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1%% Trope was declared Administrivia/NoRealLifeExamplesPlease via crowner by the Real Life Maintenance thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/crowner.php?crowner_id=13qdhjkz
2
3[[quoteright:225:[[Series/MythBusters https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/GrantImahara.jpg]]]]
4[[caption-width-right:225:Grant Imahara, [=MythBuster=] and PatronSaint of this trope, with a [[SmartPeopleBuildRobots typical creation]].]]
5
6->''"I became a comedian because I was the only Asian in my high school... that failed math."''
7-->-- '''Dat Phan''' (Vietnamese stand-up comedian)
8
9Pretty much any East Asian character in western media who isn't a martial artist or a gangster will be highly intelligent and/or unusually geeky. If done clearly and more on the intelligent side than geeky, this will be an exaggeration of the BrainyBrunette.
10
11The [[StereotypeFlip polar opposite]] of this, becoming more common in recent years, is the AsianAirhead -- a character archetype centering on an Asian who is [[TheDitz dumb as a brick]].
12
13The reasoning behind this stereotype is that most Asian cultures regard education and smarts as [[SeriousBusiness very important things]]. Children are expected to study very hard to obtain good grades and get into good schools. This also means that "nerdiness" is viewed more positively in these cultures (as evidence of studying hard, rather than too hard as it is usually perceived in American popular culture). For this reason, this character is all but guaranteed to have an EducationMama.
14
15May grow up to be a MagicalAsian if the character ends up being a mentor for his new students (who may also be nerdy).
16
17The possible TropeCodifier was Japanese leader Hideki Tojo, who wore glasses and had an overbite like so many stereotypical nerds, and was portrayed as ''very'' nerdy in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII Allied propaganda. In fact, you could argue that the classic Nerd archetype is a combination of how Jewish people (supposedly) talk with how Japanese people (supposedly) look.
18
19Website/TheOtherWiki has an article on the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_minority "model minority"]] stereotype from which this trope is derived. Contrast AllAsiansKnowMartialArts, as most Asian and Nerdy characters lack the athletic ability for martial arts, though it's possible for these two tropes to [[GeniusBruiser overlap]]. For the South Asian subtrope, see BollywoodNerd. For related tropes, see GermanicEfficiency, JewishAndNerdy, and BlackAndNerdy.
20
21----
22!!Examples:
23
24[[foldercontrol]]
25
26[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
27* ''Webcomic/HetaliaAxisPowers'', as its [[AnthropomorphicPersonification anthropomorphic characters]] are based on NationalStereotypes. South Korea is said to love gaming and the Internet and Japan is a TeenGenius, a GadgeteerGenius, and something of an {{Otaku}}. Taiwan is an anime fan and she cosplays in the 2011 and 2013 Halloween events, Vietnam is a gamer, and India is a BollywoodNerd who's good with numbers.
28* Reversed, possibly consciously, in ''Manga/BlackLagoon'': [[JewishAndNerdy the central team's techie is the only white member]].
29* ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia'' has Momo Yaoyorozu. Although the majority of the students at U.A. seem to be intelligent enough (excluding the fact that they're all Japanese), Momo seems to stand out amongst the other intelligent students, mostly the females. Not only does her good grades support this, but Momo literally knows everything about her Quirk, [[spoiler: tutors her classmates to help with studying for finals, and even becomes the Vice President of her class. She also recognizes her classmate's failures during the battle trial, and specifically explains it through what she saw while the others watching couldn't recognize it at all]].
30[[/folder]]
31
32[[folder:Comedy]]
33* Chinese stand-up comedian Joe Wong, with his slight frame, wire-rimmed glasses and strong accent reinforcing his background as a chemical engineer who graduated from two universities in China before furthering his studies at Rice University in Texas and is never afraid to portray himself as a FunnyForeigner in his routines. Some of his material deals with the perception of all Asians as this trope.
34* Vietnamese-American comedian Dat Phan, as evidenced by the page quote. The assumption of this trope is how the eight other people sitting around him also failed math.
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Comic Books]]
38* ''Franchise/TheDCU'':
39** Ryan Choi, who takes up Ray Palmer's mantle as ComicBook/TheAtom, and also works at the same university.
40** The Judd Winnick run of ''ComicBook/PowerGirl'' features Nicco Cho, an expert hacker and inventor who aids Power Girl.
41* ''ComicBook/{{Giantkiller}}'': Dr. Steven Azuma is a Japanese-American scientist specializing in bioengineering. He is the one who created the titular Giantkiller by splicing human and {{Kaiju}} DNA.
42* Tan and Patel, Spot's tech-support colleagues in ''ComicBook/IZombie'', are heavy examples.
43* ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse'':
44** ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk'' supporting character Amadeus Cho is Korean-American and incredibly good at math, to the point that he's apparently one of the top ten smartest people in the Marvel universe.
45** Takeshi Matsuya/Wiz Kid is a mutant of Japanese descent who has powerful {{Technopath}} abilities and the computer and engineering smarts to make full use of them. Fellow ComicBook/AvengersAcademy student Hazmat outright calls him "Asian stereotype boy".
