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11
12->''"I've seen enough movies to know I'm safer siding with the mystery girl with the crazy powers than the army of dudes trying to kill her."''
13-->-- '''Jacob Freeman''', ''Webcomic/{{Shadownova}}''
14
15A plot device that walks and talks. Usually, a Mysterious Waif shows up to develop the plot of an adventure story. For some reason, they draw the eye and attention. Often it's because they are TheWoobie and so TheHero [[TheDulcineaEffect decides to protect her and/or help her on her quest]]. She often serves as a CallToAdventure.
16
17Most often [[ReallyRoyaltyReveal she's of royal birth]], or a [[GodWasMyCopilot goddess in disguise]]. [[AmnesiacHero Sometimes unknowingly, as she will often have amnesia]]. But occasionally you'll just have a common birth waif.
18
19There are two key parts.
20
21First, she's a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waif "waif."]] It's usually a she, but sometimes a young boy might fill the role -- in this case the hero is likely a heroine.
22
23To quote the other wiki: "The word waif (from the Old French guaif, stray beast) refers to a living creature removed, by hardship, loss or other helpless circumstance, from his or her original surroundings. The most common usage is to designate a homeless, forsaken or orphaned child, or someone whose appearance is evocative of same."
24
25So she's somehow been removed from her normal routine and can't go home for some reason. (This is where TheWoobie bit comes in.)
26
27The second is that she's mysterious. We (and the hero) usually don't know much about her past, at least until TheReveal at the end. But for some reason, we are drawn to her. She's mysteriously [[{{Moe}} alluring]] -- partly because of the mystery around her. Where did she come from? Why can't she go home? Why won't she tell us about these things? (She's usually scared and doesn't want to talk about her past). A Mysterious Waif is frequently visually distinct from the other characters in some way and likely to double as an OracularUrchin because odd, fey personalities are common with this trope and making cryptic remarks that only raise more questions goes hand in hand with the Mysterious part of Mysterious Waif. Outright PsychicPowers, or being so good at reading people that you might ''think'' they're psychic, are also frequently found in Mysterious Waifs.
28
29Before you know what is happening the hero is getting caught up in trying to help her without really knowing what is happening or what he's getting into. (Expect him to have a serious moment of doubt once he discovers he's gotten into something big and dangerous.) Often involves a BigBrotherInstinct aspect. Expect her to be chased by a villainous authority of some sort, usually an EvilEmpire, that needs her [[LivingMacguffin for some nefarious purpose]].
30
31Particularly common in the RPG genre for video games. This character often has other additional elements of appearance and gameplay. See the subtrope MysticalWaif for more details about this variant.
32
33Often wears an EtherealWhiteDress. See also WaifProphet, OracularUrchin, and ManicPixieDreamGirl. MysteriousWoman is usually sexy instead of {{Moe}}. Subtrope of MysteriousStranger.
34------
35!!Examples:
36
37[[foldercontrol]]
38
39[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
40* Doubly subverted in ''Manga/{{Aruosumente}}''. When Legna finally turns his attention to Moeran, Moeran seems quiet, fey and mysterious, and a foreigner, too. Legna even assumes Moeran is writing something mysterious because he cannot read the writing. Turns out Moeran's handwriting is simply terrible, he just prefers to be quiet and never talks to Legna because he hates Oracles. Except he actually ''is'' an important clue to what happened ten years ago, [[spoiler:as he witnessed Oracle Kian's death, saw his own teacher die and was only let free on the promise of never telling anyone what he saw]]. Oh yeah, and he's male but looks suspiciously like a girl with his long hair and white flowy robes.
41* Ennis from ''Literature/{{Baccano}}'' is a more modernized example. She's kind of a subversion because her powers are [[{{Immortality}} nothing]] [[HealingFactor new]] [[CharlesAtlasSuperpower in the series]] but other than that she has all the traits; Ethereal and beautiful, captivates the hero and the audience, is connected with the BigBad against her will, and is very sympathetic.
42* In ''Manga/Brave10'', from the moment she walks into his life, there are countless questions plaguing Saizo about Isanami. Why is Isanami, a simple {{miko}}, so important she's pursued by ninjas with a LeaveNoWitnesses order? Why was her temple destroyed? What is the source of her DefenceMechanismSuperpower? [[spoiler:The answer's a bit [[ThePowerOfTheVoid dark]].]]
43* ''Manga/ChainsawMan'': Makima has delicate features and a bit of an "ethereal" feel to her despite her height and her dominating personality, and is shrouded in mystery, raising more questions than answers.
44* CC from ''Anime/CodeGeass'' can be considered this, as much of her backstory is hidden until later in the Anime. Even her name is never explicitly spoken, except when Lelouch speaks it after a battle which she is injured (of course, his voice is muted before we can hear it). She also is able to grant the power of Geass to people, which is a type of psychic power (Example: Lelouch was granted the power to make people do his bidding).
45* Kazusa from ''Manga/DescendantsOfDarkness''. She's suddenly orphaned, she's being pursuied by a demon, can somehow see the demon's true form and invokes a protective impulse in the main characters.
46* Kari Kamiya/Yagami Hikari from ''Anime/DigimonAdventure'' and ''Anime/DigimonAdventure02'', the human lightbulb. Also DelicateAndSickly at times (really, she gets sick twice during the series and twice offscreen as backstory -- a lot compared to the ''zero'' of most of the rest of the cast, but that adds up to a minuscule portion of her screentime -- [[NeverLiveItDown far from the invalid she's remembered as by fans]].), she is the only one to have a Crest (Light) that ''doesn't'' refer to an innate virtue or trait. The powers of this Crest usually manifest themselves in weird ways, and she has been shown as both 1) unusually self-sacrificing and 2) drawn to the Dark Ocean, because of her powers and walled-in emotional problems. She's also empathetic to the point of being borderline psychic, which sends her into two {{Heroic BSOD}}s in 02 (and during the last one, her best friend Miyako even goes and literally [[GetAHoldOfYourselfMan slaps her]] back to sanity).
