he only wanted it back for its sentimental familial value.
** In another story, Scrooge pulls him along to search for a princess' hidden treasure. The treasure turns out to be a small chest of old toys, and it brings tears to Gladstone's eyes and evokes a double facepalm from Scrooge.
** One story establishes that he's actually quite willing to learn how to rough it out when he wants to. He fully intended on staying in the countryside and away from Duckburg, eventually becoming a competent farmer with a lot of research and assistance.
** In "The Hundred Gates Tournament" Gladstone is working as the coach of Scrooge's kid soccer team in a tournament when his luck is hijacked by Jeeves for the match with Rockerduck's team by interfering in his propitiatory ritual with a fake fortune. Gladstone quickly figures out what happened and that he can remove luck from the equation by ripping the fortune, but fears he'd lose his good luck forever by doing so... And still rips the fortune, giving his team the win ''and'' retaining the fortune. [[ProperlyParanoid He also had the sense of having a proper coach train the team anyway just in case his luck somehow didn't work]].
** In "Gladstone and the Solitude of the Four-Leaved Cloverleaf", Gladstone moves out of Duckburg upon finding out that his family can barely suffer him... But the moment he hears that without him the city is being hit by all the disasters his luck had been keeping at bay all at once he comes back. He also works out a schedule to allow the trouble to happen at a controllable pace, so when he dies the city won't be destroyed by a biblical flooding.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: The triplets found a way to turn his luck against him. His luck always wins ''against'' the odds. So in ''Oolated Luck'', when he's confident that he will win a lottery simply by having one submission out of 10000, the triplets flooded the ballot box with his name. Now that his chance of winning is 9999 to 1, ''Donald's'' name got taken instead and he lost the lottery. [[spoiler: Of course, losing the lottery turned out to be a good thing later on...
white feathers.]]
** Jeeves pulled this too: in "The Hundred Gates Tournament" they were training opposing kids soccer teams for Scrooge and Rockerduck, and Jeeves, knowing that Gladstone's luck made Scrooge's team invincible, spied him to try and find a way around it and discovered Gladstone was using a complicated propitiatory ritual that included receiving a fortune for * RiddleForTheAges: Who is the day. Fortune that Jeeves replaced with a fake one that said Gladstone's team would lose the match that day. Doesn't work fully, as Gladstone figures out what had happened and takes luck out of the equation by ripping the fake fortune, at which point [[ProperlyParanoid Gladstone having nephews father? What's his assistants train the team properly just in case]] means that [[CurbStompBattle they mop the floor with Rockerduck's team]] that [[{{Irony}} had lazed around confiding in luck to win]]...
* InadequateInheritor: Out of the people in the immediate line of inheritance Scrooge considers Gladstone the last person
name? What does he wants inheriting his wealth, purely because he has no respect for how Gladstone abhors doing honest, hard work.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: His mother, Daphne, also had the same unnatural luck. Unlike him, Daphne was a [[NiceGirl nice person]]. His uglier personality traits are from his father's side. His nephew Shamrock also is ridiculously lucky along with his nieces/cousins (depending on the source), while his cousin Disraeli has an unnatural ability to garner pity, giving him nearly the same advantages in life as Gladstone. A lot of Gladstone's family members also have his hair.
* {{Jerkass}}: In the comics.
look like? The big reason why many readers -- and, InUniverse, his cousin Donald -- hate him. It's not only guess is as good as any.
* UncertainDoom: His "appearance" in ''Donalds Nephews'' mentions
that he has such incredible luck that he can coast through life, it's that he openly enjoys doing so, and loves to rub it in to other people that no matter how hard they might work, they'll always lose to his sheer luckiness.
* JerkWithAHeartOfJerk[=/=]JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Very much DependingOnTheWriter. Several comics have him saving Donald's life, and not in a lucky way either, but through actual physical labor. A prime example is "Donald's Lucky Day", where he doesn't hesitate for a second to throw himself into a river to save Donald from drowning.
** It seems pretty easy to tell if he has a heart of gold based on where the comic is made. The European (primarily Italian) take on him is notably less of an outright jerk, and is always portrayed with at least some shreds of decency. The American version seldom has him as anything but JerkWithAHeartOfJerk.
** For all his smug, jerkass behaviour, Gladstone will drop everything to help anyone, not just Donald, who is in genuine danger. Finding out that his good luck has led to a backup of bad luck for Duckburg itself, he takes the time to work out a schedule so that he can leave and come back in order to bleed off the excess relatively safely, so that the city doesn't get obliterated when he dies or is away for too long.
* LazyBum: Because he never has to work, things always going his way, he abhors physical labor and avoids it wherever possible. This has led to some of the rare occasions where his luck hasn't worked, notably one story where Donald and the boys spend the day digging up a beachside in search of a treasure, whilst Gladstone just lounges around waiting for it to fall into his hands. When he decides it mustn't be on that beach and moves on, the others dig the place up where he was sitting and find it; his luck had provided, if only he wasn't so lazy.
* LetsGetDangerous: On a few occasions he actually ''puts effort'' in what he's doing, showing himself quite intelligent and adding that to his luck, becoming effectively unbeatable.
** Especially shown in his role as coach of Scrooge's futsal team in "The Hundred Gates Tournament":
*** Jeeves had figured out a way to hijack his luck... Except Gladstone had not only hired a deputy to actually train the team [[ProperlyParanoid just in case]], he quickly figures out what Jeeves had pulled and how and turns the tables on him.
*** In the final game it turns out Donald's team has grown stronger than his, to the point they could win through sheer skill, putting them on par in terms of victories (Donald's team having lost their first game) and winning the tournament thanks to the dozens of goals scored against the Beagle Brats... Then Gladstone shuts them down by ordering the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catenaccio Catenaccio]] and forcing a draw, as he only needed that to win the tournament.
** The time Paperinik disguised him as Scrooge set him against Rockerduck's casino to give him a lesson for the plan to turn Scrooge in a [[TheGamblingAddict Gambling Addict]] Gladstone noticed and countered all attempts at cheating from a number of professional gamblers. He walked out with ''all'' the money in the casino.
* LogicalWeakness: While his luck seemingly defies all logic, there ''is'' a logic to it. And whenever someone figures out that logic, they can work around it:
** In one story, Huey, Dewey and Louie exploited the fact that Gladstone always defies the odds by making sure the odds were in his favor for once. Sure enough, Gladstone defies the odds and actually loses.
** In "The Hundred Gates Tournament" Scrooge and Rockerduck, among others, were sponsoring five-a-side kids football teams, with Gladstone working as Scrooge's coach and thus having his luck benefit the team... And Jeeves, coaching Rockerduck's team, sees he has a complicated propitiatory ritual and interferes in it so that he ''hijacks Gladstone's luck for his team''... At least until Gladstone [[TaughtByExperience who knew by experience that his luck wasn't invincible]], figured out what had happened and how and turned the tables on them.
* NiceJobBreakingItHero: In one story, he happily sells the [[ArtifactOfDoom golden helmet]] to a villain who intends to use it to take over america. This was not done out of ignorance either, Donald had already told him about the helmet's true value and ''begged'' him to throw it to the sea. Gladstone simply didn't think about the implications.
* NotMyLuckyDay: According to Don Rosa's ''The Sign of the Triple Distelfink'', his birthday is the one day of the year his lucky streak stops. At the story's end, however, this flaw in his luck is removed -- much to the chagrin of many readers.
* NotSoInvincibleAfterAll: Gladstone's luck ''can'' be defeated with enough cunning or sheer skill:
** Paperinik can reliably defeat him through his cunning and stubborness, having once convinced him his luck had been cursed away, among other tricks.
*** This can only be done by Paperinik, as Gladstone has learned from the experience and is quick to recognize and counter attempts at outsmarting his luck, and only Paperinik is able to still pull this off.
** "The Mondor's Cup" shows that while he's a ''fantastic'' soccer goalkeeper [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlo_Parola Carlo Parola]] can still score on him with his signature bicycle kick.
** If Gladstone were ever to face Magica he'd find himself ''helpless'' against her, as she has a spell capable of turning his good luck into ''bad'' luck just lying around.
* PassedOverInheritance: Invoked and Zigzagged in ''Nobody's Business''. Played Straight when Scrooge declares he's going to give all of his money to
the triplets and not give one dime to his nephews Donald and Gladstone. Subverted when he admits to himself that such a decision isn't fair and he thus decides to award them with ownership of a company based on how they each invest $1000 he gives them.
* PetTheDog: Occasionally -- ''very'' occasionally -- he'll have a few moments where he does this and employs his incredible luck for the benefit of others and not just himself. Notable examples are [[http://disneycomics.free.fr/Ducks/Barks/show.php?num=18&loc=1952/W_OS_367-02R&s=date ''Christmas for Shacktown'']] and [[http://disneycomics.free.fr/Ducks/Rosa/show.php?num=25&loc=D96325&s=date ''A Little Something Special.'']]
* RichInDollarsPoorInSense: Gladstone's luck allows
latest prank put him to coast through life and he exploits that shamelessly, amassing money, property and everything he could desire just by winning contests. This has come at the cost of him lacking basic life skills, however. One story shows that he has no idea how to cook eggs.
** He only ever worked once, during a dry spell in his luck, earning a dime. That job and the dime are his greatest shame.
** Which is an interesting contrast to Scrooge [=McDuck=] who values his trademark NumberOneDime because it was the [[SelfMadeMan first dime he made on his first day of honest work on the job, even 20 years before he became rich.]]
* SharpDressedMan: The coiffe cannot leave the house without being perfectly curled. In his trademark favourite green naturally, to honour shamrock, his personal symbol.
* SmallNameBigEgo: He thinks that being lucky means he's the best guy around, but his cousin Donald's reaction to his attitude says otherwise.
* SmugSnake:
** In the comics, this is ultimately why people really hate him. It's less that he's supernaturally lucky and more that he's such an arrogant bastard about it who loves rubbing it in others' faces.
** Subverted in his appearance
in the 1987 cartoon. While still very lucky, he's actually pretty genial and his first bit was taking out Uncle Scrooge for a nice dinner. His FatalFlaw hospital, which is instead his overreliance on his supernatural luck.
* ATasteOfDefeat: Done ''very'' rarely, for already specified reasons, but it's happened. Him magically losing his luck was the entire plot of an episode of ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''.
** Gladstone, even after having his incredible luck established, did not usually outright win in Barks stories where he was pitted against Donald. Typically, Gladstone either wins but finds that victory isn't really desirable, or wins the apparent prize/conflict and then quits prematurely, allowing Donald to score some less obvious, but more meaningful, victory. On the occasions where Gladstone does outright win (such as in "Gemstone Hunters"), Donald himself is generally behaving in some ethically dubious manner, making the loss more karmic than anything.
** When Italian stories have him dealing with Paperinik, he either loses (with such gems as Paperinik making him believe [[ItMakesSenseInContext Donald's curse with the Mail Shaman's charm]] made him lose his luck before showing up as Donald and selling him the useless charm), or finds out the prize isn't worth it (he was once mistaken for Paperinik, and the real one couldn't prove he wasn't while he enjoyed dating half the girls in the city. Then criminals started gunning for him...).
** A notable early defeat for Gladstone is ''Trail of the Unicorn'' (February, 1950), because it relies on his lack of foresight. Scrooge has offered a reward to Donald for the capture of a fierce unicorn. Gladstone spies on them, and competes
why they're staying with Donald. While Donald and the nephews do all the hard work, Gladstone captures the unicorn and leaves them behind. Scrooge gives him the reward. However, Gladstone did not bring back anything for the unicorn to eat, nor did he care about that. Scrooge is increasingly desperate that his unicorn is dying of starvation. When Donald and the nephews return with information on the unicorn's eating habits, and rescue its life, Scrooge is overjoyed. Donald ends up with a much larger reward than Gladstone, who ends up looking like a poor relative.
* TokenEvilTeammate: A milder example than most, being
this could imply that he is more amoral than evil, but he is the only regularly appearing member of the Duck family who is outright ''died'' from his injuries, this would be pretty consistently an unsympathetic character.
* TooDumbToFool: He's one of the rare characters who's so completely disinterested in power that
ghoulish even the [[ArtifactOfDoom Golden Helmet]] has no hold on him because he's too lazy to ever try to take what it's offering. Deconstructed when it turns out that just being incorruptible does not mean he's IncorruptiblePurePureness. He happily sells the helmet to someone far in more malicious than him just because he needed some cash and didn't care about the consequences.
* UselessBystanderParent: In Don Rosa's story 'The Duck Who Never Was', the triplets live with Gladstone in an alternate universe where Donald never existed. All three are immensely fat and too lazy
adult settings, much less friggin' Disney. Whatever happened to even turn in their chairs, which tells readers everything they need to know about Gladstone's parenting skills. Although Gladstone failed at teaching them ''any'' valuable life lessons and could even come across as [[ParentalNeglect neglectful]], he didn't seem to hold back on things like food, toys, or affection.
** In another story, Donald is swallowed by a huge fish, and the boys try to stir Gladstone into action by threatening to come live with him if their Unca Donald died. Gladstone's initial reaction is confusion and horror. He starts off thinking to himself that he doesn't want them in his house for extended periods of time because he's afraid Donald's bad luck has imprinted upon them. Then he worries that even if he does take them in, he'd probably not be a very good parent.
* VitriolicBestBuds: with Donald, in "[[http://sarroora.tumblr.com/image/121659565584 stories like this one]]".
** In a comic where Huey, Dewey and Louie ask Gladstone if he'll miss Donald if he dies before
him, he answers:
-->'''Trnsl
hasn't been heard from Arabic:''' Of course I'll miss him! His recklessness is endearing! And he's funny when you tick him off!since, even after Della's return.



[[folder: Fethry Duck]]
[[quoteright:157:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fethry_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Health Nut"'', 1964]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/TomKenny (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Donald's eccentric cousin who seems to take on a new obsession every week, but as all of his information on his obsession usually comes from books, TV shows, self-help videos and the like, he often messes up his attempts to apply his "knowledge" and is blissfully unaware of the trouble he causes for everyone around him (especially Donald). Despite Fethry's being an American invention, his stories weren't printed in English until relatively recently. Instead, he enjoyed popularity in other countries, Brazil going as far as to give him his own solo comic, complete with nephew (Dugan), girlfriend (Gloria), superhero alter-ego (The Red Bat, borderline useless). He is not part of Barks/Don Rosa canon, though ExecutiveMeddling made Rosa include Fethry in the Duck family tree for the sake of international readers.
----

* BreakoutCharacter: Since his introduction, Fethry has been a recurring character. In the Brazilian Disney comics, Fethry soon became on of the most popular members of the Donald Duck character cast and he starred in various comics with him as the titular character (and give him also a superhero identity, the Red Bat). He's similary popular in Italy, being a constant character in the publications.
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: As he might say: "Having your feet on the ground just means you're standing still."
* CorrespondenceCourse: Takes a lot of them, and often drags Donald with him.
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: Not as frequently as Donald, but he does have some moments where he manages to step up and pull off some genuinely awesome stunts. He's mostly liable to do this in the [[TheMenInBlack TNT (Tamers of Nonhuman Threats)]] stories.
** Subverted with his superhero identity, the Red Bat. Despite his good intentions, he is a sort of joke that often create problems to real heroes like Paperinik (Duck Avenger).
* DependingOnTheWriter: Can become a borderline [[TheLoad Load]] under certain writers.
* TheDeterminator: When he gets an idea, he will see it through to the end no matter what... or at least until he gets a new idea to be obsessed about.
* DitzyGenius: Though as (bad) luck would have it, his tactlessness and lack of common sense punish others around Fethry more than Fethry himself.
* FleetingPassionateHobbies: One of his defining traits. Any interest or hobby Fethry picks up very quickly becomes an obsession -- until he finds a new thing to obsess over. Which may very well be something wildly different or the exact opposite of his previous obsession. His first appearance, ''The Health Nut,'' perfectly illustrates this: After having read a book called "Health Can Be Fun," he becomes a total health freak, and spends the entire story dragging Donald along in his "healthy living" program... only to at the end of the story read another book, "Fun With Food" and instead devote himself to the art of gastronomy.
* FreudianTrio : In many stories Donald is the id, Fethry is the ego, and Gladstone is the superego.
* TheFriendNobodyLikes: DependingOnTheWriter he plays that role inside the Duck-family's dynamic.
* GenreSavvy:
** Not so much in his normal, day-to-day life, but shows distinct traits of this as a TNT agent; a lifelong obsession with fantasy, sci-fi, horror and the supernatural has taught him just about every trick in the book, which comes in useful when going out to deal with real monsters.
** Also he ''knows'' he's a [[TheKlutz Klutz]], and, to help his family, is capable of ''weaponizing it''. Best shown in the Italian story ''"Zio Paperone e l'Ultima Avventura"'' (''Uncle Scrooge and the Last Adventure''): ThePlan to defeat Flintheart and Rockerduck and get back Killmotor Hill needed time, in which they would have erased the hill, so Fethry had himself hired as a demolition worker and ''set off disaster after disaster'', slowing down the works long enough for the plan to succeed (before he's finally fired, we see him smiling and saying he doesn't want to get in the quickly solidifying ''concrete'' he flooded the area with when he used the wrecking ball and hit a mixer. The chief is among the people trapped in the concrete, and ''really'' wants to get his hands on him).
* GetRichQuickScheme: He starts a lot different professions and business ideas based on different interests of himself. While he himself isn't too interested in the financial success of his businesses, he uses the "getting rich quick"-argument frequently to talk Donald into joining him.
* GranolaGirl: A rare young male example.
* HeavySleeper: As CharacterizationMarchesOn.
* InstantExpert: Subverted. Fethry tends to consider himself an immediate expert on any topic after having read one book on the subject -- but without fail his "expertise" is shown to be extremely flawed and shallow; at best he only has the basics down and lacks the necessary detailed understanding, and at worst he has misunderstood even the basics.
* IWantMyBelovedToBeHappy: Fethry selflessly dotes on Donald and considers him his favorite cousin, genuinely wishing to improve things for Donald whenever possible. You can guess about how well that works out.
* KindheartedSimpleton: Although not stupid, he is rather naïve with a great dose of CloudCuckooLander, but probably one of the most helpful and friendly people you can find in the Duck family.
* TheKlutz: He has traces of this and is responsible for inadvertently setting off a number of {{Slapstick}} routines.
* LethalKlutz: Fethry Duck does sometime cause this kind of disasters. Not being an idiot, he does sometime take advantage of it, such as working in demolitions (that get much quicker and cheaper) or, as in the Italian story "Zio Paperone e l'Ultima Avventura" ("Uncle Scrooge's Last Adventure"), easy and large-scale sabotage.
* LetNoCrisisGoToWaste: Depends on the writer, but in spite of (or perhaps ''due to'') his [[CloudCuckooLander cloud cuckoo lander]] personality, Fethry will see unexpected opportunities and grab them. In one old comic, Scrooge is kidnapped and Donald and Fethry have to rush to the hideout with the ransom. Everyone eventually gets into a fight over the gun. Except Fethry. He picks up the phone and [[http://www.angelfire.com/comics/disney/e7te6af.htm sells the story to the press]].
* ManChild: He is an adult with childlike naivete.
* NeverBareheaded: It is rare see him without his cap. It is revealed, in ''The Health Nut'', that Fethry wears a stocking cap because he was convinced by a self-help book author that one's head is healthier when it's kept hot.
* NewJobEpisode: He often starts different occassions and businesses based on his current varying interests, often forcing his cousin Donald into joining him.
* NiceGuy: There's absolutely no guile or malice to him, and he genuinely wants to help everybody (and especially Donald). [[UnwantedAssistance His ways of helping people, however, generally lead them to wish he wasn't so helpful]].
* {{Robosexual}}: Once fell in love with Margherita, a robot maid girl, oblivious to her nature (she wasn't even sentient) and even intended to marry her.
* SarcasmBlind: Often to Donald's snarky remarks.
* ShrinkingViolet: Believe it or not, according to Donald Fethry used to be very shy and timid when he was a kid. He well and truly grew out of it.
* SimplemindedWisdom: One of his undeniable strengths is that since his mind works in such strange ways, he's very good at spotting the obvious questions or solutions that everyone else misses.
* SoapboxSadie: Occasionally, but unlike most examples of the trope he's hardly ever a soapbox for the ''writers'' and is probably wrong more often than he's right.
* StalkerWithoutACrush:
** Can sometimes be this towards Donald, DependingOnTheWriter.
** While it's obviously not a romantic interest, Fethry adores Donald's miserable pet tomcat, Tabby, and behaves in [[WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures Elmyra]]-like fashion when Tabby is near.
* StraightManAndWiseGuy: Part of Fethry's charm is that he allows Donald to play the StraightMan to him in many stories.
* SuperZeroes: As The Red Bat (his superhero identity), he goes on by sheer luck, appearing more competent that he actually is and weaponizing his innate clumsiness.
* TerribleArtist: He's into recreational activities, like painting and sculpting. The problem with his 'artworks' is that people keep mistaking them for garbage.
* VitriolicBestBuds: Classic Type 1, with Donald. Fethry drives Donald insane on a regular basis, but he ''is'' one of the very few people in the Duck universe who genuinely likes and appreciates Donald as a friend. How much Donald in turn appreciates Fethry often [[DependingOnTheWriter Depends On The Writer]], but even in the stories where he ''doesn't'' like Fethry much it's still clear that he vastly prefers Fethry to Gladstone-and in one Paperinik story Donald was willing to make an exception and let him remember his superhero identity rather than force LaserGuidedAmnesia on him as usual (it would be Fethry himself to ask for a memory-erasing candy after realizing he was only making things worse for him).
* UnwantedAssistance: He just wants to help people out and is honestly trying to look out for everyone... it's just that with his clumsiness and generally ditzy nature, he tends to harm more than help.
[[/folder]]

!Ducks
[[folder: Elvira "Grandma" Duck]]
[[quoteright:145:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/elvira_coot.png]]
-> Debut: ''Grandma Duck gag'' (1943)
-> Voiced by: Creator/JuneForay, Russi Taylor (''Sport Goofy in Soccermania'')

Born Elvira Coot, she is Casey's sister, Humperdink's wife, Donald, Fethry and Gladstone's grandmother and Huey, Dewey and Louie's great-grandmother. She lives at a farm outside Duckburg with her gluttonous, incredibly lazy farmhand Gus Goose, Casey's grandson, and is renowned for her pie-baking skills. She is the granddaughter of the founder of Duckburg, Cornelius Coot.

to:

[[folder: Fethry Abner "Whitewater" Duck]]
[[quoteright:157:https://static.[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fethry_duck.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/abner_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Health Nut"'', 1964]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/TomKenny (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

''"Log Jockey"'', 1962]]

Donald's eccentric cousin who seems to take on a new obsession every week, but as all of his information on his obsession usually comes from books, TV shows, self-help videos and the like, he often messes up his attempts to apply his "knowledge" and is blissfully unaware of the trouble he causes for everyone around him (especially Donald). Despite cousin, Fethry's being an American invention, his stories weren't printed in English until relatively recently. Instead, he enjoyed popularity in other countries, Brazil going as far as to give him his own solo comic, complete with nephew (Dugan), girlfriend (Gloria), superhero alter-ego (The Red Bat, borderline useless). He is not part of Barks/Don Rosa canon, though ExecutiveMeddling made Rosa include Fethry in the Duck family tree for the sake of international readers.
----

* BreakoutCharacter: Since his introduction, Fethry has been a recurring character. In the Brazilian Disney comics, Fethry soon became on of the most popular members of the Donald Duck character cast
brother, and he starred in various comics with him as the titular character (and give him also a superhero identity, the Red Bat). Douglas's nephew. He's similary popular in Italy, being a constant character in the publications.
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: As he might say: "Having your feet on the ground just means you're standing still."
* CorrespondenceCourse: Takes a lot of them,
lumberjack and often drags Donald with him.
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: Not as frequently as Donald, but he does have some moments where he manages to step up and pull off some genuinely awesome stunts. He's mostly liable to do this in the [[TheMenInBlack TNT (Tamers of Nonhuman Threats)]] stories.
** Subverted with his superhero identity, the Red Bat. Despite his good intentions, he is a sort of joke that often create problems to real heroes like Paperinik (Duck Avenger).
* DependingOnTheWriter: Can become a borderline [[TheLoad Load]] under certain writers.
* TheDeterminator: When he gets an idea, he will see it through to the end no matter what... or at least until he gets a new idea to be obsessed about.
* DitzyGenius: Though as (bad) luck would have it, his tactlessness and lack of common sense punish others around Fethry more than Fethry himself.
* FleetingPassionateHobbies: One of his defining traits. Any interest or hobby Fethry picks up very quickly becomes an obsession -- until he finds a new thing to obsess over. Which may very well be something wildly different or the exact opposite of his previous obsession. His first appearance, ''The Health Nut,'' perfectly illustrates this: After having read a book called "Health Can Be Fun," he becomes a total health freak, and spends the entire story dragging Donald along in his "healthy living" program... only to at the end of the story read another book, "Fun With Food" and instead devote himself to the art of gastronomy.
* FreudianTrio : In many stories Donald is the id, Fethry is the ego, and Gladstone is the superego.
* TheFriendNobodyLikes: DependingOnTheWriter he plays that role inside the Duck-family's dynamic.
* GenreSavvy:
** Not so much in his normal, day-to-day life, but shows distinct traits of this as a TNT agent; a lifelong obsession with fantasy, sci-fi, horror and the supernatural has taught him just about every trick in the book, which comes in useful when going out to deal with real monsters.
** Also he ''knows'' he's a [[TheKlutz Klutz]], and, to help his family, is capable of ''weaponizing it''. Best shown in the Italian story ''"Zio Paperone e l'Ultima Avventura"'' (''Uncle Scrooge and the Last Adventure''): ThePlan to defeat Flintheart and Rockerduck and get back Killmotor Hill needed time, in which they would have erased the hill, so Fethry had himself hired as a demolition worker and ''set off disaster after disaster'', slowing down the works long enough for the plan to succeed (before he's finally fired, we see him smiling and saying he doesn't want to get in the quickly solidifying ''concrete'' he flooded the area with when he used the wrecking ball and hit a mixer. The chief is among the people trapped in the concrete, and ''really'' wants to get his hands on him).
* GetRichQuickScheme: He starts a lot different professions and business ideas based on different interests of himself. While he himself isn't too interested in the financial success of his businesses, he uses the "getting rich quick"-argument frequently to talk Donald into joining him.
* GranolaGirl: A rare young male example.
* HeavySleeper: As CharacterizationMarchesOn.
* InstantExpert: Subverted. Fethry tends to consider himself an immediate expert on any topic after having read one book on the subject -- but without fail his "expertise" is shown to be extremely flawed and shallow; at best he only has the basics down and lacks the necessary detailed understanding, and at worst he has misunderstood even the basics.
* IWantMyBelovedToBeHappy: Fethry selflessly dotes on Donald and considers him his favorite cousin, genuinely wishing to improve things for Donald whenever possible. You can guess about how well that works out.
* KindheartedSimpleton: Although not stupid, he is rather naïve with a great dose of CloudCuckooLander, but probably one of the most helpful and friendly people you can find in the Duck family.
* TheKlutz: He has traces of this and is responsible for inadvertently setting off a number of {{Slapstick}} routines.
* LethalKlutz: Fethry Duck does sometime cause this kind of disasters. Not being an idiot, he does sometime take advantage of it, such as working in demolitions (that get much quicker and cheaper) or, as in the Italian story "Zio Paperone e l'Ultima Avventura" ("Uncle Scrooge's Last Adventure"), easy and large-scale sabotage.
* LetNoCrisisGoToWaste: Depends on the writer, but in spite of (or perhaps ''due to'') his [[CloudCuckooLander cloud cuckoo lander]] personality, Fethry will see unexpected opportunities and grab them. In one old comic, Scrooge is kidnapped and Donald and Fethry have to rush to the hideout with the ransom. Everyone eventually gets into a fight over the gun. Except Fethry. He picks up the phone and [[http://www.angelfire.com/comics/disney/e7te6af.htm sells the story to the press]].
* ManChild: He is an adult with childlike naivete.
* NeverBareheaded: It is rare see him without his cap. It is revealed, in ''The Health Nut'', that Fethry wears a stocking cap because he was convinced by a self-help book author that one's head is healthier when it's kept hot.
* NewJobEpisode: He often starts different occassions and businesses based on his current varying interests, often forcing his cousin Donald into joining him.
* NiceGuy: There's absolutely no guile or malice to him, and he genuinely wants to help everybody (and especially Donald). [[UnwantedAssistance His ways of helping people, however, generally lead them to wish he wasn't so helpful]].
* {{Robosexual}}: Once fell in love with Margherita, a robot maid girl, oblivious to her nature (she wasn't even sentient) and even intended to marry her.
* SarcasmBlind: Often to Donald's snarky remarks.
* ShrinkingViolet: Believe it or not, according to Donald Fethry used to be very shy and timid when he was a kid. He well and truly grew out of it.
* SimplemindedWisdom: One of his undeniable strengths is that since his mind works in such strange ways, he's very good at spotting the obvious questions or solutions that everyone else misses.
* SoapboxSadie: Occasionally, but unlike most examples of the trope he's hardly ever a soapbox for the ''writers'' and is probably wrong more often than he's right.
* StalkerWithoutACrush:
** Can sometimes be this towards Donald, DependingOnTheWriter.
** While it's obviously not a romantic interest, Fethry adores Donald's miserable pet tomcat, Tabby, and behaves in [[WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures Elmyra]]-like fashion when Tabby is near.
* StraightManAndWiseGuy: Part of Fethry's charm is that he allows Donald to play the StraightMan to him in many stories.
* SuperZeroes: As The Red Bat (his superhero identity), he goes on by sheer luck, appearing more competent that he actually is and weaponizing his innate clumsiness.
* TerribleArtist: He's into recreational activities, like painting and sculpting. The problem with his 'artworks' is that people keep mistaking them for garbage.
* VitriolicBestBuds: Classic Type 1, with Donald. Fethry drives Donald insane on a regular basis, but he ''is'' one of the very few people in the Duck universe who genuinely likes and appreciates Donald as a friend. How much Donald in turn appreciates Fethry often [[DependingOnTheWriter Depends On The Writer]], but even in the stories where he ''doesn't'' like Fethry much it's still clear that he vastly prefers Fethry to Gladstone-and in one Paperinik story Donald was willing to make an exception and let him remember his superhero identity rather than force LaserGuidedAmnesia on him as usual (it would be Fethry himself to ask for a memory-erasing candy after realizing he was only making things worse for him).
* UnwantedAssistance: He just wants to help people out and is honestly trying to look out for everyone... it's just that with his clumsiness and generally ditzy nature, he tends to harm more than help.
[[/folder]]

!Ducks
[[folder: Elvira "Grandma" Duck]]
[[quoteright:145:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/elvira_coot.png]]
-> Debut: ''Grandma Duck gag'' (1943)
-> Voiced by: Creator/JuneForay, Russi Taylor (''Sport Goofy in Soccermania'')

Born Elvira Coot, she is Casey's sister, Humperdink's wife, Donald, Fethry and Gladstone's grandmother and Huey, Dewey and Louie's great-grandmother. She lives at a farm outside Duckburg with her gluttonous, incredibly lazy farmhand Gus Goose, Casey's grandson, and is renowned for her pie-baking skills. She is the granddaughter of the founder of Duckburg, Cornelius Coot.
currently dating Donna Duck.



* AdaptationNameChange: Before Don Rosa solidated Grandma's name as "Elvira", an alternative was "Abigail" as mentioned in a 1953 ''"Grandma Duck"'' comic and in ''"Ridin' the Rails"''.
* BewareTheNiceOnes: She is the kindest, most reasonable, and most generous member of the Duck family, but don't think for a moment that this means you can walk all over her; if provoked enough she'll show you ''exactly'' how tough an elderly lady who runs a farm almost by herself has to be. The fact that she is the only Duck family member who can make Scrooge back down with no effort whatsoever, really says everything.
** In one Italian story, Donald finds a diary from her younger years, modifies it a bit, and publishes it as a novel (in his own name). Grandma tells him exactly what she thinks of him, after sharing some of her most private moments with the world.
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: In her early appearances in Al Taliaferro's newspaper strips, she comes off as somewhat senile and more comically old-fashioned and conservative than she has become since.
** Several 1950s stories feature Grandma shunning "modern" inventions such as electricity, running water, and television. She also refuses to replace her car with something more modern. The car in question is a Detroit Electric from the 1910s (an electric automobile, running on a rechargeable lead acid battery).
* DependingOnTheWriter: According to Creator/DonRosa, she is Donald's paternal grandmother and therefore not related to Scrooge at all, but before that, in European comics, it was widely accepted that she was Scrooge's sister and actually Donald's ''aunt'' -- and Huey, Dewey and Louie's real grandmother. With the publication of the Duck family tree which shows her as Donald's grandmother, this has largely been forgotten.
** In part this was a problem in translation. In American stories, Scrooge and Grandma had different last names and no indication that they were related to each other (they also barely interacted in stories). Italian translations eliminated the name difference by naming Scrooge as "Paperone" and Grandma as "Nonna Papera", and some writers started writing stories with the assumption that they are siblings. Several other translations followed this example.
** Her affection for Donald differs in several stories. In the "Paperino Paperotto" subseries (featuring Donald's childhood and school years), Grandma was his sole legal guardian, he is her favorite grandson, and she genuinely adores him. In several other stories (including interactions with an adult Donald), she is strict with him, all too eager to point out his faults, and she even finds him annoying.
** How close her relationship is with other Duck family members, or their friends differs in stories. Several stories have her organizing family gatherings in her farm, and remaining in contact with almost everyone. Others have her interacting with her family on rare occasions. A number of older stories have Grandma striking an IntergenerationalFriendship with Daisy and/or treating her as a surrogate granddaughter, but most recent ones mention no special bond between them.
* CoolOldLady: While she can be strict, especially in early stories, she is also kind and loving... not to mention, she can be tough as nails when she needs to be.
* DubNameChange: She's Anna in Norwegian comics.
%%* GrannyClassic: Both in looks and in manners.
* HopelessWithTech: Her biggest AchillesHeel; she can never figure out these "newfangled contraptions" that the city-dwellers take such pride in, and any attempt she makes to figure them out will lead to inevitable disaster. In many she is portrayed as [[TechnologicallyBlindElders distrusting and disliking modern tech]] and insisting on doing everything the old-fashioned way -- and in all these stories it is repeatedly demonstrated that for her at least, the GoodOldWays ''[[LuddWasRight work]]''.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: Good friends with Daisy, Emily Quackfaster, and Brigitta. The age difference with the latter is such Brigitta could be her ''daughter'', and she's the oldest of the three.
* LandPoor: She owns a rather large farm-that is what remains of the Coot properties, that used to cover ''all of modern-day Duckburg and much of the nearby land'' before Scrooge started buying it to build the city.
* MoralityPet: Interestingly enough, to Scrooge. While he's not above exploiting her hospitality for what its worth, Grandma is one of ''very'' few people he'll always treat kindly. This might be because he knows [[NeverMessWithGranny exactly how tough she can be,]] or because he genuinely appreciates her kind nature... or a combination of both.
* NeverMessWithGranny: There's a reason she runs a largish farm almost by herself: she's ''that'' tough, and has no qualm grabbing the shotgun when it comes to defend her property.
* PunnyName: In Norwegian, her name is sometimes Anna, a homophone for Anda, "the duck."
* SecretSecretKeeper: At one point she stumbled on the fact her nephew Donald is the superhero Paperinik, and never told anyone.
* SupremeChef: Her cooking is famous; even hard-boiled criminals have been known to break down and promise to be better people if they could have just ''one more taste.''
* TeamMom: Well, Team Grandma, but the effect is the same.
* {{Workaholic}}: She ''loves'' doing chores at the farm. There have been stories where her workload is diminished either by Gus Goose shaping up or getting additional help, and the result is always that Grandma ends up driving herself crazy trying to come up with ways to fill her free time.

to:

* AdaptationNameChange: Before Don Rosa solidated Grandma's name AllThereInTheManual: The reveal that Fethry and Whitewater are brothers isn´t stated in an actual story but comes from Creator/DonRosa's family tree. Probably he put it that way thanks [[ExecutiveMeddling to having to include the non-Barks-character Fethry as "Elvira", an alternative was "Abigail" as mentioned he's so puplar in Europe]]. In fact, the two brothers never did appear in a 1953 ''"Grandma Duck"'' comic and in ''"Ridin' the Rails"''.story together.
* BewareTheNiceOnes: She is the kindest, most reasonable, and most generous member of the Duck family, but don't think for a moment that this means you can walk all over her; if provoked enough she'll show you ''exactly'' how tough an elderly lady who runs a farm almost by herself has to be. The fact that she is the only Duck family member who can make Scrooge back {{Determinator}}: In ''"Log Jockey"'', Whitewater can't guide his logs down with no effort whatsoever, really says everything.
** In one Italian story, Donald finds a diary from her younger years, modifies it a bit, and publishes it as a novel (in his own name). Grandma tells him exactly what she thinks of him, after sharing some of her most private moments with
the world.
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: In her early appearances in Al Taliaferro's newspaper strips, she comes off as somewhat senile and more comically old-fashioned and conservative than she has become since.
** Several 1950s stories feature Grandma shunning "modern" inventions such as electricity, running water, and television. She also refuses
river due to replace her car with something more modern. The car in question is a Detroit Electric from the 1910s (an electric automobile, running on a rechargeable lead acid battery).
* DependingOnTheWriter: According to Creator/DonRosa, she is Donald's paternal grandmother
an injured foot and therefore not related can't strike up the bonus of being the first to arrive, so he volunteers Donald within two minutes of meeting him for the first time. In ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'', he and Douglas lose every round of a sourdough competition against Donald and Scrooge at all, who use their brains to make up for their lack in physical strength and skill. The two are nonetheless declared co-winners because "real sourdoughs never quit. Not even when they're outmatched." They take it in stride.
--> '''Whitewater:''' "You mean we're '''winners''' because we're such big '''losers'''?"
* TheFriendsWhoNeverHang: Family, in this case. Whitewater isn't very close with his family, which is reasonable,
but before that, there exist no stories in European comics, it was widely accepted which he and Fethry both appear. The knowledge that she was Scrooge's sister and actually Donald's ''aunt'' -- and Huey, Dewey and Louie's real grandmother. With the publication of the Duck they are brothers comes solely from family tree which shows her as Donald's grandmother, this has largely been forgotten.trees.
** In part this was a problem * OutOfFocus: Out of various cousins of Donald who have appeared in translation. In American stories, Scrooge comics, only Gus Goose, Gladstone Gander, and Grandma Fethry Duck have been developed into major characters who often star in their own stories. Whitewater has only had different last names three story appearances so far (published between 1962 and 2012), and mostly appears in family trees. He has little to no indication that they were related to each other (they also characterization, and barely interacted in stories). Italian translations eliminated the name difference by naming Scrooge as "Paperone" and Grandma as "Nonna Papera", and some writers started writing stories any interaction with the assumption that they are siblings. Several other translations followed this example.characters.
** Her affection for * PairTheSpares: In ''"Too Many Donalds"'', Whitewater forms a couple with Donna Duck, a former love interest of Donald differs in several stories. In as rarely written about as Whitewater is.
* RelatedInTheAdaptation: It was not until ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'' that Whitewater was identified as Douglas' nephew. And this doesn't really seem to fit into
the "Paperino Paperotto" subseries (featuring Donald's childhood and school years), Grandma was his sole legal guardian, he is her favorite grandson, and she genuinely adores him. In several other stories (including interactions with an adult Donald), she is strict with him, all too eager to point out his faults, and she even finds earlier family trees which have him annoying.a full brother to Fethry.
** How close her relationship is with other Duck family members, or their friends differs in stories. Several stories have her organizing family gatherings in her farm, * TheRival: He and remaining in contact with almost everyone. Others have her interacting with her family on rare occasions. A number of older stories have Grandma striking an IntergenerationalFriendship with Daisy and/or treating her as a surrogate granddaughter, but most recent ones mention no special bond between them.
* CoolOldLady: While she can be strict, especially in early stories, she is also kind
his uncle Douglas were this to Donald and loving... not to mention, she can be tough as nails when she needs to be.
* DubNameChange: She's Anna in Norwegian comics.
%%* GrannyClassic: Both in looks and in manners.
* HopelessWithTech: Her biggest AchillesHeel; she can never figure out these "newfangled contraptions" that the city-dwellers take such pride in, and any attempt she makes to figure them out will lead to inevitable disaster. In many she is portrayed as [[TechnologicallyBlindElders distrusting and disliking modern tech]] and insisting on doing everything the old-fashioned way -- and in all these stories it is repeatedly demonstrated that for her at least, the GoodOldWays ''[[LuddWasRight work]]''.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: Good friends with Daisy, Emily Quackfaster, and Brigitta. The age difference with the latter is such Brigitta could be her ''daughter'', and she's the oldest of the three.
* LandPoor: She owns a rather large farm-that is what remains of the Coot properties, that used to cover ''all of modern-day Duckburg and much of the nearby land'' before
Scrooge started buying it to build the city.
* MoralityPet: Interestingly enough, to Scrooge. While he's not above exploiting her hospitality for what its worth, Grandma is one of ''very'' few people he'll always treat kindly. This might be because he knows [[NeverMessWithGranny exactly how tough she can be,]] or because he genuinely appreciates her kind nature... or a combination of both.
* NeverMessWithGranny: There's a reason she runs a largish farm almost by herself: she's ''that'' tough, and has no qualm grabbing the shotgun when it comes to defend her property.
* PunnyName: In Norwegian, her name is sometimes Anna, a homophone for Anda, "the duck."
* SecretSecretKeeper: At one point she stumbled on the fact her nephew Donald is the superhero Paperinik, and never told anyone.
* SupremeChef: Her cooking is famous; even hard-boiled criminals have been known to break down and promise to be better people if they could have just ''one
in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"''. Or more taste.''
* TeamMom: Well, Team Grandma, but
fairly considering who entered the effect is the same.
* {{Workaholic}}: She ''loves'' doing chores at the farm. There have been stories where her workload is diminished either by Gus Goose shaping up or getting additional help, and the result is always that Grandma ends up driving herself crazy trying to come up with ways to fill her free time.
contest first, vice versa.



