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3%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add your example in the proper place. Thanks!
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7[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/shrunkdrifter.jpg]]
8[-[[caption-width-right:300:[[http://gavade.deviantart.com/art/Drifter-98082502 Image]] by [[http://gavade.deviantart.com GAVade]]]]-]
9
10->''"There's a voice, that keeps on calling me.\
11Down the road, it's where I'll always be.\
12Every stop I make, I make a new friend.\
13Can't stay for long, just turn around and I'm gone again."''
14-->-- ''Series/TheLittlestHobo'' theme song
15
16Like a gust of wind, The Drifter quietly blows into [[AdventureTowns a troubled town]]. He's [[TheStoic low-key]], and usually TheQuietOne that's not looking for trouble. He has a MysteriousPast and may even have a DarkAndTroubledPast. He'll rarely raise the interest or curiosity of the [[{{Muggles}} townspeople]] or the BigBad that's been slowly draining the town of all life and money. Usually, he just wants an odd job to make ends meet before leaving again, the implication being that he's [[SternChase running from someone]] or WalkingTheEarth [[InHarmsWay for the fun of it]] or [[FightingForAHomeland for finding a good home for him/her/itself.]] Occasionally TheSheriff and his deputies, or a QuirkyMinibossSquad of the BigBad (sometimes one and the same) will visit the DeterminedHomesteader employing the Drifter or him directly, to try and [[BlackmailIsSuchAnUglyWord extort some money.]]
17
18[[LetsGetDangerous Then the gloves come off.]]
19
20By this point, he's either got a personal stake in helping the [[MeekTownsman meek townsmen]] chase off the BigBad, like saving a hostage or other [[LoveInterests love interest]], or will do it just because it's [[GoodSamaritan the right thing to do.]] An interesting twist on the above is that the Drifter is not just pretending he [[IAmNotLeftHanded is Not Left Handed]] in terms of martial skill, but is also concealing his true purpose -- to depose the BigBad and his goons -- [[HiddenInPlainSight hiding in plain sight]] as a mere {{Muggle}} to get information to bring him down.
21
22In some variants, he'll be approached by the meek townsmen and appointed TheSheriff (the previous one having been run off or killed). He usually requires some convincing, in which the BigBad helps out by [[KickTheDog kicking a few nearby dogs]] in The Drifter's presence. Once the BigBad is defeated, expect him to lay down his badge, perhaps passing it on to one of the townspeople who showed some backbone in the fight. This is a hero who often faces the LeaveYourQuestTest and agonizes over it each time.
23
24He's a strange combination of traits: A Guardian Angel come to help a town that can't help itself, rarely grim but usually has a bit of TheStoic in him, or at least [[TheQuietOne values few words]]. Sometimes a TechnicalPacifist and former [[TheGunslinger Gunslinger]] WalkingTheEarth. Though he's not a KnightInShiningArmor, he's usually several clicks above an AntiHero or IneffectualLoner, being motivated by more compassionate standards than the WellIntentionedExtremist. Once he's done, [[ButNowIMustGo he'll probably have to go]].
25
26Also known as the Stranger archetype, from Joseph Campbell's ''Literature/TheHeroWithAThousandFaces''.[[note]]Well, quotes from ''The Hero with a Thousand Faces'' in the ''Franchise/StarWars'' exhibition catalogue, anyway.[[/note]]
27
28Fairly common in AfterTheEnd settings, where he'll get a [[DisasterScavengers scavenger sidekick]]. [[CastCalculus Occasionally]] joins up or becomes the leader of a band of HitchhikerHeroes. Closely related to the KnightErrant, who wanders the land actively seeking wrongs to right. The FlyingDutchman is often pressed into this role (though not always as a protagonist) by means of a curse.
29
30If he has a LoyalAnimalCompanion, pack animals like horses, camels, and llamas are the obvious choices, especially in WanderingCulture settings, followed closely by dogs and the occasional bird.
31
32Subtrope of MysteriousStranger.
33
34[[JustForFun/IThoughtItMeant No relation]] with MultiTrackDrifting at all, even if he ''is'' a BadassDriver. [[Toys/{{Bionicle}} Nor with Thok, the white Piraka.]]
35
36----
37!!Examples:
38
39[[foldercontrol]]
40
41[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
42* ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'': Guts was this at the beginning of the series, wandering around looking for Apostles to kill. After the Golden Age prologue, we learn that he did so thinking Casca was safe, not considering that she needed someone to be with her.
43* Ran from ''Anime/CarriedByTheWindTsukikageRan''. ("Kazemakaze" translates into something like "Carried by the wind", a colorful way of describing a carefree wanderer.)
44* In ''Manga/DemonSlayerKimetsuNoYaiba'', after [[spoiler:being expelled from the Demon Slayer Corps over being pointed as the escape goat for a string of factors that ranged from Muzan escaping to his own older twin brother betraying the Corps to join Muzan himself]], Yoriichi Tsugikuni at first went back to the home he lived with his late wife Uta, but upon first meeting and making friends with the poor couple that had stationed there, Sumiyoshi and Suyako, Yoriichi decided to give that home to the Kamados ancestors, and going on to become a drifter, a Main/{{Ronin}} in all but name, to kill any number of demons he can find for the rest of his life as a tragic act of self-appointed atonement over [[spoiler:failing to kill Muzan for good]].
45
46* Goku from ''Manga/DragonBall'' became this after he was told to WalkTheEarth by Master Roshi. In the filler in-between the end of the Red Ribbon Army Saga and the next tournament, Goku is shown going to town to town, helping people along the way, and then leaving as soon as his task is completed. He was also like this during the previous saga when he was looking for his grandfather's Dragon Ball.