47* ''Anime/Dororo2019'': Hyakkimaru's initial blindness, deafness, and muteness prevent him from explaining his unusual circumstances to others or knowing the full extent of them himself. His character design is even retooled to reflect this role, now resembling an eerie porcelain doll.
48* Lucy/Nyuu from ''Manga/ElfenLied'', who Kouta and Yuka discover [[NakedFirstImpression naked]] and standing on a beach, and is being pursued by the BigBad Director Kakuzawa and the unethical research facility he runs. Unlike most examples, however, the audience [[DramaticIrony already knows how she ended up there]], though she still has many mysteries surrounding her. She also has a SplitPersonality and, in her Lucy persona, is a much more violent VillainProtagonist variation of this trope.
49* Ruru of ''Anime/GaikingLegendOfDaikuMaryu'' appeared five years ago to Daiya after he lost his father at sea, saved him from being killed by a {{Kaiju}}, and gave him a small disc made of metal and glass, and then disappeared. In the future, as Daiya's hometown was attacked, she reappeared, bringing with her the titular SuperRobot and calmly teaching Daiya its attacks after his FallingIntoTheCockpit.
50* Tiffa Adil, the Mysterious Waif of ''[[Anime/AfterWarGundamX Gundam X]]'' fits the psychic part of this trope to a tee. She is a Newtype with precognition that is used to find the others like her, how does she find them? Through drawing their potential location. In addition, she has been shown to be the most powerful newtype in ''[[Anime/AfterWarGundamX Gundam X]]'' and has been mentioned [[VideoGame/SuperRobotWars via crossovers]] to potentially be the most powerful newtype in Gundam, period.
51* ''Anime/IDInvaded'': Narihisago takes on the role of a Brilliant Detective named Sakaido investigating the death of a girl named Kaeru, whose murder always points towards the path of solving the case.
52* Vivio of ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaStrikers'', the main character's adopted 6-year-old daughter who has heterochromia and was found trudging through the sewers while chained to a pair of cases containing [[MacGuffin Relics]].
53* The title character from ''Anime/NadiaTheSecretOfBlueWater'' is [[ActionGirl a lot better at holding her own]] than a typical example, and her relationship with TheHero is somewhat more... [[{{Tsundere}} volatile...]] than usual, but she definitely has the mysterious past and the "mysterious allure" (though not in a {{moe}} way) that persuades TheHero to throw his lot in with her. Her past also ties into why the antagonists are hunting her, although she's not an outright LivingMacGuffin.
54* ''Anime/{{Noir}}'' has Yumura Kirika, a melancholic and very cute protagonist who has no memory of her past. She also happens to be a deadly assassin.
55* ''Anime/Persona4TheGoldenAnimation'': The mysterious new character Marie becomes the main focus of the overall plot in this adaptation of ''VideoGame/{{Persona 4}}''.
56* Mytho is a RareMaleExample from ''Anime/PrincessTutu'', at least to Fakir. When Fakir first found him, Mytho was an EmptyShell dressed in rags who couldn't even remember his name, let alone his past ("Mytho" isn't his real name). Turns out he's a prince from a book, but he can't return until he defeats [[SealedEvilInACan the Raven]].
57* ''Manga/SailorMoon'':
58** Chibi-Usa first appears in this type of role. Convincing her that she can trust the Sailor Senshi is a major plot element.
59** Hotaru Tomoe/Sailor Saturn from ''Anime/SailorMoon''. She is mysterious, ready for self-sacrifice, and wears unusually dark clothes; she also has several mysterious powers even outside of her Sailor Senshi identity (although many of the other girls did too). Her situation is somewhat different, as there are [[EvilerThanThou three sides]] involved: Sailor Moon, who wants to save her; the Guardians of the Outer Solar System, who want to get rid of her as she poses a threat to the world; and the evil Death Busters, who want to destroy the world with her help. A couple of seasons later, she joins the main cast, and her powers overlap somewhat with those of the WhiteMagicianGirl CoolBigSis, Sailor Pluto.
60* Eto of ''Manga/TokyoGhoul'' is a rare evil example, a member of [[AntiHumanAlliance Aogiri Tree]] who is [[spoiler:the lost daughter of Kuzen Yoshimura and his human wife, Ukina]], as well as [[spoiler:the [[TheDreaded One-Eyed Owl]] and one of two regents for the semi-mythical One-Eyed King]]. Her small body is loaded with more secrets, power and insight than almost anyone else in the series and [[spoiler:she's the BigBad in control of a ''[[TheChessmaster massive]]'' amount of the plot]]. She also foretells many events and revelations throughout the collection of Tokyo Ghoul works, through [[spoiler:her books written with the pen name Sen Takatsuki]].
61* Kisara of ''Anime/YuGiOh'', the white-haired and blue-eyed Egyptian and homeless, quiet, vaguely psychic, mysterious keeper of the spirit of the Blue-Eyes White Dragon who [[HeroicSacrifice sacrificed herself]] to protect the only person who ever showed her kindness, High Priest Seto... even [[{{Reincarnation}} 3,000 years later]]. Only present day example would be against losing to Isis during Battle City. Otherwise, Kaiba typically sees Blue-Eyes White Dragon as his personal {{BFG}}.
62* ''Anime/ZoidsChaoticCentury'': Protagonist Van Flyheight finds a young girl with no memory of her past inside a container, and names her "Fiine" because it's the first word she said when he asked her name. All she can remember are the words "Zoid Eve", and from then on they set out to try and figure out what they mean. [[spoiler:It's eventually revealed during ''Guardian Force'' that she's an Ancient Zoidian and one of the last survivors of an apocalypse from the distant past.]]
