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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/digimon_frontire.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:''If we're all for one world, there's a world for us all.'']]
3
4Takuya Kanbara is an average city kid who receives a text message from an unknown source instructing him to "board a train towards his destiny". Taking up the CallToAdventure, he finds the train in question and is whisked off to the Digital World, which is currently under threat from the malevolent Cherubimon. Cherubimon and his minions are consuming the very building blocks of the Digital World (its "Fractal Code") to increase their own power, and if nothing is done then the entire Digital World will be devoured.
5
6All is not lost, however. Takuya and the other "chosen" children who boarded the train inherit the power of the Ten Legendary Warriors that saved the Digital World in the distant past, allowing them to transform themselves into Digimon. With their new powers, they fight to take back the stolen Fractal Code and restore the fractured Digital World to its former glory.
7
8The fourth anime series in the ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' franchise, following ''Anime/DigimonTamers'', and is, in some ways, the antithesis of its predecessor. While it does have its share of dramatic, intense, and introspective moments, it is relatively [[LighterAndSofter light-hearted and dynamic]], more focused on battle than in any psychological theme.
9
10It is followed by ''Anime/DigimonDataSquad''.
11[[foldercontrol]]
12----
13!!''Digimon Frontier'' contains examples of:
14[[folder: Tropes A - D]]
15* AccidentalPervert: J.P./Junpei in "A Molehill Out of a Mountain". Before climbing a rope, he does the "ladies first" bit, forgetting that Izumi/Zoe is wearing a skirt. Cue PervertRevengeMode.
16* ActionizedSequel: Granted, the Digimon franchise has always had action, but this series is noticeably more action oriented than its immediate predecessor, Tamers, which had significant SliceOfLife elements early on. And this time around, the kids themselves do the fighting, rather than having partners who fight for them, and right from the start the action set pieces are noticeably more elaborate and choreographed than many in the previous series, with more instances of RapidFireFisticuffs.
17* AlasPoorVillain:
18** [[spoiler:Cherubimon doesn't die until we've already learned that he's not responsible for what happened to him. He was corrupted by forces outside his control]].
19*** A minor one involving Cherubimon is when [[spoiler:Ophanimon offers to turn him good again.]] You can easily tell he wants it to work, so he draws in close... [[spoiler:and, as it turns out, not only is he too corrupted for it to work, but Ophanimon also uses the chance to steal back the D-tecters--and that's if you don't assume that she was lying just to get them.]]
20** Zoe/Kazemon shows some pity towards Ranamon before she defeats her because Ranamon was only nasty due to how pained and empty she was inside, so she hopes purification can heal her ("This digivice will purify your broken heart!") [[LostInTranslation The dub unfortunately removes this]], making Zoe/Kazemon just happy to be rid of her... which [[BrokenAesop kind of goes against that particular episode's message.]]
21** There wasn't much to Arbormon besides being a DumbMuscle VillainousGlutton, but his death at the hands of Duskmon did have a twinge of tragedy to it, as he seemed to genuinely believe the other Evil Warriors (including Duskmon) were his friends, being completely oblivious to the fact that none of them really cared all that much for him.
22--> '''Arbormon:''' A friend in need is a friend indeed, [[VerbalTic right?]]\
23'''Duskmon:''' ''Wrong''.
24* AlienSky: The Digital World has three moons of different colors, but that has nothing on Sakkakumon's [[PocketDimension internal environments]]. The skies all have a palette-swapped swirly pattern. Even the relatively normal-looking area where Zoe defeats Ranamon has clouds that form that pattern.
25* AllegedLookalikes: Being brothers, Koji and Koichi naturally have some sort of resemblance to one another, yet characters seem to marvel at them sharing an appearance. However, to the viewer, much like with Kagome and Kikyo in ''Manga/InuYasha'', they don't particularly resemble one another beyond the things other characters have in common due to having the same art style (in other words, one could probably give another character the same hair color as the brothers and they'd look no different.) Between their different hairstyle and distinctly different voices (in both Japanese and English) it's very easy to tell the two apart.
26* AllYourPowersCombined: Susanoomon is created by [[spoiler: combining all 10 pairs of spirits with initially Takuya and Kouji, and later all five remaining kids.]]
27* AloofAlly: Koji, at the start, is literally a lone wolf. But it doesn't last long as he in episodes 2 and 4 helps the others before going off on his own, then [[EnemyMine unwillingly]] joins the group in episode 6.
28%%* AlternateUniverse: The Digital World.
29* AlternativeForeignThemeSong:
30** The English dub uses a completely new theme song, and while it's different from the Japanese version, it brings a whole different feel from the theme song that was used for the previous seasons.
31** The Italian dub composed a new theme song for its dub rather than translate the Japanese theme song.
32%%* AntiVillain: Arbormon, played for laughs.
33* BackToBackBadasses: The Royal Knights do this on their debut. The Digidestined run around them to try to catch them off guard while the two knights stand calmly together, casually taking them down when the digidestined attack.
34%% Badass Decay was moved to the YMMV tab. Please don't add it back here.
35* BareMidriffsAreFeminine: Zoe, Ranamon, and Ophanimon, the [[TheSmurfettePrinciple Smurfettes]] of their respective groups.
36** Zoe's Digimon forms also do this.
37* BatmanGambit: Mercurymon pulls off an impressive one roughly halfway through the series, during the Sakkakumon arc. May also qualify for XanatosGambit, because [[spoiler: if the kids get killed inside Sakkakumon, he wins. If they win, he still does... what he ended up doing.]]
38* BazaarOfTheBizarre: Episode 17, from beginning to end. The dub title copies the trope name, almost verbatim.
39%%* BeamOWar
40* BeamSpam: Both Duskmon and Cherubimon are fond of using these.
41%%* BigDamnHeroes
42* BigBadEnsemble: Though many of the villains are part of Cherubimon's and Lucemon's armies, there are many that are independent. Snimon, [=IceDevimon=], and Saggitarimon have no association to either of the main antagonists, outside of [=IceDevimon=] being Cherubimon's prisoner, and one of the Minomon being a spy for the Wind Factory and reporting to Grumblemon.
43* BigEater: Zoe. See episode 17, where she wins an eating contest.
44* {{BFS}}: [[spoiler:Susanoomon's Heavenly Wings Slash[[note]] 天羽々斬, Ama no Habakiri[[/note]] attack (Celestial Blade in the dub) involves a MASSIVE sword-gun thing appearing in his hands, followed by an equally massive holy energy beam coming out of it, effectively becoming a humongous lightsaber that does Lucemon Chaos Mode in one swing, and in the final battle, the dragon that protects Lucemon Larva in one swing.]] Beowolfmon's Beo Sabre should definitely count also.
45* BishonenLine: Deliberately invoked, at least in reverse, with the new evolution system. (Which is immediately spun into a RunningGag for Ranamon.) Takuya and Kouji in particular cross ''back'' over the line at Mega/Ultimate level.
46* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler:Par for the course, though this has to be the least bitter ending of the bunch, as the heroes don't have Digimon partners to have torn from them. They still have to leave the Digital World and all their friends there behind, however.]]
47%%* BlueWithShock: see episode 15.
48* BondVillainStupidity: Ranamon has two great opportunities to attack the kids while they are unable to Spirit Evolve in episodes 15 and 16. Instead, she wastes half her time bragging and the other half of her time being whisked off by her own Beast Spirit's spinning attack.
49* BookEnds: Though it didn't end up being the last season, ''Frontier'' appeared to be for a while. In the last episode, Susanoomon declares "AND SO, IT ENDS!" just before dealing the final blow, which parallels the dub name for the first episode of ''Anime/DigimonAdventure''. Furthermore, the last shot of the episode has the caption "The End", rather than "To Be Continued" as it had for all the episodes of the show's US run.
50** The dub's episode naming had this as well; the first episode was entitled "All Aboard" while the final episode's name was "End of the Line".
51* BotanicalAbomination: Arbormon and Petaldramon, the Legendary Warriors that represent the element of Wood, resemble a wooden armour and a huge reptilian {{Planimal}}. They were both spawned from [=AncientTroiamon=].
52* BrainwashedAndCrazy: [[spoiler: Most of the Digimon the Digidestined fight due to Lucemon's corrupting influences/viruses, most notably his direct corruption and mind control over Cherubimon.]]