[[folder: Humperdink "Grandpa" Duck]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_grandpa_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Grandma Duck"'', 1951]]

Husband of Elvira Coot, as well as Donald, Fethry and Gladstone's grandfather and Huey, Dewey and Louie's great-grandfather. He was a farmer in life, but has passed away of old age.

to:

[[folder: Humperdink "Grandpa" Dugan Duck]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_grandpa_duck.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/dugan_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Grandma Duck"'', 1951]]

Husband
''"O Furacão Branco E Preto"'', 1982]]

The son
of Elvira Coot, as well as Donald, Fethry Duck's sister. He lives with his uncle and Gladstone's grandfather and Huey, Dewey and Louie's great-grandfather. He was a farmer in life, but has passed away of old age.is close friends with Cintia, the girl living next door.



* AdaptationNameChange: "Humperdink" is the name given for Grandma's late husband in the 50s ''Grandma Duck'' comics. Don Rosa was not aware of this when he created the first version of the Duck family tree and gave the character another name, "Dabney". When he was informed, he changed the name to Humperdink to match prior canon. Both names have since entered use, although "Humperdink" is more popular.
* HappilyMarried: As early as the 50s ''Grandma Duck'' comics, it was established that Grandma has nothing but loving memories of her husband. One 1951 comic has her find his love letters in the attic while searching for stuff to sell and the apparent loss of the letters in the events following deeply upsets her. In another comic published that same year, Grandma is pressured into dressing up by her new maid and she picks a dress that reminds her of time spent with Humperdink.
* LazyBum: According to ''"The Good Old Daze"'', he had the nasty habit of forcing Donald to do all the chores when he was visiting. On top of that, he ate all the pies Grandma baked while Donald was at work, leaving nothing for his grandson.
* PosthumousCharacter: While not explicit, it's strongly implied that he's passed away, since he's not present in any modern comic, and his family rarely mention him.

to:

* AdaptationNameChange: "Humperdink" AlternateCompanyEquivalent: So here is a duck boy who has been picked from the name given wilderness, all tropes like messy hair, high-energy, and friend included, to live with an uncle figure and who has a semi-romantic bond with the pig girl living next door. Sounds quite a bit like [[Characters/DuckTales1987 Bubba]] from ''[=DuckTales=]''.
* BoyNextDoor: To Cintia.
* TheDreaded: Due to the disasters he sets off, everyone who knows him is ''terrified'', and being his babysitter
for Grandma's late husband a day is considered more dangerous than being a ''professional stuntman''.
** In one Italian story, Fethry forces Scrooge to babysit Dugan for a day. Every employee
in the 50s ''Grandma Duck'' comics. Don Rosa was not aware of this when he created the first version of the Duck family tree Money Bin runs away, typically overworked Emily Quackfaster announces a sudden decision to go on a vacation, and gave the character another name, "Dabney". When he was informed, he changed the name to Humperdink to match prior canon. Both names have since entered use, although "Humperdink" is more popular.
* HappilyMarried: As early as the 50s ''Grandma Duck'' comics, it was established
Magica informs Scrooge that Grandma has nothing but loving memories of her husband. One 1951 comic has her find his love letters in she will stay away from the attic while searching for stuff to sell and the apparent loss of the letters in the events following deeply upsets her. In another comic published that same year, Grandma Money Bin as long as Dugan is pressured into dressing up by her new maid and she picks a dress that reminds her of time spent with Humperdink.
there.
* LazyBum: According to ''"The Good Old Daze"'', he had the nasty habit of forcing Donald to do all the chores when he was visiting. On top of that, he ate all the pies Grandma baked while Donald was at work, leaving nothing PaletteSwap: There are two canon colors for his grandson.
* PosthumousCharacter: While not explicit, it's strongly implied that he's passed away, since he's not present in any modern comic,
feathers: regular white and yellow a la [[Characters/DarkwingDuck Gosalyn Mallard]]. White feathers are usual for Italian comics and yellow feathers are the preferred canon of Brazilian comics.
* ParentalAbandonment: You'd think Fethry would tell
his family rarely mention him.sister he found her lost son and for her to pick him up, but no. No details are spent on the identity of Dugan's father either.
* PleasePutSomeClothesOn: Dugan goes around naked for almost the entirety of ''"O Nascimento Do Biquinho"'' on account of being raised by porcupines. It is a little awkward when Fethry and Gloria get to meet him.
* RaisedByWolves: He sabotaged his own delivery by the stork and ended up in the jungle where he was raised by porcupines. This often results in him setting off disasters because he has no idea of what he is doing.



[[folder: Quackmore Duck]]
[[AC: First appearance: ''"Carl Barks Duck Family Tree"'' (1950's/1981)]]
Donald and Della Duck's father, Hortense's husband, and Grandma and Grandpa Duck's son, Quackmore first "appeared" as a simple name in a Duck family tree sketch made by Barks sometime in the 1950's, which was eventually illustrated in 1981. His first true appearance as a character was in "The Invader Of Fort Duckburg" in 1993.

to:

![=McDucks=]
[[folder: Quackmore Duck]]
[[AC: First appearance: ''"Carl Barks Duck Family Tree"'' (1950's/1981)]]
Donald and Della Duck's father, Hortense's husband, and Grandma and Grandpa Duck's son, Quackmore first "appeared" as a simple name in a Duck family tree sketch made by Barks sometime in the 1950's, which was eventually illustrated in 1981. His first true appearance as a character was in "The Invader Of Fort Duckburg" in 1993.
Fergus [=McDuck=]]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/DonMessick (''[=DuckTales=]''), Creator/GrahamMcTavish (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Scrooge [=McDuck=]'s father.



* AmazonChaser: He fell in love with Hortense while she was yelling at him in rage.
* DisappearedDad: Like his wife Hortense, there is no record of exactly what happened to him, his last appearance being the disastrous family reunion at the end of "The Empire Builder from Calisota" where he and Hortense tried to introduce Scrooge to his niece and nephew. By the comics present, he's presumed long-dead.
* GenerationXerox: Don Rosa depicts him as looking virtually identical to his son, especially in his youth.
* HairTriggerTemper: A massive one, which was matched only by Hortense.
* HiddenDepths: Grew up as a simple farmer, but spent decades as a high-ranking worker for Scrooge.
* ImportantHaircut: When he reappears in "The Empire Builder of Calisota", he's begun neatly combing his head feathers as part of joining Scrooge's empire, which shows him shedding his FarmBoy past.
* LikeFatherLikeSon: He looks and behaves almost like his son Donald when he first meets his eventual wife Hortense.
* ObnoxiousInLaws: Scrooge never thought highly of his brother-in-law, even with the very limited panel time they shared, and it shows.
* SatelliteLoveInterest: Compared to Hortense, he has next to no personality aside from a HairTriggerTemper and possibly a good sense of business.

to:

* AmazonChaser: He fell in love with Hortense while she was yelling at him in rage.
* DisappearedDad: Like his wife Hortense, there is no record of exactly what happened to him, his last appearance being the disastrous family reunion at the end of "The Empire Builder from Calisota" where he and Hortense tried to introduce
GoodParents: Fergus encouraged Scrooge to be self-reliant, but also made it clear to him that his niece love was unconditional and, no matter what his son did, he would be proud of him.
* HappilyMarried: To Downy O'Drake.
* ImpoverishedPatrician: Fergus was born in the old aristocratic [=McDuck=] family
and nephew. By had legal claim to Dismal Downs, the comics present, he's presumed long-dead.
* GenerationXerox: Don Rosa depicts him as looking virtually identical to
family castle. However he was born a few generations after his son, especially in family lost most of their wealth. His father and mother were coal miners and Fergus himself spend most of his youth.
* HairTriggerTemper: A massive one, which was matched only by Hortense.
life as a mill worker.
* HiddenDepths: Grew up as a simple farmer, InSeriesNickname: "[=McPapa=]" in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', "Scotty" [=McDuck=] on Barks' original Duck family tree.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: ''"A Letter from Home"'' shows that he had solved the mystery of the Templars hidden beneath Castle [=McDuck=] and made it all the way to the final chamber,
but spent decades as due to not having access to the last clue (which not even the Junior Woodchuck's Guide contained), leaves a high-ranking worker note for Scrooge.
Scrooge there.
* ImportantHaircut: When he reappears PassedInTheirSleep: He passes quietly away from old age in "The Empire Builder of Calisota", he's begun neatly combing his head feathers sleep on the same night his children leave for America.
* PosthumousCharacter: While he does occasionally show up due to NegativeContinuity, it's usually agreed upon that Fergus has passed away by the modern day.
* SoProudOfYou: Offers this
as part of parting words to his son Scrooge, when he explains that he won't be joining him and his sisters for their emigration to America, as he is simply too old to make the journey.
-->'''Fergus:''' Scrooge, take your sisters to a new life in America! Ye're right -- ye've ootgrown the life ''ah've'' known.\\
'''Scrooge:''' But--\\
'''Fergus:''' ''(smiles warmly)'' No arguin, lad! Joost ''promise me'' you'll always be true to yourself and know ah'll always be prood o' ya!
* SparedByTheAdaptation: The [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 [=DuckTales=]-reboot]] shows that Fergus and Downy are not only still alive in this continuity, but also [[Really700YearsOld basically immortal]].
* StrongFamilyResemblance: He looks exactly like an older Scrooge. When Magica de Spell tries to travel back in time to steal
Scrooge's empire, which shows him shedding his FarmBoy past.
* LikeFatherLikeSon: He looks
NumberOneDime, she mistook Fergus for Scrooge and behaves almost like his son Donald tries to attack him.
* TogetherInDeath: Downy comes back as a ghost to welcome Fergus to the afterlife
when he first meets his eventual wife Hortense.
dies in ''"The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs"''.
* ObnoxiousInLaws: Scrooge never thought highly of his brother-in-law, even with WouldHitAGirl: Downplayed, but definitely there as shown in ''"Of Ducks And Dimes And Destinies"'':
-->'''Magica de Spell:''' Back off, buster! You wouldn't '''dare''' to lay your hands on a lady!\\
'''Fergus:''' Oh, wouldn't I?\\
''(cut to Fergus having grabbed Magica by
the very limited panel time they shared, ankles and it shows.
* SatelliteLoveInterest: Compared to Hortense,
holding her upside down as he has next to no personality aside from a HairTriggerTemper and possibly a good sense shakes the NumberOneDime out of business.her pocket)''\\
'''Magica de Spell:''' Of course, I could be wrong...



[[folder: Della "Dumbella" Duck]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/PagetBrewster (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dumbella_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Donald's Nephews"'', 1937]]

Donald's twin sister, and mother of Huey, Dewey and Louie.

to:

[[folder: Della "Dumbella" Duck]]
Downy O'Drake]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/PagetBrewster (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dumbella_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Donald's Nephews"'', 1937]]

Donald's twin sister, and mother of Huey, Dewey and Louie.
June Foray (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''), Ashley Jensen (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Scrooge [=McDuck=]'s mother.



* AcePilot: According to ''"80 Jaar"''. It serves to make her a {{Foil}} to Donald being a sailor. Eventually, she became an astronaut, dropping the triplets with Donald when she went on a deep space mission. Her depiction in a painting in WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 also shows her wearing pilot gear.
* AlliterativeName: '''D'''ella '''D'''uck.
* AlwaysIdenticalTwins: Don Rosa made her Donald's twin. And basically Donald with blonde hair, down to the sailor suit.
* AscendedExtra: With a sprinkling of TheBusCameBack. For decades, Della went unseen, existing solely through the presence of her sons. Della's first steps into the spotlight occured in ''The Life and Times of Scrooge [=McDuck=]'' in 1994, 57 years after first being mentioned (she was given an appearance a year prior in the family tree), and that spotlight was limited to her childhood years. In 2014, the Dutch branch of Disney comics was given permission to star Della as an adult for Donald's eightieth birthday as long as it didn't interfere with the status quo. This formed the inspiration for the 2017 series ''Donald's Eerste...'' (''Donald's First...''), which is the first time Della is featured as an equal to Donald. In addition, her absence in the Triplets' lives is now a key plot point for the [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 2017 reboot]], which puts the series as her animated debut, and she later becomes a main character in the later half of its second season as well as the third and finale season.
* BrotherSisterTeam: The Dutch series ''Donald's Eerste...'' details Donald's and Della's childhood.
* CoolBigSis: She's his twin, but ahead of her brother in maturity. In ''"80 Jaar"'', Donald spares no words to convey how much he admires her.
* {{Determinator}}: From early childhood, Della wanted to be a pilot and knew that being a woman made her wish unconventional, but she set her mind to it anyway. She was good enough that at the age of 22 in 1958, she was picked to man an experimental rocket for a test flight...
* GoneToTheFuture: What happened according to ''"80 Jaar"''. Experimental rocket fuel sent Della buzzing at lightspeed through her deep space mission, which due to TimeDilation means that for Della just 5 minutes (of an intended 20) have passed, while [[ComicBookTime who-knows-how-many-years went by on Earth]]. Thanks to Gyro, the nephews get a chance to contact her. She notes that they remind her of her infant sons and they haven't the heart to tell her they are them and that circumstances have made her miss out on years of their lives.
* InSeriesNickname: Dumbella is Della's nickname. In ''"Donald's Eerste Liedje"'', Della says she dislikes her name so to cheer her up Donald composes a song making fun of her name, his own name, and Gyro's name. Della likes it so much she takes the "Dumbella" part of the song as her nickname.
* MissingMom: Don Rosa's thoughts on the matter are that you can't explain where Della is without being [[ShaggyDogStory pointless]]; [[{{Nephewism}} Donald (and Scrooge) are the triplets' father figures,]] [[StatusQuoIsGod no need to add the parents!]].
* ParentalNeglect: Leaving your prankster sons with your short-tempered brother can be seen as this. Even more in the comics, where Della's letter details that the [[SarcasmMode "angels"]] had just hospitalized their father by blowing him with firecrackers.
** A Dutch comic though established that Della never meant to be gone for more than an hour, but because of the strange time effects going nearly the speed of light caused she thinks its only been 15 minutes since she left earth when in reality it has been years. Sadly by the time Della returns, her boys will be older than she is.
* {{Retcon}}: With elements of RelatedDifferentlyInTheAdaptation. In the comic ''"Donald's Nephews"'', the letter indicates that ''Della'' is Donald's ''cousin''. In the short ''Donald's Nephews'', released a year later, the letter indicates that ''Dumbella'' is Donald's ''sister''. In general, Della has been taken as the character's name, Dumbella is her InSeriesNickname, and she is Donald's sister -- twin sister ever since Don Rosa wrote about her.
* RiddleForTheAges: The identity of the father of her children. 80 years after first being mentioned, and he has never made an on-screen appearance, never been named, and his face is missing even from family trees depicting obscure relatives. A few writers (and fans) have toyed with the idea that he is Daisy Duck's brother, but nothing has been confirmed about him. In Creator/CarlBarks stories, Daisy has mentioned having an (unseen) sister, but mentions nothing about a brother. Since he's never brought up, it's quite possible that he was just a boyfriend that Della has since moved on from.
* SiblingYinYang: In regards to their professions: Donald is a sailor (and possibly marine), Della is a pilot and/or astronaut.

to:

* AcePilot: According to ''"80 Jaar"''. It serves to make her GoodParents: She was a {{Foil}} to Donald being a sailor. Eventually, she became an astronaut, dropping the triplets with Donald when she went on a deep space mission. Her depiction dutiful, very temperate mother.
* HappilyMarried: To Fergus.
* InSeriesNickname: "[=McMama=]"
in a painting in WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 also shows her wearing pilot gear.
''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''.
* AlliterativeName: '''D'''ella '''D'''uck.
* AlwaysIdenticalTwins: Don Rosa
IWasQuiteTheLooker: A lifetime of work and hardship had made her Donald's twin. And basically Donald with blonde hair, down to Downy grey-haired and worn-out by the sailor suit.
* AscendedExtra: With a sprinkling of TheBusCameBack. For decades, Della went unseen, existing solely through the presence of her sons. Della's first steps into the spotlight occured in ''The Life and Times of
time Scrooge [=McDuck=]'' in 1994, 57 was ten years after first being mentioned (she was given an appearance a year prior in the family tree), and that spotlight was limited to old. When her childhood years. In 2014, the Dutch branch of Disney comics was given permission to star Della as an adult for Donald's eightieth birthday as long as it didn't interfere spirit greets her husband upon his own death, she looks decades younger, with her hair back to its original brown. In comparison, while Fergus also returns to his younger appearance, he looks the status quo. This formed the inspiration for the 2017 series ''Donald's Eerste...'' (''Donald's First...''), which is the first time Della is featured same as an equal to Donald. In addition, her absence in the Triplets' lives is now a key plot point for the he did during Scrooge's childhood.
* SparedByTheAdaptation: The
[[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 2017 reboot]], which puts the series as her animated debut, and she later becomes a main character in the later half of its second season as well as the third and finale season.
* BrotherSisterTeam: The Dutch series ''Donald's Eerste...'' details Donald's and Della's childhood.
* CoolBigSis: She's his twin, but ahead of her brother in maturity. In ''"80 Jaar"'', Donald spares no words to convey how much he admires her.
* {{Determinator}}: From early childhood, Della wanted to be a pilot and knew
[=DuckTales=]-reboot]] shows that being a woman made her wish unconventional, but she set her mind to it anyway. She was good enough that at the age of 22 in 1958, she was picked to man an experimental rocket for a test flight...
* GoneToTheFuture: What happened according to ''"80 Jaar"''. Experimental rocket fuel sent Della buzzing at lightspeed through her deep space mission, which due to TimeDilation means that for Della just 5 minutes (of an intended 20) have passed, while [[ComicBookTime who-knows-how-many-years went by on Earth]]. Thanks to Gyro, the nephews get a chance to contact her. She notes that they remind her of her infant sons
Downy and they haven't the heart to tell her they are them and that circumstances have made her miss out on years of their lives.
* InSeriesNickname: Dumbella is Della's nickname. In ''"Donald's Eerste Liedje"'', Della says she dislikes her name so to cheer her up Donald composes a song making fun of her name, his own name, and Gyro's name. Della likes it so much she takes the "Dumbella" part of the song as her nickname.
* MissingMom: Don Rosa's thoughts on the matter are that you can't explain where Della is without being [[ShaggyDogStory pointless]]; [[{{Nephewism}} Donald (and Scrooge) are the triplets' father figures,]] [[StatusQuoIsGod no need to add the parents!]].
* ParentalNeglect: Leaving your prankster sons with your short-tempered brother can be seen as this. Even more in the comics, where Della's letter details that the [[SarcasmMode "angels"]] had just hospitalized their father by blowing him with firecrackers.
** A Dutch comic though established that Della never meant to be gone for more than an hour, but because of the strange time effects going nearly the speed of light caused she thinks its
Fergus not only been 15 minutes since she left earth are still alive in this continuity, but also [[Really700YearsOld basically immortal]].
* TogetherInDeath: She comes back as a ghost to welcome Fergus to the afterlife
when he dies in reality it has been years. Sadly by the time Della returns, her boys will be older than she is.
* {{Retcon}}: With elements of RelatedDifferentlyInTheAdaptation. In the comic ''"Donald's Nephews"'', the letter indicates that ''Della'' is Donald's ''cousin''. In the short ''Donald's Nephews'', released a year later, the letter indicates that ''Dumbella'' is Donald's ''sister''. In general, Della has been taken as the character's name, Dumbella is her InSeriesNickname, and she is Donald's sister -- twin sister ever since Don Rosa wrote about her.
* RiddleForTheAges: The identity of the father of her children. 80 years after first being mentioned, and he has never made an on-screen appearance, never been named, and his face is missing even from family trees depicting obscure relatives. A few writers (and fans) have toyed with the idea that he is Daisy Duck's brother, but nothing has been confirmed about him. In Creator/CarlBarks stories, Daisy has mentioned having an (unseen) sister, but mentions nothing about a brother. Since he's never brought up, it's quite possible that he was just a boyfriend that Della has since moved on from.
* SiblingYinYang: In regards to their professions: Donald is a sailor (and possibly marine), Della is a pilot and/or astronaut.
''"The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs"''.



[[folder: ???? Duck (Huey, Dewey and Louie's father)]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Donald's Nephews"'', 1937]]

The mysterious husband of Della Duck and father of Huey Dewey and Louey, this duck is by far one of the biggest unknowns in the entire Ducks universe. Mentioned exactly ''once'' in almost a century, everything about the man is a mystery, including his name and his appearance.

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[[folder: ???? Duck (Huey, Dewey and Louie's father)]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Donald's Nephews"'', 1937]]

Matilda [=McDuck=]]]
The mysterious husband oldest of Della Duck and father of Huey Dewey and Louey, this duck is by far one of the biggest unknowns in the entire Ducks universe. Mentioned exactly ''once'' in almost a century, everything about the man is a mystery, including his name and his appearance. Scrooge's two younger sisters. Don Rosa intended for her to be or have been married to Ludwig von Drake.
->Voiced by: Creator/MichelleGomez (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')



* AmbiguouslyRelated: Creator/DonRosa's theory is that he's related to Daisy, possibly her brother, which would explain how the triplets call her Aunt. He never put this in a story, however, so for now it remains SchrodingersCanon.
* DisappearedDad: Was last mentioned in a cartoon in 1937 and that's the all we know of him. Unlike Della, there's never been any sort of hint of what happened to him afterwards or why he never returned for his sons.
* TheFaceless: His spot on the Creator/DonRosa Duck Family tree is blocked off by branches and the bird standing on them. What little can be seen shows [[TheUnreveal nothing but general indicators of a male duck with white feathers.]]
* RiddleForTheAges: Who is the nephews father? What's his name? What does he look like? The readers guess is as good as any.
* UncertainDoom: His "appearance" in ''Donalds Nephews'' mentions that the triplets latest prank put him in the hospital, which is why they're staying with Donald. While this could imply that he outright ''died'' from his injuries, this would be pretty ghoulish even in more adult settings, much less friggin' Disney. Whatever happened to him, he hasn't been heard from since, even after Della's return.

to:

* AmbiguouslyRelated: Creator/DonRosa's theory BewareTheNiceOnes: She's the kindest and most sweet-natured of Scrooge's siblings, but she does have the same fiery temper of the family. Donald, in particular, is that he's related to Daisy, possibly afraid of her brother, which would explain how the triplets call because she'd frequently give him paddlings when he misbehaves.
* BigBrotherWorship: [[spoiler: Until [[BrokenPedestal Chapter 11 ]].]] When we meet
her Aunt. He never put again as an old lady, [[spoiler: she inverts this in a story, however, so for now it remains SchrodingersCanon.
* DisappearedDad: Was last mentioned in a cartoon in 1937 and that's the all we know of him. Unlike Della, there's never been any sort of hint of what happened to him afterwards or why he never returned for his sons.
* TheFaceless: His spot on the Creator/DonRosa Duck Family tree is blocked off
trope by branches and the bird standing on them. What little can be seen shows [[TheUnreveal nothing but general indicators of a male duck with white feathers.insulting Scrooge at every turn]]. [[spoiler:It returns though when they finally reconcile.]]
* RiddleForTheAges: Who is the nephews father? What's his name? What does he look like? The readers guess is as good as any.
* UncertainDoom: His "appearance" in ''Donalds Nephews'' mentions that the triplets latest prank put him in the hospital, which is why they're staying
BrokenPedestal: She looked up to her brother for most of her childhood and early adulthood. She has a massive falling out with Donald. While this could imply that he outright ''died'' from his injuries, this would be pretty ghoulish even in more adult settings, much less friggin' Disney. Whatever happened to him, he hasn't been heard from since, even Scrooge after Della's return.
his destruction of an African tribe. Their attempt at reconciliation fails 20 years later due to Scrooge at that point having become completely misanthropic. They finally made up in ''"A Letter from Home"''.
** In part it is what he says to her that causes the falling out in 1930. Scrooge hired Matilda as an employee in 1902, and she worked loyally for him for 28 years (1902-1930), taking care of the Money Bin and his business affairs during his 21 years of absence (1909-1930). When he returns, Scrooge accuses her of embezzling money from the company.
* DamselInDistress: She's not nearly as physically capable as her siblings, and can't fight back against the Beagle Boys like Hortense and Scrooge can.
* TheHeart: Between her, Hortense, and Scrooge, she has the same temper exception going as Della does. With Hortense's fate not being touched upon, Matilda may be the only one of Scrooge's family he has to reconcile with.
* IWasQuiteALooker: When Creator/DonRosa depicts Matilda as a young woman, she is a slender and very attractive female Duck. When depicting her as an old woman, she has a somewhat thicker body, wrinkles surround her eyes, her blonde hair seems to have changed color, and her facial expressions tend to match her increasingly jaded outlook in life.
* NoBadassToHisValet: She is one of the few people who can genuinely hurt Scrooge physically and verbally, even sending him to a HeroicBSOD.
* TranquilFury: Unlike every other [=McDuck=], whenever she gets angry, it is this trope.



[[folder: Abner "Whitewater" Duck]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/abner_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Log Jockey"'', 1962]]

Donald's cousin, Fethry's brother, and Douglas's nephew. He's a lumberjack and currently dating Donna Duck.

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[[folder: Abner "Whitewater" Duck]]
Hortense [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/abner_duck.org/pmwiki/pub/images/quackmore_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Log Jockey"'', 1962]]

[[caption-width-right:250:Hortense with her husband, Quackmore.]]
Scrooge's youngest sister and
Donald's cousin, Fethry's brother, and Douglas's nephew. He's a lumberjack and currently dating Donna Duck.Della's mother.



* AllThereInTheManual: The reveal that Fethry and Whitewater are brothers isn´t stated in an actual story but comes from Creator/DonRosa's family tree. Probably he put it that way thanks [[ExecutiveMeddling to having to include the non-Barks-character Fethry as he's so puplar in Europe]]. In fact, the two brothers never did appear in a story together.
* {{Determinator}}: In ''"Log Jockey"'', Whitewater can't guide his logs down the river due to an injured foot and therefore can't strike up the bonus of being the first to arrive, so he volunteers Donald within two minutes of meeting him for the first time. In ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'', he and Douglas lose every round of a sourdough competition against Donald and Scrooge who use their brains to make up for their lack in physical strength and skill. The two are nonetheless declared co-winners because "real sourdoughs never quit. Not even when they're outmatched." They take it in stride.
--> '''Whitewater:''' "You mean we're '''winners''' because we're such big '''losers'''?"
* TheFriendsWhoNeverHang: Family, in this case. Whitewater isn't very close with his family, which is reasonable, but there exist no stories in which he and Fethry both appear. The knowledge that they are brothers comes solely from family trees.
* OutOfFocus: Out of various cousins of Donald who have appeared in comics, only Gus Goose, Gladstone Gander, and Fethry Duck have been developed into major characters who often star in their own stories. Whitewater has only had three story appearances so far (published between 1962 and 2012), and mostly appears in family trees. He has little to no characterization, and barely any interaction with other characters.
* PairTheSpares: In ''"Too Many Donalds"'', Whitewater forms a couple with Donna Duck, a former love interest of Donald as rarely written about as Whitewater is.
* RelatedInTheAdaptation: It was not until ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'' that Whitewater was identified as Douglas' nephew. And this doesn't really seem to fit into the earlier family trees which have him a full brother to Fethry.
* TheRival: He and his uncle Douglas were this to Donald and Scrooge in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"''. Or more fairly considering who entered the contest first, vice versa.

to:

* AllThereInTheManual: The reveal that Fethry BadassAdorable: Already as a little girl she was tough as nails, as a teenager she effortlessly chased and Whitewater are brothers isn´t stated in beat up fully grown men, and as a young adult she managed to chase away an actual story but comes from Creator/DonRosa's family tree. Probably he put it that way thanks [[ExecutiveMeddling to having to include entire ''army'' by chasing them with a broom.
* BelligerentSexualTension: Her interactions with Quackmore Duck, her eventual husband, mostly involve them screaming at each other, then immediately swooning at
the non-Barks-character Fethry as he's so puplar in Europe]]. In fact, the two brothers never did appear in a story together.
other's temper.
%%* TheBerserker: Broom Version
* {{Determinator}}: In ''"Log Jockey"'', Whitewater can't guide his logs down the river due to an injured foot FieryRedhead: She is usually drawn with red hair, and therefore can't strike up the bonus of being the first is prone to arrive, so he volunteers throwing temper tantrums.
* GirlyBruiser: Flirts with cowboys and loves Teddy Bears. Decks a Secret Service, a Rough Rider, and [[UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt TR himself]] with a single punch.
* LikeFatherLikeSon:
Donald within two minutes of meeting him inherited his temper from both his mother and father. Della inherited her mother's conviction that her gender would not be her limit.
* LoveAtFirstPunch: She fell
for the first time. In ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'', he and Douglas lose every round of a sourdough competition Quackmore after their temper clashed against Donald each other.
* MissingMom: Disappears along with Quackmore after the events of "The Empire Builder of Calisota",
and there are no records of what happened to either of them.
* StayInTheKitchen: UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt (AKA the most badass president of all time) once told this to her. She knocked him out in one punch as a response.
* UnstoppableRage: She's far more easily provoked than her brother.
* TheUnintelligible: As a baby her only words were "glxblt".
* WeNamedTheMonkeyJack:
Scrooge who use their brains to make up for their lack names his horse in physical strength and skill. The two are nonetheless declared co-winners America "Hortense" in honor of his sister because "real sourdoughs never quit. Not even when they're outmatched." They take it in stride.
--> '''Whitewater:''' "You mean we're '''winners''' because we're such big '''losers'''?"
* TheFriendsWhoNeverHang: Family, in this case. Whitewater isn't very close with his family, which is reasonable, but there exist no stories in which he and Fethry
they both appear. The knowledge that they are brothers comes solely from family trees.
* OutOfFocus: Out of various cousins of Donald who
have appeared in comics, only Gus Goose, Gladstone Gander, and Fethry Duck have been developed into major characters who often star in their own stories. Whitewater has only had three story appearances so far (published between 1962 and 2012), and mostly appears in family trees. He has little to no characterization, and barely any interaction with other characters.
* PairTheSpares: In ''"Too Many Donalds"'', Whitewater forms
a couple with Donna Duck, a former love interest of Donald as rarely written about as Whitewater is.
* RelatedInTheAdaptation: It was
bad temper. Hortense is not until ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'' that Whitewater was identified as Douglas' nephew. And this doesn't really seem to fit into the earlier family trees which have him a full brother to Fethry.
* TheRival: He and his uncle Douglas were this to Donald and Scrooge in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"''. Or more fairly considering who entered the contest first, vice versa.
amused.



[[folder: Dugan Duck]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dugan_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"O Furacão Branco E Preto"'', 1982]]

The son of Fethry Duck's sister. He lives with his uncle and is close friends with Cintia, the girl living next door.

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[[folder: Dugan Duck]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dugan_duck.png]]
Angus "Pothole" [=McDuck=]]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"O Furacão Branco E Preto"'', 1982]]

The son of Fethry Duck's sister. He lives with his uncle
Appearance: '''The Great Steamboat Race, 1955 (Mentioned)''', '''Master Of the Mississippi, 1992 (In Person''')]]

Scrooge's uncle,
and is close friends with Cintia, the girl living next door. older brother of Fergus, Angus left Scotland sometime in the 1840's, hoping to find a better life in the United States, eventually finding work on the Mississippi river boats, where he earned the nickname "Pothole". After retiring, Angus found some success in writing dime novels and appearing in Wild West stage shows.



* AlternateCompanyEquivalent: So here is a duck boy who has been picked from the wilderness, all tropes like messy hair, high-energy, and friend included, to live with an uncle figure and who has a semi-romantic bond with the pig girl living next door. Sounds quite a bit like [[Characters/DuckTales1987 Bubba]] from ''[=DuckTales=]''.
* BoyNextDoor: To Cintia.
* TheDreaded: Due to the disasters he sets off, everyone who knows him is ''terrified'', and being his babysitter for a day is considered more dangerous than being a ''professional stuntman''.
** In one Italian story, Fethry forces Scrooge to babysit Dugan for a day. Every employee in the Money Bin runs away, typically overworked Emily Quackfaster announces a sudden decision to go on a vacation, and Magica informs Scrooge that she will stay away from the Money Bin as long as Dugan is there.
* PaletteSwap: There are two canon colors for his feathers: regular white and yellow a la [[Characters/DarkwingDuck Gosalyn Mallard]]. White feathers are usual for Italian comics and yellow feathers are the preferred canon of Brazilian comics.
* ParentalAbandonment: You'd think Fethry would tell his sister he found her lost son and for her to pick him up, but no. No details are spent on the identity of Dugan's father either.
* PleasePutSomeClothesOn: Dugan goes around naked for almost the entirety of ''"O Nascimento Do Biquinho"'' on account of being raised by porcupines. It is a little awkward when Fethry and Gloria get to meet him.
* RaisedByWolves: He sabotaged his own delivery by the stork and ended up in the jungle where he was raised by porcupines. This often results in him setting off disasters because he has no idea of what he is doing.

to:


* AlternateCompanyEquivalent: So here is a duck boy who has been picked from the wilderness, all tropes like messy hair, high-energy, and friend included, to live with an uncle figure and who has a semi-romantic bond with the pig girl living next door. Sounds quite a bit like [[Characters/DuckTales1987 Bubba]] from ''[=DuckTales=]''.
* BoyNextDoor: To Cintia.
* TheDreaded: Due to the disasters he sets off, everyone who knows him is ''terrified'', and being his babysitter for a day is considered more dangerous than being a ''professional stuntman''.
** In one Italian story, Fethry forces
BadBoss: Only paid Scrooge to babysit Dugan and Ratchet ''30 cents a day'' when they signed on for him. Adjusted for inflation, that's about 8$.
* EvilFormerFriend: His rival Porker Hogg used to be his partner, until they had
a day. Every employee in massive falling out over an old plantation they bought after the Money Bin runs away, typically overworked Emily Quackfaster announces a sudden decision to go on a vacation, and Magica informs Civil War. By the time Scrooge that she will stay away from comes to America, the Money Bin as long as Dugan two despise each other.
* ItWillNeverCatchOn: Has an idea for a new kind of dime novel where all the dialogue
is there.printed in "little bubbles"; i.e comic books. Everyone he tries pitching it to think he's completely nuts, even Scrooge.
* PaletteSwap: There are two canon colors FakeUltimateHero: Despite how much he played up himself in his writing, the few times he's called on for heroism in real life, he tends to fall flat.
* IShouldWriteABookAboutThis: After retiring in 1882, Angus moved on to writing... let's just say "embellished" stories about
his feathers: regular white and yellow a la [[Characters/DarkwingDuck Gosalyn Mallard]]. White feathers are usual for Italian comics and yellow feathers are the preferred canon of Brazilian comics.
* ParentalAbandonment: You'd think Fethry would tell his sister he found her lost son and for her to pick him up, but no. No details are spent
adventures on the identity of Dugan's father either.
* PleasePutSomeClothesOn: Dugan goes around naked
Mississippi for almost the entirety of ''"O Nascimento Do Biquinho"'' on account of being raised by porcupines. It is a little awkward dime novels.
* MartyStu: InUniverse-example-
when Fethry Angus wrote about his adventures, he changed them to show himself as TheAce who took on entire armies of Beagle Boys by himself, while Scrooge was relegated to the ButtMonkey comic relief.
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: He's only refered to as "Pothole" in ''The Great Steamboat Race''. Creator/DonRosa would be the one to give him a proper name.
* SoleSurvivor: He was a cabin boy on the ''Drenann White'', a riverboat that sank with all hands in 1850, leaving Angus as the only survivor,
and Gloria get to meet him.
* RaisedByWolves: He sabotaged his own delivery by
the stork and ended up in only person with the jungle knowledge of where he was raised by porcupines. This often results in him setting off disasters because he has no idea the remains of what he the ship, and the gold shipment onboard, is doing.located.
* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: "Catfish" [=McDuck=] from ''WesternAnimation/Ducktales1987''.



![=McDucks=]
[[folder: Fergus [=McDuck=]]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/DonMessick (''[=DuckTales=]''), Creator/GrahamMcTavish (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Scrooge [=McDuck=]'s father.

to:

![=McDucks=]
[[folder: Fergus Jake [=McDuck=]]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/DonMessick (''[=DuckTales=]''), Creator/GrahamMcTavish (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

[[AC:First Appearance: '''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown, 1952 (Photograph)''', '''Last Of The Clan [=McDuck=], 1992 (In Person)''']]

Fergus' younger brother and Scrooge's uncle, Jake originally appeared as a photograph in ''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown'' by Creator/CarlBarks, which Donald used to disguise himself in an attempt to scam
Scrooge [=McDuck=]'s father.for charity. Creator/DonRosa would introduce Jake himself in the first chapter of ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''.



* GoodParents: Fergus encouraged Scrooge to be self-reliant, but also made it clear to him that his love was unconditional and, no matter what his son did, he would be proud of him.
* HappilyMarried: To Downy O'Drake.
* ImpoverishedPatrician: Fergus was born in the old aristocratic [=McDuck=] family and had legal claim to Dismal Downs, the family castle. However he was born a few generations after his family lost most of their wealth. His father and mother were coal miners and Fergus himself spend most of his life as a mill worker.
* InSeriesNickname: "[=McPapa=]" in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', "Scotty" [=McDuck=] on Barks' original Duck family tree.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: ''"A Letter from Home"'' shows that he had solved the mystery of the Templars hidden beneath Castle [=McDuck=] and made it all the way to the final chamber, but due to not having access to the last clue (which not even the Junior Woodchuck's Guide contained), leaves a note for Scrooge there.
* PassedInTheirSleep: He passes quietly away from old age in his sleep on the same night his children leave for America.
* PosthumousCharacter: While he does occasionally show up due to NegativeContinuity, it's usually agreed upon that Fergus has passed away by the modern day.
* SoProudOfYou: Offers this as parting words to his son Scrooge, when he explains that he won't be joining him and his sisters for their emigration to America, as he is simply too old to make the journey.
-->'''Fergus:''' Scrooge, take your sisters to a new life in America! Ye're right -- ye've ootgrown the life ''ah've'' known.\\
'''Scrooge:''' But--\\
'''Fergus:''' ''(smiles warmly)'' No arguin, lad! Joost ''promise me'' you'll always be true to yourself and know ah'll always be prood o' ya!
* SparedByTheAdaptation: The [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 [=DuckTales=]-reboot]] shows that Fergus and Downy are not only still alive in this continuity, but also [[Really700YearsOld basically immortal]].
* StrongFamilyResemblance: He looks exactly like an older Scrooge. When Magica de Spell tries to travel back in time to steal Scrooge's NumberOneDime, she mistook Fergus for Scrooge and tries to attack him.
* TogetherInDeath: Downy comes back as a ghost to welcome Fergus to the afterlife when he dies in ''"The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs"''.
* WouldHitAGirl: Downplayed, but definitely there as shown in ''"Of Ducks And Dimes And Destinies"'':
-->'''Magica de Spell:''' Back off, buster! You wouldn't '''dare''' to lay your hands on a lady!\\
'''Fergus:''' Oh, wouldn't I?\\
''(cut to Fergus having grabbed Magica by the ankles and holding her upside down as he shakes the NumberOneDime out of her pocket)''\\
'''Magica de Spell:''' Of course, I could be wrong...

to:

* GoodParents: Fergus encouraged Scrooge to be self-reliant, but also made it clear to him that his love was unconditional and, no matter what his son did, he would be proud of him.
* HappilyMarried: To Downy O'Drake.
* ImpoverishedPatrician: Fergus was born in A member of the old aristocratic once-wealthy [=McDuck=] family and had legal claim to Dismal Downs, the family castle. However he was born clan, Jake eeked out a few generations after his family lost most of their wealth. His father and mother were coal miners and Fergus himself spend most of his life as a mill worker.
* InSeriesNickname: "[=McPapa=]" in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', "Scotty" [=McDuck=] on Barks' original Duck family tree.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: ''"A Letter from Home"'' shows that he had solved the mystery of the Templars hidden beneath Castle [=McDuck=] and made it all the way to the final chamber, but due to not having access to the last clue (which not even the Junior Woodchuck's Guide contained), leaves a note for Scrooge there.
* PassedInTheirSleep: He passes quietly away from old age in his sleep
living working on the same night his children leave for America.
Glasgow docks.
* PosthumousCharacter: While SatelliteCharacter: His appearances can be summed up with "he existed" - he does occasionally show up due to NegativeContinuity, it's usually agreed upon that virtually nothing of importance, and only appears alongside his brother so Fergus has passed away by someone to talk to. He doesn't even help fight the modern day.
* SoProudOfYou: Offers this
Whiskervilles during the events of ''The New Laird of Castle [=McDuck=]'' as parting words to his son Scrooge, when he explains that he won't be joining him he's busy taking Matilda and his sisters for their emigration to America, as he is simply too old to make the journey.
-->'''Fergus:''' Scrooge, take your sisters to a new life in America! Ye're right -- ye've ootgrown the life ''ah've'' known.\\
'''Scrooge:''' But--\\
'''Fergus:''' ''(smiles warmly)'' No arguin, lad! Joost ''promise me'' you'll always be true to yourself and know ah'll always be prood o' ya!
* SparedByTheAdaptation: The [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 [=DuckTales=]-reboot]] shows that Fergus and Downy are not only still alive in this continuity, but also [[Really700YearsOld basically immortal]].
* StrongFamilyResemblance: He looks exactly like an older Scrooge. When Magica de Spell tries to travel
Hortense back in time to steal Scrooge's NumberOneDime, she mistook Fergus for Scrooge Glasgow.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Disappears with no explanation between ''The Dream-Time Of the Duck Never-Never''
and tries to attack him.
* TogetherInDeath: Downy comes back as a ghost to welcome Fergus to the afterlife when he dies in ''"The
''The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs"''.
* WouldHitAGirl: Downplayed, but definitely there as shown in ''"Of Ducks And Dimes And Destinies"'':
-->'''Magica de Spell:''' Back off, buster! You wouldn't '''dare''' to lay your hands on a lady!\\
'''Fergus:''' Oh, wouldn't I?\\
''(cut to
Downs'', and is never mentioned again, though considering how old Fergus having grabbed Magica is by the ankles and holding her upside down as he shakes the NumberOneDime out of her pocket)''\\
'''Magica de Spell:''' Of course, I could be wrong...
this point, Jake has presumably passed on from old age.