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Asian Animation]]
66* Throughout the series ''Animation/LingLongIncarnation'' there are rumors that a female warrior of great skill with MysticalWhiteHair still lives on the surface armed with a sword. Some characters believe she rescued them once, years ago, during a near-disastrous monster encounter. Most members of the Lighthouse leadership dismiss the legend on principle, since no one is supposed to be able to live there anymore, but we the audience are eventually shown that she is indeed real, and she's not alone, as she is part of a whole group of surface humans.
67[[/folder]]
68
69[[folder:Comic Books]]
70* "I'm Layla Miller. I know stuff."
71* ''ComicBook/GiraffesOnHorsebackSalad'': The Woman Surreal is an in-universe example; the story begins with a group of socialites gossiping over her identity, her rumored fortune, and the [[RealityIsOutToLunch otherworldly spectacles]] that follow her everywhere she goes.
72* Miho in ''ComicBook/SinCity'' is a much more violent version of this trope.
73* ComicBook/{{X 23}} fills this role in her comics debut, ''Comicbook/{{NYX}}''. She doesn't show up until the third issue, but ultimately ends up driving the plot as the group she falls in with spends the rest of the series dealing with her abusive pimp's (who conveniently also gunned down protagonist Kiden Nixon's father in front of her when she was a child) attempts to track her down.
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder:Fan Works]]
77* ''Fanfic/AlwaysVisible'': The mysterious young mute guy with whom Galbraith flew to London meets and follows the inspector several times. He doesn't have a single line, and no one seems to see him except Galbraith himself.
78* ''FanFic/CadanceOfCloudsdale'': [[Characters/FriendshipIsMagicThePrincesses Cadance]] fits the definition to a T. [[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS3E1TheCrystalEmpirePart1 Her home magically disappeared nearly a millennium ago]], she's surrounded by mystery with her WingedUnicorn-ness, odd aging, and shrouded past. Finally, Celestia took her under her wing, to help Cadance discover more about her past.
79* Shion Nanashi from ''Fanfic/DanganronpaParadiseLost'' is a strange young girl with amnesia about a very troubled past, who ends up becoming protagonist Daisuke Hiyori's most trusted ally as he decides to protect her throughout the Killing Game and get to the bottom of who she is and how she ended up trapped with everyone else.
80* Michikyuu Kanae from ''Fanfic/KyonBigDamnHero'' qualifies. She's a girl escaping from an AlienInvasion by traveling between {{Alternate Universe}}s for so long [[YouCantGoHomeAgain she got lost and can't find her way back to her homeworld]]. Oh, and also [[spoiler: she's revealed not to remember well her own past so [[UnreliableNarrator she may be mistaken about her own backstory]].]]
81* In the MagicalGirl CrossOver ''FanFic/ShatteredSkiesTheMorningLights'', [[Franchise/SailorMoon Chibi-Chibi]], [[Anime/PrettyCure Cure Echo]], [[Franchise/LyricalNanoha Alicia Testarossa]], and [[Franchise/MadokaMagica Nagisa Momoe]] all fit the bill. [[spoiler:They are later revealed to all be the same being taking alternating forms, an embodiment of people [[RetGone erased from the flow of normal time]] as a result of massive disruptions in time and space.]]
82* In ''Fanfic/TowardABrightFuture'', the main character Y/N counts, if more cheerful than most, with an [[AmnesiacHero unknown past]], being removed to find herself in unfamiliar surroundings (the U.A. grounds, and strange {{Seer|s}} powers that kick off the fic's plot.
83[[/folder]]
84
85[[folder:Film]]
86%%%* Leeloo, the female lead of ''Film/TheFifthElement''.
87* The kid in ''Film/MadMax2TheRoadWarrior'' who never talks, but somehow grows up into the film's articulate narrator.
88%%* A male example would be the titular Oliver from ''Literature/OliverTwist''.
89* An early example is the servant girl from ''Film/TheSeventhSeal''. She is a mute that follows the knight and his squire after they save her from a rapist.
90* ''Film/{{Waterworld}}'' has Enola, an orphan with a map to dry land tattooed on her back.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Literature]]
94* ''Literature/OneQEightyFour'': Fuka-Eri is a beautiful seventeen-year-old girl who used to be apart of the religious organization, Sakigake. She managed to escape the commune and make a living in the outside world, but her experiences in Sakigake left a permanent mark. She has a peculiar speaking style- short sentences, lack of inflection when asking questions, etc.- and, if she doesn't want to answer a question or inquiry, she'll simply ignore whoever is speaking to her.
95* Errand in ''Literature/TheBelgariad'' starts out as a 'total innocent,' passed from one evil sorcerer to another, until he falls in with the heroes, having learned only one word (that being "Errand".) He turns out to be a [[spoiler:replacement God for Torak]]
96* ''Literature/ChroniclesOfTheKencyrath'': Kindrie is a {{Gender Inverted|Trope}} example. With his MysticalWhiteHair, strong Shanir (read: magical) powers, and mysterious origins, Kindrie is definitely a Mysterious Waif in the first few books he appears in. He turns out to be a [[spoiler:Chosen One, and an avatar of the second face of God--the only one of the three of them who was ever really unknown in that regard -- and their cousin.]]
97* Ivy, the current Archive in ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles''. The Archive is the repository of all human knowledge. Anything that has been written down, anywhere, she knows. She also happens to be a young girl. When we first see her, she's seven -- and unconcernedly tells Harry that if she has to, she'll kill him. We've seen her blasting vampires into oblivion and (at twelve) keeping almost 10 Denarians entertained without much effort. But she's still a kid, and will render official documents in crayon and {{squee}} over a cat.
98* Flute, in ''Literature/TheElenium'' trilogy by David Eddings, is a small girl who is revealed, slowly, to have greater magical powers than anyone else in the party. She can control time and animals, among other things. Eventually [[spoiler:they find out that Flute is actually the goddess Aphrael]], which explains everything.
