->'''[[HughLaurie Bertie Wooster]]:''' Why is it, do you think, Jeeves, that the thought of the "little thing" my Aunt Dahlia wants me to do for her fills me with a nameless foreboding?\\
'''[[StephenFry Jeeves]]:''' Experience, sir?\\
-- ''JeevesAndWooster''

->'''Nimue''': See, this is the point where the monster always jumps out.\\
'''Merlin''': [[ThisIsReality That only happens in stories.]]\\
'''Nimue''': That's what they always say in the stories.\\
--''ArthurKingOfTimeAndSpace''

The exact opposite of GenreBlindness. A GenreSavvy character doesn't necessarily [[MediumAwareness know they're in a story]], but they do know of stories like their own and what worked in them and what didn't. They know every [[ASimplePlan Simple Plan]] is doomed to failure from the start and instead of participating, sit back and wait to get in their "I told you so", or even a "WeCouldHaveAvoidedAllThis". They can spot someone being controlled by ThePuppetMasters from a mile away ([[NotBrainwashed usually]]). They're more likely to listen when they catch someone in a compromising position who sputters "It's NotWhatItLooksLike!". They can tell fairly early that that [[HorribleJudgeOfCharacter strange old man who's offering free lollipops]] is probably best avoided. And they've seen enough [[{{Horror}} Horror movies]] to know that when there's an ax murderer on the loose, the ''last'' thing you want to do is either [[AloneWithThePsycho split up]], [[DeathBySex boink your significant other]], or [[CuriosityKilledTheCast investigate strange noises]] in the SinisterSubway. They know how to avoid getting a bad rank on the SortingAlgorithmOfMortality.

The GenreSavvy live to [[LampshadeHanging hang lampshades]], give {{Aside Glance}}s, and say, "{{You just had to say it}}, didn't you?" right after use of a TemptingFate [[StockPhrases Stock Phrase]]. Their [[FacePalm exasperation]] with the [[TooDumbToLive sheer stupidity]] [[FinaglesLaw of the entire universe]] usually makes them a DeadpanSnarker. They are likely to be told that ThisIsReality or [[SomebodyElsesProblem just ignored]], and likely to be the one who [[IAlwaysWantedToSayThat always wanted to say that]]. A useful person to have around if you get TrappedInTVLand.

They will often try to take advantage of tropes, either to fail embarrassingly (often because they're actually WrongGenreSavvy), or to achieve remarkable feats to everyone else's astonishment.

Genre savviness sometimes occurs when TheManWhoKnewTooLittle discovers that his situation is real. This is a JustifiedTrope in situations where the character was initially recruited for their knowledge of the genre. (''GalaxyQuest'', ''TheLastStarfighter'', ''Film/ThreeAmigos!'') It can also be justified through experience--hopefully, after going through dozens of LetsYouAndHimFight scenarios a superhero will eventually see them coming and start trying to avoid them ahead of time.

Like playing with the FourthWall, having one or more GenreSavvy characters is indicative of PostModernism.

The most extreme, who know what GenreBlindness is and that they're ''supposed'' to be, remain [[ContractualGenreBlindness Contractually Genre Blind]]. On the other hand, when they're incorrect in their assumptions on what they're supposed to be, they're of the WrongGenreSavvy persuasion.

When a villain instead says "screw that!" and dodges every trope and IdiotBall that comes their way, they are DangerouslyGenreSavvy. When they don't, it's DeathByGenreSavviness. When characters are just GenreSavvy enough to accept the premises of the story, they are FunctionalGenreSavvy. Compare with MediumAwareness.

----
[[foldercontrol]]

!!Examples:

[[folder:Anime and Manga ]]
* Inuzuka Koushi from ''SumomoMoMomoMo'' is the only person who sees the lunacy of an underground martial arts war, constantly quoting the various laws they are breaking.
* The title character of ''SuzumiyaHaruhi'' sees ''everything'' in terms of [[TheCatalogue TV and anime tropes]], even where they might not otherwise have been. She borders between being a [[WrongGenreSavvy wrong]] and being an accurate GenreSavvy. Since she is an [[spoiler: all-powerful RealityWarper]] with unstoppable willpower, she actually ''makes'' herself become accurate.
** Koizumi himself is a GenreSavvy character too, using it to his advantage to convince Haruhi of certain things. Sometimes it does work, sometimes it backfires at him.
** Kyon also is a pretty GenreSavvy guy, usually expressing it with [[DeadpanSnarker snarky]] [[MetaGuy remarks]].
* Normally, Kyoko in ''MaisonIkkoku'' tends to think the worst of Godai when it comes to other women. The exception being schoolgirl Ibuki Yagami, who has an (unreturned) crush on Godai-sensei. Nothing that she tries fazes Kyoko the least (Godai isn't so lucky). Kyoko's late husband was one of her teachers and she knows that story inside and out.
* Akira of ''SchoolRumble'' is the only one who actually understands the LoveDodecahedron, even using that knowledge to manipulate people. As demonstrated in the BeachEpisode, where a naked Harima winds up grappling a bikini-clad Eri, not only is Akira fully aware that it's NotWhatItLooksLike instead of jumping to the obvious conclusion, she is also capable of explaining in ''great'' detail exactly what happened.
* Konata of ''LuckyStar'' is Genre Savvy to the point of being a trope-fixated {{Cloudcuckoolander}}. She recognizes tropes and conventions... [[WrongGenreSavvy but never seems to be able to tell which actually apply to her own genre]]. Sometimes she gets it right, but other times, she applies tropes that are spectacularly wrong for her situation, referencing DatingSim event flags or deciding the dentist sounds like a classic mecha anime.
* Houshakuji Renge from ''OuranHighSchoolHostClub'' is an {{Otaku}} example. All of the other main characters (except Haruhi), as well, to the extent of deliberately playing up their specialized {{bishonen}} stereotypes to please their [[FanGirl customers]].
* In ''MahouSenseiNegima'', the [[CastHerd "library girls"]], quite understandably, read a lot of books... which means they're quite willing to accept the idea that their teacher is secretly a wizard. In particular, Paru (Saotome Haruna, herself supposed to be an amateur manga artist!) is all too willing to participate in cliche storylines.
-->'''Paru''': But mostly I want to help because IT SOUNDS LIKE A BLAST!
** But then, one character is GenreSavvy enough to freak out when she realizes that she's in a LoveTriangle, and those ''never'' end well... (especially not in Japanese literature!)
** In a curious and almost tragic use of this trope, Ako expresses her lack of self-confidence and feeling of being "ordinary" by saying she's literally "just a supporting character". Negi, of course, tries to reassure her that she ''is'' important... but in the context of the manga as a whole, ''[[BrokenAesop she's exactly right about her lack of importance]]''. At least so far...
*** This comes up again (much) later on. In chapter 245 she shows that even a "side-character" can be incredibly important when she [[spoiler: [[CrowningMoment/MahouSenseiNegima keeps Negi from getting blackmailed into slavery by Tosaka]] by [[HeroicSacrifice offering herself]] [[TakeMeInstead in his place.]] ]]
*** Not to mention that [[spoiler: the sole reason that Negi is even able to get back up after Jack Rakan pounded him is because [[HeroicResolve he promised her he would win]] and he's ''[[{{Determinator}} going]]'' to win. That's pretty important.]]
** Also, [[OnlySaneMan Chisame]] often points out, that in this World of Magic, [[ValuesDissonance not everything]] [[GrayAndGrayMorality is shining and clean]], and often worried about Negi's affiliation with Nagi, who ends the war, [[spoiler:and effectively ruining [[AristocratsAreEvil some people's]] [[WarForFunAndProfit plans.]]]], and often worrying if Negi had [[ParentalAbandonment troubling parents]]. [[spoiler:She's right about all that.]]
* Shows up a ''lot'' in ''HayateTheCombatButler'', which has NoFourthWall. Almost everyone is GenreSavvy about the fact that they're in a shounen anime/manga and what that usually entails. Key word: ''usually''.
** The trick is, they don't know they're in a ''parody.''
* Most of the characters in ''{{Genshiken}}'' are major, ''major'' otaku and therefore genre savvy, but share Konata's affliction of being unable to tell exactly what kind of anime they're in. Most of the guys seem to visualise life as a dating sim, and beat themselves up about it when they realise it.
* Zola in ''BlueDragon''. In the second episode, after she effortlessly destroys several dozen enemy robots, the remaining ones begin [[CombiningMecha combining]] into [[HumongousMecha a single much larger robot]]. Zola notes that it would be stupid of her to wait for them to finish, and successfully attacks before the TransformationSequence is finished.
* Dio Brando of ''Jojo's Bizarre Adventure'' gets into DangerouslyGenreSavvy territory, as he usually does not take chances when it comes to his known weaknesses (he's a [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampire]], after all). For example, instead of throwing one knife (which he knows the hero can block), Dio [[TimeStandsStill stops time]] and throws about 10 to 20 knives in succession so that he can't possibly block them all. And, just to be really, ''really'' sure, he drops a steamroller on him. Is it any wonder that this guy is one of the most beloved anime villains of all time?
**Another BigBad, Yoshikage Kira, is also DangerouslyGenreSavvy to the point where he's downright ''paranoid''!
* Keima of the ''TheWorldOnlyGodKnows'' manga is an internet-famous genius when it comes to {{Dating Sim}}s, so when Hell has a problem with evil spirits hiding inside schoolgirls--where making them fall in love is the only way to exorcise them -- they call ''him''. And despite Keima's dislike of real girls, ''it works''.
* [[MagicalGirlLyricalNanoha Hayate Yagami]] not only JumpedAtTheCall after witnessing the Wolkenritter and hearing their story, but she designed their costume-like [[ImpossiblyCoolClothes Barrier Jackets]].
* Simon of ''TengenToppaGurrenLagann'' becomes rather Genre Savvy in the last two arcs, recognizing that they've always snatched victory at the last second from the jaws of defeat merely by being sheer bloody-minded {{Determinator}}s, in stark contrast to Rossiu who thinks things like "plans" and "logic" have any effect in a universe governed by the RuleOfCool. Kamina has the same mindset before Simon, but this is less to do with being Genre Savvy than it does Kamina being the kind to charge in without a plan. Fanboys try to ignore [[TheWorfEffect all the times this didn't really work]].
** To be fair, Rossiu was '''very''' savvy as the rest of the cast fell for the [[ObviousTrap hot]] [[GoldilocksAndTheMinesOfMoria springs]] [[WhatAnIdiot trap]].
* Tomoyo Daidouji from ''CardcaptorSakura'' is pretty much the result of making the camera person and the costume designer a major character.
* ''IkkiTousen'' is basically "RomanceOfTheThreeKingdoms, {{Gender Flip}}ped and as a HighSchoolAU". Well, the teenage fighters ''know'' they're the reincarnations of these heroes, and several of them use such knowledge to their advantage as they fight their ways in the story, searching for a way to either fulfill or screw their fates.
* In ''{{Kannagi}}'', Akiba Meguru, being a "self-conscious akiba-freak", is GenreSavvy to the extreme, even recognizing that Mikuriya Jin for what he is:
--> 'If this is a comic, you are the main character!'
* This editor was initially puzzled by one fight towards the beginning of ''YuYuHakusho''. Kurama squares off against the first of the four Saint Beasts, a rock demon which is able to melt into the stone all around them and come out from any direction (there ought to be a trope page for that). Kurama is able to predict which part of the walls, floor, or ceiling the demon is about to pop out of every single time, which he eventually reveals is due to his rose whip blanketing the room in a sweet scent--he knows where the demon is because of his foul odor. But that still didn't explain how he knew the first time the demon exploded out of the ceiling at him, before he brought out the rose whip. It was only after multiple viewings that I [[FridgeBrilliance caught his remark immediately after dodging that attack]]:
--> '''Kurama''': ''Same old trick.''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comics]]
* AmbushBug is not only extremely Genre Savvy, he also loves breaking down the FourthWall, and the Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Walls, just in case.
* As a result of his numerous adventures and encountering just about every being in the Marvel universe (and then some), Comicbook/{{Spider-Man}} is teeming with GenreSavvy. At times, he sarcastically expresses boredom at how redundant and predictable his life can be.
**In the {{MC2}} universe, GenreSavvy is yet another [[SuperpowerfulGenetics skill Peter passes on]] to his daughter May. Much of the witty banter that goes down during her fights consist of [[PlayingWithATrope describing]] the comic book tropes they're supposed to be following.
**Spider-Man routinely teams up with Wolverine. During their section of the latest Marvel Team-Up series, Peter makes a quip about the fact that they start brawling every time they meet. ''Every time.'' Even though they have teamed up many times and know each other socially. And they were most likely teammates on The Avengers at the time. This may stem from their intense mutual dislike of one another, made clear in their first encounter, but still...