[[folder: Downy O'Drake]]
-> Voiced by: June Foray (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''), Ashley Jensen (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Scrooge [=McDuck=]'s mother.

to:

[[folder: Downy O'Drake]]
-> Voiced by: June Foray (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''), Ashley Jensen (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Gideon [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gideon_mcduck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Shellfish Motives"'', 1956]]

Scrooge's brother and the editor-in-chief of the County Conscience, the most credible newspaper in Duckburg, and a business rival to his older brother
Scrooge [=McDuck=]'s mother.and his newspaper, The Duckburg Chronicle. He is confirmed to be the son of Fergus and Downy, and the brother of Matilda and Hortense, as in the 2017 comic "Zio Paperone e Il Segreto di Cuoridpietra"



* GoodParents: She was a dutiful, very temperate mother.
* HappilyMarried: To Fergus.
* InSeriesNickname: "[=McMama=]" in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''.
* IWasQuiteTheLooker: A lifetime of work and hardship had made Downy grey-haired and worn-out by the time Scrooge was ten years old. When her spirit greets her husband upon his own death, she looks decades younger, with her hair back to its original brown. In comparison, while Fergus also returns to his younger appearance, he looks the same as he did during Scrooge's childhood.
* SparedByTheAdaptation: The [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 [=DuckTales=]-reboot]] shows that Downy and Fergus not only are still alive in this continuity, but also [[Really700YearsOld basically immortal]].
* TogetherInDeath: She comes back as a ghost to welcome Fergus to the afterlife when he dies in ''"The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs"''.

to:

* GoodParents: She was a dutiful, very temperate mother.
* HappilyMarried: To Fergus.
* InSeriesNickname: "[=McMama=]" in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''.
* IWasQuiteTheLooker: A lifetime of work and hardship had made Downy grey-haired and worn-out by the time Scrooge was ten years old. When her spirit greets her husband upon
DependingOnTheArtist: Exactly how much he resembles his own death, she looks decades younger, with her hair back to its more famous brother varies depending on who's drawing him. Romano Scarpa's original brown. In comparison, while Fergus also returns to his younger appearance, design, shown here, doesn't look too much like Scrooge, but [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/disney/images/2/29/Gideon_McDuck.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/270?cb=20131212221548 in other appearances he looks exactly like Scrooge, just with wilder hair and a different outfit.]]
* EnragedByIdiocy: Used in a few 1990s stories focusing on Gideon. He is pissed off that
the same reading public in Duckburg is more interested in celebrity gossip than actual news, and that a singer dying his hair is considered more newsworthy than political events.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: He places his morals about the importance of Information before anything else. And even though Scrooge himself never does anything ''dishonest'', Gideon is so much about his morals and so much not about the money he could make with the newspaper, that he manages to unnerve Scrooge on unseen levels.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: With Dickie Duck in some modern stories. She works
as he did during a reporter for "The Jiminy Cricket" and the two get along well. (Given that Dickie is Scrooge's childhood.
surrogate granddaughter, he may be treating her as family.)
* SparedByTheAdaptation: TheOneWhoWearsShoes: In some modern appearances he, like Dickie, also wears pants.
* RememberTheNewGuy: His first appearance treats him as a well-established member of the Duck cast.
The [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 [=DuckTales=]-reboot]] shows fact that Downy and Fergus not only are still alive in this continuity, but also [[Really700YearsOld basically immortal]].
* TogetherInDeath: She comes back
he is Scrooge's brother is just thrown away as a ghost to welcome Fergus to the afterlife when he dies in ''"The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs"''.though it was nothing ''special''.
%%* UnclePennybags: For Donald.



[[folder: Matilda [=McDuck=]]]
The oldest of Scrooge's two younger sisters. Don Rosa intended for her to be or have been married to Ludwig von Drake.
->Voiced by: Creator/MichelleGomez (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

to:

[[folder: Matilda [=McDuck=]]]
The oldest of
Rumpus [=McFowl=]]]
[[quoteright:185:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rumpus_mcfowl.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"It's All Relative"'', 1994]]

Scrooge's two younger sisters. Don Rosa intended for her to be or have been married to Ludwig von Drake.
->Voiced by: Creator/MichelleGomez (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')
lazy, freeloading, overweight half-brother. Created and so far used exclusively by William Van Horn.



* BewareTheNiceOnes: She's the kindest and most sweet-natured of Scrooge's siblings, but she does have the same fiery temper of the family. Donald, in particular, is afraid of her because she'd frequently give him paddlings when he misbehaves.
* BigBrotherWorship: [[spoiler: Until [[BrokenPedestal Chapter 11 ]].]] When we meet her again as an old lady, [[spoiler: she inverts this trope by insulting Scrooge at every turn]]. [[spoiler:It returns though when they finally reconcile.]]
* BrokenPedestal: She looked up to her brother for most of her childhood and early adulthood. She has a massive falling out with Scrooge after his destruction of an African tribe. Their attempt at reconciliation fails 20 years later due to Scrooge at that point having become completely misanthropic. They finally made up in ''"A Letter from Home"''.
** In part it is what he says to her that causes the falling out in 1930. Scrooge hired Matilda as an employee in 1902, and she worked loyally for him for 28 years (1902-1930), taking care of the Money Bin and his business affairs during his 21 years of absence (1909-1930). When he returns, Scrooge accuses her of embezzling money from the company.
* DamselInDistress: She's not nearly as physically capable as her siblings, and can't fight back against the Beagle Boys like Hortense and Scrooge can.
* TheHeart: Between her, Hortense, and Scrooge, she has the same temper exception going as Della does. With Hortense's fate not being touched upon, Matilda may be the only one of Scrooge's family he has to reconcile with.
* IWasQuiteALooker: When Creator/DonRosa depicts Matilda as a young woman, she is a slender and very attractive female Duck. When depicting her as an old woman, she has a somewhat thicker body, wrinkles surround her eyes, her blonde hair seems to have changed color, and her facial expressions tend to match her increasingly jaded outlook in life.
* NoBadassToHisValet: She is one of the few people who can genuinely hurt Scrooge physically and verbally, even sending him to a HeroicBSOD.
* TranquilFury: Unlike every other [=McDuck=], whenever she gets angry, it is this trope.

to:

* BewareTheNiceOnes: She's the kindest {{Acrofatic}}: He's old and most sweet-natured of Scrooge's siblings, fat and lazy, but she does have the same fiery temper of the family. Donald, in particular, is afraid of her because she'd frequently give him paddlings can ''really'' move when he misbehaves.
wants to.
* BigBrotherWorship: [[spoiler: Until [[BrokenPedestal Chapter 11 ]].]] When we meet her again BigEater: Especially when it's other people's food he's eating.
* {{Expy}}: Of J. Wellington Wimpy from ''ComicStrip/{{Popeye}}''.
* {{Foil}}: Unlike Donald or Gus Goose who are also shown to be pretty lazy and with flaws, Rumpus doesn´t possess the sympathy and redeeming qualities of the two.
* JerkAss: He doesn't have very many redeeming qualities, and in fact seems determined to be
as an old lady, [[spoiler: she inverts this trope by insulting irritating and pushy as he possibly can be towards his poor relatives. Though in some stories he does seem to have a slightly soft spot for his half-brother Scrooge at every turn]]. [[spoiler:It returns though and gets a few minor PetTheDog moments when they finally reconcile.]]
* BrokenPedestal: She looked up
he at least ''tries'' to her brother for most of her childhood and early adulthood. She has a massive falling out get along with Scrooge him.
* KarmaHoudini: He tends to be this, even when it looks like it's going to be subverted; in fact, the two first stories he appeared ''both'' ended with him,
after his destruction of an African tribe. Their attempt at reconciliation fails 20 years later due to Scrooge at that point having become completely misanthropic. They finally made up in ''"A Letter from Home"''.
** In part it is what he says to her that causes the falling out in 1930. Scrooge hired Matilda as an employee in 1902, and she worked loyally for him for 28 years (1902-1930), taking care of the Money Bin and his business affairs during his 21 years of absence (1909-1930). When he returns, Scrooge accuses her of embezzling money from the company.
* DamselInDistress: She's not nearly as physically capable as her siblings, and can't fight back against the Beagle Boys like Hortense
driving Donald and Scrooge can.
* TheHeart: Between her, Hortense,
insane, injuring himself and Scrooge, she has the same temper exception going as Della does. With Hortense's fate not becoming bed-ridden for weeks... which meant that he got to happily lie about in Donald's bed while Donald had to wait on him hand and foot.
* LazyBum: A strange version; he energetically puts every bit of effort he can into
being touched upon, Matilda may extremely lazy, and does it in such a way that he's ''as annoying as possible.''
* TheLoad: Treated as one in-universe. Every single Duck family member dreads it when he's coming over for a visit because they know he'll eat all their food, hogs all their things, and keeps them awake all night with his infernal snoring, which can be heard through concrete-thick walls.
* NoSocialSkills: Though it doesn't seem to
be the only one cause of Scrooge's family any strange upbringing or Asperger's Syndrome or anything like that -- Rumpus probably ''could'' be a socially well-adjusted person if he has made the effort; it's just that he does not care enough about anyone who isn't him to reconcile with.
even bother trying.
* IWasQuiteALooker: When Creator/DonRosa depicts Matilda as a young woman, she is a slender and very attractive female Duck. When depicting her as an old woman, she has a somewhat thicker body, wrinkles surround her eyes, her blonde hair seems to have changed color, and her facial expressions tend to match her increasingly jaded outlook in life.
* NoBadassToHisValet: She is one
SiblingYinYang: He's the lazy, not-carrying brother of the few people who can genuinely hurt SelfMadeMan Scrooge physically and verbally, even sending him to a HeroicBSOD.
* TranquilFury: Unlike every other [=McDuck=], whenever she gets angry, it is this trope.
[=McDuck=].



[[folder: Hortense [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/quackmore_duck.png]]
[[caption-width-right:250:Hortense with her husband, Quackmore.]]
Scrooge's youngest sister and Donald's and Della's mother.

to:

[[folder: Hortense Douglas [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/quackmore_duck.org/pmwiki/pub/images/douglas_mcduck.png]]
[[caption-width-right:250:Hortense with her husband, Quackmore.]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Visits Cousin"'', 1981]]

Scrooge's youngest sister cousin and Donald's and Della's mother.Whitewater's uncle.



* BadassAdorable: Already as a little girl she was tough as nails, as a teenager she effortlessly chased and beat up fully grown men, and as a young adult she managed to chase away an entire ''army'' by chasing them with a broom.
* BelligerentSexualTension: Her interactions with Quackmore Duck, her eventual husband, mostly involve them screaming at each other, then immediately swooning at the other's temper.
%%* TheBerserker: Broom Version
* FieryRedhead: She is usually drawn with red hair, and is prone to throwing temper tantrums.
* GirlyBruiser: Flirts with cowboys and loves Teddy Bears. Decks a Secret Service, a Rough Rider, and [[UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt TR himself]] with a single punch.
* LikeFatherLikeSon: Donald inherited his temper from both his mother and father. Della inherited her mother's conviction that her gender would not be her limit.
* LoveAtFirstPunch: She fell for Quackmore after their temper clashed against each other.
* MissingMom: Disappears along with Quackmore after the events of "The Empire Builder of Calisota", and there are no records of what happened to either of them.
* StayInTheKitchen: UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt (AKA the most badass president of all time) once told this to her. She knocked him out in one punch as a response.
* UnstoppableRage: She's far more easily provoked than her brother.
* TheUnintelligible: As a baby her only words were "glxblt".
* WeNamedTheMonkeyJack: Scrooge names his horse in America "Hortense" in honor of his sister because they both have a bad temper. Hortense is not amused.

to:

* BadassAdorable: Already AllThatGlitters: One of the core differences between Scrooge and Douglas symbolic of their respective success and... not-so-success is that, while gold was crucial for Scrooge to get his fortune started, Douglas has the peculiar inability to tell gold from fool's gold and somehow ''always'' comes up with bags of the latter thoroughly convinced it's the former. The one time he actually found gold was in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'', but it was gold dust and when he came across chunks of fool's gold, he gladly threw the dust away thinking he was getting his hands on better.
* AmbiguouslyRelated: He is introduced
as a little girl she cousin of Scrooge and part of the [=McDuck=]-family, but also is explicitly stated as the uncle of Whitewater Duck who is part of the Duck-side (Donald is related to Scrooge via his mother, Scrooge's sister. For that, his cousin shouldn't have a link to the [=McDucks=]. The story ''A [=McDuck=] By Any Other Name'' adds more ambiguous to the relation: Scrooge states that Douglas was tough not a real [=McDuck=] but just adopted. To prove that, they travel to Scotland. In the end, after Douglas saves Scrooge's life, they decide to not investigate the case further, as nails, as a teenager she effortlessly chased and beat up fully grown men, and as a young adult she managed Scrooge states Douglas proved to chase away an entire ''army'' by chasing be a real [=McDuck=] anyway.
* FamilyHonor: Starting with ''"Gall In The Family"'', Douglas regularly talks badly about Scrooge's branch of the family, calling
them spendthrifts and wastrels that do the name "[=McDuck=]" no favors. One example he brings up is an event in '98 where Scrooge's father bought a whole glass of lemonade for his family.
* LoanShark: Not so by occupation, but the punchline of his debut comic is that Scrooge came to visit him after years apart and the first thing Douglas does is remind Scrooge of a dollar he lent him back in the day which he wants back
with a broom.
sizable interest.
* BelligerentSexualTension: Her interactions with Quackmore Duck, her eventual husband, mostly involve them screaming at each other, then immediately swooning at MountainMan: He comes down often enough, but his day-to-day life is spent alone in the other's temper.
%%* TheBerserker: Broom Version
wilderness looking for gold.
* FieryRedhead: She is usually drawn with red hair, and is prone to throwing temper tantrums.
* GirlyBruiser: Flirts with cowboys and loves Teddy Bears. Decks a Secret Service, a Rough Rider, and [[UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt TR himself]] with a single punch.
* LikeFatherLikeSon: Donald inherited his temper from both his mother and father. Della inherited her mother's conviction
RelatedInTheAdaptation: Douglas always was Scrooge's cousin, but it wasn't until ''"Gold Foolery"'' that her gender would he was explicitly identified as a [=McDuck=]. It was furthermore not be her limit.
until ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'' that he was identified as Whitewater's uncle.
* LoveAtFirstPunch: She fell for Quackmore after their temper clashed against each other.
* MissingMom: Disappears along with Quackmore after the events of "The Empire Builder of Calisota",
TheRival: He and there are no records of what happened to either of them.
* StayInTheKitchen: UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt (AKA the most badass president of all time) once told
his nephew Whitewater were this to her. She knocked him out in one punch as a response.
* UnstoppableRage: She's far more easily provoked than her brother.
* TheUnintelligible: As a baby her only words were "glxblt".
* WeNamedTheMonkeyJack:
Scrooge names his horse and Donald in America "Hortense" in honor of his sister because they both have a bad temper. Hortense is not amused.''"Smarter Than The Toughies"''. Or more fairly considering who entered the contest first, vice versa.
* UncannyFamilyResemblance: Douglas and Scrooge are borderline indistinguishable.



[[folder: Angus "Pothole" [=McDuck=]]]
[[AC:First Appearance: '''The Great Steamboat Race, 1955 (Mentioned)''', '''Master Of the Mississippi, 1992 (In Person''')]]

Scrooge's uncle, and the older brother of Fergus, Angus left Scotland sometime in the 1840's, hoping to find a better life in the United States, eventually finding work on the Mississippi river boats, where he earned the nickname "Pothole". After retiring, Angus found some success in writing dime novels and appearing in Wild West stage shows.

to:

[[folder: Angus "Pothole" Sir Quackly [=McDuck=]]]
[[AC:First Appearance: '''The Great Steamboat Race, 1955 (Mentioned)''', '''Master appearance: (Mentioned) ''ComicBook/TheOldCastlesSecret'' (1948), (In Person) ''The Last Of the Mississippi, 1992 (In Person''')]]

Clan [=McDuck=]'' (1992)]]

Scrooge's uncle, and the older brother of Fergus, Angus left Scotland sometime in the 1840's, hoping to find a better life in the United States, eventually finding work ancestor, who fought on the Mississippi river boats, where he earned side of King Macbeth during the nickname "Pothole". After retiring, Angus found some success English Civil War, only to fall victim to his own greed when he accidentally walled himself up with his treasure in writing dime novels and appearing in Wild West stage shows.1057. Realizing his folly, he took it upon himself to watch over his descendants from the afterlife, especially Scrooge.




* BadBoss: Only paid Scrooge and Ratchet ''30 cents a day'' when they signed on for him. Adjusted for inflation, that's about 8$.
* EvilFormerFriend: His rival Porker Hogg used to be his partner, until they had a massive falling out over an old plantation they bought after the Civil War. By the time Scrooge comes to America, the two despise each other.
* ItWillNeverCatchOn: Has an idea for a new kind of dime novel where all the dialogue is printed in "little bubbles"; i.e comic books. Everyone he tries pitching it to think he's completely nuts, even Scrooge.
* FakeUltimateHero: Despite how much he played up himself in his writing, the few times he's called on for heroism in real life, he tends to fall flat.
* IShouldWriteABookAboutThis: After retiring in 1882, Angus moved on to writing... let's just say "embellished" stories about his adventures on the Mississippi for dime novels.
* MartyStu: InUniverse-example- when Angus wrote about his adventures, he changed them to show himself as TheAce who took on entire armies of Beagle Boys by himself, while Scrooge was relegated to the ButtMonkey comic relief.
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: He's only refered to as "Pothole" in ''The Great Steamboat Race''. Creator/DonRosa would be the one to give him a proper name.
* SoleSurvivor: He was a cabin boy on the ''Drenann White'', a riverboat that sank with all hands in 1850, leaving Angus as the only survivor, and the only person with the knowledge of where the remains of the ship, and the gold shipment onboard, is located.
* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: "Catfish" [=McDuck=] from ''WesternAnimation/Ducktales1987''.

to:

\n* BadBoss: Only paid TheAtoner: In the centuries since his death, forced to watch as his clan dwindled, Sir Quackly realized what a screwup he'd been, and took it upon himself to help Scrooge and Ratchet ''30 cents a day'' when lead the family back to greatness.
* ExactWords: When
they signed on for him. Adjusted for inflation, that's about 8$.
* EvilFormerFriend: His rival Porker Hogg used to be his partner, until they had a massive falling out over an old plantation they bought after the Civil War. By the time
first meet, Scrooge comes to America, the two despise each other.
* ItWillNeverCatchOn: Has an idea for a new kind of dime novel where all the dialogue is printed in "little bubbles"; i.e comic books. Everyone he tries pitching it to think
asks Sir Quackly if he's completely nuts, even Scrooge.also a [=McDuck=], only for Quackly to state that it's obviously impossible, since Scrooge, his parents, uncles, and siblings are the only ''living'' [=McDucks=] left.
* FakeUltimateHero: Despite how much he played up FatalFlaw: Greed, just like many of his descendants. He got carried away trying to hide the fortune King Macbeth had paid him for shelter, only to wall himself up in his writing, the few times he's called on for heroism clan castle in real life, he tends to fall flat.
* IShouldWriteABookAboutThis: After retiring in 1882, Angus moved on to writing... let's just say "embellished" stories about his adventures on
the Mississippi for dime novels.process.
* MartyStu: InUniverse-example- when Angus wrote about his adventures, he changed them to show himself as TheAce who took on entire armies of Beagle Boys by himself, while FriendlyGhost: Though Scrooge was relegated to the ButtMonkey comic relief.
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: He's only refered to as "Pothole" in ''The Great Steamboat Race''. Creator/DonRosa would be the one to give him a proper name.
* SoleSurvivor: He was a cabin boy on the ''Drenann White'', a riverboat
never finds out that sank with all hands in 1850, leaving Angus as the only survivor, and "caretaker" of Dismal Downs who helped him against the only person with Whiskervilles was in reality the knowledge ghost of his own ancestor.
* ThisIsSomethingHesGotToDoHimself: Refuses to simply point out to Scrooge
where the remains of the ship, and the gold shipment onboard, his treasure is located.hidden since just being handed wealth won't teach Scrooge what he needs to know.
* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: "Catfish" [=McDuck=] from ''WesternAnimation/Ducktales1987''.



[[folder: Jake [=McDuck=]]]
[[AC:First Appearance: '''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown, 1952 (Photograph)''', '''Last Of The Clan [=McDuck=], 1992 (In Person)''']]

Fergus' younger brother and Scrooge's uncle, Jake originally appeared as a photograph in ''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown'' by Creator/CarlBarks, which Donald used to disguise himself in an attempt to scam Scrooge for charity. Creator/DonRosa would introduce Jake himself in the first chapter of ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''.

to:

!Ganders
[[folder: Jake [=McDuck=]]]
Shamrock Gander]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_shamrock_gander.png]]
[[AC:First Appearance: '''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown, 1952 (Photograph)''', '''Last Of The Clan [=McDuck=], 1992 (In Person)''']]

Fergus' younger brother and Scrooge's uncle, Jake originally appeared
appearance: ''"Daisy Duck"'', 1955]]

Gladstone's nephew who is just
as a photograph in ''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown'' by Creator/CarlBarks, which Donald used to disguise himself in an attempt to scam Scrooge for charity. Creator/DonRosa would introduce Jake himself in the first chapter of ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''.infuriatingly lucky as his uncle.



* ImpoverishedPatrician: A member of the once-wealthy [=McDuck=] clan, Jake eeked out a living working on the Glasgow docks.
* SatelliteCharacter: His appearances can be summed up with "he existed" - he does virtually nothing of importance, and only appears alongside his brother so Fergus has someone to talk to. He doesn't even help fight the Whiskervilles during the events of ''The New Laird of Castle [=McDuck=]'' as he's busy taking Matilda and Hortense back to Glasgow.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Disappears with no explanation between ''The Dream-Time Of the Duck Never-Never'' and ''The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs'', and is never mentioned again, though considering how old Fergus is by this point, Jake has presumably passed on from old age.

to:

* ImpoverishedPatrician: A member BornLucky: Exactly like his uncle is. Gladstone knows he can trust Shamrock to have the same success rate as he does.
* HateSink: Not to the extent of his uncle because at the end
of the once-wealthy [=McDuck=] clan, Jake eeked out day Shamrock is still a living working on child, but consider his debut comic. Daisy forbids Gladstone from entering a lottery she's hosting because she knows his luck makes him an unfair winner. What does Gladstone do? Send in his nephew whom Daisy hasn't met yet so she won't forbid him from entering. Shamrock is fully aware of his role in Gladstone's plan and smugly participates in it.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: Like Gladstone, Daphne, Rose, and Elise, Shamrock is blessed with luck. He also has
the Glasgow docks.
same hair as Gladstone, Rose, Elise, and Disraeli.
* SatelliteCharacter: His MeaningfulName: He's named after a good-luck charm.
* OutOfFocus: He's had three comic
appearances can be summed up with "he existed" - he does virtually nothing of importance, in total: in 1955, 1978, and only appears alongside his brother so Fergus has someone to talk to. He doesn't even help fight the Whiskervilles during the events of ''The New Laird of Castle [=McDuck=]'' as 1981. This means he's busy taking Matilda not been featured for 36 years.
* SuddenNameChange: He is named Clyde in ''"The Visiting Clyde"''. Clyde might be another character on account that Huey, Dewey,
and Hortense back Louie did not recognize him, although it could also be that comic story is to Glasgow.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Disappears with no explanation between ''The Dream-Time Of the Duck Never-Never'' and ''The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs'', and is never mentioned again, though considering how old Fergus is by this point, Jake has presumably passed on from old age.
be put first chronologically.



[[folder: Gideon [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gideon_mcduck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Shellfish Motives"'', 1956]]

Scrooge's brother and the editor-in-chief of the County Conscience, the most credible newspaper in Duckburg, and a business rival to his older brother Scrooge and his newspaper, The Duckburg Chronicle. He is confirmed to be the son of Fergus and Downy, and the brother of Matilda and Hortense, as in the 2017 comic "Zio Paperone e Il Segreto di Cuoridpietra"

to:

[[folder: Gideon [=McDuck=]]]
Elise and Rose]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gideon_mcduck.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_elise_and_rose.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Shellfish Motives"'', 1956]]

Scrooge's brother
''"Daisy Duck"'', 1955]]

Gladstone's twin cousins. Some translations make them his nieces
and it's also the editor-in-chief of the County Conscience, the most credible newspaper in Duckburg, and a business rival to his older brother Scrooge and his newspaper, The Duckburg Chronicle. He is confirmed to be the son of Fergus and Downy, and the brother of Matilda and Hortense, as translations that sometimes give them names, which they lack in the 2017 comic "Zio Paperone e Il Segreto di Cuoridpietra"English version.



* DependingOnTheArtist: Exactly how much he resembles his more famous brother varies depending on who's drawing him. Romano Scarpa's original design, shown here, doesn't look too much like Scrooge, but [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/disney/images/2/29/Gideon_McDuck.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/270?cb=20131212221548 in other appearances he looks exactly like Scrooge, just with wilder hair and a different outfit.]]
* EnragedByIdiocy: Used in a few 1990s stories focusing on Gideon. He is pissed off that the reading public in Duckburg is more interested in celebrity gossip than actual news, and that a singer dying his hair is considered more newsworthy than political events.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: He places his morals about the importance of Information before anything else. And even though Scrooge himself never does anything ''dishonest'', Gideon is so much about his morals and so much not about the money he could make with the newspaper, that he manages to unnerve Scrooge on unseen levels.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: With Dickie Duck in some modern stories. She works as a reporter for "The Jiminy Cricket" and the two get along well. (Given that Dickie is Scrooge's surrogate granddaughter, he may be treating her as family.)
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: In some modern appearances he, like Dickie, also wears pants.
* RememberTheNewGuy: His first appearance treats him as a well-established member of the Duck cast. The fact that he is Scrooge's brother is just thrown away as though it was nothing ''special''.
%%* UnclePennybags: For Donald.

to:

* DependingOnTheArtist: Exactly how much he resembles BornLucky: All but confirmed to be the case. Their penchant for luck isn't demonstrated in their one comic, but they're the punchline that there's no escaping the Gander luck. Specifically, Gladstone was forbidden to participate in the lottery hosted by the women club because of his more famous brother varies depending on who's drawing him. Romano Scarpa's original design, shown here, doesn't look too much like Scrooge, but [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/disney/images/2/29/Gideon_McDuck.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/270?cb=20131212221548 unfair luck. So he sent in other appearances he looks exactly like Scrooge, just his nephew who no one knew was his nephew and equally blessed with wilder hair and a different outfit.]]
* EnragedByIdiocy: Used in a few 1990s stories focusing on Gideon. He is pissed off that the reading public in Duckburg is more interested in celebrity gossip than actual news, and that a singer dying his hair is
luck. Daisy considered more newsworthy than political events.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: He places his morals about
making the importance of Information before anything else. And even though Scrooge himself never does anything ''dishonest'', Gideon is so much about his morals lottery for women only next time, at which point Elise and so much not about Rose step on the money he could make scene to greet their cousin Gladstone.
* TheDividual: As is common
with the newspaper, that he manages to unnerve Scrooge on unseen levels.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: With Dickie
child-type family members in Duck & Mouse fiction. In some versions of ''"Daisy Duck"'', they are ColorCodedCharacters.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: Like Gladstone, Daphne, and Shamrock, Elise and Rose are (likely) blessed with luck. They also have the same hair as Gladstone, Shamrock, and Disraeli.
* NamedByTheAdaptation: They are unnamed in the English version of their one comic, but received names
in some modern stories. She works as a reporter for "The Jiminy Cricket" translations. Elise and the two get along well. (Given that Dickie is Scrooge's surrogate granddaughter, he may be treating her as family.)
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: In some modern appearances he, like Dickie, also wears pants.
* RememberTheNewGuy: His first appearance treats him as a well-established member of the Duck cast. The fact that he is Scrooge's brother is just thrown away as though it was nothing ''special''.
%%* UnclePennybags: For Donald.
Rose are their French names.



[[folder: Rumpus [=McFowl=]]]
[[quoteright:185:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rumpus_mcfowl.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"It's All Relative"'', 1994]]

Scrooge's lazy, freeloading, overweight half-brother. Created and so far used exclusively by William Van Horn.

to:

[[folder: Rumpus [=McFowl=]]]
[[quoteright:185:https://static.
Crabstone Gander]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rumpus_mcfowl.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_crabstone_gander.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"It's All Relative"'', 1994]]

Scrooge's lazy, freeloading, overweight half-brother. Created and so far used exclusively by William Van Horn.
''"The Hound of Basketville"'', 1965]]

Gladstone's unspecified ancestor from a 100 years ago in an adaption of ''Literature/TheHoundOfTheBaskervilles''.



* {{Acrofatic}}: He's old and fat and lazy, but can ''really'' move when he wants to.
* BigEater: Especially when it's other people's food he's eating.
* {{Expy}}: Of J. Wellington Wimpy from ''ComicStrip/{{Popeye}}''.
* {{Foil}}: Unlike Donald or Gus Goose who are also shown to be pretty lazy and with flaws, Rumpus doesn´t possess the sympathy and redeeming qualities of the two.
* JerkAss: He doesn't have very many redeeming qualities, and in fact seems determined to be as irritating and pushy as he possibly can be towards his poor relatives. Though in some stories he does seem to have a slightly soft spot for his half-brother Scrooge and gets a few minor PetTheDog moments when he at least ''tries'' to get along with him.
* KarmaHoudini: He tends to be this, even when it looks like it's going to be subverted; in fact, the two first stories he appeared ''both'' ended with him, after driving Donald and Scrooge insane, injuring himself and becoming bed-ridden for weeks... which meant that he got to happily lie about in Donald's bed while Donald had to wait on him hand and foot.
* LazyBum: A strange version; he energetically puts every bit of effort he can into being extremely lazy, and does it in such a way that he's ''as annoying as possible.''
* TheLoad: Treated as one in-universe. Every single Duck family member dreads it when he's coming over for a visit because they know he'll eat all their food, hogs all their things, and keeps them awake all night with his infernal snoring, which can be heard through concrete-thick walls.
* NoSocialSkills: Though it doesn't seem to be the cause of any strange upbringing or Asperger's Syndrome or anything like that -- Rumpus probably ''could'' be a socially well-adjusted person if he made the effort; it's just that he does not care enough about anyone who isn't him to even bother trying.
* SiblingYinYang: He's the lazy, not-carrying brother of the SelfMadeMan Scrooge [=McDuck=].

to:

* {{Acrofatic}}: He's old and fat and lazy, but can ''really'' move when he wants to.
* BigEater: Especially when
BornLucky: Just like Gladstone after him, it's other people's food he's eating.
the reason he can walk around freely in the moor without having to fear the grim-mire.
* {{Expy}}: Of J. Wellington Wimpy HiddenInPlainSight: Crabstone used picnic baskets to transport his money from ''ComicStrip/{{Popeye}}''.
* {{Foil}}: Unlike Donald or Gus Goose who are also shown to be pretty lazy
and with flaws, Rumpus doesn´t possess to the sympathy moor. Everyone thought he had just a weird preference where to eat and redeeming qualities of didn't question the two.
* JerkAss: He doesn't have very many redeeming qualities, and in fact seems determined to be as irritating and pushy as he possibly can be towards his poor relatives. Though in some stories he does seem to have a slightly soft spot for his half-brother Scrooge and gets a few minor PetTheDog moments
picnic basket at times appearing heavier when he at least ''tries'' to get along with him.
* KarmaHoudini: He tends to be this, even when it looks like it's going to be subverted; in fact,
left the two first stories he appeared ''both'' ended with him, after driving Donald and Scrooge insane, injuring himself and becoming bed-ridden for weeks... which meant that he got to happily lie about in Donald's bed while Donald had to wait on him hand and foot.
moor.
* LazyBum: A strange version; he energetically puts every bit of effort he can into being extremely lazy, and does it in such a way that he's ''as annoying as possible.''
* TheLoad: Treated as one in-universe. Every single Duck
OldMoney: The family member dreads it when he's coming over for a visit because they know he'll eat all their food, hogs all their things, and keeps them awake all night fortune disappeared with his infernal snoring, which can be heard through concrete-thick walls.
* NoSocialSkills: Though
death because he had hidden it doesn't seem so well. Sherlock Mouse finds it back for Gladstone.
* ScoobyDooHoax: Crabstone used dogs coated with luminous paint
to be make the cause of any strange upbringing or Asperger's Syndrome or anything like that -- Rumpus probably ''could'' be a socially well-adjusted person if he made moor look haunted, an extra precaution to keep thieves out. Gladstone picks up the effort; it's just that trick ''and'' adds himself to it once he does not care enough about anyone who isn't him to even bother trying.
* SiblingYinYang: He's the lazy, not-carrying brother
becomes master of the SelfMadeMan Scrooge [=McDuck=].castle and the treasure.



[[folder: Douglas [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/douglas_mcduck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Visits Cousin"'', 1981]]

Scrooge's cousin and Whitewater's uncle.

to:

[[folder: Douglas [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:200:https://static.
Disraeli Duck]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/douglas_mcduck.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_disraeli_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Visits Cousin"'', 1981]]

Scrooge's
''"Gladstone and Disraeli"'', 2013]]

Gladstone's
cousin and Whitewater's uncle.from his father's side of the family. While many members of Gladstone's family attract luck, Disraeli attracts ''pity.''



* AllThatGlitters: One of the core differences between Scrooge and Douglas symbolic of their respective success and... not-so-success is that, while gold was crucial for Scrooge to get his fortune started, Douglas has the peculiar inability to tell gold from fool's gold and somehow ''always'' comes up with bags of the latter thoroughly convinced it's the former. The one time he actually found gold was in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'', but it was gold dust and when he came across chunks of fool's gold, he gladly threw the dust away thinking he was getting his hands on better.
* AmbiguouslyRelated: He is introduced as a cousin of Scrooge and part of the [=McDuck=]-family, but also is explicitly stated as the uncle of Whitewater Duck who is part of the Duck-side (Donald is related to Scrooge via his mother, Scrooge's sister. For that, his cousin shouldn't have a link to the [=McDucks=]. The story ''A [=McDuck=] By Any Other Name'' adds more ambiguous to the relation: Scrooge states that Douglas was not a real [=McDuck=] but just adopted. To prove that, they travel to Scotland. In the end, after Douglas saves Scrooge's life, they decide to not investigate the case further, as Scrooge states Douglas proved to be a real [=McDuck=] anyway.
* FamilyHonor: Starting with ''"Gall In The Family"'', Douglas regularly talks badly about Scrooge's branch of the family, calling them spendthrifts and wastrels that do the name "[=McDuck=]" no favors. One example he brings up is an event in '98 where Scrooge's father bought a whole glass of lemonade for his family.
* LoanShark: Not so by occupation, but the punchline of his debut comic is that Scrooge came to visit him after years apart and the first thing Douglas does is remind Scrooge of a dollar he lent him back in the day which he wants back with a sizable interest.
* MountainMan: He comes down often enough, but his day-to-day life is spent alone in the wilderness looking for gold.
* RelatedInTheAdaptation: Douglas always was Scrooge's cousin, but it wasn't until ''"Gold Foolery"'' that he was explicitly identified as a [=McDuck=]. It was furthermore not until ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'' that he was identified as Whitewater's uncle.
* TheRival: He and his nephew Whitewater were this to Scrooge and Donald in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"''. Or more fairly considering who entered the contest first, vice versa.
* UncannyFamilyResemblance: Douglas and Scrooge are borderline indistinguishable.

to:

* AllThatGlitters: One of the core differences between Scrooge and Douglas symbolic of BitchInSheepsClothing: Gladstone's luck is semi-passive, but Disraeli has to put up an act for his powers to do their respective success and... not-so-success is that, while gold was crucial for Scrooge work. He doesn't have to get his fortune started, Douglas has go to the peculiar inability to tell gold from fool's gold and somehow ''always'' comes up intellectual heights of ManipulativeBastard because the pity will kick in with bags of the latter thoroughly convinced it's the former. The one time he actually found gold was in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'', flimsiest of stories, but it was gold dust and he is well-aware of what he's doing. His influence only ceases when he came across chunks proof of fool's gold, he gladly threw the dust away thinking he was getting his hands on better.
* AmbiguouslyRelated: He
lies is introduced as a cousin of Scrooge presented.
* EnemyMine: Donald thinks he
and part Disraeli will get along just fine because of the [=McDuck=]-family, but also how Gladstone feels about him and initially believes Disraeli is explicitly stated as the uncle of Whitewater Duck who timid. Then Donald notices Disraeli is part of the Duck-side (Donald is related a manipulative liar and interested in Daisy and he proceeds to Scrooge via his mother, Scrooge's sister. For that, help his cousin shouldn't have a link to the [=McDucks=]. The story ''A [=McDuck=] By Any Other Name'' adds more ambiguous to the relation: Scrooge states that Douglas was not a real [=McDuck=] but just adopted. To prove that, they travel to Scotland. In the end, after Douglas saves Scrooge's life, they decide to not investigate the case further, as Scrooge states Douglas proved to be a real [=McDuck=] anyway.
* FamilyHonor: Starting with ''"Gall In The Family"'', Douglas regularly talks badly about Scrooge's branch of the family, calling them spendthrifts and wastrels that do the name "[=McDuck=]" no favors. One example he brings up is an event in '98 where Scrooge's father bought a whole glass of lemonade for his family.
* LoanShark: Not so by occupation, but the punchline of his debut comic is that Scrooge came to visit him after years apart and the first thing Douglas does is remind Scrooge of a dollar he lent him back in the day which he wants back with a sizable interest.
* MountainMan: He comes down often enough, but his day-to-day life is spent alone in the wilderness looking for gold.
Gladstone out.
* RelatedInTheAdaptation: Douglas always was Scrooge's FriendToAllLivingThings: 50/50 played straight and subverted. Disraeli's power of pity works on animals, giving him all the fauna-friendly qualities of a Disney Princess! Whether he actually deserves their kindness is another matter. He's a manipulator of people, which does not bode well, but he seemed to genuinely get along well with Bolivar.
* HateSink: Even more so than his
cousin, but it wasn't until ''"Gold Foolery"'' namely because while Gladstone's luck is passive, Disraeli has to put effort to exploit being so pitiful. Also, while Gladstone can and does show good qualities, same can't be said for Disraeli.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: Unlike many of his family, Disraeli does not have luck on his side. What he does have is pity and pity makes for powerful peer pressure to give him what he wants anyway. Especially among lucky relatives. His hair's also similar to
that of Gladstone, Shamrock, Rose, and Elise.
* JerkWithAHeartOfJerk: Has been this since
he was explicitly identified as a [=McDuck=]. It was furthermore not child. One incident had him desiring the bicycle his cousin had just won, so he threw his own under a bus and went for a cry to Gladstone's mother. She believed it to be an accident and let him borrow Gladstone's bike until ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'' that he'd get a new one.
* LazyBum: A similar principle, but rather than having fate push things on him like with Gladstone or the rest of the family,
he was identified as Whitewater's uncle.
has to manipulate people for it.
* TheRival: He NamedAfterSomebodyFamous: UsefulNotes/BenjaminDisraeli, former British Prime Minister and his nephew Whitewater were this archrival to Scrooge and Donald in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"''. Or more fairly considering who entered the contest first, vice versa.
* UncannyFamilyResemblance: Douglas and Scrooge are borderline indistinguishable.
UsefulNotes/WilliamGladstone.



