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1[[quoteright:350:[[Manga/SayonaraZetsubouSensei https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/collector_of_the_strange.jpg]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Don't worry, she pretends they're fake.]]
3
4->'''Janine:''' Do you have any hobbies?\
5'''Egon:''' I collect spores, molds, and fungus.
6-->-- ''Film/Ghostbusters1984''
7
8People collect things they like: movies, stamps, [[KitschCollection hummel figurines]] of [[GlurgeAddict baby animals]], bottle caps, books, and action figures. It's only natural for those individuals who have a specific hobby to develop a fascination with acquiring memorabilia that is directly related to their outlet of interest. Such a pattern of human behavior is quite normal and is relatively accepted in society.
9
10However, there are those people who, because of their unique occupation or lifestyle, collect items that are too dangerous, rare or gross for the average human being to even ''want'' to own. For those people who gather anything bizarre and strange, this trope page is for you.
11
12May have a FriendInTheBlackMarket. A group of these might form an ArtifactCollectionAgency. For the superhero version, see SuperheroTrophyShelf. A more mundane version would be the TrophyRoom. RoomFullOfCrazy is this taken to its logical conclusion. See also SecretGovernmentWarehouse. A specific variant only wants things (and at times people) that are [[UniquenessValue unique]] and [[LastOfHisKind one of a kind]]. Compare CreepySouvenir, for when morbid items (often body parts) are acquired as trophies.
13
14See also TheCollector, driven by the need to collect ''someone'' in particular, the LivingDollCollector, who transforms the living into a collection of custom toys, and NerdHoard, which is a collection of items from the GeekReferencePool.
15----
16!!Examples:
17
18[[foldercontrol]]
19
20[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
21* In the manga story "The Collection" by Creator/ShintaroKago, a high-school girl is intent on collecting everything the boy of her dreams touches... which is pretty much literally '''''everything.'''''
22* ''Manga/CrimsonSpell'': This is Halvir's ''raison d'etre'' prior to meeting [[MagneticHero Vald]]. His house is packed with rare magical items (and that's not even all of them, as he keeps his most prized acquisitions in a PocketDimension). Vald is only able to convince Havi to travel with him by promising to act as a bodyguard while Havi chases obscure spell components and weird artifacts in dangerous locations.
23* ''Manga/{{Domu}}: A Child's Story'': Old Cho collects little trinkets as trophies from each person he kills with his PsychicPowers. His room is so full of junk that it was thought impossible to even get inside.
24* ''Literature/TheFamiliarOfZero'': Luctiana, an elven researcher, likes to collect human artifacts from Halkeginia. However, she tends to mistake the functions of those artifacts, leading her to use them in strange ways, such as hanging a bucket on a hat stand or using an upturned umbrella as a container.
25* ''Manga/FrierenBeyondJourneysEnd'': Frieren has a hobby of collecting all kinds of strange objects, like the skull of a monster or a drug that melts clothes. She also collects weird UtilityMagic like producing tea, shaving ice, or magic that de-rusts statues. She started doing the latter as a hobby after Himmel praised her for casting a spell that could raise a bed of flowers.
26* ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders'': The D'Arby brothers combine this with YourSoulIsMine, using their [[FightingSpirit Stands]] to claim the souls of those who lose to them in games of chance. There are a few key differences between them: Elder brother Daniel (TheGambler) keeps his victims' souls at rest and turns them into poker chips, while younger brother Terence (The Gamer) hand-carved marionettes of his victims and puts the souls into them, keeping them conscious so he can talk to them occasionally. [[spoiler:Both end up being defeated by Jotaro (who's a better cheater than them), which frees all their victims.]]
27* ''Manga/{{Kakegurui}}'': Itsuki Sumeragi has a collection of fingernails she won from all of the girls she's defeated in card games.
28* ''Literature/{{Kampfer}}'': Sakura collects animal entrails, stuffed animals with various mutilations.
29* ''Manga/{{Karin}}'': Anju collects {{Creepy Doll}}s, one of which [[spoiler:houses a serial killer.]]
30* ''Manga/KenkoZenrakeiSuieibuUmisho'': Shizuoka is too embarrassed to let her clubmates know that she collects strange little statues in a secret closet. [[ComicallyMissingThePoint That's not what she should]] [[LingerieScene be worrying]] [[VaporWare about]].
31* ''Manga/TheMermaidPrincesssGuiltyMeal'': The mermaid Sango is in charge of studying humanity and has collected all manner of memorabilia dumped from the surface world. She's kind of like [[WesternAnimation/TheLittleMermaid1989 Ariel]], except it's a job instead of a hobby and she actually knows what everything is. Her stockpile of human money comes in handy when Ela wants a bite to eat, the princess helping herself in secret much to Sango's chagrin.
32* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'': Tobi apparently has a warehouse-sized room dedicated to storing pairs of eyes. It becomes apparent after events concerning [[spoiler:Pain's corpse and Konan]] that he does this so he can swap them around at leisure.
33* ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'': Negi collects antiques which more often than not turn out to be powerful magic items.
34* ''Manga/OnePiece'': The pirate empress Big Mom is a ''literal'' collector; she captures "unusual creatures" and imprisons them, using the Devil Fruit power of one of her sons to contain them in books. These poor souls are given the AndIMustScream treatment, but Brook, a living skeleton, gets it worse -- Big Mom likes him so much she decides to keep him in a bag by her side, AndCallHimGeorge!
35* ''Manga/PandoraHearts'': [[spoiler:Miranda Barma]] is rather manic about collecting skulls. While it's unknown how she goes about ''acquiring'' said skulls or even ''why'' she does it, it has been established that she has a certain desire for [[spoiler:Glen/Oswald]]'s head, and the way in which she attempts to secure it very nearly leads to [[spoiler:TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt]], so it may not be [[AxCrazy hard to guess the how or why]].
36* ''Manga/PanoramaOfHell'': The unnamed MadArtist collects [[JarOfTheBizarre deformed fetuses and animal parts preserved in jars full of formaldehyde]], among other grotesque stuff. He's even seen ''[[{{Squick}} licking]]'' them.
37* ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'': Something you might not know about Team Rocket's James: he likes to collect bottle caps in his spare time.
38* ''Manga/RaveMaster'': Ruby, the penguin. What he collects is unknown, but things he's at least attempted to add are Plue, a bell that becomes a sword, a man-like crab, and a [[WhoWouldWantToWatchUs Bluun doll]].
39* ''Manga/SayonaraZetsubouSensei'': Abiru shows her love for animals by collecting their tails.
40* ''Manga/SoulEater'': In a darker take, Noah uses the Book of Eibon to "collect" various artifacts he finds interesting. He's not too picky: people, swords, {{Eldritch Abomination}}s... it's all the same. [[spoiler:He even gets Death the Kid at one point.]] Oh, and [[spoiler:it turns out he's actually just a personification of the Book's will. He's nothing but the madness of obsessive collecting given form.]]
41* ''Manga/TonoToIssho'': UsefulNotes/DateMasamune and his collection of absurd eyepatches.
42[[/folder]]
43
44[[folder:Comic Books]]
45* ''ComicBook/AstroCity'':
46** The First Family seem to have a large number of weird things lying around their home, though home much of it is a collection, how much is there for safekeeping, and how much is there because Augustus and Julius want to tinker with it is not established.
47** Jared Everall, owner of the T.J. Scoundrel's chain of {{Kitschy Themed Restaurant}}s, collects souvenir super-gear and is a supervillian fanboy.
48--->"You want to sell those Grav-Pods you arrived on, I'll give you a good deal. Those are vintage, man. First used in 1963 by Dr. Ecliptic agains Supersonic. Not many originals survive, but those two look cherry."
49* ''ComicBook/AgentX'': One issue features two rather strange people who collect famous people's ''underwear''.
50* ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'':
51** Through his years of crime-fighting, Batman has amassed quite a large stash of villainous weapons and gadgets that he [[SuperheroTrophyShelf keeps on display in his Batcave]]. His older incarnation is not opposed to using some of this technology if the situation calls for it. Three of the most iconic objects are a giant Joker playing card, a giant penny, and a giant dinosaur. Originally, the penny came from a 1947 comic ''strip'' story about "The Penny Plunderer", and the dinosaur from a 1946 adventure in a "Dinosaur Island" theme park. More recent continuities have changed up these origins, such as ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'', where the giant penny comes from a failed attempt by Two-Face to kill Batman in "[[Recap/BatmanTheAnimatedSeriesE46AlmostGotIm Almost Got 'Im]]". ''[[ComicBook/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica JLA Classified]]'' #1 establishes that Batman has a [[Series/DoctorWho Dalek]] in storage. [[NoodleIncident We don't know where he got it]], we don't know what he [[CrazyPrepared plans to use it for]], but he does have one.
52** In a silly comic that may not have been canon, Gotham City has a museum of the villains' failed death traps and other ridiculous props, and the Riddler is curator as part of his rehabilitation, where he figures out the flaws that allowed Batman to escape.
53* ''ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics'':
54** Scrooge [=McDuck=], when one thinks about it: his collection includes rare coins, rare books, the Goose Egg Nugget, the Striped Ruby, the majority of the Fabergé Eggs, ''the'' NumberOneDime, his old prospector tools, a cannon from the Boer War (his sisters freaked out when he sent that one home. It was actually a way to not pay for the ship plane ticket for himself, as he was hiding inside the cannon, but he still kept the cannon and acquired more), a teddy bear (the first one), and many other things, including ''all the money in the Money Bin'' (it's actually petty cash, by his standards). The common theme is that they're things he earned himself during his adventures and wouldn't give up, but considering the collection, he still qualifies.
55** Donald Duck has made some strange collections from time to time, and in [[ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures Paperinik]] stories he's shown to keep some weapons and tools from the supervillains he defeated and lots of his own old and damaged weapons.
56** Gladstone keeps some of the things he won through his luck instead of selling them, depending on his fancy.
57** Goofy collected ''his ancestors' collections''. His attic contains literally almost ''everything''.
58** Small-time villain Melvin Nickelby collected coins, but only ''first'' coins. This included first coins of a type minted, but also the first coin used for a coin toss, the first coin spent in a vending machine, the first coin dropped into a wishing well, and more of the similar. He tried to steal Scrooge's Nr. 1 Dime because he figured the first coin earned by the world's richest duck would round out his collection nicely.
59* ''ComicBook/DoctorStrange'': Doctor Strange himself does this. Generally, he has a pretty good idea of what everything is supposed to do.
