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* PopularWithFurries: Thirty-Thirty of course.

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* PopularWithFurries: Thirty-Thirty Thirty-Thirty, of course.
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** Jingles Morgan managed to make a very strong impression, due to having a surprisingly nuanced backstory of his fall from grace due to his bad decisions, as well as his personal ties as [=BraveStarr=]'s former mentor at the Marshal Academy. The emotional conflict between him and [=BraveStarr=] is considered to be quite a highlight of the episode ''"Recap/BravestarrS1E2FallenIdol"'' due to the complicated feelings of [=BraveStarr=] about his idol's fall into outlaw, and [[IveComeTooFar Jingles' reflection on his past mistakes.]] [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodCharacter Some were actually quite disappointed at him only having one episode, with one reviewer feeling he was too good of a character for this series.]]

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** Jingles Morgan managed to make a very strong impression, due to having a surprisingly nuanced backstory of his fall from grace due to his bad decisions, as well as his personal ties as [=BraveStarr=]'s former mentor at the Marshal Academy. The emotional conflict between him and [=BraveStarr=] is considered to be quite a highlight of the episode ''"Recap/BravestarrS1E2FallenIdol"'' ''"[[Recap/BravestarrS1E2FallenIdol Fallen Idol]]"'' due to the complicated feelings of [=BraveStarr=] about his idol's fall into outlaw, and [[IveComeTooFar Jingles' reflection on his past mistakes.]] [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodCharacter Some were actually quite disappointed at him only having one episode, with one reviewer feeling he was too good of a character for this series.]]
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** Jingles Morgan managed to make a very strong impression, due to having a surprisingly nuanced backstory of his fall from grace due to his bad decisions, as well as his personal ties as [=BraveStarr=]'s former mentor at the Marshal Academy. [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodCharacter Some were actually quite disappointed at him only having one episode, with one reviewer feeling he was too good of a character for this series.]]

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** Jingles Morgan managed to make a very strong impression, due to having a surprisingly nuanced backstory of his fall from grace due to his bad decisions, as well as his personal ties as [=BraveStarr=]'s former mentor at the Marshal Academy. The emotional conflict between him and [=BraveStarr=] is considered to be quite a highlight of the episode ''"Recap/BravestarrS1E2FallenIdol"'' due to the complicated feelings of [=BraveStarr=] about his idol's fall into outlaw, and [[IveComeTooFar Jingles' reflection on his past mistakes.]] [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodCharacter Some were actually quite disappointed at him only having one episode, with one reviewer feeling he was too good of a character for this series.]]
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** Jingles Morgan managed to make a very strong impression, due to having a surprisingly nuanced backstory of his fall from grace due to his bad decisions, as well as his personal ties as BraveStarr's former mentor at the Marshal Academy. [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodCharacter Some were actually quite disappointed at him only having one episode, with one reviewer feeling he was too good of a character for this series.]]

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** Jingles Morgan managed to make a very strong impression, due to having a surprisingly nuanced backstory of his fall from grace due to his bad decisions, as well as his personal ties as BraveStarr's [=BraveStarr=]'s former mentor at the Marshal Academy. [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodCharacter Some were actually quite disappointed at him only having one episode, with one reviewer feeling he was too good of a character for this series.]]
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** Jingles Morgan managed to make a very strong impression, due to having a surprisingly nuanced backstory of his fall from grace due to his bad decisions, as well as his personal ties as BraveStarr's former mentor at the Marshal Academy. [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodCharacter Some were actually quite disappointed at him only having one episode, with one reviewer feeling he was too good of a character for this series.]]
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* AlternativeCharacterInterpretation: Shaman may have come off as negligent for not doing more to help Jay and Brad in “The Price”, however Shaman’s role in the episode may have served not as a guardian to Brad but to the audience themselves. The entire point of the episode was teaching kids to seek out trusted adults for help when it came to drugs, and many kids in real life who were (and still are) in Brad’s position ''don’t'' have someone to tell them that it’s okay to tell on friends for these type of situations. Shaman wasn’t so much as a guide to Brad in the episode as he was a voice to the audience telling them that ''they'' (the audience) weren’t a bad friend if they wanted to help a friend in need by telling on them.
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Moving to Tear Jerker page


* TearJerker:
** A young boy dying in "The Price", for some.
** From "[[Recap/BraveStarrS1E2FallenIdol Fallen Idol]]":
--->[[spoiler:'''[=BraveStarr=]''': How could you do this? You were my hero.]]
--->[[spoiler:'''Jingles Morgan''': I never asked to be your hero.]]
--->[[spoiler:''Jingles is led away while [=BraveStarr=] looks devastated. Then...'']]\\
[[spoiler:'''Fuzz''': [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments You're still my hero, [=BraveStarr=].]]]]
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* TheScrappy: The Prairie People can be this for some viewers due to voices and sometimes being overly naive.

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* TheScrappy: The Prairie People can be this for some viewers due to their odd voices and sometimes being overly naive.