47* Kenshiro of ''Manga/FistOfTheNorthStar'' fits this trope to a tee, especially at the beginning of the series. He wanders the [[AfterTheEnd post-apocalyptic]] landscape from town to town looking for his kidnapped lover, has his sidekick in Bat, is theoretically not looking for trouble, and yet somehow always leaves behind body counts that range from dozens to hundreds.
48* Van from ''Anime/GunXSword'' is this, both pre-series and during.
49* Wilfried Jeremiah of ''Manga/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaVivid'', a mysterious travelling scholar that initially meets the Saint Princess Olivie when [[InSeriesNickname Ried]] happens to come across the princess's carriage while it was being attacked by bandits. Despite having been given a stable place to live in Prince Claus' castle, Ried would still randomly disappear to [[WalkingTheEarth walk the earth]] for months at a time.
50* Rokusho of ''VideoGame/{{Medabots}}'' fits as well. He wanders into storylines and back out, always willing to help the helpless or the righteous without any need for reward.
51* Tohru from ''Manga/MissKobayashisDragonMaid'' rarely stayed in one place for too long prior to moving into Kobayashi's apartment. If she didn't, humans would often come and try to slay her.
52* Dr. Tenma from ''Manga/{{Monster}}'' (Subverted as any troubles are almost always connected with the "monster" Johan).
53* The protagonist, Ginko, from ''Manga/{{Mushishi}}'' (a sort of ''mononoke''-ologist)
54* The sisters and their maid in ''Popotan''. They travel through time, befriending someone they meet in each period, before having to move to the next.
55* ''Anime/PrincessMononoke'': Ashitaka becomes entwined with and takes a stake in the outcome of the conflict between the various factions he encounters during his travels. As Eboshi says when asked if she saw him come around: "Came, and went."
56* ''Manga/KarasuTenguKabuto'': The titular character is a ninja who wanders around Feudal Japan fighting demons and evil overlords.
57* ''Manga/RurouniKenshin'':
58** The titular character purposefully became this after the war and settled down starting in the first episode. We see him comment that with the friends he makes, he may stop wandering. Also, "Rurouni" can be translated as wanderer.
59** After being [[spoiler:defeated by Kenshin]], Seta Soujirou decides to follow Kenshin's example and go wandering, giving himself time and freedom to resolve the moral conflict he's now facing.
60** In the Jinchuu arc, Sanosuke decides to leave the main cast temporarily and relieve some stress, which he does by wandering back into his hometown. He then takes this time to save a town, beat the shit out of two hundred men, and terrorize the local yakuza. His stress being relieved, he then leaves town and returns to Tokyo. And nobody even knew his name (except his dad). Amusingly, the fallout from this adventure later causes him to need to flee Japan, so given his temperament, he probably goes around being this in countries where no one can understand a word he says.
61* ''Anime/SamuraiSeven'': Kanbe shows signs of being a wanderer, although the town actively recruits him and he puts up a lot of resistance.
62* In ''Manga/{{Sekirei}}'', [[NobleTopEnforcer Mutsu]] had shades of this in his backstory. After leaving the Discipline Squad, he took to WalkingTheEarth and only came to the capital after beginning to react to his Ashikabi. Though he complained about not wanting to cause trouble, he intervened in a violent mugging and rescued Mikogami. Any efforts to avoid taking part in the Sekirei Plan were dashed since his master was DesperatelyLookingForAPurposeInLife.
63* ''Manga/{{Trigun}}'': Vash the Stampede is a wanted outlaw and an [[spoiler:immortal superhuman]]. Since his setting is Western-inspired and he has mad gun skills, ChronicHeroSyndrome, and multiple issues with settling down, he does a lot of this, especially in the anime which put off the CerebusSyndrome a lot longer, although most of the story is consumed by the plot happening. He only stops the drifting thing during his TenMinuteRetirement after he inadvertently shot the moon, when he grows a BeardOfSorrow, changes his name, and doesn't kick the asses of the creeps who come to his new hometown and start killing everybody who annoys them. Which is kind of extreme restraint, given the town ''couldn't build enough coffins to house all their dead.'' Interestingly, that situation gets resolved by Wolfwood drifting ''into'' town looking for him the same day Vash's adopted family member is kidnapped, and then both of them kick ass and walk off into the sunset. Vash's ButNowIMustGo costs him a ''lot'' more than usual this time.
64[[/folder]]
65
66[[folder:Comic Books]]
67* ''ComicBook/GhostRider'': Johnny Blaze stands out from other bearers of the mantle due to his nomadic lifestyle, a preference gained from being raised in a traveling carnival. His adventures have taken him everywhere from famous big cities to lesser known small towns, and is one of the few superheroes in the Marvel universe to actively defend civilians living in some of the more undervalued corners of civilization.
68* ''ComicBook/BatLash'': Wanted by the law, Bat keeps moving; never staying in any one place for too long. Needless to say, he finds trouble wherever he goes.
69* ''ComicBook/TheChimpWithTheBrownHat'': The titular character travels from town to town, trying to solve the mystery of who he is.
70* ComicBook/DouweDabbert always ends up helping and protecting people wherever he goes and never stays anywhere for long.
71* ''ComicBook/GrooTheWanderer''. Played with in that he's always looking for a fray.
72* Bruce Banner in ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk''. While he's had a fixed abode a few times in the comics, most of the time he's WalkingTheEarth either looking for a cure, running from people looking to destroy/control the Hulk, or both. One of the most common Hulk stories is the basic Drifter story -- Bruce arrives in town, finds trouble, ends up HulkingOut to deal with it and then is forced to move on because either the authorities are hot on his heels, and/or the [[HeroWithBadPublicity townsfolk he just saved see him as a bigger threat than the one he just saved them from]].