60* The ''Eagle'', original home of ComicStrip/DanDare, ran a short-lived series called ''The Collector'' in the early '80s. A horror anthology, each week's story was a horror story featuring an object from the collection of the title character. Possibly inspired by the radio series "Tales from the Black Museum", in which Creator/OrsonWelles would relate the stories of items from Scotland Yard's "Black Museum" - see Real Life, below.
61* ''ComicBook/TheFurtherAdventuresOfIndianaJones'' has a recurring villain named Ben Ali Ayoob. An extremely wealthy man, he collects valuable antiquities, with a special interest in unique artifacts. As these are the kind of things Indiana Jones hunts, this often puts him at odds with Indy: as, unlike Indy who wants to place these items in a museum for the world to see, Ayoob wants them for his private collection.
62* ''ComicBook/GreenLantern'': Agent Orange, the Orange Lantern, is driven by the light of [[{{Greed}} avarice]] to acquire other beings. He does so by killing and consuming them. His ring then replicates their personality and creates an orange energy construct in their image which serves Agent Orange. This is the Orange Lantern Corps; they aren't welcomed. They are owned.
63* ''ComicBook/IronMan'': Exploited in one of the early issues of Creator/MattFraction's ''ComicBook/InvincibleIronMan2008''. Tony Stark naturally knows several wealthy people who collect bits of Iron Man memorabilia, up to and including pieces of destroyed suits. When Tony discovers that someone has been buying up these pieces and using them to create one-shot disposable supervillains, he deliberately seeds the market with some choice bits -- all of which have been tagged with a special tracking virus so he can find the mystery buyer.
64* ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse'': The Elders of the Universe are each defined by their obsession. Each one the LastOfTheirKind, they devoted their entire immortal life to something, the most famous example being the Collector, a minor Avengers villain who collected superheroes.
65* ''ComicBook/StrikeforceMorituri'': The [[PlanetLooters alien Horde]] combine this with BattleTrophy. Horde leaders prominently wear souvenirs from hunts, ranging from bottle caps and trinkets to human bones and scalps.
66* ''ComicStrip/ThePhantom'': The titular character of has a huge collection of treasures in his Skull Cave. It helps that he's a LegacyCharacter and that the Phantoms have BeenThereShapedHistory for centuries. His collection is divided in two: The Minor Treasure room with gold and jewels, and the Major Treasure room which includes invaluable, historical treasures like the snake that killed Cleopatra, Excalibur, the diamond cup of Alexander The Great, Shakespeare's original Hamlet script, and one of Alfred Nobel's first sticks of dynamite.
67* ''ComicBook/{{Planetary}}'': Both the Four and members of Planetary maintain large collections of the world's secrets, including mementos from dead superheroes and alien artifacts. As Mr. Snow observes when visiting a parallel earth, "They killed an entire world so that they had somewhere to store their weapons."
68* ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'': Cain and Abel are brothers and collectors. Cain collects mysteries, and Abel collects secrets.
69* ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'':
70** In UsefulNotes/{{the Silver Age|OfComicBooks}}, the titular character's Fortress of Solitude seemed to exist mainly as a place to house ''his'' collection of geegaws, including statues of his friends and things related to them. A few of said friends managed somehow or another to see their wing of the Superman Museum of Stalkees and most of them were flattered rather than creeped out.
71** Brainiac's whole thing is that he wipes out planets, but preserves one city from each civilization that he destroys, which he shrinks and keeps in glass containers. The most notable is Kandor, a Kryptonian city which Superman manages to recover but can't unshrink.
72* ''Franchise/{{Tintin}}'': In the story ''[[Recap/TintinTheSecretOfTheUnicorn The Secret of the Unicorn]]'', the pickpocket who's been plaguing the city turns out to be an eccentric old [[StickyFingers kleptomaniac]] who keeps a collection of the wallets he's stolen, without bothering to empty the contents.
73[[/folder]]
74
75[[folder:Fan Works]]
76* ''Fanfic/CatTales'': Per canon, Batman's trophy room in the Batcave is used for displaying mementos from his stranger or more memorable cases. Selina begins adding things to it as well, eventually, such as a souvenir glass from the Iceberg Lounge and a 40,000-carat fiberglass diamond that had been used as a display piece in Falconi Jewelers. "Trophies", story #63, has Batman telling her the stories behind some of the stranger pieces (such as the giant penny and the robotic ''T. rex'') while they rearrange things to make room for said fiberglass diamond.
77* ''Fanfic/AChangeOfPace'': Vicky notes that Taylor is becoming one, what with her disturbing amount of human body parts she keeps for her powers.
78* There's a sidekick statue collection revealed in ''WebAnimation/{{Ducktalez}} 6''. It also keeps track of their deaths, and it is owned by [[spoiler:Darkwing]].
79* In ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/9805958/20/Family-is-Everything Family is Everything]]'' Harry once had a collection of 2,057 ice cream sticks, which he was building into a castle.
80* In ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/7896387/10/Food-for-Thought Food for Thought]]'' Colin has a collection of restraining orders and subpoenas, including an entire ''room'' of ones served on Harry's behalf.
81* ''Fanfic/TheInfiniteLoops'': Loopers in general tend to collect things in their [[{{Hammerspace}} Pockets]], some of which are normal, but some of which are on the odder side - [[Manga/RanmaOneHalf Ranma Saotome]], for instance, collects ''[[Franchise/StarWars Death Stars]]''.
82** ''Fanfic/TheRWBYLoops'' in particular gives us the Romantic Weapons and Ballistics of Yggdrasil Museum, maintained by Ruby Rose and stocked with duplicates of weapons from across the multiverse. Given the MegaCrossover of the setting, that actually spans quite a large scale -- think of every weapon from every movie, book, video game, anime, television series, cartoon, toy line... the centerpiece is [[Film/TheForceAwakens Starkiller Base]], which is also where most of the museum is located, and various snips imply Ruby is still looking to collect.
83* The Raptor Squad in ''Fanfic/ItsNotTheRaptorDNA'' have a curious habit of decorating their nests with various junk and toys, similar to modern birds. Delta uses bottle caps whilst Blue has a boot that she stole from Owen a long time ago. [[{{Troll}} Blue also gloats and taunts Owen with this boot.]]
84* ''Fanfic/TheMansionverse'' has Philidore Gastley, an early 20th-century collector of cursed or otherwise mind-boggling items who gathered them into what would become the Museum of the Weird. The Ghost Host himself also has clear shades of this, though it's just a hobby for him and he only has a room full of weird to show for it against Gastley's Museum.
85* In Petty's ''Webcomic/NuzlockeComics'' spinoff, Barb the Nidoran/-rina/-queen collects pieces of paper. Typically her collection is old greeting cards, receipts, and other trash, but at one point it included [[GrailInTheGarbage a Bike Voucher and an SS Ticket]].
86* ''Fanfic/NoStarsInSight'': Ikharos has a hobby of collecting specimens of alien fauna that he's encountered while visiting other planets, which are kept in terrariums inside the TrophyRoom of his CoolStarship. These include a feathered serpent from Venus, a nest of tiny red scorpions from Pluto, a slug from an unnamed RoguePlanet, and a spider from Amalthia.
87* ''Fanfic/OSMUFanfictionFriction'': Octavius, being a {{Bookworm}}, collects old typewriters, usually scouring the Internet for them and buying them.
88* ''Fanfic/RosarioVampireBrightestDarkness'': As explained in Act III chapter 46, Issa Shuzen is a collector of rare and powerful magical spells and artifacts, though he never actually intends to use them. Unfortunately, one of those spells/artifacts is the dangerous [[TimeTravel Chrono Displacement spell]], and Akua and Kahlua steal it from his archive for Kiria to use in his EvilPlan.
89* In ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/4825005/1/Trophy Trophy]]'' Draco collects undergarments and other personal items belonging to people he's had sex with.
90* ''Fanfic/TheWorldIsFilledWithMonsters'': Luna. Her "office" in Everfree Castle is not so much an actual office as a massive, dimly lit warehouse filled to the brim with a collection of objects and artifacts that she collected over her long life -- works of art, musical instruments, armor and weapons, books and scrolls, statues and monuments, chandeliers, piles of coins and precious gems, astronomical equipment, and countless other things. The resulting hoard is stored with no order whatsoever, the centuries-old junk and treasures all stacked and piled haphazardly in massive heaps as far as the eye can see.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
94* ''WesternAnimation/TheLittleMermaid1989'': Ariel salvages discarded human artifacts, most of which are quite strange by merfolk standards (e.g. shoes, cutlery, smoking pipes, etc.). [[spoiler:[[FantasyForbiddingFather King Triton later destroys her collection in a fit of rage]].]]
95* ''WesternAnimation/PussInBootsTheLastWish'': Jack Horner has a massive collection of magic artifacts and objects from across the fairy tale world, from glass slippers to Excalibur, and he WILL use them as needed.
96* ''WesternAnimation/TwiceUponATime'': The BigBad Synonamess Botch shows our unwitting heroes around his castle, where he has collections of all sorts of weird things, including dried salami, stretched cats, and stuffed and mounted bat heads.
97* ''WesternAnimation/WallE'': The titular protagonist keeps a wide assortment of random trinkets that catch his fancy. The items he collects don't seem to have any particular theme, they're just anything that strikes him as interesting. (At one point he throws out a diamond ring and keeps the little velvet box instead, for example.)
98* ''Manga/XxxHolic'': In the movie, not only does the movie take place at a gathering of strange collectors, but it turns out the man throwing the party collects [[spoiler:collectors themselves]].
99[[/folder]]
100
101[[folder:Films -- Live Action]]
102* Nino in ''Film/{{Amelie}}'' collects footprints, strange laughs, and flawed ID photos.
103* ''Film/CitizenKane'': Charles Foster Kane collected... everything, including a lot of junk from his past, [[ItWasHisSled even a little sled]].
104-->'''Newsreel Narrator:''' [at beginning of newsreel on Charles Foster Kane's death] ''Legendary was Xanadu where Kubla Khan decreed his stately pleasure dome. Today, almost as legendary is Florida's Xanadu, world's largest private pleasure ground. Here, on the deserts of the Gulf Coast, a private mountain was commissioned and successfully built. One hundred thousand trees, twenty thousand tons of marble are the ingredients of Xanadu's mountain. Contents of Xanadu's palace: paintings, pictures, statues, the very stones of many another palace — a collection of everything so big it can never be catalogued or appraised, enough for ten museums — the loot of the world. Xanadu's livestock: the fowl of the air, the fish of the sea, the beast of the field and jungle. Two of each, the biggest private zoo since Noah. Like the pharaohs, Xanadu's landlord leaves many stones to mark his grave. Since the pyramids, Xanadu is the costliest monument a man has built to himself. Here in Xanadu last week, Xanadu's landlord was laid to rest, a potent figure of our century, America's Kubla Khan — Charles Foster Kane.''