99* Luna Lovegood in ''Literature/HarryPotter''. Last of her line. Mother died when she was 9. Orphan's plot trinket = Butterbeer cork necklace and Dirigible plum earrings. Also pure-hearted and kind, distracted at times, weird, persecuted, absolutely adorable!
100* ''Literature/{{Haugtussa}}'': When her second sight takes hold the poems state Veslemøy is going around by herself, mumbling dark words, at times scaring even her own mother.
101* Sorry from the [[Literature/GardensOfTheMoon first volume]] of the ''Literature/MalazanBookOfTheFallen''. She's a young EmotionlessGirl who shows up out of nowhere and knows more than a [[NewMeat recruit]] ever should. She mostly keeps to herself, lets an occasional comment slip and seems to have some kind of agenda. Deconstructed because aside from teenage thief Crokus who is enthralled by her, everyone is creeped out, even the assassin and the mage of the squad. The war-hardened soldiers refuse to accept her into the squad or even see her as human and get nervous when she hasn't been seen for a certain time. Sorry is in fact a fisher girl displaced from her home, possessed by the Patron God of Assassins and turned into a PsychoForHire. Cotillion eventually is made to withdraw from the possession, leaving behind a girl with a mix of memories of both a fisher girl and a ProfessionalKiller. She loses her Mysterious Waif appeal, but finally draws people to her who are willing to help her return home.
102* ''Literature/{{Neverwhere}}'' has Door, who falls at [[UnluckyEverydude Richard Mayhew]]'s feet on the street one night, bleeding and begging for help. He takes her home to clean her up and let her sleep, and suddenly, he finds himself neck-deep in trouble -- being tracked by Croup and Vandemar, being dragged around by [[MagnificentBastard the Marquis de Carabas]], and stumbling upon London Below.
103* Kah-Poel from Literature/ThePowderMageTrilogy. She's a "savage" from a faraway land, orphaned by invading soldiers. She's also an EthnicMagician who packs enough punch to keep [[spoiler: a god]] in a coma.
104* Owl from ''Literature/TheWitchlands''. She's a young, mute girl who's extremely important to the BigBad for some reason and who [[spoiler:has a mountain bat (this world's version of a dragon) under her control]], which is a witchery that no-one has ever seen or thought possible before.
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
108* ''Series/{{Andromeda}}'': Trance Gemini, a recent member of Beka's crew who seems very innocent and naive and whose origins are a complete mystery because no one else is familiar with her species (human-shaped, [[PointyEars pointy-eared]], purple-skinned, blonde, with a forked tail) and increasingly gives hints of being much older and wiser than she looks. [[spoiler:She turns out to actually be the avatar of a sun, one of many - and therefore [[TimeAbyss as old as the universe]] - sent by her people to steer the ''Andromeda'' crew so that they can defeat the Magog swarm, whose "god", the Spirit of the Abyss, is the avatar of black holes. And she can [[{{Seers}} see possible futures]] to judge which course of action is best, as symbolized by that bonsai tree she keeps pruning]].
109* Jessie from ''Series/DancingOnTheEdge'', a non-supernatural example, but whose background is shrouded in mystery and who is described by another character as "a mysterious little creature."
110* ''Series/DarkMatter2015'': Even on a show where the initial premise is that six people awaken on a starship with no memory of who they are or why they're there, the past of teenage girl Five (played by Creator/JodelleFerland) is the most mysterious of them all. While the adult crew (One, Two, Three, Four and Six, named in order of waking) all learn their given names at the end of the pilot episode and that [[spoiler:[[AmnesiacDissonance they were all hardened criminals and lowlife mercenaries]] guilty of mass murder, kidnapping, assault and piracy]], Five has no [[spoiler:wanted file]] in the ship's database, and so although the others [[ThatManIsDead choose not to use their original names]], Five doesn't even know hers. She bemoans to the Android in the second episode that at least the others know they belong on the ship, though she quickly demonstrates a prodigy-level aptitude for mechanics and programming that allows her to [[TagalongKid fill the role]] of TeenGenius and TheSmartGuy. Adding to the mystery are the disturbing non sequitors she sometimes utters that make it clear she has the others' memories buried in her subconscious. The rest of the crew can't even be sure [[spoiler:[[AmbiguousSituation whether]] their original selves kidnapped this girl, or [[LittleStowaway she stowed away]]]], but regardless of their original relationship, they're [[EveryonesBabySister all very protective of her now]]. Five's exact age is unknown even to her, until it's established as sixteen at the beginning of Season 2.
111* Clara from ''Series/DoctorWho'', the [[InSeriesNickname Impossible Girl]] who was [[spoiler: [[SaveThisPersonSaveTheWorld born to save the Doctor]]]]
112* River from ''Series/{{Firefly}}'', who was tricked into leaving home for [[PlayingWithSyringes the]] [[SchoolForScheming Academy]] and can't go ''back'' home because her rescue by her brother turned them both into hunted fugitives. She's now both psychic and insane, and she was already a genius polymath, so she definitely knows more about what goes on than anyone else but she's not equipped to tell anyone about it in a non-cryptic fashion. Also, she can shoot people dead without looking at them and take out entire rooms of enemies with WaifFu.
113** After ''Film/{{Serenity}}'', it seems she's getting better. Not 100% better (she still reads minds) but better than before.
114* Natsuki in ''Series/GoGoSentaiBoukenger'' has a couple of SpiderSense moments, so far a part you wonder if ThePowersThatBe ''forgot'' about the skull thingy way back in episode one, but when her powers are used against the Boukengers by bad guys, you get mass destruction. It's... really more trouble than it's worth.
115* Rebecca from ''Series/HowToGetAwayWithMurder'', a girl at the centre of a murder trial, with a mysterious background and waif-like appearance (slender frame, long dark hair, soulful brown eyes).