46* ''ComicBook/TheLonelinessOfTheLongDistanceCartoonist'': Tomine, who is Japanese-American, narrates an incident where a cartoonist assumed he was an internet technician rather than a fellow cartoonist.
47* Sharri Barrnett, the Filipino programmer in ''ComicBook/SteelgripStarkeyAndTheAllPurposePowerTool''.
48[[/folder]]
49
50[[folder:Comic Strips]]
51* Asok the Intern in ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}''. Scott Adams has said that if he keeps getting complaints about stereotyping, he'll make Asok a drug dealer.
52* The sibling pair of Phoebe and Eugene in ''ComicStrip/FoxTrot''.
53[[/folder]]
54
55[[folder:Fan Works]]
56* In ''Fanfic/NowThatICanSeeYourFaceICanStandUpToAnything'', teen GradeSkipper Velma is at least half-Asian. Her mother is from Japan.
57* ''Fanfic/SilentWish'': Trixie is Asian and described as an academic comic book fangirl.
58[[/folder]]
59
60[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
61* ''WesternAnimation/BigHero6'':
62** Hiro Hamada and his brother Tadashi, who are half-Japanese and both robotics prodigies.
63** Gogo is Korean and also a skilled mechanical engineer.
64* ''WesternAnimation/OverTheMoon'': Fei Fei is at the top of her class and also manages to build a functioning rocket all on her own.
65* In ''WesternAnimation/TurningRed'', protagonist Meilin "Mei" Lee is Chinese-Canadian, a straight-A student, and a general overachiever. On the geekier end, she wears a calculator wristwatch and carries a ''Toys/{{Tamagotchi}}'' pretty much everywhere with her.
66[[/folder]]
67
68[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
69* Due to his ancestry, Creator/KeanuReeves frequently [[PlayingWithATrope plays with this trope]], being (for example) a "jock" in ''Film/BillAndTedsExcellentAdventure'' and a "nerd" in ''Film/TheMatrix''.
70* {{Subverted}} in ''21 and Over''. At first, we're led to believe that Jeff Chang is a straight-A student who tutors people in science. We later find out that he's on the verge of failing out of college and is ''being'' tutored in science.
71* Deconstructed in ''Film/BetterLuckTomorrow''. The protagonists are all high-achieving Asian American teens, who use their goody-two-shoes appearance to get away with a number of crimes, while they secretly live a wild party lifestyle. This rebellion is a response to the pressure of the role they're expected to play as top students- as the protagonist puts it
72--> '''Ben:''' I enjoyed doing things I couldn't put on my college application.
73* The early John Cusack comedy ''Film/BetterOffDead'' combined this with JewishAndNerdy by having an Asian immigrant learn English by watching ABC's ''Wide World of Sports'', and thus talk constantly in Howard Cosell's distinctive nasal voice.
74* Peter, one of David's friends and fellow birders in ''Film/ABirdersGuideToEverything''.
75* The 1981 film ''Film/TheCannonballRun'' featured a pair of racers of indeterminate Asian origin (one of whom was played by Jackie Chan!). Their car is a 1980-81 Subaru hatchback modified to a James Bond-esque gizmo-mobile which even turns into a submersible at one point. Jackie returns in the sequel, this time as the team engineer for Mitsubishi and paired up with driver Richard Kiel.
76* Also, Lau in ''Film/TheDarkKnight'' was hired by the mobs to launder their money because he was "good at calculations". This, with a few other examples above, grates on the nerves of [[Webcomic/MegaTokyo Shirt Guy Dom]]. In particular, he was an accountant who lived in a country where he couldn't really be touched by the US. Still fits this trope, but it's [[JustifiedTrope justified]].
77* Bruce (Masi Oka's character) in the 2008 ''Film/GetSmart'' movie. Of course, he was flanked by two geeky white men: Lloyd and Max himself. Also, in the direct-to-video spin off ''Bruce and Lloyd: Out of Control'', Bruce is apparently more successful with the ladies than [[ButtMonkey Lloyd]].
78* Data from ''Film/TheGoonies'' is this in full 80's glory.
79* ''Film/TheGreenHornetSerials''. This incarnation of Kato is a scientist and inventor. In one episode, Britt asks Kato to examine the superweapon they just retrieved from the crooks to see how it works. In another, when Britt needs to check on a scientist, his first idea is to send Kato over to talk inventions (and Kato's delighted to do so).
80* Ellie in ''Film/TheHalfOfIt'' is introverted, has excellent grades, wears huge glasses, plays the guitar and keyboard, and writes essays as a side hustle.
81* ''Film/HaroldAndKumarGoToWhiteCastle'':
82** Harold.
83** Subverted by Cindy Kim and her East Asian Club. They appear to be straight-laced nerds, but turn out to be drug-using party animals.
84* The "Asian Nerds" in ''Film/MeanGirls''. Averted by the "Cool Asians."
85* Franchise/MonsterVerse: Though an American ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}'' franchise, it has seen several egghead characters who happen to be of Asian nationality and exceptionally smart: Monarch's monster experts and field specialists include the [=MonsterVerse's=] resident Dr. Serizawa, the Chen family and San Lin, whilst Serizawa's son Ren is a technically-gifted engineer.
