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2%% Image selected by discussion in the image pickin' forum. Stop by there and discuss it if you think it needs to be changed.
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4[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/GloriousMotherOfBrooms.jpg]]
5[[caption-width-right:350:The Red Army's broom will sweep the homeland clean of scum!]]
6
7->''Our fields are too wide for the eyes\
8Our cities are too many to remember\
9Our proud word--comrade--\
10To us is higher than all fine words.''
11-->-- "Wide is My Motherland," ''[[Film/Circus1936 Circus (1936)]]''
12
13The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), America's sworn enemy during the UsefulNotes/ColdWar, has gone through several periods of stereotyping. The most famous is the Communist Russia of the UsefulNotes/ColdWar. Everyone's [[UsefulNotes/RedsWithRockets red]], calls each other "comrade", and is trying to take away the freedom of the world in the name of [[DirtyCommunists Communism]]. Of course, with the [[WhyWeAreBummedCommunismFell fall of Communism]] in the country, [[DeadHorseTrope this one is pretty dead]]. Then again, Vladimir Putin made his name in the KGB.
14
15Then there are tall, furry hats, ThatRussianSquatDance, borscht, vodka (''[[VodkaDrunkenski lots]]'' [[VodkaDrunkenski of vodka]]), and everyone constantly being [[CrapsackWorld miserable]] and [[DeathWorld cold]], which is why they drink the vodka. These tropes seem permanently associated with the area. In recent years, [[SensualSlavs the Russian bride]] has started to turn up a lot. Chernobyl has also become very important in the outside world's views of the country, even though it is in Ukraine. [[http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/49/RedSquare_SaintBasile_%28pixinn.net%29.jpg Saint Basil's Cathedral]] will probably show up, too. No, it's [[IAmNotShazam not]] the [[SymbologyResearchFailure Kremlin]]. ''[[http://kremlin-architectural-ensemble.kreml.ru/si/kremlinemsemblethematicwebsitepic2.jpg This]]'' is the Kremlin. [[note]]Moscow Kremlin, to be precise. There are actually [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kremlin_(fortification) many others.]] That church next door is the Cathedral of the Annunciation.[[/note]] (Image searches on "Kremlin" invariably turn up far more of the former building than the latter.)
16
17For [[UsefulNotes/ColdWar obvious reasons]], the ''Sovetskiy Soyuz'' (and later ''Rossiyskaya Federatsiya'') have been subject to a lot of CaliforniaDoubling over the years, although there are a number of late eighties films (such as ''The Russia House'') actually filmed in Moscow, because of ''glasnost''.
18
19This article will list some of the more common ways for foreigners to get all things Russian wrong. In Russia proper, they are called ''razvesistaya klukva'' (blooming cranberry) or just ''klukva'' (cranberry) and are a source of much humor.
20
21* Fluffy hats. Yes, they are somewhat practical during the long cold winter, but they are not part of the national dress. The ''ushanka'' is a functional winterized headgear, as simple as that. Also not really big and fluffy, and it's really a ''Finnish'' national wear which has become common thing in Russia only in 20th century. In modern Russia they even aren't very common, worn by mostly older people; young folks prefer more international headgear like knitted caps. But an ushanka made of fake bluish fur is still standard issue for soldiers and policemen during winter.
22** Ushankas are also commonly confused with papakhi, a larger fluffy hat without the ear-flaps. The papakhi is not really Russian, it's from the Caucasus, and is only associated with Russia via UsefulNotes/{{Cossacks}}, who adopted it from Caucasian peoples.
23* Vodka. Sadly true, but again, mostly for the older generation. [[VodkaDrunkenski There's a lot of raging alcoholics among younger people, too]], but they prefer beer and cheap "cocktails" sold in cans.
24* Borscht. It is actually a matter of dispute between Russians and Ukrainians about whose national food it is (borscht as we know it today is of Ukrainian origin). But still mostly true, it's common and liked in Russia.
25* Other cuisine. It's usually caviar and pierogi. However, what the average American means by pierogi (dumplings) is actually Polish; a Russian pierog (or an Ukrainian pyrih) is a pie, not a dumpling. The dumplings are called pelmeni (Russian), vareniki (Ukrainian) or kolduny (Belarusian).