** In ''Paradise X'' Saga, Peter Parker (now a cop), demonstrates a ridiculous level of Genre Saviness when he deduces the Guardians of the Galaxy's motivation with a two-word reply:
--->'''Peter Parker:''' [[spoiler: I know you guys are gettin' ready to go back to the 30th century an' all, but I've been wonderin' -- Where's Nikki?]]\\
'''Vance Astro:''' [[spoiler: "Nikki" who?]]\\
'''Peter Parker:''' [[spoiler: Oh wait, I know this one too. You're the guardians ''before'' Nikki joined the team, right? You haven't even ''won'' your war in the future yet, right? Earth's still in danger? So you're looking for a way to... let's see... no, not ''clone'', don't even ''say'' the word "clone"... No, you want to ''mutate'' and ''empower'' the people of Earth so that they can defend themselves against some ''alien invaders'', right? An' that's why you're here.]]\\
''(cue Vance and StarHawk's totally shocked faces)''\\
'''Peter Parker:''' ''(absolutely nonchalantly)'' [[spoiler: Really, it's not that hard... when you're doing this as long as I have, it's kind of difficult to be surprised by a twist like that anymore.]]
** In an issue of [[LighterAndSofter Marvel Adventures]], at the end of a LetsYouAndHimFight Spidey says, "It was a textbook superhero misunderstanding battle. Happens all the time! Luckily, this is the part where we make up for it by working together to stop her."
* Likewise, {{Deadpool}} displays a similar amount of GenreSavvy, though for a different reason -- because of the inoperable brain tumor that ultimately, through SuperScience, lead to his healing factor, he also has NoFourthWall.
* And then there's Rick Jones, whose genre-savviness is given a ''name'': "Comics Awareness" (as opposed to buddy Captain Marvel's "''cosmic'' awareness".)
* ''ZombiesCalling'' by Faith Erin Hicks is built around the main character being savvy to the "rules" of zombie movies.
* The new ''StarTrek'' comic book series, which picks up the adventures of the crew right after the last episode of the original series, has the characters showing they've gained some GenreSavvy.
** After being stunned and thrown in a cell, [=McCoy=] is surprised to see Kirk pull a small phaser out of his boot and blast the door. [=McCoy=] asks when he started carrying a hidden weapon. "You get knocked out and thrown into a cell enough, you start to take precautions."
** After returning to the ship at the end of another issue, Kirk asks Spock how he knew to adjust the shields in anticipation of an attack. Spock replies by giving the percentage of times the ship has been attacked after losing communications with Kirk.
* TheDCU's Infectious Lass. For example: "That's what we learned in the future about team-ups. First you ''fight''..."
* In AlanMoore and Dave Gibbon's ''{{Watchmen}},'' [[spoiler:Adrian Veidt, aka Ozymandias, declares that he is not a villain from a Republic Films serial and therefore had already completed his plan 35 minutes before beginning his HannibalLecture]].
* In ''TheSandman'', Morpheus is possibly one of the most genre savvy entities in the whole universe. As the Prince of Stories, he knows that life literally imitates art (and vice versa) and is more than capable of controlling it. While teaming up with John Constantine to enter a house haunted by renegade dreams, Constantine shows some genre savviness himself, recalling what happens to people in horror movies when they [[AloneWithThePsycho split up]]. He asks Morpheus for reassurance that they'll stick together.
* In Marvel's current ''IncredibleHercules'' series, Hercules is aware that as a figure of myth, he is trapped in endlessly repeating patterns that he cannot escape from, as they are a part of his essential being. Of course, he also routinely has flashbacks to assorted contradictory incidents, which he accepts with equanimity, as these are also part and parcel of being 'mythic'.
** This would mildly backfire at one point, when Hercules was presented with a situation of comparing his recent partners to companions in the past, such as individual Argonauts. When he comes to [[TheTwink who Amadeus Cho is like]]... "No idea."
*** This later came up when he gave a thumbs up to Amadeus for "scoring" with the Amazonian princess, without knowing that Amadeus had found out that the (main) reason for her interest was due to him being Hercules' ''eromenos''...
* There was a ''JusticeLeague'' storyline where they were fighting adversaries with some sort of time-skipping teleportation powers, and as usual the JLA were scattered across the world dealing with different problems. This exchange happens:
-->'''Flash:''' I wish Batman were here.\\
'''Plastic Man:''' Batman? Isn't this fight kind of beyond his means? Wouldn't he just slow us down?\\
'''GreenLantern (Kyle Rayner):''' Heh, listen to the ''other'' new guy. We need Batman to explain what the hell's going on!
* In ''Avengers: The Initiative'' issue 21, Gorilla Girl and Batwing have the following conversation:
-->'''Batwing:''' Where are you headed, Gorilla Girl?\\
'''Gorilla Girl:''' Home. I asked them to put me in the reserves, and they did.\\
'''Batwing:''' But you did such a good job against the Skrulls!\\
'''Gorilla Girl:''' Yeah, Batwing... and I came out ''alive'', which is practically a miracle. I turn into a ''gorilla'', I'm black, I'm female, and nobody's ever heard of me. I might as well have "Cannon Fodder" stamped on my forehead. You can keep pushing your luck if you want, but I'm getting out while I'm still in one piece. Vaya con dios, kids.
* ''The Amory Wars''/''Coheed and Cambria'' storyline's villain, the Trimage Wilhelm Ryan, sort of does this when addressing his robotic general, Mayo Deftinwulf:
-->"There is ''no room'' for mistakes, Mayo -- nor young ones' vendettas!"
** Unfortunately, Claudio Kilgannon ''still'' survives, and goes out on a vendetta to kill Trimage Ryan.
* Used in ''Uncanny X-Men #254'' when an alien fleet is about to attack Earth in a parody of DCComics' ''[=~Invasion!~=]''. When an alien fleet is about to attack Earth, a nameless researcher turned up the fact that Earth has fought off Skrulls and Badoon, repelled attacks from ''Galactus'' multiple times, is the home to Galactus's herald and the Phoenix, etc. His conclusion: "We're doomed!" They are.
**Similarly, in a DC comics story, a group of would-be invaders are talking to each other about the beings on Earth. When one reports that the Earth houses not only [[{{Superman}} two]] [[{{Supergirl}} Kryptonians]], but ''also'' multiple {{Green Lantern}}s, one turns to the other and goes, "Maybe we should rethink this invasion thing."
* In the final two issues of ''{{Alias}}'', the Purple Man actually scripts the comic as he speaks and makes references to main character Jessica Jones having to please her fanbase.
* An ''Comicbook/IncredibleHulk'' example: [[spoiler:Bruce Banner, having been permanently stopped from turning into the Hulk -- and having had his condition confirmed by several of the finest scientific minds in the Marvel universe -- starts planning for the Hulk's return. As Banner himself says, "the Hulk ''always'' returns".]]
* In Whedon's run on ''Astonishing X-Men'', Kitty Pryde confronts [[FirstLawOfResurrection Colossus]];
-->'''Shadowcat:''' You have to know that if you're a clone or robot or, yeah, a ghost or an alternate universe thingie, I can deal, ...but if you are some shapeshifter or illusionist who's just watching me twist I will kill you and I will kill you with an axe so right away just prove it, say something, show me something, I can't ...
-->'''Colossus:''' Katya ...
-->'''Shadowcat:''' You died! Piotr Rasputin died and I know this because I carried his ashes to Russia and scattered them myself!
-->'''Colossus:''' You did? ... Thank you.
* Scrooge [=McDuck=] has outwitted several plots against him because {{Paper Thin Disguise}}s don't fool him, he ''knows'' something's wrong when everything goes too smoothly, and he remembers when Donald [[ContinuityNod tried similar schemes before]].
* While Brazilian comic ''Monica's Gang'' is rife with NoFourthWall, Casc�o/Smudge deserves mention: he knows Cebolinha/Jimmy Five's "infallible plans" against Monica won't work. Yet [[FailureIsTheOnlyOption he's always convinced to help him.]] [[SpannerInTheWorks And the plans usually run well until Smudge ruins them.]]
* Volt, a hero in Mark Waid's ''{{Irremeemable}}.''

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Works]]
* If fanfiction counts as "literature", there's the wacky but surprisingly good ''House''/ZombieApocalypse fic "The Rampant Disease", in which House and Co. invoke every trope in the book -- [[SortingAlgorithmOfMortality only some of which end up being true.]]
* Nili's ''LordOfTheRings'' fanfic ''[[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/3128022/1/A_Taste_of_Disaster A Taste of Disaster]]'' shows how genre savvy Legolas, Aragorn, Elrond and company get after Aragorn and Legolas have been through a few action/adventure fics. HilarityEnsues .
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film]]
* Pretty much the entirety of the ''{{Scream}}'' franchise is based on the characters being GenreSavvy, to the point that they make comments like "I know [[SortingAlgorithmOfMortality what happens to the black dude]], and I'm getting out of here." Randy Meeks was a veritable fountain of knowledge about how to survive a horror movie until he found a giant IdiotBall and turned his back to a dangerous area. This is actually the weakness of the films. Most deaths were from IdiotBall incidents.
* And long before the ''Scream'' movies there was ''There's Nothing Out There'', which had the premise of a single genre-savvy character surrounded by genre-blind people in a horror film and trying to convince them of what's happening.
* ''HotFuzz'' plays off one of the characters' detailed knowledge of action cop films.
* Played for endless laughs within the ''AustinPowers'' trilogy, particularly any scene with Dr. Evil and his son.
* Subverted in the ''MortalKombat'' film, in which Liu Kang refuses to bow to a "mere beggar" whom his grandfather identifies as the god Raiden. Liu's grandfather begs Raiden's forgiveness and explains that America and too much television has made him crass -- yet, not two minutes later, Raiden asks Liu to attack him and Liu promptly gets trounced. Apparently Liu has, in fact, not been watching ''enough'' television.
* Goes double for just about everyone in ''NotAnotherTeenMovie''. Several scenes featured characters taking a moment to stand around describing the quirks and apsects of their character portrayal with great detail.
-->'''Ricky Lipman:''' I am ''not'' going to let you hurt Janey again. Okay? Besides, I love her.\\
'''Jake:''' Well, so do I.\\
'''Ricky Lipman:''' ''(slight pause)'' Yes, but I'm the best friend, and I have been in front of her face the whole time, and she just... hasn't really realized it yet, but she will.\\
'''Jake:''' Well, I'm the reformed cool guy, who's learned the error of his ways. She's gonna forgive me for my mistakes, and realize that I really love her.\\
'''Ricky Lipman:''' ''(pause)'' Dammit, that's true.
** Let's not forget the "slow clap" rules.
** Or:
--->'''Malik:''' Sure, why not? [[BlackBestFriend I am the token black guy. I'm just supposed to smile and stay out of the conversation and say things like: "Damn," "Shit," and "That is wack."]]
**My personal favorite:
--> '''Areola:''' I am here only to serve as object of lust for poor American nerds who cannot get pussy.
* Pretty much all of ''GalaxyQuest''. When the characters [[TheManWhoKnewTooLittle realize they're in a real space battle]], they try to use sensible, real-life tactics, and fight the tendency to act like the characters they play -- which backfires, because they're ''much'' more effective once they start acting their parts. The PluckyComicRelief is the most Genre Savvy of the bunch, leading to him being convinced he's doomed because he used to play a RedShirt. He manages to survive and [[PromotionToOpeningTitles gets upgraded to a main character]] with the rank of security chief.
* The plot of ''LadyInTheWater'' revolves around the characters realizing that they've stumbled into a FairyTale. This gets subverted when [[spoiler:things go horribly awry because they're acting out the wrong roles in the story.]]
-->'''Harry Farber:''' This is precisely the moment where the mutation or beast will attempt to kill an unlikable side character. But, in stories where there has been no prior cursing, violence, nudity or death, such as in a family film, the unlikable character will escape his encounter, and be referenced later in the story, having learned valuable lessons. He may even be given a humorous moment to allow the audience to feel good about him. This is where I turn to run. You will leap for me, I will shut the door, and you will land a fraction of a second too late. ([[spoiler:He turns to run and immediately gets killed.]])
* One of the few good things about ''IndependenceDay'' was a scene during the initial attack on the alien ships. As soon as Will Smith's character sees their missiles exploding at some distance from ship with [[SomeKindOfForceField a special effect]] he immediately yells "They have shields!" and everyone knows [[DeflectorShields what he's talking about]].
* In ''MysteryMen'', Mr. Furious insists -- correctly -- that Lance Hunt is actually superhero Captain Amazing, and that it's only by [[ClarkKenting wearing or removing a pair of glasses]] that he is able to switch his identity. Unfortunately, his colleagues are [[GenreBlindness not quite so savvy]], and this leads to many frustrating arguments in which they insist that Hunt ''can't'' be Amazing because "He wouldn't be able to see."
* Peter Venkman in the ''{{Ghostbusters}}'' movies and cartoons, in addition to being the more street-smart (if BookDumb) Ghostbuster, also tends to display some genre savviness. In the second movie in particular, he's savvy enough to realize that [[YouHaveToBelieveMe ranting and raving]] about a demonic painting attempting to possess a baby at midnight on New Year's Eve is [[CassandraTruth only going to make them look crazy]] to the psychiatrists at the asylum where they have been instituted, and so goes along with events in a calm and rational manner until someone wises up to let them go and deal with it. It's a matter of some frustration to him that his colleagues [[GenreBlindness don't seem to have realized this]].