86* Julia from ''Film/TheRainbowExperiment'' is captain of the volleyball team, a member of the Chinese and National Honor Society, and a violinist. Matty is convinced that she'll someday be President.
87* Takashi in the first ''Film/RevengeOfTheNerds''.
88* Doctor Matsumoto in ''Film/RobotJox''.
89* Lawrence in ''Film/SchoolOfRock'' "I can't be in the band! I'm not cool enough!"
90* The 2009 live-action ''Film/ScoobyDooTheMysteryBegins'' ContinuityReboot has cast a Japanese-American actress as Velma. However despite being a RaceLift this isn't noted at all, and furthermore, when she's in the Velma costume, [[http://blog.al.com/scenesource/2009/09/large_scooby1.jpg you wouldn't know she's Asian.]]
91* ''Film/SixteenCandles''. Long Duk Dong - though it's subverted by the time the film is over, as he's gone into Full Wacky Pseudo-Stoner Mode.
92* Averted in the Disney Channel movie ''Film/WendyWuHomecomingWarrior.'' Wendy herself averts this trope, but [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin because of the film's title]] falls into the stereotype of [[AllAsiansKnowMartialArts martial artist]]. Her brother, however, averts both stereotypes as a popular and somewhat dim jock.
93[[/folder]]
94
95[[folder:Literature]]
96* ''Literature/FourKidsInFiveEAndOneCrazyYear'': The Chinese Ah Kum is a ShrinkingViolet who gets perfect grades on most assignments and paints, writes, and knits. However, she is also a DeconstructedCharacterArchetype of this, as she enjoys hanging out with LovableAlphaBitch Destiny, secretly wants to dye her hair and only cares about her grades because [[EducationMama her terrifying father wants her to be a pharmacist when she grows up]] to improve their status as poor immigrants and will make her life Hell over TheBGrade, let alone anything less than that. Destiny makes a mental NotSoDifferentRemark about Ah Kum and Max after seeing the look on Ah Kum's face as Max yells about his abusive father during an argument.
97* {{Averted|Trope}} with Claudia Kishi of ''Literature/TheBabySittersClub'': artsy but terrible in all her other subjects. Her sister definitely qualifies, though.
98* The main reason why Park Sheridan in ''Literature/EleanorAndPark'' has such a hard time with fitting in his predominantly white and non-geeky community is his race and geekiness.
99* ''Literature/FearStreet'': Phoebe is Japanese-American and probably the third or fourth smartest student in her class, [[AcademicAthlete although she's also a cheerleader.]]
100* ''Literature/TheGreatGreeneHeist'':
101** Victor Cho is a self-proclaimed "intellectual nerd" who runs the chess club.
102** Hashemi Larijani is a {{Trekkie}} and GadgeteerGenius.
103* [[Literature/MatthewScudder Matt Scudder's]] occasional hacker-for-hire Jimmy Hong.
104* Cheater/Dennis Woo of ''Literature/HiddenTalents''.
105* In ''Literature/TheHungerGames'', everyone in District 3 is implied to be Asian. While the books [[AmbiguouslyBrown don't specify the races of many characters]] (which is justified, as the setting is a dystopian America AfterTheEnd, so the racial definitions of modern society aren't the same), the engineers "Volts" Beetee and "Nuts" Wiress from from District 3 are described as having black hair, ashen skin, and small builds, traits which are common for the rest of their District and the narrator of the Scholastic audio books puts on a distinct stereotypical Asian accent. (The ''[[Film/TheHungerGamesCatchingFire Catching Fire]]'' movie averted this by making the former [[BlackAndNerdy black]] and the latter white—Beetee even gets the black-sounding surname of Latier.)
106* Averted and defied InUniverse by Elijah ''Literature/TheGoldenFeather'', who complains about people who think he's "smart" because of this trope when in reality his grades are pretty mediocre.
107%%* Jenny from ''Literature/TheCornersvilleTraceMythos''.
108%%* Stacey Chen from Val [=McDermid=]'s ''Literature/TonyHill'' books.
109%%* Noah Giancoli in ''Literature/TheGeeksShallInheritTheEarth''.
110* Twoflower in the Literature/{{Discworld}} books is a FantasyCounterpartCulture version of this, as well as a JapaneseTourist.
111* Janine Cho from ''Literature/MiracleCreek'' was practically ignored as a child so her parents could focus on her brother, their firstborn son. She rebelled by throwing herself into her studies, eventually becoming a doctor, while her brother dropped out of college to become an actor. She laughs at the irony: her rebellion against Korean gender stereotypes led her right into the white American stereotype of brilliant, overachieving Asians.
112* In the ''Thea Stilton'' spin-off of the ''Literature/GeronimoStilton'' series, Violet is the Chinese member of the [[MultiNationalTeam Thea Sisters]] and has a passion for studying and reading, so much that her friends consider her a walking encyclopedia and Thea herself describes her as a "real intellectual, just like [her] brother, Geronimo".
113* Myishi from ''Literature/TheWishList'' is one of Hell's top scientists and engineers, and was Japanese when he was alive.