105* Egon from ''Film/{{Ghostbusters 1984}}''. "I collect spores, molds, and fungus."
106* The Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse has one in the Collector, a recurring character who collects strange and powerful artifacts (and creatures) from around the universe. This includes multiple Infinity Stones, Cosmo the Space Dog, ComicBook/HowardTheDuck, a cocoon that was believed to belong to [[ComicBook/Warlock1967 Adam Warlock]] (until the real cocoon was shown in ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyVol2''), and, most bizarrely, [[Series/ArrestedDevelopment Tobias Funke]].
107** Yondu collects little figurines. [[spoiler: When Peter steals the Power Stone from him, he leaves Yondu a Troll doll for his collection.]]
108** [[Ride/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyMissionBreakout The ride at Disney California Adventure]] combines Ride/DisneyThemeParks and Marvel and adds an [[Film/AvengersAgeOfUltron Ultron drone]], the Warlock's Eye, a [[Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy2014 Sakaaran head]], a statue from [[Film/DoctorStrange2016 Kamar-Taj]] and the Crimson Bands of Cyttorak from the same film, Creator/StanLee, the Yeti from the Matterhorn, [[Ride/JourneyIntoImagination Figment]], a bellhop's hat from [[Ride/TheTwilightZoneTowerOfTerror the Hollywood Tower Hotel]], a Nova Corps uniform, a Hydra helmet and gun, the weapons of [[Film/{{Thor}} the Warriors Three]], [[Film/ThorTheDarkWorld Dark Elf artifacts]], and [[ComicBook/BetaRayBill Stormbreaker]].
109* In ''Film/{{Micmacs}}'', one of the arms makers has a collection of the body parts of famous people, such as Marilyn Monroe's molar and the heart of Louis XIV (I think), and he's trying to get Mussolini's eye.
110* ''Film/MouseHunt'' features EccentricMillionaire Alexander Falko, who is the world’s most famous collector of items relating to the architect Charles Lyle [=LaRue=]. When Ernie and Lars Munst discover the fabled "Missing [=LaRue=]" (the last house the man designed before he was sent to an asylum for undisclosed reasons), Falko swiftly introduces himself to the brothers as he proudly boasts that he possesses [=LaRue=]'s books, letters, and forty-two of his houses, wants to make the building Lars and Ernie have just found his forty-third, and is sure that [=LaRue=] would have liked his shoes (though not before the brothers ask if they belonged to the man himself).
111* While much of the movie ''Mondo Collecto'' is faked, some real collectors of esoteric items are featured. Filmmaker Ted V. Mikels displays his medieval weapon collection, and Earl L. Luckes (as a character named Harutak) displays his collection of ''Film/PhantomOfTheParadise'' memorabilia (including an original prop helmet).
112* ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000: TheMovie'' showcases Tom Servo's underpants collection.
113* Jack from ''Film/Oblivion2013'' collects a variety of pre-war memorabilia artifacts he managed to scavenge, keeping them in a secret cottage he built in a somewhat-untouched grotto.
114* The titular Predators from the ''Franchise/{{Predator}}'' series, who all collect [[CreepySouvenir the skulls of their victims]].
115* At the start of ''Film/Restoration1995'', young doctor Merivel encounters a man with a hole in his chest due to an injury that enables people to see his beating heart (Merivel is the only one who dares to touch it). Later he encounters the man as a living exhibit in a private collection kept by King Charles II.
116* ''Film/RoadToPerdition''. Maguire, a crime scene photographer (though also a hitman) has a collection of photographs of corpses.
117* In Creator/FritzLang's ''Film/SecretBeyondTheDoor'' (1948), Creator/MichaelRedgrave plays the role of Mark Lamphere, an architect who "collects" rooms where murders have taken place by reconstructing the rooms using as much of the original crime scene material as possible.
118* Several of the {{Pinball}} fans in the {{Documentary}} ''Film/SpecialWhenLit'' are presented like this; two examples include Steve Keeler, who collects pinball machines and ''Film/{{Jaws}}'' memorabilia, and Josh "Pingeek" Kaplan, who collects and sells ''videos'' of pinball games being played.
119* Owen, Danny [=DeVito=]'s {{Manchild}} character in ''Film/ThrowMommaFromTheTrain'', collects coins. Not rare, valuable, or mint-condition coins; just coins. The coins are meaningful to him because he acquired them during times he spent with his father as a kid.
120* In ''Film/TheWrongBox'', Morris Finsbury collects rare eggs.
121[[/folder]]
122
123[[folder:Literature]]
124* ''Literature/BasLagCycle'': The Weaver from ''Literature/PerdidoStreetStation'' collects scissors, apparently because the sound they make appeals to its otherworldly aesthetic sense. Previously it'd collected chess sets.
125* In Creator/MarkTwain's "The Canvasser's Tale" a traveling salesman tells the sad story of how his formerly-rich uncle died and left the storyteller nothing but his vast collection of ''echoes''.
126* The ''Literature/CharlieParkerSeries'' has the Collector, who collects relics of murders and other crimes that he believes are important on some cosmic level.
127* In ''Chronicles of a Strange Kingdom'' king Shellar III of Ortan collects... his own coffins. No, he's not a vampire, [[spoiler:although later he gains the ability to [[AstralProjection manifests as a ghost while near death]]]]. A RunningGag in the series is whenever Shellar risks his life [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething for the sake of his kingdom]] or his loved ones, or generally is in trouble, at some moment he is falsely presumed dead and a new coffin is ordered for him. Eventually, his collection becomes so well-known he starts receiving new additions to it from other monarchs, as sincere birthday gifts. This actually has some plot importance: Shellar's bloodline was cursed to die out [[CurseEscapeClause unless one of them cheats death thrice]], which he did much more than that, and in later books, the Archmage actually considers that Shellar's coffins became a sort of good luck charm for him and orders a new one on purpose when the king is in grave danger. [[spoiler:It seems to have worked - Shellar survived, although spent several weeks as a ghost with his body comatose. Interestingly, he does not plan to use any of his collection ever, instead going to remain as SpiritAdvisor to his descendants via the aforementioned manifestation.]]
128* ''Literature/{{Clue}}'': Some of Boddy's items may be valuable, but they're also decidedly ''odd'', such as the antique rabbit's foot (with a solid-gold chain) from book #12, chapter 6 ("Bad Hare Day"), the piece of jade carved into the shape of a sparrow in book #14, chapter 1 ("You're So Jaded"), a solid gold peanut that's given away as a prize in book #15, chapter 3 ("A Nutty Day"), a jade ice cream cone also given away as a prize in book #16, chapter 5 ("Sundae School"), a necklace with every letter of the alphabet made from diamond, rubies, and emeralds in book #17, chapter 7 ("Alphabet Clues"), and a silent music box used in old silent movies in book #18, chapter 7 ("Party Poopers").
129* Snazz, a gremlin murder victim from ''Literature/DanShambleZombiePI'', collected ''lint'' as a child.
130* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
131** According to ''Literature/MakingMoney'' Lord Vetinari has, somewhere in the palace, the death masks of most of his predecessors as Patrician of Ankh-Morpork (those whose bodies were in any state to have a death mask made). When asked if he finds it creepy to have them all looking down on him, he replies that generally ''he'' looks down on ''them'' because they were fat, greedy, corrupt, and incompetent, and he's [[MagnificentBastard awesome]].
132** When Gaspode the Wonder Dog is bathed against his will at the end of ''Literature/MenAtArms'', he runs away from his adoptive home and returns to the streets, complaining: "Every flea, gone! And I had nearly the complete set!"
133** In ''Literature/GoingPostal'', the invention of the stamp attracts a new collecting craze, mostly among people who previously had collected ''pins''. Let us clarify: these are not brooch-style decorative pins (''a la'' Disney "Pin Trading"), but the sort of pins you'd use to fasten two pieces of cloth together temporarily.
134** A number of Literature/{{Discworld}} novels make reference to people collecting pressed lizards. An unpleasant child from ''Literature/{{Hogfather}}'' requested a "lizard press" as a Hogswatch gift, indicating it's a sufficiently-popular hobby that someone invented such a device.
135*** Tiffany Aching once told a passerby that she was making a collection of pressed ''toads'', but this was only a lie to justify her picking up the (talking) toad who accompanied her on a journey.
136** In ''Literature/{{Snuff}}'', Young Sam starts a poo collection, inspired by the one assembled by Geoffrey in ''Literature/TheWorldOfPoo''. There's a brief mention of some Ankh-Morporkians having ''smell'' collections, in carefully stoppered bottles.
137---> It was all a mystery to Vimes, who was absolutely sure that it was impossible to tell the difference between a chicken fart and a turkey fart, but there were those who professed to be able to do so, and he was glad that such people had chosen this outlet for their puzzling inclinations rather than, for example, fill their sink with human skulls, collected on the high street.
138* Morollan of the ''Literature/{{Dragaera}}'' novels collects [[SoulCuttingBlade Morganti weapons]].
139* Richard Knaak's ''Literature/DragonTome'' in his ''Literature/DragonRealm'' series has a magic-user who collects unusual people.
140* In the book ''Literature/DragonskinSlippers'', each of the dragons collects something - windows, shoes, even dogs.
141* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'': Harry Dresden has a collection of vampire fangs. And not the hinged plastic kind. Other odd spell ingredients he used to keep on hand include sunshine wrapped up in a handkerchief, mainly for use on vampires. And in ''{{Literature/Changes}}'', he has to remove stuff from his apartment in a hurry that the FBI might be interested in. The list of stuff he's bundling up includes two swords (one of which the police would call a murder weapon in a local case), depleted uranium, and a human skull. (The skull isn't actually a souvenir, incidentally; [[DemBones he's called Bob and he's on Harry's payroll.]])
142* ''Literature/FeralsSeries'': Felix Quaker the cat feral spends his time collecting rare feral artifacts throughout history.
143* ''Literature/TheFiresStone'': Herrek, a man in Ischia who "helps" Aaron break into the palace, has collected so many treasures as trades for information and equipment that he has trapped himself within his own hoard. He also collects information.
144* One of the proudest claims of the appropriately-named BadGuyBar, the Last Mistake from the ''Literature/GentlemanBastard'' Sequence, is that it has secured a memento of every ship that has foundered within sight of Camorr over a period of seventy years. The walls are covered in "a bewildering variety of souvenirs, each one telling a visual tale that ended with the phrase 'not quite good enough.'" such as broken bits of ships, split helmets, and a suit of armor with a square hole punched into it by a crossbow bolt.