26** The Russian pelmeni is originally a Finno-Ugric (specifically, Permian) dish from the Ural mountains. The word itself ("пельнянь") is derived from the Komi or Udmurt language and means "bread ear". Pelmeni appeared in the Russian cuisine in XIV — early XV. ([[https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%9F%D0%B5%D0%BB%D1%8C%D0%BC%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%B8 Source]])
27* Bears. It's true that the bear is a common and well known animal in Russia, inasmuch as Russia having 60% of all Brown Bears in the world (and most of the remaining bears living in Northern Canada and Alaska). But they don't walk the streets of Russian cities,[[note]]too often, at least, as there are regular occasions of a bear wandering into smaller Siberian podunk towns in search for food, while from time to time villages and smaller towns may be even besieged by a whole pack of bears or wolves (examples include Vankarem, Yaylyu and Verkhoyansk)[[/note]] and you can see a trained bear only in a circus. Bears and any big animals (including wolves) are very rarely seen in a wild by modern Russian urbanite. [[RussianBear Using the bear as a symbol for Russia itself]] is mainly a foreign thing, although it is used in coats of arms for a number of cities, mostly in Siberia again, as well as the logo for UsefulNotes/VladimirPutin's ruling United Russia party. Historically, Russians have used the double-headed eagle as their national symbol.
28* Atheism. UsefulNotes/ColdWar-era Russians are often stereotyped as "godless Communists." The reality is more complex. The Soviet Union did persecute clergymen and dismantle religious institutions. However, the laity was mostly tolerated as the Communists realized that persecuting a group that made up a majority of Russia's population was a bad idea and many lay Christians actually supported the persecution of priests, who were viewed as a [[CorruptChurch greedy and corrupt elite]]. Also, UsefulNotes/JosefStalin himself would revive the Russian Orthodox Church to drum up support for Russia's entry into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, and never really bothered suppressing the Georgian Orthodox Church at all (he was afraid of getting an earful from [[MyBelovedSmother his mother]]). While some of the anti-religious were revived by Krushchev, they were again considerably relaxed from the Brezhnev era onward.
29** Nowadays, the tables have flipped, and Russia has become increasingly religious, with the Russian Orthodox Church now an important player in state politics. However, Orthodox Christianity is seen more as a cultural identity by many Russians than an actual religion: only a half of Russians who call themselves Orthodox actually attend church services, and 80% of them do not even participate in the Eucharist. By contrast, Russians of other faiths like Catholicism and Islam are visibly more observant.
30* Russian language. In media, it is mostly portrayed with a [[FakeRussian ridiculous accent]], [[TheBackwardsR flipped Latin letters]] and a small number of commonly known words like "vodka", "da", "nyet", "pravda", "babushka", "[[ForeignCussWord suka]]", "tovarisch", "rodina", "borsch", "soyuz", "mir", "avtomat", "pulemyot", "slava", "kommunizm", "revolutsyia", "kapitalist", "mudak", "bratva", "gulag", "intelligentsiya", "kosmonaut", "balalaika", "matryoshka", "kazakh", "pogrom", "ruble", "Kopeck", "samovar", "kremlin". "partiya", "cheka", "bolshevik", "Spetsnaz", "commissar", "kapitan" "glasnost", "perestroika", "KGB", "Politburo", "tsar", "Afganistan", "Rossiya", "Chechnya", "dacha", "Amerika", "sharashka", "laika", "Kalashnikov".[[note]]водка, да, нет, правда, бабушка, сука, товарищ, родина, борщ, союз, мир, автомат, пулемёт, слава, коммунизм, револуция, капиталист, мудак, братва, гулаг, интеллигенция, космонавт, балалайка, матрёшка, казах, погром, рубль, копейка, самовар, Кремль, партия, чека, большевик, Спецназ, коммиссар, капитан, гласностъ, перестройка, КГБ, Политбюро, царь, Афганистан, Россия, Чечня, дача, Америка, шарашка, лайка, Калашников, армия. English: vodka, yes, no, truth, grandmother, bitch, comrade, motherland, borsch, union, peace, assault rifle, machine gun, glory, Communism, revolution, capitalist, bastard, brotherhood (gang), gulag, intellectuals, astronaut, balalaika, nesting doll, Kazakh, pogrom, rouble, kopeck, samovar, kremlin, party, cheka, bolshevik, Spetsnaz (SWAT), commissar, captain, glasnost, perestroika, KGB, politburo, tsar, Afghanistan, Russia, Chechnya, summer house, America, sharashka, laika (hunting dog), Kalashnikov[[/note]] See UsefulNotes/RussianLanguage for an in-depth look at it and GratuitousRussian for more common ways to do it wrong.