114* Doubly subverted in Creator/GishJen's ''Literature/MonaInThePromisedLand'': Mona Chang, daughter of Chinese immigrants, is not particularly interested in school despite pressure from her parents, but hangs out with her Jewish classmates and eventually converts to Judaism. Her sister, however, fits this trope. (In another subversion, her parents run a pancake restaurant.)
115* ''Literature/RoysBedoys'': Downplayed on both counts for Maker, who seems to be part Asian (his dad’s last name is Chan and looks like he could be Asian, while his mom is clearly white) and is the best student and sometimes has general knowledge the others don’t.
116* Chloe Cho from ''Literature/UnidentifiedSuburbanObject'' is one of the best students in her school, as well as a violinist who's made first chair in the school orchestra for the last three years. Adam Wheeler, her only real competition, complains that she only beats him because Asians have a violin-playing gene, which infuriates her.
117* ''[[Literature/SpaceForce2018 Space Force]]'' by Jeremy Robinson: Jian is a Chinese hacker who is the physically weakest of the anti-alien team, a huge anime fan, and a massive gamer who knows Captain Stone by his gaming livestreams versus special operations credentials.
118* A very odd case (and possibly an UrExample) is from the ''Literature/LandOfOz''! It was revealed in ''The Royal Book of Oz'' that the [[TheSmartGuy Scarecrow]] had once been Emperor of the Silver Islands, a FantasyCounterpartCulture of Imperial China (as written by a 1920s American). It was due to some magic gone sideways that led to his spirit possessing a Munchkin Scarecrow on the other side of Nonestica with [[GhostAmnesia no clue as to who or what he really was]].
119* Jester, the Asian member of Ben's ace tech team in ''Literature/WarsOfTheRealm''.
120[[/folder]]
121
122[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
123* ''Series/NeverHaveIEver'': Devi is Indian, gets top grades, and even plays the harp.
124* John Cho's character Henry on ''Series/{{Selfie}}'' is the more grown-up, non academic version of this trope, being an intelligent {{Workaholic}} who is good at his job and almost [[MarriedToTheJob obsessed with it.]]
125* Hiro in ''Series/{{Heroes}}''. It helps that he's played by Masi Oka, who's a genuine article geek.
126* Cody's nerdy Asian girlfriend, Barbara, from ''Series/TheSuiteLifeOfZackAndCody''. She even takes A.P. ''lunch''. She's also extremely competitive, as during one episode whenever Cody one-upped her she ''stomped on his foot.'' It only worked once, the next time she [[LaserGuidedKarma hurt herself because]] he was wearing steel-toed boots. Barbara also counts as JewishAndNerdy.
127* This was double subverted in the weirdest way possible in ''Series/DegrassiJuniorHigh'', where Yick Yu, a dorky bespectacled Asian kid, had to work extra hard in class to break the stereotype (that apparently exists in the Degrassi world) of [[AsianAirhead Asians as]] {{Dumb Jock}}s. Originally to be played straight, but the actor complained.
128* The late Grant Imahara of ''Series/{{Mythbusters}}'' was a RealLife example.
129** Grant plays up to this stereotype. He builds robots for fun and in the jailhouse rope episode had pi on his "prisoner" outfit as a "prisoner number". At least he's not a stereotypical bespectacled dork; he's very handsome (see picture above). When they tested lie detectors, Grant was asked if he had ever thought of building a robot girlfriend. He said "no", and the machine flagged it as a lie.
130** He tweeted a photo of himself [[http://twitpic.com/aoxvo dressed as Spock]], and played Sulu in the fan series ''WebVideo/StarTrekContinues''.
131** When he was inducted into the 501st Legion (think Civil War reenactors, only with [[Franchise/StarWars Stormtroopers]]) he attended his ceremony dressed as the [[Series/DoctorWho Tenth Doctor]].
132* Toshiko Sato in ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'' is the team's shy, nerdy tech person.
133* While she's thoroughly Americanized and acts like an AsianAirhead, Zoe from the short-lived ''Series/KnightRider'' 2008 series speaks 9 languages and is a genius at computers.
134* Evelyn Kwong from ''Series/NedsDeclassifiedSchoolSurvivalGuide'' is the smartest person at James K. Polk besides [[BlackAndNerdy Cookie]], leading to a lot of competition. She subverts a lot of the accompanying tropes that go with this though, she's competitive, rude, loud, mean and a sometimes StalkerWithACrush.
135* Vince Masuka of ''Series/{{Dexter}}''. However, he subverts some of the stereotypes by showing interest in and, occasionally, success with women. And by not being very Asian, except in appearance.
136* ''Series/TheAmazingRace'' prefers to cast this type of Asian team. They generally speak Chinese, too.
137* Lt. Michael Tao of ''Series/TheCloser'' and its sequel series ''Series/MajorCrimes'' is probably second only to Imahara in how incredibly this trope he is on contemporary TV.