53** [[spoiler:Kouichi, as Duskmon, initially has no memory of who he used to be and willingly serves Cherubimon. Later, as he begins to remember, Cherubimon forces more darkness into him to keep him subservient.]]
54** Tommy[=/=]Kumamon in "Welcome to My Nightmare" is forced into a nightmare where all of his friends are against him and ends up attacking them as a result.
55* BreakingTheFourthWall: Episode 17 in Japanese has Arbormon telling us to always lock our entrances at night, and at a later point to wash our hands after using the toilet.
56* BreatherEpisode: The Man in the Moon is You, which comes right after the defeat of Cherubimon and the first battle with the Royal Knights and right before the last arc of the series. This episode mostly consists of comic antics as the Digidestined try to escape the moon and get back to the digital world. Notable events include Metalkabuterimon shooting Agunimon out of the cannon on his head.
57* CallBack: The series has its own completely unique soundtrack and doesn't reuse from previous series... except for one or two instances which fall under this trope. When Patamon is born, they play "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxBTNsmppg8 Victory ~Theme of Good #2~]]", a lighthearted track from the ''Anime/DigimonAdventure'' soundtrack as an obvious callback to Patamon's role back then.
58** It also repurposes Locomon's theme from the second ''Tamers'' movie, ''Runaway Digimon Express'', for the various Trailmon in the series.
59** The dub version will also use a snatch of music or two from ''Tamers'' when appropriate, just as ''Tamers'' borrowed the "Digi-armor, energize!" music from ''02'' now and again.
60** In the dub, during Gallantmon's cameo appearance, he is voiced by Brian Beacock and Steve Blum in the Fusion Voice they used in ''Tamers'', even referring to himself in plural, as a nod to the previous series (Dukemon doesn't speak in the original).
61* CallToAdventure: Literally. Ophanimon calls the kids on their cellphones.
62* CastingGag: Some of the English dub actors in ''Frontier'' had appeared in some of the older entries of the series.
63** From the main children, Creator/SteveBlum (Guilmon, Kenta, and Yamaki in ''Anime/DigimonTamers'') is J.P., Creator/SteveStaley (Ryo in ''Tamers'') is Kouji, and Creator/MichaelReisz (Matt in ''Anime/DigimonAdventure'') is Takuya (however, he isn't voicing [=EmprerorGreymon=], whose duty was given to Creator/DaveWittenberg, Henry in ''Tamers''[[note]]Wittenberg [[TheOtherDarrin voices Takuya in the movie]], too, and serves as the sub/stand in VA in the series as Takuya in some episodes.[[/note]]).
64** The extra four kids with Angemon are voiced by Joshua "[[Anime/DigimonAdventure Tai]]" Seth as Teppei, Brad "[[Anime/DigimonTamers Kazu]]" [=MacDonald=] as Katsuharu, Tifanie "[[Anime/DigimonAdventure02 Yolei]]" Christun as Chiaki, and Brian "[[Anime/DigimonAdventure02 Davis]]" Donovan as Teruo. Dave Mallow reprises his voice role from ''Anime/DigimonAdventure'' as (a [[{{Expy}} different]]) Angemon.
65** Creator/MonaMarshall ([[Anime/DigimonAdventure Izzy]]) is the BigBad, and [[Anime/DigimonDataSquad not for the last time either]]!
66** Creator/MaryElizabethMcGlynn was given the opportunity to play a larger role than just a digivice shouting "Digivolution" (or "Matrix Digivolution") like she did in ''Tamers'', leading her to voice Ophanimon.
67** There's an interesting case related to Cherubimon's voice actors. Creator/PaulStPeter voiced Diaboromon in ''Anime/DigimonTheMovie'', and by extension, the Diaboromon-infected ([[DubText at least in America]]) Kokomon, and Cherubimon (Kokomon's highest form), and he is later casted as the first ''Frontier'' BigBad, Cherubimon. When he returns to Lopmon, St. Peter is taken over by Creator/MichelleRuff, who was ''Tamers''[='=] Lopmon, in a similar "former agent of darkness reverted to friendly" setting.
68** Several other Digimon are voiced by the same actors as their counterparts in the earlier series, including Tifanie Christun as Biyomon, Creator/KirkThornton as Tsunomon/Gabumon, Dave Mallow as Gekomon, Michael Sorich as Elecmon, Creator/SteveBlum and Creator/BrianBeacock as Gallantmon, Dave Guerrie as [=SkullSatamon=], and Peter Spellos as Whamon. Similarly, Creator/PaulStPeter voices [=IceLeomon=], a PaletteSwap of Leomon, whom he voiced in both ''Adventure'' and ''Tamers''.
69** And much like the aforementioned Creator/BrianDonovan did in ''Tamers'', Creator/MelissaFahn does the narration in ''Frontier'' in her Rika voice from ''Tamers''. When she leaves, Creator/BrianBeacock continues the narration as Bokomon.
70** In the dub, [=SuperStarmon=] is an ElvisImpersonator and is voiced by Creator/RichardEpcar, using the same voice he used for Etemon in ''Adventure'', who was also an Elvis Impersonator.
71* CavalryBetrayal: A villainous variation. When Duskmon appears during a battle, Arbormon thinks he's there to lend him support. [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness He's wrong.]]
72* CheatersNeverProsper: [=ShadowWereGarurumon=] and Doggymon in episode 18. Unusually, they cheat quite openly and yet never get disqualified for it, but their [[SeriousBusiness dirty cheating habits]] annoy Takuya to the point where he ends up ''fighting'' them fist-to-fist on top of the Trailmon in a TraintopBattle.
73* CombatTentacles: [[AnIcePerson Korikakumon]] and [[GreenThumb Petaldramon]] can both use these to attack and restrain enemies. Korikakumon uses his braids while Petaldramon uses roots/vines that extend through the ground from his tail.
74* CombinationAttack: How the team beats Sakakkumon. the kids pair up, combine attacks, and attacking together. Since Sakakkumon can only duplicate their attacks individually, they're able to overpower him.
75%%zce* CombinedEnergyAttack
76* ConservationOfCompetence: Most ''Digimon'' series have this to an extent, but in ''Frontier'' it becomes so strong in the back half of the series that four of the six main characters are rendered completely useless in combat until the climax of the final episode.
77%%zce* ConservationOfNinjitsu: Applied against the ''good guys'' in their second fight against Gigasmon.
78* ContemplateOurNavels: Almost every episode has at least one scene where the Chosen Children contemplate their Digivices.
79* ContinuityCameo: Dub only. [[Anime/DigimonTamers Takato and Guilmon's voices]] can be heard coming from a Gallantmon at one point.
80** The Autumn Leaf Fair has several, but special mention goes to [[Anime/DigimonTamers Gallantmon]]. [[FusionDance He even has the same dual voice and refers to himself as "we."]]
81** Arukenimon and Mummymon can also be glimpsed. ''In human form.''
82* CookingDuel: [[ShoutOut "You Want Fries With That?" ]] leads to a literal one, including OnionTears. [[spoiler: Tommy/Tomoki wins.]] This quickly turns into a LowerDeckEpisode; Takuya and Kouji keep going while the others enter battle.
83* CoolAndUnusualPunishment: Tickle torture in episode 23.
84* CoolTrain: The Trailmon are living trains with unique personalities and appearances.
85%%zce* CompressedAdaptation: The manga.
86* CorruptCorporateExecutive: Snimon in episode 5, who tries to kill Agunimon and his friends because they destroyed part of his factory.
87* TheCorruption: A pervasive dark force emanating from Cherubimon causes otherwise good Digimon to become mischievous at best, positively evil at worst.
88* TheCorrupter: Cherubimon to most of the antagonistic Digimon. [[spoiler:Ironically, he himself has been corrupted by Lucemon]].
89* CrackPairing: An InUniverse example: [=LordKnightmon=] openly ships Kouji and Koichi. J.P. rightfully calls him a freak for this.
90* CrossCounter: Episode 7 has Takuya and Kouji defeat a group of [=ShadowToyAgumon=] by making them do this after they've combined into a pair of HumongousMecha.
91%%zce* CrossPoppingVeins
92* CurbStompBattle:
93** The Royal Knights arc can be described as follows: 1) The Royal Knights target an area to absorb its data. 2) The heroes try to stop them. 3) The heroes lose. Badly. 4) Wash, rinse, repeat [[spoiler:until Lucemon is freed.]]
