[[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/{{Superman}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/supermanluthor_6916.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:350:He's the Man of Steel, not the man ''in'' steel.]]

There are [[GoodWeaponEvilWeapon many]], [[GoodColorsEvilColors many]], [[GoodEyesEvilEyes many]], [[SensibleHeroesSkimpyVillains many]] [[RedOniBlueOni ways]] to [[BlackAndWhiteMorality make the difference between heroes and villains obvious]]. One of the many tricks is to put the villain in armor, but not the hero facing him.

One of the main reasons is making said villain a TinTyrant, but there may be other possibilities behind it:

* The villain's power relies on said armor, forcing the heroes to find a way around it to hurt him.
* It's a subtle way to imply that the hero is better, because he doesn't need any further protection.
* It encourages the image of the hero as an underdog: after all, the villain has armor and they don't, so the villain has an edge for the hero to surmount.
* Creating a full suit of armor requires time, money and a skilled craftsman, implying that the villain has power or wealth. This reinforces the hero's underdog status.
* Armor can be associated with war, tyranny and oppression. Heroes without armor can symbolize [[TechnicalPacifist peace]] and freedom.
* Armor can help a villain look inhuman, which highlights his villainy. Heroes, on the other hand, need to look approachable and trustworthy.
* Armor increases the wearer's apparent size, allowing more opportunities for EvilIsBigger.
* Armor tends to be heavy. If the hero doesn't have superpowers it might strain WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief if they're able to move around as nimbly as a ballet dancer decked out in a full suit of armor. (Villains avoid this problem as the focus is not often on them so the audience can assume they had to take their sweet time plodding to their destination, but nobody wants to spend time watching the hero do that.)
* Last but not least: seeing an unarmed and unarmored guy beating up a big guy in a armor [[RuleOfCool is always awesome to look at]].

See also TinTyrant, TheLawOfDiminishingDefensiveEffort and HelmetsAreHardlyHeroic. Often related to BrainsEvilBrawnGood and GoodArmorEvilArmor.
----
!!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'':
** ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventurePhantomBlood Phantom Blood]]'': Jonathan himself wears only an adventurer outfit while two of DIO's minions he faces against; Bruford and Tarkus, are undead knights wearing metallic armor.
** ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureSteelBallRun Steel Ball Run]]'': Magent's Stand manifests as an ArmorOfInvincibility, making him impervious to all attacks from the normal-wearing Johnny and Gyro.
* The Saiyans in ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' wear some sort of armor, as do Freeza's soldiers later, in contrast to the protagonists who mostly wear martial arts gis. Vegeta in his long transition from villain, to anti-hero, to hero wears less armor every time he gets a costume change, from his first appearance with a battle skirt, winged shoulders, and a scouter, to the Buu Saga with no armor at all (though that was because he showed up to enter the Tenkaichi Tournament, where armor was forbidden, and never got the chance to get it back. He returns to wear armor again in ''[[Anime/DragonBallYoSonGokuAndHisFriendsReturn Yo! Son Goku and His Friends Return!!]]'' (where he claims it counts as formal wear), ''[[Anime/DragonBallZBattleOfGods Battle of Gods]]'', ''[[Anime/DragonBallZResurrectionF Resurrection 'F']]'' and ''Anime/DragonBallSuper'', which all take place after Majin Buu's defeat). After fighting on Earth it is said Vegeta only survived because of his armor but by time the protagonists had reached Namek it was shown to be [[ArmorIsUseless easily shattered]] even [[OvershadowedByAwesome by Krillin]].
* In ''Manga/OnePiece'', one of the most memorable examples would be Luffy versus the weapon-loving Don Krieg. A good part of the fight revolves around Luffy trying a way to break his armor. However, Luffy always jumps at the chance to wear armor, believing to be a very manly sort of thing. He even weeps with joy at just getting armored boots and gauntlets from Mr. 3's Wax Wax Fruit during the Impel Down saga.
* ''Manga/{{Yaiba}}'': The main character wears normal clothes whereas his nemesis Takeshi Onimaru wears spiky armor.