138* In ''Series/{{Community}}'', the school's Math Club appears to be comprised ''solely'' of this trope, as {{lampshade|Hanging}}d when Jeff and Chang (himself an underachieving aversion) are pinned down by them during a paintball tournament:
139-->'''Chang:''' Relax. I have a plan. ''[louder]'' Hey, Math Club! I'm Asian! Are you guys Asian?\
140'''Math Club Member:''' ... That's pretty racist, dude.\
141'''Chang:''' That wasn't a no! [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder I'm coming over!]]
142* Played with in regards to Trini in ''Series/MightyMorphinPowerRangers'' as she is shown to be a good student though the biggest nerd in the group is Billy - she was his TranslatorBuddy early in the series. She's more like a combination of Billy and ValleyGirl Kimberly.
143%%* Paul in ''Series/TheNineLivesOfChloeKing''%%Administrivia/ZeroContextExample
144* Glenn from both iterations of the ''Series/TheWalkingDead'' is a subversion, possibly a slight Deconstruction of most of the older Asian stereotypes. Before the outbreak, he was very far from the innocent, quietly nerdy Asian archetype. In fact, he never spoke to his parents, and was so far in debt from college and other purposes, he had to resort to car theft with his friends, and various low-paying jobs such as pizza delivery to make ends meet. After the outbreak, he quickly becomes the GuileHero of his survivor group, as a comparatively rational thinker with a preference for sneaking around the walkers.
145* Dr Chi Park, third-generation team member on ''Series/{{House}}'', is an over-achieving BespectacledCutie. In a twist of events, she's asked resident ChickMagnet Robert Chase out on a date, and he's said yes.
146* In the short-lived ''Some of My Best Friends'', CampGay Vern attempts to fix a broken TV. Another character dubiously asks if he can really fix it, and he responds, "Hello! I'm Asian!" [[SubvertedTrope Turns out he has no clue]].
147* Kevin Tran in ''Series/{{Supernatural}}''. In his first episode, he's introduced playing the cello in his bedroom (which is filled with honors and awards). When his phone starts ringing, he doesn't pick up until a timed alarm on his computer tells him practice time is over, at which point he starts talking to his nearly-as-nerdy girlfriend. Then he gets hit by a celestial lightning bolt and appointed translator of the Word of God. Of all the things to happen on exam day...
148* Suki from ''Series/TowerPrep''. Justified in that the series takes place at a school for the gifted.
149* Alex from ''Series/KidNation''.
150* Andy in ''Series/NowhereBoys''. The character was created by Tony Ayres, who himself has an Asian background. It consequently has a realistic portrayal of a kid from a Singaporean migrant family, rather than a shallow stereotype.
151* Scott Fuller from ''Series/FromDuskTillDawn'' was adopted from China. He's also [[Literature/TheLordOfTheRings fluent in Elvish]] and [[Series/BattlestarGalactica2003 uses ''Frack'' as a swear word]].
152* Firewire in ''Series/Zoey101''. The rest of his clique is white though.
153* ''Series/{{Grimm}}'': Lampshaded and parodied in Season 1, Episode 3. When asked if he can hack a blocked text, Sgt. Wu sarcastically retorts "Of course, I can. I'm Asian!" Hank laughs at the joke, but Wu has it hacked in seconds. This becomes a hallmark of Wu's constant ability to be both sassy and serious at the same time.
154* Dr. Seth Park on ''Series/OpenHeart''. He makes a makes a level-up joke when London delivers him a patient’s urine sample and sarcastically says "mission complete".
155* Wang from ''Series/SpaceAboveAndBeyond'' is an unusual variant of this: he's specifically a ''baseball'' nerd. In one episode his parents send him a piece of sod from Yankee Stadium, and he's able to guess which part of the field it comes from by the smell.
156* Zach from ''Series/SchoolOfRock'' though downplayed. He gets good grades and has very strict parents who dislike their son's interest in rock, preferring him to study classical music.
157* Doctor Kitasato in ''Series/{{Charite}}'', though the trait isn't too pronounced seeing as all the non-Asian scientists and doctors in the series are, of course, just as nerdy.
158* Averted on ''Series/{{Bones}}'' for the most part. Angela is half Chinese and a gifted computer tech person, but she avoids the nerd stereotypes. She’s outgoing, confident,flirty and embraces her sexuality.
159* Joseph Cheng from the ''Series/LeverageRedemption'' episode "[[Recap/LeverageRedemptionS1E7TheDoubleEdgedSwordJob The Double-Edged Sword Job]]" is a villainous version of this trope, although the Asian part is {{downplayed|trope}}. He's a tech genius with NoSocialSkills who has created Searchlight, which is not only the most scarily advanced FacialRecognitionSoftware on the planet, but also predicts its subjects' behavior. He's too amoral to worry who uses Searchlight, or why; a DomesticAbuser tracking down his terrified ex? Fascistic PrivateMilitaryContractors? Dictators making sure their victims can't escape? Cheng doesn't care as long as he gets paid. He also happens to be Chinese-American, although no one ever brings this up.
160* ''Series/TheWhiteLotus'': Ethan Spiller is of Asian descent and made his money from tech, and (along with his Latina wife Harper) is one of the most book-smart and socially conscious of season 2's roster. More dramatically, his white friend Cameron frequently emasculates him, which Ethan resents.