[[folder: Sir Quackly [=McDuck=]]]
[[AC:First appearance: (Mentioned) ''ComicBook/TheOldCastlesSecret'' (1948), (In Person) ''The Last Of the Clan [=McDuck=]'' (1992)]]

Scrooge's ancestor, who fought on the side of King Macbeth during the English Civil War, only to fall victim to his own greed when he accidentally walled himself up with his treasure in 1057. Realizing his folly, he took it upon himself to watch over his descendants from the afterlife, especially Scrooge.

to:

!Gooses
[[folder: Sir Quackly [=McDuck=]]]
Gus Goose]]
[[quoteright:172:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gusgoose_5434.jpeg]]
[[AC:First appearance: (Mentioned) ''ComicBook/TheOldCastlesSecret'' (1948), (In Person) ''The Last Of the Clan [=McDuck=]'' (1992)]]

Scrooge's ancestor, who fought on the side
''Donald's Cousin Gus'', 1938]]
-> Voiced by: Frank Welker (''House
of King Macbeth during the English Civil War, only to fall victim to his own greed when he accidentally walled himself up with his treasure in 1057. Realizing his folly, he took it upon himself to watch over his descendants from the afterlife, especially Scrooge.Mouse'')

Grandma Duck's incredibly lazy and gluttonous helping hand.



* TheAtoner: In the centuries since his death, forced to watch as his clan dwindled, Sir Quackly realized what a screwup he'd been, and took it upon himself to help Scrooge lead the family back to greatness.
* ExactWords: When they first meet, Scrooge asks Sir Quackly if he's also a [=McDuck=], only for Quackly to state that it's obviously impossible, since Scrooge, his parents, uncles, and siblings are the only ''living'' [=McDucks=] left.
* FatalFlaw: Greed, just like many of his descendants. He got carried away trying to hide the fortune King Macbeth had paid him for shelter, only to wall himself up in the clan castle in the process.
* FriendlyGhost: Though Scrooge never finds out that the "caretaker" of Dismal Downs who helped him against the Whiskervilles was in reality the ghost of his own ancestor.
* ThisIsSomethingHesGotToDoHimself: Refuses to simply point out to Scrooge where his treasure is hidden since just being handed wealth won't teach Scrooge what he needs to know.

to:

* TheAtoner: AlliterativeName: '''G'''us '''G'''oose.
* BewareTheNiceOnes: He's usually the nicest guy around. Endanger his friends or family or threaten his lunch, and you'll discover why ''bears'' run from him.
* BigEater / ExtremeOmnivore: He is always hungry.
In the centuries since cartoon ''Donald's Cousin Gus'', he comes to visit Donald and through the episode devours all of Donald's food without leaving him a single crumb.
* DependingOnTheWriter: An interesting variation here, as both comics and cartoons portray Gus as lazy and gluttonous... but whether he is more gluttonous or lazy depends on the media. In the cartoons, Gus' defining trait is
his death, forced appetite; most of his appearances are almost solely dedicated to him eating huge amounts of food. In the comics, however, Gus (while still a BigEater) is far more likely to be found asleep under a tree or thinking up ways to do the least possible amount of work.
* DreadfulMusician: Gus has a horrible singing voice. The only one who likes to hear him produce a song is Cissy.
* EveryoneHasStandards: Just because he is a glutton doesn't mean he'll eat ''anything''. That's the outcome of eating excellent food like Grandma Duck's. He'll eat only quality food, and one story (code: [[http://coa.inducks.org/story.php?c=I+TL+2966-2 I TL 2966-2 ]] on I.N.D.U.C.K.S) has him comically imprisoned by a couple of impostors. Their methods of torture included making him
watch as people eating horrid, rotting food.
* HiddenDepths: An amazing food critic, who can easily detect the quality of any food. In Italian stories, he actually has an on-off job in Duckburg police hunting down those who sell food made with adulterated ingredients, and, in spite of
his clan dwindled, Sir Quackly realized what a screwup he'd been, laziness and took it upon himself to help Scrooge lead the family back to greatness.
* ExactWords: When
usually being at Grandma Duck's farm, is easily their best agent, that they first meet, Scrooge asks Sir Quackly if he's also call in whenever a [=McDuck=], only case becomes too complicated for Quackly to state that it's obviously impossible, since Scrooge, his parents, uncles, and siblings are the only ''living'' [=McDucks=] left.full-time officers.
* FatalFlaw: Greed, just like many of his descendants. He got carried away trying to hide the fortune King Macbeth had paid him for shelter, only to wall himself up LazyBum: His defining trait in the clan castle in the process.
* FriendlyGhost: Though Scrooge
comics; he never finds does more work than he absolutely has to.
* NiceGuy: Despite being incredibly lazy, always shirking work, and always eating more than his fair share, he is actually very soft-hearted. In one story, it turned
out that the "caretaker" of Dismal Downs who helped him against reason he hadn't fetched the Whiskervilles mail in weeks was that two birds had made a nest in reality Grandma's mailbox, and Gus didn't have the ghost heart to disturb the baby birds.
* TheStoic: One interesting side-effect
of his own ancestor.
laziness -- he is usually pretty calm and level-headed in a crisis, either because panicking takes too much energy or because he was dozing off when the danger was explained and isn't aware of how much trouble he is really in.
* ThisIsSomethingHesGotToDoHimself: Refuses StoutStrength: Surprisingly strong, able to simply point out to Scrooge lift Grandma's horse.
* SupremeChef: In general, he's far more interested in eating than in cooking, but on the rare occasions when he does cook, he's almost as good as Grandma (he has, after all, picked up a lot from her).
* UltimateJobSecurity: The only logical explanation for why Gus hasn't been fired is that he's Grandma Duck's nephew, as she crossly reminds us now and then.
** There have been a couple of stories
where Gus (temporarily) either got much more energetic, or Grandma hired another farmhand to help out -- every time, Grandma ended up going nuts because all of a sudden ''there wasn't enough work left for her.''
* TheVoiceless: In the cartoons he only utters the occasional honk, and when he first appeared in the daily comic strip by Al Taliaferro he was likewise silent -- but when he was picked up by Carl Barks and made Grandma's farmhand, he became a fully-voiced character and
his treasure is hidden since just being handed wealth won't teach Scrooge what he needs to know.
comics incarnation has remained so ever since.



!Ganders
[[folder: Shamrock Gander]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_shamrock_gander.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Daisy Duck"'', 1955]]

Gladstone's nephew who is just as infuriatingly lucky as his uncle.

to:

!Ganders
[[folder: Shamrock Gander]]
Greta Goose]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_shamrock_gander.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_greta_goose.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Daisy ''"Grandma Duck"'', 1955]]

Gladstone's nephew who is just as infuriatingly lucky as his uncle.
1952]]

A cousin of Gus and presumably a grandnibling of Grandma Duck too. She's a lumberjack in the North Woods and, after intervention by Grandma, in a relationship with Hjalmar.



* BornLucky: Exactly like his uncle is. Gladstone knows he can trust Shamrock to have the same success rate as he does.
* HateSink: Not to the extent of his uncle because at the end of the day Shamrock is still a child, but consider his debut comic. Daisy forbids Gladstone from entering a lottery she's hosting because she knows his luck makes him an unfair winner. What does Gladstone do? Send in his nephew whom Daisy hasn't met yet so she won't forbid him from entering. Shamrock is fully aware of his role in Gladstone's plan and smugly participates in it.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: Like Gladstone, Daphne, Rose, and Elise, Shamrock is blessed with luck. He also has the same hair as Gladstone, Rose, Elise, and Disraeli.
* MeaningfulName: He's named after a good-luck charm.
* OutOfFocus: He's had three comic appearances in total: in 1955, 1978, and 1981. This means he's not been featured for 36 years.
* SuddenNameChange: He is named Clyde in ''"The Visiting Clyde"''. Clyde might be another character on account that Huey, Dewey, and Louie did not recognize him, although it could also be that comic story is to be put first chronologically.

to:

* BornLucky: Exactly like his uncle is. Gladstone knows he AlliterativeName: '''G'''reta '''G'''oose.
* BadassAdorable: She's adorable and pretty and
can trust Shamrock to have lift an entire tree on her own. Which is useful for a lumberjack.
* DoggedNiceGuy: Greta is well-liked in
the same success rate settlement and known to be dependable and capable, but not a man views her as he does.
* HateSink: Not to the extent of his uncle
a potential romantic partner because at the end of the day Shamrock is still NoGuyWantsAnAmazon. ''Grandma Duck gets more interest when she arrives.''
* DreadfulMusician: Not unlike Gus, Greta has
a child, but consider his debut comic. Daisy forbids Gladstone from entering a lottery she's hosting horrible singing voice. It does, however, attract moose. Far more than for appearance, this makes Hjalmar decide to date her because she knows his luck it makes her the ideal hunting partner.
%%* MightyLumberjack: Greta likely is the mightiest of them all.
* SheCleansUpNicely: After Grandma gives Greta a makeover, she immediately draws the attention of Hjalmar for "looking like a girl".
* StoutStrength: Portrayed as amazing, but not out of the ordinary. Other than carrying around trees, Greta also helps get a car filled with lumber out of the mud by lifting it and is asked to straighten a beartrap.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Socrates M. Gosling]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_socrates_gosling.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: newspaper comic, 1944]]

Better known as "Sock", Socrates is the nerdy cousin of Huey, Dewey, and Louie. He is related to Gus Goose insofar that Gus was authorized to send
him an unfair winner. What does Gladstone do? Send to stay with Donald for a while, but it isn't clarified how they are related.
----
* AmbiguouslyRelated: He physically resembles Gus Goose and has a similar-sounding surname, but their exact relationship is never defined.
* TheBusCameBack: After his run in 1944, Sock remained absent until 1984 when he got to star
in his nephew whom Daisy hasn't met yet so she won't forbid him from entering. Shamrock is fully aware of his role in Gladstone's plan and smugly participates in it.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: Like Gladstone, Daphne, Rose, and Elise, Shamrock is blessed with luck. He also has the same hair as Gladstone, Rose, Elise, and Disraeli.
* MeaningfulName: He's named after a good-luck charm.
* OutOfFocus: He's had three
first comic appearances story: ''"Woodchuck Sock"''. Since then, he appeared in total: another comic only once in 1955, 1978, and 1981. This means 2002's ''"Healthy Choice"''.
* ButtMonkey: Either he brings it upon himself or
he's not been featured for 36 years.
the victim of the triplets.
* SuddenNameChange: He is named Clyde in ''"The Visiting Clyde"''. Clyde might be another character on account that DeathbringerTheAdorable: Prior to meeting Socrates, Huey, Dewey, and Louie did not recognize him, although assume "Sock" refers to the verb "to sock" and go as far as [[YouWouldntHitAGuyWithGlasses to acquire fake glasses to avoid a pummeling]].
%% EndearinglyDorky: Just look at him! He gets a date out of
it could also be too with the daughter of the owner of a confectionery store.
* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: In one comic, Sock tries to convince the triplets
that comic story asking for cookies is better than stealing them. He goes to be put first chronologically.ask for one from Donald, but when Donald approves and they go to the plate, all the cookies are gone because Huey, Dewey, and Louie stole them in the meantime.



[[folder: Elise and Rose]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_elise_and_rose.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Daisy Duck"'', 1955]]

Gladstone's twin cousins. Some translations make them his nieces and it's also the translations that sometimes give them names, which they lack in the English version.

to:

! Coots
[[folder: Elise and Rose]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
Cornelius Coot]]
[[quoteright:282:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_elise_and_rose.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/coot.jpg]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Daisy Duck"'', 1955]]

Gladstone's twin cousins. Some translations make them his nieces
''"Statuesque Spendthrifts"'', 1952]]

The founder of Duckburg
and it's also Donald's great-great-grandfather. [[OurFounder An immense statue of him]] erected by Scrooge as part of a contest with the translations that sometimes give them names, which they lack in Maharajah of Howduyustan towers over the English version.city.



* BornLucky: All but confirmed to be the case. Their penchant for luck isn't demonstrated in their one comic, but they're the punchline that there's no escaping the Gander luck. Specifically, Gladstone was forbidden to participate in the lottery hosted by the women club because of his unfair luck. So he sent in his nephew who no one knew was his nephew and equally blessed with luck. Daisy considered making the lottery for women only next time, at which point Elise and Rose step on the scene to greet their cousin Gladstone.
* TheDividual: As is common with child-type family members in Duck & Mouse fiction. In some versions of ''"Daisy Duck"'', they are ColorCodedCharacters.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: Like Gladstone, Daphne, and Shamrock, Elise and Rose are (likely) blessed with luck. They also have the same hair as Gladstone, Shamrock, and Disraeli.
* NamedByTheAdaptation: They are unnamed in the English version of their one comic, but received names in some translations. Elise and Rose are their French names.

to:

* BornLucky: All AlliterativeName: '''C'''ornelius '''C'''oot.
* AscendedExtra: Carl Barks created and named him as the founder of Duckburg,
but confirmed to be the case. Their penchant for luck isn't demonstrated he only appears via statues as in their one comic, but they're the punchline "Statuesque Spendthrifts" and "Statues of Limitations". The reader never learns anymore about that there's no escaping man. Later writers like Creator/DonRosa would flesh out the Gander luck. Specifically, Gladstone was forbidden to participate in the lottery hosted by the women club because background of his unfair luck. So he sent in his nephew who no one knew was his nephew Cornelius Coot more and equally blessed more, including flashbacks, a backstory for why he's always portrayed with luck. Daisy considered making corn and his own family.
%%zce* CallToAdventure:
* DependingOnTheWriter: In his original depictions there is no indication
the lottery for women only next time, at which point Elise and Rose step on Ducks are in any way related to Cornelius Coot. In fact, he's just portrayed as the scene to greet their cousin Gladstone.
* TheDividual: As is common with child-type family members in Duck & Mouse fiction. In some versions of ''"Daisy Duck"'', they are ColorCodedCharacters.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: Like Gladstone, Daphne, and Shamrock, Elise and Rose are (likely) blessed with luck. They also have the same hair as Gladstone, Shamrock, and Disraeli.
* NamedByTheAdaptation: They are unnamed in the English version
founder of their one comic, but received names hometown. Don Rosa and some other writers would later link Donald and/or Scrooge to Cornelius, most famously with Rosa deciding to make Grandma Duck the granddaughter of Cornelius Coot.
* FounderOfTheKingdom: The founder of Duckburg.
* OurFounder: He founded Duckburg. The statue of him is a plot point
in some translations. Elise stories when it's not just background decoration.
* PosthumousCharacter: Never appears in person, but his great-grandson sells Killmotor Hill to Scrooge when the two meet in Klondike. Prior to Scrooge centering his financial empire around his money bin there, Duckburg was merely a few farms
and Rose are their French names.the old decaying Fort Duckburg, established by Sir Francis Drake some 200 years before.
** The Ducks ''do'' meet him "for real" in a time-travel story, though.
** His spirit/ghost is also seen watching Scrooge at the end of ''His Majesty, [=McDuck=]''.
** His background is finally explored in part in the Italian story ''The Exile of the Van Coots''.
* SpecsOfAwesome: Even his statue has the specs, cementing him as a badass explorer.



[[folder: Crabstone Gander]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_crabstone_gander.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Hound of Basketville"'', 1965]]

Gladstone's unspecified ancestor from a 100 years ago in an adaption of ''Literature/TheHoundOfTheBaskervilles''.
----
* BornLucky: Just like Gladstone after him, it's the reason he can walk around freely in the moor without having to fear the grim-mire.
* HiddenInPlainSight: Crabstone used picnic baskets to transport his money from and to the moor. Everyone thought he had just a weird preference where to eat and didn't question the picnic basket at times appearing heavier when he left the moor.
* OldMoney: The family fortune disappeared with his death because he had hidden it so well. Sherlock Mouse finds it back for Gladstone.
* ScoobyDooHoax: Crabstone used dogs coated with luminous paint to make the moor look haunted, an extra precaution to keep thieves out. Gladstone picks up the trick ''and'' adds himself to it once he becomes master of the castle and the treasure.

to:

[[folder: Crabstone Gander]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_crabstone_gander.png]]
Clinton Coot]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Hound ''"Guardians of Basketville"'', 1965]]

Gladstone's unspecified
the Lost Library"'', 1993]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/ThomasLennon (2018)

The son of Cornelius Coot and founder of the Junior Woodchucks.

* AlliterativeName: '''C'''linton '''C'''oot.
* AscendedExtra: He was created by Don Rosa as the founder of the Junior Woodchucks and established in his family tree. However, while he was rarely used by Rosa or other writers, he makes his animated debut in ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'' where he's depicted as an
ancestor from a 100 years ago in an adaption of ''Literature/TheHoundOfTheBaskervilles''.
----
* BornLucky: Just like Gladstone after him, it's the reason he can walk around freely in the moor without having to fear the grim-mire.
* HiddenInPlainSight: Crabstone used picnic baskets to transport his money from
Donald and to the moor. Everyone thought he had just a weird preference where to eat and didn't question the picnic basket at times appearing heavier when he left the moor.
* OldMoney: The family fortune disappeared with his death because he had hidden it so well. Sherlock Mouse finds it back for Gladstone.
* ScoobyDooHoax: Crabstone used dogs coated with luminous paint to make the moor look haunted, an extra precaution to keep thieves out. Gladstone picks up the trick ''and'' adds himself to it once he becomes master
founder of the castle and original three Caballeros.
* PosthumousCharacter: Much like his father Cornelius he's already dead at
the treasure. time most stories take place, so he only gets mentioned or appears via flashbacks.



[[folder: Disraeli Duck]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_disraeli_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Gladstone and Disraeli"'', 2013]]

Gladstone's cousin from his father's side of the family. While many members of Gladstone's family attract luck, Disraeli attracts ''pity.''

to:

[[folder: Disraeli Duck]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
Casey Coot]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Last Sled To Dawson"'', 1988]]

The grandson of Cornelius and the son of Clinton Coot. According to the family tree by Don Rosa this also means he is Grandma Duck's brother. He's the one selling the piece of land where the Fort Duckburg stands to Scrooge [=McDuck=].

* AlliterativeName: '''C'''asey '''C'''oot.
* SmallRoleBigImpact: He only appears in a short flashback sequence in his debut story by Creator/DonRosa. However, in this scene, he sells the land of piece where the Fort Duckburg stands to Scrooge [=McDuck=]. This hill will later be the place where Scrooge's money bin stands. In fact, Scrooge's influence transforms Duckburg from a small community into the big city it is nowadays and in which most of the Duck family's adventures take place. In other word, it was Casey's decision to sell his grandfather's land to the newly rich Scrooge who is responsible for all the stories taking place here.
[[/folder]]

! Unknown
[[folder: Ludwig von Drake]]
[[quoteright:166:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_disraeli_duck.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/ludwigvondrake_6817.jpg]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Gladstone ''The Wonderful World of Color'', 1961]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/PaulFrees (1961-1986), Walker Edmiston (1985-1987), Creator/WayneAllwine (1985), Albert Ash (1987), Creator/CoreyBurton (1987-present)

An absent-minded scholar/inventor who is referred to as Donald's uncle (according to Creator/WaltDisney himself, he's the brother of Donald's father, while in Tony Strobl's stories, he's depicted as Grandma Duck's cousin,
and Disraeli"'', 2013]]

Gladstone's cousin from his father's side
Creator/DonRosa claims he is/was married to Scrooge's sister Matilda, making him Donald's uncle by marriage) and an expert on everything. He originally appeared in ''Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color'' and has since become a semi-recurring character in the family. While many members of Gladstone's family attract luck, Disraeli attracts ''pity.''comics. He and Gyro are somewhat similar and if you're confused, just remember, Ludwig is TheProfessor first and a BunglingInventor second, while Gyro is the other way around.



* BitchInSheepsClothing: Gladstone's luck is semi-passive, but Disraeli has to put up an act for his powers to do their work. He doesn't have to go to the intellectual heights of ManipulativeBastard because the pity will kick in with the flimsiest of stories, but he is well-aware of what he's doing. His influence only ceases when proof of his lies is presented.
* EnemyMine: Donald thinks he and Disraeli will get along just fine because of how Gladstone feels about him and initially believes Disraeli is timid. Then Donald notices Disraeli is a manipulative liar and interested in Daisy and he proceeds to help his cousin Gladstone out.
* FriendToAllLivingThings: 50/50 played straight and subverted. Disraeli's power of pity works on animals, giving him all the fauna-friendly qualities of a Disney Princess! Whether he actually deserves their kindness is another matter. He's a manipulator of people, which does not bode well, but he seemed to genuinely get along well with Bolivar.
* HateSink: Even more so than his cousin, namely because while Gladstone's luck is passive, Disraeli has to put effort to exploit being so pitiful. Also, while Gladstone can and does show good qualities, same can't be said for Disraeli.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: Unlike many of his family, Disraeli does not have luck on his side. What he does have is pity and pity makes for powerful peer pressure to give him what he wants anyway. Especially among lucky relatives. His hair's also similar to that of Gladstone, Shamrock, Rose, and Elise.
* JerkWithAHeartOfJerk: Has been this since he was a child. One incident had him desiring the bicycle his cousin had just won, so he threw his own under a bus and went for a cry to Gladstone's mother. She believed it to be an accident and let him borrow Gladstone's bike until he'd get a new one.
* LazyBum: A similar principle, but rather than having fate push things on him like with Gladstone or the rest of the family, he has to manipulate people for it.
* NamedAfterSomebodyFamous: UsefulNotes/BenjaminDisraeli, former British Prime Minister and archrival to UsefulNotes/WilliamGladstone.

to:

* BitchInSheepsClothing: Gladstone's luck is semi-passive, but Disraeli has to put up an act for his powers to do their work. He doesn't have to go to the intellectual heights of ManipulativeBastard because the pity will kick in with the flimsiest of stories, but he is well-aware of what AbsentMindedProfessor: As smart as Ludwig is, he's doing. His influence only ceases when proof of a bit airheaded if not senile, easily losing his lies train of thought.
* AmbiguouslyRelated: He was once introduced by Creator/WaltDisney himself as Donald's uncle but ''how'' exactly he
is presented.
* EnemyMine: Donald thinks he
related is a constant debate between fans and Disraeli will get along just fine creatives. It helps that there seems to be almost no other named von Drakes in the Duck family. It becomes more ambiguous in regards to Scrooge: Many stories hint that Scrooge and Ludwig may be related too. Creator/DonRosa revealed [[WordOfGod his view of things]], that Ludwig is married to Scrooge's sister Mathilda, making him a wider, not blood-related part of the family. But this is far from official canon.
* DitzyGenius: Even more so than Gyro, in fact. There's no doubt that he's brilliant in every way, but he's also somewhat of an eccentric, at times bordering on being a [[TheWonka Wonka]] -- or, DependingOnTheWriter, even a full-fledged {{Cloudcuckoolander}}.
* FamousAncestor: According to the episode ''"The Truth About Mother Goose"'' of ''[[Series/WaltDisneyPresents Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color]]'', Ludwig is the grandson of [[NurseryRhyme Mother Goose]].
* InsufferableGenius: On a bad day. But even on a good day, humility is not his strongest suit. One story shows that the other professors at his university outright hate him
because he keeps walking in on their classes and correcting them in front of how Gladstone feels about their students.
* MommasBoy: In ''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'' and ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'', it was a RunningGag for
him to be intimidated by his mother yelling at him from offscreen. This has since found some comic follow-up, like in ''"Wiener Schnitzel Woes"'', where his mother sends him homemade wiener schnitzel weekly all the way from Austria.
* MrExposition: Occasionally, his role is to explain why things are happening.
* OutOfFocus: In later years he hasn't been used much in comics -- in fact, for some years Egmont Creative A/S, the main publisher of Disney comics in Europe, completely banned any use of the character, because editor
and initially believes Disraeli creative leader Byron Erickson considered him superfluous; there was nothing Ludwig could do that Gyro Gearloose or the Junior Woodchuck Guidebook couldn't. However, the ban seems to have been lifted in recent years, though Ludwig is timid. Then Donald notices Disraeli is still a manipulative liar and interested minor character in Daisy and he proceeds to help his cousin Gladstone out.the comics.
* FriendToAllLivingThings: 50/50 played straight ** Strangely enough, another character that was banned from use at Egmont was Launchpad [=McQuack=], and subverted. Disraeli's power when asked why the two characters were not seen in Disney comics nowadays, Byron Erickson famously answered: ''"Ludwig and Launchpad ran off to Las Vegas, where they came out as transvestites and joined a drag show."''
** The animated version
of pity works on animals, giving him Ludwig, however, remains fairly central and is usually the character who appears whenever WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse or his friends need a scientist to explain things.
** Also still a recurring character in Italian comics, usually appearing whenever Scrooge needs some cultural help.
* OmniDisciplinaryScientist: In fact, he'll constantly point out
all the fauna-friendly qualities various fields he's an expert in. Usually, he's right about it too, though he doesn't always go on about things in the most sensible way.
* OppositeSexClone: He made [[Characters/HouseOfMouse one
of a Disney Princess! Whether he actually deserves their kindness is another matter. He's a manipulator himself]] in ''House of people, which does not bode well, but he seemed Mouse'' to genuinely get along well be a romantic partner. She broke up with Bolivar.
* HateSink: Even more so than his cousin, namely
him because while Gladstone's luck is passive, Disraeli has to put effort to exploit being so pitiful. Also, while Gladstone can and does show good qualities, same can't be said for Disraeli.
* ItRunsInTheFamily: Unlike many
of his family, Disraeli does not have luck on his side. What he does have ego.
%%* TheProfessor
* SesquipedalianLoquaciousness: Tends to overcomplicate things.
* WorldsSmartestMan: He
is pity an universally acclaimed expert in nearly any theoretical science field imaginable and pity makes for powerful peer pressure has diploms to give him what he wants anyway. Especially among lucky relatives. His hair's also similar to that of Gladstone, Shamrock, Rose, and Elise.
* JerkWithAHeartOfJerk: Has been this since he was a child. One incident had him desiring the bicycle his cousin had just won, so he threw his own under a bus and went for a cry to Gladstone's mother. She believed it to be an accident and let him borrow Gladstone's bike until he'd get a new one.
* LazyBum: A similar principle, but rather
proof that. Every than having fate push things on and when a young scientist tries to best him like with Gladstone or the rest of the family, he has to manipulate people for it.
* NamedAfterSomebodyFamous: UsefulNotes/BenjaminDisraeli, former British Prime Minister
and archrival to UsefulNotes/WilliamGladstone.fails.



!Gooses
[[folder: Gus Goose]]
[[quoteright:172:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gusgoose_5434.jpeg]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''Donald's Cousin Gus'', 1938]]
-> Voiced by: Frank Welker (''House of Mouse'')

Grandma Duck's incredibly lazy and gluttonous helping hand.

to:

!Gooses
[[folder: Gus Goose]]
[[quoteright:172:https://static.
Sholto]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gusgoose_5434.jpeg]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_cousin_sholto.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''Donald's Cousin Gus'', 1938]]
-> Voiced by: Frank Welker (''House
''"Not Distant Enough"'', 2001]]

Donald's distant cousin from an unspecified branch
of Mouse'')

Grandma Duck's incredibly lazy and gluttonous helping hand.
the family. He's an anthropologist at Goosetown University.



* AlliterativeName: '''G'''us '''G'''oose.
* BewareTheNiceOnes: He's usually the nicest guy around. Endanger his friends or family or threaten his lunch, and you'll discover why ''bears'' run from him.
* BigEater / ExtremeOmnivore: He is always hungry. In the cartoon ''Donald's Cousin Gus'', he comes to visit Donald and through the episode devours all of Donald's food without leaving him a single crumb.
* DependingOnTheWriter: An interesting variation here, as both comics and cartoons portray Gus as lazy and gluttonous... but whether he is more gluttonous or lazy depends on the media. In the cartoons, Gus' defining trait is his appetite; most of his appearances are almost solely dedicated to him eating huge amounts of food. In the comics, however, Gus (while still a BigEater) is far more likely to be found asleep under a tree or thinking up ways to do the least possible amount of work.
* DreadfulMusician: Gus has a horrible singing voice. The only one who likes to hear him produce a song is Cissy.
* EveryoneHasStandards: Just because he is a glutton doesn't mean he'll eat ''anything''. That's the outcome of eating excellent food like Grandma Duck's. He'll eat only quality food, and one story (code: [[http://coa.inducks.org/story.php?c=I+TL+2966-2 I TL 2966-2 ]] on I.N.D.U.C.K.S) has him comically imprisoned by a couple of impostors. Their methods of torture included making him watch people eating horrid, rotting food.
* HiddenDepths: An amazing food critic, who can easily detect the quality of any food. In Italian stories, he actually has an on-off job in Duckburg police hunting down those who sell food made with adulterated ingredients, and, in spite of his laziness and usually being at Grandma Duck's farm, is easily their best agent, that they call in whenever a case becomes too complicated for the full-time officers.
* LazyBum: His defining trait in the comics; he never does more work than he absolutely has to.
* NiceGuy: Despite being incredibly lazy, always shirking work, and always eating more than his fair share, he is actually very soft-hearted. In one story, it turned out that the reason he hadn't fetched the mail in weeks was that two birds had made a nest in Grandma's mailbox, and Gus didn't have the heart to disturb the baby birds.
* TheStoic: One interesting side-effect of his laziness -- he is usually pretty calm and level-headed in a crisis, either because panicking takes too much energy or because he was dozing off when the danger was explained and isn't aware of how much trouble he is really in.
* StoutStrength: Surprisingly strong, able to lift Grandma's horse.
* SupremeChef: In general, he's far more interested in eating than in cooking, but on the rare occasions when he does cook, he's almost as good as Grandma (he has, after all, picked up a lot from her).
* UltimateJobSecurity: The only logical explanation for why Gus hasn't been fired is that he's Grandma Duck's nephew, as she crossly reminds us now and then.
** There have been a couple of stories where Gus (temporarily) either got much more energetic, or Grandma hired another farmhand to help out -- every time, Grandma ended up going nuts because all of a sudden ''there wasn't enough work left for her.''
* TheVoiceless: In the cartoons he only utters the occasional honk, and when he first appeared in the daily comic strip by Al Taliaferro he was likewise silent -- but when he was picked up by Carl Barks and made Grandma's farmhand, he became a fully-voiced character and his comics incarnation has remained so ever since.

to:

* AlliterativeName: '''G'''us '''G'''oose.
* BewareTheNiceOnes:
AbsentMindedProfessor: A light case. He's usually driven by his work and can forget all the nicest guy around. Endanger technical aspects surrounding it that need to be taken care of too. Even details of his friends or family or threaten his lunch, and you'll discover why ''bears'' run from him.
* BigEater / ExtremeOmnivore: He is always hungry. In the cartoon ''Donald's Cousin Gus'',
work can get muddled up, like when he comes to visit assured Donald that nonos are flightless swimmers and through the episode devours all of Donald's food without leaving him a single crumb.
* DependingOnTheWriter: An interesting variation here, as both comics and cartoons portray Gus as lazy and gluttonous... but whether
later realized he is more gluttonous or lazy depends on the media. In the cartoons, Gus' defining trait is his appetite; most of his appearances are almost solely dedicated to him eating huge amounts of food. In the comics, however, Gus (while still a BigEater) is far more likely to be found asleep under a tree or was thinking up ways to do the least possible amount of work.
penguins; nonos are nonaquatic fliers.
* DreadfulMusician: Gus has a horrible singing voice. The only one who likes to hear him produce a song is Cissy.
* EveryoneHasStandards: Just because he is a glutton doesn't mean he'll eat ''anything''. That's the outcome of eating excellent food like Grandma Duck's. He'll eat only quality food,
ExperimentalArcheology: He and one story (code: [[http://coa.inducks.org/story.php?c=I+TL+2966-2 I TL 2966-2 ]] on I.N.D.U.C.K.S) has him comically imprisoned by a couple of impostors. Their methods of torture included making him watch people eating horrid, rotting food.
* HiddenDepths: An amazing food critic, who can easily detect the quality of any food. In Italian stories, he actually has an on-off job in Duckburg police hunting down those who sell food made with adulterated ingredients, and, in spite of his laziness and usually being at Grandma Duck's farm, is easily
Professor Grabgrant each had their best agent, own ideas on how the population of Arbor Day Island could've reached the site that they call in whenever a case becomes too complicated for the full-time officers.
* LazyBum: His defining trait in the comics; he never does more work than he absolutely has to.
* NiceGuy: Despite being incredibly lazy, always shirking work, and always eating more than his fair share, he is actually very soft-hearted. In one story,
later would be Duckburg. The latter believed it turned out that the reason he hadn't fetched the mail in weeks was that two birds had to be due to boats made a nest in Grandma's mailbox, of mud and Gus the former didn't have any theories except that a mud boat would be preposterous. So they agreed to a contest in which each would go to Ardor Day Island and build something to reach Duckburg. In the heart to disturb end, the baby birds.
* TheStoic: One interesting side-effect of his laziness -- he is usually pretty calm and level-headed in a crisis, either because panicking takes too much energy or because he was dozing off when
historical boats proved to be the danger was explained and isn't aware island's large statues, which actually were hollowed-out pumice.
* TheJinx: Donald thinks
of how much him as one, anyway. Whenever Sholto comes over, he drags Donald into tiresome adventures more trouble he is really in.
* StoutStrength: Surprisingly strong, able to lift Grandma's horse.
* SupremeChef: In general, he's far more interested in eating
than in cooking, but on the rare occasions when he does cook, he's almost as good as Grandma (he has, after all, picked up a lot from her).
* UltimateJobSecurity: The only logical explanation for why Gus hasn't been fired is that he's Grandma Duck's nephew, as she crossly reminds us now and then.
** There
they'd have been a couple of stories where Gus (temporarily) either got much more energetic, or Grandma hired another farmhand to help out -- every time, Grandma ended up going nuts because all of a sudden ''there wasn't enough work left for her.''
be.
* TheVoiceless: In WillNotTellALie: He rather gets himself, Donald, and the cartoons he only utters the occasional honk, and when he first appeared in the daily comic strip by Al Taliaferro he was likewise silent -- but when he was picked up by Carl Barks and made Grandma's farmhand, he became nephews thrown overboard than keep a fully-voiced character and his comics incarnation has remained so ever since.secret of scientific fraud.



[[folder: Greta Goose]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_greta_goose.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Grandma Duck"'', 1952]]

A cousin of Gus and presumably a grandnibling of Grandma Duck too. She's a lumberjack in the North Woods and, after intervention by Grandma, in a relationship with Hjalmar.

to:

! Love interests
[[folder: Greta Goose]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
April, May and June]]
[[quoteright:225:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_greta_goose.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/aprilmayjune_8726.jpg]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Grandma Duck"'', 1952]]

A cousin of Gus
''"Flip Decision"'', 1952]]
->Voiced by: Creator/JessicaDiCicco (''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros''), [[spoiler: Creator/KateMicucci]] (April/[[spoiler: Webby]]), Creator/RikiLindhome (May),
and presumably a grandnibling Creator/NoelWells (June) (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Daisy's three nieces, and more or less {{Distaff Counterpart}}s
of Grandma Duck too. She's a lumberjack in the North Woods and, after intervention by Grandma, in a relationship Huey, Dewey, and Louie. Unlike HD&L, however, they live with Hjalmar.their mother, Daisy's anonymous sister, and only occasionally stay with their aunt.



* AlliterativeName: '''G'''reta '''G'''oose.
* BadassAdorable: She's adorable and pretty and can lift an entire tree on her own. Which is useful for a lumberjack.
* DoggedNiceGuy: Greta is well-liked in the settlement and known to be dependable and capable, but not a man views her as a potential romantic partner because NoGuyWantsAnAmazon. ''Grandma Duck gets more interest when she arrives.''
* DreadfulMusician: Not unlike Gus, Greta has a horrible singing voice. It does, however, attract moose. Far more than for appearance, this makes Hjalmar decide to date her because it makes her the ideal hunting partner.
%%* MightyLumberjack: Greta likely is the mightiest of them all.
* SheCleansUpNicely: After Grandma gives Greta a makeover, she immediately draws the attention of Hjalmar for "looking like a girl".
* StoutStrength: Portrayed as amazing, but not out of the ordinary. Other than carrying around trees, Greta also helps get a car filled with lumber out of the mud by lifting it and is asked to straighten a beartrap.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Socrates M. Gosling]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_socrates_gosling.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: newspaper comic, 1944]]

Better known as "Sock", Socrates is the nerdy cousin of Huey, Dewey, and Louie. He is related to Gus Goose insofar that Gus was authorized to send him to stay with Donald for a while, but it isn't clarified how they are related.

to:

* AlliterativeName: '''G'''reta '''G'''oose.
TheCameo: Prior to ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'', their only animated appearance was a cameo in the ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'' episode "Ladies' Night".
* BadassAdorable: She's adorable ChromaticArrangement: Only in about half their appearances do the girls follow the classic red/blue/green scheme; they're often seen to wear yellow/magenta/cyan, and pretty sometimes (such as in ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'') they discard the chromatic part and wear yellow/purple/orange -- and sometimes they all wear the same color. The girls did not get an official color assignment until 1998 when the Dutch comics made them regulars in the ''Duckies'' series. In one comic published that year, "Nieuwe Coupe" ("New Hairdo"), the girls gain more modern appearances and can lift an entire tree on now be told apart by their [[http://www.mysites.nl/upload2/donald_duck/328375.jpg hairstyles]]: April wears her own. Which hair in a ponytail (magenta), May has short hair and wears a headband (cyan), while June wears twin pigtails (yellow). Certain Danish stories also feature the redesigned girls.
* CompositeCharacter: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', Webby
is useful for essentially the girls as one character.
* DecompositeCharacter:
** April, May, and June follow on the 1941 character Dottie, also
a lumberjack.
niece of Daisy. Yes, the girls are both decomposite and composite characters.
** Returning to the subject of Webby, in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', the final episodes [[LastEpisodeNewCharacter introduce May and June]], while April turns out to be [[spoiler: [[CanonCharacterAllAlong Webby herself]], in a TomatoInTheMirror moment]].
* DoggedNiceGuy: Greta is well-liked DistaffCounterpart: Few Disney characters are this blatant about it.
* TheDividual: Like Huey, Dewey, and Louie, the girls look and act the same.
* IdenticalTwinIDTag: Again,
in the settlement and known modern Dutch comics, their hairstyles. In older comics, the colours of their clothes are probably supposed to be dependable and capable, this, but not a man views her as a potential romantic partner because NoGuyWantsAnAmazon. ''Grandma Duck gets since the girls' colours are even more interest when she arrives.''
* DreadfulMusician: Not unlike Gus, Greta has a horrible singing voice. It does, however, attract moose. Far more
inconsistently handled than for appearance, Huey, Dewey and Louie's are, this makes Hjalmar decide really doesn't help.
* ParentalAbandonment: Surprisingly enough, averted. Though their mother never appears on-page and isn't referred
to date very often, the girls first show up in a story where Daisy is visiting her because it makes sister and introduces her the ideal hunting partner.
%%* MightyLumberjack: Greta likely is the mightiest
three nieces to Donald. Presumably, they still live with their mother (though we don't hear anything about their father).
* RelatedInTheAdaptation: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', instead
of them all.
Daisy Duck, they're related to [[spoiler:Scrooge [=McDuck=] through [[OppositeSexClone cloning]]]].
* SheCleansUpNicely: After Grandma gives Greta a makeover, she immediately draws the attention of Hjalmar for "looking TertiarySexualCharacteristics: They wear bows on their heads.
* ThemeTwinNaming: Rather than having their names rhyme
like a girl".
* StoutStrength: Portrayed as amazing, but not out
Donald's nephews, Daisy's nieces' names are all months of the ordinary. Other year and can also be used as feminine names.
* WiseBeyondTheirYears: Much like Huey, Dewey, and Louie, they are often vastly more sensible
than carrying the adults around trees, Greta also helps get a car filled with lumber out of the mud by lifting it and is asked to straighten a beartrap.
[[/folder]]

them.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Socrates M. Gosling]]
Dottie]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_socrates_gosling.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/dottie_and_nephews.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: newspaper comic, 1944]]

Better
comics, 1941]]

Dottie, also
known as "Sock", Socrates Dotty, is the nerdy cousin niece of Daisy Duck. Huey, Dewey, and Louie. He is related to Gus Goose insofar that Gus was authorized to send him to stay with Donald for Louie each have a while, but it isn't clarified how they are related.crush on her.



* AmbiguouslyRelated: He physically resembles Gus Goose and has a similar-sounding surname, but their exact relationship is never defined.
* TheBusCameBack: After his run in 1944, Sock remained absent until 1984 when he got to star in his first comic story: ''"Woodchuck Sock"''. Since then, he appeared in another comic only once in 2002's ''"Healthy Choice"''.
* ButtMonkey: Either he brings it upon himself or he's the victim of the triplets.
* DeathbringerTheAdorable: Prior to meeting Socrates, Huey, Dewey, and Louie assume "Sock" refers to the verb "to sock" and go as far as [[YouWouldntHitAGuyWithGlasses to acquire fake glasses to avoid a pummeling]].
%% EndearinglyDorky: Just look at him! He gets a date out of it too with the daughter of the owner of a confectionery store.
* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: In one comic, Sock tries to convince the triplets that asking for cookies is better than stealing them. He goes to ask for one from Donald, but when Donald approves and they go to the plate, all the cookies are gone because Huey, Dewey, and Louie stole them in the meantime.

to:

* AmbiguouslyRelated: He physically resembles Gus Goose and has a similar-sounding surname, but their exact relationship is never defined.
* TheBusCameBack: After his run in 1944, Sock remained absent until 1984 when he got to star in his first comic story: ''"Woodchuck Sock"''. Since then, he
ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: She appeared in another comic only once two newspaper comics and then never again. She's arguably been [[{{Expy}} succeeded by Daisy's "other" nieces April, May, and June]].
* DecompositeCharacter: April, May and June are this to her. Funnily enough, they have a CompositeCharacter
in 2002's ''"Healthy Choice"''.
* ButtMonkey: Either he brings it upon himself or he's the victim
Webby Vanderquack of the triplets.
''[=DuckTales=]'' fame.
* DeathbringerTheAdorable: Prior to meeting Socrates, DistaffCounterpart: To Huey, Dewey, and Louie assume "Sock" refers to the verb "to sock" and go as far as [[YouWouldntHitAGuyWithGlasses to acquire fake glasses to avoid a pummeling]].
%% EndearinglyDorky: Just look at him! He gets a date out of it too with the daughter of the owner of a confectionery store.
* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: In one comic, Sock tries to convince the triplets that asking for cookies is better than stealing them. He goes to ask for one from Donald, but when Donald approves and they go to the plate, all the cookies are gone because Huey, Dewey, and Louie stole them in the meantime.
Louie.