* In ''Manga/FairyTail'', there's most of the guild members against [[spoiler:Master Hades]], while earlier, we have [[CampStraight Sugarboy]] vs [[WalkingShirtlessScene Gray]]. In the latest arc, the [[EvilCounterpart Raven Tail flagbearer]] [[spoiler:(Actually Ivan in disguise)]] is completely covered in armor. By the time of the Tartaros arc, Gray also faces off against his own father Silver Fullbuster, now serving under Tartaros and armored up like a knight, while Gray himself does battle shirtless.
* In ''Manga/RurouniKenshin'', [[AttackOfThe50FootWhatever Fuji]] at first wears a set of armor as he faces [[spoiler:Hiko]], but when he's told that wearing it will only boost his confidence and make his attacks weaker, he decides to opt for a fair and square fight, and removes it.
* In ''Manga/{{Gamaran}}'' none of the Ogame Ryu members wear protective clothes of sort, while many of their enemies may usually wear chainmail of sorts to protect themselves.
* ''Manga/HanaukyoMaidTeam La Verite''. In episode 11 Konoe Tsurugi's OneeSama wears a heavy armor suit in combat, while her opponents Konoe and Yashima don't.
* Inverted most of the time in ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'', where Guts always wears armor, while most of the villains are un-armored, Especially the Apostles and the God Hand.
* ''Anime/Ulysses31'': For some reason, Ulysses doesn't activate his energy shield when fighting them, while they all have shields.
* ''Literature/SwordArtOnline'':
** As Heathcliff, Akihiko is clad in the armor of the Knights of the Blood Oath, while Kirito wears a simple Badass Longcoat.
** During the first half of the Alicization arc, Kirito and Eugeo are unarmored, while their enemies, the Integrity Knights, wear full plate. Eugeo suggests taking some armor along for protection, but Kirito says that it would likely slow them down, since they're unused to fighting in it. There are some exceptions, such as Alice (who later does a HeelFaceTurn and continues fighting in her armor), as well as antagonistsBercouli, Chudelkin and Quinella, none of whom are armored.
* ''Manga/RaveMaster'': Both Haru Glory and his father Gale never used armor of sorts, while their nemesis King and Lucia Rareglove don threathening black armor on their bodies. Furthermore, while both Haru and Lucia descend from mighy kingdoms, only the Raregloves still bask in the former glory of their kingdom and try to keep up its legacy as the organization Demon Card.
* Inverted in ''Manga/UshioAndTora'': as the final battle approaches, Ushio and Tora both receive a gift in the form of protective armor, one made from the remains of [[StarterVillain Stone Eater]] and the other from the [[spoiler:Fallen Azafuse]], while Hakumen no Mono has no need of armor.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* TinTyrant ComicBook/DoctorDoom is the main adversary of the ComicBook/FantasticFour, who are all armorless.
* ComicBook/SpiderMan, pretty much an archetypal skintight-suit superhero, periodically though not invariably goes up against armored opponents of various kinds, such as the Rhino or assorted Spider-Slayer robots.
* ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'':
** In ''ComicBook/ActionComics #544: ComicBook/LuthorUnleashed!'', Lex Luthor builds a fancy armored warsuit which he has kept for any physical brawls between him and Superman ever since. Superman, the original FlyingBrick, has no need for such toys.
** Some versions of Metallo play his cyborg parts as a sort of "armored" look, and characters like ComicBook/{{Brainiac}}, Cyborg Superman, and Barrage have donned it to fight him.
** Part of the reason the ''ComicBook/New52'' redesign drew a lot of ire was that it attempted to add an "armor plating" look to Superman's outfit, which undermined the imagery.
** In ''ComicBook/SupergirlCosmicAdventuresInThe8thGrade'', Lena Thorul wears a modified version of her brother Lex's warsuit when she wants to fight ComicBook/{{Supergirl}}, who never wears armor (and doesn't want to fight Lena anyway).
** "ComicBook/TheUnknownLegionnaire": Subverted, since [[spoiler:Supergirl hardly wears armor, but she feels a compulsion to protect her identity when she loses her memories]], so she quickly makes an armor suit, complete with a full-head helmet. She ditches her armor as soon as she remembers who she is.
** Inverted in ''ComicBook/{{Crucible}}'', with Supergirl wearing Kryptonian armor at some points, and her enemies fighting without protective gear.