31* Russian names. In media, they are formed by [[ElSpanishO slapping suffixes like "ov", "ski", "vich"]] on a bunch of common names like "Boris" or "Vladimir", not caring what those suffixes mean and in what order do various Russian names follow. The end result is something like "Boris Ivanski Vladimirvich", which doesn't sound right at all to a Russian.[[note]]"-vich" means literally "son of" and it's always the suffix for middle name / patronymic of a true Russian.[[/note]] See UsefulNotes/RussianNamingConvention on how to do it right.
32** In fact, -ovich can be used as a surname ending, but the "o" must be stressed. It also indicates either Jewish, Serbian or Ukrainian descent, and is not very widespread in Russia itself.
33** Surnames that end with "-ko" also usually indicate Ukrainian origin.
34** The "off" or "koff" ending is Bulgarian, not Russian; however, names of Russian historical figures may be transcribed with an "off" ending, as this was the way the very Russian "-ov" was usually transcribed in French and from time to time in English until around the end of the 19th century. (This is why older translations of Creator/FyodorDostoevsky's [[Literature/TheBrothersKaramazov final novel]] spell it ''The Brothers Karamazoff'', and why the US-based vodka maker is spelled Smirnoff.)
35* St. Basil's Cathedral. [[note]]neither a cathedral nor named after a saint Basil -- it's really [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Basil%27s_Cathedral a group of churches called Trinity Church, with one named after Bl. Vasily]], but Vasily's building is really a basilica and not a cathedral, and the complex's real modern name is [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathedral_of_the_Annunciation,_Moscow Church of the Annunciation of the Most Holy Theotokos]], which is on the Moat.[[/note]] It's that church with those colorful onion domes, [[EiffelTowerEffect appearing whenever we see Moscow]]. Often confused with the Kremlin.
36* Everything is cold and miserable. Mostly true, except in summer when everyone is ''hot'' and miserable -- it's called "continental climate". OTOH, cities near the Sea of Japan do not have a worse climate than New York (and the ones on the Black Sea are downright ''Californian''), and some central cities look quite better in the last decade (less cold and miserable and more brain-melting hot and miserable).
37* An ornery attitude, stubborn resistance to change from outside. In RealLife... kinda zig-zagged. It's true that Russia resisted invasions and attempts to bring foreign order into it for most of its history, and Russians are most of the time very suspicious of foreign culture. But the biggest aversion for the entire history is the fall of the USSR, caused, among other things, by Russians rushing to adopt democracy and Western culture. It backfired wildly on them, possibly reinforcing the trope back.
38** The ''creation'' of the USSR in the first place may be an even bigger aversion, if you think about it. Centuries of czarist rule and tradition were replaced with ideas which came from a German who lived in England and was a pretty committed Russophobe at that.
39** Although what did backfire was trying to make production facilities self-sustaining... [[ArtisticLicenseEconomics While prohibiting the free market]]. Go figure.
40
41See DirtyCommunists, ChummyCommies and FakeRussian. For Useful Notes about Russia and its predecessors in some depth, [[UsefulNotes/{{Russia}} see here]].
42
43Also see UsefulNotes/HistoryOfTheUSSR for the UsefulNotes on this.