! Coots
[[folder: Cornelius Coot]]
[[quoteright:282:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/coot.jpg]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Statuesque Spendthrifts"'', 1952]]

The founder of Duckburg and Donald's great-great-grandfather. [[OurFounder An immense statue of him]] erected by Scrooge as part of a contest with the Maharajah of Howduyustan towers over the city.

to:

! Coots
[[folder: Cornelius Coot]]
[[quoteright:282:https://static.
Glittering Goldie O'Gilt]]
[[quoteright:141:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/coot.jpg]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Statuesque Spendthrifts"'', 1952]]

The founder of Duckburg and Donald's great-great-grandfather. [[OurFounder An immense statue of him]] erected by Scrooge as part of a contest with the Maharajah of Howduyustan towers over the city.
org/pmwiki/pub/images/20b6ac2436684b0afc82f9eac2e22c37.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''ComicBook/BackToTheKlondike'' (1953)
-> Voiced by: Joan Gerber (''[=DuckTales=]''), Creator/AllisonJanney (''[=2017 reboot=]'')

Scrooge's love interest from his gold prospecting days, "the only live one I ever knew."



* AlliterativeName: '''C'''ornelius '''C'''oot.
* AscendedExtra: Carl Barks created and named him as the founder of Duckburg, but he only appears via statues as in "Statuesque Spendthrifts" and "Statues of Limitations". The reader never learns anymore about that man. Later writers like Creator/DonRosa would flesh out the background of Cornelius Coot more and more, including flashbacks, a backstory for why he's always portrayed with corn and his own family.
%%zce* CallToAdventure:
* DependingOnTheWriter: In his original depictions there is no indication the Ducks are in any way related to Cornelius Coot. In fact, he's just portrayed as the founder of their hometown. Don Rosa and some other writers would later link Donald and/or Scrooge to Cornelius, most famously with Rosa deciding to make Grandma Duck the granddaughter of Cornelius Coot.
* FounderOfTheKingdom: The founder of Duckburg.
* OurFounder: He founded Duckburg. The statue of him is a plot point in some stories when it's not just background decoration.
* PosthumousCharacter: Never appears in person, but his great-grandson sells Killmotor Hill to Scrooge when the two meet in Klondike. Prior to Scrooge centering his financial empire around his money bin there, Duckburg was merely a few farms and the old decaying Fort Duckburg, established by Sir Francis Drake some 200 years before.
** The Ducks ''do'' meet him "for real" in a time-travel story, though.
** His spirit/ghost is also seen watching Scrooge at the end of ''His Majesty, [=McDuck=]''.
** His background is finally explored in part in the Italian story ''The Exile of the Van Coots''.
* SpecsOfAwesome: Even his statue has the specs, cementing him as a badass explorer.

to:

* AlliterativeName: '''C'''ornelius '''C'''oot.
'''G'''littering '''G'''oldie O''''G'''ilt.
* AscendedExtra: Her creator Creator/CarlBarks only used her in one story, ''ComicBook/BackToTheKlondike''. His spiritual successor, Creator/DonRosa, especially in his Scrooge-biography ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'' as well the animated adaptation of the comic in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' cemented her as the primary and sometimes only love interest and appeared in multiple media since.
* BreakoutCharacter: Only appeared in one
Carl Barks created story but was eventually accepted as Scrooge's de facto love interest (a la [[Literature/SherlockHolmes Irene Adler]]) in American comics and named him as animation.
* TheChanteuse: She was
the founder leading star of Duckburg, but he only appears via statues as in "Statuesque Spendthrifts" and "Statues of Limitations". The reader never learns anymore about that man. Later writers like Creator/DonRosa would flesh out the background of Cornelius Coot more and more, including flashbacks, a backstory for why he's always portrayed with corn and his own family.
%%zce* CallToAdventure:
* DependingOnTheWriter: In his original depictions there is no indication the Ducks are in any way related to Cornelius Coot. In fact, he's just portrayed as the founder of their hometown. Don Rosa and some other writers would later link Donald and/or
"The Black Jack" when Scrooge met her.
* DefrostingIceQueen: Both she and Scrooge had this effect on each other. Unlike Scrooge however, Goldie in her older days is more or less not trying
to Cornelius, most famously with Rosa deciding to make Grandma Duck the granddaughter of Cornelius Coot.hide a HiddenHeartOfGold and has no problem showing Scrooge that she still loves him.
* FounderOfTheKingdom: The founder DemotedToExtra: In Italian comics, her character is rarely used (aside from cameos and short scenes) in favour of Duckburg.
Brigitta.
* OurFounder: He founded Duckburg. The statue DependingOnTheWriter: Just like Scrooge, ''Duck Tales'' gives her a LighterAndSofter personality where she and Scrooge are way more open about their feelings and even nearly gets married at one point.
* FemmeFatale: ''Yes'', there's a character like in a Disney comic. She frankly ticks all the boxes, at least in her younger days. Charming? Yes. Glamorous? Yes. She manipulates men (or ducks) in dangerous situations? Definitely check.
%%* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: Please check the trope page to make sure your example fits the current definition.
%%* HiddenHeartOfGold: Part
of the reason she and Scrooge didn't get together in the comics was because they both Hid this.
* IWillWaitForYou: In "A Little Something Special", she tells Scrooge this.
* LoveAtFirstPunch: Drugging and robbing a guy and dumping
him in a ditch is not your typical foundation for a plot point relationship.
* LoveHurts: It didn't turn out well.
* MaybeEverAfter: As mentioned
in some Scrooge's entries, Don Rosa's stories when has left some hints here and there that Scrooge might eventually return to her someday.
* MeaningfulName: It's probably no coincidence that Scrooge's love interest has "gold" in her name.
* NewOldFlame: Even 50 years after they last saw each other, she and Scrooge still have strong feelings for each other. In Don Rosa's "The Quest for Kalevala",
it's not just background decoration.
* PosthumousCharacter: Never appears in person, but his great-grandson sells Killmotor Hill to
hinted that Scrooge when plans on returning to her someday.
* NonMammalMammaries: She has breasts in
the stories drawn by Don Rosa.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Her inspiration was Yukon dancer Kathleen "Klondike Kate" Rockwell.
* OddFriendship: She has met Brigitta in at least
two meet stories, and they get along really well... Fully knowing they're ''rivals in Klondike. Prior to love''. Goldie all but states that Brigitta is the only one she could tolerate with Scrooge centering his financial empire around his money bin there, Duckburg in her place, and Brigitta hints she reciprocates.
* OlderAndWiser: In her youth, she
was merely a few farms FemmeFatale, thief and swindler with quite the temper. In her old decaying Fort Duckburg, established age, she retains the temper, but otherwise acts as a CoolOldLady who gives advice to the younger Ducks.
* OlderThanTheyLook: In the Ducktales 2017 reboot, she looks a good bit younger in her old age than any other depiction, yet still retains her long-time Gold Rush relationship with Scrooge. This is {{handwave}}d when she casually claims to have found a fountain of youth since they last met.
* TheOneThatGotAway: For Scrooge.
%%* PluckyGirl
%%* SlapSlapKiss: [[DestructoNookie To put it mildly...]]
* SilverVixen: Not as originally depicted
by Sir Francis Drake some 200 years before.
** The Ducks ''do'' meet him "for real" in a time-travel story, though.
** His spirit/ghost is also seen watching
Carl Barks, but when Don Rosa draws her she's always depicted as every bit as beautiful as she was when Scrooge at first knew her. It's likely a case of SheCleansUpNicely, as by the time of her first appearance, she'd spent the decades since the end of ''His Majesty, [=McDuck=]''.
** His background is finally explored in part
the Yukon gold rush in the Italian story ''The Exile wilderness, living on Scrooge's old claim. By the time she reappears in Rosa's work, she'd returned to Dawson and turned the old Blackjack Ballroom into a hotel, allowing her to regain her old looks.
* StockholmSyndrome: Don Rosa attempted to avert this by showing that Goldie had brought a gun, meaning she could have killed Scrooge if she wanted to, and also adding the fact that she was half-willingly joining him at his claim so she could seize an opportunity to trick him and steal his gold nugget again. Also, she already had an interest in Scrooge ''before'' he kidnapped her.
* RagsToRiches: She already lived in Dawson back when it was basically just a logging camp, running the-then Blackjack Saloon for the lumberjacks in the area. When the gold rush hit, Goldie blossomed into wealth and stardom, becoming known as "The Star Of the North". Sadly, the end
of the Van Coots''.
gold rush, not to mention Scrooge's rejection, eventually led to her [[RichesToRags falling back down again]]. The events of "Back To The Klondike" leads to Goldie finding a middle ground as the owner of the Blackjack Hotel.
* SpecsOfAwesome: Even TookALevelInKindness: Spent the years after the gold rush taking care of orphans.
* TooMuchAlike: She and Scrooge are stubborn, proud, ([[BeneathTheMask apparently]]) greedy and cold-hearted. All of this drives them apart, instead of bringing them closer.
* {{Tsundere}}: She truly does love Scrooge, but won't admit it to
his statue has face out of pride (at least in her youth). Yeah, Goldie fits the specs, cementing definition to a T. If it weren't for that stray block of frozen hose water...
* VillainessesWantHeroes: Not a down right villain per se, but Goldie is introduced as greedy, rude and deceitful, not above [[SlippingAMickey drugging]] prospectors to steal their gold. She quickly gets a thing for Scrooge learning how he refuses to waste his money unlike every other man in Dawson and watching
him as a badass explorer.demonstrate his strength on the town's crooks. Eventually however, Goldie [[DefrostingIceQueen defrosts.]]
%%* TriggerHappy



[[folder: Clinton Coot]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Guardians of the Lost Library"'', 1993]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/ThomasLennon (2018)

The son of Cornelius Coot and founder of the Junior Woodchucks.

* AlliterativeName: '''C'''linton '''C'''oot.
* AscendedExtra: He was created by Don Rosa as the founder of the Junior Woodchucks and established in his family tree. However, while he was rarely used by Rosa or other writers, he makes his animated debut in ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'' where he's depicted as an ancestor of Donald and a founder of the original three Caballeros.
* PosthumousCharacter: Much like his father Cornelius he's already dead at the time most stories take place, so he only gets mentioned or appears via flashbacks.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Casey Coot]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Last Sled To Dawson"'', 1988]]

The grandson of Cornelius and the son of Clinton Coot. According to the family tree by Don Rosa this also means he is Grandma Duck's brother. He's the one selling the piece of land where the Fort Duckburg stands to Scrooge [=McDuck=].

* AlliterativeName: '''C'''asey '''C'''oot.
* SmallRoleBigImpact: He only appears in a short flashback sequence in his debut story by Creator/DonRosa. However, in this scene, he sells the land of piece where the Fort Duckburg stands to Scrooge [=McDuck=]. This hill will later be the place where Scrooge's money bin stands. In fact, Scrooge's influence transforms Duckburg from a small community into the big city it is nowadays and in which most of the Duck family's adventures take place. In other word, it was Casey's decision to sell his grandfather's land to the newly rich Scrooge who is responsible for all the stories taking place here.
[[/folder]]

! Unknown
[[folder: Ludwig von Drake]]
[[quoteright:166:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ludwigvondrake_6817.jpg]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''The Wonderful World of Color'', 1961]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/PaulFrees (1961-1986), Walker Edmiston (1985-1987), Creator/WayneAllwine (1985), Albert Ash (1987), Creator/CoreyBurton (1987-present)

An absent-minded scholar/inventor who is referred to as Donald's uncle (according to Creator/WaltDisney himself, he's the brother of Donald's father, while in Tony Strobl's stories, he's depicted as Grandma Duck's cousin, and Creator/DonRosa claims he is/was married to Scrooge's sister Matilda, making him Donald's uncle by marriage) and an expert on everything. He originally appeared in ''Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color'' and has since become a semi-recurring character in the comics. He and Gyro are somewhat similar and if you're confused, just remember, Ludwig is TheProfessor first and a BunglingInventor second, while Gyro is the other way around.

to:

[[folder: Clinton Coot]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Guardians of the Lost Library"'', 1993]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/ThomasLennon (2018)

The son of Cornelius Coot and founder of the Junior Woodchucks.

* AlliterativeName: '''C'''linton '''C'''oot.
* AscendedExtra: He was created by Don Rosa as the founder of the Junior Woodchucks and established in his family tree. However, while he was rarely used by Rosa or other writers, he makes his animated debut in ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'' where he's depicted as an ancestor of Donald and a founder of the original three Caballeros.
* PosthumousCharacter: Much like his father Cornelius he's already dead at the time most stories take place, so he only gets mentioned or appears via flashbacks.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Casey Coot]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Last Sled To Dawson"'', 1988]]

The grandson of Cornelius and the son of Clinton Coot. According to the family tree by Don Rosa this also means he is Grandma Duck's brother. He's the one selling the piece of land where the Fort Duckburg stands to Scrooge [=McDuck=].

* AlliterativeName: '''C'''asey '''C'''oot.
* SmallRoleBigImpact: He only appears in a short flashback sequence in his debut story by Creator/DonRosa. However, in this scene, he sells the land of piece where the Fort Duckburg stands to Scrooge [=McDuck=]. This hill will later be the place where Scrooge's money bin stands. In fact, Scrooge's influence transforms Duckburg from a small community into the big city it is nowadays and in which most of the Duck family's adventures take place. In other word, it was Casey's decision to sell his grandfather's land to the newly rich Scrooge who is responsible for all the stories taking place here.
[[/folder]]

! Unknown
[[folder: Ludwig von Drake]]
[[quoteright:166:https://static.
Brigitta [=McBridge=]]]
[[quoteright:305:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ludwigvondrake_6817.org/pmwiki/pub/images/brigitta_2300.jpg]]
[[AC:First appearance: -> Debut: ''The Wonderful World of Color'', 1961]]
-> Voiced by: Creator/PaulFrees (1961-1986), Walker Edmiston (1985-1987), Creator/WayneAllwine (1985), Albert Ash (1987), Creator/CoreyBurton (1987-present)

An absent-minded scholar/inventor who
Last Babaloo'' (1960)

A shrewd businesswoman duck whose main goal
is referred to as Donald's uncle (according to Creator/WaltDisney himself, he's one day marry Scrooge [=McDuck=], even though he isn't interested in romance at all. Created by Romano Scarpa, Barks liked the brother of Donald's father, while in Tony Strobl's stories, he's depicted as Grandma Duck's cousin, and Creator/DonRosa claims he is/was married to Scrooge's sister Matilda, making him Donald's uncle by marriage) and an expert on everything. He originally appeared in ''Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color'' and has since become a semi-recurring character in the comics. He and Gyro are somewhat similar and if you're confused, just remember, Ludwig is TheProfessor first and enough to give Romano a BunglingInventor second, while Gyro is the other way around.drawing of Brigitta trying to seduce Scrooge with a Money-Scented perfume, which Romano then wrote a story based on said premise. The original drawing has been lost.



* AbsentMindedProfessor: As smart as Ludwig is, he's a bit airheaded if not senile, easily losing his train of thought.
* AmbiguouslyRelated: He was once introduced by Creator/WaltDisney himself as Donald's uncle but ''how'' exactly he is related is a constant debate between fans and creatives. It helps that there seems to be almost no other named von Drakes in the Duck family. It becomes more ambiguous in regards to Scrooge: Many stories hint that Scrooge and Ludwig may be related too. Creator/DonRosa revealed [[WordOfGod his view of things]], that Ludwig is married to Scrooge's sister Mathilda, making him a wider, not blood-related part of the family. But this is far from official canon.
* DitzyGenius: Even more so than Gyro, in fact. There's no doubt that he's brilliant in every way, but he's also somewhat of an eccentric, at times bordering on being a [[TheWonka Wonka]] -- or, DependingOnTheWriter, even a full-fledged {{Cloudcuckoolander}}.
* FamousAncestor: According to the episode ''"The Truth About Mother Goose"'' of ''[[Series/WaltDisneyPresents Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color]]'', Ludwig is the grandson of [[NurseryRhyme Mother Goose]].
* InsufferableGenius: On a bad day. But even on a good day, humility is not his strongest suit. One story shows that the other professors at his university outright hate him because he keeps walking in on their classes and correcting them in front of their students.
* MommasBoy: In ''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'' and ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'', it was a RunningGag for him to be intimidated by his mother yelling at him from offscreen. This has since found some comic follow-up, like in ''"Wiener Schnitzel Woes"'', where his mother sends him homemade wiener schnitzel weekly all the way from Austria.
* MrExposition: Occasionally, his role is to explain why things are happening.
* OutOfFocus: In later years he hasn't been used much in comics -- in fact, for some years Egmont Creative A/S, the main publisher of Disney comics in Europe, completely banned any use of the character, because editor and creative leader Byron Erickson considered him superfluous; there was nothing Ludwig could do that Gyro Gearloose or the Junior Woodchuck Guidebook couldn't. However, the ban seems to have been lifted in recent years, though Ludwig is still a minor character in the comics.
** Strangely enough, another character that was banned from use at Egmont was Launchpad [=McQuack=], and when asked why the two characters were not seen in Disney comics nowadays, Byron Erickson famously answered: ''"Ludwig and Launchpad ran off to Las Vegas, where they came out as transvestites and joined a drag show."''
** The animated version of Ludwig, however, remains fairly central and is usually the character who appears whenever WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse or his friends need a scientist to explain things.
** Also still a recurring character in Italian comics, usually appearing whenever Scrooge needs some cultural help.
* OmniDisciplinaryScientist: In fact, he'll constantly point out all the various fields he's an expert in. Usually, he's right about it too, though he doesn't always go on about things in the most sensible way.
* OppositeSexClone: He made [[Characters/HouseOfMouse one of himself]] in ''House of Mouse'' to be a romantic partner. She broke up with him because of his ego.
%%* TheProfessor
* SesquipedalianLoquaciousness: Tends to overcomplicate things.
* WorldsSmartestMan: He is an universally acclaimed expert in nearly any theoretical science field imaginable and has diploms to proof that. Every than and when a young scientist tries to best him and fails.

to:

* AbsentMindedProfessor: As smart as Ludwig is, he's a bit airheaded if not senile, easily losing AbhorrentAdmirer: To Scrooge. Brigitta truly loves Scrooge, and for decades, she has tried every method to get him to return her love. This includes stalking him, which greatly infuriates Scrooge.
** Right from the beginning, Scarpa and
his train of thought.
* AmbiguouslyRelated: He was once introduced by Creator/WaltDisney himself as Donald's uncle but ''how'' exactly he is related is a constant debate between fans and creatives. It helps that there seems to be almost no other named von Drakes in the Duck family. It becomes more ambiguous in regards to Scrooge: Many stories hint
successors have left enough hints that Scrooge is interested in her, but does not enjoy her obsession with him. Although he pretends to be emotionless--a typical character trait--he is not.
* AscendedExtra: Already shortly after her creation by Scarpa, she was picked up by other authors
and Ludwig may began appearing in their stories. She still appears frequently in Italian stories, even getting the occasional starring role in stories where Scrooge doesn't appear.
* BrilliantButLazy: She could
be related too. Creator/DonRosa revealed [[WordOfGod his view as rich as the likes of things]], Rockerduck, Glomgold, and even Scrooge himself... Except she can't be bothered to get serious [[WomanScorned unless Scrooge makes her angry]].
** Best shown by an alternate universe counterpart, who had stopped going in any business after marrying her reality's Scrooge and not caring
that Ludwig her new spendthrift habits were contributing to his impending bankruptcy... Then the main universe's Scrooge, who had been tricked by her husband into switching places, got in his mind to restore his wealth and put her in charge of the restaurants side of the businesses after reminding her of how she used to be, and she brought them back to their former glory in ''weeks''-just as Scrooge expected based on his experience with the main reality's Brigitta.
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: In her early stories it wasn't clear if her love for Scrooge was genuine (in Scarpa's own words, "Does she have a crush on Scrooge, on his fortune... Or both?"), before other authors made clear she really loved Scrooge. Similarly, as the years went on, while her crush on Scrooge remained as strong as ever, she became less obsessive and her StalkerWithACrush tendencies were heavily toned down.
* TheDreaded: Scrooge
is married ''terrified'' of Brigitta whenever she decides to compete with him, as he knows far too well that, no matter if she succeeds or not, she is just as formidable as Rockerduck or Glomgold, if not more, and she always comes out of nowhere and he can't prepare for her.
* GoldDigger: {{Subverted}}: while she sometimes ''appears'' one, it's usually very clear she's interested in Scrooge for his own personality.
* HiddenDepths: She's usually seen as just a lovestruck woman, but she's actually a businesswoman in the same league as Scrooge himself. These Depths have become markedly less Hidden over the years, as CharacterizationMarchesOn.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: She's old enough she first met Scrooge in ''1897'', but often forms a friendly quartet with the much younger Daisy and Miss Quackfaster and, occasionally, the even older Grandma Duck. She also gets along very well with Huey, Dewey and Louie, and Dickie.
* MadLove: She is perfectly aware that [[AllLoveIsUnrequited Scrooge doesn't return her feelings,]] but this doesn't stop her from hoping, and trying again, and again, and again...
* TheMatchmaker: A ''professional'' one: her most frequent enterprise is a dating agency and a rather successful one.
* OddFriendship: She has met Goldie in at least two stories and they get along really well, fully knowing they're ''rivals in love''. It's hinted that Brigitta considers Goldie the only woman she could tolerate with Scrooge, and Goldie all but declares the same for her.
* OlderThanTheyLook: She's not much younger than Scrooge is, yet she looks in her forties.
* PinkMeansFeminine: Her "Briggitik" costume is totally pink (bow and arrow included). Justified because "love" is her motif.
* PlatonicLifePartners: With Jubal -- which is a clear case of CharacterizationMarchesOn, as the two were ''definitely'' not friends in the first story Jubal appeared in.
%%* PluckyGirl
* RememberTheNewGirl: Her first story mentions she already knew Scrooge in 1898, right after he turned from millionaire prospector to businessman, and a later story shows they had already met the previous year.
* ShipTease: Scrooge is often depicted as feeling ''something'' for her. If it's either love, friendship, or just respect, that is up to the readers.
* StalkerWithACrush: To Scrooge, though the actual stalking has been toned severely down since her early appearances.
* StalkingIsLove: While [[DownplayedTrope downplayed]] in more recent stories, her methods in her classic appearances actually include ambushing him on public places, disguising herself to enter the money bin and some old stories reveal she has a telescope on her house to observe Scrooge doing his work and private life. Some Scarpa-stories show Scrooge hiding in panic that Brigitta is waiting for him. However, Brigitta´s stalking and
Scrooge's sister Mathilda, making him a wider, not blood-related part terrified reactions on it are mainly PlayedForLaughs and portrayed as love from Brigitta´s side. While Scrooge clearly feels uncomfirtable most of the family. But this is far from official canon.
* DitzyGenius: Even more so than Gyro, in fact. There's no doubt that he's brilliant in every way, but he's also somewhat of an eccentric, at times bordering on being a [[TheWonka Wonka]] -- or, DependingOnTheWriter,
time (although some stories show he may have feelings for her), Scrooge's family and especially Brigitta's good friend Daisy are even a full-fledged {{Cloudcuckoolander}}.
* FamousAncestor: According to the episode ''"The Truth About Mother Goose"'' of ''[[Series/WaltDisneyPresents Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color]]'', Ludwig is the grandson of [[NurseryRhyme Mother Goose]].
* InsufferableGenius: On a bad day. But even on a good day, humility is not his strongest suit. One story shows that the other professors at his university outright hate him because he keeps walking in on their classes
supporting Brigitta´s stalking and correcting them often will in front of their students.
* MommasBoy: In ''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'' and ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'', it was a RunningGag
turn criticize Scrooge for him to be intimidated by his mother yelling at him from offscreen. This has since found some comic follow-up, like in ''"Wiener Schnitzel Woes"'', where his mother sends him homemade wiener schnitzel weekly all the way from Austria.
* MrExposition: Occasionally, his role is to explain why things are happening.
* OutOfFocus: In later years he hasn't been used much in comics -- in fact, for some years Egmont Creative A/S, the main publisher of Disney comics in Europe, completely banned any use of the character, because editor and creative leader Byron Erickson considered him superfluous; there was nothing Ludwig could do that Gyro Gearloose or the Junior Woodchuck Guidebook couldn't. However, the ban seems to have been lifted in recent years, though Ludwig is still a minor character in the comics.
acting rude towards her attemps as she just means well.
** Strangely enough, another character * SupremeChef: An excellent cook. Some of her businesses (starting from the epic one in "[[WhamEpisode Brigitta's Strawberries]]" actually took advantage from that
* TookALevelInBadass: In the Italy story "Paperinik, Paperinika e la Romantica Vendicatrice" (Duck Avenger, Super Daisy and the Romantic Avenger), Brigitta takes the identity of Brigittik, the Romantic Avenger after being accidentally brainwashed by a Gyro invention
that was banned releases all of Brigitta's frustration about her romantic failure. This identity re-appears in few stories.
* {{Tsundere}}: Of "Dere" type. Differently
from use at Egmont was Launchpad [=McQuack=], and when asked why the two characters were not seen in Disney comics nowadays, Byron Erickson famously answered: ''"Ludwig and Launchpad ran off to Las Vegas, where they came out as transvestites and joined a drag show."''
** The animated version of Ludwig, however, remains fairly central and
Goldie, Brigitta is usually the character who appears whenever WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse or his friends need a scientist to explain things.
** Also still a recurring character in Italian comics, usually appearing
very sweet (and even open about her feelings), but whenever Scrooge needs some cultural help.
* OmniDisciplinaryScientist: In fact, he'll constantly point out all the various fields he's an expert in. Usually, he's right about it too, though
goes too far in his rejections he doesn't always go on about things in the most sensible way.
* OppositeSexClone: He made [[Characters/HouseOfMouse one of himself]] in ''House of Mouse''
is quickly reminded she is really vindicative-and a businesswoman good enough to be a romantic partner. actually rival him.
* WomanScorned: Many stories starring Brigitta have her being rudely rejected by Scrooge, then starting her own business trying to outperform him.
* ZanyScheme:
She broke up is really good with him because them... they actually succeed a fair number of his ego.
%%* TheProfessor
* SesquipedalianLoquaciousness: Tends to overcomplicate things.
* WorldsSmartestMan: He is an universally acclaimed expert in nearly any theoretical science field imaginable and has diploms to proof that. Every than and when a young scientist tries to best him and fails.
times too.



[[folder: Sholto]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_cousin_sholto.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Not Distant Enough"'', 2001]]

Donald's distant cousin from an unspecified branch of the family. He's an anthropologist at Goosetown University.

to:

[[folder: Sholto]]
Feather Mallard]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_cousin_sholto.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gladstone_feather_mallard.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Not Distant Enough"'', ''"Lady Luck"'', 2001]]

Donald's distant cousin from an unspecified branch of the family. He's an anthropologist at Goosetown University.A woman as lucky as Gladstone Gander. They fancy each other, but their supernatural fortune turns into supernatural misfortune whenever they are together.



* AbsentMindedProfessor: A light case. He's driven by his work and can forget all the technical aspects surrounding it that need to be taken care of too. Even details of his work can get muddled up, like when he assured Donald that nonos are flightless swimmers and later realized he was thinking of penguins; nonos are nonaquatic fliers.
* ExperimentalArcheology: He and Professor Grabgrant each had their own ideas on how the population of Arbor Day Island could've reached the site that later would be Duckburg. The latter believed it to be due to boats made of mud and the former didn't have any theories except that a mud boat would be preposterous. So they agreed to a contest in which each would go to Ardor Day Island and build something to reach Duckburg. In the end, the historical boats proved to be the island's large statues, which actually were hollowed-out pumice.
* TheJinx: Donald thinks of him as one, anyway. Whenever Sholto comes over, he drags Donald into tiresome adventures more trouble than they'd have to be.
* WillNotTellALie: He rather gets himself, Donald, and the nephews thrown overboard than keep a secret of scientific fraud.

to:

* AbsentMindedProfessor: A light case. He's driven by his work and can forget all the technical aspects surrounding it that need to be taken care of too. Even details of his work can get muddled up, like when he assured Donald that nonos are flightless swimmers and later realized he was thinking of penguins; nonos are nonaquatic fliers.
* ExperimentalArcheology: He and Professor Grabgrant each had their own ideas on how the population of Arbor Day Island could've reached the site that later would be Duckburg. The latter believed it to be due to boats made of mud and the former didn't have any theories except that a mud boat would be preposterous. So they agreed to a contest in which each would go to Ardor Day Island and build something to reach Duckburg. In the end, the historical boats proved
BornLucky: Heavily implied to be the island's large statues, which actually were hollowed-out pumice.
case.
* TheJinx: Donald thinks of him as one, anyway. BroughtDownToNormal: Whenever Sholto comes over, he drags Donald she and Gladstone are together, their fortunes cancel each other out into tiresome adventures more trouble than they'd have mutual misfortune.
* DistaffCounterpart: Of Gladstone.
* LazyBum: Because her luck means she never has
to be.
* WillNotTellALie: He rather gets himself, Donald, and
work, she abhors effort beyond stuff like picking up a diamond ring she finds on the nephews thrown overboard than keep a secret of scientific fraud.street.



! Love interests
[[folder: April, May and June]]
[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/aprilmayjune_8726.jpg]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Flip Decision"'', 1952]]
->Voiced by: Creator/JessicaDiCicco (''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros''), [[spoiler: Creator/KateMicucci]] (April/[[spoiler: Webby]]), Creator/RikiLindhome (May), and Creator/NoelWells (June) (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Daisy's three nieces, and more or less {{Distaff Counterpart}}s of Huey, Dewey, and Louie. Unlike HD&L, however, they live with their mother, Daisy's anonymous sister, and only occasionally stay with their aunt.

to:

! Love interests
[[folder: April, May and June]]
[[quoteright:225:https://static.
Gloria]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/aprilmayjune_8726.jpg]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_gloria.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Flip Decision"'', 1952]]
->Voiced by: Creator/JessicaDiCicco (''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros''), [[spoiler: Creator/KateMicucci]] (April/[[spoiler: Webby]]), Creator/RikiLindhome (May),
''"Paz, Amor E Glória"'', 1972]]

Fethry's girlfriend
and Creator/NoelWells (June) (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Daisy's three nieces, and more or less {{Distaff Counterpart}}s
the civilian identity of Huey, Dewey, and Louie. Unlike HD&L, however, they live with their mother, Daisy's anonymous sister, and only occasionally stay with their aunt.the Purple Butterfly.



* TheCameo: Prior to ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'', their only animated appearance was a cameo in the ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'' episode "Ladies' Night".
* ChromaticArrangement: Only in about half their appearances do the girls follow the classic red/blue/green scheme; they're often seen to wear yellow/magenta/cyan, and sometimes (such as in ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'') they discard the chromatic part and wear yellow/purple/orange -- and sometimes they all wear the same color. The girls did not get an official color assignment until 1998 when the Dutch comics made them regulars in the ''Duckies'' series. In one comic published that year, "Nieuwe Coupe" ("New Hairdo"), the girls gain more modern appearances and can now be told apart by their [[http://www.mysites.nl/upload2/donald_duck/328375.jpg hairstyles]]: April wears her hair in a ponytail (magenta), May has short hair and wears a headband (cyan), while June wears twin pigtails (yellow). Certain Danish stories also feature the redesigned girls.
* CompositeCharacter: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', Webby is essentially the girls as one character.
* DecompositeCharacter:
** April, May, and June follow on the 1941 character Dottie, also a niece of Daisy. Yes, the girls are both decomposite and composite characters.
** Returning to the subject of Webby, in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', the final episodes [[LastEpisodeNewCharacter introduce May and June]], while April turns out to be [[spoiler: [[CanonCharacterAllAlong Webby herself]], in a TomatoInTheMirror moment]].
* DistaffCounterpart: Few Disney characters are this blatant about it.
* TheDividual: Like Huey, Dewey, and Louie, the girls look and act the same.
* IdenticalTwinIDTag: Again, in the modern Dutch comics, their hairstyles. In older comics, the colours of their clothes are probably supposed to be this, but since the girls' colours are even more inconsistently handled than Huey, Dewey and Louie's are, this really doesn't help.
* ParentalAbandonment: Surprisingly enough, averted. Though their mother never appears on-page and isn't referred to very often, the girls first show up in a story where Daisy is visiting her sister and introduces her three nieces to Donald. Presumably, they still live with their mother (though we don't hear anything about their father).
* RelatedInTheAdaptation: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', instead of Daisy Duck, they're related to [[spoiler:Scrooge [=McDuck=] through [[OppositeSexClone cloning]]]].
* TertiarySexualCharacteristics: They wear bows on their heads.
* ThemeTwinNaming: Rather than having their names rhyme like Donald's nephews, Daisy's nieces' names are all months of the year and can also be used as feminine names.
* WiseBeyondTheirYears: Much like Huey, Dewey, and Louie, they are often vastly more sensible than the adults around them.

to:

* TheCameo: Prior to ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'', their only animated appearance was a cameo in AmazonBrigade: One of the ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'' episode "Ladies' Night".
* ChromaticArrangement: Only in about half their appearances do the girls follow the classic red/blue/green scheme; they're often seen to wear yellow/magenta/cyan, and sometimes (such as in ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'') they discard the chromatic part and wear yellow/purple/orange -- and sometimes they all wear the same color. The girls did not get an official color assignment until 1998 when the Dutch comics made them regulars in the ''Duckies'' series. In one comic published that year, "Nieuwe Coupe" ("New Hairdo"), the girls gain more modern appearances and can now be told apart by their [[http://www.mysites.nl/upload2/donald_duck/328375.jpg hairstyles]]: April wears her hair in a ponytail (magenta), May has short hair and wears a headband (cyan), while June wears twin pigtails (yellow). Certain Danish stories also feature the redesigned girls.
* CompositeCharacter: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', Webby is essentially the girls as one character.
* DecompositeCharacter:
** April, May, and June follow on the 1941 character Dottie, also a niece
members of Daisy. Yes, the girls are both decomposite and composite characters.
** Returning to the subject of Webby, in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', the final episodes [[LastEpisodeNewCharacter introduce May and June]], while April turns out to be [[spoiler: [[CanonCharacterAllAlong Webby herself]], in a TomatoInTheMirror moment]].
* DistaffCounterpart: Few Disney characters are this blatant about it.
* TheDividual: Like Huey, Dewey, and Louie, the girls look and act the same.
* IdenticalTwinIDTag: Again, in the modern Dutch comics, their hairstyles. In older comics, the colours of their clothes are probably supposed to be this, but since the girls' colours are even more inconsistently handled than Huey, Dewey and Louie's are, this really doesn't help.
* ParentalAbandonment: Surprisingly enough, averted. Though their mother never appears on-page and isn't referred to very often, the girls first show up in a story where Daisy is visiting her sister and introduces her three nieces to Donald. Presumably, they still live with their mother (though we don't hear anything about their father).
* RelatedInTheAdaptation: In ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', instead of Daisy Duck, they're related to [[spoiler:Scrooge [=McDuck=] through [[OppositeSexClone cloning]]]].
* TertiarySexualCharacteristics: They wear bows on their heads.
* ThemeTwinNaming: Rather than having their names rhyme like Donald's nephews,
Daisy's nieces' names are all months Adventure Club in the 90s, along with Daisy Duck, Minnie Mouse, Clara Cluck, and Clarabelle Cow.
* GranolaGirl: It depends on the story who, between her and Fethry, is the more level-headed one.
* LoveTriangle: She and Rita Goose had a short rivalry over Fethry. [[FirstGirlWins Gloria won.]]
* NewAgeRetroHippie: Gloria is one, although she's not as overbearing as the stereotype usually goes and she's been considerably toned down over the years.
* OutOfFocus: Hasn't appeared in a single story since the 90s when Brazil stopped producing Fethry-centered stories.
* SecretIdentity: As the superhero known as the Purple Butterfly, who along with Fethry's Red Bat persona is a member
of the year and can also be used as feminine names.
* WiseBeyondTheirYears: Much like Huey, Dewey, and Louie, they are often vastly more sensible than
Club of Heroes. Neither know the adults around them.other's secret identity.



[[folder: Dottie]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dottie_and_nephews.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: newspaper comics, 1941]]

Dottie, also known as Dotty, is the niece of Daisy Duck. Huey, Dewey, and Louie each have a crush on her.

to:

[[folder: Dottie]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
Donna Duck]]
[[quoteright:200:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dottie_and_nephews.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_donna_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: newspaper comics, 1941]]

Dottie, also known as Dotty, is
1951]]

Donna Duck originates from
the niece of 1937 short ''Don Donald'' and precedes Daisy Duck. Huey, Dewey, Duck as Donald's love interest. In 1951, she starred in a series of daily newspaper comics alongside Donald and Louie each have a crush on her.Daisy and has since made an occasional reappearance. She's currently dating Whitewater Duck.



* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: She appeared in two newspaper comics and then never again. She's arguably been [[{{Expy}} succeeded by Daisy's "other" nieces April, May, and June]].
* DecompositeCharacter: April, May and June are this to her. Funnily enough, they have a CompositeCharacter in Webby Vanderquack of ''[=DuckTales=]'' fame.
* DistaffCounterpart: To Huey, Dewey, and Louie.

to:

* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: She appeared in two newspaper comics AlliterativeName: '''D'''onna '''D'''uck.
* CostumeEvolution: In the animated short, Donna wears only her headpiece
and then never again. She's arguably been [[{{Expy}} succeeded by Daisy's "other" nieces April, May, and June]].
a shawl. Post-Daisy, that look has become somewhat naked-y in comparison, so once Donna made her comic debut, she got an additional shirt.
* DecompositeCharacter: April, May Until 1951, Donna and June are this to her. Funnily enough, they Daisy were regarded as the same character. It were the newspaper comics that established Donna as a separate individual.
* OldFlame: Donna and Donald still
have some feelings for each other. In the newspaper comics, it's exclusively from Donald's side. In the 2012 comic ''"Too Many Donalds"'', it's mutual.
* PairTheSpares: In the newspaper comics, Donna had found
a CompositeCharacter new romantic partner in Webby Vanderquack a {{dogface}} named Manuel Gonzales. In the 2012 comic ''"Too Many Donalds"'', she instead forms a couple with Whitewater Duck, a cousin of ''[=DuckTales=]'' fame.
Donald as rarely written about as Donna is.
* DistaffCounterpart: To Huey, Dewey, SpicyLatina: It's what you get when you put Donald's HairTriggerTemper on a Mexican angle and Louie.give it to a female character.



[[folder: Glittering Goldie O'Gilt]]
[[quoteright:141:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/20b6ac2436684b0afc82f9eac2e22c37.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''ComicBook/BackToTheKlondike'' (1953)
-> Voiced by: Joan Gerber (''[=DuckTales=]''), Creator/AllisonJanney (''[=2017 reboot=]'')

Scrooge's love interest from his gold prospecting days, "the only live one I ever knew."

to:

[[folder: Glittering Goldie O'Gilt]]
[[quoteright:141:https://static.
Cintia Paiva]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/20b6ac2436684b0afc82f9eac2e22c37.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''ComicBook/BackToTheKlondike'' (1953)
-> Voiced by: Joan Gerber (''[=DuckTales=]''), Creator/AllisonJanney (''[=2017 reboot=]'')

Scrooge's love interest from his gold prospecting days, "the only live one I ever knew."
org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_cintia_paiva.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Entre A Cruz E A Espada"'', 1982]]

A close friend of Dugan Duck, who lives next door, much to her parents' annoyance.