* ''ComicBook/XMen'':
** The X-Men aren't big believers in armor, excepting those who come with it naturally through their power set, but they've faced a lot of armored enemies over the years.
** ComicBook/{{Apocalypse}} wears alien PoweredArmor, although given his power set it's probably the least dangerous thing about him. His "heir" Stryfe, his son Holocaust/Nemesis/whatever-it-is-this-week, and anyone who takes over Apocalypse's role [[spoiler:like Archangel or ''ComicBook/AgeOfApocalypse'' Wolverine]] all wear armor as well. And for pretty much all of them it's more for intimidation than any practical purpose.
** ComicBook/{{Magneto}} for much of his history wore a costume of red chainmail along with his trademark helmet. Light, but just enough to keep Wolverine from gutting him on a few occasions.
** The Juggernaut is a hulking giant in enormous dark-red armor, even though he's naturally tough enough for it to have no point (besides the helmet anyway).
* ComicBook/IronMan inverts this at time especially with foes like The Mandarin and Fin Fang Foom who don't wear armor.
* ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'':
** Inverted by Batman, whose suit contains Kevlar body-armor (how much this is emphasized visually depends on the artist), but armor is worn by almost none of his enemies. Mr. Freeze is one of the few exceptions, but most of the threats that face Gotham wear elaborate costumes made from normal cloth.
** ''ComicBook/Robin1993'' & ''ComicBook/RedRobin'': While Tim Drake always has body-armor in his suits they are generally flexible and cloth-like overall while his recurring villain "Scarab" wears high-tech full body encasing PoweredArmor.
* ''Franchise/WonderWoman'':
** [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Volume 1]] & ''ComicBook/SensationComics'': Byrna Brilyant wears her Snowman and Blue Snowman PoweredArmor while fighting Wondy, who is dressed in culotte shorts and a strapless red bustier.
** [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 Volume 2]]: Ares wears black and blue armor while Wonder Woman wears a {{Stripperiffic}} swimsuit--[[ComicBook/AllStarComicsNumber8 originally]] a strapless red shirt and pair of spangled shorts--modeled after the American Flag.
** [[ComicBook/WonderWomanRebirth Volume 5]]: Byrna faces off against WW in a HumongousMecha, while Diana is wearing short pteruges and a strapless red bustier.
* ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse: The Jealous Pacificus dons an armor when he decides to attack WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Works]]
* In the climax of the ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' fic ''Fanfic/LovedAndLost'', [[TheUsurper King Jewelius]] and his minions replace their normal attires with battle armors as they prepare to [[spoiler:wipe out the entire population of Ponyville]]. The [[HeroWithBadPublicity heroes who've lost their social standing]] -- the princesses, the Mane Six, Shining Armor and Spike -- face them with the Elements of Harmony as their only equipment. Only the TokenGoodTeammate of the villains doesn't don an armor, and she's the only one who [[HeelFaceTurn switches sides]] during the battle.
* The author of one of the spin offs for ''Fanfic/TheManyDatesOfDannyFenton'' posted [[https://www.deviantart.com/dragonrex1/art/Thanatos-The-God-of-Death-815130994 an image of Thanatos]] on his Deviant Art account. As seen, he wears complete armor all over his body, with no indication of what he looks like underneath, save for red eyes. The hero, on the another hand, wears normal clothes.
* In ''Fanfic/KaraOfRokyn'', Lex Luthor dons his green-and-purple warsuit for his final battle with the Man of Steel, who as usual goes without armor.
* In ''Fanfic/HellsisterTrilogy'', Superman is always armorless whereas Lex Luthor wears his green armor at all times.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
* The robot probe sent by Gallaxhar in ''WesternAnimation/MonstersVsAliens'' has deflector shields that render it invulnerable to the Army's weapons. The five monsters battle the robot without armor or even weapons. Ginormica puts up a goodly tussle, and Doctor Cockroach is unkillable.
* Inverted with the armored conscripts that defend Imperial China from the armorless Hun horde in Walt Disney Pictures' ''WesternAnimation/{{Mulan}}''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
* Franchise/DCExtendedUniverse:
** ''Film/ManOfSteel'': Kal-El/Superman wears his Kryptonian skinsuit (his superhero suit in effect), while General Zod and his crew wear Kryptonian armors on top of their own skinsuits. Only mid-way during Zod's final confrontation does her take his armor off for better freedom of movement, not needing it anyway.