116* Freya from ''Series/{{Merlin|2008}}'', a Druid runaway who is under a {{Curse}}.
117* Kes from ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'' though her past is well-explained ([[spoiler:if not her subsequent FaceHeelTurn]]) given that she's only lived a couple of years when the crew encounters her.
118* Eleven on ''Series/StrangerThings'' is a mysterious, [[YouAreNumberSix nameless]] adolescent girl with a shaved head, NoSocialSkills, and a perpetually frightened and vulnerable appearance who one day shows up in the life of a group of middle-school-aged ''[[TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons D&D]]'' nerds right after one of their own, Will Byers, goes missing. Turns out both she and Will's disappearance are connected: [[spoiler:she's a {{psychic|Powers}} [[SuperSoldier living weapon]] raised by a sinister government program, and her powers tore a hole in reality that brought into our world the monsters that kidnapped Will.]] The "mysterious" part goes away in later seasons as she befriends the protagonists and grows more comfortable around others, [[spoiler:though the psychic powers don't]].
119* Rose Wilson from ''Series/Titans2018''. She more or less starts the plot of Season 2. Homeless, after running away from her homicidal father; MysticalWhiteHair; evoking the main hero's desire to protect her; a lot of mystery about her true motivations; cryptic backstory.
120[[/folder]]
121
122[[folder:Opera]]
123* Music/ClaudeDebussy's ''Pelléas et Mélisande'' is built around this trope. Pelléas keeps asking Mélisande questions, and never gets any concrete answers. Example:
124-->'''Pelléas:''' How old are you?\
125'''Mélisande:''' I'm beginning to feel cold.
126[[/folder]]
127
128[[folder:Podcasts]]
129* November from ''The Chimera Program'' arc of ''Podcast/CoolKidsTable''. She releases everyone at the titular facility for the escape, but only Papyrus and Wyvern are able to remember her after she leaves their line of sight. She also gets a hold of everyone's file during the breakout.
130[[/folder]]
131
132[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
133* ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'': The Scripture of the Bride [[DiscussedTrope discuss]] this trope. It supposedly contains [[IceCreamKoan profound cosmic truth.]]
134-->[[ArcWords Once, there was a maiden...]]
135-->[[BigBad ...who fled a shadow]], [[TheHero in the company of a friend]].
136-->[[WalkingTheEarth They traveled through strange places,]] [[HiddenElfVillage and among strange people.]]
137-->[[AngstWhatAngst "How can you trust me,"]] [[LampshadeHanging he asked,]] [[YouCantFightFate "with such horror behind you?"]]
138-->[[ThePowerOfLove "Love endures," she said.]]
139* Blue-Eyed Maiden in the ''TabletopGame/YuGiOh'' card. Like Kisara, she can summon the Blue-Eyes White Dragon with her effect
140[[/folder]]
141
142[[folder:Video Games]]
143* ''VideoGame/ANNOMutationem'':
144** Sigrid is first discovered by Ann around Freeway 42 after she had [[HungerCausesLethargy collapsed from hunger]]. [[spoiler:It's later shown she's actually a RealityWarper that was taken there as part of C's UriahGambit to prevent her from being used against him]].
145** In the Mysterious Console DLC storyline, Noni is TheSpeechless who has been living within a device for an unspecified amount of time waiting for contact from her parents. [[spoiler:Noni is really a digital construct of the real Noni who succumbed to chronic disease and was created by an AnonymousBenefactor who was paid by her parents]].
146* Machi Tobaye in ''VisualNovel/ApolloJusticeAceAttorney''. Blind, can't speak English, and falsely accused of cold-blooded murder. [[spoiler:Only the last's true, although his English is pretty awkward]]. TheReveal from Tobaye's part only makes his partner, Lamiroir, even more Mysterious Waif than she already is, [[spoiler:since she's the one who is blind]]. Other than that, the woman hides her face, speaks a foreign language, has amnesia, an angelic singing voice, [[spoiler:two dead husbands, a long lost son and daughter, and a stage magician background. She's also recruited as one of the test jurors who literally decide the game's ending]].
147%%* ''VideoGame/ArTonelicoMelodyOfElemia'' has Aurica. ''VideoGame/ArTonelicoQogaKnellOfArCiel'' has Saki.
148* Elizabeth from ''VideoGame/BioShockInfinite'' is the quarry of the Columbian government, ruled by a fiery preacher (and Elizabeth's "father", so to speak), and the private eye sent to smuggle her out of the city. She seems to have an invisible touch: She can open "tears", or windows to alternate realities and even the future; she is also the root cause of the tears -- or at least, her body's electrical field is somehow generating them without her consent -- hence, her popularity. She is kept under close surveillance in a laboratory tower. [[spoiler:The epilogue reveals that the infant Elizabeth lost her finger when an (artificially-created) tear closed over it. The missing 'piece' was let behind in an alternate reality, which upset the balance of reality and gave her the portal ability.]]
149-->'''Booker:''' They won't stop until they have you.
150-->'''Elizabeth:''' Why?! What did I do to them?
151-->'''Booker:''' You frighten them.
152-->'''Elizabeth:''' Good.
153* In ''VideoGame/BoxxyQuestTheGatheringStorm'', Catie and Arianna are heroic and villainous examples of this trope, respectively. Although Catie’s mystique has died down a bit in-universe since the first game.
154%% Needs context * [[spoiler:Layla,]] the girl in the Sunset Cage in ''{{VideoGame/Fairune}}'' counts. [[spoiler:Both of them do.]]
155* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
156** Terra of ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'', an escaped, scared slave of TheEmpire who is DesperatelyLookingForAPurposeInLife. She also can use magic, something nobody can do without an aid from MagiTek or espers.