* AlliterativeName: '''G'''littering '''G'''oldie O''''G'''ilt.
* AscendedExtra: Her creator Creator/CarlBarks only used her in one story, ''ComicBook/BackToTheKlondike''. His spiritual successor, Creator/DonRosa, especially in his Scrooge-biography ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'' as well the animated adaptation of the comic in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' cemented her as the primary and sometimes only love interest and appeared in multiple media since.
* BreakoutCharacter: Only appeared in one Carl Barks story but was eventually accepted as Scrooge's de facto love interest (a la [[Literature/SherlockHolmes Irene Adler]]) in American comics and animation.
* TheChanteuse: She was the leading star of "The Black Jack" when Scrooge met her.
* DefrostingIceQueen: Both she and Scrooge had this effect on each other. Unlike Scrooge however, Goldie in her older days is more or less not trying to hide a HiddenHeartOfGold and has no problem showing Scrooge that she still loves him.
* DemotedToExtra: In Italian comics, her character is rarely used (aside from cameos and short scenes) in favour of Brigitta.
* DependingOnTheWriter: Just like Scrooge, ''Duck Tales'' gives her a LighterAndSofter personality where she and Scrooge are way more open about their feelings and even nearly gets married at one point.
* FemmeFatale: ''Yes'', there's a character like in a Disney comic. She frankly ticks all the boxes, at least in her younger days. Charming? Yes. Glamorous? Yes. She manipulates men (or ducks) in dangerous situations? Definitely check.
%%* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: Please check the trope page to make sure your example fits the current definition.
%%* HiddenHeartOfGold: Part of the reason she and Scrooge didn't get together in the comics was because they both Hid this.
* IWillWaitForYou: In "A Little Something Special", she tells Scrooge this.
* LoveAtFirstPunch: Drugging and robbing a guy and dumping him in a ditch is not your typical foundation for a relationship.
* LoveHurts: It didn't turn out well.
* MaybeEverAfter: As mentioned in Scrooge's entries, Don Rosa's stories has left some hints here and there that Scrooge might eventually return to her someday.
* MeaningfulName: It's probably no coincidence that Scrooge's love interest has "gold" in her name.
* NewOldFlame: Even 50 years after they last saw each other, she and Scrooge still have strong feelings for each other. In Don Rosa's "The Quest for Kalevala", it's hinted that Scrooge plans on returning to her someday.
* NonMammalMammaries: She has breasts in the stories drawn by Don Rosa.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Her inspiration was Yukon dancer Kathleen "Klondike Kate" Rockwell.
* OddFriendship: She has met Brigitta in at least two stories, and they get along really well... Fully knowing they're ''rivals in love''. Goldie all but states that Brigitta is the only one she could tolerate with Scrooge in her place, and Brigitta hints she reciprocates.
* OlderAndWiser: In her youth, she was a FemmeFatale, thief and swindler with quite the temper. In her old age, she retains the temper, but otherwise acts as a CoolOldLady who gives advice to the younger Ducks.
* OlderThanTheyLook: In the Ducktales 2017 reboot, she looks a good bit younger in her old age than any other depiction, yet still retains her long-time Gold Rush relationship with Scrooge. This is {{handwave}}d when she casually claims to have found a fountain of youth since they last met.
* TheOneThatGotAway: For Scrooge.
%%* PluckyGirl
%%* SlapSlapKiss: [[DestructoNookie To put it mildly...]]
* SilverVixen: Not as originally depicted by Carl Barks, but when Don Rosa draws her she's always depicted as every bit as beautiful as she was when Scrooge first knew her. It's likely a case of SheCleansUpNicely, as by the time of her first appearance, she'd spent the decades since the end of the Yukon gold rush in the wilderness, living on Scrooge's old claim. By the time she reappears in Rosa's work, she'd returned to Dawson and turned the old Blackjack Ballroom into a hotel, allowing her to regain her old looks.
* StockholmSyndrome: Don Rosa attempted to avert this by showing that Goldie had brought a gun, meaning she could have killed Scrooge if she wanted to, and also adding the fact that she was half-willingly joining him at his claim so she could seize an opportunity to trick him and steal his gold nugget again. Also, she already had an interest in Scrooge ''before'' he kidnapped her.
* RagsToRiches: She already lived in Dawson back when it was basically just a logging camp, running the-then Blackjack Saloon for the lumberjacks in the area. When the gold rush hit, Goldie blossomed into wealth and stardom, becoming known as "The Star Of the North". Sadly, the end of the gold rush, not to mention Scrooge's rejection, eventually led to her [[RichesToRags falling back down again]]. The events of "Back To The Klondike" leads to Goldie finding a middle ground as the owner of the Blackjack Hotel.
* TookALevelInKindness: Spent the years after the gold rush taking care of orphans.
* TooMuchAlike: She and Scrooge are stubborn, proud, ([[BeneathTheMask apparently]]) greedy and cold-hearted. All of this drives them apart, instead of bringing them closer.
* {{Tsundere}}: She truly does love Scrooge, but won't admit it to his face out of pride (at least in her youth). Yeah, Goldie fits the definition to a T. If it weren't for that stray block of frozen hose water...
* VillainessesWantHeroes: Not a down right villain per se, but Goldie is introduced as greedy, rude and deceitful, not above [[SlippingAMickey drugging]] prospectors to steal their gold. She quickly gets a thing for Scrooge learning how he refuses to waste his money unlike every other man in Dawson and watching him demonstrate his strength on the town's crooks. Eventually however, Goldie [[DefrostingIceQueen defrosts.]]
%%* TriggerHappy

to:

* AlliterativeName: '''G'''littering '''G'''oldie O''''G'''ilt.
AlternateCompanyEquivalent: So here's a well-to-do pig girl living next door to a duck boy who's been picked from the wilderness, all tropes like messy hair, high-energy, and friend included, to live with an uncle figure and whom she has a semi-romantic bond with. Sounds quite a bit like [[Characters/DuckTales1987 Julie Blurf]] from ''[=DuckTales=]''.
* AscendedExtra: Her creator Creator/CarlBarks only used GirlishPigtails: And she never wears it differently.
* GirlNextDoor: Overlaps with UptownGirl. She's from an upper class family and
her in one story, ''ComicBook/BackToTheKlondike''. His spiritual successor, Creator/DonRosa, especially in his Scrooge-biography ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'' as well the animated adaptation parents aren't all that fond of the comic in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' cemented her as the primary Dugan and sometimes only love interest and appeared in multiple media since.
* BreakoutCharacter: Only appeared in one Carl Barks story but was eventually accepted as Scrooge's de facto love interest (a la [[Literature/SherlockHolmes Irene Adler]]) in American comics and animation.
* TheChanteuse: She was the leading star of "The Black Jack" when Scrooge met her.
* DefrostingIceQueen: Both she and Scrooge had this effect on each other. Unlike Scrooge however, Goldie in her older days is more or
Fethry, who are decidedly less not trying to hide a HiddenHeartOfGold familiar with etiquette and has no problem showing Scrooge that she still loves him.money.
* DemotedToExtra: In Italian comics, HairContrastDuo: Cintia fulfills HairOfGoldHeartOfGold, while her character is rarely used (aside from cameos and short scenes) in favour of Brigitta.
* DependingOnTheWriter: Just like Scrooge, ''Duck Tales'' gives her a LighterAndSofter personality where she and Scrooge are way more open about their feelings and even nearly gets married at one point.
* FemmeFatale: ''Yes'', there's a character like in a Disney comic. She frankly ticks all
mother, the boxes, at least in her younger days. Charming? Yes. Glamorous? Yes. She manipulates men (or ducks) in dangerous situations? Definitely check.
%%* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: Please check the trope page to make sure your example fits the current definition.
%%* HiddenHeartOfGold: Part of the reason she and Scrooge didn't get together in the comics was because they both Hid this.
* IWillWaitForYou: In "A Little Something Special", she tells Scrooge this.
* LoveAtFirstPunch: Drugging and robbing a guy and dumping him in a ditch is not your typical foundation for a relationship.
* LoveHurts: It didn't turn out well.
* MaybeEverAfter: As mentioned in Scrooge's entries, Don Rosa's stories has left some hints here and there that Scrooge might eventually return
parent most opposed to her someday.
* MeaningfulName: It's probably no coincidence that Scrooge's love interest has "gold" in her name.
* NewOldFlame: Even 50 years after they last saw each other, she and Scrooge still have strong feelings for each other. In Don Rosa's "The Quest for Kalevala", it's hinted that Scrooge plans on returning to her someday.
* NonMammalMammaries: She has breasts in the stories drawn by Don Rosa.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Her inspiration was Yukon dancer Kathleen "Klondike Kate" Rockwell.
* OddFriendship: She has met Brigitta in at least two stories, and they get along really well... Fully knowing they're ''rivals in love''. Goldie all but states that Brigitta is the only one she could tolerate
contact with Scrooge Dugan, has DarkIsEvil going on hair-wise.
* OutOfFocus: Hasn't appeared
in her place, and Brigitta hints she reciprocates.
* OlderAndWiser: In her youth, she was
a FemmeFatale, thief and swindler with quite the temper. In her old age, she retains the temper, but otherwise acts as a CoolOldLady who gives advice to the younger Ducks.
* OlderThanTheyLook: In the Ducktales 2017 reboot, she looks a good bit younger in her old age than any other depiction, yet still retains her long-time Gold Rush relationship with Scrooge. This is {{handwave}}d when she casually claims to have found a fountain of youth since they last met.
* TheOneThatGotAway: For Scrooge.
%%* PluckyGirl
%%* SlapSlapKiss: [[DestructoNookie To put it mildly...]]
* SilverVixen: Not as originally depicted by Carl Barks, but when Don Rosa draws her she's always depicted as every bit as beautiful as she was when Scrooge first knew her. It's likely a case of SheCleansUpNicely, as by the time of her first appearance, she'd spent the decades
single story since the end of the Yukon gold rush in the wilderness, living on Scrooge's old claim. By the time she reappears in Rosa's work, she'd returned to Dawson and turned the old Blackjack Ballroom into a hotel, allowing her to regain her old looks.
* StockholmSyndrome: Don Rosa attempted to avert this by showing that Goldie had brought a gun, meaning she could have killed Scrooge if she wanted to, and also adding the fact that she was half-willingly joining him at his claim so she could seize an opportunity to trick him and steal his gold nugget again. Also, she already had an interest in Scrooge ''before'' he kidnapped her.
* RagsToRiches: She already lived in Dawson back
90s when it was basically just a logging camp, running the-then Blackjack Saloon for the lumberjacks in the area. When the gold rush hit, Goldie blossomed into wealth and stardom, becoming known as "The Star Of the North". Sadly, the end of the gold rush, not to mention Scrooge's rejection, eventually led to her [[RichesToRags falling back down again]]. The events of "Back To The Klondike" leads to Goldie finding a middle ground as the owner of the Blackjack Hotel.
* TookALevelInKindness: Spent the years after the gold rush taking care of orphans.
* TooMuchAlike: She and Scrooge are stubborn, proud, ([[BeneathTheMask apparently]]) greedy and cold-hearted. All of this drives them apart, instead of bringing them closer.
* {{Tsundere}}: She truly does love Scrooge, but won't admit it to his face out of pride (at least in her youth). Yeah, Goldie fits the definition to a T. If it weren't for that stray block of frozen hose water...
* VillainessesWantHeroes: Not a down right villain per se, but Goldie is introduced as greedy, rude and deceitful, not above [[SlippingAMickey drugging]] prospectors to steal their gold. She quickly gets a thing for Scrooge learning how he refuses to waste his money unlike every other man in Dawson and watching him demonstrate his strength on the town's crooks. Eventually however, Goldie [[DefrostingIceQueen defrosts.]]
%%* TriggerHappy
Brazil stopped producing Dugan-centered stories.



[[folder: Brigitta [=McBridge=]]]
[[quoteright:305:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/brigitta_2300.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''The Last Babaloo'' (1960)

A shrewd businesswoman duck whose main goal is to one day marry Scrooge [=McDuck=], even though he isn't interested in romance at all. Created by Romano Scarpa, Barks liked the character enough to give Romano a drawing of Brigitta trying to seduce Scrooge with a Money-Scented perfume, which Romano then wrote a story based on said premise. The original drawing has been lost.

to:

[[folder: Brigitta [=McBridge=]]]
[[quoteright:305:https://static.
Cecilia "Cissy" Swann]]
[[quoteright:200:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/brigitta_2300.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''The Last Babaloo'' (1960)

org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_cissy_swann.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Lazy Luck"'', 2006]]

A shrewd businesswoman duck whose main goal wealthy woman who is to one day marry Scrooge [=McDuck=], even though he isn't interested in romance at all. Created by Romano Scarpa, Barks liked the character enough to give Romano a drawing of Brigitta trying to seduce Scrooge romantically involved with a Money-Scented perfume, which Romano then wrote a story based on said premise. The original drawing has been lost.Gus Goose.



* AbhorrentAdmirer: To Scrooge. Brigitta truly loves Scrooge, and for decades, she has tried every method to get him to return her love. This includes stalking him, which greatly infuriates Scrooge.
** Right from the beginning, Scarpa and his successors have left enough hints that Scrooge is interested in her, but does not enjoy her obsession with him. Although he pretends to be emotionless--a typical character trait--he is not.
* AscendedExtra: Already shortly after her creation by Scarpa, she was picked up by other authors and began appearing in their stories. She still appears frequently in Italian stories, even getting the occasional starring role in stories where Scrooge doesn't appear.
* BrilliantButLazy: She could be as rich as the likes of Rockerduck, Glomgold, and even Scrooge himself... Except she can't be bothered to get serious [[WomanScorned unless Scrooge makes her angry]].
** Best shown by an alternate universe counterpart, who had stopped going in any business after marrying her reality's Scrooge and not caring that her new spendthrift habits were contributing to his impending bankruptcy... Then the main universe's Scrooge, who had been tricked by her husband into switching places, got in his mind to restore his wealth and put her in charge of the restaurants side of the businesses after reminding her of how she used to be, and she brought them back to their former glory in ''weeks''-just as Scrooge expected based on his experience with the main reality's Brigitta.
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: In her early stories it wasn't clear if her love for Scrooge was genuine (in Scarpa's own words, "Does she have a crush on Scrooge, on his fortune... Or both?"), before other authors made clear she really loved Scrooge. Similarly, as the years went on, while her crush on Scrooge remained as strong as ever, she became less obsessive and her StalkerWithACrush tendencies were heavily toned down.
* TheDreaded: Scrooge is ''terrified'' of Brigitta whenever she decides to compete with him, as he knows far too well that, no matter if she succeeds or not, she is just as formidable as Rockerduck or Glomgold, if not more, and she always comes out of nowhere and he can't prepare for her.
* GoldDigger: {{Subverted}}: while she sometimes ''appears'' one, it's usually very clear she's interested in Scrooge for his own personality.
* HiddenDepths: She's usually seen as just a lovestruck woman, but she's actually a businesswoman in the same league as Scrooge himself. These Depths have become markedly less Hidden over the years, as CharacterizationMarchesOn.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: She's old enough she first met Scrooge in ''1897'', but often forms a friendly quartet with the much younger Daisy and Miss Quackfaster and, occasionally, the even older Grandma Duck. She also gets along very well with Huey, Dewey and Louie, and Dickie.
* MadLove: She is perfectly aware that [[AllLoveIsUnrequited Scrooge doesn't return her feelings,]] but this doesn't stop her from hoping, and trying again, and again, and again...
* TheMatchmaker: A ''professional'' one: her most frequent enterprise is a dating agency and a rather successful one.
* OddFriendship: She has met Goldie in at least two stories and they get along really well, fully knowing they're ''rivals in love''. It's hinted that Brigitta considers Goldie the only woman she could tolerate with Scrooge, and Goldie all but declares the same for her.
* OlderThanTheyLook: She's not much younger than Scrooge is, yet she looks in her forties.
* PinkMeansFeminine: Her "Briggitik" costume is totally pink (bow and arrow included). Justified because "love" is her motif.
* PlatonicLifePartners: With Jubal -- which is a clear case of CharacterizationMarchesOn, as the two were ''definitely'' not friends in the first story Jubal appeared in.
%%* PluckyGirl
* RememberTheNewGirl: Her first story mentions she already knew Scrooge in 1898, right after he turned from millionaire prospector to businessman, and a later story shows they had already met the previous year.
* ShipTease: Scrooge is often depicted as feeling ''something'' for her. If it's either love, friendship, or just respect, that is up to the readers.
* StalkerWithACrush: To Scrooge, though the actual stalking has been toned severely down since her early appearances.
* StalkingIsLove: While [[DownplayedTrope downplayed]] in more recent stories, her methods in her classic appearances actually include ambushing him on public places, disguising herself to enter the money bin and some old stories reveal she has a telescope on her house to observe Scrooge doing his work and private life. Some Scarpa-stories show Scrooge hiding in panic that Brigitta is waiting for him. However, Brigitta´s stalking and Scrooge's terrified reactions on it are mainly PlayedForLaughs and portrayed as love from Brigitta´s side. While Scrooge clearly feels uncomfirtable most of the time (although some stories show he may have feelings for her), Scrooge's family and especially Brigitta's good friend Daisy are even supporting Brigitta´s stalking and often will in turn criticize Scrooge for acting rude towards her attemps as she just means well.
* SupremeChef: An excellent cook. Some of her businesses (starting from the epic one in "[[WhamEpisode Brigitta's Strawberries]]" actually took advantage from that
* TookALevelInBadass: In the Italy story "Paperinik, Paperinika e la Romantica Vendicatrice" (Duck Avenger, Super Daisy and the Romantic Avenger), Brigitta takes the identity of Brigittik, the Romantic Avenger after being accidentally brainwashed by a Gyro invention that releases all of Brigitta's frustration about her romantic failure. This identity re-appears in few stories.
* {{Tsundere}}: Of "Dere" type. Differently from Goldie, Brigitta is usually very sweet (and even open about her feelings), but whenever Scrooge goes too far in his rejections he is quickly reminded she is really vindicative-and a businesswoman good enough to actually rival him.
* WomanScorned: Many stories starring Brigitta have her being rudely rejected by Scrooge, then starting her own business trying to outperform him.
* ZanyScheme: She is really good with them... they actually succeed a fair number of times too.

to:

* AbhorrentAdmirer: To Scrooge. Brigitta truly loves Scrooge, IdleRich: Cissy's got no job because her parents are rich and for decades, spends her day doing whatever she has tried every method to get him to return wants.
* KindheartedSimpleton: Cissy's a sweet girl, alright, but not very bright and sometimes unintentionally self-centered in
her love. This includes stalking him, which greatly infuriates Scrooge.
** Right from the beginning, Scarpa and his successors have left enough hints that Scrooge is interested in her, but does not enjoy
actions. In ''"Roughing It"'', Grandma's thoughts on Cissy describe her obsession with him. Although he pretends to be emotionless--a typical character trait--he is not.
* AscendedExtra: Already shortly after her creation by Scarpa, she was picked up by other authors and began appearing in their stories. She still appears frequently in Italian stories, even getting the occasional starring role in stories where Scrooge doesn't appear.
* BrilliantButLazy: She could be
as "as rich as the likes of Rockerduck, Glomgold, and even Scrooge himself... Except she can't be bothered to get serious [[WomanScorned unless Scrooge makes her angry]].
** Best shown by an alternate universe counterpart, who had stopped going in any business after marrying her reality's
Scrooge and not caring that her new spendthrift habits were contributing to his impending bankruptcy... Then the main universe's Scrooge, who had been tricked by her husband into switching places, got in his mind to restore his wealth and put her in charge of the restaurants side of the businesses after reminding her of how [[StealthInsult as smart as Gus]]".
* MotorMouth: Quite a talker when
she used to be, and she brought them back to their former glory in ''weeks''-just as Scrooge expected based on his experience with the main reality's Brigitta.
* CharacterizationMarchesOn:
gets going. In her early stories it wasn't clear if her love ''"The Fashionable Farmer"'', Grandma Duck leaves for Scrooge was genuine (in Scarpa's own words, "Does she have a crush on Scrooge, on his fortune... Or both?"), before other authors made clear she really loved Scrooge. Similarly, as the years went on, while her crush on Scrooge remained as strong as ever, she became less obsessive and her StalkerWithACrush tendencies were heavily toned down.
* TheDreaded: Scrooge is ''terrified'' of Brigitta whenever she decides to compete with him, as he knows far too well that, no matter if she succeeds or not, she is
famers' convention just as formidable as Rockerduck or Glomgold, if not more, and Cissy arrives to visit Gus, so Grandma quickly drives on to avoid being held up by a conversation.
* SingleWomanSeeksGoodMan: With a hint of WhatDoesSheSeeInHim on account of Cissy's family fortune. She likes Gus for his uncomplicated farmer outlook on life, his work ethic (which
she always comes out of nowhere and he can't prepare for her.
* GoldDigger: {{Subverted}}: while she sometimes ''appears'' one, it's usually very clear
overestimates somewhat due to Gus showing off a little when she's interested in Scrooge for around), his own personality.
* HiddenDepths: She's usually seen as just a lovestruck woman, but
appetite, and she's actually a businesswoman in the same league as Scrooge himself. These Depths have become markedly less Hidden over the years, as CharacterizationMarchesOn.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: She's old enough she first met Scrooge in ''1897'', but often forms a friendly quartet with the much younger Daisy and Miss Quackfaster and, occasionally, the even older Grandma Duck. She
also gets along very well with Huey, Dewey and Louie, and Dickie.
* MadLove: She is perfectly aware that [[AllLoveIsUnrequited Scrooge doesn't return her feelings,]] but this doesn't stop her from hoping, and trying again, and again, and again...
* TheMatchmaker: A ''professional'' one: her most frequent enterprise is a dating agency and a rather successful one.
* OddFriendship: She has met Goldie in at least two stories and they get along really well, fully knowing they're ''rivals in love''. It's hinted that Brigitta considers Goldie
the only woman she could tolerate with Scrooge, and Goldie all but declares the same for her.
* OlderThanTheyLook: She's not much younger than Scrooge is, yet she looks in her forties.
* PinkMeansFeminine: Her "Briggitik" costume is totally pink (bow and arrow included). Justified because "love" is her motif.
* PlatonicLifePartners: With Jubal -- which is a clear case of CharacterizationMarchesOn, as the two were ''definitely'' not friends in the first story Jubal appeared in.
%%* PluckyGirl
* RememberTheNewGirl: Her first story mentions she already knew Scrooge in 1898, right after he turned from millionaire prospector
one who likes to businessman, and a later story shows they had already met the previous year.
* ShipTease: Scrooge is often depicted as feeling ''something'' for her. If it's either love, friendship, or just respect, that is up to the readers.
* StalkerWithACrush: To Scrooge, though the actual stalking has been toned severely down since her early appearances.
* StalkingIsLove: While [[DownplayedTrope downplayed]] in more recent stories, her methods in her classic appearances actually include ambushing
hear him on public places, disguising herself to enter the money bin and some old stories reveal she has a telescope on her house to observe Scrooge doing his work and private life. Some Scarpa-stories show Scrooge hiding in panic that Brigitta is waiting for him. However, Brigitta´s stalking and Scrooge's terrified reactions on it are mainly PlayedForLaughs and portrayed as love from Brigitta´s side. While Scrooge clearly feels uncomfirtable most of the time (although some stories show he may have feelings for her), Scrooge's family and especially Brigitta's good friend Daisy are even supporting Brigitta´s stalking and often will in turn criticize Scrooge for acting rude towards her attemps as she just means well.
* SupremeChef: An excellent cook. Some of her businesses (starting from the epic one in "[[WhamEpisode Brigitta's Strawberries]]" actually took advantage from that
* TookALevelInBadass: In the Italy story "Paperinik, Paperinika e la Romantica Vendicatrice" (Duck Avenger, Super Daisy and the Romantic Avenger), Brigitta takes the identity of Brigittik, the Romantic Avenger after being accidentally brainwashed by a Gyro invention that releases all of Brigitta's frustration about her romantic failure. This identity re-appears in few stories.
* {{Tsundere}}: Of "Dere" type. Differently from Goldie, Brigitta is usually very sweet (and even open about her feelings), but whenever Scrooge goes too far in his rejections he is quickly reminded she is really vindicative-and a businesswoman good enough to actually rival him.
* WomanScorned: Many stories starring Brigitta have her being rudely rejected by Scrooge, then starting her own business trying to outperform him.
* ZanyScheme: She is really good with them... they actually succeed a fair number of times too.
sing.



[[folder: Feather Mallard]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gladstone_feather_mallard.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Lady Luck"'', 2001]]

A woman as lucky as Gladstone Gander. They fancy each other, but their supernatural fortune turns into supernatural misfortune whenever they are together.

to:

[[folder: Feather Mallard]]
Hjalmar]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gladstone_feather_mallard.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_hjalmar.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Lady Luck"'', 2001]]

''"Grandma Duck"'', 1952]]

A woman as lucky as Gladstone Gander. They fancy each other, but their supernatural fortune turns into supernatural misfortune whenever they are together.hunter in the North Woods who is in a relationship with Greta Goose.



* BornLucky: Heavily implied to be the case.
* BroughtDownToNormal: Whenever she and Gladstone are together, their fortunes cancel each other out into mutual misfortune.
* DistaffCounterpart: Of Gladstone.
* LazyBum: Because her luck means she never has to work, she abhors effort beyond stuff like picking up a diamond ring she finds on the street.

to:

* BornLucky: Heavily implied to be AlliterativeName: '''H'''jalmar the case.
'''H'''unter. Not truly a name, but the same prinicple.
* BroughtDownToNormal: Whenever she BadassAdorable: Greta thinks he's cute, but he doesn't go around being called "the hunter" for nothing.
* DreadfulMusician: He only knows hunting songs
and Gladstone are together, their fortunes cancel each he can't even perform them in an aurally pleasant manner.
* HunterTrapper: The BoisterousBruiser type. He doesn't wear pelts or
other out into mutual misfortune.
trophies or brags about his kills, but he is highly enthusiastic about his job and likes to share the experience.
* DistaffCounterpart: Of Gladstone.
* LazyBum: Because
NoGuyWantsAnAmazon: He liked Greta as an acquaintance, but didn't view her luck means as romantic material at first because she never has wasn't girl-like. His interest was piqued after Grandma gave her a makeover, but didn't know what to work, she abhors effort beyond stuff like picking up a diamond ring she finds on do with her over the street.top DamselInDistress performance. In the end, he began dating her because of her moose-attracting singing voice.



[[folder: Gloria]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_gloria.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Paz, Amor E Glória"'', 1972]]

Fethry's girlfriend and the civilian identity of the Purple Butterfly.

to:

! Love interests' family
[[folder: Gloria]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
Dickie Duck]]
[[quoteright:200:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_gloria.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Paz, Amor E Glória"'', 1972]]

Fethry's girlfriend
org/pmwiki/pub/images/dickie-duck_3921.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''The Arrival of Dickie Duck'' (1966)

Glittering Goldie's granddaughter, who now attends college in Duckburg -- that is, when she's not roaming around the town
and the civilian identity of the Purple Butterfly.getting into various mishaps.



* AmazonBrigade: One of the members of Daisy's Adventure Club in the 90s, along with Daisy Duck, Minnie Mouse, Clara Cluck, and Clarabelle Cow.
* GranolaGirl: It depends on the story who, between her and Fethry, is the more level-headed one.
* LoveTriangle: She and Rita Goose had a short rivalry over Fethry. [[FirstGirlWins Gloria won.]]
* NewAgeRetroHippie: Gloria is one, although she's not as overbearing as the stereotype usually goes and she's been considerably toned down over the years.
* OutOfFocus: Hasn't appeared in a single story since the 90s when Brazil stopped producing Fethry-centered stories.
* SecretIdentity: As the superhero known as the Purple Butterfly, who along with Fethry's Red Bat persona is a member of the Club of Heroes. Neither know the other's secret identity.

to:

* AmazonBrigade: One of the members of Daisy's Adventure Club AlliterativeName: '''D'''ickie '''D'''uck.
* BreakoutCharacter: While a minor character in many countries and virtually unknown
in the 90s, along USA, she was rather popular in Brazil during TheEighties, where she starred in her own stories - which featured mainly in José Carioca's comics - together with Daisy Duck, Minnie Mouse, Clara Cluck, and Clarabelle Cow.
* GranolaGirl: It depends on
her own group of friends (including the story who, between her and Fethry, is the more level-headed one.
* LoveTriangle: She and Rita Goose had a short rivalry over Fethry. [[FirstGirlWins Gloria won.]]
* NewAgeRetroHippie: Gloria is one, although
Aracuan Bird from ''WesternAnimation/TheThreeCaballeros''). In those stories, she's not as overbearing as the stereotype usually goes and a budding musician instead of a cub journalist.
* CaliforniaUniversity: In her introductory comic, Dickie had already graduated (high school or college, unknown!) In more recent comics,
she's been considerably toned down over attending college in Duckburg, at Calisota University which is conveniently within biking distance of Scrooge's mansion.
* ChasteHero: She doesn't seem particularly interested in romance either (though other characters are often interested in her).
* CoolBigSis: While not their ''actual'' sister, she'll occasionally play this role to April, May and June. In a ''few'' stories she'll have a similar vibe to Huey, Dewey and Louie, but more often with them she's just OneOfTheBoys.
* DependingOnTheArtist: Does she have white human-like feet (as seen in
the years.
* OutOfFocus: Hasn't appeared
picture above) or regular orange duck feet? The former was more common in earlier stories featuring her, but in more recent stories the latter version is more common. Though in her very first appearance she had duck feet for the [[https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-FDV9bPYoV6I/WKhL4OoDVaI/AAAAAAAAHpQ/KaHhS1rcGHUUXgwetQi6EFk5lBK66awMgCEw/s1600/di16.tiff one panel she went barefoot]].
* DubNameChange: In the Brazilian comics, she's named Pata Lee.
* FullyDressedCartoonAnimal: One of few Duck characters that is full dressed.
* GenkiGirl: Usually. When teamed up with Huey, Dewey and Louie she is usually the [[SavvyGuyEnergeticGirl Energetic Girl to their combined Savvy Guy]].
* HonoraryUncle: In Italian comics, she calls Scrooge "nonno" ("grandfather"). [[LostInTranslation In Italy it's the equivalent of "old man" and can be both affectionate and derogative]], but it's also sometimes taken as
a single story hint that Dickie is ''really'' Scrooge's grand-daughter, a daughter of the baby Scrooge and Goldie may have had, since it is hard for Don Rosa fans to imagine Goldie having a relationship with anyone else than Scrooge.
** According to Dickie's origin story, Goldie could no longer take care of her granddaughter and convinced Scrooge to take care of
the 90s when Brazil stopped producing Fethry-centered stories.
* SecretIdentity: As
teenage girl. It set Scrooge up as her legal guardian, though the superhero known two do not interact that often.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: Very good friends with Brigitta.
* IntrepidReporter: In some stories she is a junior reporter for the newspaper ''The Jiminy Cricket.''
* PluckyGirl: Perhaps one reason why the normally girl-hating Huey, Dewey and Louie don't mind hanging out with her and are even fine with her taking the lead -- she is a spirited teen and OneOfTheBoys.
* RoadTripPlot: Ducks On The Road is an excellent comic about Dickie, Gyro, and Daisy - in the year 1975 - going on a trip from Virginia to California.
* ShoutOut: In the Brazilian comics, she got a DubNameChange as Pata Lee, after the Brazilian female singer/songwriter Rita Lee, mostly because she's a musician in Zé Carioca's comics and her hairstyle is similar to Rita's (although the real-life singer was redhead at the time[[note]]She's grey-haired nowadays[[/note]] instead of blonde).
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: As well
as the Purple Butterfly, one who along with Fethry's Red Bat persona is wears ''pants.'' Justified in that she has a member more humanoid body than most of the Club other Ducks.
* {{Tomboy}}: While depicted as a typical teenage girl, Dickie is much more interested in her job as a reporter, various sports, and music than romance. Her clothes would not look out
of Heroes. Neither know place in a typical boy. Her main feminine trait is her long, blonde hair.
* TwoGirlsAndAGuy: Dickie, Gyro, and Daisy in Ducks On The Road. They're her two favorite people and they're spending
the other's secret identity.summer together having wacky adventures!
* YouDontLookLikeYou: In the early 2000 years, the Italian ''Disney Parade'' collection of character statues features a Dickie Duck [[http://www.toremmodellismo.it/images/SERIE%20PERS.TOPO/PERSONAGGI%203D/151_5120.JPG barely taller than Huey, Dewey and Louie]]. Romano Scarpa, the character's original creator, was pissed off since she is supposed to be even taller than Donald.



[[folder: Donna Duck]]
[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_donna_duck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: newspaper comics, 1951]]

Donna Duck originates from the 1937 short ''Don Donald'' and precedes Daisy Duck as Donald's love interest. In 1951, she starred in a series of daily newspaper comics alongside Donald and Daisy and has since made an occasional reappearance. She's currently dating Whitewater Duck.

to:

[[folder: Donna Duck]]
[[quoteright:200:https://static.
Teensy Whiffle]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_donna_duck.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_teensy_whiffle.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: newspaper comics, 1951]]

Donna Duck originates from
''"Duos And Don'ts"'', 2001]]

Daisy's cousin and
the 1937 short ''Don Donald'' and precedes Daisy Duck as Donald's love interest. In 1951, she starred in a series girlfriend of daily newspaper comics alongside Donald and Daisy and has since made an occasional reappearance. She's currently dating Whitewater Duck.Woimly Filcher.



* AlliterativeName: '''D'''onna '''D'''uck.
* CostumeEvolution: In the animated short, Donna wears only her headpiece and a shawl. Post-Daisy, that look has become somewhat naked-y in comparison, so once Donna made her comic debut, she got an additional shirt.
* DecompositeCharacter: Until 1951, Donna and Daisy were regarded as the same character. It were the newspaper comics that established Donna as a separate individual.
* OldFlame: Donna and Donald still have some feelings for each other. In the newspaper comics, it's exclusively from Donald's side. In the 2012 comic ''"Too Many Donalds"'', it's mutual.
* PairTheSpares: In the newspaper comics, Donna had found a new romantic partner in a {{dogface}} named Manuel Gonzales. In the 2012 comic ''"Too Many Donalds"'', she instead forms a couple with Whitewater Duck, a cousin of Donald as rarely written about as Donna is.
* SpicyLatina: It's what you get when you put Donald's HairTriggerTemper on a Mexican angle and give it to a female character.

to:

* AlliterativeName: '''D'''onna '''D'''uck.
BadassAdorable: She's cute and in touch with her femininity, but she's also a traveling anvil salesman.
* CostumeEvolution: In {{Elopement}}: Not literally, but Teensy and Woimly fell in love during the animated short, Donna wears only her headpiece and a shawl. Post-Daisy, that look has become somewhat naked-y in comparison, so once Donna made her comic debut, she got an additional shirt.
* DecompositeCharacter: Until 1951, Donna and Daisy were regarded
Duckburg Lothario's Annual Winter-Walk while they each had another as the same character. It were the newspaper comics that established Donna as a separate individual.
* OldFlame: Donna and
partner. Donald still have some feelings and Gloria had treated them badly during the walk (Donald not on purpose), so for the two to walk out on the activity and ditch their partners in favor of each other. In other is understandable.
* FluffyTheTerrible: Donald expected a much more delicate partner for
the newspaper comics, Winter-Walk based on the name "Teensy Whiffle".
* NoGuyWantsAnAmazon: Averted in practice, but
it's exclusively from this attitude that Daisy counted on when she set up Teensy as Donald's side. In date for the 2012 comic ''"Too Many Donalds"'', it's mutual.
* PairTheSpares: In the newspaper comics, Donna had found
Duckburg Lothario's Annual Winter-Walk. She herself couldn't go because she was sick and she didn't want Donald to go with anyone who could qualify as a new romantic partner in a {{dogface}} named Manuel Gonzales. In the 2012 comic ''"Too Many Donalds"'', she instead forms a couple rival, like Gloria De Lovely.
* OffIntoTheDistanceEnding: Her part of ''"Duos and Don'ts"'' ends
with Whitewater Duck, a cousin of Donald as rarely written about as Donna is.
* SpicyLatina: It's what you get when you put Donald's HairTriggerTemper on a Mexican angle
her, Woimly, and give it to a female character.her anvils driving off out of Duckburg.




[[folder: Cintia Paiva]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_cintia_paiva.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Entre A Cruz E A Espada"'', 1982]]

A close friend of Dugan Duck, who lives next door, much to her parents' annoyance.
----
* AlternateCompanyEquivalent: So here's a well-to-do pig girl living next door to a duck boy who's been picked from the wilderness, all tropes like messy hair, high-energy, and friend included, to live with an uncle figure and whom she has a semi-romantic bond with. Sounds quite a bit like [[Characters/DuckTales1987 Julie Blurf]] from ''[=DuckTales=]''.
* GirlishPigtails: And she never wears it differently.
* GirlNextDoor: Overlaps with UptownGirl. She's from an upper class family and her parents aren't all that fond of Dugan and Fethry, who are decidedly less familiar with etiquette and money.
* HairContrastDuo: Cintia fulfills HairOfGoldHeartOfGold, while her mother, the parent most opposed to her contact with Dugan, has DarkIsEvil going on hair-wise.
* OutOfFocus: Hasn't appeared in a single story since the 90s when Brazil stopped producing Dugan-centered stories.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Cecilia "Cissy" Swann]]
[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_cissy_swann.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Lazy Luck"'', 2006]]

A wealthy woman who is romantically involved with Gus Goose.
----
* IdleRich: Cissy's got no job because her parents are rich and spends her day doing whatever she wants.
* KindheartedSimpleton: Cissy's a sweet girl, alright, but not very bright and sometimes unintentionally self-centered in her actions. In ''"Roughing It"'', Grandma's thoughts on Cissy describe her as "as rich as Scrooge and [[StealthInsult as smart as Gus]]".
* MotorMouth: Quite a talker when she gets going. In ''"The Fashionable Farmer"'', Grandma Duck leaves for a famers' convention just as Cissy arrives to visit Gus, so Grandma quickly drives on to avoid being held up by a conversation.
* SingleWomanSeeksGoodMan: With a hint of WhatDoesSheSeeInHim on account of Cissy's family fortune. She likes Gus for his uncomplicated farmer outlook on life, his work ethic (which she overestimates somewhat due to Gus showing off a little when she's around), his appetite, and she's also the only one who likes to hear him sing.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Hjalmar]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_hjalmar.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Grandma Duck"'', 1952]]

A hunter in the North Woods who is in a relationship with Greta Goose.
----
* AlliterativeName: '''H'''jalmar the '''H'''unter. Not truly a name, but the same prinicple.
* BadassAdorable: Greta thinks he's cute, but he doesn't go around being called "the hunter" for nothing.
* DreadfulMusician: He only knows hunting songs and he can't even perform them in an aurally pleasant manner.
* HunterTrapper: The BoisterousBruiser type. He doesn't wear pelts or other trophies or brags about his kills, but he is highly enthusiastic about his job and likes to share the experience.
* NoGuyWantsAnAmazon: He liked Greta as an acquaintance, but didn't view her as romantic material at first because she wasn't girl-like. His interest was piqued after Grandma gave her a makeover, but didn't know what to do with her over the top DamselInDistress performance. In the end, he began dating her because of her moose-attracting singing voice.
[[/folder]]

! Love interests' family
[[folder: Dickie Duck]]
[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dickie-duck_3921.jpg]]
-> Debut: ''The Arrival of Dickie Duck'' (1966)

Glittering Goldie's granddaughter, who now attends college in Duckburg -- that is, when she's not roaming around the town and getting into various mishaps.
----
* AlliterativeName: '''D'''ickie '''D'''uck.
* BreakoutCharacter: While a minor character in many countries and virtually unknown in the USA, she was rather popular in Brazil during TheEighties, where she starred in her own stories - which featured mainly in José Carioca's comics - together with her own group of friends (including the Aracuan Bird from ''WesternAnimation/TheThreeCaballeros''). In those stories, she's a budding musician instead of a cub journalist.
* CaliforniaUniversity: In her introductory comic, Dickie had already graduated (high school or college, unknown!) In more recent comics, she's attending college in Duckburg, at Calisota University which is conveniently within biking distance of Scrooge's mansion.
* ChasteHero: She doesn't seem particularly interested in romance either (though other characters are often interested in her).
* CoolBigSis: While not their ''actual'' sister, she'll occasionally play this role to April, May and June. In a ''few'' stories she'll have a similar vibe to Huey, Dewey and Louie, but more often with them she's just OneOfTheBoys.
* DependingOnTheArtist: Does she have white human-like feet (as seen in the picture above) or regular orange duck feet? The former was more common in earlier stories featuring her, but in more recent stories the latter version is more common. Though in her very first appearance she had duck feet for the [[https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-FDV9bPYoV6I/WKhL4OoDVaI/AAAAAAAAHpQ/KaHhS1rcGHUUXgwetQi6EFk5lBK66awMgCEw/s1600/di16.tiff one panel she went barefoot]].
* DubNameChange: In the Brazilian comics, she's named Pata Lee.
* FullyDressedCartoonAnimal: One of few Duck characters that is full dressed.
* GenkiGirl: Usually. When teamed up with Huey, Dewey and Louie she is usually the [[SavvyGuyEnergeticGirl Energetic Girl to their combined Savvy Guy]].
* HonoraryUncle: In Italian comics, she calls Scrooge "nonno" ("grandfather"). [[LostInTranslation In Italy it's the equivalent of "old man" and can be both affectionate and derogative]], but it's also sometimes taken as a hint that Dickie is ''really'' Scrooge's grand-daughter, a daughter of the baby Scrooge and Goldie may have had, since it is hard for Don Rosa fans to imagine Goldie having a relationship with anyone else than Scrooge.
** According to Dickie's origin story, Goldie could no longer take care of her granddaughter and convinced Scrooge to take care of the teenage girl. It set Scrooge up as her legal guardian, though the two do not interact that often.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: Very good friends with Brigitta.
* IntrepidReporter: In some stories she is a junior reporter for the newspaper ''The Jiminy Cricket.''
* PluckyGirl: Perhaps one reason why the normally girl-hating Huey, Dewey and Louie don't mind hanging out with her and are even fine with her taking the lead -- she is a spirited teen and OneOfTheBoys.
* RoadTripPlot: Ducks On The Road is an excellent comic about Dickie, Gyro, and Daisy - in the year 1975 - going on a trip from Virginia to California.
* ShoutOut: In the Brazilian comics, she got a DubNameChange as Pata Lee, after the Brazilian female singer/songwriter Rita Lee, mostly because she's a musician in Zé Carioca's comics and her hairstyle is similar to Rita's (although the real-life singer was redhead at the time[[note]]She's grey-haired nowadays[[/note]] instead of blonde).
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: As well as the one who wears ''pants.'' Justified in that she has a more humanoid body than most of the other Ducks.
* {{Tomboy}}: While depicted as a typical teenage girl, Dickie is much more interested in her job as a reporter, various sports, and music than romance. Her clothes would not look out of place in a typical boy. Her main feminine trait is her long, blonde hair.
* TwoGirlsAndAGuy: Dickie, Gyro, and Daisy in Ducks On The Road. They're her two favorite people and they're spending the summer together having wacky adventures!
* YouDontLookLikeYou: In the early 2000 years, the Italian ''Disney Parade'' collection of character statues features a Dickie Duck [[http://www.toremmodellismo.it/images/SERIE%20PERS.TOPO/PERSONAGGI%203D/151_5120.JPG barely taller than Huey, Dewey and Louie]]. Romano Scarpa, the character's original creator, was pissed off since she is supposed to be even taller than Donald.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Teensy Whiffle]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_duck_teensy_whiffle.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Duos And Don'ts"'', 2001]]

Daisy's cousin and the girlfriend of Woimly Filcher.
----
* BadassAdorable: She's cute and in touch with her femininity, but she's also a traveling anvil salesman.
* {{Elopement}}: Not literally, but Teensy and Woimly fell in love during the Duckburg Lothario's Annual Winter-Walk while they each had another as partner. Donald and Gloria had treated them badly during the walk (Donald not on purpose), so for the two to walk out on the activity and ditch their partners in favor of each other is understandable.
* FluffyTheTerrible: Donald expected a much more delicate partner for the Winter-Walk based on the name "Teensy Whiffle".
* NoGuyWantsAnAmazon: Averted in practice, but it's this attitude that Daisy counted on when she set up Teensy as Donald's date for the Duckburg Lothario's Annual Winter-Walk. She herself couldn't go because she was sick and she didn't want Donald to go with anyone who could qualify as a romantic rival, like Gloria De Lovely.
* OffIntoTheDistanceEnding: Her part of ''"Duos and Don'ts"'' ends with her, Woimly, and her anvils driving off out of Duckburg.
[[/folder]]
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* HoardingTheProfits: In stories where Scrooge McDuck is hit with AdaptationalJerkass and AdaptationalVillainy treatment, he often steals riches that his nephews hardly earned.
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** For all his smug, jerkass behaviour, Gladstone will drop everything to help anyone, not just Donald, who is in genuine danger. Finding out that his good luck has led to a backup of bad luck for Duckburg itself, he takes the time to work out a schedule so that he can leave and come back in order to bleed off the excess relatively safely, so that the city doesn't get obliterated when he dies or is away for too long.
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Trope was cut/disambiguated due to cleanup


* CoolGuns: Owns a double-barreled shotgun (most famously used in "Donald and Reginella's Wedding" to [[OneManArmy crush Bingo's army]]) and a Colt 1911 (seen in the early Paperinik stories).