** ''Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice'': Rather ''very'' misguided co-protagonist than outright villain, but still, Batman wears a PoweredArmor when confronting Superman -- mostly to protect himself from crashing through walls whenever the Man of Steel is not under the effect of Kryptonite gas.
** ''Film/{{Wonder Woman|2017}}'': Diana does wear armor parts, but nowhere near as covering as the one Ares conjures from nearby metal debris in their final confrontation.
** ''Film/WonderWoman1984'': The film {{invert|ed Trope}}s the trope with Diana and her golden armor against the unarmored Cheetah.
** ''Film/ZackSnydersJusticeLeague'': Steppenwolf wears a silvery collapsible armor covering his whole body, while the only one who's fully covered in armor on the heroes' side is Cyborg.
* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
** Darth Vader. In addition to evoking the look of a BlackKnight against the unarmored farmboy, the armor/life support emphasizes his inhumanity.
** The [[LaResistance Rebel Alliance]] forces tend to have uniforms with with little more than flak armor, compared to the Empire's Stormtroopers who are armored head to toe ([[ArmorIsUseless not that it ever helps them]]). Even their pilots are FacelessMooks.
** During the Clone Wars the Jedi would more often than not be unarmored, while their Clonetroopers, the future Stormtroopers, wear body armor. In ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'' this is actually one of the reasons many Clonetroopers disliked the Jedi, as they took them going unarmored as considering themselves immortal and putting themselves above the lowly Stormtroopers, with Appo, commander of the 501st Legion under both the Republic and the Empire, privately respecting Darth Vader ''more'' than he had when he was Anakin precisely because he finally took on wearing armor.
* Played with in ''Film/TheLastSamurai'' with the armored samurai vs. the modern Japanese army in western uniforms.
* Inverted in ''Film/IronMan3'''s final battle, where the eponymous hero, famed for his PoweredArmor, fights the BigBad who wears normal clothes.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* The main villains of ''Literature/GodsAndWarriors'' are the members of the House of Koronos. They're rich and powerful enough to afford bronze armor, while the warriors under their command wear rawhide armor. The two main heroes are an Outsider and the runaway daughter of the High Priestess, and their allies tend to be low-class as well. The final battle of the final book is the only time the heroes are wearing armor.
* In ''Literature/JourneyToTheWest'', after starting the eponymous journey with Tripitaka, Sun Wukong wears nothing but a tunic and a tiger pelt used as a kilt, and being monks neither Pigsy or Sandy carry armor. Most of his opponents will show some impressive armors, helmets and plates, usually described in high detail. That doesn't help them much.
* A variant in ''Literature/TheStormlightArchive''. While both the Alethi protagonists and the Parshendi antagonists have armor, the Parshendi armor is literally a part of their body. The Alethi just wear armor like normal.
* A common trope in artwork depicting Franchise/ConanTheBarbarian, but largely averted in the actual stories and films.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Series/Daredevil2015'':
** In season 1, Matt Murdock wears black CivvieSpandex while Wilson Fisk wears suits lined with knife-proof material. Matt eventually manages to get his iconic red devil costume tailored by the guy who tailors Fisk's suits.
** In season 3, Matt is wearing a black costume made from clothes in his church's donation bin, while Dex wears a Daredevil suit that Fisk made for him.
* In ''Series/DoctorWho'', the Doctor and their companions are always wearing normal Earthly clothing, while monsters like the Daleks and the [[TinTyrant Cybermen]] are heavily armored.
* Omnipresent in the first two seasons of ''Series/SpartacusBloodAndSand'', in which the gladiators (and later rebels) mostly go into combat shirtless against Roman soldiers in laminar armour. In the last season most of the rebels take to wearing looted Roman armour.
* ''Series/GameOfThrones'' shows [[DeconstructedTrope why this is a bad idea]] in the first season, when the unarmoured MasterSwordsman Syrio Forel takes on the villainous Kingsguard Ser Meryn Trant. To quote the Hound: "Your friend's dead, and Meryn Trant's not, because Trant had armour. And a big fucking sword."