145* ''Literature/GoblinsInTheCastle'': ''Goblins On the Prowl'' reveals that the Baron keeps a collection of cannonballs from famous battles. They're seen on the fireplace in the Great Hall in the first book but aren't specifically identified as a collection until the second.
146* In ''Literature/GoodOmens'', the angel Aziraphale collects books of prophecy and "infamous Bibles", antique Bibles with amusing misprints such as the Unrighteous Bible, the Wicked Bible, and the Bugger Alle Thys Bible. Apart from the Charring Cross and Bugger Alle Thys Bibles, all the misprinted Bible editions in Aziraphale's collection [[http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bible_errata really do exist]] in RealLife.
147* ''Literature/AGoodScentFromAStrangeMountain'': The narrator of "Relic" has bought one of Music/JohnLennon's shoes...not just any shoe, but supposedly one of the two shoes that Lennon was wearing when he was murdered. He describes himself as "a special collector of things."
148* ''Literature/HarryPotter:''
149** Horace Slughorn collects people, but not in the way you think. He doesn't want to be in the spotlight himself; instead, he purposely acts to collect the trust and affection of hopeful and talented students so he could serve as a powerful influence for them.
150** Arthur Weasley collects Muggle artifacts. Some of them, like a Ford Anglia he enchanted to become invisible and fly, are pretty neat, but a lot of it is junk like electrical plugs and batteries. Considering the average Wizard is disinterested to the point of indifference regarding Muggles, and most of those who aren't are downright hostile towards them, he comes off as more than a bit weird due to his obsession.
151* In ''Literature/JohnDiesAtTheEnd'' and its sequels, David Wong has a garden shed (later an apartment room) full of things that people send to him. Some are objects with supernatural properties, others are mundane items that simply should not exist in this universe, such as an issue of TIME magazine about the assassination of Bill Clinton.
152* ''Literature/LaszloHadronAndTheWargodsTomb'': Areton Sarm owns a vast trove of artifacts from various cultures and periods of history, ranging from old alien warships to a Tyrannosaurus skeleton.
153* ''Literature/LongsummerNights'', "Seeds of Solace": [[{{Medusa}} Alessia]] keeps a collection of people she's turned to stone.
154* The Collector is a series regular in the ''{{Literature/Nightside}}'' novels, a compulsive hoarder who seeks out anything exotic, unique, or historically significant, then stashes it in various super-secret locations (on the Moon, inside a live tyrannosaur's cage, etc). As one of the things he maintains a collection of is ''time machines'', many of the historical artifacts he's picked up were taken directly from their periods of origin.
155* In ''Literature/{{Pale}}'' this is an entire subset of magic practitioner. Collectors try to find magical items focusing on certain themes and fit them in diagrams. The strongest Collector in the story, however, is a [[TheCollector collector of people]], so his diagram is an apartment complex.
156** Abraham Musser, a later antagonist, is a Collector focusing on [[MagicalAccessory Implements]], which he steals from other practitioners and masters. Among his collection are a catcher's mitt that lets him catch any incoming attack and a knife whose cuts grow over time.
157* ''Literature/PaperTowns'': "IT'S NOT MY FAULT THAT MY PARENTS OWN THE WORLD'S LARGEST COLLECTION OF BLACK SANTAS!"
158* The children's book ''Poo at the Zoo'' features Hector Gloop, who collects ''[[RoadApples animal droppings]]'' and shows them off to other people.
159* Orfeo Culzean, TheChessmaster for hire from ''Literature/{{Ravenor}}'' collects deodands - random, innocuous items that have caused people's deaths.
160* ''Literature/ReuhurinteenAlaAste'': One story has Rosita tell the class about her hobby of collecting pencil shavings. Vatanen gets upset that Rosita sharpened away the pencil he gave her, and pays her back by using up the eraser she gave him, and ends up thinking about collecting eraser dust.
161* Discussed in one story in ''Stories for Nine-Year-Olds'', in which Ruth Dixon (through a series of [[MondegreenGag mishearings]]) thinks she'll have to bring a dead frog to school, and her brother Mike jokingly suggests she start a pressed frog collection.
162* Creator/JenniferRoberson also has a character who collects the unusual, including people, in her ''Literature/TigerAndDel'' series.
163* ''Literature/TressOfTheEmeraldSea'': Tress collects cups from faraway places because they let her imagine life in other lands than her boring island home. Her interest wanes after she gets to sail the seas and see some of those places, but she keeps a few personally significant pieces.
164* The main character of ''The Very Inappropriate Word'' keeps a collection of words he's learnt under his bed.
165* In ''Literature/BlackLegion'', a novel based in the universe of ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', Abaddon has a staggering collection of trophies, weapons, and curiosities aboard ''Vengeful Spirit'', from the Talon of Horus to advanced biomechanical cogitators (computers) and the head of an enormous sea serpent. He acquired them during a centuries-long pilgrimage through the [[NegativeSpaceWedgie Eye]].
166* In ''Literature/TheWestingGame'', dressmaker Flora Baumbach tells Turtle that her late [[spoiler: mentally-challenged]] daughter collected fabric swatches from her shop's sample collection.
167* Several of these show in ''Literature/BrimstoneAngels''. [[ManipulativeBastard Lorcan]], who holds [[DarkIsNotEvil Farideh's]] warlock pact, collects warlocks in general, especially those from noteworthy bloodlines. Being able to have an impressive collection of pacted warlocks doesn't have a material benefit in devil society, but it ''does'' give you bragging rights. Sairche, Lorcan's sister and rival, collects secrets. [[EvilSorcerer Adolican Rhand]], the ArcVillain of the middle of the series, collects surreal artwork, especially pieces that depict BodyHorror - not as strange, but definitely creepy, and he likes showing them off to people to make them uncomfortable.
168[[/folder]]
169
170[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
171* In the live-action puppet series ''Bookmice'', the cat that would later call himself "Exit"[[note]]He took his name from an "EXIT" sign in the library; it was the first word he ever learned to read.[[/note]] is revealed to have a collection of keys.
172* Gammil in the ''Series/{{Charmed|1998}}'' episode; "Size Matters" makes statuettes out of witches.
173* Gil Grissom's office from ''{{Series/CSI}}'' mirrors the owner's fascination with insects where he keeps full preserved bodies of giant spiders and other bugs that catch his fancy. This isn't particularly strange by the standards of this trope -- entomology is a well-established and perfectly respectable field of study -- but bringing his hobby to work with him like that must make his coworkers nervous.
174** Grissom's collection temporarily became even more macabre in Season 7. As the Miniature Killer kept leaving incredibly detailed dioramas of their crime scenes for police to find, Grissom started keeping them on shelves in his office. He even began creating miniatures of his own, in an attempt to get into the killer's mindset.
175* ''Series/DoctorWho'': Considering the Doctor tends to have all sorts of weird stuff in his pockets for every occasion and the TARDIS has all sorts of cool stuff in it the Doctor whips out for use in various episodes and serials, he's this too, though it overlaps with CrazyPrepared when you consider his lifestyle.
176** Henry van Statten of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E6Dalek "Dalek"]] collected and studied alien artifacts. Collecting a live Dalek may not have been the best move...
177** Done again with Grayle in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS33E5TheAngelsTakeManhattan "The Angels Take Manhattan"]], who does much the same thing with a Weeping Angel, and meets an unpleasant fate.
178* Marshall Teller from ''Series/EerieIndiana'' collects leftovers from all the strange adventures he's been in and stores them in an evidence locker in his attic in the hopes of using them to prove that he lives in the centre of weirdness for the entire world.
179* ''{{Series/Itch}}'': Itch collects elements from the periodic table. It's this hobby that kicks off the plot of the whole show!
180* In an episode of ''Series/MidsomerMurders'', the fact a suspect for the murder is somewhat mentally distressed is lampshaded by the fact he is an obsessive collector of and wargamer with Creator/GamesWorkshop fantasy armies. He is also a CannotTalkToWomen type whose obsessive love for a female character is condensed into his trying to paint a warrior woman miniature figure to look ''exactly'' like her. In TV dramas, nobody ''ever'' collects toy soldiers who is mentally balanced, psychologically normal, and socially integrated. This is always a lazy TV shorthand for ''obsessive deranged loner''.
181* Gonzo on ''Series/TheMuppetShow'' kept a mildew collection.
182* In the ''Series/NightGallery'' episode "A Death in the Family", a mortician collects preserved dead bodies.
183** ''The Night Gallery'' itself might qualify if one assumes that the narrator actually collects the paintings.
184* This is the premise of ''Series/{{Oddities}}'' produced by Discovery, showing off collections of old scientific instruments, animal taxidermies, and Victorana.
185* Rumplestiltskin in ''Series/OnceUponATime'' collects magic artifacts, weapons, and virtually everything else; many of his deals involve having the other party [[FetchQuest seek out objects for him.]] Fittingly, his Storybrooke counterpart is a pawnbroker.
186* Rimmer in ''Series/RedDwarf'' collects photos of 20th-century telegraph poles. Meanwhile, the Cat collects clothes, while Lister contents himself with growing the mould in his used coffee cup. (Admittedly that last one's mostly because it annoys Rimmer.)
187** Rimmer also collects headlines about other people with the name Arnold, "No Smoking" signs, and old wires. He also went on a hiking tour of the ship's engine decks and returned with photos of seemingly identical bits of machinery with only minor differences that only he can make out. It's a RunningGag that he's utterly clueless about the fact that nobody else on the ship is interested in them but him.
188*** Rimmer's gift to a seemingly-departing Kryten in ''The Last Day'' is a vial of a famous general's spinal fluid.
189** The Skutters, the ''service robots'' on the ''Dwarf'' are big enough fans of John Wayne movies that they're members of a fan club. With posts directly addressed to them.
190* ''Series/ShiningTimeStation'': Downplayed; Tito, one of the members of the Jukebox Band, collects the nickels that are put into the jukebox. While collecting coins is fairly normal, collecting those coins specifically can be considered strange.
191* ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'': In "Treachery, Faith and the Great River", Nog mentions one Al Lorenzo, chief of operations on Dagos Prime, who collects holo-photos of himself sitting behind the desks of Starfleet captains. Nog helps him borrow Sisko's desk for a photo as part of an elaborate ChainOfDeals.
192* Berry Weiss on ''Series/StorageWars'' bids on storage lockers looking mostly for weird and cool collectibles. He's found things like a really creepy wooden head sculpture, and metalwork helmets etched with oil-industry images.
193* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1985'': In "The Mind of Simon Foster", the pawnbroker Mr. Quint sells [[TransferableMemory removed memories]] to wealthy people who collect different experiences such as high school graduations and a person's first time making love.