94** [[spoiler:Lucemon against [=EmperorGreymon=] and [=MagnaGarurumon=], they don't have a chance. Every time Susanoomon shows up however, Lucemon is the one that gets beaten very badly, usually by 1 single attack on each form (the final form has two separate Digimon, so two attacks there).]]
95** The first couple of encounters with Duskmon go like this. The first time was because the heroes didn't know what to expect and the second was because Takuya just charged in recklessly.
96* {{Cyberspace}}: The Digital World, as in the other iterations of ''Digimon'', is a world made up of internet data.
97* DarkIsNotEvil: Kouichi is the Warrior of Darkness, and [[spoiler:post-HeelFaceTurn]], he's just as solidly on the side of good as the other kids are.
98* DeadToBeginWith: [[spoiler:Kouichi. He had an accident while following Kouji down Shibuya Station, which caused only his soul to ever reach the digital world. His body was never there.]]
99* DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment: One of Beetlemon's attacks is called Lightning [[GratuitousGerman Blitz,]] 'blitz' being the German word for 'lightning.'
100* DesignatedGirlFight: Zoe and Ranamon have an entire episode dedicated to their final battle against each other. Notably, it's the only fight Zoe won by herself.
101* DevourTheDragon: [[spoiler:Lucemon does this to Crusadermon and Dynasmon.]]
102* DiscOneFinalBoss: Cherubimon is presented as the show's main antagonist. Though a formidable opponent, he is revealed to be a mere pawn to the real BigBad, [[spoiler:Lucemon]].
103* DoggedNiceGuy: J.P. to Zoe, as he constantly tries to impress her due to his crush on her.
104* DubInducedPlotHole: The dub adds some lines that say that Koji has problems getting along with his stepmother because "it hurt so much when Mom died", with the distinct implication that he was there to see it. As later episodes prove, this is clearly incorrect because [[spoiler:not only is she not dead, but also if he had been around to ever see his biological mother he would have remembered Koichi, and it's clearly established that each of the two did not know the other existed]]. Particularly egregious about this is that the living proof of this contradiction ([[spoiler:Koichi]]) appears in the ''very same episode''.
105* DubNameChange: While every dub of ''Digimon'' has this happen, this show's dub's use of the trope was just plain ridiculous in how much was changed. An example of this is that almost all of the children's Digimon forms name were changed, sometimes pointlessly so (Wolfmon became Lobomon in the dub, for instance).
106** The dub also changes "[=DigiCode=]" to "Fractal Code". It's possible that this was changed in order to differentiate it from the Digimon franchise's CypherLanguage known as [[http://digimon.wikia.com/wiki/DigiCode DigiCode]], which in Japanese is デジ文字 (literally translated as Digi-Letters) rather than デジコード ("[=DigiCode=]" written phonetically).
107%%* DudeMagnet: Zoe
108[[/folder]]
109[[folder: Tropes E - H]]
110* EarthShatteringKaboom: [[spoiler:Happens to the three moons, with remains of the yellow one obliterating the other two.]]
111* ElementalEmbodiment: More than just having ElementalPowers, the Ten Legendary Warriors represent the essence of their respective elements.
112* ElementalPowers: The 10 Legendary Warriors each command one element: [[PlayingWithFire Fire]], [[MakingASplash Water]], [[BlowYouAway Wind]], [[DishingOutDirt Earth]], [[ExtraOreDinary Metal]], [[ShockAndAwe Thunder]], [[AnIcePerson Ice]], [[GreenThumb Wood]], [[CastingAShadow Darkness]], and [[LightEmUp Light]].
113* {{Expy}}:
114** Takuya is an obvious Taichi/Tai expy, being the impulsive, extroverted leader, who wears goggles as his trademark accessory. His evolutions are fire-based and visually similar to Greymon, including [=EmperorGreymon=], who is basically a [=WarGreymon=] on roids.
115** Kouji is an expy of Yamato/Matt, being the stoic [[TheLancer lancer]]. His evolutions resemble Garurumon's (especially Garmmon/[=KendoGarurumon=] and [=MagnaGarurumon=]).
116** Koichi's arc is pretty much identical to Ken's, as he starts out as a major antagonist before being purified and becoming the SixthRanger. Their personalities also match, as they are kind-hearted, introverted boys who initially have trouble fitting with the rest of the team.
117** [[spoiler:Susanoomon]] is an obvious Omegamon/Omnimon expy, as he [[spoiler:is a god-like warrior, fights with both a sword and a cannon, is formed from a FusionDance, and single-handedly turns the tide of the battle against the FinalBoss]].
118* FacialMarkings: Agunimon (and by extension, Aldamon), Flamemon, Kazemon, Grumblemon, Kumamon, Korikakumon and Lucemon all have them. [[spoiler:Susanoomon]] has Agunimon's FacialMarkings on his helmet.
119%%zce* FailureHero: All of the heroes are turned into this during the Royal Knights saga.
120* FantasyKitchenSink: While ''Tamers'' really started the push to start bringing mythology in, incorporating the Four Gods and the Chinese Zodiac, ''Frontier'' turned west for its Digimon. Takuya's various Hybrids are derived from Hindu mythology; Garmmon is Garmr, the guardian of [[TheUnderworld Hel]] alongside Hrelsvelgr (who you might know as [[{{Foreshadowing}} Velgrmon]]); Shutumon is based on a Sumerian god of wind (and illness and pestilence); Blizzarmon is very likely a Norse [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berserker Berserker]] (short version: legendary bear-coat warriors); and Bolgmon is named for the proto-Celtic god of lightning, though the Digimon's actually associated with AncientEgypt and scarabs.
121** Gigasmon is derived from ancient greek giants, Sephirotmon is one huge shout out to the Kabbalah (see Rule of Symbolism below). [[spoiler:Koichi, post-reformation]] adds a lot of Ancient Sphinx derivations, and then there's Susanoomon, named for Susanoo no Mikoto, the ocean god who slew the Orochi. Orochimon doesn't make a significant appearance, however; Susanoomon instead wields a weapon called the "ZERO ARMS: Orochi".
122* FauxActionGirl: Downplayed with Zoe. She has some initial success when she first uses both of her spirits, but fails to follow through when the Difficulty Spikes[[note]]When she achieves Kazemon's form she's able to defeat three Mushroomon but loses when they combine into a Woodmon. Unlocking Zephyrmon allows her to deal with Ranamon, but she can't deal with Calmaramon immediately after[[/note]] and usually has to be bailed out by one or more of her teammates. The only enemy she defeats on her own is her ArchEnemy Ranamon in a DesignatedGirlFight. That being said, a positive step in her development is when she acquires her Beast Spirit and gets upgraded to Zephyrmon while not losing control, unlike her teammates.
123* FauxAffablyEvil: [=IceDevimon=] chats enthusiastically with his victims, to the point where you wonder if he is ObliviouslyEvil or ObfuscatingInsanity. The things he says are pretty psycho. "It would be so ''joyous,'' all the pain and the suffering!" (Quote from dub.)
124* FillerVillain: [[CheatersNeverProsper ShadowWereGarurumon]] and Doggymon serve the antagonist role for the mostly-filler episode "Trailmon vs. Trailmon" and don't have any effect on the plot beyond that.
125* FireIceLightning: When the 10 Ancient Warrior entrusted their spirits to the Three Great Angels, Orphanimon was entrusted with three of them under these elements.
126* ForgotICouldFly: Zoe in "A Molehill Out of a Mountain". She is as scared of falling as any of the others, when she ''could'' just turn into [[WingedHumanoid Kazemon]] and fly up.
127** Similarly, in "The Swiss Family Digimon", Zoe was the only member of the crew who still had her Digivice. Everybody else had their Digivices stolen, and the (non-dangerous) thieves flew to a (non-dangerous) nearby island that's specifically stated to be inaccessible by sea. Rather than just have Zoe fly over to collect the Digivices herself, the crew fusses over trying to find a flying Digimon for a while, then opts to just build a raft.
128** In the fight against [=IceDevimon=], you have Kouji and Takuya's digivices frozen. Would have been really useful if one of their teammates had the elemental affinity for ice and could have unfrozen them, huh?