* A variation of this occurs in ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' and its adaptation ''Franchise/PowerRangers''. The transformed form of the heroes always resembles them wearing skintight spandex, while at least one villainous character per series wears a suit of armor or has a body structure that resembles armor.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Myths & Religion]]
* ''Literature/TheBible'' probably holds the UrExample: When [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_and_Goliath David]] was fighting Goliath he refused to wear any armor [[note]]this was a matter of practicality rather than principle; he was offered Saul's own armor, but Saul was a full-grown man (and explicitly one of if not ''the'' tallest and strongest of the Israelites to boot) and David was, at the time, a kid in his teens who tried it on and discovered that it severely hampered his movement[[/note]] and took only his sling and five stones with him. [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_(Bernini) Some Artists]] depict [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Antonin_mercie_david_bronze_nude.jpg him wearing]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_(Michelangelo) absolutely]] [[FullFrontalAssault nothing]].(except maybe [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_(Donatello)#The_bronze_David a helmet]]).
* Present in almost every telling of the Myth/RobinHood legend -- Robin and his Merry Men wear tunics of lincoln green (or, in more modern adaptations, homespun shirts) while battling the Sheriff's guards, who wear chainmail and helmets. Which are, of course, wholly ineffective.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': The [[SpaceElves Eldar]] of the craftworlds and corsair fleets use lightweight tech that is very sleek and lends itself to a pseudo-FutureSpandex look. The Dark Eldar, by contrast, use gear covered in conventional layered plates and hard edges. Compare their basic infantry units, [[https://www.games-workshop.com/resources/catalog/product/920x950/99120104018_Guardians10NEW_01.jpg Guardians]] and [[https://www.games-workshop.com/resources/catalog/product/920x950/99120112007_KabaliteWarriorsNEW01.jpg Kabalite Warriors]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''VideoGame/ANNOMutationem'': Ann's combat suit is a StylishProtectionGear without any form of protective armor, while she single-handedly battles variations of {{mooks}} wearing hi-tech body armor made of a strong alloy.
* ''VideoGame/GodOfWar'':
** In ''VideoGame/GodOfWarI'', Kratos is almost always wearing a loincloth and sandals against the heavily armored Ares.
** ''VideoGame/GodOfWarIII'' pits you against two notable armored bosses: Poseidon and Hercules. In both cases you have to smash the armor first.
** Averted in ''VideoGame/GodOfWarPS4''. Kratos can now wear full plate armor (although it is optional), and [[spoiler: the villain, Baldur,]] only wears a loincloth.
* In ''VideoGame/{{Genji}} Dawn Of The Samurai'' there's [[FragileSpeedster Yoshitsune]] versus [[TheBrute The Mask Yoritoshi]] of the Heishi. You can even cleave part of his armor to obtain an ingredient.
* Downplayed in ''VideoGame/HeroOfSparta'', where the duology's hero, King Argos, wears a sleeveless Spartan-style tunic and shin-guards. The main villain, [[EverybodyHatesHades Hades]] on the other hand is a black-clad TinTyrant with his entire body decked in powerful spiked armor.
* ''VideoGame/RadiantHistoria'': Aside from Rosche, the heroes aren't depicted as wearing much armor. Meanwhile, the enemies start with helmeted soldiers and move up to wearing full-body armor.
* ''VideoGame/BioShock'':
** Jack versus the Big Daddies in ''VideoGame/BioShock1''. Jack is wearing a casual sweater, while the Big Daddies don't look human because all you can see is armor. Justified as Jack is the RightManInTheWrongPlace and gains more health thanks to 'Adam', while Big Daddies were designed to survive bullets.
** Inverted in ''VideoGame/BioShock2''. Subject Delta IS a proto-type Big Daddy, while the splicers are just crazy humans.
** Booker versus almost anything in ''VideoGame/BioShockInfinite''; The Handymen are disabled men now in Mecha-suits, the Firemen are permanently trapped inside their suits of armor, the Motorized Patriots are completely made of metal, and various soldiers have heavy battle armor. Booker, on the other hand, relies completely on an invisible magnetic shield around his body.