194* Everything from ''Series/Warehouse13''. See SecretGovernmentWarehouse and ArtifactCollectionAgency.
195* Mike on ''Series/TheYoungOnes'' claimed that he'd donated his used-tissue collection to the household kindling supply. He's also referred to his ''passport'' collection. Though knowing Mike, he probably never actually collected used tissues, but simply tossed a fresh one on the fire and ''claimed'' that he'd been collecting them. That way, he didn't have to forfeit anything he actually valued.
196[[/folder]]
197
198[[folder:Magazines and Print Media]]
199* ''Magazine/ForteanTimes'' could be viewed as one of these in print; it regularly reports on strange and bizarre collections surfacing around the world.
200[[/folder]]
201
202[[folder:Music]]
203* The Carnival in Emerson, Lake, and Palmer's "Karn Evil 9 (First Impression), parts I and II." Given that the song takes place after a nightmarish war between man and machine, the Carnival's wares (the remnants of the world before the war) would seem very unusual to the crowds.
204* ''Music/EvilliousChronicles'': How strange these things ([[spoiler:a silver spoon for Greed, a glass tainted with red for Gluttony, a clockwork doll for Sloth, four mirrors for Pride, a pair of scissors for Envy, a sword with poison on its blade for Lust, and a yet unknown object that is heavily implied to change forms for Wrath]]) are is up for everyone to judge, but Gallerian Marlon strives to collect the 'Vessels of the Seven Deadly Sins'- so much, that he is nicknamed The Collector, apart from his first name sounding very similar to 'gallery'.
205[[/folder]]
206
207[[folder:Pinball]]
208* Robert Ripley (and the player) take this role in ''Pinball/RipleysBelieveItOrNot,'' traveling the world to document and collect various oddities.
209[[/folder]]
210
211[[folder:Podcast]]
212* ''Podcast/TopDownPerspective'': The three often talk about Toys/{{amiibo}} collecting and trying to track down amiibos, especially when new waves are released. Jon in particular quests to acquire eight Captain Falcons.
213* ''Podcast/TheMagnusArchives'' has Jurgen Leitner, who had the largest private collection of books touched by the Entities. Emphasis on ''had'', as putting together that many [[TomeOfEldritchLore cursed books]] powered by [[EldritchAbomination unfathomable monstrosities]] is a bit like gathering sticks of dynamite around a campfire; when the library fell, the books were released into the world. Most of the rest of the characters on the podcast view him as an absolute git whose hubris in believing he was the only one who could contain these tomes only set him up for an inevitable disaster.
214[[/folder]]
215
216[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
217* According to Silas Young, ACH is an avid collector of Japanese cartoons [=DVDs=]. This went so far as to be the catalyst of a feud between the two in Wrestling/RingOfHonor, where Young decided he was going to make ACH act more like a man.
218* Hayley Shadows collects action figures, but ''don't'' give her a Barbie Doll.
219* While Jim Londos had done something huge in lucha libre when he took the mask of El Enmascarado Rojo, it was Bobby Segura who gained a reputation for ''collecting'' the masks of luchadors and in fact was [[TraumaticHairCut humiliation shaved]] as a result of failing to take Rojo's after Londos gave it back. Although this isn't so strange anymore what with some luchadors having "collections" that dwarf that of the entire Segura [[WrestlingFamily family]] combined, but in 1946, yeah.
220* Wrestling/SaraDelRey brought up Wrestling/ChrisHero's t-shirt collection, slamming it in comparison to her "[[Wrestling/ClaudioCastagnoli very European]]" garbs.
221* In Wrestling/{{WCW}} in 1997, {{Heel}} manager [[Wrestling/JamesMitchell James Vandenberg]][[note]][[Wrestling/{{SMW}} Daryl Van Horne]][=/=][[Wrestling/{{ECW}} the Sinister Minister]][=/=][[Wrestling/ImpactWrestling Father James Mitchell]][[/note]], the manager for [[Wrestling/{{Kanyon}} Mortis (Kanyon)]] and [[Wrestling/BryanClarke Wrath (Bryan Clarke)]], was supposedly the curator of the Museum of Medical Abnormalities in [[UsefulNotes/{{Taiwan}} Taipei]] and a collector of [[DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment "rare oddities"]].
222[[/folder]]
223
224[[folder: Puppet Shows]]
225* ''Series/SesameStreet:''
226** Bert and his collection of paper clips. He also collects bottle caps.
227** Telly likes to collect triangles.
228[[/folder]]
229
230[[folder:Radio]]
231* Linda in ''Linda Smith's Brief History of Timewasting'' collects ceramic birds. But she has to smash them when they become endangered.
232[[/folder]]
233
234[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
235* ''TabletopGame/{{Numenera}}'': Ghamalso is an alien being obsessed with collecting unique beings, machines, artifacts, and phenomena to store aboard his spaceship, which through some creative use of spatial warping now contains so much stuff that someone who spent a mortal lifetime moving from room to room, studying each object for only one minute, would still only see one percent or so of it all. Ghamalso has no real standards for what he collects beyond some degree of interest, and his collection includes, among other things, mummified alien heads, immense war machines, paintings and other artwork, a human child in stasis, and an alien zoo with a greater surface area than the Earth.
236* ''TabletopGame/{{Talislanta}}'': The Sindarans have collecting as one of their [[PlanetOfHats hats]]. Most of them collect the things you'd expect -- art, books, antiques, etc -- but not all of them. A fandom suggestion list for "things for your Sindaran to collect" included "lint" and "other collectors' collections".
237* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
238** Khorne, the Chaos God of war and bloodshed, collects blood and skulls, which form a ''lake'' and a ''mountain'', respectively.[[note]]Not a normal lake and mountain of course. It was said that just one of Khorne's servants collected enough skulls to form a small planetoid. Said servant was powerful, but mostly an ordinary daemon, overshadowed by monsters like Anngrath, Doombreed, or Angron.[[/note]]
239** The Necron special character Trazyn the Infinite. Think Doctor Doom if he was a killer skeleton robot from space and you have a decent idea of what he's like. His collection includes, among other things, the wraithbone choir of Craftworld Altansar, the preserved severed head of Sebastian Thor, an [[http://wh40k.lexicanum.com/wiki/Enslaver#.Ues7iI2koTc Enslaver]] husk, and baroque set of Space Marine power armour (with the accompanying Blood Angels marine; it's implied that the poor sap is ''far'' from the only technically living thing in Trazyn's collection), and the world spirit shrine of Maiden World Carnac. And Trazyn is always looking to add more things to his bizarre gathering of oddities.
240** TabletopGame/RogueTrader gives us the Stryxis, a ProudMerchantRace local to the part of space the game is set. Any given trader will have a vast hoard of unique treasures, rare technologies, and outright junk for trade. The challenge when dealing with them is that how much they would want for any of it and what they might find valuable in return is completely nonsensical to humans, and seems to vary massively between individuals to boot.
241* ''Franchise/TheWorldOfDarkness'':
242** ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheDreaming'': The Maeghar are fae-blooded vampires who typically build large collections of small objects, often {{Creepy Souvenir}}s like finger bones, children's teeth, [[GenuineHumanHide pieces of tattooed skin]], [[InsubstantialIngredients broken dreams]]...
243** In ''TabletopGame/VampireTheMasquerade'': One of the [[MadHatter Malkavian]] character templates is named "[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin The Collector]]" who collects obsessively out of a desire to understand the world. To that end, he'll collect, examine, and catalogue every single variation of a certain item for months at a time; eventually, he'll exhaust all the insights the item has to give, put the collection in storage, and move on to another series of object- no matter how bizarre or macabre: insects, oak leaves, human hands, anything.
244* Black dragons in the ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'' game, aside from the usual treasure, are infamous for collecting ''live prisoners'' to torture and torment.
245* ''TabletopGame/{{Battletech}}'': Cranston Snord, mercenary commander and collector of Star League artifacts, selected similarly-minded people when starting up his mercenary company, and ended up with collectors of everything from Elvis memorabilia to pickled human organs. Some people in the setting say, only half-jokingly, that Snord didn't found a mercenary company, he just expanded his collecting hobby to include weirdos.
246[[/folder]]
247
248[[folder:Theatre]]
249* In the 2013 musical ''Theatre/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory'', Charlie Bucket collects ''other people's'' thoughtlessly-discarded Wonka Bar wrappers at the dump near his home, where a sweet stall passes each day. He's too poor to enjoy an actual Wonka Bar more than once a year, but he loves them so much that he faithfully collects the wrappers, with Whipple-Scrumptious Fudgemallow Delight wrappers ([[YourFavorite his favorite]]) especially cherished. His family doesn't see this as strange (Grandpa Joe practically encourages it!) but it does garner bemused questioning from an observer in the opening scene. This hobby-collecting eventually earned Charlie a trip to the titular Chocolate Factory when one of the discarded wrappers turns out to have a golden ticket.
250[[/folder]]
251
252[[folder:Video Games]]
253* In pretty much any video game with an inventory system (particularity [[RolePlayingGame RPGs]]), a player may become one of these themselves, especially if going for OneHundredPercentCompletion.
254* The Worm from ''VideoGame/TheAdventuresOfMassmouth'' collects unique artifacts (such as the ancient superweapon "Eye of Mahan") and creatures (such as the miniature demon "Mini-Baron") from across the universe, and in fact maintains his own ArtifactCollectionAgency to acquire new items.
255* Over the course of the ''Franchise/BaldursGate'' series, you can collect quite a few interesting items. A vampire's hand, golden, silver, and bronze pantaloons, a couple of heads, hearts from demons, sharks, and humans, a brain, a soul, and weapons of all kinds. Fortunately, you also get a HammerSpace bag.
256* Carlos, from the ''VideoGame/BattleClash'' duology, collects the heads of the mecha he's defeated in battle. He's made it his life's mission to defeat ST Falcon, the world's only known two-manned mecha, which he considers an abomination (all other ST models do not have a separate pilot and gunner).
257* Dante from ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry'' adorns his office with trophy heads. While this is not unusual in itself, the skulls on his walls are of all the demons he's killed during his career as a bounty hunter. A bonus art from ''[[VideoGame/DevilMayCry3DantesAwakening 3]]'' takes this to its logical conclusion, [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome where Dante's office is so filled up with corpses of all the monsters he's killed and gear he's collected over the game, there's almost no walking room left]]. Presumably that's why he only keeps trophy heads in the later games; space is an issue when your business is also your house.