44
45----
46!!Examples:
47
48[[foldercontrol]]
49
50[[folder: Аниме и манга (Anime & Manga)]]
51
52* With little debate, the second most important team in ''Anime/BakutenShootBeyblade'' is the Russian team, Borg. The team Borg is part of the organization Borg, which is led by Vladimir Volkov. Its elite bladers are Yuriy Ivanov, Boris Kuznetsov, Sergei Rybakov, and Ivan Pahov. At the time of introduction, they're easily the team that's suffered the most and a force to be reckoned with. However, the trope is not played straight, as it's made clear that this isn't normal by Russian standards but rather the doings of Volkov specifically (and the non-Russian guy he works for). They're also introduced pretty early on so more teams followed with their own backstory of woe. In the continuation of the manga, ''Rising'', Russia is even presented positively with the introduction of Irina Golubeva and her love for her country and the orphans she's taking care of, which includes Borg. Additionally, Yuriy's backstory is that his father was a soldier of the USSR, but lost his job when it fell and became a miserable drunk that chased off both his wife and his son before drinking himself to death. This is how Yuriy ended up under Volkov's control. Yuriy's elemental affiliation is the the cold, btw.
53* ''Anime/DigimonAdventure02'' had an episode set in Russia. To communicate with the Russian Chosen Children, Miyako simply used "Borscht", "Pierogi", and "Caviar" to indicate what directions to fly their monsters. Naturally, the monster fight took place outside of the Kremlin, and it was snowing the entire time; though this took place right before Christmas.
54* Russia, an anthropomorphism of the country, from ''Webcomic/HetaliaAxisPowers'' is a PsychopathicManchild who loves vodka and often wishes to leave his cold, unforgiving homeland. He also claims that one day, "everyone will be one with Russia." (No fuzzy hats or Cossack dances, though, oddly.)
55** Actually, the aforementioned fuzzy hat ''and'' Cossack dance appeared in Russia's character song, My Heart Has a Light.
56** He's shown wearing a papaha, but since he was younger is at least period appropriated.
57* Hotel Moscow from ''Manga/BlackLagoon'' is generally not very ''Klukva'', but Balalaika's real name is still a case of this trope. "Sofiya Irininskaya Pavlovena" is a case of confusing the naming order, getting a suffix wrong, and even if the "Irininskaya" was where it belongs (a last name) it would be still grammatically correct but vaguely not right.
58[[/folder]]
59
60[[folder: Комиксы (Comic Books)]]
61
62* ''ComicBook/SupermanRedSon'' has Kal-El's escape pod landing in the Ukraine instead of Kansas, and includes the miserable cold, vodka, Stalin, Sputnik probes and comic covers with the angular style of propaganda posters. But maybe nothing invokes this quite so much as Moscow's Batmankoff and his furry ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ushanka ushanka]]'' Bat-hat with earflaps.
63* Often invoked in the dialog between the Soviets in ''ComicBook/NthManTheUltimateNinja''.
64* Common in early 1960s Creator/MarvelComics stories, as a source of [[DirtyCommies Soviet villains.]]
65[[/folder]]
66
67[[folder: Фильм (Film)]]
68* The soundtrack of the 1989 documentary ''Film/DeNurembergANuremberg'' includes some of the Red Army Choirs' greatest patriotic hits, which aimed at galvanizing the spirit of resistance of the Soviet people against German invaders. It's particularly bombastic in the parts where the Red Army is on the offensive and wins.
69[[/folder]]
70
71[[folder: Литература (Literature)]]
72* ''Literature/TheHelmsmanSaga'' has Sodeskaya, an empire of a race of bipedal bears wearing papakhas, mostly living on frozen planets and inhabiting one sixth of the galaxy.
73* The Durmstrang students and their headmaster Karkaroff in ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire'', especially the film, blend aspects of this with German archetypes.
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder: Телевидение (Live-Action TV)]]
77* Want to see every Russian/Soviet stereotype condescended into one rap? See [[http://www.hulu.com/watch/273976 this]] ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' skit from 1985.
78* ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'': Pavel Chekov loved to expound on the glories of his home country and [[RunningGag regularly]] claimed that things were invented in Russia or discovered by Russians.