* Played with in ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight''. Saber is an armored hero while most of the antagonistic Servants like Lancer, Rider, Berserker, Caster, and Assassin ([[spoiler:as well as True Assassin]]) are unarmored villains. It's played straight by the armored villain [[spoiler:Gilgamesh]] and, during the finale of Heaven's Feel, [[spoiler:by Saber Alter and Rider]].
* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'': Many villains from the series are encased in armor while the heroes are running around in normal clothes ([[ImpossiblyCoolClothes well, for a given value of normal...]]).
** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyI'', Garland, the first boss [[spoiler:and BigBad]], is a TinTyrant. The heroes (minus the Warrior) are in clothing or robes.
** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyII'', Firion and co. wear civilian clothing, and only one of the temporary party members wears armor. The EvilEmpire's mooks and TheDragon all wear heavy plate armor.
** Golbez of ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIV'' is a TinTyrant, while only two out of the twelve members of the player party are armored (Cecil and Kain). Cecil also loses some armor coverage when he transforms into a Paladin, although he's still clearly a knight.
** Exdeath from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyV'', in wizard form, wears a pale blue armor with gold trims. The Light Warriors do have several heavy armor jobs, but their Freelancer outfits (which they're liable to fight the final battle in) are just clothes.
** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII'', the main party are wayward members of LaResistance who spend a good chunk of the game fighting Archadian Judges, powerful warriors armored head-to-toe to enforce the will of the Empire. The main party sticks to normal clothing, which only includes a couple of token armor pieces if any.
** Most of the high ranking members of TheEmpire in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' are covered head to toe in armor and conceal their faces in helms. The city state leaders and the Scions of the Seventh Dawn that oppose the empire wear light armor to normal clothing and their faces are always shown. The player can follow the trope, invert it, or zig zag it with whatever gear they wish to use.
* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
** In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI'' Link faces foes dressed only in a tunic and pants, while his armored enemies range from stone statues to ten-foot-tall knights in full plate.
** Localizations of ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast A Link To The Past]]'' address this by calling the upgraded tunics "mail".
** Games from ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTwilightPrincess Twilight Princess]]'' onwards would add a thin chain or scale mail shirt under the tunic. In the latter, he can also get a full set of armor that renders him invincible at the cost of constantly draining his rupees.
* In the ''Franchise/{{Castlevania}}'' series, heroes rarely wear armor at all, while, among various things, living armors are recurring enemies, in one form or another.
* In ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoSanAndreas'', none of your enemies wear body armor, but [[spoiler:Big Smoke]] does when he's fought as a boss. CJ calls him out on being a wuss for wearing body armor and how a real gangbanger doesn't need it. However, the insult can dive into HypocriticalHumor if you have him wearing (albeit [[InformedEquipment invisible]]) body armor and this is never pointed out.
* In ''VideoGame/{{Strider}}'' there's [[TheHero Hiryu]] and his official [[TheRival rival]], Solo. Hiryu wears a simple ninja outfit and relies entirely on melee weapons/skills whereas Solo appears decked in several types of PoweredArmor that lets him fly and shoot missiles around.
* Inverted in ''Franchise/{{Metroid}}'', where [[TheHero Samus]] is clad head-to-toe in PoweredArmor, fighting for the most part dangeorus alien lifeforms with nothing but their own bodies as weapons.
* Played with in ''Franchise/DragonAge''.
** Loghain from ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'' is a major villain who wear armor all the time and some of the player's party members(as well as the player themself) are unarmored with Liliana starting out unarmored when facing a bunch of Loghains's men and is one of the most noble hearted characters, but gets inverted with the [[BigBad Archdemon]] with his lack of armor and being the villain and Alistair being a heroic member of the party in armor.
** ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'' inverts this with the Arishok as a major antagonist without armor.
* ''[[VideoGame/TrailsSeries The Legend of Heroes - Trails]]'': The heroes of each arc don't wear any armor whatsoever while Arianrhod, the strongest member of [[AncientConspiracy Ouroboros]] wears a TwentyFourHourArmor. Duvalie from the same series is also a case of this trope on both ends of the spectrum where she's a villain when she has the armor on but [[spoiler:ends up joining the heroes in ''Cold Steel IV'', ditching the armor. She does wear it back in the finale but she's still on the heroes side]].