** "The Price", for some.

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** A young boy dying in "The Price", for some.
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* AngstWhatAngst: Several characters are the last of their people ([=BraveStarr=], the Shaman, Thirty/Thirty, Stampede) but none of them seem to care.

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* AngstWhatAngst: Several characters are the last of their people ([=BraveStarr=], the Shaman, Thirty/Thirty, Stampede) Stampede, and a few guest characters) but none of them seem to care.
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* CargoShip: Thirty-Thirty x {{BFG}} Sara Jane.

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* CargoShip: Thirty-Thirty x {{BFG}} Sara Jane.Jane (who even got named by Thirty-Thirty).

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* CargoShip: Thirty-Thirty x Sara Jane.

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* BreakoutCharacter: BoisterousBruiser sidekick Thirty-Thirty made a noticeably bigger splash in popular culture than [=BraveStarr=] himself due to being a quotable horselike cyborg with a {{BFG}}.
* CargoShip: Thirty-Thirty x {{BFG}} Sara Jane.



* EnsembleDarkhorse: Thirty-Thirty.
** On the secondary villain side, Thunderstick, and to lesser extents the Dingoes (particularly Barker, Howler, and Two-Faced Dingo Dan) and Cactus Head are tough and quirky enough to make an impression.

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* EnsembleDarkhorse: Thirty-Thirty.
EnsembleDarkhorse:
** On the secondary villain side, Thunderstick, the stuttering robot with the ArmCannon, is one of the least fleshed out of Hex's primary henchmen but is also the best-liked of the bunch. His fellow outlaw robot Cactus Head is also well-liked for his quirkiness and to lesser extents the Dingoes (particularly Barker, Howler, and NotSoHarmless villain moments.
**
Two-Faced Dingo Dan) Dan and Cactus Head Howler appear less often than the main Dingo {{Mook}}s (Barker, Goldtooth, and the unnamed one with armbands and a yellow shirt) but are tough probably more popular for having AwesomeAussie accents, distinctive designs, and quirky enough unique skills in addition to make an impression. their gunfighting (Dan shapeshifts and Howler rides live steeds instead of the hoverbike turbo mules). It helps that they are uninvolved in some of the Dingos' worst KickTheDog moments.
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** On the good side, the same might be true of BrokenAce Lucas Conway (although he makes one subsequent cameo) and Wimble, the Prairie person child adopted by Thirty Thirty.

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** On the good side, the same might be true of BrokenAce {{Broken Ace}}s Lucas Conway (although he makes one subsequent cameo) and Paco, as well as Wimble, the Prairie person child adopted by Thirty Thirty.
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** On the good side, the same might be true of BrokenAce Lucas Conway and Wimble, the Prairie person child adopted by Thirty Thirty.

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** On the good side, the same might be true of BrokenAce Lucas Conway (although he makes one subsequent cameo) and Wimble, the Prairie person child adopted by Thirty Thirty.
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** On the secondary villain side, Thunderstick, and to lesser extents Howler, Two-Faced Dan and Barker of the dingoes and Cactus Head are tough and quirky enough to make an impression.

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** On the secondary villain side, Thunderstick, and to lesser extents the Dingoes (particularly Barker, Howler, and Two-Faced Dan and Barker of the dingoes Dingo Dan) and Cactus Head are tough and quirky enough to make an impression.
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** On the villain side, Thunderstick, and to lesser extents Howler and Barker of the dingoes and Cactus Head are decently tough and quirky.

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** On the secondary villain side, Thunderstick, and to lesser extents Howler Howler, Two-Faced Dan and Barker of the dingoes and Cactus Head are decently tough and quirky.quirky enough to make an impression.
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** On the villain side, Thunderstick, and to lesser extents Barker of the dingoes and Cactus Head.

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** On the villain side, Thunderstick, and to lesser extents Howler and Barker of the dingoes and Cactus Head.Head are decently tough and quirky.
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* UnintentionallyUnsympathetic: In "The Price," [=BraveStarr=] and Thirty-Thirty are revealed to have thrown everyone undergoing Spin withdrawal, men ''and'' women, into the single jail cell in Fort Kerium. The town doctor appears only briefly, and is nowhere in sight as the victims experience painful withdrawal symptoms. While intended to be a ScareEmStraight moment, it reflects ''very'' poorly on the protagonists.

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* UnintentionallyUnsympathetic: In "The Price," [=BraveStarr=] and Thirty-Thirty are revealed to have thrown everyone undergoing Spin withdrawal, men ''and'' women, into the single jail cell in Fort Kerium. The town doctor appears only briefly, and is nowhere in sight as the victims experience painful withdrawal symptoms. While intended to be a ScareEmStraight moment, it reflects ''very'' poorly on the protagonists. The Shaman doesn't come off too well, either, since he clearly knows what's going on but chooses to stay out of the way even after ''a child'' gets addicted to Spin.

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