* CoolGuns: Owns more than a few: two Colt Single Action Army (from his cowboy days), a few blunderbusses (usually loaded with salt shells), and at least one double-barreled shotgun (rarely seen nowadays. And this one was usually loaded with buckshot). Also, a few ''cannons'' of various origins and models (mostly carronades, but also a residuate from the Boer War and an unspecified Italian 149mm gun).
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* BadassBoast: Repeated with variants across Carl Barks's comics: ''"I'm Scrooge [=McDuck=], and if you don't [X], I'll buy this [Y] and fire you!"''
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* BadBoss: Only paid Scrooge and Ratchet ''30 cents a day'' when they signed on for him. Adjusted for inflation, that's about 8$.


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* ItWillNeverCatchOn: Has an idea for a new kind of dime novel where all the dialogue is printed in "little bubbles"; i.e comic books. Everyone he tries pitching it to think he's completely nuts, even Scrooge.

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* AmbiguouslyRelated: Despite being only Donald's fiancee, she shares a last name with him and is generally considered a fixed part in the family even when she and Donald (temporally) broke up. Furthermore, she is often seen having familiar ties to Grandma Duck and Scrooge (mostly in Dutch comics) independently from her involvement with Donald. Some figure her a distant cousin of Donald's.



* AmbiguouslyRelated: Despite being only Donald's fiancee, she shares a last name with him and is generally considered a fixed part in the family even when she and Donald (temporally) broke up. Furthermore, she is often seen having familiar ties to Grandma Duck and Scrooge (mostly in Dutch comics) independently from her involvement with Donald. Some figure her a distant cousin of Donald's.



* AbsentMindedProfessor: As smart as Ludwig is, he's a bit airheaded if not senile, easily losing his train of thought.



* AbsentMindedProfessor: As smart as Ludwig is, he's a bit airheaded if not senile, easily losing his train of thought.


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* WorldsSmartestMan: He is an universally acclaimed expert in nearly any theoretical science field imaginable and has diploms to proof that. Every than and when a young scientist tries to best him and fails.

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[[AC:First Appearance: '''The Great Steamboat Race, 1955 (Mentioned)''', '''Master Of the Mississippi, 1992 (In Person''']]

to:

[[AC:First Appearance: '''The Great Steamboat Race, 1955 (Mentioned)''', '''Master Of the Mississippi, 1992 (In Person''']]Person''')]]


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* EvilFormerFriend: His rival Porker Hogg used to be his partner, until they had a massive falling out over an old plantation they bought after the Civil War. By the time Scrooge comes to America, the two despise each other.
* FakeUltimateHero: Despite how much he played up himself in his writing, the few times he's called on for heroism in real life, he tends to fall flat.


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* MartyStu: InUniverse-example- when Angus wrote about his adventures, he changed them to show himself as TheAce who took on entire armies of Beagle Boys by himself, while Scrooge was relegated to the ButtMonkey comic relief.

Added: 1960

Changed: 4280

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[[folder: Jake [=McDuck=]]]
[[AC:First Appearance: '''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown, 1952 (Photograph)''', '''Last Of The Clan [=McDuck=], 1992 (In Person)''']]

Fergus' brother and Scrooge's uncle, Jake originally appeared as a photograph in ''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown'' by Creator/CarlBarks, which Donald used to disguise himself in an attempt to scam Scrooge for charity. Creator/DonRosa would introduce Jake himself in the first chapter of ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''.

to:

[[folder: Jake Angus "Pothole" [=McDuck=]]]
[[AC:First Appearance: '''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown, 1952 (Photograph)''', '''Last '''The Great Steamboat Race, 1955 (Mentioned)''', '''Master Of The Clan [=McDuck=], the Mississippi, 1992 (In Person)''']]

Fergus' brother and
Person''']]
Scrooge's uncle, Jake originally appeared as a photograph in ''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown'' by Creator/CarlBarks, which Donald used to disguise himself in an attempt to scam Scrooge for charity. Creator/DonRosa would introduce Jake himself and the older brother of Fergus, Angus left Scotland sometime in the first chapter of ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''.1840's, hoping to find a better life in the United States, eventually finding work on the Mississippi river boats, where he earned the nickname "Pothole". After retiring, Angus found some success in writing dime novels and appearing in Wild West stage shows.



* ImpoverishedPatrician: A member of the once-wealthy [=McDuck=] clan, Jake eeked out a living working on the Glasgow docks.
* SatelliteCharacter: His appearances can be summed up with "he existed" - he does virtually nothing of importance, and only appears alongside his brother so Fergus has someone to talk to. He doesn't even help fight the Whiskervilles during the events of ''The New Laird of Castle [=McDuck=]'' as he's busy taking Matilda and Hortense back to Glasgow.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Disappears with no explanation between ''The Dream-Time Of the Duck Never-Never'' and ''The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs'', and is never mentioned again, though considering how old Fergus is by this point, Jake has presumably passed on from old age.

to:


* ImpoverishedPatrician: A member of the once-wealthy [=McDuck=] clan, Jake eeked out a living working IShouldWriteABookAboutThis: After retiring in 1882, Angus moved on to writing... let's just say "embellished" stories about his adventures on the Glasgow docks.
Mississippi for dime novels.
* SatelliteCharacter: His appearances can be summed up with "he existed" - he does virtually nothing of importance, and OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: He's only appears alongside his brother so Fergus has someone refered to talk to. He doesn't even help fight the Whiskervilles during the events of as "Pothole" in ''The New Laird of Castle [=McDuck=]'' as he's busy taking Matilda and Hortense back Great Steamboat Race''. Creator/DonRosa would be the one to Glasgow.
give him a proper name.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Disappears SoleSurvivor: He was a cabin boy on the ''Drenann White'', a riverboat that sank with no explanation between ''The Dream-Time Of all hands in 1850, leaving Angus as the Duck Never-Never'' only survivor, and ''The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs'', the only person with the knowledge of where the remains of the ship, and the gold shipment onboard, is never mentioned again, though considering how old Fergus is by this point, Jake has presumably passed on located.
* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: "Catfish" [=McDuck=]
from old age.
''WesternAnimation/Ducktales1987''.



[[folder: Gideon [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gideon_mcduck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Shellfish Motives"'', 1956]]

Scrooge's brother and the editor-in-chief of the County Conscience, the most credible newspaper in Duckburg, and a business rival to his older brother Scrooge and his newspaper, The Duckburg Chronicle. He is confirmed to be the son of Fergus and Downy, and the brother of Matilda and Hortense, as in the 2017 comic "Zio Paperone e Il Segreto di Cuoridpietra"

to:

[[folder: Gideon Jake [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gideon_mcduck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Shellfish Motives"'', 1956]]

Appearance: '''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown, 1952 (Photograph)''', '''Last Of The Clan [=McDuck=], 1992 (In Person)''']]

Fergus' younger brother and
Scrooge's brother and the editor-in-chief of the County Conscience, the most credible newspaper uncle, Jake originally appeared as a photograph in Duckburg, and a business rival ''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown'' by Creator/CarlBarks, which Donald used to his older brother disguise himself in an attempt to scam Scrooge and his newspaper, The Duckburg Chronicle. He is confirmed to be the son of Fergus and Downy, and the brother of Matilda and Hortense, as for charity. Creator/DonRosa would introduce Jake himself in the 2017 comic "Zio Paperone e Il Segreto di Cuoridpietra"first chapter of ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''.



* DependingOnTheArtist: Exactly how much he resembles his more famous brother varies depending on who's drawing him. Romano Scarpa's original design, shown here, doesn't look too much like Scrooge, but [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/disney/images/2/29/Gideon_McDuck.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/270?cb=20131212221548 in other appearances he looks exactly like Scrooge, just with wilder hair and a different outfit.]]
* EnragedByIdiocy: Used in a few 1990s stories focusing on Gideon. He is pissed off that the reading public in Duckburg is more interested in celebrity gossip than actual news, and that a singer dying his hair is considered more newsworthy than political events.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: He places his morals about the importance of Information before anything else. And even though Scrooge himself never does anything ''dishonest'', Gideon is so much about his morals and so much not about the money he could make with the newspaper, that he manages to unnerve Scrooge on unseen levels.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: With Dickie Duck in some modern stories. She works as a reporter for "The Jiminy Cricket" and the two get along well. (Given that Dickie is Scrooge's surrogate granddaughter, he may be treating her as family.)
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: In some modern appearances he, like Dickie, also wears pants.
* RememberTheNewGuy: His first appearance treats him as a well-established member of the Duck cast. The fact that he is Scrooge's brother is just thrown away as though it was nothing ''special''.
%%* UnclePennybags: For Donald.

to:

* DependingOnTheArtist: Exactly how much he resembles his more famous brother varies depending on who's drawing him. Romano Scarpa's original design, shown here, doesn't look too much like Scrooge, but [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/disney/images/2/29/Gideon_McDuck.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/270?cb=20131212221548 in other appearances he looks exactly like Scrooge, just with wilder hair and a different outfit.]]
* EnragedByIdiocy: Used in a few 1990s stories focusing on Gideon. He is pissed off that the reading public in Duckburg is more interested in celebrity gossip than actual news, and that a singer dying his hair is considered more newsworthy than political events.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: He places his morals about the importance of Information before anything else. And even though Scrooge himself never does anything ''dishonest'', Gideon is so much about his morals and so much not about the money he could make with the newspaper, that he manages to unnerve Scrooge on unseen levels.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: With Dickie Duck in some modern stories. She works as a reporter for "The Jiminy Cricket" and the two get along well. (Given that Dickie is Scrooge's surrogate granddaughter, he may be treating her as family.)
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: In some modern appearances he, like Dickie, also wears pants.
* RememberTheNewGuy: His first appearance treats him as a well-established
ImpoverishedPatrician: A member of the Duck cast. The fact that once-wealthy [=McDuck=] clan, Jake eeked out a living working on the Glasgow docks.
* SatelliteCharacter: His appearances can be summed up with "he existed" -
he is Scrooge's does virtually nothing of importance, and only appears alongside his brother so Fergus has someone to talk to. He doesn't even help fight the Whiskervilles during the events of ''The New Laird of Castle [=McDuck=]'' as he's busy taking Matilda and Hortense back to Glasgow.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Disappears with no explanation between ''The Dream-Time Of the Duck Never-Never'' and ''The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs'', and
is just thrown away as never mentioned again, though it was nothing ''special''.
%%* UnclePennybags: For Donald.
considering how old Fergus is by this point, Jake has presumably passed on from old age.



[[folder: Rumpus [=McFowl=]]]
[[quoteright:185:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rumpus_mcfowl.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"It's All Relative"'', 1994]]

Scrooge's lazy, freeloading, overweight half-brother. Created and so far used exclusively by William Van Horn.

to:

[[folder: Rumpus [=McFowl=]]]
[[quoteright:185:https://static.
Gideon [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rumpus_mcfowl.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gideon_mcduck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"It's All Relative"'', 1994]]

''"Shellfish Motives"'', 1956]]

Scrooge's lazy, freeloading, overweight half-brother. Created brother and so far used exclusively by William Van Horn.the editor-in-chief of the County Conscience, the most credible newspaper in Duckburg, and a business rival to his older brother Scrooge and his newspaper, The Duckburg Chronicle. He is confirmed to be the son of Fergus and Downy, and the brother of Matilda and Hortense, as in the 2017 comic "Zio Paperone e Il Segreto di Cuoridpietra"


Added DiffLines:

* DependingOnTheArtist: Exactly how much he resembles his more famous brother varies depending on who's drawing him. Romano Scarpa's original design, shown here, doesn't look too much like Scrooge, but [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/disney/images/2/29/Gideon_McDuck.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/270?cb=20131212221548 in other appearances he looks exactly like Scrooge, just with wilder hair and a different outfit.]]
* EnragedByIdiocy: Used in a few 1990s stories focusing on Gideon. He is pissed off that the reading public in Duckburg is more interested in celebrity gossip than actual news, and that a singer dying his hair is considered more newsworthy than political events.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: He places his morals about the importance of Information before anything else. And even though Scrooge himself never does anything ''dishonest'', Gideon is so much about his morals and so much not about the money he could make with the newspaper, that he manages to unnerve Scrooge on unseen levels.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: With Dickie Duck in some modern stories. She works as a reporter for "The Jiminy Cricket" and the two get along well. (Given that Dickie is Scrooge's surrogate granddaughter, he may be treating her as family.)
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: In some modern appearances he, like Dickie, also wears pants.
* RememberTheNewGuy: His first appearance treats him as a well-established member of the Duck cast. The fact that he is Scrooge's brother is just thrown away as though it was nothing ''special''.
%%* UnclePennybags: For Donald.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Rumpus [=McFowl=]]]
[[quoteright:185:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rumpus_mcfowl.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"It's All Relative"'', 1994]]

Scrooge's lazy, freeloading, overweight half-brother. Created and so far used exclusively by William Van Horn.
----

Added: 1866

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[[folder: Gideon [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gideon_mcduck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Shellfish Motives"'', 1956]]

Scrooge's brother and the editor-in-chief of the County Conscience, the most credible newspaper in Duckburg, and a business rival to his older brother Scrooge and his newspaper, The Duckburg Chronicle. He is confirmed to be the son of Fergus and Downy, and the brother of Matilda and Hortense, as in the 2017 comic "Zio Paperone e Il Segreto di Cuoridpietra"

to:

[[folder: Gideon Jake [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gideon_mcduck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"Shellfish Motives"'', 1956]]

Appearance: '''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown, 1952 (Photograph)''', '''Last Of The Clan [=McDuck=], 1992 (In Person)''']]

Fergus' brother and
Scrooge's brother and the editor-in-chief of the County Conscience, the most credible newspaper uncle, Jake originally appeared as a photograph in Duckburg, and a business rival ''ComicBook/AChristmasForShacktown'' by Creator/CarlBarks, which Donald used to his older brother disguise himself in an attempt to scam Scrooge and his newspaper, The Duckburg Chronicle. He is confirmed to be the son of Fergus and Downy, and the brother of Matilda and Hortense, as for charity. Creator/DonRosa would introduce Jake himself in the 2017 comic "Zio Paperone e Il Segreto di Cuoridpietra"first chapter of ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''.



* DependingOnTheArtist: Exactly how much he resembles his more famous brother varies depending on who's drawing him. Romano Scarpa's original design, shown here, doesn't look too much like Scrooge, but [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/disney/images/2/29/Gideon_McDuck.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/270?cb=20131212221548 in other appearances he looks exactly like Scrooge, just with wilder hair and a different outfit.]]
* EnragedByIdiocy: Used in a few 1990s stories focusing on Gideon. He is pissed off that the reading public in Duckburg is more interested in celebrity gossip than actual news, and that a singer dying his hair is considered more newsworthy than political events.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: He places his morals about the importance of Information before anything else. And even though Scrooge himself never does anything ''dishonest'', Gideon is so much about his morals and so much not about the money he could make with the newspaper, that he manages to unnerve Scrooge on unseen levels.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: With Dickie Duck in some modern stories. She works as a reporter for "The Jiminy Cricket" and the two get along well. (Given that Dickie is Scrooge's surrogate granddaughter, he may be treating her as family.)
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: In some modern appearances he, like Dickie, also wears pants.
* RememberTheNewGuy: His first appearance treats him as a well-established member of the Duck cast. The fact that he is Scrooge's brother is just thrown away as though it was nothing ''special''.
%%* UnclePennybags: For Donald.

to:

* DependingOnTheArtist: Exactly how much he resembles his more famous brother varies depending on who's drawing him. Romano Scarpa's original design, shown here, doesn't look too much like Scrooge, but [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/disney/images/2/29/Gideon_McDuck.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/270?cb=20131212221548 in other appearances he looks exactly like Scrooge, just with wilder hair and a different outfit.]]
* EnragedByIdiocy: Used in a few 1990s stories focusing on Gideon. He is pissed off that the reading public in Duckburg is more interested in celebrity gossip than actual news, and that a singer dying his hair is considered more newsworthy than political events.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: He places his morals about the importance of Information before anything else. And even though Scrooge himself never does anything ''dishonest'', Gideon is so much about his morals and so much not about the money he could make with the newspaper, that he manages to unnerve Scrooge on unseen levels.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: With Dickie Duck in some modern stories. She works as a reporter for "The Jiminy Cricket" and the two get along well. (Given that Dickie is Scrooge's surrogate granddaughter, he may be treating her as family.)
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: In some modern appearances he, like Dickie, also wears pants.
* RememberTheNewGuy: His first appearance treats him as a well-established
ImpoverishedPatrician: A member of the Duck cast. The fact that once-wealthy [=McDuck=] clan, Jake eeked out a living working on the Glasgow docks.
* SatelliteCharacter: His appearances can be summed up with "he existed" -
he is Scrooge's does virtually nothing of importance, and only appears alongside his brother so Fergus has someone to talk to. He doesn't even help fight the Whiskervilles during the events of ''The New Laird of Castle [=McDuck=]'' as he's busy taking Matilda and Hortense back to Glasgow.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Disappears with no explanation between ''The Dream-Time Of the Duck Never-Never'' and ''The Billionaire Of Dismal Downs'', and
is just thrown away as never mentioned again, though it was nothing ''special''.
%%* UnclePennybags: For Donald.
considering how old Fergus is by this point, Jake has presumably passed on from old age.



[[folder: Rumpus [=McFowl=]]]
[[quoteright:185:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rumpus_mcfowl.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"It's All Relative"'', 1994]]

Scrooge's lazy, freeloading, overweight half-brother. Created and so far used exclusively by William Van Horn.

to:

[[folder: Rumpus [=McFowl=]]]
[[quoteright:185:https://static.
Gideon [=McDuck=]]]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rumpus_mcfowl.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gideon_mcduck.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"It's All Relative"'', 1994]]

''"Shellfish Motives"'', 1956]]

Scrooge's lazy, freeloading, overweight half-brother. Created brother and so far used exclusively by William Van Horn.the editor-in-chief of the County Conscience, the most credible newspaper in Duckburg, and a business rival to his older brother Scrooge and his newspaper, The Duckburg Chronicle. He is confirmed to be the son of Fergus and Downy, and the brother of Matilda and Hortense, as in the 2017 comic "Zio Paperone e Il Segreto di Cuoridpietra"


Added DiffLines:

* DependingOnTheArtist: Exactly how much he resembles his more famous brother varies depending on who's drawing him. Romano Scarpa's original design, shown here, doesn't look too much like Scrooge, but [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/disney/images/2/29/Gideon_McDuck.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/270?cb=20131212221548 in other appearances he looks exactly like Scrooge, just with wilder hair and a different outfit.]]
* EnragedByIdiocy: Used in a few 1990s stories focusing on Gideon. He is pissed off that the reading public in Duckburg is more interested in celebrity gossip than actual news, and that a singer dying his hair is considered more newsworthy than political events.
* HonestCorporateExecutive: He places his morals about the importance of Information before anything else. And even though Scrooge himself never does anything ''dishonest'', Gideon is so much about his morals and so much not about the money he could make with the newspaper, that he manages to unnerve Scrooge on unseen levels.
* IntergenerationalFriendship: With Dickie Duck in some modern stories. She works as a reporter for "The Jiminy Cricket" and the two get along well. (Given that Dickie is Scrooge's surrogate granddaughter, he may be treating her as family.)
* TheOneWhoWearsShoes: In some modern appearances he, like Dickie, also wears pants.
* RememberTheNewGuy: His first appearance treats him as a well-established member of the Duck cast. The fact that he is Scrooge's brother is just thrown away as though it was nothing ''special''.
%%* UnclePennybags: For Donald.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Rumpus [=McFowl=]]]
[[quoteright:185:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rumpus_mcfowl.png]]
[[AC:First appearance: ''"It's All Relative"'', 1994]]

Scrooge's lazy, freeloading, overweight half-brother. Created and so far used exclusively by William Van Horn.
----

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Added example(s)


* DespairEventHorizon: In the alternate universe that Paperinik visits in ''History of a Disappearance'', Scrooge's Number One dime is accidentally destroyed by a criminal, putting Scrooge in such a sorry state that he cedes almost all of his wealth and corporate holdings to that dimension's ''Donald''. He then becomes the new guardian of Huey, Dewey, and Louie after his nephew ditches them to enjoy his newfound money and power.

to:

* DespairEventHorizon: DespairEventHorizon:
**
In the alternate universe that Paperinik visits in ''History of a Disappearance'', Scrooge's Number One dime is accidentally destroyed by a criminal, putting Scrooge in such a sorry state that he cedes almost all of his wealth and corporate holdings to that dimension's ''Donald''. He then becomes the new guardian of Huey, Dewey, and Louie after his nephew ditches them to enjoy his newfound money and power.power.
** Also happens in ''ComicBook/TheDuckWhoNeverWas''; in an alternate universe where Donald was never born, Gus Goose became Scrooge's assistant, and was soon tricked into handing over his NumberOneDime by Magica De Spell (she disguised herself as a street vendor selling hamburgers for a dime a piece). With the loss of his dime, Scrooge's spirit was broken, and easily crushed by Flintheart Glomgold, who swindled him out of the rest of his fortune.



* SpecsOfAwesome: The pince-nez glasses are certainly necessary given how old he is, and thus help him be such an intrepid duck.

to:

* SpecsOfAwesome: The pince-nez glasses are certainly necessary given how old he is, and thus help him be such an intrepid duck. According to Creator/DonRosa, Scrooge originally had perfect vision, but his early years of cattle drives and prospecting in the bright, open plains of Montana led to him needing reading glasses by age 18. His six years in the frozen tundra of Klondike finished the job, requiring him to wear glasses permanently at 35.



* TakingTheBullet: Almost, in ''"A Letter from Home"''. Fortunately, the pistol blew up on the gunman due to having been turned to gold by the Philosopher's Stone.
* ThriftyScot: In the Creator/DonRosa canon, this is a family trait of the [=McDuck=] Clan, and it's one they're very proud of -- the ghosts of Scrooge's ancestors ensure he survives a would-have-been fatal injury when they discover his destiny is to become the most tightfisted tightward the world will ever see. In fact, one of Scrooge's ancestors lost a battle (and his life) because he was too cheap to buy arrows for his archers. Another lost a major battle because his army wouldn't fight for the measly wages he was paying them. When Angus Whiskerville insults the clan, referring to them as "liars, cheaters and tightwads", Scrooge and Fergus are furious... at the first two insults, not the third.

to:

* TakingTheBullet: Almost, for his sister Matilda in ''"A Letter from Home"''. Fortunately, the pistol blew up on the gunman due to having been turned to gold by the Philosopher's Stone.
* ThriftyScot: In the Creator/DonRosa canon, this is a family trait of the [=McDuck=] Clan, and it's one they're very proud of -- the ghosts of Scrooge's ancestors ensure he survives a would-have-been fatal injury when they discover his destiny is to become the most tightfisted tightward the world will ever see. In fact, one of Scrooge's ancestors lost a battle (and his life) because he was too cheap to buy arrows for his archers. Another lost a major battle because his army wouldn't fight for the measly wages he was paying them. When Angus Whiskerville insults the clan, referring to them as "liars, cheaters cowards and tightwads", Scrooge and Fergus are furious... at the first two insults, not the third.



* TyrannicalTownTycoon: A more benevolent example than most, but the whole of Duckburg built is around his financial empire and he holds lease with the majority of the city.

to:

* TyrannicalTownTycoon: A more benevolent example than most, but the whole of Duckburg built is around his financial empire and he holds lease with the majority of the city. This trope is even invoked by Donald in ''ComicBook/ALittleSomethingSpecial'', when he points out to the Mayor that Scrooge has never tried to tell anyone how to run the town, even though Scrooge could basically rule it like a king if he wanted to.

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* ReallyFondOfSleeping: Donald ''really'' likes to catch some Z's, much to Scrooge's annoyance, as he has a tendency to try and nap during work hours. In fact, Donald is so devoted to sleep that he's allowed into the Halls of The Dead prematurely during the events of Creator/DonRosa's ''The Quest For Kalevala'' because Tuoni, the Finnish Grim Reaper, considers him worthy enough to get a preview of the eventual "eternal sleep".



* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Donald really enjoys drinking soda, and Scrooge is constantly berating him for wasting his money on them. In one story, Donald is given one thousand dollars by his uncle to invest, and by the end of the challenge, he manages to use the money to obtain a company which he sold for one thousand dollars plus a crate of sodas.

to:

* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Donald really enjoys drinking soda, and Scrooge is constantly berating him for wasting his money on them. In one story, ''ComicBook/NobodysBusiness'', Donald is given one thousand dollars by his uncle to invest, and by the end of the challenge, he manages to use the money to obtain makes a company business deal for a new invention which he sold for one thousand dollars plus a crate of sodas.sodas. To be fair, [[KnowWhenToFoldEm he'd had extremely bad luck]] with any investment ideas so far, and he was getting thirsty anyway.
** While soda is the most prominent, Donald really enjoys fast food in general, which was just becoming a thing when he gained popularity in the mid-20th century.
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None


* InTheBlood: Donald inherited his awful temper from both mother and father.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: No matter how fowl-tempered, self-centered or otherwise annoying he may act, Donald isn't a bad person at heart. He may cheat or misbehave in small ways, but when things get ''serious'' he's usually well-intentioned and will go to great lengths to do the right thing or help people in need. Their relationship may be stormy at times but he [[ParentalSubstitute genuinely does care for his nephews and will sacrifice just about anything for their sake.]] In "A Christmas for Shacktown", Donald goes out of his way to throw a Christmas party for the poor kids of Shacktown, of course it was the triplets' idea but once Donald committed to it, he was entirely behind it.

to:

* InTheBlood: Donald inherited his awful temper from both his mother and father.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: No matter how fowl-tempered, self-centered self-centered, or otherwise annoying he may act, Donald isn't a bad person at heart. He may cheat or misbehave in small ways, but when things get ''serious'' he's usually well-intentioned and will go to great lengths to do the right thing or help people in need. Their relationship may be stormy at times but he [[ParentalSubstitute genuinely does care for his nephews and will sacrifice just about anything for their sake.]] In "A Christmas for Shacktown", Donald goes out of his way to throw a Christmas party for the poor kids of Shacktown, of course it was the triplets' idea but once Donald committed to it, he was entirely behind it.



* MeaningfulName: A minor case. Obviously his surname reflects his species, but his given name, Donald, is Gaelic in origin, and he is half Scottish on his mother's side.

to:

* MeaningfulName: A minor case. Obviously his surname reflects his species, but his given name, Donald, is Gaelic in origin, and he is half Scottish half-Scottish on his mother's side.



** Used as a plot point in several stories, where (for one reason or another), Donald impersonates Scrooge, by simply wearing Scrooge's clothes, spectacles, and false sideburns. Depending on the story, Donald either does a spectacular job, or forgets some of Scrooge's mannerisms. People who don't know Scrooge well are still fooled, the others can tell the difference. One story has Daisy having doubts whether the "Scrooge" who just talked to her was the genuine article. She throws a coin to the ground and waits for Scrooge's trained ear to react to the sound. When the male duck does not react at all, she unmasks him as Donald.

to:

** Used as a plot point in several stories, where (for one reason or another), Donald impersonates Scrooge, by simply wearing Scrooge's clothes, spectacles, and false sideburns. Depending on the story, Donald either does a spectacular job, job or forgets some of Scrooge's mannerisms. People who don't know Scrooge well are still fooled, the others can tell the difference. One story has Daisy having doubts whether the "Scrooge" who just talked to her was the genuine article. She throws a coin to the ground and waits for Scrooge's trained ear to react to the sound. When the male duck does not react at all, she unmasks him as Donald.



* SupremeChef: DependingOnTheWriter to a ''very'' high degree, and some comics even depict him as a LethalChef, but in most stories where it comes up he's actually a good cook -- not quite in Grandma Duck's class, and often limited by the fact that he can't afford to buy the proper ingredients, but a talented enough chef that family members will come running when he's doing the cooking.

to:

* SupremeChef: DependingOnTheWriter to a ''very'' high degree, and some comics even depict him as a LethalChef, but in most stories where it comes up up, he's actually a good cook -- not quite in Grandma Duck's class, and often limited by the fact that he can't afford to buy the proper ingredients, but a talented enough chef that family members will come running when he's doing the cooking.



* AdultsAreUseless: Mostly {{Downplayed|Trope}} as Donald and Scrooge are very capable and competent in their own rights most of the time, nonetheless on many occasions it's on Huey, Dewey and Louie to save the day or Scrooge's fortune. In Creator/CarlBarks' ''ComicBook/TheOldCastlesSecret'' they even mention that Donald and Scrooge wouldn't be a great help at the upcoming treasure hunt.

to:

* AdultsAreUseless: Mostly {{Downplayed|Trope}} as Donald and Scrooge are very capable and competent in their own rights most of the time, nonetheless on many occasions it's on Huey, Dewey Dewey, and Louie to save the day or Scrooge's fortune. In Creator/CarlBarks' ''ComicBook/TheOldCastlesSecret'' Creator/CarlBarks's ''ComicBook/TheOldCastlesSecret'', they even mention that Donald and Scrooge wouldn't be a great help at the upcoming treasure hunt.



* CharacterizationMarchesOn: They started out as absolute terrors who delighted in tormenting their uncle, but slowly became more sympathetic and mature, until they arguably acted more "grown-up" than Donald in most situations. This change was actually deliberately invoked by Creator/CarlBarks, who reasoned that the audience would tire of the boys if they never became anything other than mischief-makers.

to:

* CharacterizationMarchesOn: They started out as absolute terrors who delighted in tormenting their uncle, but slowly became more sympathetic and mature, mature until they arguably acted more "grown-up" than Donald in most situations. This change was actually deliberately invoked by Creator/CarlBarks, who reasoned that the audience would tire of the boys if they never became anything other than mischief-makers.



* ChromaticArrangement: Their colors have varied wildly, [[DependingOnTheArtist Depending on the Colorist]], but in the late 1980s it stabilized as Huey/red, Dewey/blue and Louie/green.
** Another common combination in the comics is, or at least was, Huey/blue, Dewey/green and Louie/Red. The change of colors was usually ignored, but sometimes [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] and explained as the boys sometimes borrowing each others' clothes. Also, possibly thanks to the fact that in their animation debut their colors were red/orange/yellow, Dewey is sometimes depicted with yellow clothes in certain European comics.
* DeadpanSnarker: In every incarnation they are this in response to Donald or anything that they view as kind of lame.
* DependingOnTheWriter: In some of their more modern animated appeareances, like in ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'' or ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse2013'', they can alternate between their original mischievous rascal persona (albeit toned down) or their more sympathetic and mature personality from the comics.

to:

* ChromaticArrangement: Their colors have varied wildly, [[DependingOnTheArtist Depending on the Colorist]], but in the late 1980s it stabilized as Huey/red, Dewey/blue Dewey/blue, and Louie/green.
** Another common combination in the comics is, or at least was, Huey/blue, Dewey/green Dewey/green, and Louie/Red. The change of colors was usually ignored, but sometimes [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] and explained as the boys sometimes borrowing each others' other's clothes. Also, possibly thanks to the fact that in their animation debut their colors colours were red/orange/yellow, Dewey is sometimes depicted with yellow clothes in certain European comics.
* DeadpanSnarker: In every incarnation incarnation, they are this in response to Donald or anything that they view as kind of lame.
* DependingOnTheWriter: In some of their more modern animated appeareances, appearances, like in ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'' or ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse2013'', they can alternate between their original mischievous rascal persona (albeit toned down) or their more sympathetic and mature personality from the comics.



* DumbassNoMore: While not particullary dumbasses, the trio consists of average, maybe a bit bratty children with few interest in schooling and "normal" hobbies. However, that changed with the introduction of the Junior Woodchucks: Huey, Dewey and Louie are now full-blown boyscouts with great knowledge about almost everything and with an all-knowing Junior Woodchuck Guidebook. Their cleverness often helps Donald and/or Scrooge out of misery.
* {{Expy}}: They actually started out as Expys for Mickey's two nephews, Morty and Ferdie, who until the introduction of Huey, Dewey and Louie actually made several appearances in Donald's comic strip, sans Mickey, in order to torment him with pranks and childish mischief. After a while, it was decided to give Donald his own nephews -- and as a way of one-upping Mickey, Donald got ''three'' bratty, identical nephews instead of just ''two.'' [[ParodyDisplacement Of course, since they only had a couple of animated appearances and starred in far fewer comics, today Morty and Ferdie aren't one-tenth as well-known or popular as Huey, Dewey and Louie are.]]

to:

* DumbassNoMore: While not particullary dumbasses, the trio consists of average, maybe a bit bratty children with few interest in schooling and "normal" hobbies. However, that changed with the introduction of the Junior Woodchucks: Huey, Dewey Dewey, and Louie are now full-blown boyscouts with great knowledge about almost everything and with an all-knowing Junior Woodchuck Guidebook. Their cleverness often helps Donald and/or Scrooge out of misery.
* {{Expy}}: They actually started out as Expys for Mickey's two nephews, Morty and Ferdie, who until the introduction of Huey, Dewey Dewey, and Louie actually made several appearances in Donald's comic strip, sans Mickey, in order to torment him with pranks and childish mischief. After a while, it was decided to give Donald his own nephews -- and as a way of one-upping Mickey, Donald got ''three'' bratty, identical nephews instead of just ''two.'' [[ParodyDisplacement Of course, since they only had a couple of animated appearances and starred in far fewer comics, today Morty and Ferdie aren't one-tenth as well-known or popular as Huey, Dewey and Louie are.]]



* InsultOfEndearment: After their first appearance, Donald Duck would often call them "little devils" due to their mischief making antics. Sometimes however he uses the term affectionately.
* MoralityPet: While he does have his moments towards them, Huey, Dewey, and Louie are consistently portrayed as being the characters Scrooge is nicest too. Even when he's being a huge jerk towards Donald, Scrooge is usually still nice towards the triplets. They are also portrayed as one of the biggest reasons he starts warming up towards family again and getting back his love of adventure in multiple series.
* NotAllowedToGrowUp: Oh, yeah! ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' made an attempt to age them by a few years, but most modern day works featuring them [[CanonDiscontinuity disregard this]].
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Their common names? Nicknames. Their actual names are Hubert, Deuteronomy and Louis.

to:

* InsultOfEndearment: After their first appearance, Donald Duck would often call them "little devils" due to their mischief making mischief-making antics. Sometimes however he uses the term affectionately.
* MoralityPet: While he does have his moments towards them, Huey, Dewey, and Louie are consistently portrayed as being the characters Scrooge is nicest too.to. Even when he's being a huge jerk towards Donald, Scrooge is usually still nice towards the triplets. They are also portrayed as one of the biggest reasons he starts warming up towards family again and getting back his love of adventure in multiple series.
* NotAllowedToGrowUp: Oh, yeah! ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'' made an attempt to age them by a few years, but most modern day modern-day works featuring them [[CanonDiscontinuity disregard this]].
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Their common names? Nicknames. Their actual names are Hubert, Deuteronomy Deuteronomy, and Louis.



* AscendedMeme: Actually, Phooey isn't a character, but an artist's error. Occasionally, stressed-out comic artists would make a mistake and draw a fourth nephew who was suddenly there for one panel and then vanished again. Fans took to calling this fourth nephew "Phooey" (though "Barks," after Creator/CarlBarks, was a popular alternate name for him). In 1999, a story named "Much Ado About Phooey" canonized him by explaining that Huey, Dewey and Louie had once been struck by lightning, and after that the image of a fourth nephew would occasionally materialize next to them only to vanish a few seconds later, and the family were so used to it that they basically didn't pay it any mind.

to:

* AscendedMeme: Actually, Phooey isn't a character, but an artist's error. Occasionally, stressed-out comic artists would make a mistake and draw a fourth nephew who was suddenly there for one panel and then vanished again. Fans took to calling this fourth nephew "Phooey" (though "Barks," after Creator/CarlBarks, was a popular alternate name for him). In 1999, a story named "Much Ado About Phooey" canonized him by explaining that Huey, Dewey Dewey, and Louie had once been struck by lightning, and after that the image of a fourth nephew would occasionally materialize next to them only to vanish a few seconds later, and the family were so used to it that they basically didn't pay it any mind.



* TheAce: Especially under Rosa's pen. World's richest duck, completely self-made, does Franchise/IndianaJones' job for fun, worked about twenty jobs over his life time and was impressively good at all of them, and a good enough scrapper to keep the world's most dangerous crooks on their toes- all while pushing ninety years old.

to:

* TheAce: Especially under Rosa's pen. World's richest duck, completely self-made, does Franchise/IndianaJones' job for fun, worked about twenty jobs over his life time lifetime and was impressively good at all of them, and a good enough scrapper to keep the world's most dangerous crooks on their toes- all while pushing ninety years old.



** For a while in the comics. The strain of doing all the impressive thing's he's done - and repeatedly losing everything he had - made him hard-hearted and mean-spirited, something that alienated him from his once-close family for decades. Adding to that is that since Scrooge ''worked'' for all his money, and he spent so much time doing so, that he has no idea how to act in high-society circles someone as rich as him would be expected to participate in leaving him with no real friends.

to:

** For a while in the comics. The strain of doing all the impressive thing's things he's done - and repeatedly losing everything he had - made him hard-hearted and mean-spirited, something that alienated him from his once-close family for decades. Adding to that is that since Scrooge ''worked'' for all his money, and he spent so much time doing so, that he has no idea how to act in high-society circles someone as rich as him would be expected to participate in leaving him with no real friends.



* ByronicHero: Especially in ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''. He's physically capable, cunning, brave and charismatic, and manages to achieve his success by being "tougher than the thoughies and sharper than the sharpies". Despite this, he feels alienated from the world because almost everyone around him are crooks who are ready to swindle/rob him, or those who hate him out of jealousy.

to:

* ByronicHero: Especially in ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck''. He's physically capable, cunning, brave brave, and charismatic, and he manages to achieve his success by being "tougher than the thoughies toughies and sharper than the sharpies". Despite this, he feels alienated from the world because almost everyone around him are crooks who are ready to swindle/rob him, him or those who hate him out of jealousy.



** More comedic examples involve the backlash Scrooge recieves when his greed starts to cross the line, even when it's not actually dishonest, such as in "His Majesty [=McDuck=], or pulling a dirty trick while competing with Glomgold, especially if Glomgold hasn't done anything himself yet, like in "The Island On the Edge of Time".

to:

** More comedic examples involve the backlash Scrooge recieves receives when his greed starts to cross the line, even when it's not actually dishonest, such as in "His Majesty [=McDuck=], or pulling a dirty trick while competing with Glomgold, especially if Glomgold hasn't done anything himself yet, like in "The Island On the Edge of Time".