161[[/folder]]
162
163[[folder:Toys]]
164* Uranus from ''Toys/MilkyWayAndTheGalaxyGirls'' is a {{bookworm}} highly [[EducationMama concerned]] with her younger sister, the laidback {{surfer|Dude}} Neptune's, education. Her nerdiness is further emphasized by her schoolgirl attire and [[SmartPeopleWearGlasses glasses]].
165[[/folder]]
166
167[[folder:Theatre]]
168* Marcy Park in ''TheTwentyFifthAnnualPutnamCountySpellingBee'' can be this, depending on the production. [[note]] The script suggests she's of Asian descent based on her last name, and was played by an Asian American actress in the original cast, but this is never explicitly stated.[[/note]] In a cast of nerds, Marcy is likely the smartest, as she placed in the top ten at the National Spelling Bee and has a whole song about how she is fluent in six languages. [[spoiler: The only reason she doesn't win the Putnam Bee is because she [[VictoryIsBoring decides to throw the competition]].]]
169* Sean Liu-Ogden in Creator/PeterFenton’s ''Theatre/AbandonAllHope'' initially comes off as a straight (even exaggerated) example being an engineering major at an Ivy League school after having been Valedictorian and National Honors Society President in high school. However, the archetype is deconstructed as it’s revealed [[spoiler:Sean put all the pressure on himself to be successful in these areas to differentiate himself from his parents, who are an A-List Actress and Director. He resents that the only Ivy he could get into was the school his father went to.]]
170
171[[/folder]]
172
173[[folder:Video Games]]
174* [[ExaggeratedTrope Exaggerated]] in ''VideoGame/Fallout2'' with the Shi, descendants of the crewmen of a Chinese nuclear submarine who went on to repopulate San Francisco's Chinatown. They went from being a bunch of sailors to the most technologically advanced faction in all of postwar America, surpassing even the Brotherhood of Steel and [[VideoGame/Fallout4 the Institute]], [[InsufferableGenius with even random civilians bragging about how they're smarter than they look]]. The only faction proving to be close to their intellectual equal is [[ANaziByAnyOtherName the Enclave, who they're all too happy to avoid]].
175* Jenny from ''VideoGame/MySims'' has an Asian appearance. Her Interests are Geeky ''and'' Studious. More specifically, she "is president of five science fiction clubs, seven video game clans, and a prolific fan fiction author."
176* Mei Ling from the ''VideoGame/MetalGear'' series is a Chinese-American data analyst going to MIT at the time ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid'' game takes place.
177* Ling-Ling Johnson from ''VideoGame/GuiltyParty'' is TheSmartGuy in a group that's ''already'' pretty clever, and in addition to being a cracking good KidDetective, she's a GadgeteerGenius who designed portable lie detectors.
178* Jung Park in ''VideoGame/RainbowSixVegas'' is a South Korean electronics specialist. He carries the radio, does all the hacking and can recognize a Farraday Cage from thirty paces. [[BadassBookworm He's also a former member of the South Korean 707th--]] [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast also known as the "White Tigers"]][[BadassBookworm --and is a crack shot with his G36C]].
179* Yoko Suzuki, a former Umbrella researcher from ''VideoGame/ResidentEvilOutbreak''.
180* Hannah, Nikhil, and Jake from ''VisualNovel/YearningAGayStory'' are all Asian (albeit of different nationalities: Hannah is Chinese, Nikhil is [[BollywoodNerd Indian]], and Jake is Thai) computer science students who excel at classes and geek out over board games. Hannah in particular is said to have parents who expect her to get straight As and takes on a ''triple'' major in mathematics and Japanese in the epilogue.
181* Subverted in ''VideoGame/DiscoElysium'', where Kim Kitsuragi is stereotyped as being a nerd due to his Seolite ancestry and dependence on NerdGlasses, and is assigned demeaning, geeky jobs by his employers (such as working with children, or assuming he will be good at playing pinball as it was invented in Seol). However, he is perfectly elegant and cool in a way your player character will never achieve. During his debriefing of your player character at the end of the first day, the player character's internal monologue might start fanboying over how cool Kim is, and may even ask him how he got to be that way, or even realise it's [[BeneathTheMask something Kim cultivated to protect himself from this stereotype]]. He does have some nerdy interests -- in particular, he has a keen interest in tinkering with machines and loves playing civilisation-building board games and gets excited when the player starts popping out play tokens from their cardboard frame-- but his need to counter this stereotype forces him to act a little defensive about this side of himself. If the player are leaning into a DumbMuscle playstyle, they will also have the option to call Kim a "bino" (a nerd), which Kim mostly ignores.
182* ''VisualNovel/C14Dating'': This is downplayed, but Shoji, the geekiest option among Melissa's potential love interests, happens to be ''half''-Japanese. The two of them initially bond over a shared love of video games and one of Shoji's insecurities in his romantic route is that their relationship might not advance beyond the two of them becoming gaming buddies.