73* ''ComicBook/KidColt'': The main character is a wanted man who keeps drifting from town to town so the law doesn't catch up with him.
74* ''ComicBook/TheLegendOfZelda'': The comics spun off of the original ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI'' give this sort of backstory to Link, who happens to wander into Hyrule from his native Calatia just as Ganon is starting to wreak havoc.
75* ''ComicBook/Robin1993'': Tim Drake is happily based out of Gotham but he befriends an odd retiree who can use {{Extra Dimensional Shortcut}}s who has no real set home and wanders quietly from place to place helping people where he can.
76* The heroes in ''ComicBook/SinCity'' have the demeanor of the drifter (quiet loners with troubled pasts), even if they tend to stick to the city limits of Basin. Wallace might be an aversion since his story seems to indicate that he is relatively new in town. He doesn't seem to grasp how corrupt the city is and despite his deadliness, he is a relative unknown.
77* In the ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'' comic ''Nomad'', Darca Nyl ends up giving this impression. He's actually trying to track down the man who killed his son, but along the way, people keep thinking that he's a Jedi, and needing his help. [[BecomingTheMask And he gives it]], and [[GoodFeelsGood it's the only good thing he's felt in a long time]]. In the end, once he kills the man, he decides to take up this trope/become a KnightErrant.
78* ''ComicBook/{{Supergirl}}'' story "ComicBook/SupergirlsBigBrother": Biff Rigger drifts into Midvale, prepared to convince the Danvers that he is his deceased son in order to con them out of their money; but since he has always been a wanderer with no family or home, Biff ends liking the lie of being Fred and Edna's son, and even sacrifices himself to save their adoptive daughter's life.
79* ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'': In "ComicBook/SupermanTruth", when his secret identity was exposed, he'd lost most of his powers and he was a fugitive from the US government, Clark Kent was one, travelling from town to town on a CoolBike righting wrongs before moving on.
80* ''ComicBook/UsagiYojimbo'': The titular character, Miyamoto Usagi, is a {{Ronin}} whose travels form the plot of the comic. Also Inazuma (another ronin) and Chizu, who's on the run from her former clan.
81%%zce* Comicbook/{{Wolverine}} is often a Drifter when he's in a solo book.
82[[/folder]]
83
84[[folder:Fan Works]]
85* ''Fanfic/TheBoltChronicles'': Applies to Blaze, who lives as a street stray (the result of several failed adoption efforts), cajoles food from stores and restaurants, and has several girlfriends in various parts of Los Angeles. He refuses Bolt's offer to adopt him into Penny's family. Seen in both "The Seven" and "The Cameo."
86* In the ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' fanfiction ''Fanfic/JerichoMLP'', the titular main character and narrator, [[SociopathicHero Jericho]], is a form of this. Save for the fact that he is, of course, not quiet or stoic at all. He is openly [[DeadpanSnarker sarcastic]], a [[FirstPersonSmartass smartass]], occasionally a bit of a CloudCuckoolander, and his reasons are rather shady. He wanders around the world and, [[UnreliableNarrator according to him]], is just doing [[GoodSamaritan what's right]]. However, when he gave [[{{Woobie}} Cards]] a speech about doing what's right to help yourself deal with a [[TheAtoner great guilt]], his InnerMonologue questioned how much what he said was true, to which Jericho refuses to say to the reader, but a good deal of it appeared to be a [[BlatantLies lie]] in hindsight. It's doubly strange when considering that Jericho seems to be a [[TheSociopath sociopath]].
87** The only real clue of his motives come from a strange letter he gets in the first chapter from his unseen [[OurAngelsAreDifferent guardian angel]], wherein Jericho is told to travel to a certain TownWithADarkSecret and, in [[FigureItOutYourself very uncertain terms]], kill some people. That's it.
88* The eponymous Traveler from the MassiveMultiplayerCrossover fic ''FanFic/TheLoneTraveler''. It's pretty much all he does.
89* Kyril Sutherland from ''Fanfic/TheNightUnfurls'' ticks off most, if not all of the attributes of this character archetype. He [[WalkingTheEarth wanders around]] a particular place (Eostia); he [[TheQuietOne doesn't talk]] and [[TheStoic emote]] much; he's seen as a [[MysteriousStranger mysterious stranger/foreigner]] by the populace; he [[ActionHero kicks a lot of ass]]; and most importantly, he eventually lends a hand to said place that frankly needs it, while resolving that the DarkSecret within him (his DarkAndTroubledPast in Yharnam) dies with him.
90* Another ''MLP'' fic example is ''FanFic/TheRockFarmersDaughters''. Set in an [[AlternateUniverseFic alternate universe]] where neither Pinkie Pie nor Cheese Sandwich are party ponies, the story has Cheese as a variant of this, and he's more shy than stoic.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
94* The animated film ''WesternAnimation/KungFuPanda1'' starts off with a dream sequence where Po fits this trope PERFECTLY. Of course, this is just his dream self, but it does show how caught up in stories he is. Po's actual experience with being a warrior involves trouble coming to find ''him''.
95[[/folder]]
96
97[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
98* ''Film/TheCardCounter'': William Tell, real name William Tillich, moves from city to city making a living by deliberately only winning modest sums at casinos. He lives out of two suitcases and stays in motel rooms. It's later revealed that he is atoning for war crimes committed while deployed in the Iraq War.