79* There is a lot of this in the first 2:17 of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQUkfiF6lIw this video]], NBC's intro to the Sochi 2014 UsefulNotes/OlympicGames. Come to think of it, there was plenty of it in the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hbpraIoxpI Opening Ceremonies]], too.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder: Музыка (Music)]]
83* A few of the songs by Music/{{Sabaton}} are about Russia's military conquests over the Nazis, including "Panzerkampf" and "Attero Dominatus."
84* [[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=awIV87DBxrw The Soviet March]] from ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerRedAlert3''.
85[[/folder]]
86
87[[folder: Пинбол (Pinballs)]]
88* In Williams' ''Pinball/{{Taxi}}'' pinball game, "Gorby" (UsefulNotes/MikhailGorbachev) talks like this.
89-->'''Gorby:''' Hey, comrade taxi!
90* [[GeneralRipper General Yagov]] from ''[[Pinball/F14Tomcat F-14 Tomcat]]''. Among other things, draining the ball prompts a Russian jingle to play, ending with him shouting "HEY!"
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder: Подкасты (Podcasts)]]
94* ''Podcast/FatFrenchAndFabulous'':
95** The hosts give the harsh, deprived Ruskie treatment to Ayn Rand of all people.
96--->"Hello Grandchildren, fight for sustenance."
97** The soviet doctor who removed his own appendix in the Antarctic earns a similar lampooning.
98--->"I practice this surgery on live bear. No anesthesia. They fight."
99[[/folder]]
100
101[[folder: Настольные игры (Tabletop Games)]]
102* The nation of Khador in ''TabletopGame/IronKingdoms'' is essentially a SteamPunk FantasyCounterpartCulture of Soviet Russia. They dress in red, wear fur hats, and their Warjacks share the same design philosophy as Soviet tanks (heavily armed and armored, not very sophisticated but extremely reliable).
103* The same goes for ''TabletopGame/{{AT 43}}'' where the Red Blok is supposed to be the space-age evolution of Soviet Russia, although it is not explicitly stated in the rulebook.
104* ''TabletopGame/VORTheMaelstrom'' shows a resurgent 21st century brown-red (ultranationalistic communist) Russia that invades half the world with its crude war machines, innumerable cannon fodder, NBC weapons, and ugly mutants. It is even said that the Russian "Ursa" warwalker can take out two American "Ares" singlehandedly, but will probably overheat and explode just after. Luckily, AmericaSavesTheDay.
105* [[TabletopGame/Warhammer40000 The Imperium of Man]] includes Soviet & Imperial Russian themes, like the use of [[ThePoliticalOfficer commisars]] & double-headed eagles, among others.
106** The Valhallan Ice Warriors of the Imperial Guards are basically an exaggerated expy of WWII era [[RedsWithRockets Red Army]] with their WeHaveReserves mentality exaggerated, while the Vostroyan Firstborn are inspired by Ukrainian/[[UsefulNotes/RussiansWithRifles Imperial Russian]] UsefulNotes/{{Cossacks}} with a taste for BlingOfWar.
107** The Space Marines in general bears some resemblance to the modern Spetsnaz, by their [[TrainingFromHell ridiculously brutal training]], [[RageHelm full-face helmets]] & [[http://warhammer40k.wikia.com/wiki/Bolter stubby-looking]] [[http://http://wikipedia.org/wiki/SR-3_Vikhr guns,]] official policy of secrecy, and the fact that some of them served under the universe's resident StateSec not unlike their real-life counterpart.
108** The Emperor himself was also partly based upon Vladimir Lenin, both were militant enforcers of atheism & materialism during their lives and later preserved & venerated in some sort of shrine, although the latter demands a fraction of rubles instead of psykers for his preservation. Also, the Emperor looks like Peter the Great, especially in [[https://1d4chan.org/wiki/File:646545.jpg one of his depiction outside his power armor.]]
109** And in a strange case of LifeImitatesArt, 2010's Russia unwittingly imitate the Cadians instead, from body armor design to [[MakeTheBearAngryAgain culture of militarism]] starting since childhood.