129* {{Foreshadowing}}: When [[spoiler:Kouichi]] talks about how he ended up in the Digital World, he states that he at first thought he had ended up in the afterlife and was a wandering spirit. [[spoiler:He may not have ended up in the afterlife...but he wasn't far off.]]
130** In the original Japanese, Wolfmon's attacks are all in GratuitousGerman. So, interestingly enough, are Duskmon's. Guess why.
131** In the dub: [[spoiler:"I'd rather die than betray my brother!"]]
132** The opening also has a [[FreezeFrameBonus more subtle one]]: Right at the end there is clearly some glowing winged figure in the circle of all the symbols of the Legendary Warriors, with a minimum of 6 fluffy wings (but likely 8 in the silhouette with the last pair getting lost in the white circle behind it) and too short to be Ophanimon or Seraphimon. [[spoiler: Yup [[ItWasThereTheWholeTime that was Lucemon right there]], in the middle of the warriors who sealed him away.]]
133** At one point after [[spoiler:Kouichi joins the team]] the entire group gets hit with an attack so hard it reveals the fractal code of their Spirits, [[spoiler:except for Kouichi who, although as hurt as the others, never has his Spirits exposed. Guess who is the only person there not ''fully'' in the Digital World?]]
134* ForgottenPhlebotinum: In one episode, Takuya learns that [[spoiler:being a legendary warrior also gives him the power to control/predict the weather which he can use to increase his attack strength. After that one episode, it never comes up again.]]
135* TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou: Lucemon's message plays on every screen in the world... and finally, on yours.
136* FriendlyTickleTorture: In episode 15, Koji is briefly tickled by Takuya and J.P.
137* FusionDance: The Advanced Hybrids are combinations of the Human and Beast spirits, while Susanoomon is the combination of [=KaiserGreymon=], [=MagnaGarurumon=] and two or more of the Chosen themselves.
138* FusionDissonance: The forms achieved through Fusion Spirit Evolution are normally created by mixing and matching parts from the earlier Human and Beast Spirit Evolution forms (which, in the toy line, also have an alternate combination representing the ancient Digimon who created them). However, supplemental material includes Fusion forms for the supporting cast which [[ToylessToylineCharacter couldn't possibly be replicated by a toy]] -- e.g. the Ice fusion combining a snowman and a [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti yeti]] into a penguin.
139* GenderBender: In TheMovie, the male Beast Digimon Hippogriffomon can [[StanceSystem slide evolve]] to the female Human Digimon Darcmon. His true form is Murmukusmon (male), who [[VoiceOfTheLegion speaks with both their voices]] at first.
140* GenreSavvy: J.P. invokes this (via the use of Horror Tropes) to prevent Takuya stupidly running after Kouji, complete with American-esque comic ArtShift.
141* TheGimmick: The lore (and movie) of this particular generation of ''Digimon'' is premised on two, neither of which really occurs in the rest of franchise.
142** The first is what basically amounts to a race war between "Human" and "Beast" digimon; there are human, beast, and fusion hybrids for each element.
143** The second is a system of ElementalPowers--Fire, Light, Wind, Thunder, Ice, Water, Earth, Wood, Steel, and Darkness--that inform the ancient digimon and the hybrid digimon created by their totems.
144* GogglesDoNothing: {{Downplayed}}. Takuya uses his goggles in a few occasions in the show, but they are otherwise aesthetic.
145%%zce* GoneSwimmingClothesStolen: Or rather, "Gone Swimming, D-Tectors Stolen". This befalls almost everyone in episode 15. Zoe is spared, in no small part because she used a separate dressing room.
146* GratuitousForeignLanguage: Many of the Digimon in this season had names in GratuitousEnglish, but were changed for the English dub (presumably to [[{{Woolseyism}} preserve their exotic flavor]]). The most notable instances were Fairymon becoming Kazemon, Wolfmon becoming Lobomon, and Grottomon becoming Grumblemon.
147** However, the dub did keep the GratuitousItalian provided by Zoe.
148** GratuitousGerman: This time around, the original loved to use this for attack names. ''Zwei Händer! Geist-o Abend!'' Even the dub gets in on it, with Kaiser Leomon becoming Jäger Lowemon.
149** Duskmon used German attack names in the original while Velgemon's attacks were GratuitousEnglish.
150* GroundPunch:
151** Beetlemon occasionally did this when using his Thunder Fist attack, while other times, he would just use it directly against an enemy.
152** Gigasmon also did this to try to attack Agunimon. The resulting shockwave didn't have quite enough range to land a hit.
153* HeelFaceTurn: The four Dark Legendary Warriors' spirits after they have been defeated and purified, as well as [[spoiler: Kouichi]].
154** And then [[spoiler: Cherubimon]], when the same is done with him, and [[spoiler: he hatches into Lopmon]].
155* HeroicSacrifice: [[spoiler:Kouichi dies a DisneyDeath so the other five can defeat the BigBad.]]
156* HeroOfAnotherStory: The first act of the story reveals that Ophanimon punched a massive hole in the barrier between Earth and Digiworld in the hopes that someone might get through to awaken Seraphimon. This proves to be a giant mistake, as it let in more than just the main cast, but dozens of other children. We get to meet a few of them, Katsuharu, Teppei, Chiaki, Teruo, and the Angemon assigned to watch over them.
157* HolyHandGrenade: This seems to be Susanoomon's [[InfinityPlusOneElement element]]. Ophanimon and Seraphimon, being angelic Digimon, use this as well.
158[[/folder]]
159[[folder: Tropes I - L]]
160* IdiotBall:
161** Ranamon grabbed it early on and never let it go:
162*** When she has three of the Chosen Children at her mercy, she decides to torture them for information... by tickling them. Not only is J.P. unfazed, but Tommy and Zoe are too busy laughing to be of any use to her. By the time she chooses a far more effective torture method, Kouji and later Takuya manage to launch an offensive and rescue them.
163*** And then there are the times when she is shown fighting. Whenever she is not getting in Mercurymon's way with her reckless attacks, she is knocking herself out as she does not know how to properly control her Beast form's attacks.
164** All of the children grab this when they have to figure out a way to make it back to the Digital World after being stuck on the Moon. The entire episode is one ridiculous plan after the other until they make the obvious decision to convince the local Digimon to help them build a prototype rocket.
165* IKnowWhatYouFear: Sakakkumon's ploy near the end of his arc is to torment the heroes with their own fears.
166* ImNotAfraidOfYou: When Takuya (as Flamemon) confronts his hallucinations of Duskmon in the real world.
167* InfinityPlusOneElement: Suggested by Susanoomon's design. It uses the Kanji for heaven[=/=]sky the same way that the warriors' designs use the kanji for their respective elements.
168%%* InTheEndYouAreOnYourOwn
169%%* IncendiaryExponent: Agunimon's ''Salamander Break'' and Vritramon's ''Flame Storm''.
170* IncestSubtext: PlayedForLaughs in episode 41 when [=LordKnightmon=] imagines Koichi and Koiji thanking each other while surrounded by LoveBubbles. He calls it "beautiful" while the other chosen children call him a weirdo.
171* InconsistentDub: ''Frontier'' marks the point where Bandai of America simply stopped caring about keeping ''Digimon'' consistent. None of the dub supporting material's information about [[CallingYourAttacks attacks]] is even remotely consistent with the dub itself for Digimon introduced in ''Frontier'', and even several names are way off![[note]]most egregiously Cherubimon/Kerpymon, Ranamon/Lanamon, Sakkakumon/Sephirothmon, Crusadermon/[=LordKnightmon=][[/note]] The dubbed show itself certainly isn't devoid of problems - it had a chronic habit of mismatching attack names with the correct attack, though it at least had the decency to keep names straight. It's also worth noting that the first episode of the dub had "spirit evolution" called "digivolution", which is the only time the series calls it that.
172** Taken to ridiculous levels in the manga [[note]]technically {{manhua}}, as it was originally published in UsefulNotes/HongKong, not Japan[[/note]] adaptation; Takuya and Koji's Fusion forms are called by their Beast Hybrids' names (in Koji's case, interchangeably by the English and Japanese ones), [=MagnaGarurumon=] is called [=KendoGarurumon=], and their attacks are horribly misnamed...it's pretty obvious the translators and adaptors hadn't watched the dub. For a particularly egregious example, Baromon is referred to as "Baolongshou", a literal transliteration of his name from Chinese.