183[[/folder]]
184
185[[folder:Web Animation]]
186* Vivi Yukino from ''WebAnimation/MysterySkullsAnimated'' is a Japanese horror and mystery enthusiast that works in a store that deals exclusively in horror themed novels and comic books and leads her own Franchise/ScoobyDoo esque group of paranormal investigators.
187[[/folder]]
188
189[[folder:Webcomics]]
190* Ki Oshiro-Wellington from ''Webcomic/GeneralProtectionFault'', who can out-nerd almost anyone.
191* ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'':
192** Played with in regards to Tedd, who is [[ButNotTooForeign half-Asian]] and [[MadScientist very nerdy indeed]]. Although, he seems to have a lot more in common with his dad in that regard over his Japanese MissingMom.
193** Tedd's cousin Nanase averts this. Despite doing amazing at school thanks to an overbearing EducationMama, she's athletic and toned as well as very popular.
194** Played completely straight by Chika, one of the characters in the [[FourthWallMailSlot Q&A segments]]. She's an analytical and level-headed Asian scientist, who plays the StraightMan to [[GeniusDitz Amanda]] and [[BunnyEarsLawyer Lisa]].
195* ''My Hot Ass Neighbor'' lampshades and subverts this with main Wong who has all the physical traits expected of a stereotype from [[ShorterMeansSmarter his height making him the shortest character by a wide margin save for his grade-school sister despite being in high school,]] to his coke bottle glasses and buck teeth, which [[FieryRedhead Sharona]] points out as the reason she needs him as a tutor [[GiveGeeksAChance (and then some)]] then subverted as he has [[BiggerIsBetterInBed "something else"]] that gets the ladies going, too.
196* The main character of ''Webcomic/FisheyePlacebo'' Vance Lee is a huge fan of anime/manga and memes, as well as a masterful hacker and computer science major, to boot.
197* Pavel (Bombay by way of Seattle) of ''Webcomic/BadMoonRising'' is the go-to researcher for the vampire hunting heroes.
198[[/folder]]
199
200[[folder:Web Original]]
201* Played straight and subverted in ''WebOriginal/BloodAndTheStars''.
202** Orelius Zhang is one of Coror's scientists, and is known for being intelligent, to the point that Masto Cost mistook Pootus for being one of his creations.
203** Galius Cho, on the other hand, is a boxer, not a thinker.
204* Both Beth Tezuka and her father Johnny Tezuka in ''WebAnimation/BravestWarriors''.
205* ''VideoGame/Halo2'' ARG ''ARG/ILoveBees'' has nerdy medical student Hiroyuki, roommate of the Middle-Eastern and Nerdy protagonist Kamal.
206* The entire point of the song 'Nobody's Asian in the movies' by Maurissa Tancharoen from the ''WebVideo/DoctorHorriblesSingAlongBlog'' musical commentary, ''WebVideo/CommentaryTheMusical''. The song ends with "I'm gonna go play with my violin and... math!"
207** Possibly a jokey jab at the lead actress of Dr Horrible, Creator/FeliciaDay, who is ''not'' Asian but was a violin performance/math double major.
208* One article from ''Website/TheOnion'' interviewed a pair of Asian students who, due to lazy and stupid behavior, were praised for breaking stereotypes.
209* Erin Hasegawa from ''Literature/GirlsOnFilm'', who is Hardestadt's Japanese-American partner who adores technology, pop culture, and playing tabletop games.
210* Generator (Jade Sinclair) of the ''Literature/WhateleyUniverse'' once invented real, working shoulder angels. The campus nearly didn't survive.
211* The trope is ''heavily'' referenced in ''[[{{Literature/Takotsubo}} Takotsubo: The story of a superhero]].'' Chinese-American Cord Cai is a troubled young man who repeatedly [[InternalizedCategorism calls himself a failure because he's not a kung-fu artist or a doctor.]] After his fiancé Roland gets shot and the police completely mishandle it, [[TragicVillain Cord thinks this is a sign that leaving the streets is hopeless,]] shoots the murderer because gang justice is better than no justice, and resigns himself to running a [[NeighborhoodFriendlyGangsters vigilante gang.]] As the tagline states, Cord is a superhero who [[WrongGenreSavvy shoehorns himself into the villain role]] because [[GenreDeconstruction he's never seen any Asian-American superheroes.]]
212* [=CaryKH=] is one of these. He was born in America to Chinese parents, and several of his videos go into the topic of AI coding.
213[[/folder]]
214
215[[folder:Western Animation]]
216* Kim and Kam Chin from ''WesternAnimation/ClassOf3000''-- but mostly Kam, who is more bookish and reserved than his twin sister.
217* Toshi, one of Steve's friends in ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'', is a highly intelligent Asian. Who speaks Japanese all the time and wants to kill, humiliate or mutilate Steve, usually. Averted by JerkJock Vince Chung, who is "so cool that you forget he's Asian."
218* ''WesternAnimation/{{Amphibia}}'':
219** Marcy Wu is a dorky teenage girl who gets effortlessly good grades and is into all kinds of nerdy things, especially video games and [=RPGs=]. Within Newtopia, she becomes an invaluable inventor, practically revolutionizing the whole city and molding her into a formidable warrior. Despite being extremely smart however, she is rather scatterbrained, and [[DitzyGenius her incredible clumsiness and obliviousness to the world around her]] tends to get her into trouble.