110* ''{{TabletopGame/Cyberpunk}}'': The Soviet Union is still there, even into the 2070s. This world's version of "perestroika" was a far more controlled set of economic reforms than in OTL and the end result has resulted in a country largely reminiscent of modern-day China; authoritarian and repressive in many ways, but stable and with rising levels of prosperity.
111[[/folder]]
112
113[[folder: Видеоигры (Video Games)]]
114* Surprisingly, a complete aversion comes in one of ''VideoGame/RagnarokOnline'''s island maps (which debuted from none other than the Russian [=rRO=] servers), being the peaceful and early czarist Moscovia, complete with a dungeon and monsters based on Russian folklore.
115* ''VideoGame/{{Tetris}}''.
116* Played straight to ridiculous levels the Moscow stage of ''VideoGame/TonyHawksUnderground'', and with the [[CossackDance Russian Boneless]].
117* In Zangief's ending in ''VideoGame/StreetFighterII'', Soviet premier Mikhail Gorbachev arrives to congratulate Zangief, and suggests they celebrate "in our traditional way." They immediately start doing ThatRussianSquatDance.
118%%** It's a HarsherInHindsight when you play it nowadays, considering it was made only months before the collapse of the Soviet Union, and Gorbachev talking about how the "Soviet spirit will overcome all obstacles". It's almost sad, really. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FVwUUNdc1HU Look how earnest he is when he talks about it]]! It makes you understand why Soviet nostalgia is more common than you think.
119%%** This might be a subtle TakeThat, given the state of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian-Japanese_relations Russian and Japanese diplomatic relations]].
120%%*** No one in both nations really pay attention to that crap politicos argue about, so it's just good, old CreatorProvincialism.
121* The second set of levels in the console versions of ''VideoGame/AlienHominid'' took place in Russia. It combined the Soviet set of stereotypes with the more recent ones, and some far stranger material, like giant robot frogs that shoot tree-frog-shaped homing missiles.
122** This strange robot comes from the [[RedsWithRockets Russian rocket series]] known to NATO as [[ReportingNames FROG]] (it's an [[FunWithAcronyms acronym]] meaning Free Rocket Over Ground).
123* The political simulation video game ''VideoGame/RepublicTheRevolution'' takes place in "Novistrana" (a loose Slavonic rendering of "New Country"), a post-Soviet East European republic. While explicitly not associated with Russia (first of all, Novistrana is too small to be it), the game goes a long way to reconstruct most of the archetypal Russian flair.
124* The first three ''[[VideoGame/NintendoWars Advance Wars]]'' games have the Blue Moon country which is obviously patterned after this trope. Its leader is a bearded man named Olaf whose special power is to make it snow on the battlefield.
125** Oddly enough his second is Grit, a defector. The other two [=COs=] are siblings who are basically millionares, so it is sort of... odd.
126*** Well, the "millionaires" do provide an analogue for the WeHaveReserves military style shared by Blue Moon and Russia.
127** Gamecube/Wii spin-offs ''VideoGame/BattalionWars'' 1 and 2 have the Tundran Territories. A "nation of conquest" as described by their late Tsar Gorgi, they use red units, have a rather unhealthy obsession with turnips (especially in the sequel) and faux-Russian accents. Note also that Tsar Gorgi's successor, Marshal Nova, doesn't adopt the rank of Tsar.
128* Most everything in the fan community involving ''VideoGame/MegaMan4'' and Dr. Cossack falls under this trope.
129** ''Webcomic/BobAndGeorge'' takes it to RefugeInAudacity levels. Ran dies when you touch him. They used VERY cheap Soviet style parts...
130*** Don't forget the fact that he has an almost unlimited number of spare bodies available/available for production. And that Cossack Buster....
131** Cossack in ''VideoGame/MegaManBattleNetwork 3'' is pretty tame; but in four, the contestant from "Sharo" (aka Russia) is a grumpy, bitter old man with a silly accent who wears a humongous fur coat and complains about it being too hot in Netopia, then hacks his country's weather satellites to induce a blizzard to cool things down (rather than, say, taking off his coat). His navi is, of course, "Cold Man.exe".