258* Xenon in the Black Emporium DLC of ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'', who owns a store of items he's collected in his quest to find immortality (which he succeeded in, but [[AgeWithoutYouth not the way he wanted]]) that Hawke and his group can browse around for.
259* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'':
260** In each game in the series since the [[VideoGame3DLeap 3D Leap]], as well as in its ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'' sister series, you can easily turn [[AHomeOwnerIsYou your home]] into a SuperheroTrophyShelf with all of the questing treasures you acquire. There are far more in each game than you can possibly put to use, so most will go toward decorating your home. Many {{Game Mod}}s exist that aid in this process.
261** In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'', Divayth Fyr has amassed quite the collection of legendary artifacts and has even set up a LockAndKeyPuzzle for those willing to risk their lives (to either his violent [[BodyHorror Corprus victims]] or catching the disease themselves) to try to steal them. In particular, he has a number of [[OurDwarvesAreDifferent Dwemer]] artifacts and items associated with the Imperial Battlespire event.
262** ''[[TheElderScrollsIVOblivion Oblivion's]]'' ''Shivering Isles'' DLC has characters who obsessively collect things such as forks or bones. One can also assist the curator of the Museum of Oddities with new acquisitions.
263** In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]'''s ''Dragonborn'' DLC, the [[TheMagocracy Telvanni]] [[TheArchMage Mage-Lord]] and legendary enchanter Master Neloth collects the staffs of Azra Nightwielder, a legendary master of "Shadow Magic."
264** The expansive ''Skyrim'' GameMod "Legacy of the Dragonborn" allows you to become this on a grand scale, with an expansive museum to store and display literally thousands of items (including many from previous games), ranging from dangerous daedric weapons and armor to rare books, rare coins, weird doohickeys, severed heads, and more.
265* Subaru of ''VideoGame/EnsembleStars'' loves to collect shiny things, ranging from coins to ramune bottle marbles to any old glittery thing he happens to find on the side of the road. More than one character wonders whether he is actually somehow a crow.
266* In ''E.P.I.C. Wishmaster Adventures'' a sergeant in the villain's army collects the skulls of mine slaves he's ordered to be killed.
267* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyV'''s Gilgamesh collects rare swords from all the worlds he's visited. His ultimate goal is to find [[InfinityPlusOneSword Excalibur]].
268* ''VideoGame/FireEmblemFates'' has [[LittleBitBeastly Keaton and his daughter Velouria]], who share a hobby of collecting "treasures" like broken plates, discarded thread, clumps of dirt, and other random objects their human comrades tend to consider garbage or are ordinary to the point of being above their notice.
269* In ''VideoGame/GhostbustersTheVideoGame'':
270** Edmund Hoover, later known as "Azetlor, the Collector," collected ancient and extremely rare books and tomes, some of which were ''very'' powerful. He seduced (and later murdered) Eleanor Twitty, a librarian at the NYCPL, so that he could get his hands on [[TomeOfEldritchLore The Gozerian Codex]].
271** The Ghostbusters themselves fit this trope, what with all the Cursed Artifacts found throughout the game.
272* ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoIV'' Add-On ''[[VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoIVTheBalladOfGayTony The Ballad of Gay Tony]]'' has Yusuf Amir. The son of a rich Arabian businessman says himself that he wants things that he couldn't buy, so he pays you for illegally getting him a chopper with miniguns and rockets (later he plated with gold), a subway car, and a S.W.A.T. Tank. He never uses anything for himself, he is lucky enough for having the stuff.
273* In ''[[VideoGame/NancyDrew Legend of the Crystal Skull]]'', Nancy Drew must gather each of the novelty glass eyes formerly owned by the late Bruno Bolet. Bruno also collected exotic pets as well as prosthetic eyes.
274* Brainiac from ''VideoGame/LegoBatman 3: Beyond Gotham'' takes this even further than the comics counterpart. He still collects cities but is now growing bored with that. He's escalated it to collecting ''worlds'', and also has the Lantern rings on his agenda.
275* Gutten Kisling from the video game ''VideoGame/OkageShadowKing'' collects toenail clippings.
276* In ''VideoGame/PrincessMaker2'', a Travelling Salesman will show up [[RuleOfThree times]]. He has many weird things, which range from useless to very useful for the Daughter's stats.
277* Tooth Fairy from ''VideoGame/Reverse1999'', as her name suggests, collects teeth. This is partly a necessity as she needs to breed magical critters called tooth fairies as part of her magical medical practice, but she's also fond of collecting them for sentimental reasons, oftentimes for the memories associated with the specific events, such as the time that she [[spoiler:accidentally ran over a young boy and managed to save his life but knock his baby tooth out in the process, her unknowingly being part of a harmful drug trial, and punching out her former mentor Prof. Evan's incisor in a fit of rage.]]
278* Hisahide in ''VideoGame/SengokuBasara'' collects various different antiques and famous artifacts but also collects ''people''. Taken to the extreme in ''Utage'' where he now collects metaphysical objects like names and bonds such as taking [[spoiler: Mitsuhide]]'s real name and turning them into another person and also robbing [[spoiler: Mitsunari]] of their bond with [[spoiler: Ieyasu]] by killing the latter.
279* In ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiIIINocturne'', the Collector Manikin was known for his collection of human-made stuff. Since this is AfterTheEnd, they're not in wide supply. To progress in the game, you need to steal a yen note from Loki's room for him.
280* In the second ''VideoGame/SimonTheSorcerer'' game, the two gargoyles guarding the entrance to the Fortress of Doom discuss how far Simon would be able to make it without dying, followed by expressing hope that they are allowed to keep his kneecaps.
281* In the LetsPlay of ''VideoGame/SonicUnleashed'' done by [[LetsPlay/{{pokecapn}} pokecapn and company]], LetsPlay/{{medibot}} names all the collectibles in the game. Sonic ends up collecting everything from a lost sock to an umbrella that only works if you don't look at it.
282* Admiral ZEX from ''VideoGame/StarControl II'' collects beings from various races.
283* Geo Strigau in ''VideoGame/TalesOfHearts'' collects Spirunes, which are roughly peoples' ''souls'' in crystal form. He truly pisses off both Innes and the player when he takes the Spirune of one [[MoralityPet Lapis Silver]].
284* ''Franchise/TouhouProject'':
285** Marisa Kirisame, of ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' fame, has a reputation for stealing and acquiring random objects, many of which are magical in nature. [[TrashOfTheTitans She can't be bothered to sort or identify them.]] Legendary artifacts have been discovered in her house.
286** Earlier, in the PC-98 games, Kotohime was fond of collecting "things no one else finds interesting". [[CloudCuckooLander She also thought she was a police officer.]]
287** Rin "Orin" Kaenbyou collects ''corpses''. It is [[LampshadeHanging mentioned in game]] [[http://en.touhouwiki.net/wiki/Double_Spoiler/Spell_Cards/Stage_8 how weird this is]].
288** Kosuzu Motoori collects youma books, books that are written by and/or contain {{youkai}}. They are usually indecipherable by humans, but Kosuzu has a special ability to read them.
289* In ''VideoGame/UntilDawn'', [[spoiler: Wendigo!Hannah]] is revealed at the end of the game to collect ''[[OffWithHisHead heads]]'' as some sort of trophy or possibly as a means for [[spoiler: her friends to stay with her]].
290* In ''VideoGame/TheWalkingDeadSeasonFour'', [[PlayerCharacter Clementine]] can find different items to decorate her room at the Ericson's Boarding School. Some of them are fairly standard, like fake flowers, a crystal, or drawings of some of the kids who live in the school, but she can also find and display skulls of different animals (a deer, a boar, a cat, and a ''human''). She can also decorate her room with a Venus flytrap and a potted mushroom.
291[[/folder]]
292
293[[folder:Visual Novels]]
294* ''VisualNovel/{{Clannad}}'':
295** Nagisa has a habit of collecting Dango plushies, given that they are based on her favorite food. Of course, this makes her all the more endearing.
296** [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} Fuko]] is ''obsessed'' with starfish, collecting figures of them and carving them herself out of wood. She also likes to share them with her classmates.
297* Yuri from ''VisualNovel/DokiDokiLiteratureClub'' is a knife collector. What makes her this trope is that Yuri is a ShrinkingViolet high schooler with anxiety issues, heavily implied to be a NightmareFetishist who enjoys cutting herself with her collection. [[spoiler:She ends up shanking herself to death with a knife once Monika pushes her over the edge.]]
298* ''VisualNovel/SpiritHunterNG'':
299** Seiji has an odd hobby of collecting gross-sounding drinks, to the point that people will gift him with strange drinks to pacify his sadism. At one point, Akira's run-in with a spirit is interrupted when Seiji drops by with a drink for him to try.
300** The spirit Kubitarou collects heads from a variety of sources, ranging from plushies to humans. This is revealed to be because, in life, she presented the heads to sacred cedar trees in the hopes of reviving her younger brother. After becoming a spirit, she loses all sanity and only continues collecting heads out of habit.
301[[/folder]]
302
303[[folder:Web Animation]]
304* ''WebAnimation/EtraChanSawIt'': [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SwOcvJzbHVs Hiiragi]] collected his children's baby teeth and their (as well as his own) fingernails and kept them inside a drawer in the closet he used to scare Akane for doing the same to her cousins Tsutsuji and Kuroki.
305* ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner'':
306** In the WebAnimation/StrongBadEmail "[[Recap/StrongBadEmailE54MorningRoutine morning routine]]", Strong Bad inexplicably has a dozen or so assorted eggs hidden in the couch.
307--->'''Strong Bad:''' So I got a lotta eggs. And I keep 'em in the couch.\
308'''Strong Sad:''' There needs to be a better word for "weird".
309** In "Decemberween Short Shorts", Coach Z claims to collect "embarrassing physical problems" when Homestar suggests he avoid [[ElderlyAilmentRambling talking about them]].
310[[/folder]]
311
312[[folder:Webcomics]]
313* ''Webcomic/DanAndMabsFurryAdventures'': Daniel Ti'Fiona collects muscle-powered weapons, swords are his favorite, but his collection includes axes, crossbows, polearms, etc. They're displayed on the walls of his room.
314** Also, following an incident where he had to wear high-heels and kept tripping in them, he collects far too many high-heel training shoes.
315* ''Webcomic/DemonEater'': Considering that demons don't have much time to worry about anything other than basic hand-to-mouth survival, the fact that the human club exists, and the fact that it has actual human things, definitely brands them for this trope.