* Preacher in ''DeepBlueSea'' at one point exclaims, "Ooh, I'm done! Brothers never make it out of situations like this! Not ever!" Ironically, perhaps, he's one of only two survivors at the end of the movie. Interesting to note, originally he died and Saffron Burrows character lived, but test audiences [[TheScrappy disliked her character so much]] (reportedly screaming "DIE BITCH!" at the screen) and liked his, so they re-shot the ending.
* In ''LastActionHero'', Danny Madigan, the kid from the real world, having seen so many action movies, knows all the clichés and plot devices when he winds up inside one. Jack Slater, the fictional Hollywood action hero who lives in the movie, refuses to believe him, suffering from GenreBlindness. However, Slater does have flashes of Savvy apparently learned from experience, such as always shooting his closet when he gets home to kill the inevitable assassin. Several of the tropes that Danny points out are actually set up by Slater to make him look good.
* John [=McClane=] in 2007's ''Live Free or DieHard'' turns out to be pretty GenreSavvy: for example, at one point he asks whether there's some sort of "Henchmen 'R' Us" where the BigBad gets all of his {{Mooks}} from. But then, he has been through roughly the same plot three times before, with only the details changed, so you'd be a bit worried if he ''[[GenreBlind hadn't]]'' spotted a pattern.
** As brilliantly parodied by Ben Stiller on ''The Ben Stiller Show'' with ''[[DieHardOnAnX Die Hard in a Supermarket]]'':
--->'''Stiller (as [=McClane=]):''' How can the same thing happen to the same guy so many times?
** The first movie has Hans show the slightest bit of GenreSavvy as well. When Holly comes to him with requests, one of them starts with, "We've got a pregnant woman out there..." and Hans immediately rolls his eyes, as if to say, "Oh lord, she's going to go into labor, isn't she?" until Holly clarifies she's not due for months.
* Nick Cannon's character in the ''Day of the Dead'' [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZd_OdK1KEo remake]]. Could also be considered DeathByGenreSavvy, as someone dies moments after he says this (but it's a teaser, so that's up for debate)
* Genre savviness abounds in the 1985 film ''Rustler's Rhapsody'', a parody of TheWestern that spoofs everything from [[WesternCharacters its stock characters]] to clean-cut "{{singing cowboy}}s" like Gene Autry to gritty "spaghetti westerns". The singing cowboy hero has gone through the same western formula so many times that he's able to see exactly what's coming. However, this time, the villains get DangerouslyGenreSavvy themselves. Realizing that good guys always defeat bad guys, the villains hire another good cowboy to fight the hero. It turns out that the other good cowboy is also a lawyer, so he's not good enough to defeat the hero.
* The Operative in ''{{Serenity}}'' shows an awareness of genre conventions while fighting Mal. In his own words, "Nothing here is what it seems. He is not the plucky hero, the Alliance is not some evil empire, and this isn't the grand arena."
** Also, "I am of course wearing full body armor. I am not a moron!"
** Unfortunately he fails to realize that Inara is ''not'' a helpless DamselInDistress.
*** On the other hand, he attacked her too. He just didn't pay attention to what else she was doing.
* One person in ''Diary of the Dead'' was GenreSavvy enough to suggest that people could survive the ZombieApocalypse from watching how he and his party had survived.
** Not forgetting that characters were making a horror movie using some classic tropes and then lampshading them when they happened for real.
* Subverted in ''The Return of the Living Dead'' in which ''NightOfTheLivingDead'' was ''loosely'' based on a true event. Two security guards try to use the zombie-fighting knowledge they received from the film, only to discover that "the movie lied!"
* Eddie Valiant, in ''WhoFramedRogerRabbit'', had a special kind of GenreSavvy. His past dealings with Toons gave him insight on how they worked, and allowed him to manipulate multiple situations to his advantage, such as using the DuckSeasonRabbitSeason trick to get Roger to take a drink. Judge Doom had similar abilities, allowing him to capture Roger at one point, by tapping "{{Shave and a Haircut}}" in a bar Roger is hiding in, knowing that Roger's old-school humor style wouldn't let him not finish the line.
* In ''JeepersCreepers'', the heroine runs down the Creeper with her car and skids to a halt a short distance away. When her passenger asks if it's dead, [[spoiler:she says, "They never are." Then proceeds to throw it into reverse and run the creature over several more times]]. [[spoiler:Unfortunately, it still doesn't work.]]
* Jack Sparrow of ''PiratesOfTheCaribbean''.
* Many of the recurring characters in KevinSmith's films seem to be genre-savvy. One glaring example is Azrael from the film ''{{Dogma}}'', who, as his plan for the destruction of all reality comes together, is asked how he did it and what he needs to do by the imprisoned good guys. Azrael's response:
-->'''Azrael:''' Oh no, I've seen way too many [[JamesBond Bond]] movies to know that you [[JustBetweenYouAndMe never reveal all the details of your plan]], no matter how close you may think you are to winning.
* Smith in ''TheMatrix Revolutions'', specifically near the end of his climactic brawl with Neo. Even though Smith -- thanks to the Eyes of the Oracle� -- can ''see'' how the fight will end, he ''still'' thinks Neo might be tricking him into defeat when the protagonist gets up to offer himself as the sacrificial lamb one final time.
* Jentee of ''MagicalLegendOfTheLeprechauns'' seems perfectly aware that the circumstances around him are a romantic tragedy waiting to happen -- to the degree that when the protagonists in love come to him for help, he suggests that committing suicide might persuade their warring families to resolve their differences. [[spoiler:Turns out he's right.]]
* In ''TimeBandits'', Kevin, at least, knows what's up when they meet RobinHood. He even tries to explain to the dwarves afterwards that of course Robin is going to hand out the treasure they stole to the poor.
* [[EvilDead Ash]] knows that, just because a [[NotUsingTheZedWord Deadite]] is down, doesn't mean it's dead.
-->'''Ash:''' It's a trick. Get an axe.
* In ''Road to Morocco'', Hope and Crosby try the old "pat-a-cake" routine (used to great success in the series' earlier films) on the villain's henchmen, only to get clobbered:
-->'''Bing:''' Yessir, Junior, that thing sure got around.\\
'''Bob:''' Yeah, and back to us!
* Jim in ''[[TwentyEightDaysLater 28 Days Later]]'' candidly points out why driving into a dark tunnel after a zombie outbreak is a stupid idea, even if the driver isn't in the mood to listen to him:
-->'''Jim:''' No, no, no... see, this is a really shit idea. You know why? Because it's ''obviously'' a shit idea! You drive into a tunnel full of fucking smashed cars and broken glass, and it is really ''fucking obviously a shit idea-''
-->'''Frank:''' HOLD ON!
-->(Frank's car rockets up the pile of wrecked cars, and travels across its flattest point for about ten seconds before landing back on the road with a shredded front tyre.]]
-->'''Frank:''' Fuck!
-->'''Jim:''' [[DeadpanSnarker World's worst place to get a flat, huh?]]
** Selina also knows just [[SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism exactly what kind of movie she's in]].
-->'''Selina:''' [To Jim] What d'you think's going to happen? We find a cure, save the world or just fall in love and ''fuck?'' Staying alive is as good as it gets.
* Pretty much the entire point and struggle of ''StrangerThanFiction'' revolves around the lead character (who hears a voice narrating his life) trying to figure out what kind of story he's in. If it's a comedy, he'll live; if it's a tragedy, he'll die. For help he visits a professor of Literature, who asks him bizarre questions like "Are you the King of anything?" and "Do you have magical powers?" His negative responses eliminate fantasy, mythology, historical fiction and other genres in order to find out the type of story he's in.
* In ''StayTuned'', a TV addict played by John Ritter buys a TV set [[DealWithTheDevil from the Devil]], and he and his wife end up TrappedInTVLand. Every show is a hellish parody, and all of them are specifically designed to kill them. At one point, he and his wife end up as [[TomAndJerry animated mice being hunted by a robot cat]]. After finally getting some respite, he starts to wonder what a "real" cartoon mouse would do... and promptly orders a robot ''dog'' from [[AcmeProducts the ACME company]]. It arrives immediately, and chases away the robot cat.
* Nero in ''Film/StarTrek'', thanks in large part to the research he did about the ''Enterprise'' and Kirk in his own timeline. Granted, once he [[spoiler:destroyed Vulcan]] and completely altered the timeline, all bets were off.
* M in ''[[QuantumofSolace Quantum of Solace]]'' shows a good bit of genre savvy-ness herself. To wit, this scene, where she recognizes a [[BondOneLiner Bond One-Liner]]:
--> '''M''': Ask him about Slate.
-->'''Tanner''' (to Bond, over a cell phone): She wants to know about Slate.
-->'''Bond''': Slate was a dead end.
-->'''Tanner''' (to M): He said it was a dead end.
-->'''M''': Damn it! He killed him.
* The two cab drivers in the diner in ''TheHudsuckerProxy'', who are smart enough to provide a running commentary on Amy's (staged) attempts to meet Norville.
* Penelope and Stephen Bloom in ''The Brothers Bloom'', a rather GenreSavvy movie altogether.
-->Bloom: This isn't an adventure story.
-->Penelope: It totally is!
* Ned from, of all things, ''17 again''. Particularly strong when he tries figuring out what triggered Mike's transformation.
-->Ned: Are you now, or have you ever been, a Norse god, vampire, or time-traveling cyborg?
-->Mike: You've know me since, what, first grade? Maybe I would have ''told you''--
-->Ned: Vampire wouldn't tell...cyborg wouldn't know.
* Tallahassee, Columbus, Witchita and Little Rock's survival in ''{{Zombieland}}'' is entirely attributed to GenreSavvy. Say them with me now -- ''Rule #1'': Cardio, ''Rule #2'': Double-tap, ''Rule #3''...
* Although the ''{{Friday the 13th}}'' sequel ''Jason Goes to Hell'' doesn't avert {{sequelitis}}, it does open with a great moment of [[GenreSavvy genre savviness]]. As the movie starts, a woman is being chased through the woods by Jason Vorhees, as usual. Once she reaches a small clearing, though, she turns around, whips out a gun and reveals that she's an FBI agent and this is a trap. Now, Jason is usually ImmuneToBullets, so that wouldn't help anything. Except then, a small army of agents armed with every caliber and variety of firearm imaginable suddenly pops out of hiding, opens fire in a hailstorm of bullets, and doesn't stop firing for more than a minute, until the last agent's out of ammo and Jason's body has pretty much been torn to shreds. Due to an especially [[TVTropesDrinkingGame egregious]] display of NewPowersAsThePlotDemands, this doesn't actually kill him for good, but it does show that law enforcement really did their homework this time around.
* Quentin Tarantino's ''{{Pulp Fiction}}'', in addition to being a textbook [[GenreBusting genre buster]], is also a study in [[GenreSavvy genre savviness]]. Its main heroes undergo something of an education in this trope as the movie progresses: Jules' character arc starts with cheap burger commercials and ends with [[AnAesop an Aesopian]] and lofty shift from gangster to [[TheDrifter drifter]]. Vince's tragic end, while primarily connected to the {{Idiot Ball}}, also can be seen as either {{Genre Blindness}} or perhaps {{Death By Genre Savviness}}, or perhaps both. The most interesting example the movie gives of this trope however, is Butch, who after escaping from Zed's basement, is savvy enough to know that he will never survive a proper gangster film if he runs off like a coward. He therefore decides to go {{Genre Shopping}}, starting with various violent genres, (Crime Thriller, Gangster, Horror) until he ends up with Samurai. He chooses wisely, not necessarily for survival purposes (Toshiro Mifuni dies in his movies as often as not), but because, live or die, Butch is now destined to {{Take A Level In Badass}}.
* In the comedy film ''Evolution'', African-American scientist Harry Block is asked to snag a mutated alien from a meteor-crash site.
-->'''Ira:''' Snag one.
-->'''Harry:''' Snag one!?!
-->'''Ira:''' Yeah... snag one...
-->'''Harry:''' Nuh-uh, I've seen this movie; black guy dies first. You snag one!
* Paris (Orlando Bloom) in ''Troy'' has as flash of this near the end. The Greek fleet has disappeared, leaving a giant [[TrojanHorse wooden horse]] behind. Paris tells his father to burn it. He doesn't listen.
* Both the main characters in ''Kiss Kiss Bang Bang'' use their knowledge of the plots of mystery novels to forsee the events which will occur in the movie. At one point there is a false end where the female lead says something along the lines of this isn't how it ends this can't be how it ends. Usually at this point there's a big action sequence where the hero kills a bunch of people for no good reason. Shortly there after the hero becomes engaged in a big action scene where he kills a bunch of people.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* TerryPratchett's {{Discworld}} features quite a few characters like this, thanks to the TheoryOfNarrativeCausality. Several of the witches, especially Granny Weatherwax, have a feel for "stories", and can use them to their own ends if they have to. Commander Sam Vimes of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch is pretty GenreSavvy when it comes to tropes of detective stories and police procedurals. Malicia from ''The Amazing Maurice And His Educated Rodents'' is either ''too'' GenreSavvy, or [[WrongGenreSavvy not savvy enough.]] She insists on ''always'' seeing things in terms of stories, ranging from fairy tales to KidDetective novels like ''Tom Swift'', ''The Hardy Boys'', and ''The Famous Five'' (she even claims at one point that four kids and a dog is "the right number for an adventure"). Furthermore, she has trouble in coping with subversions and exceptions, and [[HeroicWannabe always makes herself out to be the main character of the "story"]]. Rincewind the Wizzard [sic], meanwhile, is very much aware of [=~Finagle's Law~=] and similar narrative conventions that keep his life interesting. He hates them.