132* [[ImpliedTrope Implied]] with Ivan Vodkov in ''VideoGame/ScrapMetalHeroes''. We're never told if he's Russian, but his robots use stereotypical Communist names like "People's Fury" and "Iron Hammer". And [[VodkaDrunkenski his name]]? Yeah.
133* The Heavy in ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'' started as a heavily armed, intimidating giant with [[ICallItVera a beloved gun named Sasha]] and a Slavic accent (and slightly broken English), and the Heavy update includes a lot of Achievement names that quite blatantly parody Soviet Russia in general. Finnish translation ups the ante with ''Winter War'' references. However, in other appearances he shows HiddenDepths (his TrademarkFavoriteDrink isn't vodka, nor does he get why everyone thinks he likes Tetris (Is just ''stacking''!)
134** "Redistribution of Health," "Stalin the Kart," and "Communist Mani-Fisto," just to name a few.
135*** And of course, the '''K'''illing '''G'''loves of '''B'''oxing and the '''G'''loves of '''R'''unning '''U'''rgently.
136* [[Tet42 https://archive.org/details/Tet42SW1989EduardKappelA.BanzhafStrategyPuzzle]] (1989), a ''VideoGame/{{Tetris}}'' clone, showcased the game's roots by displaying Kremlin-style architecture and playing Russian theme music at the start of each game (it's called the Russian folk song played is called "Korobeiniki", if you're curious, but everyone in the West [and possibly the East] knows it as "The Tetris Song"), and using TheBackwardsR. Followed (1991) by USSR-themed [[http://www.abandonia.com/en/games/1057/Super+Tetris.html Super Tetris.]] Later (1992) [[http://www.abandonia.com/en/games/914/Tetris+Classic.html Tetris Classic]] from the author of original ''Tetris'' has pictures related to Russian tale or historic character or St. Basil's Cathedral for background, and music to match.
137** The Spectrum Holobyte version of ''Tetris'' from the 1980s had Russian stage backgrounds and music; e.g. the first stage used the Kremlin Wall as the background and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyushko_Pole "Polyushko Pole"]] as music.
138* ''[[VideoGame/BackyardSports Backyard Soccer]]'' has a World Cup. A Russian team, by the name of [[PunnyName Cagey Bees]], participates.
139* The countries of Yuktobania, Erusea, and Estovakia from the ''VideoGame/AceCombat'' series are all loosely based on Russia.
140** Estovakia is based on the former Yugoslavian states rather than Russia/the USSR.[[note]]And the name is a mashup of Estonia and Slovakia.[[/note]]
141* Comrades, [[TropeCodifier how could we forget the]] ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerRedAlertSeries''? In ''[[VideoGame/CommandAndConquerRedAlert Red Alert 1]]'', the Soviets are basically realistic, as part of the game's "WhatIf UsefulNotes/WorldWarII had been fought between the Allies and Stalin?" premise. In ''[[VideoGame/CommandAndConquerRedAlert2 Red Alert 2]]'', they start picking up some... oddities, like PoweredArmor with {{Lightning Gun}}s, giant squid as naval units, military structures based upon Orthodox churches, and a mind-controlling Rasputin {{Expy}}, with a [[UsefulNotes/TsaristRussia Tsar from the Romanov family]] to rule them all. In ''[[VideoGame/CommandAndConquerRedAlert3 Red Alert 3]]'', they go completely off the rails with units like [[BearsAreBadNews War Bears]], [[TankGoodness tanks equipped with tractor beams that grind up enemy vehicles]], and [[AwesomePersonnelCarrier APCs that shoot infantry out of a giant cannon]], all led by Creator/TimCurry.
142* ''VideoGame/RiseOfTheReds'' is a ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerGenerals'' mod centered upon the inclusion of a Russian faction, later merged with the "Alpha Generals" mod and another mod (origially called "Rise of Europe") about an Not-European-Union faction (the European Continental Army), with a backstory set after the events of the ''Zero Hour'' ExpansionPack. The Russian faction in question is clearly based upon the ''Red Alert'' series yet ''somewhat'' grounded in reality, with less crazy tech, more realistically questionable morality thanks to a gas-masked MadScientist trusted to lead the invasion force, and similar cheesy stereotypes for everyone involved, complete with Polyushko Pole playing in the main menu. The Russians are noticeably more transparent social-democrats rather than communist, ultranationalist, or whatever ideology suits Hollywood's depiction of Russians, which the developers decry as cliche, and they're also not the bad guys (except the aforementioned MadScientist and his followers, who are eventually despised by just about everyone).