** The role of artillery in the Money Bin's defenses: while the Bin ''always'' has four carronades, their importance for the defense against attacks compared to Gyro's more technological defenses, or even different kinds of artillery (that include a residuate from the Boer War and an Italian WWII residuate) varies with the story. The only constant is that the cannons are what he uses when he wants to ''destroy'' something or for longe range (Gyro's gadgets are usually made to immobilize attackers, and are relatively short-ranged).
** His relationship with women and his attachment to his own celibacy differs. A number of stories have elderly Scrooge maintaining a long-distance relationship with his old flame Glittering Goldie [=O'Gilt=], while other depict their relationship as having ended a long time ago. His relationship with his stalker/love-interest Brigitta [=MacBridge=] has variously been depicted as a one-sided attraction, a business rivalry fueled by their emotions, genuine companionship, to a love-hate relationship. A running-gag is that Scrooge turns into an overly jealous boyfriend whenever any other male character shows interest in Brigitta. A number of Italian stories have added a love interest for Scrooge called Molly [=McGold=], a workaholic businesswoman who turned down Scrooge's marriage proposals but is not against dating him. (Only three appearances between 1989 and 1997). The story "Zio Paperone e le grandi conquiste" (Uncle Scrooge and the Great Conquests, December, 1997) has a female reporter investigating Scrooge's love life and discovering that he still has genuinely affectionate relationships with Goldie, Brigitta, Molly, and Magica! The story ends with the reporter falling for Scrooge and chasing after him, while an intimidated Scrooge wonders who she is.

to:

** The role of artillery in the Money Bin's defenses: while the Bin ''always'' has four carronades, their importance for the defense against attacks compared to Gyro's more technological defenses, or even different kinds of artillery (that include a residuate from the Boer War and an Italian WWII residuate) varies with the story. The only constant is that the cannons are what he uses when he wants to ''destroy'' something or for longe longer range (Gyro's gadgets are usually made to immobilize attackers, and are relatively short-ranged).
** His relationship with women and his attachment to his own celibacy differs. A number of stories have elderly Scrooge maintaining a long-distance relationship with his old flame Glittering Goldie [=O'Gilt=], while other depict their relationship as having ended a long time ago. His relationship with his stalker/love-interest stalker/love interest Brigitta [=MacBridge=] has variously been depicted as a one-sided attraction, a business rivalry fueled by their emotions, genuine companionship, to a love-hate relationship. A running-gag running gag is that Scrooge turns into an overly jealous boyfriend whenever any other male character shows interest in Brigitta. A number of Italian stories have added a love interest for Scrooge called Molly [=McGold=], a workaholic businesswoman who turned down Scrooge's marriage proposals but is not against dating him. (Only three appearances between 1989 and 1997). The story "Zio Paperone e le grandi conquiste" (Uncle Scrooge and the Great Conquests, December, 1997) has a female reporter investigating Scrooge's love life and discovering that he still has genuinely affectionate relationships with Goldie, Brigitta, Molly, and Magica! The story ends with the reporter falling for Scrooge and chasing after him, while an intimidated Scrooge wonders who she is.



* HeroAntagonist: Early appearances aside, Scrooge is usually portrayed as good guy - at least in his own stories. In some European stories Scrooge acts still antagonistic towards Donald. Many Donald-stories revolve around Donald either wanting to be let alone and is forced by Scrooge to go along to his adventures or Scrooge trying to trick Donald to pay his debts and his rent and pressing him into jobs and activities Donald clearly doesn't want. That stories are usually told from Donald's perspective, as in his own stories he appears nicer towards Donald and Donald is the one not carrying about his uncle.

to:

* HeroAntagonist: Early appearances aside, Scrooge is usually portrayed as good guy - at least in his own stories. In some European stories stories, Scrooge acts still antagonistic towards Donald. Many Donald-stories Donald stories revolve around Donald either wanting to be let alone and is forced by Scrooge to go along to on his adventures or Scrooge trying to trick Donald to pay his debts and his rent and pressing him into jobs and activities Donald clearly doesn't want. That Those stories are usually told from Donald's perspective, as in his own stories he appears nicer towards Donald and Donald is the one not carrying about his uncle.



* RagsToRiches: At the core of Scrooge's character. He started out as a poor boy in Scotland, with his family not even being able to afford to live on their ancestral lands, but over the course of a lifetime of hard work he managed to become the richest man in the world. And he did it square!
* RetiredBadass: Carl Bark's "Back to the Klondike" revealed his past as an intimidating, fiery youth and is what inspired Don Rosa's ''Life and Times''. Present time he's still a badass, but the fact that he used to be a badass among badasses is something most people wouldn't have guessed at first glance.

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* RagsToRiches: At the core of Scrooge's character. He started out as a poor boy in Scotland, Scotland with his family not even being able to afford to live on their ancestral lands, but over the course of a lifetime of hard work work, he managed to become the richest man in the world. And he did it square!
* RetiredBadass: Carl Bark's Barks's "Back to the Klondike" revealed his past as an intimidating, fiery youth and is what inspired Don Rosa's ''Life and Times''. Present time he's still a badass, but the fact that he used to be a badass among badasses is something most people wouldn't have guessed at first glance.



* ShipperOnDeck: Has been shown supporting Donald's potential relationship with Reginella, even ''funding'' him-with no expectation to get back the money.
* SimpleYetOpulent: Surprisingly enough he keeps around more than a few expensive things, though they aren't really oxtentatious. Most notably is the Money Bin itself: it's just a plain cube defended by a few well-maintained old artillery pieces, but the simple fact he can ''afford'' to keep "three cubic acres" of cash and defend it with guns whose parts and ammo have to be custom made (the most recent mentioned, the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannone_da_149/40_modello_35 Cannone da 149/40 modello 35]], went out of production in 1944) speaks volumes about his wealth.

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* ShipperOnDeck: Has been shown supporting Donald's potential relationship with Reginella, even ''funding'' him-with him with no expectation to get back the money.
* SimpleYetOpulent: Surprisingly enough he keeps around more than a few expensive things, though they aren't really oxtentatious.ostentatious. Most notably is the Money Bin itself: it's just a plain cube defended by a few well-maintained old artillery pieces, but the simple fact he can ''afford'' to keep "three cubic acres" of cash and defend it with guns whose parts and ammo have to be custom made (the most recent mentioned, the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannone_da_149/40_modello_35 Cannone da 149/40 modello 35]], went out of production in 1944) speaks volumes about his wealth.



* TakingTheBullet: Almost, in ''"A Letter from Home"''. Fortunately, the pistol blew up on the gunman due to having been turned to gold by the Philosophers Stone.

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* TakingTheBullet: Almost, in ''"A Letter from Home"''. Fortunately, the pistol blew up on the gunman due to having been turned to gold by the Philosophers Philosopher's Stone.



* TookALevelInCynic: As shown in the original series episode "Once Upon a Dime", Scrooge started his career trusting enough to be scammed more than once. By the start of the series, he's a cynic. One of the points of the story is his friends and family sending him through a a level in idealism; while he remains more guarded than some of the other characters, he learns there are some people he can rely on and opens up to them.

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* TookALevelInCynic: As shown in the original series episode "Once Upon a Dime", Scrooge started his career trusting enough to be scammed more than once. By the start of the series, he's a cynic. One of the points of the story is his friends and family sending him through a a level in idealism; while he remains more guarded than some of the other characters, he learns there are some people he can rely on and opens up to them.



* UnclePennybags: When in a good mood, or when he's investing in a worthy cause or honest entrepreneur (the trick however, is ''convincing'' him). It's expecting him to give you money for the asking that he won't truck with. One storybook where Donald and the Nephews were having a charity sale to save their grandmother's farm showed Scrooge applauding their hard work, and promising to match every dollar they made 2-to-1.

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* UnclePennybags: When in a good mood, or when he's investing in a worthy cause or honest entrepreneur (the trick trick, however, is ''convincing'' him). It's expecting him to give you money for the asking that he won't truck with. One storybook where Donald and the Nephews were having a charity sale to save their grandmother's farm showed Scrooge applauding their hard work, and promising to match every dollar they made 2-to-1.



* AmbiguouslyRelated: Despite being only Donald's fiancee, she shares a last name with him and is generally conisted a fixed part in the family even when she and Donald (temporally) broke up. Furthermore, she is often seen having familiar ties to Grandma Duck and Scrooge (mostly in Dutch comics) independently from her involvement with Donald. Some figure her a distant cousin of Donald's.

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* AmbiguouslyRelated: Despite being only Donald's fiancee, she shares a last name with him and is generally conisted considered a fixed part in the family even when she and Donald (temporally) broke up. Furthermore, she is often seen having familiar ties to Grandma Duck and Scrooge (mostly in Dutch comics) independently from her involvement with Donald. Some figure her a distant cousin of Donald's.



* AdaptationPersonalityChange: Daisy is usually the responsible and down-to-earth foil to Donald, but in ''Mickey Mouse Works'' and ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'', she became a self-centered kook who obliviously makes things difficult for her friends.

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* AdaptationPersonalityChange: Daisy is usually the responsible and down-to-earth foil to Donald, but in ''Mickey Mouse Works'' and ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'', she became becomes a self-centered kook who obliviously makes things difficult for her friends.



* HalfDressedCartoonAnimal: Among the Disney Ducks, Daisy is the one that plays the most with this trope: when half-dressed (like in the picture) her rear feathers resemble bloomers, and sometimes she even wears dresses or pants (while everyone else keep their traditional wardrobe).

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* HalfDressedCartoonAnimal: Among the Disney Ducks, Daisy is the one that plays the most with this trope: when half-dressed (like in the picture) her rear feathers resemble bloomers, and sometimes she even wears dresses or pants (while everyone else keep keeps their traditional wardrobe).



* BornLucky: Literally. The Creator/DonRosa story "The Sign of the Triple Distelfink" attributes his supernatural luck to a magical sign painted for his mother's blessing before he was born. As for the "Lucky" part of things... Gladstone basically gets to cruise through life care-free because his luck provides him absolutely everything he could ever want or need. In the Creator/DonRosa story ''Nobody's Business'', Scrooge actually comes to ''fear'' the idea of giving Gladstone his own company, because he's just figured out that all of the profits Gladstone made with his string of investments came at the cost of losses to Scrooge's own business. That's right; according to Rosa, Gladstone would '''bankrupt Scrooge''' if they were direct business rivals! How fortunate for everybody that Gladstone is such an unambitious LazyBum.
* BrilliantButLazy: Gladstone is so ridiculously lucky he could probably become richer than Scrooge with no effort, but lacks the ambition to do so. Gladstone could even become Scrooge's heir if he weren't so lazy. Scrooge considers him potentially a better heir than Donald in that Gladstone is less likely to squander the money (of course Scrooge has very skewered idea of what entails squandering), but Gladstone's carefree luck-based cruising through life offends the SelfMadeMan to the very core of his principles.

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* BornLucky: Literally. The Creator/DonRosa story "The Sign of the Triple Distelfink" attributes his supernatural luck to a magical sign painted for his mother's blessing before he was born. As for the "Lucky" part of things... Gladstone basically gets to cruise through life care-free carefree because his luck provides him with absolutely everything he could ever want or need. In the Creator/DonRosa story ''Nobody's Business'', Scrooge actually comes to ''fear'' the idea of giving Gladstone his own company, company because he's just figured out that all of the profits Gladstone made with his string of investments came at the cost of losses to Scrooge's own business. That's right; according to Rosa, Gladstone would '''bankrupt Scrooge''' if they were direct business rivals! How fortunate for everybody that Gladstone is such an unambitious LazyBum.
* BrilliantButLazy: Gladstone is so ridiculously lucky he could probably become richer than Scrooge with no effort, effort but lacks the ambition to do so. Gladstone could even become Scrooge's heir if he weren't so lazy. Scrooge considers him potentially a better heir than Donald in that Gladstone is less likely to squander the money (of course Scrooge has a very skewered idea of what entails squandering), but Gladstone's carefree luck-based cruising through life offends the SelfMadeMan to the very core of his principles.



** He becomes this in the video game ''VideoGame/DonaldDuckGoinQuackers''. Every cutscene prior to a boss battle has him get comedically injured and by the end of the game he is in a full-body cast.

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** He becomes this in the video game ''VideoGame/DonaldDuckGoinQuackers''. Every cutscene prior to a boss battle has him get comedically injured and by the end of the game game, he is in a full-body cast.



* DarkSecret: One story reveals that Gladstone has a hidden shame that he's concealed for years, terrified of anyone finding out; he keeps a memento of that time in his life as a grisly souvenir. It's eventually discovered the memento is...a single dime. It turns out that there was an instance in Gladstone's past where his good luck failed him, and he was left with no choice but to take an honest job and work for a living. Since his luck eventually kicked back in, the dime was his first and only truly-earned wage, and he's embarrassed to death about it.

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* DarkSecret: One story reveals that Gladstone has a hidden shame that he's concealed for years, terrified of anyone finding out; he keeps a memento of that time in his life as a grisly souvenir. It's eventually discovered the memento is...a single dime. It turns out that there was an instance in Gladstone's past where his good luck failed him, and he was left with no choice but to take an honest job and work for a living. Since his luck eventually kicked back in, the dime was his first and only truly-earned truly earned wage, and he's embarrassed to death about it.



* TheDreaded: Due the disasters he sets off, everyone who knows him is ''terrified'', and being his babysitter for a day is considered more dangerous than being a ''professional stuntman''.

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* TheDreaded: Due to the disasters he sets off, everyone who knows him is ''terrified'', and being his babysitter for a day is considered more dangerous than being a ''professional stuntman''.



* RaisedByWolves: He sabotaged his own delivery by stork and ended up in the jungle where he was raised by porcupines. This often results in him setting off disasters because he has no idea of what he is doing.

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* RaisedByWolves: He sabotaged his own delivery by the stork and ended up in the jungle where he was raised by porcupines. This often results in him setting off disasters because he has no idea of what he is doing.



* PosthumousCharacter: While he does occasionally show up due to NegativeContinuity, it's usually agreed upon that Fergus has passed away by modern day.

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* PosthumousCharacter: While he does occasionally show up due to NegativeContinuity, it's usually agreed upon that Fergus has passed away by the modern day.



* IWasQuiteTheLooker: A lifetime of work and hardship had made Downy grey-haired and worn-out by the time Scrooge was ten years old. When her spirit greets her husband upon his own death, she looks decades younger, with her hair back to it's original brown. In comparison, while Fergus also returns to his younger appearance, he looks the same as he did during Scrooge's childhood.

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* IWasQuiteTheLooker: A lifetime of work and hardship had made Downy grey-haired and worn-out by the time Scrooge was ten years old. When her spirit greets her husband upon his own death, she looks decades younger, with her hair back to it's its original brown. In comparison, while Fergus also returns to his younger appearance, he looks the same as he did during Scrooge's childhood.



* BewareTheNiceOnes: She's the kindest and sweet-natured of Scrooge's siblings, but she does have the same fiery temper of the family. Donald, in particular, is afraid of her because she'd frequently give him paddlings when he misbehaves.
* BigBrotherWorship: [[spoiler: Until [[BrokenPedestal Chapter 11 ]].]] When we meet her again as an old lady, [[spoiler:she inverts this trope by insulting Scrooge at every turn]]. [[spoiler:It returns though when they finally reconcile.]]

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* BewareTheNiceOnes: She's the kindest and most sweet-natured of Scrooge's siblings, but she does have the same fiery temper of the family. Donald, in particular, is afraid of her because she'd frequently give him paddlings when he misbehaves.
* BigBrotherWorship: [[spoiler: Until [[BrokenPedestal Chapter 11 ]].]] When we meet her again as an old lady, [[spoiler:she [[spoiler: she inverts this trope by insulting Scrooge at every turn]]. [[spoiler:It returns though when they finally reconcile.]]



* TheHeart: Between her, Hortense, and Scrooge, she has the same temper exception going as Della does. With Hortense's fate not being touched upon, Matilda may be the only one of Scrooge's family he got to reconcile with.

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* TheHeart: Between her, Hortense, and Scrooge, she has the same temper exception going as Della does. With Hortense's fate not being touched upon, Matilda may be the only one of Scrooge's family he got has to reconcile with.



* TheLoad: Treated as one in-universe. Every single Duck family member dreads it when he's coming over for a visit, because they know he'll eat all their food, hogs all their things, and keeps them awake all night with his infernal snoring, which can be heard through concrete-thick walls.

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* TheLoad: Treated as one in-universe. Every single Duck family member dreads it when he's coming over for a visit, visit because they know he'll eat all their food, hogs all their things, and keeps them awake all night with his infernal snoring, which can be heard through concrete-thick walls.



* AllThatGlitters: One of the core differences between Scrooge and Douglas symbolic to their respective success and... not-so-success is that, while gold was crucial for Scrooge to get his fortune started, Douglas has the peculiar inability to tell gold from fool's gold and somehow ''always'' comes up with bags of the latter thoroughly convinced it's the former. The one time he actually found gold was in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'', but it was gold dust and when he came across chunks of fool's gold, he gladly threw the dust away thinking he was getting his hands on better.
* AmbiguouslyRelated: He is introduced as a cousin of Scrooge and part of the [=McDuck=]-family, but also is explicitly stated as uncle of Whitewather Duck who is part of the Duck-side (Donald is related to Scrooge via his mother, Scrooge's sister. For that his cousin shouldn't have a link to the [=McDucks=]. The story ''A [=McDuck=] By Any Other Name'' adds more ambiguous to the relation: Scrooge states that Douglas was not a real [=McDuck=] but just adopted. To proove that they travel to Scotland. In the end, after Douglas saved Scrooge's life, they decide to not investigate further to the case as Scrooge states Douglas prooved to be a real [=McDuck=] anyway.
* FamilyHonor: Starting with ''"Gall In The Family"'', Douglas regularly talks bad about Scrooge's branch of the family, calling them spendrifts and wastrels that do the name "[=McDuck=]" no favors. One example he brings up is an event in '98 where Scrooge's father bought a whole glass of lemonade for his family.

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* AllThatGlitters: One of the core differences between Scrooge and Douglas symbolic to of their respective success and... not-so-success is that, while gold was crucial for Scrooge to get his fortune started, Douglas has the peculiar inability to tell gold from fool's gold and somehow ''always'' comes up with bags of the latter thoroughly convinced it's the former. The one time he actually found gold was in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"'', but it was gold dust and when he came across chunks of fool's gold, he gladly threw the dust away thinking he was getting his hands on better.
* AmbiguouslyRelated: He is introduced as a cousin of Scrooge and part of the [=McDuck=]-family, but also is explicitly stated as the uncle of Whitewather Whitewater Duck who is part of the Duck-side (Donald is related to Scrooge via his mother, Scrooge's sister. For that that, his cousin shouldn't have a link to the [=McDucks=]. The story ''A [=McDuck=] By Any Other Name'' adds more ambiguous to the relation: Scrooge states that Douglas was not a real [=McDuck=] but just adopted. To proove that prove that, they travel to Scotland. In the end, after Douglas saved saves Scrooge's life, they decide to not investigate further to the case further, as Scrooge states Douglas prooved proved to be a real [=McDuck=] anyway.
* FamilyHonor: Starting with ''"Gall In The Family"'', Douglas regularly talks bad badly about Scrooge's branch of the family, calling them spendrifts spendthrifts and wastrels that do the name "[=McDuck=]" no favors. One example he brings up is an event in '98 where Scrooge's father bought a whole glass of lemonade for his family.



* TheRival: He and his newphew Whitewater were this to Scrooge and Donald in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"''. Or more fairly considering who entered the contest first, vice versa.

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* TheRival: He and his newphew nephew Whitewater were this to Scrooge and Donald in ''"Smarter Than The Toughies"''. Or more fairly considering who entered the contest first, vice versa.



* ExactWords: When they first meet, Scrooge asks Sir Quackly if he's also a [=McDuck=], only for Quackly to state that it's obviously impossible, since Scrooge, his parents, uncles and siblings are the only ''living'' [=McDucks=] left.

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* ExactWords: When they first meet, Scrooge asks Sir Quackly if he's also a [=McDuck=], only for Quackly to state that it's obviously impossible, since Scrooge, his parents, uncles uncles, and siblings are the only ''living'' [=McDucks=] left.



* ThisIsSomethingHesGotToDoHimself: Refuses to simply point out to Scrooge where his treasure is hidden, since just being handed wealth won't teach Scrooge what he needs to know.

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* ThisIsSomethingHesGotToDoHimself: Refuses to simply point out to Scrooge where his treasure is hidden, hidden since just being handed wealth won't teach Scrooge what he needs to know.



* FriendToAllLivingThings: 50/50 played straight and subverted. Disraeli's power of pity works on animals, giving him all the fauna friendly qualities of a Disney Princess! Whether he actually deserves their kindness is another matter. He's a manipulator of people, which does not bode well, but he seemed to genuinely get along well with Bolivar.

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* FriendToAllLivingThings: 50/50 played straight and subverted. Disraeli's power of pity works on animals, giving him all the fauna friendly fauna-friendly qualities of a Disney Princess! Whether he actually deserves their kindness is another matter. He's a manipulator of people, which does not bode well, but he seemed to genuinely get along well with Bolivar.



* LazyBum: A similar principle, but rather than having fate push things to him like with Gladstone or the rest of the family, he has to manipulate people for it.

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* LazyBum: A similar principle, but rather than having fate push things to on him like with Gladstone or the rest of the family, he has to manipulate people for it.



* HiddenDepths: An amazing food critic, and can easily detect the quality of any food. In Italian stories he actually has an on-off job in Duckburg police hunting down for those who sell food made with adulterated ingredients, and, in spite of his laziness and usually being at Grandma Duck's farm, is easily their best agent, that they call in whenever a case becomes too complicated for the full-time officers.

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* HiddenDepths: An amazing food critic, and who can easily detect the quality of any food. In Italian stories stories, he actually has an on-off job in Duckburg police hunting down for those who sell food made with adulterated ingredients, and, in spite of his laziness and usually being at Grandma Duck's farm, is easily their best agent, that they call in whenever a case becomes too complicated for the full-time officers.



* SheCleansUpNicely: After Grandma gives Greta a make-over, she immediately draws the attention of Hjalmar for "looking like a girl".

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* SheCleansUpNicely: After Grandma gives Greta a make-over, makeover, she immediately draws the attention of Hjalmar for "looking like a girl".



* AmbiguouslyRelated: He physically resembles Gus Goose, and has similar-sounding surname, but their exact relationship is never defined.

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* AmbiguouslyRelated: He physically resembles Gus Goose, Goose and has a similar-sounding surname, but their exact relationship is never defined.



The founder of Duckburg and Donald's great-great grandfather. [[OurFounder An immense statue of him]] erected by Scrooge as part of a contest with the Maharajah of Howduyustan towers over the city.

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The founder of Duckburg and Donald's great-great grandfather.great-great-grandfather. [[OurFounder An immense statue of him]] erected by Scrooge as part of a contest with the Maharajah of Howduyustan towers over the city.



* AscendedExtra: Carl Barks created and named him as the founder of Duckburg, but he only appears via statues as in "Statuesque Spendthrifts" and "Statues of Limitations". The reader never learns anymore about that man. Later writers like Creator/DonRosa would flesh-out the background of Cornelius Coot more and more, including flashbacks, a backstory for why he´s always portrayed with corn and his own family.

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* AscendedExtra: Carl Barks created and named him as the founder of Duckburg, but he only appears via statues as in "Statuesque Spendthrifts" and "Statues of Limitations". The reader never learns anymore about that man. Later writers like Creator/DonRosa would flesh-out flesh out the background of Cornelius Coot more and more, including flashbacks, a backstory for why he´s he's always portrayed with corn and his own family.



* DependingOnTheWriter: In his original depictions there is no indication the Ducks are in anyway related to Cornelius Coot. In fact, he's just portrayed as the founder of their hometown. Don Rosa and some other writers would later link Donald and/or Scrooge to Cornelius, most famously with Rosa deciding to make Grandma Duck the granddaughter of Cornelius Coot.

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* DependingOnTheWriter: In his original depictions there is no indication the Ducks are in anyway any way related to Cornelius Coot. In fact, he's just portrayed as the founder of their hometown. Don Rosa and some other writers would later link Donald and/or Scrooge to Cornelius, most famously with Rosa deciding to make Grandma Duck the granddaughter of Cornelius Coot.



* PosthumousCharacter: Never appears in person, but his great grandson sells Killmotor Hill to Scrooge when the two meet in Klondike. Prior to Scrooge centering his financial empire around his money bin there, Duckburg was merely a few farms and the old decaying Fort Duckburg, established by Sir Francis Drake some 200 years before.

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* PosthumousCharacter: Never appears in person, but his great grandson great-grandson sells Killmotor Hill to Scrooge when the two meet in Klondike. Prior to Scrooge centering his financial empire around his money bin there, Duckburg was merely a few farms and the old decaying Fort Duckburg, established by Sir Francis Drake some 200 years before.



* SmallRoleBigImpact: He only appears in a short flashback sequence in his debut story by Creator/DonRosa. However, in this scene he sells the land of piece where the Fort Duckburg stands to Scrooge [=McDuck=]. This hill will later be the place Scrooge´s money bin stands. In fact, Scrooge's influence transform Duckburg from a small community into the big city it is nowadays and in which most of the Duck family's adventures take place. In other word, it was Casey's decision to sell his grandfather's land to the newly rich Scrooge that is responsible for all the stories taking place here.

to:

* SmallRoleBigImpact: He only appears in a short flashback sequence in his debut story by Creator/DonRosa. However, in this scene scene, he sells the land of piece where the Fort Duckburg stands to Scrooge [=McDuck=]. This hill will later be the place Scrooge´s where Scrooge's money bin stands. In fact, Scrooge's influence transform transforms Duckburg from a small community into the big city it is nowadays and in which most of the Duck family's adventures take place. In other word, it was Casey's decision to sell his grandfather's land to the newly rich Scrooge that who is responsible for all the stories taking place here.



An absent-minded scholar/inventor who is referred to as Donald's uncle (according to Creator/WaltDisney himself, he's the brother of Donald's father, while in Tony Strobl's stories he's depicted as Grandma Duck's cousin, and Creator/DonRosa claims he is/was married to Scrooge's sister Matilda, making him Donald's uncle by marriage) and an expert on everything. He originally appeared in ''Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color'' and has since become a semi-recurring character in the comics. He and Gyro are somewhat similar and if you're confused, just remember, Ludwig is TheProfessor first, and a BunglingInventor second, while Gyro is the other way around.

to:

An absent-minded scholar/inventor who is referred to as Donald's uncle (according to Creator/WaltDisney himself, he's the brother of Donald's father, while in Tony Strobl's stories stories, he's depicted as Grandma Duck's cousin, and Creator/DonRosa claims he is/was married to Scrooge's sister Matilda, making him Donald's uncle by marriage) and an expert on everything. He originally appeared in ''Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color'' and has since become a semi-recurring character in the comics. He and Gyro are somewhat similar and if you're confused, just remember, Ludwig is TheProfessor first, first and a BunglingInventor second, while Gyro is the other way around.



* AmbiguouslyRelated: He was once introduced by Creator/WaltDisney himself as Donald's uncle but ''how'' exactly he is related is a constant debate between fans and creatives. It helps that there seem to be almost no other named von Drakes in the Duck family. It becomes more ambigous in regards of Scrooge: Many stories hint that Scrooge and Ludwig may be related too. Creator/DonRosa revealed [[WordOfGod his view of things]], that Ludwig is married to Scrooge's sister Mathilda, making him a wider, not blood-related part of the family. But this is far from official canon.

to:

* AmbiguouslyRelated: He was once introduced by Creator/WaltDisney himself as Donald's uncle but ''how'' exactly he is related is a constant debate between fans and creatives. It helps that there seem seems to be almost no other named von Drakes in the Duck family. It becomes more ambigous ambiguous in regards of to Scrooge: Many stories hint that Scrooge and Ludwig may be related too. Creator/DonRosa revealed [[WordOfGod his view of things]], that Ludwig is married to Scrooge's sister Mathilda, making him a wider, not blood-related part of the family. But this is far from official canon.



* DitzyGenius: Even moreso than Gyro, in fact. There's no doubt that he's brilliant in every way, but he's also somewhat of an eccentric, at times bordering on being a [[TheWonka Wonka]] -- or, DependingOnTheWriter, even a full-fledged {{Cloudcuckoolander}}.

to:

* DitzyGenius: Even moreso more so than Gyro, in fact. There's no doubt that he's brilliant in every way, but he's also somewhat of an eccentric, at times bordering on being a [[TheWonka Wonka]] -- or, DependingOnTheWriter, even a full-fledged {{Cloudcuckoolander}}.



** The animated version of Ludwig, however, remains fairly central and is usually the character who appears whenever Westernanimation/MickeyMouse or his friends need a scientist to explain things.

to:

** The animated version of Ludwig, however, remains fairly central and is usually the character who appears whenever Westernanimation/MickeyMouse WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse or his friends need a scientist to explain things.



* OmniDisciplinaryScientist: In fact, he'll constantly point out all the various fields he's an expert in. Usually he's right about it too, though he doesn't always go on about things in the most sensible way.

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* OmniDisciplinaryScientist: In fact, he'll constantly point out all the various fields he's an expert in. Usually Usually, he's right about it too, though he doesn't always go on about things in the most sensible way.



* AbsentMindedProfessor: A light case. He's driven by his work and can forget all technical aspects surrounding it that need to be taken care of too. Even details of his work can get muddled up, like when he assured Donald that nonos are flightless swimmers and later realized he was thinking of penguins; nonos are nonaquatic fliers.
* ExperimentalArcheology: He and Professor Grabgrant each had their own ideas how the population of Arbor Day Island could've reached the site that later would be Duckburg. The latter believed it to be due to boats made of mud and the former didn't have any theories except that a mud boat would be preposterous. So they agreed to a contest in which each would go to Ardor Day Island and build something to reach Duckburg. In the end, the historical boats proved to be the island's large statues, which actually were hollowed-out pumice.

to:

* AbsentMindedProfessor: A light case. He's driven by his work and can forget all the technical aspects surrounding it that need to be taken care of too. Even details of his work can get muddled up, like when he assured Donald that nonos are flightless swimmers and later realized he was thinking of penguins; nonos are nonaquatic fliers.
* ExperimentalArcheology: He and Professor Grabgrant each had their own ideas on how the population of Arbor Day Island could've reached the site that later would be Duckburg. The latter believed it to be due to boats made of mud and the former didn't have any theories except that a mud boat would be preposterous. So they agreed to a contest in which each would go to Ardor Day Island and build something to reach Duckburg. In the end, the historical boats proved to be the island's large statues, which actually were hollowed-out pumice.



->Voiced by: Creator/JessicaDiCicco (''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros''), [[spoiler:Creator/KateMicucci]] (April/[[spoiler:Webby]]), Creator/RikiLindhome (May), and Creator/NoelWells (June) (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Daisy's three nieces, and more or less {{Distaff Counterpart}}s of Huey, Dewey and Louie. Unlike HD&L, however, they live with their mother, Daisy's anonymous sister, and only occasionally stay with their aunt.

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->Voiced by: Creator/JessicaDiCicco (''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros''), [[spoiler:Creator/KateMicucci]] (April/[[spoiler:Webby]]), [[spoiler: Creator/KateMicucci]] (April/[[spoiler: Webby]]), Creator/RikiLindhome (May), and Creator/NoelWells (June) (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'')

Daisy's three nieces, and more or less {{Distaff Counterpart}}s of Huey, Dewey Dewey, and Louie. Unlike HD&L, however, they live with their mother, Daisy's anonymous sister, and only occasionally stay with their aunt.



** April, May and June follow on the 1941 character Dottie, also a niece of Daisy. Yes, the girls are both decomposite and composite characters.
** Returning to the subject of Webby, in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', the final episodes [[LastEpisodeNewCharacter introduce May and June]], while April turns out to be [[spoiler:[[CanonCharacterAllAlong Webby herself]], in a TomatoInTheMirror moment]].

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** April, May May, and June follow on the 1941 character Dottie, also a niece of Daisy. Yes, the girls are both decomposite and composite characters.
** Returning to the subject of Webby, in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'', the final episodes [[LastEpisodeNewCharacter introduce May and June]], while April turns out to be [[spoiler:[[CanonCharacterAllAlong [[spoiler: [[CanonCharacterAllAlong Webby herself]], in a TomatoInTheMirror moment]].



* TheDividual: Like Huey, Dewey and Louie, the girls look and act the same.
* IdenticalTwinIDTag: Again, in the modern Dutch comics, their hairstyles. In older comics, the colors of their clothes is probably supposed to be this, but since the girls' colors are even more inconsistently handled than Huey, Dewey and Louie's are, this really doesn't help.
* ParentalAbandonment: Surprisingly enough, averted. Though their mother never appears on-page and isn't referred to very often, the girls first show up in a story where Daisy is visiting her sister, and introduces her three nieces to Donald. Presumably, they still live with their mother (though we don't hear anything about their father).

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* TheDividual: Like Huey, Dewey Dewey, and Louie, the girls look and act the same.
* IdenticalTwinIDTag: Again, in the modern Dutch comics, their hairstyles. In older comics, the colors colours of their clothes is are probably supposed to be this, but since the girls' colors colours are even more inconsistently handled than Huey, Dewey and Louie's are, this really doesn't help.
* ParentalAbandonment: Surprisingly enough, averted. Though their mother never appears on-page and isn't referred to very often, the girls first show up in a story where Daisy is visiting her sister, sister and introduces her three nieces to Donald. Presumably, they still live with their mother (though we don't hear anything about their father).



* ThemeTwinNaming: Rather than having their names rhyme like Donald's nephews, Daisy's nieces' names are all months of the year that can also be used as feminine names.
* WiseBeyondTheirYears: Much like Huey, Dewey and Louie, they are often vastly more sensible than the adults around them.

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* ThemeTwinNaming: Rather than having their names rhyme like Donald's nephews, Daisy's nieces' names are all months of the year that and can also be used as feminine names.
* WiseBeyondTheirYears: Much like Huey, Dewey Dewey, and Louie, they are often vastly more sensible than the adults around them.



* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: She appeared in two newspaper comics and then never again. She's arguably been [[{{Expy}} succeeded by Daisy's "other" nieces April, May and June]].

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* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: She appeared in two newspaper comics and then never again. She's arguably been [[{{Expy}} succeeded by Daisy's "other" nieces April, May May, and June]].



* RagsToRiches: She already lived in Dawson back when it was basically just a logging camp, running the-then Blackjack Saloon for the lumberjacks in the area. When the gold rush hit, Goldie blossomed into wealth and stardom, becoming known as "The Star Of the North". Sadly, the end of the gold rush, not to mention Scrooge's rejection, eventually led to her [[RichesToRags falling back down again]]. The events of "Back To The Klondike" leads to Goldie finding a middle-ground as the owner of the Blackjack Hotel.

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* RagsToRiches: She already lived in Dawson back when it was basically just a logging camp, running the-then Blackjack Saloon for the lumberjacks in the area. When the gold rush hit, Goldie blossomed into wealth and stardom, becoming known as "The Star Of the North". Sadly, the end of the gold rush, not to mention Scrooge's rejection, eventually led to her [[RichesToRags falling back down again]]. The events of "Back To The Klondike" leads to Goldie finding a middle-ground middle ground as the owner of the Blackjack Hotel.



A shrewd businesswoman duck whose main goal is to one day marry Scrooge [=McDuck=], even though he isn't interested in romance at all. Created by Romano Scarpa, Barks liked the character enough to give Romano a drawing of Brigitta trying to seduce Scrooge with a Money Scented perfume, which Romano then wrote a story based on said premise. The original drawing has been lost.

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A shrewd businesswoman duck whose main goal is to one day marry Scrooge [=McDuck=], even though he isn't interested in romance at all. Created by Romano Scarpa, Barks liked the character enough to give Romano a drawing of Brigitta trying to seduce Scrooge with a Money Scented Money-Scented perfume, which Romano then wrote a story based on said premise. The original drawing has been lost.



** Best shown by an alternate universe counterpart, who had stopped going in any business after marrying her reality's Scrooge and not caring that her new spendrift habits were contributing to his impending bankrupt... Then the main universe' Scrooge, who had been tricked by her husband into switching places, got in his mind to restore his wealth and put her in charge of the restaurants side of the businesses after reminding her of how she used to be, and she brought them back to their former glory in ''weeks''-just as Scrooge expected based on his experience with the main reality's Brigitta.

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** Best shown by an alternate universe counterpart, who had stopped going in any business after marrying her reality's Scrooge and not caring that her new spendrift spendthrift habits were contributing to his impending bankrupt... bankruptcy... Then the main universe' universe's Scrooge, who had been tricked by her husband into switching places, got in his mind to restore his wealth and put her in charge of the restaurants side of the businesses after reminding her of how she used to be, and she brought them back to their former glory in ''weeks''-just as Scrooge expected based on his experience with the main reality's Brigitta.



* IntergenerationalFriendship: She's old enough she first met Scrooge in ''1897'', but often forms a friendly quartet with the much younger Daisy and miss Quackfaster and, occasionally, the even older Grandma Duck. She also gets along very well with Huey, Dewey and Louie, and Dickie.

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* IntergenerationalFriendship: She's old enough she first met Scrooge in ''1897'', but often forms a friendly quartet with the much younger Daisy and miss Miss Quackfaster and, occasionally, the even older Grandma Duck. She also gets along very well with Huey, Dewey and Louie, and Dickie.



* TheMatchmaker: A ''professional'' one: her most frequent enterprise is a dating agency, and a rather successful one.

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* TheMatchmaker: A ''professional'' one: her most frequent enterprise is a dating agency, agency and a rather successful one.



* ShoutOut: In the Brazilian comics, she got a DubNameChange as Pata Lee, after the Brazilian female singer/songwriter Rita Lee, mostly because she's a musician in Zé Carioca's comics and her hairstyle is similar to Rita's (although the real life singer was redhead at the time[[note]]She's grey-haired nowadays[[/note]] instead of blonde).

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* ShoutOut: In the Brazilian comics, she got a DubNameChange as Pata Lee, after the Brazilian female singer/songwriter Rita Lee, mostly because she's a musician in Zé Carioca's comics and her hairstyle is similar to Rita's (although the real life real-life singer was redhead at the time[[note]]She's grey-haired nowadays[[/note]] instead of blonde).



* YouDontLookLikeYou: In the early 2000 years, the Italian ''Disney Parade'' collection of character statues features a Dickie Duck [[http://www.toremmodellismo.it/images/SERIE%20PERS.TOPO/PERSONAGGI%203D/151_5120.JPG barely taller than Huey, Dewey and Louie]]. Romano Scarpa, the character's original creator, was pissed off, since she is supposed to be even taller than Donald.

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* YouDontLookLikeYou: In the early 2000 years, the Italian ''Disney Parade'' collection of character statues features a Dickie Duck [[http://www.toremmodellismo.it/images/SERIE%20PERS.TOPO/PERSONAGGI%203D/151_5120.JPG barely taller than Huey, Dewey and Louie]]. Romano Scarpa, the character's original creator, was pissed off, off since she is supposed to be even taller than Donald.
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[[folder: ???? Duck]]

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[[folder: ???? Duck]]Duck (Huey, Dewey and Louie’s father)]]
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* UnfazzedEveryman: He's basically TheEveryman and a very average guy who struggles with everyday business like raising kids, keeping his love life with Daisy going and trying to find a job. However, he would also ocassionally accompany his uncle on treasure hunts and helps him defending his money bin against witches and other crooks, without finding that weird compared to his everyday struggles at all.

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* UnfazzedEveryman: UnfazedEveryman: He's basically TheEveryman and a very average guy who struggles with everyday business like raising kids, keeping his love life with Daisy going and trying to find a job. However, he would also ocassionally accompany his uncle on treasure hunts and helps him defending his money bin against witches and other crooks, without finding that weird compared to his everyday struggles at all.
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* OnlySaneMan: Surprisingly enough given his hot-headed, stubborn personality, but he sometimes serves this role, as him being [[TheEveryman an Everyman]] allows him to have a more pragmatic view and a more average solution when weirdness arises, especially when he's on wacky adventures with Scrooge and the nephews.


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* UnfazzedEveryman: He's basically TheEveryman and a very average guy who struggles with everyday business like raising kids, keeping his love life with Daisy going and trying to find a job. However, he would also ocassionally accompany his uncle on treasure hunts and helps him defending his money bin against witches and other crooks, without finding that weird compared to his everyday struggles at all.
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* AmbiguouslyRelated: Creator/DonRosa's theory is that he's related to Daisy, possibly her brother, which would explain how the triplets call her Aunt. He never put this in a story, however, so for now it remains SchrodingersCanon.

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* TheFaceless: His spot on the Creator/DonRosa family tree is blocked off by branches and the bird standing on them. What little can be seen shows [[TheUnreveal nothing but general indicators of a male duck with white feathers.]]

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* DisappearedDad: Was last mentioned in a cartoon in 1937 and that's the all we know of him. Unlike Della, there's never been any sort of hint of what happened to him afterwards or why he never returned for his sons.
* TheFaceless: His spot on the Creator/DonRosa family Duck Family tree is blocked off by branches and the bird standing on them. What little can be seen shows [[TheUnreveal nothing but general indicators of a male duck with white feathers.]]



* UncertainDoom: His "appearance" in ''Donalds Nephews'' mentions that the triplets latest prank put him in the hospital, which is why they're staying with Donald. While this could imply that he outright ''died'' from his injuries, this would be outright ghoulish in more adult settings, much less friggin' Disney. Whatever happened to him, he hasn't been heard from since, even after Della's return.

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* UncertainDoom: His "appearance" in ''Donalds Nephews'' mentions that the triplets latest prank put him in the hospital, which is why they're staying with Donald. While this could imply that he outright ''died'' from his injuries, this would be outright pretty ghoulish even in more adult settings, much less friggin' Disney. Whatever happened to him, he hasn't been heard from since, even after Della's return.

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