157** Aerith from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'', though [[PluckyGirl bashful and happy-go-lucky]], is revealed as LastOfHerKind: a vagueful flower girl holding a quesionably useless materia who is actively being chased by bad guys. She also gets directly involved with some ancient civilization.
158** Tidus from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'' is a gender flipped example, with the added bonus of [[InvertedTrope being the perspective character]]. The audience see him start off in Zanarkand, but from everyone else's perspective he basically just showed up from nowhere and claimed to be from a long destroyed (holy) city.
159** Yeul from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIII2'' is a Seeress of Paddra, a Mysterious Waif existing in all time periods at once thanks to her reincarnation.
160* The ''Franchise/FireEmblem'' franchise has several:
161** Sophia from ''[[VideoGame/FireEmblemTheBindingBlade The Binding Blade]]''; she's [[spoiler:a Really700YearsOld HalfHumanHybrid]] who starts out as a DamselInDistress, so the cast has to free her and then help her save her [[HiddenElfVillage hometown]]. Her past is shrouded in mystery that it's never really uncovered. Aside from that, she can see the future, and she's needed in order to [[spoiler: get a McGuffin that will unlock the game's GoldenEnding.]]
162** Siblings Nils and Ninian from ''[[VideoGame/FireEmblemTheBlazingBlade The Blazing Blade]]''. Mysterious (and traumatic) past, mystical powers, and being hunted by the BigBad. Bonus points for [[spoiler:them being Really700YearsOld HalfHumanHybrids, and said BigBad being their ArchnemesisDad.]]
163** Avatar/Robin from ''VideoGame/FireEmblemAwakening'' is a rare case of a PlayerCharacter being a Mysterious Waif themselves, since he/she is an AmnesiacHero who holds great power [[spoiler: and turns out to be the ApocalypseMaiden.]]
164** Princess Azura from ''VideoGame/FireEmblemFates'' painfully deconstructs the trope. She certainly fits the archetype, being a solemn princess with mysterious powers and a close relationship to the protagonist... But her mysteriousness stems from her being a BrokenBird with trust issues who only keeps people at a distance to protect herself, despite [[IJustWantToBeLoved secretly wanting to be loved]]. Thing is, since she doesn't tell anyone this, the way she conducts herself just intimidates some members of the army (like Keaton, who at first freaks out at her apparent emotionlessness) and causes others to view her with suspicion (like Saizo, who cannot trust her until ''at least'' their B support), [[ViciousCycle making it even harder for her to bond with them]]. And the worst part? [[spoiler: Her mysterious powers ''[[CastFromLifespan are slowly killing her]]'', but [[ChronicHeroSyndrome she's so determined to help the Avatar's cause and save the world]] that she ''can't'' bring herself to stop using them, leading to her death in two of the routes.]] In short, her mysteriousness does not draw people to her, but ''separates'' her from them, and has long-lasting negative consequences upon her.
165** Arguably the defining example from the franchise is Julia from ''VideoGame/FireEmblemGenealogyOfTheHolyWar'', a mysterious and seemingly defenceless [[MysticalWhiteHair white-haired girl]] rescued by Lewyn from the Belhalla Massacre who bears [[IdentityAmnesia no memories of her past.]] She turns out to be [[spoiler:the daughter of Deirdre and Arvis, making her a princess of Grannvale, and the holder of major Naga blood, which identifies her as the hero destined to wield the legendary holy weapon of light and defeat Loptous.]]
166* ''Creator/FromSoftware'' enjoys inserting one of these girls into many of its games. Usually, she'll stick to the main hub area, provide the PC some invaluable help (like level ups), and be undyingly loyal to them.
167** ''VideoGame/DemonsSouls'' has the Maiden in Black, a powerful and ancient demon chained to the Nexus.
168** ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsII'' features the Emerald Herald, a Fire Keeper-like figure who hangs around at Majula and tells you to seek out King Vendrick for unclear reasons. [[spoiler: Near the end of the game, she reveals that her name is Shanalotte, and she was created by Aldia and Vendrick as a cure for the curse of undeath, but failed and given to be raised by the dragons.]]
169** ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsIII'' has the Fire Keeper, who aids the Ashen One in their quest to rekindle the First Flame. She levels you up, reacts to the PC's emotes, can cure you of hollowing if given the right item, [[spoiler: and if given another plot item, the Eyes of a Fire Keeper, she'll give you the End of Fire ending, where she extinguishes the First Flame and finally brings about the Age of Dark.]]
170** ''VideoGame/{{Bloodborne}}'' has the Plain Doll, an animate porcelain doll found in the Hunter's Dream who cares for all Hunters who pass through. It's heavily implied that Gherman created her as a ReplacementGoldfish for a loved one; the DLC reveals her template to be Lady Maria of the Astral Clocktower, Gherman's student and the penultimate boss.
171** ''VideoGame/EldenRing'' institutionalizes this in the form of Finger Maidens, women who help the Tarnished on their quest to reach the Elden Ring [[spoiler:and who's purpose is to burn to death to open a path for them]]. The Tarnished is initially dismissed as Maidenless, but later meets the maiden Melina, who, while not a true Finger Maiden, is willing to serve the role for the Tarnished.
172*** The Tarnished may also later run into Hyetta, a blind girl in training to become a Finger Maiden for which she has to eat Shabriri Grape to receive guidance. [[spoiler:She's actually being groomed by the followers of the Three Fingers, the EvilCounterpart to the Two Fingers. If the player follows her questline, they can unlock the game's DownerEnding where the Three Fingers, through Hyetta, sends them to burn the world to ash]].
173* ''VideoGame/GoldenSunDarkDawn'': Himi is a wise young ShrineMaiden prone to [[FaintingSeer prophecy-induced seizures]]. However, contrary to the usual use of a Mysterious Waif to begin the hero's quest, she's the EleventhHourRanger whose visions provide the key to saving the day.