220** Averted with Anne Boonchuy, who is Thai and has terrible grades, being more of a people person.
221* The Chang Triplets, Debbie, Julie and Billy, from ''WesternAnimation/TheProudFamily''.
222* Kin Kujira from ''WesternAnimation/{{Grojband}}'' is TheSmartGuy of the band and a GadgeteerGenius, although his kooky, childish personality means that he more frequently leans into being a DitzyGenius. Subverted by his twin brother Kon, who is more of a GeniusDitz and an even bigger CloudCuckoolander than Kin.
223* ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'' has Mabel's friend Candy Chiu, a dorky Korean girl who [[{{Meganekko}} wears glasses]] and, in the episode "Roadside Attraction", displays some AwesomenessByAnalysis when helping her friends escape from a monster.
224* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'':
225** "A Big Piece Of Garbage". Professor Wernstrom requests a group of interns, and that most of them be Chinese. Likely because it makes him look smarter (or so it has been suggested by tie-in comics).
226** Amy Wong, though she's often shown to be dense and clumsy. She seems to be more of a GeniusDitz than a straight-up AsianAirhead, and she's introduced early on as a graduate student in applied physics and an intern working for Professor Farnsworth. In "That Darn Katz!", her research even managed to both doom ''and'' save the Earth! She even manages to earn her doctorate in said episode because of that research, and in episodes afterwards, she's often seen helping the Professor with his experiments around the laboratory.
227%%* Phoebe Heyerdahl from ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnold''. Technically she's half-Asian, [[ButNotTooForeign because her mother's white]] while her father's Japanese.
228%%* Tom Chan in ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingChanAndTheChanClan'' and his brother Alan.
229* There's a minor character in ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' named Kevin Stoley. He's a Chinese-American and is quite a ''Franchise/StarWars'' nerd. Barely more than a LivingProp, we don't know his intellect though. There's also the rather weird fact that other than explicitly saying he's Chinese-American, ''nothing else'' implies this, including surname or appearance. It's not like ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' is usually subtle with this sort of thing...
230* Mandark from ''WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory'' is stated to be half-Japanese. His mother, Oceanbird, subverts the trope while his (apparently later {{retcon}}ned) little sister Olga is shown to be more of a ballet prodigy than an academic prodigy.
231%% * Kevin's friend, George Bang, from ''WesternAnimation/MissionHill''.
232%%* Ace Nakamura, the resident tech-whiz and linguistics nerd on ''WesternAnimation/{{Pelswick}}''.
233* Lee Ping, the main character of ''WesternAnimation/{{Detentionaire}}'', is a downplayed example. He gets good grades and used to be on the Mathletes team, but it rarely affects the plot and he uses more {{Street Smart}}s and intuition than anything to help him get out of messes. He acts and looks almost nothing like a stereotypical nerd and apparently only joined the Mathletes in the first place because his mom made him do it. [[EducationMama Mrs. Ping]] is, incidentally, a math teacher at his school, and is probably at least in part responsible for his good grades.
234%%* Yung Lee from ''WesternAnimation/MikeTysonMysteries''.
235* Sheldon Lee from ''WesternAnimation/MyLifeAsATeenageRobot'' a GadgeteerGenius who has a crush on the main character [[{{Robosexual}} partly because she's a robot]].
236* Many [[WarTimeCartoon war time cartoons]] like ''WesternAnimation/TokioJokio'', ''WesternAnimation/BugsBunnyNipsTheNips'' and ''WesternAnimation/TheDucktators'' depict the Japanese as pathetic small wimps with glasses.
237%%* Blkmrkt, the 11-year-old PlayfulHacker from ''WesternAnimation/MajorLazer.''
238* Chloe Park from ''WesternAnimation/WeBareBears'', a little girl of Korean descent who's already attending college. Though her unusual intelligence is attributed to being a ChildProdigy who was just smart enough to be able to skip middle and high school, rather than her Asian ethnicity.
239* Macie from ''WesternAnimation/AsToldByGinger'' is half-Asian and fits in a non-typical way. She's not presented as particularly studious or smart, instead she is an unpopular, [[SicklyNeuroticGeek neurotic]] band geek.
240%%* Love from ''WesternAnimation/KuuKuuHarajuku''.
241* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' pokes fun at this trope often, such as when Peter tried using an elementary-age Asian boy as a calculator for a math test.
242* The main characters of ''WesternAnimation/LouAndLouSafetyPatrol'', Lou and Louise, are of Asian descent, know a lot about safety, and aren't shy about sharing their knowledge with those in need of it.
243* Downplayed with Trixie from ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddparents''. Though a vain AlphaBitch, she's also been shown to be a comics and superhero ClosetGeek in "The Boy That Would Be Queen".
244* Tatsu from ''WesternAnimation/DCSuperHeroGirls'' just moved from Japan. She's an academic and athletic [[TheAce Ace]], only just barely bested by Diana Prince (AKA Wonder Woman).
245[[/folder]]
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