99* One of the films Creator/ClintEastwood directed is called ''Film/HighPlainsDrifter'', which plays with the conventions of this trope a bit, mainly in that The Stranger (as he is credited) is hinted at being [[spoiler: the ghost of a man murdered by the townsfolk (indirectly) years prior and thus brings on a little vengeance by turning the town's folk against each other, manipulating and scaring them into giving him absolute power and pretty much ruining the town's economy (by blowing up the hotel, tearing down the barn and not paying for any of the many goods and services he takes advantage of, such as buying everyone in town a drink from the bar at the bartender's expense. In fact, he's barely in the town for ten minutes before he kills three men, drags a woman to the barn, and rapes her. ]]
100* John J. Macreedy in the classic film ''Film/BadDayAtBlackRock'', although he arrives in the titular town with a specific purpose in mind (which is ''not'' to clean the place up).
101%%* The aptly named [[NoNameGiven The Drifter]] from ''Film/{{Bunraku}}''.
102%%* A rare female example in Mae Doyle from ''Film/ClashByNight''.
103* The first paragraph describes fairly accurately John Franchise/{{Rambo}} in ''Film/FirstBlood'', right down to being harassed by the law. Only his subsequent actions are [[RoaringRampageOfRevenge not to help the town at all]]...
104* Pete and Joey, the main characters in the 1970 Canadian movie ''Goin' Down the Road'', who move from small town Nova Scotia to Toronto in search of work, leaving the city (and in Joey's case, his ex-girlfriend and unborn child) when things go south.
105%%* The main character from ''Film/HoboWithAShotgun''.
106%%* Franchise/IndianaJones acts somewhat this way in ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheTempleOfDoom''.
107* In the films based on the Literature/JackReacher novels by Creator/LeeChild, a retired military police officer with no fixed address drifts into a town or city, rights wrongs committed by a BigBad and then leaves town on his way to somewhere else.
108* The title character of Creator/NicholasRay's ''Film/JohnnyGuitar'' is a former gunslinger turned travelling musician. As he states at one point:
109-->'''Johnny Guitar:''' I've a great respect for a gun, and besides I'm a stranger here myself!
110* Max from the ''Film/MadMax'' films. Shane in black leather.
111* At least three of ''[[Film/TheMagnificentSeven1960 The Magnificent Seven]]'' were drifters at the start. Chris was drifting towards the South when the villagers hire him, Vin is just wandering from place to place when he meets Chris, and Britt was traveling to no place in particular when Chris tracks him down.
112* In ''Film/TheManFromEarth'', John [[PunnyName Oldman]] is moving away, which he says he does every decade. [[spoiler: He reveals that he has been doing this for 14,000 years because people start to realize that he doesn't age.]]
113* In ''Film/MurderAtYellowstoneCity'', Cicero is an ex-slave who has been roaming the WildWest since the end of the UsefulNotes/AmericanCivilWar, looking for a place where he belongs.
114* ''Film/{{Sartana}}'' is a subversion; while he does go from town to town for adventure, he is definitely not the silent, brooding type.
115* ''Film/{{Shane}}'': Shane, a laconic but skilled gunfighter with a mysterious past, is a drifter who rides into an isolated valley in the sparsely settled Wyoming Territory, some time after the Civil War. He is hired as a farmhand by local rancher Joe Starrett who lives as a homesteader with his wife Marian and their young son Joey. Shane soon gets caught up in helping the homesteaders fight the attempts of the local CattleBaron to drive them off their lands. When the land war is over, Shane mounts up and rides off again.
116* At the start of ''Film/Siren2010'', Marco has been travelling the world for two years, trying to "find himself".
117* The hero of ''Film/ThreeIron'' gets along by breaking into homes that are empty and temporarily unoccupied. He does not steal from the homes like any typical run-of-the-mill burglar. In a bizarre, parasitic manner, he lives off the food resources and physical amenities provided by the homes, yet leaves them in a better state than when he first broke in, repairing damaged appliances and washing dirtied clothing thrown around by its owners.
118%%* Tetsu Hondo in ''Film/TokyoDrifter''.
119* Comrade Sukhov from ''Film/WhiteSunOfTheDesert''. A retired soldier who just wants to go home, he walks the sands of Turkestan and gets into trouble.
120* Sanjuro, in Kurosawa's ''Film/{{Yojimbo}}'' (the prototype for ''For a Fistful of Dollars'') and ''Film/{{Sanjuro}}''.
121* Also ''Franchise/{{Zatoichi}}'', hero of a ''long''-running series of Japanese films. In each film, he wanders into a new [[AdventureTowns Adventure Town]], where he at first pretends to be a simple itinerant masseur and gambler. But when some local yakuza boss or corrupt official threatens him or the group of innocent commoners he's befriended, he reveals himself to be a master swordsman and all-out [[BadassNormal badass]]. Oh, and he's blind, too.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Literature]]
125* In the ''Literature/BenSnow'' series, Ben is a wandering cowhand looking for work who keeps stumbling into mysteries. It doesn't help that he is sometimes mistaken for Billy the Kid.
126* In Creator/DevonMonk's ''Literature/DeadIron'', Cedar. He's been around this particular town long enough that he thinks it may be safer to move on.
127%%* Waylander in Gemmell's ''Literature/{{Drenai}}'' novels.
128%%* Etienne Lantier is the catalyst for the events of Émile Zola's ''Literature/{{Germinal}}''.
129* Orson Gregory from ''Literature/TheDreamsideRoad'' travels constantly across the chaotic, destabilized world, helping AdventureTowns, fighting MonstersOfTheWeek, and is drawn into various adventures as he goes.