* ''VideoGame/MiniNinjas'', Hiro and all the other ninja protagonists are unarmored, while the soldiers employed by the Evil Warlord all wear samurai armor (with occasional exceptions).
* The ''VideoGame/MaxPayne'' series pits the titular character against mooks with armored vests at least a few times per game. ''VideoGame/MaxPayne3'' takes it further with the elite UFE batallion, who don ballistic helmets as well as shoulder and knee pads in addition to bulletproof vests. Max, on the other hand, has nothing but a stash of painkillers to keep himself going.
-->'''Max:''' ''(picking up a bottle of painkillers)'' They had their body armor, I had mine.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Animation]]
* In the White trailer in ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'', Weiss is a FragileSpeedster clad in a little white dress fighting against a fully-armored BlackKnight.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''Franchise/AvatarTheLastAirbender'':
** [[WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender Original Series]]: The Fire Nation {{Mooks}} (as well as [[DiscOneFinalBoss Admiral Zhao]] and [[AntiVillain Zuko]], but only during the first season) wear body armor, in contrast to the heroes who dress in travelling clothes and monk's robes. [[TheDragon Azula]] skirts the line by wearing lightweight armor that could be mistaken for a regal outfit. But this trope is directly averted by the series BigBad Ozai, who spends his final battle against Aang shirtless.
** ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'': In this SequelSeries, both the Equalists and the Earth Empire mooks (as well as their leaders, Amon and Kuvira, respectively) both wear conspicuous armors: industrial combat suits for the former and fascist-inspired armored uniforms for the latter (mooks from both wear even Darth Vader masks). Korra and the rest of the protagonists and their allies rarely use armour at all, the exception being metalbenders like Lin. Inverted with the Red Lotus, who are armourless anarchists contrasted in later episodes against the armored but heroic Zaofu military, and averted at all by Unalaq and his troops, that don't bear any armor whatsoever.
* ''WesternAnimation/Ben10'' versus the Forever Knights. Ben transforms into different aliens, but none of them really have armor. Gwen and Kevin count in the sequels. Kind of.
* The Urpneys from ''WesternAnimation/TheDreamstone'' wear metal armor and helmets (they also wear swords on their belts that [[TheGogglesDoNothing are never used in combat]]). The Noops Rufus and Amberley are completely unarmed children (though Rufus has a similarly underutilized sword in the first season) and the magic-powered Wuts are completely naked. Both of the latter groups suffer much less to slapstick injuries than [[IronButtMonkey the Urpneys]] despite their armor.
* ''WesternAnimation/ElTigreTheAdventuresOfMannyRivera'': Most of the RoguesGallery, so far, have used a MiniMecha / PowerArmor, while all the heroes had been powered up by their Bronze Boots and using few, if any, special body protection.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheOwlHouse'': Emperor Belos is dressed in metallic gauntlets and wears a metallic helm around his mask, whereas the heroes -- from the Owl House denizens to the [=B.A.T.T.'s=] directly opposing Belos -- never really wear any armor. Additionally, the Coven Captain has a metal CoolMask, whilst the Golden Guard wears a mask and a pauldron [[spoiler:before he makes a complete HeelFaceTurn]], and it's also worth noting the Abomatons which enter Belos' service in Season 2 have an armored look with their machine parts.
* In ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'', season 4 "A Bunch of Full Grown Geese", [[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext when the baby ducks fuse together to become a giant duck man to fight a bunch of geese who also fuse together to become a giant goose man]], the geese giant has armor and the duck giant is unarmored. It's subverted when the duck giant is losing and he has Mordecai and Rigby summon PoweredArmor for them to fight and they succeed.
* ''Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles'': The Ninja Turtles only have shells, and many of their allies are completely unarmored, but Shredder is heavily armored. Especially so in his [[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2003 2003 incarnation]], where he is clad from head to toe in armor.
* ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans'': With the exception of Cyborg whose body is part-armor, the Titans don't really wear much armor and their faces are largely clear to see. [[Characters/TeenTitans2003Slade Slade]], one of the primary villains of the series, is dressed head-to-toe in dark-gray armor and his face completely obscured except for his eye.
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