173* InformedFlaw: A setting-wide example that is one of the biggest main complaints among the viewers. Excluding a NonSerialMovie, the Human-Beast conflict was never shown outside of flashbacks, despite it being responsible for the main plot.
174* InMediasRes: The first episode is this. At the start, we see Takuya desperately running towards something. When he's almost hit by a truck, [[{{Flashback}} the clock winds back]] to show how he got his CallToAdventure.
175* InternalHomage: A number of minor characters are references to Digimon from previous series. Most apparent in a episode in which the heroes visit a school, consisting of the baby-forms of many main character Digimon from previous series, plus a Tsunomon who can evolve to Gabumon. The dub played this up by having most of the homage characters use their previous voice actors - including one who was a FusionDance originally. Gallantmon the store owner - originally a non-speaking role - brought back Creator/SteveBlum and Creator/BrianBeacock to say "Wish ''we'' could help" in the simultaneous voice of [[Anime/DigimonTamers Guilmon and Takato]].
176** One non-speaking cameo featured a Gatomon who was accompanied by a Wizardmon. [[TearJerker/DigimonAdventure Thanks for opening up old wounds,]] ''[[TearJerker/DigimonAdventure Frontier]]''!
177** Oddly enough, when a pack of Gomamon made an appearance, the one obvious reference wasn't made: having R. Martin Klein (who voiced Gomamon in ''Adventure'') reprise the role. Klein had already done a large number of roles in ''Frontier'' before the episode, notably a Toucanmon in the ''same'' episode that sounded exactly like Gomamon.
178** Episode 39 of the dub has the gang encounter a [=SuperStarmon=] who can basically be summed up as a heroic version of Etemon from ''Adventure''. Notably, both Digimon possess a similar orange color scheme and a pair of CoolShades.
179* InvincibleVillain:
180** Duskmon, the last of the elemental warriors introduced, takes no damage from the heroes' attacks and is only mildly inconvenienced. [[spoiler: He's only matched when Koji reaches his fusion spirit, Beowulfmon]].
181** The Royal Knights could very well be the poster child for this trope. During their nine episodes long arc, they spend all of their appearances beating the tar out of the heroes and succeeding with their plans, without any real setback. They are only defeated after reaching their final goal.
182* JerkAss: Zoe. J.P. and Koji also display bouts of this in the initial episodes, the former often calling Tommy names like "pipsqueak".
183%%* JumpedAtTheCall: Takuya
184* {{Kiai}}: ''Everything'' involved shitloads of yelling, especially later forms of Spirit Evolution (giving the impression that the process was in fact quite painful). It got to the point where so much yelling was required that Michael Reisz (Takuya) point-blank ''refused'' to voice [=EmperorGreymon=] for fear of permanently damaging his voice; Creator/DaveWittenberg instead filled in there - where, ironically, almost no shouting was involved.
185* KidHero: The heroes are pre-teens, with the oldest being 12 years old.
186* KilledOffForReal: In an aversion of AllDeathsFinal, most Digimon are reborn as Digieggs after death, however, this does not apply to [[spoiler: Lucemon]] (the second time), Golemon [[note]]Though in his case, he appeared to be artificially created [[/note]], Mercurymon's minions [[note]]who also may not have been real[[/note]], apparently [[spoiler: the Royal Knights]], and, tragically, [[spoiler: Oryxmon]] and [[spoiler: Sorcerymon]].
187* KnightOfCerebus: Duskmon's appearance signifies a huge tonal shift, as he's the first major defeat the kids have ever really experienced.
188%%* LadyOfWar: Crusadermon in the dub.
189* LancerVsDragon: Koji is the lancer and Duskmon is the dragon to Cherubimon. The two fight twice before Koji discovers Duskmon [[spoiler:is his twin brother Koichi who is brainwashed by Cherubimon and teams up with Takuya to free him from Cherubimon's control.]]
190* LargeHam:
191** [=IceDevimon=] seems to fall under this quite nicely. Justified as his seiyuu is none other than Creator/NorioWakamoto. The dub does this as well by having the VA emulate Creator/ChristopherWalken.
192** Superstarmon falls under it much better.
193** Lucemon gets hammier with each form.
194* {{Leitmotif}}: All of the human characters have one in the Japanese version, titled "Theme of (character's representative element)". They're actually re-arranged instrumental versions of the characters' respective {{Image Song}}s (with the exception of [[spoiler:Kouichi]], whose Theme of Darkness is a rearrange of Kouji's Theme of Light).
195* LethalChef: Takuya and Koji in the Kitchen Battle episode, whose burgers range from stacking every kind of meat imaginable into a patty, to piling seafood up inside the same bun, to, well, basically anything that makes everyone at the restaurant feel sick.
196* LightFireJuxtaposition: The Digimon Spirits of fire and light are wielded by [[TheLeader Takuya]] and [[TheLancer Koji]] respectively. Takuya is HotBlooded, impulsive and approachable while Koji is aloof, reserved and prefers solitude.
197* LightIsNotGood:
198** [[spoiler:Lucemon]] who, in his initial form, looks like a teenage angel.
199** And [[spoiler:the Royal Knights]].
200* LighterAndSofter: The series certainly wasn't complete sunshine and rainbows and did have very dark and introspective moments (especially around Kouichi), but considering that its immediate predecessor was ''Anime/DigimonTamers'' and its successor was ''Anime/DigimonDataSquad''... yeah, this was inevitable.
201* LoveTriangle: Zoe is at the center of what amounts to a love-polygon involving her peers. Officially, J.P. has a blatant crush on her and she comes very close to confessing an attraction to Takuya[[note]]In turn, he mentions he likes her, though his reaction to his own statement creates ambiguity over whether he meant it in a romantic context or just flubbed a statement. He later has a dream involving them on a date, though.[[/note]].
202* LowerDeckEpisode: By the time Takuya and Koji get so overpowered and even gain powers that take the others' powers away, it really felt like this the times the main two were absent or disabled so that the others got to do something.
203* LuminescentBlush: Various, particularly Takuya, Zoe, and J.P.
204* LyricalDissonance: Kouichi's image song is an upbeat, catchy rock song... but it's titled "With Broken Wings" and its lyrics contain things such as "a stray dog without a collar is laughing at me."
205** To an extent, Blader, [[spoiler: the VillainSong from his Duskmon persona.]] Also catchy and upbeat, among what's featured in the lyrics are doing nothing but fighting and not forgiving anyone.
206[[/folder]]
207[[folder: Tropes M - R]]
208* MagicalSensoryEffect: In the CD drama "A Train Called Hope", Zoe says that she was able to see the different winds' colors and hear their tunes when she was Kazemon, and that she still has a bit of that ability left.
209* MayTheFarceBeWithYou: Not a parody exactly, but Koichi's story has many parallels with Anakin's in ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'', such as being manipulated by a powerful politician who meddled in the Dark Side, having a new identity alongside a black intimidating armor, and his one relative (who we found via a surprising reveal) being the one who brings him towards the "light".
210* MeaningfulEcho: A three-parter involving Kouji and Kouichi in the original Japanese version.
211** Episode 46:
212-->'''Kouji''': "I'm happy I came to this world. I got to meet you and all."
213** Two episodes after, [[spoiler:Kouichi's Famous Last Words as he sacrifices himself to Lucemon and entrusts Kouji with the Spirits of Darkness]]:
214-->'''Kouichi''': "I'm glad I came to the Digital World. I'm glad I could meet you."
215** And finally, as [[spoiler:Kouji returns to the Real World and brings Kouichi back to his body via miracle]]:
216-->'''Kouji''': "Can you hear me? It's Kouji! I came back to meet you, Kouichi!"
217-->'''Kouichi''': Kouji...I also wanted to meet you.
218* MerchandiseDriven: Some criticized the series for appearing notably more so than the previous series. Aldamon and Beowolfmon are almost blatantly toy-manufacturer-friendly forms (take the Human Spirit, add the Beast Spirit as an extra layer of armor, and ''done'')[[note]]So too with [=AncientGreymon and AncientGarurumon=], having inverted designs of the two Digimon mentioned. The combined form of the Spirits of Darkness, Reichmon, would also count, but he [[ExpandedUniverse never actually appeared in-series]][[/note]]. Susanoomon, the final hero, was also a visible amalgamation of [=EmperorGreymon=] and [=MagnaGarurumon=] (much like [[{{Expy}} Omegamon]], [=WarGreymon=], and [=MetalGarurumon=]). It probably isn't a coincidence that Takuya, Koji, and occasionally Kouichi were the only characters who mattered after a certain point.