130* Jimmy Hedgecock from ''Literature/GunfightersRide'' helps people while he delivers the mail.
131* Literature/JackReacher, in the novels by Creator/LeeChild, about a retired military police officer with no fixed address and no possessions beyond the clothes on hos back. Each book starts with him drifting into a town or city, finding something that catches his attention (a mystery or a person facing injustice from a BigBad) and ends with him catching a Greyhound bus on his way to somewhere else.
132* Harvey from ''Literature/{{Kieli}}'', who has spent the last 70 to 80 years WanderingTheEarth and makes a living beating people in poker because he thinks getting a job is a waste of time.
133* The titular Kino of ''Literature/KinosJourney'', travelling the world on her talking motorcycle, with a strict rule to never stay in one country for longer than three days.
134* Creator/StephenKing:
135** In ''Literature/TheStand'', Randall "The Walkin' Dude" Flagg was the embodiment of this trope's EvilCounterpart for a long while, until he decides to settle down and [[AfterTheEnd rebuild America]] in his own image using newfound [[SorcerousOverlord magical powers]]. He takes on shades of this trope ''again'' when he goes traveling through [[TheVerse time and the multiverse]], and keeps "becoming", amongst other things, a marine, a member of the UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan, a headsman, a [[UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar Viet Cong]], a supporter of a radical blacks' rights group, a [[Literature/TheEyesOfTheDragon court magician]] ([[Franchise/TheDarkTower several times]]), and other roles that help his subversive schemes. Really, the only thing that makes him into Nyarlathotep, and separates him from being an evil [[Series/DoctorWho Time Lord]] is magic and a lack of a Tardis.
136** Roland, the [[Literature/TheGunslinger Gunslinger]] from ''Franchise/TheDarkTower'' series, especially in ''Literature/TheWolvesOfTheCalla''.
137* Joe Christmas in ''Literature/LightInAugust''. The surly, psychopathic Christmas has been on the run for years, ever since at least injuring, perhaps even killing his strict Methodist adopted father. Although he has light skin, Christmas suspects that he is of African American ancestry. Consumed with rage, he is a bitter outcast who wanders between black and white society, constantly provoking fights with blacks and whites alike.
138* ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'': The Rangers of the North have few if any permanent settlements and most of the men's time is spent wandering the wilds of Eriador patrolling for servants of the Enemy and safeguarding the villages and roads, even though the people they are protecting regard them with suspicion and fear.
139* ''Literature/TheManWithTheTerribleEyes'': The Man eventually becomes one after quitting his job and fleeing the city. He, Dog, and the beetles travel around the country to keep from being captured again by Iotech, and in the process encounter [[MonsterOfTheWeek a wide variety of strange beings]] tormenting people.
140* Frank Chambers of ''Literature/ThePostmanAlwaysRingsTwice'' starts out as a drifter who gets work at a small California diner/gas station. He is far from heroic, however.
141* Bill Door, aka [[DeathTakesAHoliday Death]], in the Literature/{{Discworld}} novel ''Literature/ReaperMan''.
142%%* Made famous in literature, and later in film, by ''Literature/{{Shane}}''.
143* Insomuch as ''Literature/StarWarsKenobi'' is a SpaceWestern, Ben Kenobi plays the role of the Drifter -- first appearing in a BigDamnHeroes moment, then trying to stay quietly out of the way but unable to avoid solving the problems that appear in front of him, making friends and enemies in the process. His attempts to remain apart from the inhabitants of the Pika Oasis only increase their curiosity in him. He doesn't [[ButNowIMustGo drift on]] when the story is over, though -- his mission requires him to settle in as TheHermit instead.
144* Jon Shannow, the Jerusalem Man, in the ''Literature/StonesOfPower'' series by Creator/DavidGemmell, often three or four times a novel.
145* Barnaby Gold, the protagonist of ''Literature/TheUndertaker'' series of novels. Originally planning on travelling to Europe following his father's death, he goes on the run after killing Floyd Channon in the first book. He roams the West after that, staying one step ahead of the bounty hunters who are after him.
146* Malik ibn Ibrahim, the protagonist of the ebook anthology ''Literature/WanderingDjinn'', never actually looks for trouble during his wanderings, but will do what he knows is right if necessary.
147[[/folder]]
148
149[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
150* ''Series/TheATeam'':
151-->''"In 1972, a crack commando unit was sent to prison by a military court for a crime they didn't commit. These men promptly escaped from a maximum-security stockade to the Los Angeles underground. Today, still wanted by the government, they survive as soldiers of fortune. If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire... the A-Team."''
152* ''Series/{{Branded|1965}}'': In the 1880s, Jason [=McCord=] travels the country trying to prove he's no coward. He needs to do this because the military career of this West point graduate came to an end when he was thrown out of the army after being accused of cowardice.
153* Bronco Layne from ''Series/{{Bronco}}'', a SpinOff from ''Series/{{Cheyenne}}''. A former confederate soldier wanders the old west, and meets such famous characters as UsefulNote/JesseJames, William Frederick "Buffalo Bill" Cody, and UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt.
154* This is an absolutely perfect description of Cheyenne Bodie from ''Series/{{Cheyenne}}''. After the Civil War, nomadic adventurer Cheyenne Bodie roamed the west looking for fights, women, and bad guys to beat up. His job changed from episode to episode.
155* The Doctor in ''Series/DoctorWho'' does this throughout time and space.
156* ''Series/TheFugitive''. Dr. Kimble is on the run from the law and trying to find "the one-armed man" who killed his wife--which doesn't keep him from solving other people's problems when he can. The show's success led to several other series with [[FollowTheLeader similar formats]].