174* ''VisualNovel/HotelDuskRoom215'': Mila is a mysterious young girl who shows up at the hotel some time after Kyle's arrival. Nobody seems to know what she's looking for, and the fact she can't talk doesn't help matters.
175* Princess Yorda of ''VideoGame/{{Ico}}'' definitely qualifies. Though the castle appears to be her home, it's more accurately described as her prison. She's utterly helpless (so much so that she has to be [[BigBrotherInstinct led by the hand by the player character]]) for most of the game, [[TheUnintelligible unintelligible]], acts childlike, glows with an ethereal light, and has some kind of magical power. Oh, and the [[GodSaveUsFromTheQueen Queen]] has a particular interest in preventing her from leaving the castle.
176* ''[[VideoGame/InazumaEleven Inazuma Eleven GO Chrono Stone]]'':
177** Fei Rune who serves as a male example, at first all we know about Fei is that he came from the same time period as El Dorado, he's gotten his hands on a technology called Mixi-Max which allowed him to fuse his aura with a ''T. rex'', and he has a clear interest in protecting soccer at all costs from El Dorado.
178** Kinako from the same series also fits the bill, [[spoiler: she became a member of Raimon's soccer club after the defeat of Protocol Omega 2.0 in Nobunaga's era with little to no explanation, and she's shown to be wearing Tsurugi's number after she's won a duel against Tsurugi for it]]. She also somehow even knew about [[spoiler: the Keshin that Fei goes through lengths to hide, and the doll that Fei got from [[ParentalAbandonment his father]]]].
179* ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'':
180** Despite her outgoing personality and being the main protagonist's childhood friend, Kairi is definitely this. She arrived as an amnesiac refugee from another world. Then she loses her new home and is taken by the villains. We later learn that she is one of the Princesses of Heart, seven maidens who are needed to open the final keyhole and the titular Kingdom Hearts.
181** Kairi's [[LiteralSplitPersonality Nobody]], Naminé averts the displaced from home part (as strange as it might sound, Castle Oblivion is her birthplace) but otherwise she fits smack-dab into this trope. She has a mysterious origin and an equally mysterious power to alter memories. Also, unlike Kairi, Naminé is an ExtremeDoormat, letting herself become the villains' pawn in her own home.
182* ''VideoGame/{{Lufia}}'':
183** The titular girl in ''VideoGame/LufiaAndTheFortressOfDoom'' shows up in TheHero's hometown, eventually becoming his friend and lover. [[spoiler:She turns out to be the reincarnation of Erim, the Sinistral of Death.]]
184** Iris in ''VideoGame/LufiaIIRiseOfTheSinistrals'' and the remake ''[[VideoGame/LufiaCurseOfTheSinistrals Curse of the Sinistrals]]'', a fortune teller/priestess who provides guidance to the party. [[spoiler:Also the Sinistral of Death, [[TheMole in an antagonistic role]] ([[BecomingTheMask at first]]).]]
185** Seena in ''VideoGame/LufiaTheLegendReturns'', a travelling fortune teller who recruits TheHero Wain for a "great adventure". [[spoiler:''Yes'', she too is the Sinistral of Death, albeit firmly on the good-guy side.]]
186** Rubius in ''VideoGame/LufiaTheLegendReturns'', a priestess seeking the artifacts necessary to seal away the Beast. [[spoiler:[[MetaTwist Bzzzt, wrong, not the Sinistral of Death this time.]]]]
187%%* Luna from ''VideoGame/LunarTheSilverStar'' and Lucia from ''VideoGame/LunarEternalBlue''.
188* ''VideoGame/MegaManBattleNetwork'': Iris in the [[VideoGame/MegaManBattleNetwork6CybeastGregarAndCybeastFalzar sixth game]]. She pops up from time to time offering Lan aid, but it's never really clear who she is or where she comes from until her true identity is revealed in the final chapter.
189* In romance interactive novel, ''VideoGame/{{Moonrise}}'', the character of Alice shows up, doesn't want to talk about her past, and utterly upends the player's life.
190* ''VideoGame/NintendoWars'': Isabella/Catleia from ''Advance Wars: Days of Ruin''. {{Moe}}, LaserGuidedAmnesia, found in wreckage and rescued by the main character, instinctively knows mysterious knowledge she shouldn't without explanation, and the BigBad seems to know who she is and is unusually interested in her.
191* ''Franchise/{{Persona}}'':
192** ''VideoGame/Persona3'': A mysterious boy named Pharos introduces himself to the protagonist and makes him sign a contract. It's not until the end of the game that you learn that [[spoiler:he's an Appriser of Nix, the game's BigBad, whose EvilPlan you have been unknowingly been fulfilling by destroying Shadows throughout the game.]]
193** ''VideoGame/Persona5'': A mysterious girl, [[spoiler:Lavenza]], appears to the protagonist as a glowing blue butterfly each time he's about to die in the story, urging him to overcome his impending doom. It's not until the end of the game that you learn the truth of who this girl is [[spoiler:namely the Twins, two girls suffering IdentityAmnesia who are Lavenza's true personality split in two]], or what she's really been urging you to overcome [[spoiler:the real BigBad's EvilPlan, which you have been playing a part in for the entire game.]]
194* Nei from ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarII'' is a CuteMonsterGirl. An outcast of the society who is recued by a government agent Rolf. After that, she follows him around trying to aid his quest [[spoiler: including performing a HeroicSacrifice fighting her EvilTwin]].
195* Fina from ''VideoGame/SkiesOfArcadia'' is a [[spoiler: member of the Silvite, [[{{Lunarians}} a civilization that lives on the silver moon.]]]] She was sent to gather and secure the [[PowerCrystal Moon Crystals]] capable of awakening and controlling ancient giants created as weapons of mass destruction. Due to this she's pursued by the game's villain, the Valua Empire, which seeks to find the crystals in order to take over the world. Later in the game it's revealed that [[spoiler: the Silvites' true goal was using the crystals to destroy the world and wipe the slate clean. They had kept this detail a secret from Fina, making her an UnwittingPawn.]] Interestingly she has [[spoiler: a male counterpart of sorts in Ramirez, who had been previously sent on the same quest by the Silvite, but ended up turning on them and joining Valua.]]