316* ''Webcomic/{{Drowtales}}'': Snadhya'rune Vel'Sharen collects people with unique abilities, such as spellsong, empathy, nether summoning, and the like. These people make up a huge part of the Nidraa'chal clan's elite force [[OneManArmy as even a single person could quickly turn the tide on the battlefield]]. In Chapter 49, Snadhya'rune aided Anahid in ousting her rival Valla'drielle and becoming the rightful Ill'haress [[spoiler:with the ulterior motive of recruiting the clan Seers once the Kyorl'solenurn ally with the Nidraa'chal out of gratitude for stopping their civil war. When Anahid uses her Seer powers to discover and expose Snadhya'rune's (very) numerous crimes to her people, Snadhya'rune tries asking for forgiveness, only for Anahid to tell her to look for forgiveness from her ''actual'' victims]].
317* ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'':
318** All the kids' parental figures collect weird things: Dad collects harlequin paintings and figurines [[spoiler:because he thinks that [[RoomFullOfCrazy John likes them]]]], Mom fancies statutes and paintings of wizards, Bro fills the house with uncanny amounts of puppets, and Grandpa Harley collects everything from faded beauty salon posters to globes to mummies to suits of armour to taxidermy.
319** Among the kids, Dave Strider likes to collect [[JarOfTheBizarre things preserved in amber or jars]], while Roxy has a shelf of dead mutant cats preserved in blocks of clear material.
320* ''Webcomic/ScandinaviaAndTheWorld'': Iceland collects [[NightmareFetishist penises]]. Inspired by the [[http://www.phallus.is/ Icelandic Phallological Museum]]. (Link SFW, against all odds.)
321* ''Webcomic/ShadowsOfEnchantment'': Vrill is an artifact trader, but if he finds particularly interesting stuff he tends to just keep it (or buy it, or in some cases have it stolen). What he's really after is enchanted items, but anything rare and strange might catch his eye.
322* ''Webcomic/StandStillStaySilent'': Väinö, who guards the border between a safe area and a DeathWorld zone, has this as a side effect of his occupation. He keeps track of whether people who go through his checkpoint are still alive or not by having each of them leave a small personal item behind. If someone dies, their item magically bleeds... and apparently stays in the cabinet in which it's being kept.
323* ''Webcomic/TallyHo'': The Fox collects golf balls.
324* ''Webcomic/{{Unsounded}}'': Chea Toma collects queensguard and constable badges. It is illegal for those who are issued the badges to give them up, but her father sends her badges for every town he visits by bribing, and through Elka terrifying people into handing them over.
325[[/folder]]
326
327[[folder:Web Original]]
328* ''WebOriginal/SeventeenThousandSevenHundredSeventySix'' devotes half a chapter to the exploits of a group of friends who made a game out of collecting footballs signed by [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koy_Detmer Koy Detmer]]. To them, it's SeriousBusiness.
329* The titular character of ''WebVideo/AgamemnonTiberiusVacuum'' collects planets (and is currently trying to add the Earth to his collection).
330* The protagonist of ''WebVideo/AshensAndTheQuestForTheGameChild'' collects {{Shoddy Knockoff Product}}s. Anything that is a genuine product or of actual value, he rejects.
331* ''WebVideo/AskThatGuyWithTheGlasses:'' The titular character collects boils (because they apparently taste nice) and souls because that's part of his job of working for the devil.
332* WebVideo/BrandonFarris likes to collect random objects from Amazon or anything shown on Tik Tok. This is mostly for use in videos where he is playing with potentially harmful items (the highlights being things that intentionally inflict pain, such as a riding crop and anything with a taser function), and they can occasionally be seen in the background when he is done. Of particular note is his collection of novelty ''TabletopGame/{{Monopoly}}'' boards, which fills both bookshelves and which he is verbally defensive of when Gloria will not stop knocking them over.
333* Bryan Ropar is a [=YouTuber=] best known for [[https://www.youtube.com/c/BryanRoparsPlasticChairWorld his collection of plastic lawn chairs]]- he posts videos about his collection, and also shows off his knowledge of the chairs' manufacturing history and design. His channel is almost a meme sometimes- when outsiders stumble on fan communities dedicated to things commonly considered mundane, such as computer keyboards, those outsiders might post a screenshot of one of Ropar's videos and say, "this is what you guys sound like", followed by Ropar's channel getting a small boost in views as people learn that this guy really knows his lawn chairs. Perhaps unsurprisingly, he's also open about being on the autism spectrum, which tends to be known for these sorts of very specific interests.
334* Katherine in ''WebVideo/EmpiresSMP'' Season 1 collects heads, as the server has a mod installed that lets all mobs drop their head when they die, including other players.
335* Suzy Hanson of ''WebVideo/GameGrumps'', ''[[WebVideo/SteamTrain Steam Rolled]]'', and ''WebVideo/TableFlip'' fame has started a taxidermy collection.
336* Two characters from ''WebAnimation/{{Mugman}}'' are known to have strange collections. Mugman collects plates from famous shipwrecks, and Pementa collects [[ShoddyKnockoffProduct knockoff toys]].
337* ''WebVideo/TheNingyo'': The man who summoned Christopher to him has a large collection of live cryptids.
338* ''Website/NobodyHere'': "[[https://nobodyhere.com/justme/gum.here Gum]]" shows us Jogchem's collection of used chewing gum that he took from strange women, as well as bits of info about what each one was like and how they reacted to him picking it up.
339* ''WebVideo/TheNostalgiaChick:'' The Nostalgia Chick's sidekick Elisa has a large collection of skulls (...well, fake skulls, presumably), and another collection of ''Franchise/ThePhantomOfTheOpera'' merchandise. These are real!Elisa's actual collections.
340* One auto mechanic on ''Website/NotAlwaysWorking'' collects [[https://notalwaysright.com/an-improvement-on-homer-simpsons-makeup-gun/176745/ deployed car airbags with make-up stains on them]]. They seem to think it's amusing and like to show them to customers; the comments section finds it disturbing.
341* Ross Scott of ''WebVideo/RosssGameDungeon'' is very skilled at hunting down rare and absolutely bizarre games that nobody's ever heard of before. A good example of this is ''[[MindScrew Bip Bop II]]''. A better example is ''Bip Bop '''III''''', which basically had UnPerson status until he managed to track down a copy by contacting the original developer, who no longer had the source code to the game, but did have a few remaining retail copies on floppy disk, and wasn't sure if they even still worked or not (they did).
342* The ''Website/SCPFoundation'' spend a lot of time cleaning up after collectors of occult or otherwise anomalous items who get their hands on something actually dangerous and find out what it does the hard way. This brings them into frequent conflict with commercial ArtifactCollectionAgency Marshall, Carter, and Dark, who are alarmingly relaxed about supplying potentially hazardous artefacts to people who should ''really'' not be entrusted with them [[OnlyInItForTheMoney for the right price]].
343* ''WebVideo/Steve1989MREInfo'': Steve collects (and eats) vintage military rations, as well as other military memorabilia and minutia like survival kits. When he's got a hold of a particularly historically significant or well-preserved example of an MRE, he will often take care not to destroy the packaging when opening it so he can reseal it for display.
344* Olimar aka End of Days on ''WebVideo/ThereWillBeBrawl'' have a stash of various things from video games including the magic flute.
345* Tara, co-host of TGWTG's weird news show, ''WebVideo/WhatTheFuckIsWrongWithYou'', collects toy hippos. In fact, she's said on the show that she has a hippo for every occasion, and there seems to be no reason to doubt this. She has become so identified with hippos that a fan created a fanart of her as a superheroine with a cuddly hippo sidekick. This, in turn, spawned [[http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Hippo-Lantern-Corps/129852640446826 the Hippo Lantern Corps]].
346[[/folder]]
347
348[[folder:Western Animation]]
349* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime:''
350** Finn and Jake of ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'' do this to some degree. They have a whole room in their house ''filled'' with treasure from their exploits. They are never seen spending it or selling it, so presumably they just keep it around to look at it. Jake, however, is a collector of the strange in a different sort of way... He's a kleptomaniac, so it's inevitable that he'd pick up a few odd bits and bobbles from time to time. Finn also collects glass eyeballs.
351** The Ice King collects ''princesses''. He has been shown kidnapping various princesses and sticking them all in a big cage. Unfortunately for him, they always escape or get rescued eventually.
352** Lemongrab's castle has multiple rooms, each containing nothing but a single left-handed catcher's mitt on a pedestal. "The Mountain" eventually reveals that this is because [[JerkassWoobie he wants to play catch with his mother figure]].
353* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDragonJakeLong'', it’s revealed that Spud’s favorite possession is a ball of bellybutton lint that he’s been collecting since he was 3.
354* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'':
355** Buster collects interesting food which he keeps in a glass case in his room. His mother periodically throws it out before it starts to moulder ''too'' badly.
356** Discussed in "Arthur, the World's Greatest Gleeper" where the rumour of Arthur's "gleeping" (stealing) spreads, but due to students mishearing it, Francine at one point thinks that Arthur keeps beans.
357* Lawrence Lactavius Limburger, the BigBad of the original ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'', has a whole personal museum containing the last living specimen of several species he brought to extinction during his [[PlanetLooters job]] for his home planet Plutark.
358* Push from ''WesternAnimation/ChalkZone'' collects assignments that Mr. Wilter has erased from his chalkboard after they manifest as sheets in [=ChalkZone=].
359* ''WesternAnimation/CodenameKidsNextDoor'': [[CreepyChild The Delightful Children From Down The Lane]] collect toenails.
360--> '''The Delightful Children From Down The Lane:''' It's not "gross"... it's a ''hobby''.
361* ''WesternAnimation/CharlieAndLola'': In "I am Collecting a Collection", Lola wants to start a collection and she tries collecting cookies (only to give up and eat them) and other people's things (only to return them).
362* In ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom'', Skulker wanted to add the titular protagonist to his collection of unusual ghosts.
363* In ''WesternAnimation/EdEddNEddy'', Ed collects sponges in his basement bathroom's wall. He is also weirdly secretive about it.
364* ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnold:''
365** Helga made [[StalkerShrine a statue devoted to her love]] out of wads of used chewing gum that the object of affection cast aside.
366** Arnold's cousin Arnie collects lint and it is usually mentioned at least once per episode he appears in.
367* Egon's collection of spores, molds, and fungus is mentioned twice in ''WesternAnimation/TheRealGhostbusters'', both times when he decides to bring home food served to him by a CordonBleughChef.
368* ''WesternAnimation/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy:''
369** [[DeadpanSnarker Mandy]] was once credited as a napkin collector.
370** In the episode "Fear and Loathing in Endsville" a truck driver is shown collecting fingernails...but doesn't tell anyone he uses toenails as a substitute at times.
371* ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim'': Dib collects haunted Gummi bears, aside from his general assortment of paranormal stuff.