157* The title character of ''Series/HeresBoomer'' is another drifter dog. The series followed the adventures of Boomer, a stray dog that traveled around helping people in trouble.
158* It might take a bit longer than other examples, but Immortals in ''[[Series/{{Highlander}} Highlander: The Series]]'' have to move around every decade or so when people begin to notice that they don't age.
159* The TV version of ''Series/TheIncredibleHulk1977'' was based on the ''Fugitive'' template of a wanted protagonist helping people during his travels, with the twist that Dr. David Banner's usual method of solving problems was [[HulkingOut turning into a green-skinned monster]] with SuperStrength.
160* Eiji Hino is only said to be a drifter before ''Series/KamenRiderOOO'' starts since he stays in the same general area for most of the series, but he goes back to that lifestyle in the end -- only now he has a group of friends to stay in touch with.
161** If Eiji counts, the passing-through Kamen Rider [[Series/KamenRiderDecade Tsukasa Kadoya]] does too, though he [[MagneticHero quickly acquires companions]] and could probably not be called low-key.
162** Before either of them, we had [[Series/KamenRiderKuuga Yuusuke Godai]], who like his partial {{Expy}} Eiji only stays in the same general area over the course of the series because of the circumstances regarding the [[MonsterOfTheWeek Gurongi]] and his own sense of responsibility as the one bearing the power of Kuuga.
163* ''Series/KungFu1972'' was another series influenced by ''The Fugitive''. Its hero, Kwai Chang Caine, is a Chinese martial artist who's on the run from the authorities in TheWildWest. He's a kind-hearted man who's always willing to help out total strangers, usually while reciting {{Koan}}s and/or reluctantly kicking ass.
164* The unnamed hero of ''Series/TheLittlestHobo'' is essentially a drifter version of ''Series/{{Lassie}}'' whose lack of visible problems that would realistically be associated with WalkingTheEarth may be [[JustifiedTrope justified]], as well, since it's a dog. It can find a river to dunk in, and scraps lying around, and [[KickTheDog only the pure evil would hurt him.]]
165* ''Series/TheLoneRanger'' and Tonto have no set base of operations, but instead roam TheWildWest, seeking out injustice whether it lurks.
166* Wade Norton, protagonist of ''Series/TheOuterLimits1963'' episode "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1963S1E26TheGuests The Guests]]", as often [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] by both himself and the other characters. He's a handsome, well-intentioned youth who's WalkingTheEarth while DesperatelyLookingForAPurposeInLife.
167* Nick does the same thing as OOO in ''Series/PowerRangersMysticForce''; blow into town as the NaiveNewcomer in the beginning, leave again at season's end with a new set of TrueCompanions to show for it.
168* Jared from ''Series/ThePretender'' is on the run from an evil organization that held him prisoner from childhood, but finds time to research and uncover injustice and save people's lives wherever he goes.
169* Sam Beckett from ''Series/QuantumLeap''. His drifting is to different [[TimeTravel time periods]] as well as different locations.
170* The main characters of the series ''Series/Route66'', who are driving across America more or less aimlessly. They'll stop in a town, encounter someone who needs help, do what they can, then be on their way.
171* The titular heroes of ''Series/{{Sliders}}'', with the ScienceFiction twist that they had to fix things in a different AlternateUniverse each episode.
172* In the backstory of ''Series/{{Smallville}}'', Jor-El briefly and explicitly fell into this role, after his father sent him to Earth as part of a right of passage. He ends up falling in love with a local farm wife, but flees Earth after she is accidentally murdered by a hitman trying to kill him.
173* In ''Series/{{Supernatural}}''; The Winchesters and most other hunters as well. The Winchesters have less of a home base than the majority of hunters and are unusually kind and personable...even if they are violent maniacs with no respect for the law who lie like they breathe.
174* ''Series/ThenCameBronson'': Michael Parks and a CoolBike. James "Jim" Bronson, a newspaperman who becomes disillusioned after the suicide of his best friend Nick (Martin Sheen), and with "working for The Man" after a heated argument with his editor. In order to renew his soul, Bronson becomes a vagabond searching for the meaning of life and seeking experiences that life has to offer.
175* Gai Kurenai, the main character and human form of ''Series/UltramanOrb'', is a homeless drifter who spends most of his life hitch-hiking across the world. WordOfGod states that the character is partially based on the archetypal drifter cowboys as portrayed in ''Creator/ClintEastwood'' westerns.
176* [=Steve McQueen=] in ''Series/WantedDeadOrAlive'': a wandering bounty hunter he doesn't just chase and capture only men on wanted posters. He also settles a family feud, frees unjustly jailed or sentenced men, helps an amnesia victim recover his memory, and finds missing husbands, sons, fathers, a fiancée, a suitor, a daughter who had been captured many years earlier by Indians, an Army deserter, a pet sheep, and even Santa Claus.
177* Laconic cowboy Dave Blasingame -- the protagonist of ''Series/TheWesterner'' -- wanders the WildWest with his faithful dog Brown in his unending quest to become rich enough to buy his own ranch.
178[[/folder]]
179
180[[folder:Music]]
181* For songs where this is a DiscussedTrope, see WanderlustSong.
182%%* Elvenking's "The Wanderer". It's rather obvious.
183%%* Music/LedZeppelin's "Ramble On" from ''Music/LedZeppelinII''.
184%%* Ralph [=McTell=]'s "The Ferryman" is an exploration of this trope.
185%%* Music/{{Metallica}}'s "Wherever I May Roam".
186* Music/ModestMouse's "The World At Large" even goes so far as to mention that the narrator relates to songs and books written about drifters.