219* MissedTheCall: A group of four kids, including two who bullied Tommy. They were explicitly told to turn around and go home after the real Chosen were picked out of the masses, but [[spoiler:instead of going home, they decided to wander the Digital World and an Angemon had to be sent to protect them.]]
220* MistakenForSpies: [=KaratsukiNumemon=], upon hearing that the children are Legendary Warriors in episode 6, confuse them with Grumblemon's lot, and [[UnwillingSuspension dangle them over a cliff]], trying to [[IHaveYourIndex persuade Grumblemon into returning his hostages in exchange for "his"]]. Naturally, the bad guy ''totally'' didn't care if the good guys got thrown off a cliff, and they had to escape on their own to fight him and save... the guys who were dangling them off a cliff a minute ago.
221* {{Mon}}: Subverted. In a clear departure from franchise tradition, the human cast ''transforms'' into Digimon, rather than having partners fight on their behalf, lending the show a HenshinHero aesthetic.
222** Zigzagged late in the show when it introduces four children being protected by an Angemon. These kids are brats and ''[[InvokedTrope treat him]]'' like their Mon.
223* MonMode: the Tamers use their D-Tectors with one of their Spirits to transform into one of the Legendary Warriors Digimon.
224* MonTech: the D-Tector as the season’s resident Digivice. This model is used by the cast to [[HenshinHero transform into Digimon]] for their battles, and also is able to purify the spirits of powerful Digimon.
225* MonstrosityEqualsWeakness: Notably played within the series. Initially, Beast Spirits were shown to be vastly more powerful than their humanoid counterparts, but the exchanges would flip-flop constantly, especially with [[spoiler:Duskmon/Velgremon and Lucemon]] both providing examples of humanoid and monstrous forms dominating the other archetype.
226* MoreThanMindControl: [[spoiler:Cherubimon->Kouichi, but most notably Lucemon->Cherubimon and many others, directly or indirectly.]]
227* MorphicResonance: In addition to [=EmperorGreymon=] and [=MagnaGarurumon=], Susanoomon has a couple of Agunimon's traits. It has Agunimon's FacialMarkings and his belt buckle, albeit with a different symbol, incorporated into its armor.
228%%* MrFanservice: Kouichi. And Kouji to an extent.
229* MsFanservice:
230** Zoe is the franchise's first female lead created specifically with fanservice in mind. Her clothes are more revealing than her predecessors', her Spirit Forms are clad in what amounts to some rather complex lingerie, her TransformationSequence has a FreezeFrameBonus PantyShot, and the BeachEpisode has a few {{Imagine Spot}}s consisting of her in poses that would be more appropriate to a gravure idol than a prepubescent girl.
231** The fanservice extends to Kazemon's fighting style, as her moveset incorporates both AssKicksYou and a HurricaneKick, which is performed upside-down and with a split!
232** Ranamon is another example, given that her design is a blend of CuteMonsterGirl and WalkingSwimsuitScene. She uses her sex-appeal to turn her adoring fans into minions, as it happens.
233* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: This is done in episode 12. After Takuya grabs Tommy as [=BurningGreymon=], Tommy cries on his eye, and then Takuya notices he was about to hurt him. He then throws a tantrum, destroying rocks before turning back into Takuya, crying. He becomes lost in thought about how his actions could have destroyed everyone and that he shouldn't have been declared a Digidstined.
234* MythologyGag: Towards the end of the series, TheHero and TheLancer are able to obtain a Greymon form that uses the KillItWithFire approach and a Garurumon form that's loaded with enough weapons for a MacrossMissileMassacre, respectively. [[spoiler: This is taken to its logical conclusion in the last couple episodes, where they combine into a single Digimon that has the Greymon head on its left wrist, and the Garurumon head on its right wrist.]] Totally a MythologyGag to ''Anime/DigimonAdventure''.
235** [[spoiler:In the dub of the penultimate episode, as the Spirits go to Takuya and Kouji for Susanoomon to form, a whistling sound echoes in the scene. It's the same whistling noise used in the dub for the Adventure seasons for the Digivolution sequences.]]
236%% Narm was moved to the YMMV tab. Please don't add it back here.
237* NamedByTheDub: Tommy's older brother is unnamed in the original Japanese, but the English version gave him the name Yutaka. This is an actual Japanese name and also [[SignificantAnagram an anagram of main character's name Takuya]], [[MeaningfulName symbolizing how Takuya is Tommy's honorary brother]].
238* NaughtyTentacles: Sakkakumon uses bizarre, jelly-looking tentacles to push J.P. away from the group and most notoriously to harass Zoe's bottom in episode 24.
239* NearVillainVictory: They're able to ''completely destroy the world and its three moons'' before they are stopped. The world gets better.
240* NegatedMomentOfAwesome: All ten Legendary Warriors show up to fight the Royal Knights in one episode and fire their attacks simultaneously... all that does is to drive the villains away.
241* NewPowersAsThePlotDemands: In all fairness, this ''is'' a ''Digimon'' series and a shounen series.
242** In an amusing case, one episode had Takuya realise he could draw strength from the weather... then never used this ability again. Although it isn't weather, he later uses heat/fire to make his attacks stronger.
243** Koji uses EyeBeams while fighting Karatenmon, which he had never done before or since while Tommy and Zoe used abilities that they never had used before in their Beast Spirit forms while fighting [=IceDevimon=].
244* NonHumanSidekick: Bokomon, Neemon, [[spoiler:Patamon, Salamon and Lopmon.]]
245* NoSocialSkills: The Digimon Analyzer says that Datamon is "good with machines, but not so good with people."
246* OddballInTheSeries: ''Frontier'' is distinct for being the only ''Digimon'' anime where the protagonists don't have Digimon partners to play off of and fight for them. Instead the kids are given the power to transform into Digimon and do battle themselves.
247* OlderAlterEgo: With the exception of Tommy's, all of the kids' Human Spirit Digimon forms, along with Takuya and Kouji's Hybrid Spirit Digimon forms, have this effect.
248* OneWayVisor: Both Kazemon and [[spoiler:Susanoomon]] have them. Seraphimon, Ophanimon and Crusadermon have one-way helmets.
249* OutOfClothesExperience: The transformation sequences involve characters' clothing instantly dissolving, though conveniently reappearing upon turning back. We also get ''Tamers''-esque naked spirit scenes [[spoiler:once the kids all become Susanoomon near the end.]] BarbieDollAnatomy is thankfully in full play.
250* OutOfFocus / OvershadowedByAwesome: ''Everyone'' who isn't Takuya and Kouji in the final arc of the series. [[spoiler: Even the previously important Kouichi can do nothing but a HeroicSacrifice that gives ''them'' a power-up needed to fight the BigBad!]]
251** The manhua adaptation, [[CompressedAdaptation being much shorter]], was even worse about this. J.P. didn't do anything after getting his Beast Spirit, Zoe was shown getting her Human Spirit in a flashback and Zoe and Tommy get their Beast Spirits at the same time. Ranamon also gets this treatment. Her second battle with Zoe simply isn't shown. Koichi also never uses his Beast Spirit.
252* OverlyLongTongue: Chameleomon in episode 19 and Petaldramon in episode 20 both use their tongues to pull Kazemon and Zephyrmon, repectively.
253%%* PastelChalkedFreezeFrame
254* ThePowerOfFriendship: Emphasized heavily throughout the series, most notably during the Sakakkumon arc as part of the tests.
255* PrecisionGuidedBoomerang: In "Home Again, Takuya Returns", Sepikmon uses a boomerang to guide Takuya to the others.
256* PreviouslyOn: [[Anime/DigimonTamers Ri]][[Creator/MelissaFahn ka]] in the dub, until [[RealLifeWritesThePlot Melissa Fahn left to join the cast]] of ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}''. Bokomon took over, and wasn't nearly as good at it.
257* ProtagonistPowerUpPrivileges: Takuya and Koji are the worst offenders in the franchise until [[Anime/DigimonFusion Taiki and Kiriha come along]].