196* Elh of ''VideoGame/{{Solatorobo}}'' fits as well, having a quiet, distant personality, MacGuffin amulet, and [[spoiler:DoomedHometown]], though in this case the waif is a young male [[spoiler:- or rather, is confused for one. Elh is really a girl, much to everyone's surprise. [[YouNeverAsked They just never asked]].]]
197* In ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy'', Rosalina has this role as Mario encounters her on a small planet after he was thrown into space by Bowser's forces. It turns out that Bowser had stolen her power stars, which are her energy source for the Comet Observatory. As you play through the game, you unlock her backstory in the form of a storybook.
198* Neither are straight examples, but Kanna and Anderson from ''VideoGame/ThreeTheHardWay'' qualify. They are both enigmatic characters of unknown origins who attract much attention from others due to their cryptic personalities and [[MysteriousPast lack of concrete backstories]]. Both of them are very powerful (albeit in very different ways -- Kanna is an [[ReallySevenHundredYearsOld ancient]] [[AlchemyIsMagic alchemist/sorceress]], while Anderson is a gladiator), and they are more knowledgeable about the game's universe than the rest of the cast combined, due to their possible ties with the previous War. To clarify further:
199** Kanna is an immortal alchemist belonging to a legendary ancient Order and seem to be know the BigBad quite well. Her first in-game appearance has her ''blow up an entire battle field'', almost killing the heroes, but later joins the heroes' party for dubious reasons. However, Kanna turns out to be more of a subversion, as she is not as cryptic as she initially seems, and is more naive and clueless to her Order's purposes than being actively secretive.
200** Anderson seems to be deeply involved with almost every faction known in the game: He frequently hangs out with the Zebulun Cult despite claiming that he's not a member. He is well-acquainted with King and is implied to have met him during the first war. Older Kaibutsu Lords refer to him as their "brother". He knows a lot more about the Govan order than some of the Govan members themselves [[spoiler:and is implied to know its original founder, Candor]]. Despite these vague hints, virtually nothing of his identity have been truly confirmed.
201[[/folder]]
202
203[[folder:Web Comics]]
204* The [[{{Moe}} appropriately named]] Moé the ninja from ''Webcomic/TheInexplicableAdventuresOfBob''
205* ''Webcomic/TheNoordegraafFiles'': The majority of the orphans could count, but [[http://kumacomics.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Kat.jpg Katrina]] takes the cake. Theo first sees her in a robe, attempting to break into a locked closet. When this happens, the whole plot is set in motion. To this day, still absolutely nothing is known about her. Even for [[http://kumacomics.com/case-file-database/chars/case-file-katrina/ her biography]], all that is said about her(besides physical characteristics) is: "No information currently available."
206* ''Webcomic/RumorsOfWar'' has three in the main cast: [[TheHero Elysia]], [[TheBigGuy Illyra]], and Occela. All three have homes they can't return to; one's searching for her Missing Mentor, one pulls a double-shift as TheLadette, and the third's a BrokenBird.
207* Played with in ''Webcomic/{{Shadownova}}''. Iris is actually the main character and we know exactly why she can't go home but she does have some incredible and plot important powers that everyone either wants or wants killed. She's implied to have lost a lot of faith in humanity over some traumatic event in her past that she refuses to elaborate on besides hinting that it involved the death of her father.
208[[/folder]]
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210%%[[folder:Web Original]]
211%%* Our very own JustForFun/MysteriousWaifTan.
212%%[[/folder]]
213
214[[folder:Western Animation]]
215* ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'': [[Characters/StevenUniverseLapisLazuli Lapis Lazuli]] was poofed and imprisoned into a mirror for thousands of years after being mistaken for an enemy soldier. She is on the short side, frail, barefoot doe-eyed, and her gem got cracked while imprisoned. However, she's incredibly powerful with near-complete control of water. All Lapis can't do with a cracked gemstone is form her wings to fly back to Homeworld, her only desire, so she tries to build herself an elevator home with Earth's oceans. Fortunately, Steven manages to heal her. Unfortunately, Lapis hadn't counted on Homeworld having changed so much during her imprisonment and that her return would be dangerous.
216[[/folder]]
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218[[folder:Real Life]]
219* The Afghan Girl, real name Sharbat Gula, was photographed in an Afghan refugee camp. At the time the picture was taken, the photographer didn't know her name, and in 2002, she was successfully located and formally identified. Her photograph is the most recognized in Magazine/NationalGeographic history.[[note]]And in case you're wondering how being moderately famous improved her life... it didn't. At the time the picture was taken, Gula was twelve and had just been driven from her home, so she was understandably pissed off. And when she was found in 2002 and asked how she felt about being famous, she found that it was hard to care when your husband was working for a dollar a day and your asthma made it hard to breathe within your own polluted city.[[/note]]
220* More than one young female Catholic saint is represented like this in media. A good example would be [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solange Saint Solange]]; she's depicted as a beautiful young shepherdess blessed by God to the point of having HealingHands and exorcising demons with a sole touch. Too bad the poor kid ended up [[OffWithHisHead decapitated]] [[AttemptedRape by a would be rapist]]... but then Solange performed her last miracle: [[LosingYourHead calmly picking up her own severed head and walking back home]].
221* A popular practice in [[DidAnastasiaSurvive the classic "Anastasia lives" stories]] is to present "Anna Anderson" (in real life yet another Anastasia impersonator) as this -- in these depictions, she'll be Anastasia as an adult with amnesia who finds out that she's fallen royalty.
222[[/folder]]

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