** It's even the whole basis of the plot in ''Discworld/WitchesAbroad''. The stories want to be told, whatever the effects on their players. Lily is arranging the city of Genua along the lines of these stories. The toymaker will be a jolly, red-faced man who whistles while he works ''if he knows what's good for him''. The servant girl will marry the prince, with the help of her fairy godmother, whoever has to get hurt along the way.
** "... Exactly one in a million?"
** Perhaps the most obvious example (and subversion) of this comes from the ''[[Discworld/GuardsGuards Guards! Guards!]]'' novel, when Vimes has just confronted the hidden villain of the story. The villain, (using the title of the book) summons several mooks to take Vimes into custody. However, the mooks, despite Vimes having no weapons and just standing there, show extreme hesitation. When the villain demands an explanation, they indicate they know what happens in situations like this: the likelihood is that if they try to take Vimes into custody, he will kill them all by engaging in swashbuckling clichés such as performing somersaults or swinging off chandeliers (the villain points out, somewhat hysterically, that there ''are'' no chandeliers in the room at all.) It actually takes Vimes' assurances that he will not do so and would not know how to do so if he tried before the mooks actually take him prisoner.
** Also inverted in Discworld with [[Discworld/GoingPostal Moist Von Lipwig]], who knows very well how things are supposed to go... and plays the part of the hero, because he knows that the innate genre savviness of the public will view him as a hero if he does. As a con artist, taking advantage of what people expect to see is his major skill.
** [[Discworld/ThiefOfTime Rule One]].
*** [[http://www.llbbl.com/data/RPG-motivational/target256.html Well, *technically* they're only little old men in robes...]]
** Cohen the Barbarian and his Silver horde in ''Discworld/TheLastHero'' are confronted by Captain Carrot. They're about to fight him when they realise that's there's only one of him and nine of them, and that he's trying to save the world. All experienced heroes who have spent decades winning against incredible odds, that naturally see that the fight can only go one way and back down.
*** This is pure genius considering that the Horde took advantage of that very trope ''themselves'' in their first appearance in ''Discworld/InterestingTimes'' (though it didn't end quite the way you might think).
*** And all the moreso, in that the Horde's dangerous actions were spurred on by their belief that the time of heroes has passed. It has, but only for ''their'' kind of kick-in-the-door, rob-the-temple, big-thug-with-a-sword hero. Carrot, who routinely risks his life for a city salary the Silver Horde wouldn't consider enough to tip a barmaid, represents a new '''type''' of hero: one who's simply determined to do the right thing. The Silver Horde are confronted by this generational and cultural transition -- from hero''ing'' to hero''ism'' -- and it floors them.
** The Patrician has wearily recognised the pattern of supernaturally powered fads running riot over his city (''Discworld/SoulMusic'', ''Discworld/MovingPictures'') etc., but interestingly when he says so in ''Discworld/TheTruth'' he's actually being WrongGenreSavvy, because the fad in that book -- newspapers -- isn't supernatural and doesn't fade away like the earlier ones.
** Cohen the Barbarian shows a moment of GenreSavvy in ''Discworld/InterestingTimes'': knowing that [[EvilChancellor Grand Viziers are always evil]], he asks Twoflower, "Do you know anything about Grand-Viziering?" Twoflower says no. He gets the job, precisely ''because'' someone who knew something about it would be ''evil''.
* Johnny and Kirsty in ''OnlyYouCanSaveMankind''. Of course their genre awareness is actually influencing the setting to some degree.
* Princess Cimorene of the ''EnchantedForestChronicles'' is fairly genre savvy, as are most of the characters to one extent or another. She just refuses to conform to type.
** Note that this is an AffectionateParody universe where genre savviness is actively taught to people; Cimorene's education included things like the right way to scream when being carried off by a giant.
* In the 1932 book ''Cold Comfort Farm'', a satirical novel about a young woman who goes from the city to live with her backward relatives on the titular farm, Flora Poste has read [[ForgottenTrope all sorts of novels about young women who go from the city to live with their backward relatives on farms]]. She thus correctly guesses that they'll have names like Seth, Amos, and Judith, identifies Aunt Ada Doom as "the Dominant Grandmother Archetype", and keeps an eye peeled for subversions and exceptions.
* In the ''LordPeterWimsey'' Mysteries by Dorothy Leigh Sayers, characters discourse at length about how their situations would be different if they were in a detective story.
** Similarly, most AgathaChristie books contain at least one line where a character exclaims that "It's just like a detective novel!" and several suspects in various mysteries show nervousness because they're the least likely character to do it and hence, if it were a mystery novel, the one most likely to be fingered. Sometimes it's true, sometimes it isn't.
* {{Mercedes Lackey}}'s ''500 Kingdoms'' series uses this idea -- indeed, it is central to its premise. The idea is that the world in governed by a mysterious force called "The Tradition" which forces peoples' lives to follow traditional story tales, like Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, etc. The main characters are either Godmothers or are being helped by Godmothers to achieve the story's end -- or to change the story from one with a fair amount of deaths to one with a happy ending. As such, all Godmothers need to know what story they are in and, preferably, numerous other stories they can try and manipulate.
* The characters of the ''HarryPotter'' series seem to have some degree of this. The kids have discovered that any danger in Hogwarts will inevitably be attracted to Harry (this is attributed to him being TheChosenOne) and that every Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher will end up lasting a single year. It has also been noted that Harry has a "saving people thing", which Voldemort has used to his advantage. However, they do not seem to notice that most plot points get wrapped up at the end of each school year.
** Hermione gets quite Genre Savvy in the last book, notably bringing her {{Bag Of Holding}} to a wedding of all places. Even though it's being held outside the very house she's staying. Good thing she did though...
*** Ron experiences an accidental moment of Genre Savvy, but insisting they don't say Voldemort's name, because it just "doesn't seem like a good idea" (paraphrasing). Turns out saying the name identifies them to Voldemort's minions and makes them easily capturable.
* Sergey Lukaynenko's ''Rough Draft'' and its sequel ''Final Draft'' are practically dripping with genre savvy. Characters frequently reflect on how the events of the story follow certain genre conventions. Sometimes their observations foreshadow the actual outcome, sometimes they turn out to be wrong and other times their realization of what genre convention they wound up facing comes too late to do any good.
** In one of the early chapters, the main character meets up with a science fiction writer (a thinly-veiled [[AuthorAvatar Lukyanenko stand-in]]) in order to try to figure out the solution to his decisively supernatural problem. The writer winds up explaining how various Russian science fiction authors would resolve it, ending with his own take (which didn't match the actual ending of the novels.)
* Catherine Morland in the JaneAusten novel ''Northanger Abbey'' is very savvy about her preferred genre -- "horrid" Gothic novels. [[WrongGenreSavvy Unfortunately for her]], the story she's actually ''in'' is a [[RegencyEngland Regency]] romance. HilarityEnsues
* Many characters in JohnRingo and Travis Taylor's ''IntoTheLookingGlass'' series of novels are perfectly aware they've been thrown into a science fictional situation. In the second novel, ''Vorpal Blade'', being science fiction fans is seen as a useful characteristic for the new Space Marines and officers flying the first human starship, the captain of which takes a giddy delight in being able to give orders like "Ahead Warp 1" and "Engage warp drive".
** In the sequel ''Claws That Catch'' this is taken to a slightly surreal extreme when some conflicts between various alien technologies cause them to hallucinate that they are anime characters. One of the main characters laments the fact that he is clearly a secondary character since as anime characters the hero is clearly identifiable.
* The ''ArtemisFowl'' books have a strong "action movie" sensibility -- several of the characters are fans of action movies and are shown to compare their own experiences with the genre.
-->''A spinning kick, Butler. How could you?''
* Peter Pevensie demonstrates a degree of GenreSavvy in CSLewis's ''[[{{Narnia}} The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe]]'', particularly when -- after Edmund suggests the robin they are following might be leading them into a trap -- he observes that in all of the stories he has read, robins are creatures of good.
** Edmund also has a GenreSavvy moment or two near the beginning of ''[[{{Narnia}} Prince Caspian]]'', drawing upon his knowledge of adventure stories for ideas on how he and his siblings can get by after they find themselves in an unpopulated wilderness.
** He has another in ''[[{{Narnia}} The Voyage of the Dawn Treader]]'' when they are considering what has happened to the man whose armor they have found; it is explicitly cited that he reads mysteries.
* Subverted in ''The Dumas Club'' by Arturo Perez-Reverte. Rare book finder Lucas Corso has read enough to recognize a trope when he sees one and insists on following them until he can nab the BigBad. He's mostly right[[spoiler: but the BigBad is someone completely different than he suspected]].
* Happens a lot in K.A. Applegate's ''Everworld'' series, about four young adults thrown into a world in which everything from all the mythologies in the history of the world co-exists. Odds are at least one of them will know enough about whatever figure they encounter to know how to deal with them. They still don't believe Cassandra, though.
* The online blogiform novel ''[[http://toothycat.net/~hologram/UltimateDream/ Ultimate Dream]]'' is pretty much defined by its GenreSavvy DeadpanSnarker narrator, who relentlessly mocks the clich�d RolePlayingGame of the title, which plays like a catalogue of TheGrandListOfConsoleRolePlayingGameCliches. She continues mocking the clich�s even after she and her friends get [[TrappedInTVLand sucked into the gameworld]]. The subsequent discussions with the game characters attempts, in several cases, to [[JustifiedTrope justify]] several of the clich�s. The BigBad is DangerouslyGenreSavvy, while TheManBehindTheMan is [[ContractualGenreBlindness aware of the genre's limitations]] and indeed tries to enforce them.
* All of the ''{{Animorphs}}'' are at least somewhat GenreSavvy, as Tobias, Jake and Marco are all fans of science fiction and comic books, Ax [[AlienArtsAreAppreciated loves soap operas]] and Rachel at least watches ''BuffyTheVampireSlayer'', but they're much more likely to assert that ThisIsReality and just use it for jokes.
* In ''{{The Lord of the Rings}}'', most of the good guys are pretty GenreSavvy, since legends are a major form of entertainment in Middle Earth. In "The Stairs of Cirith Ungol," Sam wonders if he and Frodo have reached a part of the story that the audience won't want to hear. Frodo, however, rightly points out that it's the dark, scary parts that keep people interested.
* Parodied in MarkTwain's ''The Story of a Good Little Boy'', in which the protagonist longs to be the hero of a Sunday school book and goes around trying, unsuccessfully, to do all the right things: taking in a stray dog, getting a job with only a signed tract as a reference, etc. The main thing that bothers him is that [[TooGoodForThisSinfulEarth all decent Sunday school book heroes die]] so he'll never get to see the book he's in.
* Joe Hill's short story ''Best New Horror'' involves an editor who [[spoiler:slowly realizes that he's wound up in a situation that conforms to horror genre specifications. He finds this oddly exhilarating.]]
* John Dickson Carr's detective Dr. Gideon Fell is well aware that he's in a detective novel.
** In ''The Three Coffins'', he stops the action to explain to everybody how a locked room murder mystery can be pulled off, explaining that there's no point in pretending they're ''not'' in a detective novel.
* In ''ThroughTheLookingGlass'', Alice's familarity with MotherGoose leads to Genre Savviness. She knows that the king has promised to send all his horses and men to help Humpty Dumpty, and she awaits the crow with great anticipation, to break up the fight between Tweedledee and Tweedledum.
* Edith Nesbit's ''Melisande'' is a variation of Rapunzel set in a fairy tale world where everyone is GenreSavvy. For example, the king and queen deliberately refuse to hold a Christianing party, knowing what happened to the Sleeping Beauty. When all the fairies are furious that they weren't invited, and they want to curse the princess, the king points out that traditionally, only ONE of them can curse the princess.
* The whole point of CharlesStross's ''TheJenniferMorgue''. The villain, a DangerouslyGenreSavvy billionaire trying to take over the world, recognizes he's a living trope and creates a XanatosGambit by creating a magic spell that turns everything around him into a JamesBond adventure, so that only a British agent conforming to the Bond stereotype would be in a position to stop him and save the world last the last moment. The plan is to then end the spell, making the agent an ordinary person again and so easily contained and killed, with no one else able to get there in time. Unfortunately for him, the British are even more GenreSavvy [[spoiler:when the agent they send isn't really the Hero, he's the Bond Babe, acting as an initially oblivious decoy for his girlfriend who is the real Hero sweeping in at the last minute with commandos to save the day]].
* In the comic mystery play ''Any Number Can Die,'' a wannabe detective urges a reluctant informant to tell him the name of the murderer, because otherwise she'll get killed and only have time to whisper him a cryptic clue. Sure enough, she gets shot, gives him a clue, and he says in frustration, ''This always happens in stories!''