258* ThePsychoRangers: The Dark Legendary Warriors, [[spoiler: at least until they're purified and freed of Cherubimon/Lucemon's control, and ultimately end up going on to be instrumental in defeating Lucemon.]] Their overall BigBad is Cherubimon. TheDragon is Duskmon, [[spoiler: a corrupted [[LukeIAmYourFather relative of one of the heroes]]]] and the most powerful and mature member. The EvilGenius is Mercurymon, who talks in PurpleProse as he plots to take over the team himself. {{The Brute}}s are Arbormon and Grumblemon who are both pretty much DumbMuscle. Grumblemon also acted as the WakeUpCallBoss to let you know things are getting serious. Ranamon is the token girl who is vain and belittling, and develops a rivalry with Zoe over her beauty.
259* PublicDomainSoundtrack: In the ''Frontier'' movie, Zoe hums the famous Italian song '' Funiculì Funiculà'' in the beginning. This was kept in the dub!
260* PurelyAestheticGender: ''[[Anime/DigimonTamers Tamers]]'''s dub established it, but ''Frontier'' averts it completely. Different universes allows for different interpretation.
261* QuirkyMinibossSquad: See ThePsychoRangers.
262* RailroadToHorizon: There's a lot of railroad imagery (namely in posters and both the opening and the first ending sequence) to symbolize the long journey the heroes have to go on to save the Digital World. Trains are their main means of transport in the Digital World, and also how they enter it in the first place.
263* RedemptionDemotion: Downplayed with Kouichi. After being freed of Cherubimon's mind control and given a pair of proper spirits, Kouichi lacks the raw power he had as Duskmon. This is justified as his victories took place on the continent of Darkness which gave him a field power bonus and his later fights were in a place of great light.
264* RedemptionEarnsLife: [[spoiler: The Dark Legendary Warriors are purified upon being destroyed, their spirits help to defeat Lucemon and are promptly resurrected afterward, along with the heroic Legendary Warriors.]]
265* RedOniBlueOni: Takuya and Kouji, who of course are associated with red and blue respectively.
266* ResetButton: [[spoiler:The Digital World gets restored after Susanoomon finishes royally pwning Lucemon Satan Mode (the dragon and the Lucemon Larva it's protecting). Also, Kouichi's death (see DeadToBeginWith above) also gets reversed when the rest of the Digidestined get sent back to the time when they left, and they hurry to the hospital where Kouichi is dying, before they save him and their digivices turn back into mobile phones.]] This is part of the Digivices. Returning the data taken by the MonsterOfTheWeek and seeing the area restored stops happening ''really'' early on, but after their final victory, the entire world gets the treatment.
267* ResidualEvilEntity: In the penultimate battle, the Digidestined battle Lucemon, TheDragon of the series. When he is defeated, the Digidestined absorb his Digicode/Fractal Code, but only the light half. The dark half, now unfettered by the light, [[FromBadToWorse grows and forms into the purely-evil Lucemon Shadowlord Mode.]]
268* RichSiblingPoorSibling: This is subtly shown to be the case with SeparatedAtBirth twins Koji and Koichi. While Koji isn't necessarily ''spoiled'', he does enjoy a comfortable life living with his father and stepmother in a large house. Meanwhile, Koichi lives with his StrugglingSingleMother and their apartment is shown to be quite shabby. This difference feeds into Koichi's initial envy and hatred of Koji.
269* RuleOfSymbolism: There's a lot of pretty clever symbolism present in Sakakkumon, pointed out by [[http://digimon.firstagent.net/2013/04/frontier-episode-24-alone-but-never.html this blog]]. It works pretty well with Mercurymon's SmugSnake hamminess. He's a pretty smart guy and he likes to rub your face in it at every opportunity, and what better way than religious motifs to make him seem deeper than he really is.
270** The Metal Area where Mercurymon first fights Takuya is in the head, or Keter. Not only is it the obvious home for Mercurymon, the many mirrors strewn about and the tough time Takuya had finding his bearings works well in a world symbolizing things beyond man's comprehension.
271** The creepy church is Chokhmah, symbolizing divine wisdom, intuitiveness and insight. The church and Seraphimon's presence fit into this picture.
272** The Darkness Area where Koji and Duskmon duke it out is Tiferet. It means "adornment" and represents balance. Light and dark, giving and receiving, wisdom and emotion all come together here, the sphere that connects to all but one of the others. That could explain its "light on the outside, dark on the inside" portrayal.
273** The Ice Area where Takuya battles [=IceLeomon=] is Gevurah, meaning Strength. It's the judgment sphere, where even a usual good guy like Leomon has to face Takuya's wrath.
274** The Earth Area J.P. finds himself in is called Yesod, meaning "foundation". Basically, it does the dirty work of collecting the energies from other spheres and making something tangible out of them. J.P. having to balance himself and his shadow in order to discern reality would be the symbolism here, as does making earth the dominant element.
275** The Flame Area is Binah, which represents understanding. While the top right sphere is a sort of divine wisdom, the top left here is rationality and common sense. Tommy figuring out what his brother has been trying to tell him fits well here.
276** Koji goes to the Wind Area Hod. It represents majesty and, to borrow a page from the landscape, seeing the forest from the trees. In order to get stronger, Koji needs to learn to rely on his friends. Someone has to tell him that first.
277** Zoe's epic final battle with Ranamon takes place in Netzach, the victory sphere. It's about having the tenacity to overcome obstacles and achieve your goals. Pretty self-explanatory.
278** Takuya and J.P.'s pit stops are in the Chesed and Malchut sphere, representing kindness and the physical world respectively. Um... also self-explanatory!
279[[/folder]]
280[[folder: Tropes S - Y]]
281* TheSacredDarkness: The element of darkness enjoys the same sanctity and importance as the other nine. [[spoiler: Kouichi's purified spirits resemble a heroic BlackKnight instead of a demonic one.]]
282* SacrificialLion: Even if he isn't a Leomon, Kouichi's forms are lions and thus he is still considered to carry on the tradition. In Japan, [=JagerLowemon=]'s name is [=KaiserLeomon=]; while he was not in this form when he died, this is typically counted as yet another victim claimed by the Leomon curse. Also, [=IceLeomon=], a MonsterOfTheWeek; Agunimon suspected that he was being [[MindControl controlled]] by Sakkakumon and thus had to destroy him. However, as no digi-egg was left behind, it seems likely that he was not a real Digimon to begin with ([[spoiler: much like the Mercurymon they fought at the end of that arc proved to be, as the real Mercurymon was himself ''Sakkakumon'' and had a lot of fight left in him]]).
283* SailorEarth: Most of the time, they are created to either fill in the roles of the keepers of the remaining four spirits, or give the series more girls so Zoe isn't alone.
284* SaveBothWorlds: The finale of the series has the kids [[spoiler: racing to stop Lucemon before he can destroy the human world after actually destroying the Digital World (which gets better).]]
285* SealedEvilInACan: [[spoiler:Lucemon]], who was sealed in the Dark Area millenia ago. Also [=Icedevimon=], who was [[spoiler:imprisoned for destroying several Digimon towns sometime in the past, according to Bokomon.]]
286* SeanConneryIsAboutToShootYou: Tommy's eyecatch in the Japanese version has Kumamon pointing his snowball cannon at the viewer.
287* SeparatedAtBirth: [[spoiler:Kouji and Kouichi]], not quite birth but a very young age.
288* {{Sentai}}: This season is essentially a Digimon based adaptation of ''Franchise/SuperSentai''. The main characters are a FiveManBand of color coded characters, [[SmurfettePrinciple they have only a single female on the team]], they have their own transformations that give them unique elemental powers, their own enemy team of PsychoRangers, and they even have a SixthRanger who joins about halfway through.
289* ShesAManInJapan:
290** Inverted for Bokomon, he's a girl in the original Japanese, but is a boy in the English dub.
291** CampGay [=LordKnightmon=] became the dub's female Crusadermon. Some [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools actually like that]].
292** In the German Dub, Seraphimon, Cherubimon and Lucemon became all female like Ophanimon. Oddly enough, since Ophanimon, Cherubimon and Seraphimon's Rookie level forms got voice actors from previous seasons who played the same Digimon, Patamon is male.