372* ''WesternAnimation/JimmyTwoShoes'' gives us Beezy's collection of chewed gum and mustard, the latter of which he bathes in.
373* ''WesternAnimation/{{Kaeloo}}'': Stumpy has collections of normal things like comic books and stamps, and some unusual things as well. In one episode, Mr. Cat even manages to trick Stumpy into buying a toilet by claiming that Stumpy has a toilet collection he could add it to. Stumpy, being a complete idiot, believes this and starts a toilet collection.
374* ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'': Kim Possible collected Cuddle Buddies, the local equivalent to Beanie Babies that look like combinations of two animals; not that weird. [=DNAmy=] collects the same toys, but then she turns around and uses her knowledge of bioengineering to make the living equivalent; very weird.
375* ''WesternAnimation/LittlestPetShop2012'': Mrs. Twombly has a large collection of rare doorknobs.
376* ''WesternAnimation/PBAndJOtter'': Mayor Jeff collects toilet seat covers. A little [[{{Squick}} too enthusiastically for comfort.]]
377* ''WesternAnimation/TheRenAndStimpyShow'': Ren collects used celebrity underwear, opera records, fossilized dinosaur droppings, and jars of rare incurable diseases; his cousin Sven collects used bandages and spit in a jar; and Stimpy collects ''boogers'', which he calls magic nose goblins.
378* ''WesternAnimation/Rugrats1991'':
379** In "[[Recap/RugratsS6E24PlantingDilTheJokesOnYou Planting Dil]]", Grandpa Lou is revealed to collect rutabagas shaped like the heads of former U.S. Presidents.
380** In "Chuckie Collects", Chas is revealed to collect inhalers.
381* ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'': According to the "Those Meddling Kids" interviews, Shaggy has the largest collection of decorator belt buckles in the world. 653. In fact, he wears a different buckle for every mystery.
382* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': In a SuperheroEpisode, Comic Book Guy was a villain called TheCollector, who kidnapped celebrities and stored them in plastic wrap. He also had other various nerd collectibles, like a working dual lightsaber a la ''Film/ThePhantomMenace.''
383* ''WesternAnimation/StarTrekLowerDecks'': "[[Recap/StarTrekLowerDecksS2E02KayshonHisEyesOpen Kayshon, His Eyes Open]]": The Collector's Guild is an entire guild of people who collect random crap and fill their ships with museums' worth of miscellaneous exotica and elaborate deathtraps for would-be robbers.
384* ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsRebels'': Ezra Bridger collects Empire trooper and pilot helmets, which is a rather dangerous hobby given he usually grabs new models off the soldiers in question.
385* ''WesternAnimation/SushiPack'': The Collector originally appeared as a connoisseur of fine art who somehow figured out how to animate the figures in paintings, but in his later appearances became a collector of anything, from spoons to hotel soap, and information. In one episode, in fact, he attempts to [[TheCollector collects the Sushi Pack]].
386* ''WesternAnimation/Thundercats2011:''
387** Prince Lion-O searches the BlackMarket of his [[FriendInTheBlackMarket friend]] Jorma in search of fairy-tale objects called [[LostTechnology "technology"]], collecting, tinkering with, and ratholing {{Black Box}}es that most people in his [[MedievalStasis medieval kingdom]] dismiss as WorthlessYellowRocks.
388** The Duelist is a MasterSwordsman who loves unique, well-crafted swords, carrying his collection in a [[WalkingArmory rack on his back]], the catch being that these are all ''trophies'' he's taken from challenging the unwary to duels. Lion-O's Sword of Omens is unique, and Lion-O is unwary...
389* ''WesternAnimation/TimeSquad'': Buck Tuddrussel loves to collect random objects from his travels through history. These objects include some minor things like a telescope and various war helmets, to strange or outrageous things like George Washington's wooden teeth, King David's slingshot, and the American Bill of Rights.
390* ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}:''
391** ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'': The Autobot Pipes collects interesting human knick-knacks.
392** ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'': [[BountyHunter Lockdown]] collects the mods from his victims.
393** ''WesternAnimation/BeastWars'': Rattrap mentions having a collection of Predacon parts, including a very impressive one of [[TheChewToy Waspinator]]. To clarify, he claims to almost have enough parts to build his ''own'' Waspinator.
394* ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBros'': Jefferson Twilight collects the fangs from the blaculas he hunts and makes them into a necklace.
395* ''WesternAnimation/{{Wishfart}}'': Puffin collects chip bags from the potato chips he's eaten and keeps them in a scrapbook.
396* ''WesternAnimation/WorkItOutWombats'': Out of all of the collections shown in "Zeke's Collection Selection," the strangest is Zadie's collection of chattering teeth.
397[[/folder]]
398
399[[folder:Other]]
400* Creator/GeorgeCarlin, in a comic routine about losing things, made references to collections of things no one would really want: used bandages, or nude pictures of Ernest Borgnine.
401* British cartoonist/musician Gerard Hoffnung in a radio interview: "I like to collect various types of sauerkraut". Interviewer: "And what do you do with them?" Hoffnung: "That shouldn't be any concern of yours."
402* The plot of the ''Alone'' house at Ride/BuschGardens' Theatre/HowlOScream.
403* A man goes to a psychiatrist:
404-->Well doc, it was my wife's idea to consult you, I like scrambled eggs and think it might be a mental illness.\
405What? Oh come now, I'd know if it was a disease, I like scrambled eggs too.\
406Really? Then you need to come and see my collection.
407[[/folder]]
408
409[[folder:Real Life]]
410* Adam Savage is a real-life example, he has even produced a realistic replica of the Maltese Falcon from the movie, as well as a dodo skeleton, and many many other things he's collected over the years, this was showcased in one of the "get-to-know-the-cast-better" episodes of ''Series/{{Mythbusters}}''.
411** And [[Series/{{Firefly}} gorram]] it, [[http://twitpic.com/1j7id these papers...]]
412** The Mythbusters themselves could be considered for this, given how many of their strange machines built in previous episodes are seen in future ones hanging from the ceiling or walls.
413* ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Museum The Black Museum]]'' crosses the line between this and an ArtifactCollectionAgency. Beginning as a collection of prisoners' property, it was expanded into an official museum in 1875 (although it is not open to the public). It collects items from criminal cases, including some infamous ones such as Dr. Crippen[[note]] Murdered his wife and fled to America; was arrested getting off the boat thanks to a Transatlantic telegram.[[/note]], Ruth Ellis[[note]] Murdered her lover, the last woman to be hanged in Britain.[[/note]], and John George Haigh[[note]] The 'Acid Bath Murderer', who despite the name did not murder his six (official) victims by putting them in baths of acid; the acid bath was to destroy their bodies after the fact, due to the mistaken belief that he could not be charged with murder if the victim's body could not be produced.[[/note]]. The items collected are definitely strange, although the reasoning is not: the Museum is used as an educational resource for Police Officers. Creator/ArthurConanDoyle, who had [[Literature/SherlockHolmes his famous detective]] say "there is nothing new under the sun" of Crime, was one of the museum's famous visitors. The rather bland official website is [[http://www.met.police.uk/history/crime_museum.htm here.]]
414* Bowerbirds and pack rats are famous for collecting inedible items. Male bowerbirds use elaborate displays of shiny and/or colorful objects to impress females, while pack rats gather both natural materials and trash into large "middens" that they urinate on to mark territory.
415* [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabinet_of_curiosities Cabinets of Curiosities]] and early museums in general.
416* Creator/CharlesAddams, creator of ''Series/TheAddamsFamily'' collected macabre objects, like torture devices and execution implements, mostly sent by fans.
417* Dave Barry has one of these collections in real life. In his work as a humorist, he has collected the following [[http://maryland.lib.overdrive.com/AA745038-F5D4-4DAD-86C9-0905B950460F/10/295/en/ContentDetails.htm?ID=%7B72CA3615-33EE-4F89-AC6C-5BC180DF55E3%7D bizarre objects]].
418* ''Games Magazine'' once did an article on people with odd collections such as nuts (the edible kind), Mack trucks, doorknobs, and maps of Transylvania.
419* Jeffrey Rowland, the creator of ''Webcomic/{{Overcompensating}}'' is an avid collector of [[http://www.comicsalliance.com/2010/06/10/admiral-ackbar-action-figures-jeffrey-rowland/ vintage Admiral Ackbar figurines]].
420* There used to be a museum in Alabama, USA called the Museum of Miscellanea. It had a collection like this, featuring a wide variety of oddities.
421* The Creator/{{TLC}} show called ''My Crazy Obsession'' features weird collections. The first episode featured a couple with the largest collection of Cabbage Patch Kid dolls, with over 5000 dolls. Each doll has its own name and personality, and they even built 6000 sq. ft of space to put them in. Other collections featured include wigs and Mickey Mouse memorabilia.
422* [[http://www.neatorama.com/2008/05/14/neatoramas-guide-to-25-of-the-strangest-collections-on-the-web/ This Neatorama post]] catalogues many Real Life eccentric collectors and their collections. Highlights (lowlights?) include the collectors of belly button lint, toilet seats, airplane barf bags, and posters of fish.
423* Pathologists and hematologists tend to keep collections of slides from histological samples or blood smears.
424* The ''Franchise/RipleysBelieveItOrNot'' family of museums and associated books and shows are such collections. The museum's oddities include diseased skeletons, weird art, torture implements, sideshow hoaxes, and plenty of other randomness.
425* Music/ElvisPresley collected law enforcement badges, charming local police into giving him one in nearly every community he visited on tour. He even convinced Richard Nixon into granting him a federal one.
426* The show ''Series/{{Oddities}}'' on The Science Channel is about a pawn shop of sorts... where one can find taxidermy, outdated medical equipment, coffins, and other creepy memorabilia.
427* ''Many'' specialist museums have some element of this; as an example, we offer the [[http://stjosephmuseum.org/museums/glore/ Glore Psychiatric Museum]] in St. Joseph, Missouri. They do have a purpose, but for those outside the field in question, they may seem a bit odd or even macabre (especially true of those where the specialization is some branch of medicine).
428* One of the creepiest allegations against Creator/JimmySavile is that Savile collected glass eyes from corpses in a mortuary and used them as jewellery.
429* According to Creator/KennethWilliams, Creator/CharlesHawtrey collected antique brass bedsteads, believing that they would one day be worth a fortune.
430* Creator/QuentinTarantino collects old board games. Creator/JohnTravolta recalled that during their first meeting, they played the board games of ''Series/WelcomeBackKotter'', ''Film/SaturdayNightFever'' and ''Film/{{Grease}}''.
431[[/folder]]

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