187%%* Music/{{Saga}}'s "Giant" from ''The Beginner's Guide To Throwing Shapes''.
188* The Music/{{Whitesnake}} song "Here I Go Again" fits this trope. It even has the line "Like a drifter, I was born to walk alone".
189* "Space Cowboy" by Music/KaceyMusgraves is written from the perspective of the girlfriend who let her own lover go using the imagery of this trope. Said imagery is portrayed in a [[DeconReconSwitch bittersweet manner]]: On one hand, the relationship between them is over and they likely will never see each other again... but both of them no longer love each other and are moving on with their lives.
190[[/folder]]
191
192[[folder:Myths & Religion]]
193* UsefulNotes/{{Judaism}}: Eliyahu Hanavi (Elijah the Prophet) according to Jewish myth. He wanders the earth witnessing or provoking acts of charity and kindness and blessing those who perform them.
194[[/folder]]
195
196[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
197* In ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'', such characters are too often played to the point they have become a cliche, earning the pejorative [[http://1d4chan.org/wiki/Murderhobo murderhobo]]. Treating them as what they are (i.e., vagrant serial killers) is [[KillerGameMaster a DM's delight]]. The trend is believed to have been started in reaction to the KillerGM using complicated backstories to hurt characters far worse than merely killing them: a PC whose only function is to kill things and take their stuff until he dies is far more easily replaced than a unique character with crushable hopes, breakable dreams, and a 5,000-word backstory.
198* One of the playable archetypes in ''TabletopGame/FengShui'' is The Drifter. He even has the ability to show up exactly where and when he is needed. In game terms, he announces he wants to show up, and everyone picks a reason for how he got there. He chooses the one he likes the best.
199* This is a typical trait for Prometheans in ''TabletopGame/PrometheanTheCreated''. If they settle in any one place for too long, [[TorchesAndPitchforks Disquiet]] starts to take hold in the townspeople and [[WalkingWasteland Wastelands]] bloom up under their feet. Hence, they're constantly on the move, only staying long enough in any one town to enjoy contact or refresh supplies without polluting the land or warping people's minds.
200* ''TabletopGame/{{Wanderhome}}'' casts every player character as a {{downplayed}} example of the Stranger archetype. The party is going from place to place and encountering each location's problems. However, the game warns the players that it is not their characters' place to solve these problems, because they are only travelers in someone else's home, and the home's inhabitants are the ones who must solve those problems. The most that the players can do is to alleviate the problems and move on.
201* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'' has Wulfrik the Wanderer, a Chaos Champion who lives only to challenge and defeat other mortals in single combat. To help him, he has the gift of tongues (and the ability to enrage anyone into fighting him) and a flying teleporting ship.
202* A villainous version is Typhus the Traveller of ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': he goes around the galaxy to spread disease and contagion wherever he goes.
203[[/folder]]
204
205[[folder:Toys]]
206* Perhaps in name only, but in ''Toys/{{BIONICLE}}'', all six Piraka seem to have nicknames, and [[AnIcePerson Thok's]] is "the drifter." Lesovikk is also this in practice, following the loss of his toa team, [[TheAtoner which he blames himself for.]]
207[[/folder]]
208
209[[folder:Video Games]]
210* Medoute in ''VideoGame/BlazeUnion''. She winds up settling down with the rest of the party for a while after realizing she needs to take responsibility for influencing some of their important decisions, but towards the end of the game, she remembers that the whole point of her journeying was because she didn't want to have to deal with responsibility and starts chafing. In most of the endings of the game, she leaves and goes back to WalkingTheEarth.
211%%* Oblio of ''VideoGame/DanceCentral'' is a drifter in all its splendor.
212* Dillon and his partner Russ from ''VideoGame/DillonsRollingWestern'' drift from village to village, only staying long enough to help defend them against the Grock before moving on.
213* In ''Franchise/DragonAge'', most of the Grey Wardens spend their time WalkingTheEarth, searching for any sign of darkspawn.
214* Similarly to ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'', ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion'' allows you to wander the countryside, picking up whatever quests you want, joining any/all of the five main factions, or whatever else you can think of that has nothing to do with the main story. In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]'', the Dragonborn wanders the countryside in-between/on-the-way-to/during battles with Dragons.
215* Nearly every ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'' game has you playing some variant on this character type... unless you prefer evil karma, in which case you become a DoomMagnet.
216* Bartz from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyV'' starts off as one of these, with his pet Chocobo, Boco. [[spoiler:This was actually his deceased father's last request.]]
217* Shadow from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'' actually has a chance to just take off and leave your party after every battle.
218* The Sundown Kid, from ''VideoGame/LiveALive''. Also an example of a [[TheGunslinger Gunslinger]], both Type A and B.
219* The new Prince in ''VideoGame/PrinceOfPersia2008'' ends up in Elika's kingdom while caught in a sandstorm.
220* The player is essentially this in virtually any ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' game: a stranger who wanders into town, helps people with their problems, then leaves.
221* You're pretty much this way in the ''VideoGame/RuneFactory'' games even with your monsters and friends and neighbors. But when you want to go beat the snot out of wild monsters, who helps you out? No one.
222* ''VideoGame/ShirenTheWanderer'' fits this well. All of the Wanderers (not just Shiren) are always on the move. In fact, it's a gameplay feature: if the player stays too long on a single floor they hear a gust of wind, telling them to move on or suffer a NonstandardGameOver. Also, backtracking is rarely a good idea, because no items spawn in the level and you end up fighting more monsters. It's all there to ensure that you always keep on the move...