* In JasperFforde's ''ThursdayNext'' and ''NurseryCrime'' novels, the lead characters are successful because of their GenreSavvy. Thursday works in the Literary Crime division, making sure that novels stick to the conventions of their genre and using her GenreSavvy to get out of many sticky situations. The main problems come when she has trouble identifying the genre she has stepped into. Jack Sprat, in the Nursery Crime novels, is an interesting character because he not only investigates crimes committed by [[MotherGoose nursery tale characters]], but he also has a strange empathy for the genre-driven urges that make them commit the crimes.
* Commissar CiaphasCain is this in universe. He realizes that acting like the rest of the Imperium's commissars (trigger happy hardasses) will only get him killed faster, and realizes that giving a damn about his troops means he doesn't get fragged, they give a damn about him, and he more chances to avoid getting killed. He also realizes the grim dark setting for what it is, and realizes that most forms of danger are better avoided if he doesn't try to run. It gets truly insane how GenreSavvy he is when realizes that being a fanatical jackass makes him expendable, so unlike the rest of the Imperium (who put insane amounts of faith in the God Emperor of Humanity), he decides to proactively work very hard at saving his own ass himself, making him one of the smartest humans in the whole series.
* Harry Dresden in ''TheDresdenFiles''. Not exactly harmed by such details as ''Dracula'' have been written to educate people about how to kill a certain kind of vampire. On the other hand, in ''Dead Beat'', he's considering go out to confront people. If he's in ''High Noon'', that will get him killed, but if it's the early stages of ''Maltese Falcon'', they still just want to talk.
* ''LeftBehind'' has an "unintentional" variant that cripples the narrative from the get-go. Many of the characters, who should have shown emotions at certain times, seem to be aware of the type of book they are in; they thus either do not display the appropriate emotions, or merely go through the motions. This cripples the fitst book of the series to an extreme extent in regards to making the characters seem real.
* In book two of TanyaHuff's ''SmokeAndShadows'' trilogy, the production team and main cast of a VampireDetectiveSeries are trapped in a HauntedHouse while filming an episode about a haunted house. A large part their defenses are ripped off from ''{{Charmed}}'' or ''TheXFiles'', and much of the dialogue consists of witty observations -- and creative criticism -- of their predicament, and blatant self mockery of ShowWithinAShow ''Darkest Night''.
* In Jeffery Channing Wells' online masterpiece, ''Mundementia One'', there exists the Humility Company. This group of bodyguards is the best in the entire world because they refuse to say that they are the best out loud. By continuously downplaying their own skill they manage to survive for another battle. They even have an android Cardinal Richlieu to tell them when they've become too badass and have to sacrifice the rookie to the mysterious monster in the darkness.
** Frankly everyone in ''Mundementia One'' is genre savvy, though Charles is still trying to fully gain his.
* Most of the protagonists in the WhateleyUniverse grew up reading {{Marvel}} Comics and DC Comics, and watching lots of anime, so they're pretty well suited to be growing up as mutants in a superhero universe. DeadpanSnarker Phase is probably the most genre savvy of the group. although they all get into the act sooner or later, even the CloudCuckooLander Jade.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Mythology]]
* OlderThanDirt: The titular protagonist of ''TheEpicOfGilgamesh'' notably rejected the goddess Ishtar's advances because he knows how mortals sleeping with gods and goddesses [[DeathBySex always leads to tragedy]]. To make his point, he recites a list of the myriad tragic fates of Ishtar's lovers in other myths. (Not that [[WomanScorned scorning a goddess]] doesn't lead to tragedy anyway -- it was a lose-lose situation.)
** (You'd think if he was really Genre-Savvy, he'd know that part too and decide that as long as he's screwed either way....)
*** Please tell me you didn't just make that pun.
*In Book Nine of the ''Illiad,'' the Greek hero Diomedes doesn't believe Achilles' threats to sail home from Troy because he is fated to die there. He turns out to be right.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
* As part of {{WWE}} wrestler Batista's HeelFaceTurn, his entire gimmick became that he was GenreSavvy enough to see all the [[{{Heel}} Heels]]' dirty tricks coming a mile away. (He turned after he overheard his faction plotting against him but played along up until the end.)
* On the episode of WWE Smackdown that aired the Friday before the Unforgiven 2008 Pay-Per-View, MVP and Shelton Benjamin attempted to interrupt HHH's show-opening promo. HHH then made a GenreSavvy speech about the usual course of events that take place during the show-opening promo, where the champion talks for a while about the upcoming Pay-Per-View, his opponents interrupt him and try to attack him, and the champion overcomes the opponents. However, HHH did wind up being attacked by a third opponent he ''didn't'' see coming (who could be said to have been Genre Savvy enough to notice how ''his'' presence wouldn't be cliche enough to notice).
** Triple H displayed his GenreSavvy once again on a Raw episode leading into ''{{WWE}} Wrestlemania 25''. Randy Orton had declared his intent to have Triple H arrested for the assault and home invasion HHH had committed the week before, and then use his guaranteed Wrestlemania title shot to go after Edge's World Championship, rather than HHH's WWE Championship. Triple H came to the ring, allowed himself to be handcuffed, and then openly told Orton that this isn't how the story ends; that Orton needed to get revenge for Triple H having expelled him from Evolution and taken away his first championship after a mere 1-month reign, and all of this was just Orton posturing. After more goading from HHH, Orton finally agreed, had HHH released, and officially challenged him for his title.
* John Cena had a bout of this when he told the RAW general manager that if he said that Cena's current adversary has "the night off" it probably meant that said opponent was waiting to jump him backstage or interfere with his match at the end of the night. He was right.
* Pretty much any time that a wrestler manages to actually use an obvious way around the usual [[WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief suspension of the laws of physics]] needed for some of pro wrestling's more elementary sequences (such as Irish whips that lead to almost "textbook" dodging), although these moments are usually played for laughs. Specific examples would be Samoa Joe in {{ROH}} casually walking out of the way of opponents jumping off of the top rope... same goes for Kevin Steen's reaction to Nigel [=McGuinness=]' rebound lariat off of the ropes.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* The main characters of ''{{Buffy the Vampire Slayer}}'' are almost all GenreSavvy.
** Spike to Buffy in ''Blood Ties'': "You'll find her, just in the nick of time. That's what you hero types do."
** Also when Spike kidnapped Xander and Willow, Buffy immediately concludes that he hid them at the abandoned factory. Spike says, "You think I'm an idiot?" They are, of course, at the abandoned factory.
** Also note Buffy's staking of Dracula after he attempts to regenerate -- "You think I don't watch your movies? You ''always'' come back."
* Abed of ''{{Community}}'' is GenreSavvy beyond all reason. The other characters typically ignore him when he points out various tropes and it won't be too surprising when a WMG goes up saying that Abed knows he's fictional.
* The sisters in ''{{Charmed}}'' hovered between GenreSavvy and pathetically, if not [[PingPongNaivete redundantly]], [[GenreBlindness Genre Blind]].
* Castle in ''{{Castle}}'' is amazingly genre savvy, being a mystery writer in a crime show, and uses this to help the actual police. His partner pokes fun at this but it works.
* For a miniseries which purports to deconstruct fairytales, surprisingly few characters in ''TheTenthKingdom'' seem to be GenreSavvy. Street smart Virginia certainly isn't, other than when she realizes that "everyone in this place is crazy!" Wolf only gets a few moments now and then, one of the most memorable being his knowledge of fairy tale endings: "We either live happily ever after or we get killed by horrible curses." (Another would be his explanation, after [[spoiler:Prince gets turned to gold]], that "things have a way of bouncing back here"... only to admit, when confronted by Tony, that he was "just saying that" and proceeding to tempt Prince with a stick with delicious snark.) The most truly GenreSavvy moment in the entire miniseries, surprisingly, comes from [[ButtMonkey Tony]], after the Blind Woodsman explains how they can obtain his magic axe... by guessing his name -- except if they fail, he chops off Wolf's head:
-->'''Tony:''' What ''is'' it with you people? What kind of twisted upbringing did you have? Why can't you just say, "Oh, that'll be a hundred gold coins"? Why is it always "Not unless you lay a magic egg, or count the hairs on that giant's ass"?
** Of course this is immediately subverted when Tony, believing he knows which fairy tale he's in, agrees to the deal and guesses the Woodsman is named Rumpelstiltskin. Wrong! [[DeusExMachina Good thing that magic bird came along when it did.]]
** And another great Tony moment, when he's told by a talking frog that one door leads to the castle, while the other leads to certain death. The frog says they can ask him any question, but he always lies. Tony flips out, has a similar rant to the one with the woodsman, only a little longer, picks up the protesting frog, opens one of the doors and throws him in, closing the door. Moments later, an explosion is heard from the other side of the door.
--->'''Tony:''' Okay, it's the other one.
* [[DoctorWho The Doctor]], especially in his most recent incarnation. To a lesser extent, Martha Jones, his companion in Series Three; at least she knows about TimeTravelTropes, including the dangers of [[ButterflyOfDoom stepping on a butterfly]] or [[TemporalParadox killing one's own grandfather]].
** And in the revived series' third Christmas special, [[spoiler:the ''entire population of London'' turns GenreSavvy -- after two straight years of horrible disasters and alien invasions on Christmas, they evacuate the city en masse on December 25, certain that some cruel god is going to have it in for them again. Not surprisingly, they're right.]]
** The Master is GenreSavvy enough to state that he's not going to hang around telling the hero all his plans, though not enough so to just kill the heroes rather than keeping them around to gloat.
** [[ShakespeareInFiction William Shakespeare]] is also pretty savvy, [[TheZerothLawOfTropeExamples rather unsurprisingly]]. [[spoiler: He even figures out on his own that the Doctor is a time traveller]].]]
* This seems to be a racial trait unique to [[HumansByAnyOtherName Tau'ri]] (Earthlings) on ''{{Stargate SG-1}}'', while all of the aliens are hilariously GenreBlind (except when they've been exposed to enough of Earth's pop-culture):
** In one episode, the plan to attack the BigBad's superweapon involves attacking in many small ships to hit the single, small target that is its only weak spot. Jack O'Neill points out that it's a stupid plan with ridiculously low odds of success and gets everyone who agrees with him to raise their hands, which most in the briefing eventually do... including Carter, who came up with it. And when a similar plan goes into effect in a later episode, Jack expresses disappointment that his call sign for the mission isn't "Red Leader".
** O'Neill and Teal'c have to get to the command center of Thor's ship, get prepared to fight off the Replicators to do it, only to find on opening the door that the room is literally crawling with them. For TheHero normally this is the point where they rush in, guns blazing, against incredible odds only to be forced out after a massive firefight. Jack's response is to mutter "To hell with that", close the door and go off to get a new plan.
** In another episode, Jaffa Master Bra'tac details the massive defenses between the team and the ship's Phlebotinum, which they will have to fight their way to... at the bottom of a large shaft that they are standing next to. O'Neill shrugs and drops several grenades down the shaft.
*** Then switched around when O'Niell disparages at the guards preventing their escape and Bra'tac shows him a "real" grenade.
** During a briefing where Carter explains that an asteroid is heading towards Earth and will surely destroy it, O'Neill says in a stage whisper, "I've seen this movie. [[ThrowAwayCountry It hits Paris]]."
** Daniel Jackson is quite genre savvy in "The Tomb", one of ''SG-1'''s (thankfully) few attempts at horror. On seeing the [[RedShirt redshirt]] -- er, Russian military officer walk down the hall to confront the monster, he waxes sarcastic: "Yes, you go down the dark hallway alone and I'll wait here in the dark room alone."
** At one point, a character remarks, "we might as well be wearing red shirts!"
** The episode "200" was full of genre-savviness. Among other things.
** In another episode, O'Neill and Teal'c are trapped in a GroundhogDayLoop, and eventually take advantage of it for HilarityEnsues. When they finally confront the person responsible, O'Neill asks him if his plan is to become "the king of Groundhog Day".
** Jack was rather disappointed when his suggestion of a name for Earth's first starship was rejected. He thought ''Enterprise'' was appropriate.
** Lieutenant Colonel Cameron Mitchell also displays genre savviness through memorized mission reports and old sayings (usually attributed to his Grandma). It seems to be a prerequisite for the series male leads to have quick wits and knowledge of tropes.
* Not just limited to the Milky Way Galaxy: on ''StargateAtlantis'', when trapped in a room with a pregnant woman, Sheppard informs her that she's probably going to go into labor because that's what always happens in movies. (Fortunately, it ends up ''not'' happening, though when later trapped on a ship in the next season it does.)
** Similarly, Dr. (Meredith) Rodney [=McKay=] is a ''StarTrek'' fan to the point of [[GenreSavvy Genre Savviness]]. He even says that Dr. Beckett is their Dr. [=McCoy=], due to his views on Stargate travel (hint: it's [=McCoy's=] view on transporters). After an alien woman falls in love with Lt. Col. Sheppard, he exclaims "Oh God, he ''is'' Kirk!"