143* In ''VideoGame/{{XCOM}}'', Russia is the only country on Earth that ''never'' succumbs to alien infiltration, and will keep fighting the invaders until the end of the game.
144* The racing team ''Qirex'' in ''VideoGame/{{Wipeout}}''. Born after Holst [=McQueen=], former worker of AG-Systems, had an heated debate with his best friend Delia Flaubert and deserted his team, it is by far '''the most successful AG racing team in history''' and one of the fan favorite teams right from the start of the series.
145* In ''VideoGame/WargameEuropeanEscalation'' the USSR is part of the UsefulNotes/WarsawPact, its armed with the heaviest tanks and helicopters over the rest of the Warsaw factions who have downgraded versions of the USSR's arsenal.
146* ''Videogame/MotherRussiaBleeds'', a French old-school beat-up game to the likes of ''Franchise/StreetFighter'', taking place in 1980s USSR.
147* ''VideoGame/HalfLife2'' has sections suggesting vaguely Soviet past of the City 17. The color scheme of non-combine locomotives fit, there are numerous appearances of Cyrillic script and so on. It is not pressed very much, but it's present and rather clear.
148* ''VideoGame/RussianOverkill''. Three Slavs with an entire military's worth of firepower, thousands of hitpoints, and nothing to lose VS TheLegionsOfHell. Time to rock and roll!
149[[/folder]]
150
151[[folder: Веб-анимация (Web Animation)]]
152* The six-part finale of ''WebVideo/ArbyNTheChief'' features Agent Smirnoff, a fiercely loyal Russian KGB agent determined to stop a drug smuggler that ends up as the roommate of the eponymous characters' owner.
153-->'''Agent Smirnoff''': He fucked with Mother Russia. If you fuck with Mother Russia, you have to fuck with me. AND NOBODY FUCKS WITH ME!
154* Weebl's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NyiEaSzpdMk Russian Dancing Men.]]
155[[/folder]]
156
157[[folder: Оригинальный сетевой контент (Web Original) ]]
158* Downplayed with the ''Website/SCPFoundation'': while some [=SCPs=] were the product of the Soviet side of the arms race, the main instance of the trope is Captain Dimitri Arkadeyevich Strelnikov, via [[http://www.scp-wiki.net/reddawn his incomplete mastery of English, preference for Russian-made guns and hatred for Chechens.]]
159* [[https://m1-garand-rifle.com/ivan-chesnokov.php Ivan Choesnokov,]] an... ''enthusiastic'' poster of Russian guns and history.
160[[/folder]]
161
162[[folder: Западные мультфильмы (Western Animation)]]
163* ''WesternAnimation/TaleSpin'' had Thembria, a snowy and desolate country populated by blue boars based on this.
164** For a while, The ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse had Brutopia, the anti-capitalist international foil to Scrooge [=McDuck=].
165* The first part of the 20th Century Fox animated film ''WesternAnimation/{{Anastasia}}'' fits this to a T, especially during the song "Rumour in St. Petersburg".
166* ''WesternAnimation/JonnyQuestTheRealAdventures'' had recurring villain General Vostok. In "General Winter" he even lectures his cronies on the strategic advantages of Mother Russia's unforgiving winter.
167* In ''WesternAnimation/RockyAndBullwinkle,'' Boris and Natasha were proxies for stereotypical Cold War-era Russian spies, though their accents were actually from "Pottsylvania," not Russia.
168* In the ''WesternAnimation/MyLifeAsATeenageRobot'' episode "Pest Control", the lab mice are surprisingly blatant examples of this trope. Not only are all of them referred to as comrade, but the {{Episode Title Card}} has the hammer and sickle on it.
169--> Vladimir: Last one in is rotten borscht!
170[[/folder]]

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