223* ''VideoGame/SpudsAdventure'' has the titular Spud, a wanderer who just so happened to be in town when Princess Mato was kidnapped. He decides to go off again at the end of the game.
224* Sans from ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'' is initially played off as a comic relief character, but his actual role in the story fits well in-line with this trope, especially once the gloves come off.
225* While they be called Dream Chasers, Mercenaries, Wanderers, or yes, Drifters, these make up most of your [=PCs=] in the ''VideoGame/WildArms'' series.
226%%* Adol from ''VideoGame/{{Ys}}'' series is this trope.
227[[/folder]]
228
229[[folder:Visual Novels]]
230* Even though Lily from ''VisualNovel/DaughterForDessert'' settles into a job at the diner, [[spoiler:she eventually leaves to travel the world again]].
231[[/folder]]
232
233[[folder:Web Comics]]
234* In the CattlePunk world of ''Webcomic/CwynhildsLoom'', Cwynhild drifts around UsefulNotes/{{Mars}}, performing odd jobs and helping people who seek her out.
235* In ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'', the "Fantasy Wasteland" storyline features Grace playing as the [[VideoGame/{{Fallout}} Lone]] [[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Dragon Slayer]].
236* In ''Webcomic/MagIsa'', [[http://mag-isa.thecomicseries.com/comics/pl/119505 Claudita]] seems to be just drifting around trying to figure out Eman Cruz and drift wherever he goes.
237[[/folder]]
238
239[[folder:Web Original]]
240* ''Literature/NewYorkMagician'': The Djinn, certainly.
241* The ''Literature/ReconstructionSeries'''s Isaac Benjamin fits this to a T. He ''wants'' to stop drifting, and the story has to pull [[ItsNotYouItsMyEnemies this]] to get him back in action.
242* The [[UsefulNotes/MyersBriggs ISTP]] in the post-apocalypse on [[http://oddlydevelopedtypes.com/istp_survival Oddly Developed Types]]. Notable that he keeps doing this even after settling down, but since that part of the world is taken over by bureaucrats by then, he actually has to do distasteful things like paying taxes (as a "freelance executioner", the closest job description the bureaucrats could find) and asking for invoices. Ugh.
243[[/folder]]
244
245[[folder:Western Animation]]
246* The episode "[[Recap/AvatarTheLastAirbenderZukoAlone Zuko Alone]]" of ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' pegs [[Characters/AvatarTheLastAirbenderZuko Zuko]] squarely into this role, or at least when he's not busy interrupting the above-mentioned plot with [[WholeEpisodeFlashback flashbacks]] about his DarkAndTroubledPast. In a subversion, the inevitable IAmNotLeftHanded moment reveals to the rescued townsfolk that said drifter is Fire Nation and they promptly shun him, leaving him to thanklessly drift on.
247** In the SequelSeries to ''The Last Airbender'', ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'', [[Characters/TheLegendOfKorraAvatarKorra the eponymous character]] has her own episode called "[[Recap/TheLegendOfKorraS4E2KorraAlone Korra Alone]]" where she drifts for about two years around the world, trying to psychologically recover from a near-death experience.
248* In ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'', [[spoiler: Soos]] hilariously gets this role when [[spoiler:the apocalypse hits]], entering the realm of legend despite the fact that [[spoiler:the apocalypse has only been going on for three days.]]
249--> "I've been wandering the plains like a desperado, helping strangers. I guess there's some folk songs about me now?"
250* Wirt and Greg play this role in ''WesternAnimation/OverTheGardenWall'', drifting through various settings and -- sometimes inadvertently -- solving everyone's problems.
251* ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'': The show follows "[[Characters/SamuraiJackJack Jack]]", an unnamed Japanese samurai who, after nearly defeating the ultimate evil being known as Aku, using a magic katana capable of cutting through virtually anything, is sent forward in time by him to a dystopian future ruled by the tyrannical shape-shifting demon. Jack, who is brought to the future with only his robe, sandals, and sword, quests to travel back to his own time and defeat Aku before he can take over the world. Jack's search for a way back to his own time period transcends Aku's control, but Jack's efforts are largely in vain due to the ways back to his home being just out of his reach.
252* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', Maggie briefly takes on this role when she and [[HorseOfADifferentColor Santa's Little Helper]] decide to seek out a kidnapped Homer in a neighboring town.
253* The titular protagonist of ''WesternAnimation/XavierRenegadeAngel'' is a parody of this kind of protagonist mixed with SurrealHumor. He sees himself as a soul-searching wandering hero with a dark past who helps people with words of wisdom, but he's actually a moron who causes many devastating accidents and most of his dialogue is nonsensical [[IceCreamKoan Ice Cream Koans]].
254* The eponymous Wander of ''WesternAnimation/WanderOverYonder'' is all but stated to be this. He's a nomadic alien who roams the galaxy with his noble steed Sylvia, helping anyone in need, but moves right on once he's done his job. He's implied to be homeless in the second season, claiming he lives "wherever the stars take him," and it's revealed he helps others because he knows what it's like to be helpless himself. It's also implied he doesn't have a family of his own, hinting he's the LastOfHisKind.
255* Surprisingly enough, ''Frosty the Snowman'' of all characters is depicted as this in ''WesternAnimation/FrostyReturns''. After showing the citizens of Beansboro that winter is special and should be celebrated, and convincing CorruptCorporateExecutive Mr. Twitchell to pull a HeelFaceTurn, Frosty goes to quietly make his exit, and when asked, says [[ButNowIMustGo he plans to move onto a new town and make some new friends]]. Though, true to form, he does promise to come back eventually.
256[[/folder]]
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