* In ''StargateUniverse'', [[TheEveryman Everyman]] [[IKnowMortalKombat Geek Genius]] [[UnluckyEverydude Eli Wallace]] seems to share this trait, in large part due to his enthusiasm for science fiction. A promo had him comparing an ice planet to Hoth and the recently aired Air, Part 3 has him warning the expedition party that [[LetsSplitUpGang splitting up]] is [[MySignificanceSenseIsTingling a verrrrry bad idea]]. Three guesses as to if he's right or not. [[spoiler:He is, though nothing too dramatic happens. Basically half of the team goes through the stargate to an unexplored planet where they have a heavily implied [[OffscreenCrash Offscreen Death]].]]
* Surprisingly enough, this even showed up in a ''StarTrek'' series (''[[StarTrekDeepSpaceNine Deep Space Nine]]''). Sisko, chasing the traitor Eddington, realizes that Eddington sees himself as a noble hero straight out of fiction. Sisko then [[XanatosGambit arranges things, by intentionally playing the bad guy]], so that Eddington's only option is to sacrifice his freedom in order to save innocent people.
** Sisko isn't the only one either; Dax (or at least ''Jadzia'') occasionally has flashes of this, but usually only enough to [[DeadpanSnarker get a good line in]]. Garak on the other hand seems to know he's trapped in a fictional world, usually using his savvy to poke fun at Dr. Bashir's chronic GenreBlindness. Which is even funnier because Bashir's main hobby for much of the later seasons is playing holographic recreations of not-quite-Bond novels, about which ''he'' is extremely GenreSavvy and Garak knows ''nothing''...
*** With extra bonus irony from Garak being an ''actual'' former intelligence officer.
** Of course the magic really happens when Garak and Sisko finally team up [[spoiler: to bring the Romulans into the war with the Dominion]]. Best. Episode. Ever.
* Also the episode "A Fistful of Datas" in ''StarTrekTheNextGeneration''. Deanna Troi has read enough Westerns to know that the villain will try double-crossing Worf during the prisoner exchange.
** The episode "Elementary, My Dear Data" has its major conflict come up because of Data, in the role of Sherlock Holmes in a holodeck story, veering past GenreSavvy straight into [[spoiler:cutting straight to the ending by telling the first policeman he sees who the villain is and the crime because he already knew the story without doing any sleuthing]]; the resultant discussion over how Data could "enjoy" the exercise leads to the self-inflicted, ship-endangering mishap of the week.
* ''SpaceCases'': Commander Goddard, perhaps because he's the one with the most experience and has learned the rules of sci-fi tropes, i.e. "Which one is which? This always happens with {{Evil Twin}}s!"
* Given a half-twist in ''AshesToAshes''. Alex, [[spoiler:having been Sam Tyler's psychologist in 2006]], is very quickly ''convinced'' that she's hallucinating during a near-death experience, that she knows exactly what the rules of her imaginary world are, and that there will inevitably be ''some'' sequence of events that will allow her to wake up; rather than gradually assimilating into 1981, as Sam did to 1973, she seems almost to be trying to game her way out of it. Unfortunately, her [[WrongGenreSavvy assumptions tend to be less than infallible]] since she's working on the rules from ''LifeOnMars'', only some of which carried over to ''AshesToAshes''.
** Much to the sadistic glee of Zippy and George, apparently.
* The Hybrids (the semi-humanoid computers of the Basestars) in ''BattlestarGalactica'' seem to be aware that they're on a TV show ("Throughout history, the nexus between man and machine has spawned some of the most dramatic, compelling, and entertaining fiction"). Also, Admiral Adama says in the episode "Revelations" that if they give the alliance with the rebel cylons any more time it will just fall apart again, and gives the order to jump with the Rebel Basestar to their mutual destination instead of sending a scouting party first.
* ''TheMiddleman'' himself and his SideKick Wendy are both GenreSavvy, as is potential LoveInterest Tyler. Wendy and the Middleman have a tendency to make plans along the lines of "You go get the villain to start [[JustBetweenYouAndMe monologuing]], while I sneak around behind him to disable his dimensional portal."
** This eventually backfires when the villain doesn't show the slightest intention to give his monologue, demonstrating that he, as well, is GenreSavvy.
* The first episode of ''LA7'', aka ''S Club 7 in LA'', entitled "Into the Unknown" has them lost in a forest in which group of film-makers disappeared, which sounded awfully familiar to them.
* Some (but not all) of the characters on ''{{Lost}}'' are GenreSavvy. Boone suspects he is a RedShirt. Hurley and Charlie often question the wisdom of traipsing into a monster-inhabited jungle.
** On an episode, as Hurley and Charlie bury Ethan, Hurley says that he sees the situation ending badly, with Ethan becoming a zombie and chasing him and Charlie.
** In season 5, after [[spoiler: (most of) the Oceanic Six end up back on the Island in 1977]], Hurley hilariously attempts genre-savviness concerning [[spoiler: time travel]]. However, it seems that the entirety of his knowledge on the subject comes from [[spoiler:''BackToTheFuture'']], and he has, let's say, a lot of trouble grasping the show's more realistic implications, [[CrowningMomentOfFunny much to Miles' exasperation]].
* Hiro Nakamura on ''Series/{{Heroes}}''. "You're telling us your plan? What kind of overconfident nemesis are you?"
** Though not GenreSavvy enough to just listen to the plan.
** Ando, too. Hiro travels to the future and sees Ando attacking him. He tells Ando, and Ando suggests that it could be a robot or a shapeshifter.
* In the ''{{Farscape}}'' episode "Twice Shy", Crichton and D'Argo take it for granted that the DistressedDamsel they've rescued will turn out to be a villain, and resolve to dump her on the first habitable planet they come to. However this turns out to be not so easy [[spoiler:as she's actually a giant shapeshifting spider that feeds on emotions.]]
* In ''{{House}}'', characters occasionally realize where they are in the script. Thus, Wilson sometimes points out that he's just provided House with his routine epiphany, while, in one episode, House complains that the epiphany went to somebody else.
* ''{{NCIS}}'': "Tony, your dying words would be 'I've seen this film.'"
** The episode "Missing"
--->"Way to go, [=MacGyver=]! If that bomb were real, we'd be washing you off the streets of Baghdad right now! ''Never'' assume that a bomb timer is accurate! Bad guys watch movies, too."
* In one episode of ''{{Psych}}'' the characters realize they're surrounded by slasher movie cliches but then [[spoiler:even more Genre Savvy Shawn figures out all the cliches are a set up]], but then [[spoiler:people do start dying]].
* In ''TheWorstWitch'' TV series, Miss Crotchet gains this toward the end of the third season. She says in the penultimate (aired) episode that even though she has only been at the school for a year, she knows how arguments go between the teachers. Miss Hardbroom will argue for a change in the treatment of the pupils, Miss Drill will argue in favour of the pupils, she will say something and get ignored, then Miss Cackle will enter the argument and everything will revert to [[StatusQuoIsGod status quo]]. However, things don't pan out like that in that episode.
* [[RidiculouslyHumanRobot Sheriff Andy]] on ''{{Eureka}}'' was apparently programmed for GenreSavvy. Faced with a situation where only a main character could succeed he refused to go (because he was programmed to follow the town charter, which says the sheriff cannot take unreasonable risks). Once [[TheHero Carter]] went in Andy was able to follow and help because he knew that Carter being there increased the odds of success dramatically.
* ''{{Firefly}}''
** Instead of lecturing a henchman who has promised to [[WeWillMeetAgain hunt Mal down]] and [[TheLastThingYouEverSee kill him]], Mal simply shrugs, takes him at his word, and kicks the guy into an engine intake.
** When Mal and Saffron get interrupted trying to steal the Lassiter, Saffron starts talking fast and Mal plays along. Much to their relief, Haymer appears grateful and leaves to get Mal a reward. When he returns, however, he informs them that he had alerted security the second he saw them and now armed Alliance guards are coming to take them in.
* ''{{Supernatural}}'': In the Season 1 episode, "Asylum," Sam and Dean investigate a haunted, abandoned mental hospital. They find a teenage couple wandering around inside, just for kicks. Dean gives the girl, Kat, this piece of advice:
-->'''Dean''': You watch a lot of horror movies, right?\\
'''Kat''': Yeah, so?\\
'''Dean''': So next time you hear a place is haunted don't [[GenreBlind go in]].
* A GameShow example: In the original ''LetsMakeADeal'' with Monty Hall, when it came time for TheReveal of the endgame, Monty would always save the door with the Big Deal of the Day to be revealed last, opening the other two first. Contestants quickly figured this out, and would start [[Squee Squeeing]] and jumping for joy as soon as the door they had picked was the last one left unrevealed, or would become disappointed as soon as the door they had picked was opened without being saved for last.
* Found in ''HannahMontana'', believe it or not, where about midway through season 1 Lilly begins to develop a dangerous understanding of how Miley's ZanyScheme's usually work, sees them coming a good minute and a half before they actually happen, and why she can't say no, even though she knows she should.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Radio]]
* Bluebottle from ''TheGoonShow'' has learned some Genre Savviness after being [[StuffBlowingUp explosively]] [[DeathIsCheap deaded]] in most episodes -- he seems to know that his appearance will always result in his deading, and has taken some fairly extensive steps to avoid it (such as leaving Neddie tied to a pile of dynamite in England, then going to the middle of a desert in America in about four seconds). Of course, it fails, but that's because he hasn't quite figured the finer points of the RuleOfFunny.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* Norin the Wary from ''MagicTheGathering'' is convinced that everything in the world wants to hurt him. [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=111082 Except lemurs.]] This is more or less accurate.
* [[{{Metagame}} "The DM wouldn't send a monster that powerful against us! It has to be an illusion!"]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''PrincessWaltz'' is a good H-game not just because of its elements that work, but because it gleefully lampshades its own cliches. It's really hard to hate this game for following the stock conventions of its own genres when they cleverly keep poking fun at them at the same time. In fact, the BigBad and The PluckyComicRelief are walking fonts of GenreSavvy hilarity.
* ''HeroesOfMightAndMagic IV'' includes a sympathetic undead king who gets his underling to draw up plans for invading a neighbouring kingdom -- and them sends the plans to that kingdom, so they can fix the holes in their defenses. He explains that even though invading his neighbour would make him the most powerful ruler in the entire world, that would just mean [[GondorCallsForAid everyone else would unite their forces to take him down]].
** He later promotes a zombie to Captain and takes the trouble to learn his name for showing the sense and initiative to find out exactly what an enemy's ArtifactOfDoom did (saving his life in the process), and figures out that there must be a reason why no one has ever activated each of five {{MacGuffin}}s. He then takes [[SacrificialLamb appropriate precautions]].
* The protagonist's genre savviness is what jump-starts the plot in the FMV game ''Brain Dead 13''. Teen computer ace Lance is sent to fix a computer at the home of MadScientist and brain-in-a-tank Nero Neurosis, and quickly identifies it as a typical mad scientist's lair. Dr. Neurosis flies into a rage after Lance refers to him as an "[[ITakeOffenseToThatLastOne average villain]]", and he sics his homicidal toady Fritz on our hero.
* Almost ''all'' the characters in the ''{{Disgaea}}'' series, particularly Etna. Mao from the third game is [[DangerouslyGenreSavvy dangerously so]], concluding that the quickest method of kicking his dad off the throne and rule with his own iron fist is to actually ''become the hero'' of the game.
* In the ''GrandTheftAuto'' series, a pedestrian having a conversation about a nearby dead body will occasionally mutter "Don't worry, he'll respawn!" or something similar.
* Kyle Katarn (at least in ''Jedi Academy'') is genre savvy, lampshading tropes such as the fact [[LockedDoor the console for opening a door is probably hidden in some room twelve floors up]] and that [[MySignificanceSenseIsTingling Luke Skywalker]] ''[[MySignificanceSenseIsTingling always]]'' [[MySignificanceSenseIsTingling senses a disturbance in the Force]].
** He's like this to a lesser extent in ''Jedi Outcast,'' too. [[NeverTrustATrope Never trust a bartender with bad grammar.]]
*** He also finishes one of his mission objectives (disabling the Doomgiver's shields) during Glaek's monologue.
** In a lesser example, he always knows how to find keys.
* ''CityOfHeroes'' has one involving the Trolls and the Tsoo: while interfering with a meeting between the two gangs, heroes will come across Mr. Ting, a Tsoo, complaining to the Troll leader, "Haven't you learned anything? [[RevealingCoverup When you kidnap people, capes show up.]]"
** Many of the [=NPCs=] in the game tend to be genre savvy: civilians will complain about they can't walk down the street without someone trying to snatch their purse, kidnap them, or try to use them in strange rituals. And some of the villains are equally savvy; at least one fragment of dialogue for a low-level gangbanger references the endless-loop purse tug-of-war animation with a "No, really! I actually got the purse!"
*** In the same vein of the low-level gang member, a cry for help on part of the NPC struggling for her purse shows some degree of GenreSavvy as well, recognizing that since crying out about getting mugged won't summon help quickly enough, she yells that there's a fire instead.
** The pamphleteer in front of City Hall will sometimes say things like "Burn Perez Park to the ground! [[ScrappyLevel It's full of monsters and impossible to find your way around!]]"