293* ShipTease: Takuya/Zoe, Kouji/Zoe, and J.P./Zoe all have their moments.
294* TheSmurfettePrinciple: Zoe is the only girl in a FiveManBand of mostly guys. Ranamon is her counterpart amongst the [[PsychoRangers evil legendary warriors]].
295* SolomonDivorce: [[spoiler: Kouji and Kouichi]] were split apart by their parents' divorce. They were so young that neither even remembers the other.
296* SpectacularSpinning: Vritramon, Shutumon, Bolgmon, Calmaramon, Gigasmon, Arbormon, and Sakkakumon all have attacks with spinning.
297* SpoilerOpening:
298** The series' second Japanese ending is one of the franchise's most notable examples. It began playing at the end of the episode revealing [[spoiler: Duskmon is a human]], and showed [[spoiler: Kouichi as a member of the group, his natural Darkness Human and Beast forms AND Takuya and Kouji's new D-Scan designs that were not introduced for another 8 episodes]]!
299** Ironically, another opening averts this; most ''Digimon'' series had openings that, once a new member of the core cast was introduced, would change to show the new member, but ''Frontier''[='=]s opening never changes even after [[spoiler:Kouichi joins]].
300* StockFootage: The spirit evolution sequences, which are reused and almost [[{{Filler}} never edited down]]; par for the course with ''Digimon''. Another use of StockFootage also caused continuity problems in the last episode. When the children are about to Spirit Evolve together into Susanoomon, all of them raise their D-Tectors, and the screens glow. This was reused footage from an earlier episode. It wouldn't be a problem or even a noticeable issue if it weren't for the fact that the reused footage contained Kouichi's raised D-Tector as well, making the total of raised Digivices into 6 rather than 5, and the fact that Kouichi [[spoiler: was "killed off" two episodes ago]]. Though one could argue that Kouichi was still with them "in spirit" so to speak.
301** Several variations of a montage of the four other children [[spoiler: contributing their spirits so Kouji and Takuya could Hyper Spirit Evolve]] was reused for a couple of episodes during the Royal Knights arc.
302** The footage of [=KendoGarurumon=] howling after his Beast Spirit Evolution was re-used a few times. The clip even used different audio for the howl once.
303%%* TheSweatDrop
304* StolenGoodReturnedBetter: In episode 15, most of the Digidestined's D-tectors are stolen by Toucanmon. Two episodes later, they find them in the hands of a Datamon on the Autumn Leaf Fair. Tommy is able to win them back from the Datamon by winning a game for him, and upon doing so learns that Datamon added the Beast Spirit of Ice to his D-Tector.
305%%* SwissArmyTears: Thrice, no less.
306%%* {{Synchronization}}: Susanoomon
307* TechnicolorBlade: Duskmon has a pair of red swords, which he uses when utilizing his Lunar Plasma attack.
308* ThemeTwinNaming: Kouichi and Kouji - literally "Light First" and "Light Second".
309%%* ThoseTwoGuys: Bokomon & Neemon.
310* ThoseWereOnlyTheirScouts: When the team finally faces off with Cherubimon. He throws off their best attacks easily, and after giving each member of the team the opportunity to throw TheWorfBarrage at him so he can laugh it off, he smashes everyone with a single attack. Kouichi then gets his Digimon forms back, redesigned and stronger, and manages to defeat Cherubimon... only for the voice of Cherubimon to taunt him. That was just a much-weaker projection the real Cherubimon whipped up in order to try and talk Kouichi back to the Dark Side. The real thing will be waiting for them when they reach his lair.
311* ThresholdGuardians: Dark Trailmon and an illusion of Duskmon are this for a despairing Takuya after the team's defeat by the latter.
312** The Sakkakumon mini-arc has these for the rest of the characters, each using a given character's flaws against them.
313*** Volcamon, who later becomes a shadow version of Beetlemon, calls out J.P. for trying to [[TastesLikeFriendship bribe]] his way into friendships and shows the latter just how alone he was.
314*** Karatenmon picks apart Koji's loner tendencies and tells him not to reject allies.
315*** Asuramon shows Tommy the flaws of expecting others to help him constantly by turning that exact attitude against him.
316*** Ranamon forces Zoe to confront her guilt at lashing out at her OnlyFriend at camp.
317* TickleTorture: Ranamon uses this against Zoe and Tommy, before eventually giving up and switching to a more potentially deadly torture.
318* TongueTwister: When the kids encounter some Pipismon who keep echoing what they say, they try to confuse them by speaking in tongue twisters.
319* TransformationExhilaration: When Ranamon finally digivolves into her beast spirit form Calmaramon, she's screaming in joy and laughing maniacally. Ironically said form is a {{Gonk}} squid woman that even her own servants get repulsed by.
320* TransformationSequence: Fairly impressive ones that get used as StockFootage.
321* TransformationTrinket: D-tectors and Spirits, such that when Gigasmon steals the Kazemon and Kumamon spirits, or the Toucanmon steal their D-Tectors, the kids concerned (which at one point is [[GoodTroiEpisode everyone except Zoe]]) swiftly become TheLoad to their comrades and worry about it.
322* TrappedInAnotherWorld: Much less action occurs on Earth than in any other animated season.
323* TrashTheSet: [[spoiler:More like Trash The Planet and Its Three Moons. The final battle ''literally'' occurs in the void of space.]]
324%%* TroubledButCute: Inevitably Kouji and/or Kouichi.
325* TwinSwitch: In the CD drama "A Train Called Hope", Kouji suggests that Kouichi could impersonate him for Kouji's stepmother's sake while Kouji goes backpacking, and makes Kouichi practice a little. Kouichi doesn't think it's such a great idea, especially since Kouji has a dog who'd be able to tell the difference.
326* UnwittingPawn: A lot of characters turn out to be this during the Sakkakumon and Cherubimon arc. It's implied during Agunimon's fight with [=IceLeomon=] that even the enemies the kids face in Sakkakumon are being controlled or manipulated by Mercurymon.
327%%* VerbalTic: Many baby-level digimon.
328* VillainForgotToLevelGrind: How the Royal Knights were eventually defeated.
329* VoiceOfTheLegion: [[spoiler:Susanoomon]] has this due to being [[spoiler:a [[FusionDance combination]] of all ten Warriors]], though it sounds more like multiple people talking at once than some kind of audio effect.
330* WackyRacing: "Trailmon vs. Trailmon". The villains of the episode are [[ShoutOut a cheater and his cackling cartoon dog]]. The dub even referenced the Trope Namer by giving Doggymon a fair approximation of [[WesternAnimation/WackyRaces Muttley's]] laugh.
331* WeCanRuleTogether: Cherubimon and Duskmon. In fact, Cherubimon was merely using him as an UnwittingPawn and subjecting him to TheCorruption.
332* WeirdnessCensor: Demonstrated with this rather brilliant quote from the final episode:
333--> '''News Announcer:''' The disturbance was apparently the result of an electrical discharge. When asked why an electrical discharge looked like a giant dragon, the city spokesperson said "That's what electrical discharges do."
334* WhatYouAreInTheDark: When the heroes are trapped inside Sakkakumon, each one has to confront something like this. The most extreme example is J.P., who is tormented by his [[EnemyWithin darker self]] and is willing to [[TakingYouWithMe destroy himself along with it, just to get it to shut up]].
335* WhiteIsPure: the main antagonist is a digimon named Lucemon: an angelic-looking, blue-eyed blonde boy who wears a white toga. Again, he evokes the imagery of purity associated with angels in popular culture (white robes, golden hair).
336* WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity: After the group acquire the beast spirits. Takuya, Kouji, J.P., and Tommy initially go berserk when they first Beast spirit evolve, unable to control their new power. Zoe averts this as she was somehow able to control her power when she first Beast spirit evolves.
337* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Arbormon loses his beast spirit to Wolfmon. According to Duskmon, that makes him useless to the evil legendary warriors. Duskmon then disposes of him, giving the horrified kids a taste of what to expect in the following WhamEpisode.
338* YouMustBeCold: At the beginning of Episode 17, Koji offers his jacket to Zoe for her to wear when she's feeling cold, which leaves J.P. feeling rather jealous.
339* YouShallNotPass: Sorcermon in episode 13, to hold off the Dark Legendary Warriors and buy the kids time to escape.
340[[/folder]]

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