* In ''ArmyOfTwo'', neither Rios nor Salem are particularly fazed by being [[OneManArmy sent in on missions to retake aircraft carriers or blast their way past the entirety of the People's Liberation Army,]] and at the endgame, they [[spoiler: take on practically all of the biggest PMC in the world without blinking.]] When confronting PsychoForHire Phillip Clyde, they don't even act surprised at his stream of increasingly irrational descriptions of what he's going to do to their corpses.
* ''IWannaBeTheGuy'' forces the ''player'' of all people to be Genre Savvy as a requirement to progress past...well, to pretty much progress period. Unfortunately, [[NintendoHard this isn't the only thing needed to progress]].
** It also invokes DeathByGenreSavviness several times -- primarily in the famous 'You jumped into a sword! You retard!' scene.
* Midna in ''TheLegendOfZelda: Twilight Princess'' is rather genre savvy (half because she's TheImp + DeadpanSnarker; half probably to make up for how [[StopHelpingMe ridiculously obvious her predecessor, Navi's, hints were]]).
-->'''Midna:''' [[KleptomaniacHero Look at that open window...this village is full of idiots.]]
* Arthas, aka the Lich King, of ''WorldOfWarcraft'', as of the newest expansion, has displayed some unexpected genre-savviness, going so far in one early encounter as to [[spoiler:deliberately murder your character, simply to prove a point about his own power, knowing full well you'll get right back up shortly and keep coming after him anyway]].
** Now that is ''DangerouslyGenreSavvy''.
* [[MsFanservice Rouge the Bat]] takes an abrupt turn to the Genre Savvy in ''[[SonicTheHedgehog Sonic Chronicles: The Dark Brotherhood]]'', LampshadeHanging everything from the convenient findability of the series' GreenRocks to the [[TalkLikeAPirate nonsensical dialects]] of [[SpaceIsAnOcean space brigands]].
* Henry of ''NoMoreHeroes'' is made of this trope. He correctly identifies himself as main character Travis' mysterious foil and just goes on from there.
* Guillo of ''BatenKaitos Origins'' displays genre-savviness throughout the game, questioning good guys who turn out to be villains, realizing when something has come "too easily," and knowing to run away before the inevitable [[HopelessBossFight "doomed to lose"]] boss fights.
* Zoey of ''Left4Dead'' is a prime example -- as a college student, she's seen a lot of zombie movies, and often spouts out lines relating to [[ZombieApocalypse their current situation]]. A good example happened recently in one of {{Dark}}'s playthroughs: the group stumbled upon an abandoned cabin in a forest, and she said, "An empty cabin in the middle of the woods. I know how ''this'' movie ends."
* Tohsaka in ''FateStayNight'', best exemplified by asking Caster [[HesDeadJim if she made sure to check Kotomine's body for signs of advanced deadness.]] [[NeverFoundTheBody Naturally, his 'corpse' disappears]] and makes way for Lancer's CrowningMomentOfAwesome.
* [[MonkeyIsland Guybrush Threepwood]] occasionally points out a trope during his adventures and tries to take advantage (generally by refusing to do something stupid).
* The title character of ''EatLeadTheReturnOfMattHazard'' is not only savvy about every genre he's ever been in, but he's savvy about every other game genre, too. He also has MediumAwareness, and these are half of what he uses to get through his situation. The other half, of course, is lots of guns.
* Apart from the whole "evil unkillable vampires" part and stuff of which she is by necessity very genre savvy, [[CloudCuckoolander Arcueid]] of ''{{Tsukihime}}'' also surprisingly displays some genre savviness in regards to relationships. Arcueid notes that Shiki sure is acting nice to everyone else, he says that he ''is'' nice to everyone... except her. You idiot! She's thrilled (but can't quite grasp why), because she recognizes him as being a {{tsundere}} -- and therefore making her the love interest!
* Refreshingly, the main character in ''ShinMegamiTensei: Devil Survivor'' can be played this way. Often, the main character can explain the plot to the other characters in the party. There's usually two dialogue options: Genre Savvy and Panicking/Has no idea what's going on. In most RPGs, the main character is prevented from being genre savvy in favor of having an ExpositionFairy explain everything for them. As a result, there's not really any scenes in the game where the main character says things like [[GenreBlind "That demonic cult member said he wanted to destroy the world with demons! I wonder what that could mean? Please explain it to me, party members."]]
* [[SamAndMax Sam & Max]] gradually grow into this throughout the [[TelltaleGames Telltale]] series, eventually reaching a point in ''Moai Better Blues'' where Max correctly guesses that the sea monkeys' prophecy about their messiah has [[TheThreeTrials three distinct requirements that the duo will have to fulfill in order to progress]]. The sea monkeys themselves, being GenreBlind, take his seemingly omniscient guess as evidence that he might be their messiah.
* In ''NeverwinterNights'', besides of making more explicable efforts to stop the plague, the BigGood and his minions set up an academy to train heroes to save the city. Of course, [[PlayerCharacter one of them]] does. However, this goes beyond any reasoning that might actually make sense in the game world, and seems more like a bad excuse to set up the ProtagonistWithoutAPast.
* In ''Uncharted: Drake's Fortune'', Nathan Drake invariably ends up in gunfights consisting of several waves of goons. Every so often, Drake will ask to himself "Where do these guys keep coming from?".
** In the second game, Among Thieves, Drake in one level has to retrieve an ally from a broken elevator. As he does so, Drake tells himself "I swear to God, if there's a zombie around the next corner...". Mutant Spaniards, or "zombies", were a special foe from the first game, in a level where Drake again had to rescue a friend from a small compartment.

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Comics]]
* Elan, from ''{{The Order of the Stick}}'', is a bit like Malicia in the Pratchett example, in that he suffers from being ''too'' genre savvy. [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0663.html Like here.]] The other members of the titular band of adventurers also tend to lack GenreBlindness, but Elan's the only one notable for occasionally ''needing'' some. [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0556.html Not that it doesn't occasionally work out for him.]]
** Really, one of the main points of ''The Order of the Stick'' is genre savviness. Try this [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0555.html comic page]] where even the stupid orc chieftain is hilariously genre savvy.
** Elan's mentor, a dashing sky pirate who helps him literally [[TookALevelInBadass take a level in badass]] also displays Genre Savviness -- hoping never to meet Elan again, lest he become TheObiWan.
** Vaarsuvius recently displayed a blend of cynicism and genre-savviness by [[spoiler:killing someone (Kubota) just because Elan is holding him prisoner, and V knows that Elan only takes major villains prisoner, and rationalizing it by explaining how the trial would have been a tedious 20- or 30-episode affair which would interfere with the bigger picture.]]
*** More recently, our trusty wizard, when confronted with a silver-tongued imp, demonstrates that s/he knows what happens when you make a DealWithTheDevil, regardless of its stature.
*** [[spoiler:And then goes on to make a slightly different deal with different devils anyway.]]
** Whilst all the characters are GenreSavvy to some extent, Elan is clearly more Savvy than the rest of them; unfortunately, his status as CloudCuckoolander means that the others are only inclined to dismiss his concerns in their moments of GenreBlindness, only to learn too late that they really should have paid attention.
-->'''Elan:''' ''Fight, Fight, Fight, Fight, the urge to say "I told you so!"''
* Cherry Blossomfeather, of ''RPGWorld'', has an uncommon lack of genre blindness. While it's eventually [[JustifiedTrope justified]], she's largely a way for the author to poke fun at {{RPG}} tropes.
* Contrast with Ardam from ''{{Adventurers}}!'' -- he plays the same role in the comic, but eventually it's a subversion of GenreSavvy, as he finally realizes that no matter how nonsensical the rules of the world are, they're still the rules of the world, and it's irrational to go against them.
** This culminates and is subverted in Ardam's Crowning Moment of Awesome where he: [[spoiler: Bends the normal rule of summoning "You can only summon one creature at a time" by instead sending the creature to the realm of the summons. This allows ALL the summons to attack the enemy.]]
** Karn from ''{{Adventurers}}!'' is extremely GenreSavvy about computer {{RPG}}s despite his general stupidity. Good for him that he lives in such a game. The much smarter Ardam is continually frustrated in his [[WrongGenreSavvy expectations that the game world physics make sense from the real world physics point of view]].
* Othar Tryggvassen, GentlemanAdventurer! of ''GirlGenius'' is largely aware of the conventions of the genre, and jumps into their application a bit too quickly at times.
** When Agatha (the heroine) meets him, he's being held captive by the Baron. His first words to her are "Ah, you must be the villain's [[MadScientistsBeautifulDaughter beautiful daughter]]. Just in time." Or, if not, he assumes she's the "plucky lab assistant," and in any case, is going to rescue him and become his "spunky girl sidekick." Barring one minor incident, he persists in thinking of her as his sidekick no matter how much she protests. Later on, when they meet again, he tells Agatha that she's a hero by nature, which she denies -- proving her own genre blindness, as even the ''cat'' understands her destiny.
** Agatha actually is GenreSavvy (except for her refusal to admit she's a hero), which she demonstrates by '''[[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20031015 not]]''' releasing Othar:
---->'''Agatha:''' Look, no offense, but I've been around labs most of my life.\\
'''Othar:''' Oh?\\
'''Agatha:''' I'd rather ''not'' be the easily-duped minion who sets the insanely dangerous experiment free.\\
''Or'' the ''hostage'' who ensures the smoothtalking villain's ''escape''.\\
'''Othar''': Er...\\
'''Agatha:''' I don't have ''any proof'' that you are ''really'' Othar Tryggvassen or even really ''human''.\\
'''Othar:''' Ah...\\
'''Agatha:''' This girl sidekick job doesn't call for a lot of ''smarts'', does it?
*** Gil and Tarvek demonstrate their ''savoir de genre'', and Agatha a gap in hers, [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20091007 here]].
** And Lars' genre savvitude is enough to [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20060410 help infiltrate a castle]].
* Ellie, in ''OkashinaOkashi'' is familiar with manga tropes. But like Sugimoto, she's never the heroine of those stories.
* In [[http://www.bitmapworld.com/smcomic.cgi?a=43 this issue]] of ''BitmapWorld,'' Cyan speculates on who her teacher may be, based on various [[{{Schoolteachers}} Schoolteacher Tropes.]] After being reminded that she's not a character in a sitcom, she discovers her teacher is [[HippieTeacher the Hippie trope.]]
* Sam Starfall in ''Freefall'' knows about genre conventions, and will set them up, but doesn't get the point of them.
* The two title characters in ''StickmanAndCube'' have NoFourthWall, and thus know their tropes.
* Meji from ''[[http://www.errantstory.com/index.php Errant Story]]'' is quite up-to-date on her tropes. Among the more notable examples is her awareness of the dangers of SuperpowerMeltdown ("All the stories that starts like this ends with 'And then his head exploded...'") and her instant recognition of [[http://www.errantstory.com/comic.php?date=2007-06-27 the sheer number of tropes involved in the backstory of the Amraphel siblings]]. Ellis, as well as several minor characters, also gets in on the action from time to time, but she's a step ahead of them -- at one point, she deliberately invokes DeusExMachina. Literally '[[http://www.errantstory.com/comic.php?date=2002-12-30 invokes]]'...
** Read forward -- [[spoiler:It works...]]
* Sam Sprinkles, from ''ZebraGirl'', is a former [[AnimatedActors cartoon actor]] who is way too GenreSavvy for his own good, and has a tendency to get very, very mouthy with people over their role in the story.
** Considering he browbeats a character into a HeelFaceTurn, mouthy doesn't even begin to cover it.
* All of the main characters of ''SluggyFreelance'' are highly Genre Savvy, though normally only after they fall into one of the traps of the genre at the time. Best shown in [[http://www.sluggy.com/daily.php?date=990812 this strip]].
* Gordito in the fourth episode of ''TheAdventuresOfDoctorMcNinja''.
-->'''Ben Franklin:''' But the excitement does get to you! I suppose this lifestyle isn't so bad.\\
'''Gordito:''' ''Ah! Don't!'' Dude, in "this lifestyle" if you say something like that, it's pretty much like pushing a "make the situation worse" button. It's the opposite of the one they have at the office supply store.\\
''(helicopter shows up)''\\
'''Gordito:''' ''See?!'' That's Schrodinger's helicopter right there.\\
'''Ben Franklin:''' You must mean "Murphy's Helicopter".\\
'''Gordito:''' I'm twelve.\\
'''Ben Franklin:''' Well it can only be more ninjas, and we've had no problem with those so far.\\
'''Gordito:''' Oh ''please'' keep talking!
* ''KnowledgeIsPower'': EmJay is about to ask David to pretend to be her boyfriend, but remembering how poorly that goes in fiction, changes her mind.
* ''[[http://www.shapequest.net ShapeQuest]]'' is GenreSavvy, such as when Theo tells Lance they can't buy higher quality armor because the game developers wouldn't allow it, or their [[http://http://www.shapequest.net/?id=18 lower job class levels]].
* Miranda West of ''TheWotch'' seems pretty GenreSavvy, calling out [[spoiler:Natasha Dahlet]] on her use of a villainous cliché and often pointing out some other clich�s, like when she [[http://www.thewotch.com/index.php?epDate=2006-12-01 threatens to turn Anne into a newt]].
* The latest arc of ''MSFHigh'' revolves around the fact that the "pocket-universe" in which the story takes place conforms to genre rules. This is exploited by many students most recently in the form of the "runner", an anime girl who will run everywhere eyes closed with an armload of books in the hopes of causing a romantic comedy style collision.
* [[TheNonAdventuresOfWonderella Wonderella]] [[http://nonadventures.com/2007/12/22/a-christmas-peril/ here.]]
* The whole routine of K, the main character of ''[[http://antagonist.swimtrunkstudio.com/index.php The Antagonist]]''... Though his genre savvy has gotten a little spotty at times ever since getting kicked out of the League of Villains, if they hadn't been actively trying to screw him over on nearly every job, he'd be quite DangerouslyGenreSavvy.
* How tragic it must be to be a ''[[IWasKidnappedByLesbianPiratesFromOuterSpace Genre Savvy Redshirt]]''.
* The Major in the ''{{Hellsing}}'' fancomic ''AndShineHeavenNow'' is familiar enough with fandom terms that [[spoiler: he gives a fanboy version of his famous 'I Love War' speech to subdue the fangirls attached to everyone. It's BetterThanItSounds.]]
* ''MSFHigh'': People at this school have come to realize it is based on Anime. Leads to lots of InvokedTropes.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* This was the main shtick of Slappy Squirrel on ''{{Animaniacs}}'', who, as an old hand at cartoons, was pretty GenreSavvy.
* In the ''TeenTitans'' episode "Fear Itself", the Titans are investigating strange goings-on in their base after watching a horror movie. Starfire suggests [[LetsSplitUpGang they split up]], but Beast Boy [[NeverSplitTheParty vehemently protests this plan]]:
-->'''Beast Boy:''' Did you not see the movie?! When you split up, the monster picks you off one by one, starting with the good-looking [[PluckyComicRelief comic relief]]... me!
** Beast Boy's knowledge of tropes would come in handy again in the TrappedInTVLand episode.
* Due to being TV-holics, multiple characters on ''FamilyGuy'' are GenreSavvy.
* Kim, Ron, Shego, and Senor Senior Jr. are of the most GenreSavvy on ''KimPossible''. This however doesn't prevent from falling victim to GenreTropes (or that they fall into the tropes as part of a 4th wall bending realisation that they have to do so to have a story), but does make for some great LampshadeHanging afterwards.
** [[TheLibby Bonnie]] also Genre Savvy when she ends up on missions, asking why Dementor hasn't simply set off his plan instead of gloating, and about how complicated that plan is as well.
* Green Arrow proves to be GenreSavvy in ''Batman: TheBraveandtheBold'' when he tells Speedy never to ask "You and what army?" after it lands them in trouble.
* ''AvatarTheLastAirbender'':
** Sokka, TheSmartGuy, is the first to spot CharactersAsDevice like the WellIntentionedExtremist Jet and the StepfordSmiler Joo Dee. In one episode, after being suddenly awoken, he groggily mutters "Huh? Uh? What's going on? Did we get captured again?" and sure enough, Aang is captured and imprisoned within an impenetrable fortress in the very next episode. He is also aware that the team is a WeirdnessMagnet, of the team's [[FanNickname Fan Nicknames]], of his status as BadAssNormal, and even of his own character ("Sokka, the Meat and Sarcasm Guy -- it's pretty much my whole identity."). He also has a good grasp of Murphy's Law, "I've never not slept before! What if I fall asleep and something happens? And something ALWAYS happens!"
** Aang, for his part, somehow has pretty good knowledge of IndianaJones tropes ([[spoiler:Zuko]], unfortunately, [[GenreBlind doesn't]]).
** Azula is DangerouslyGenreSavvy.
* Flash from ''JusticeLeague'' occasionally shows traits of this, as this quote from "The Brave and the Bold" demonstrates:
-->'''Flash:''' Usually when it's this empty, flesh eating zombies show up.\\
'''Green Lantern:''' [[YouWatchTooMuchX You watch too many horror movies]]... ''(interrupted by the sound of a brainwashed mob)''\\
'''Flash:''' Maybe ''you'' don't watch ''enough''.
* The smooth, fast-talking Hades in Disney's ''Hercules'', especially apparent within the syndicated series. Unfortunately, he is surrounded by [[GenreBlindness Genre Blind]], [[SurroundedByIdiots idiotic minions]].
* Played straight and surprisingly seriously in ''TheIncredibles''. A [[AscendedFanboy former fan]] who was rejected as a sidekick by Mr. Incredible, Syndrome, used his GenreSavvy to master exotic new technologies with which he [[CutLexLuthorACheck built a fortune as a weapon designer]]... and then decimated the ranks of the surviving superheroes. He even cuts himself off in the middle of [[JustBetweenYouAndMe "monologuing"]] when when Mr. Incredible nearly gets the drop on him.
** Syndrome's one moment of GenreBlindness is when he fails to realize [[spoiler:the ultra-sophisticated robot he built ''is'' smart enough to wonder why it has to take orders.]] Also, at the very end, [[spoiler: his non-breakaway cape.]] Seeing how many in-universe examples Edna could reel off, Syndrome should have known better. This may less an example of {{genre blindness}} than an example of {{death by genre savviness}}, considering that [[spoiler:supers rarely die by jet-intake in ther comics or television series.]] Mainly because [[spoiler:capes are usually very detachable and get torn, ripped off, etc.]]
*** He also falls prey to {{Bond Villain Stupidity}} when he [[spoiler:traps the entire family in the same escape-proof room so they can experience his moment of triumph via satellite TV after they've been captured. He even leaves a fully-fuelled rocket in his base so they can follow him in it]]. He seems to lose his {{Genre Savvy}}ness as the movie progresses.
* In an episode of ''TheBoondocks'', where Robert is telling his grandchildren an obviously fake story of his ancestor Catcher Freeman, Riley's Genre Savviness ruins the story by pointing out all the bad action movie clichés and even predicting how the climax is going to be.
* Also happened in an episode of ''{{Legion of Super Heroes}}''. Bouncing Boy is the 21st Century horror movie aficionado, so he warns them of the rules. And then, the disappearing of teammates begins, and:
-->'''Bouncing Boy:''' Here, Kitty, Kitty... Oh, no... ''[[{{Aliens}} I went back for the cat]].''
* Surprisingly, the otherwise extremely dimwitted Fry from ''{{Futurama}}'', to the point where tropes seem to be all he ''does'' understand. It's very heavily implied that this is from his near-constant intake of television, movies, etc.
** Fry also eventually turns out to know every single campfire story ever told.
--->'''Leela:''' Fine, Mr. Know-it-all about something finally, why don't you tell a story?
* Michelangelo in ''[[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2003 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Fast Forward]]'' is so GenreSavvy that he was teaching tropes to a number of onlookers, particularly describing horror tropes.
* #21 and #24 from ''TheVentureBrothers''. In "The Lepidopterists", they are well aware that they posses the perfect combination of "expendable and invulnerable". Upon being sent off on a mission with #1, they remark that his cool professionalism marks him for death, while their bumbling incompetence will see them through to the end. Later, when they point out that #1's lack of a name makes him a RedShirt, he reveals his name, only to have it dismissed as a device to make his impending death more emotional. Ultimately, he meets his fate when his impressive escape techniques draw the attention of Brock Sampson. #21 and #24 were pretending to be wax sculptures at the time. [[spoiler: Ironically, or at least in a cruel twist of fate, in the season 3 finale, 24 stands near the Monarch's car when it suddenly explodes. He's killed in the blast as 21 unintentionally catches his burning head.]]
** If you're gonna mention ''TheVentureBrothers'' you ''can't'' forget Dr. Venture, who spends half the time making sarcastic genre savvy comments. Brock does it a lot too, especially when they're in danger. Come to think of it, a great deal of the cast are.
*** Hank and Dean notably ''aren't''. [[WrongGenreSavvy They think they are, though]], with all their presumed ''{{Hardy Boys}}'' style mysteries. This occasionally works out for them, one example is in the episode "Fallen Arches" when Triana Orpheus is kidnapped by the super villain Torrid and Dean thinks to run the hot water in the shower so the steam will reveal a message on the mirror.
* Subverted in this exchange from ''TheSimpsons'':
-->'''Lisa:''' This broom closet is not what it seems. It's a secret surveillance room guarded by a tiny evil robot!\\
'''Homer:''' Ugh. Is this gonna be like one of those horror movies where we open the door and everything's normal and we think you're crazy, but then there really ''is'' a killer robot and the next morning you find me impaled on a weather vane? Is that what this is, Lisa?
** Played straight when there's an episode where Homer becomes an opera star and someone is trying to murder him (long story). To protect him during an opera, Chief Wiggum orders the chandelier to be pre-crashed.
** Also, Lisa manages to apply it to real life in a somewhat rational fashion, as she plans to be a jazz musician who is unappreciated in her time but discovered as a genius decades later. "And I may or may not die young, I haven't decided yet."
** Also in a halloween special, Bart and Lisa are trapped in Itchy & Scratcy's universe and are inside a car about to be murdered. Bart uses his cartoon knowledge to draw an eject button, press it and escape.
** Homer applies a bit of genre savviness to help Apu and Mandula get pregnant by setting them up in a scenario with every cliche in the book of the LawOfInverseFertility.
* ''SouthPark'' makes regular use of this trope, most recently in "Pandemic", in which minor character Craig spends the whole episode complaining about how genre blind the main characters are. "Stanley's Cup" uses this trope heavily. Partially subverted in "Butt Out" in which smart-guy Kyle attempts, and fails, to convince the other major characters to not follow the show's formula for once.
** Or the episode "Canceled" when the boys realize they're in a rerun of the very first episode.
** Also Token's name fits this trope, as he clearly is the token black guy and token rich guy.
** Buttersin the Imaginationland trilogy. "Watch it guys, I think this guy wants to rape us."
* Gwen from ''TotalDramaIsland'' tries to educate the other campers about the rules of horror movies only to be blatantly ignored... except by fellow horror-buff Duncan, who successfully becomes the [[FinalGirl Final Guy]] because of it.
* Hades from Disney's ''Hercules''. After Hercules makes a deal that only appears to benefit Hades, Hades briefly stops to think about this, wondering if the deal actually has a downside or if it's too good to be true. Pity that greed and impatience win out over intelligence.
* In ''{{Gargoyles}}'', Xanatos manages to restrain several of the gargoyle heroes, and sets up a deathtrap-like situation where a vat of poison will pour down upon them.
-->'''Xanatos:''' This is my first attempt at really cliched villainy. How am I doing?".
** On the whole, David [[XanatosPlannedThisIndex Xanatos]] is clearly aware of what is expected from a cartoon villain, and sometimes comments on the clich�s he's performing or avoiding. He still rarely achieves DangerouslyGenreSavvy levels, since the methods by which he's foiled are usually relatively standard fare, [[XanatosRoulette even if he never admits defeat]].
* The latest ''StrawberryShortcake'' series paints Sour Grapes as slightly genre savvy, at least enough to know that any plan the Peculiar Purple Pieman tries to pull off against Strawberry is going to [[FailureIsTheOnlyOption fail miserably]].
* ''PinkyAndTheBrain'': Brain has a Genre Savvy epiphany in "Megalomaniacs Anonymous".
-->'''Brain:''' The whole universe is playing a little [[CosmicPlaything cosmic joke]]! "We'll give Brain an obsession with [[TakeoverTheWorld taking over the world]] and then ''never let him succeed!''" Hah-hah-hah-hah! Isn't it funny?!
* Most of the characters on ''Titan Maximum'' know the conventions of the {{Mecha Show}}. As well as several other film genres. For instance, the following exchange between [[TheHero Palmer]] and [[TheSmartGuy Willie]] after they hear banjo music in the distance:
-->'''Willie''': What was that?
-->'''Palmer''': [[DontGoInTheWoods The worst sound your anus ever heard.]]
* ''TheWeekenders'' tends to feature a fairly interesting variation in that each of the four main characters take turns being GenreSavvy. For example, if Tino is the one learning the lesson for the day, Tish, Carver and/or Lor will spend most of the episode either A) waiting for the "I told you so" opportunity to arise, B) actively discouraging him from doing whatever it is he's supposed to be learning not to do, or C) helping him do it, because they need to be taken down a peg in the same department, too. [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded occasionally]].
-->'''Lor''': How do I know this is going to end in disaster?
-->'''Tino''': Years of experience.

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Real Life]]
* To some extent, the "nicer form" (so to speak) of counterinsurgency can be said to require this to some extent, at least to avoid a ZeroPercentApprovalRating.
* Murphy's Law, FinaglesLaw, SturgeonsLaw and their many variants are all intended to be this, whether you agree depends on where you stand on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism.
* Hell, everyone at this wiki may as well count. I mean, [[MetaConcepts the idea on its own]].
** But especially in the WildMassGuessing page sometimes. It's possible to become so savvy about the genre and the creator's themes and habits that you can predict certain revelations and plot points way before they happen.
*** [[WrongGenreSavvy And sometimes you can't]].
[[/folder]]
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