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* ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'': saKhan Connor Rood is this for his Clan, Ice Hellion. While the rest of his Clan and his Khan are all LeeroyJenkins, Connor actually takes his time to think and make some use practical and pragmatic decisions to save whats left of his Clan, when they are getting stomped by Clan Jade Falcon, and Hell's Horses.
* In ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'', the character with the highest Wisdom is a party is likely to become this by default, as Wisdom is the measure of a character's common sense and egotism. The same applies to gameplay, as less wise characters such as Barbarians or Knights will fail to notice [[FailedASpotCheck the obvious]], including traps, ulterior motives and just about everything else, whereas characters with higher Wisdom such as Clerics or Druids will be much more invested in their surroundings and in the situations they find themselves.
** Intelligence often plays this role as well, since it's the stat for anything that involves taking clues and fitting them together. Additionally, the variants of the system with skill-purchase systems make a high-intellect character potentially better at everything, even tasks for which his statistics aren't suited (a high-int character might have spare points to train sense motive or spot, for instance, and be better at both than a wisdom character with fewer points to distribute). Finally, intelligence bonus translates directly into understanding a larger number of languages, meaning that while the rest of the party is speculating on what kind of dark god was worshipped in this ancient temple, the [=INT=] character might have just read a sign and realized it's actually an ancient marketplace half an hour ago.
* In the ''TabletopGame/OldWorldOfDarkness'' and its spiritual successor the ''TabletopGame/NewWorldOfDarkness'' you can take merits which make you this. Everyone around you sees a werewolf transform, panics, and remembers it as a dog, sees a Vampire bite someone and dismisses it as teenagers making out, and has a WeirdnessCensor so strong that magic actually unravels itself in their presence (and then they forget it). You, however, are literally the only person you know mentally capable of adding two ones and getting two instead of one.
** Note that, this being the Worlds of Darkness, this... doesn't usually work out very well for the people with the merit.
** ''TabletopGame/WerewolfTheApocalypse'' has the Children of Gaia tribe. While all the other tribes fight over how to properly help [[MotherEarth Gaia]] and combat the Wyrm's defilement of the world, with opinions that tend to fall somewhere on the scale of 'blame particular group of humans for everything and whine about how you're not supposed to commit mass murder against them' to 'poke evil with a stick and hope it doesn't kill or corrupt you' or 'I dunno', the Children of Gaia are the ones who go 'now, hear me out... what if we tried to make the world ''[[WorldHalfFull better]]''?' Most of the other tribes think they're naive, but it's pretty heavily implied that the only reason said methods aren't working is because so few of the other Garou are ''helping''.
** In ''TabletopGame/GeniusTheTransgression'', Klagen - who Catalyze in situations of grief and loss - tend to play this role. While Klagen can certainly do dumb and reckless things as a way of working through their issues, their TraumaticSuperpowerAwakening leaves them with a keen investment in preventing tragedies...while Grimms have a HairTriggerTemper, Hoffnungs are WellIntentionedExtremist's, Staunen will often do anything ForScience, and Neids tend to be motivated by revenge, and as such are more likely to end up causing them instead.
** In ''TabletopGame/LeviathanTheTempest'', this is the curse of the Nu strain. Their Beloved ''always'' wind up as fanatical idiots (even by Beloved standards) with a major case of ComplexityAddiction and ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim''-like talents of screwing up even the most simple tasks. 2e's writeup mentions one Nu's Beloved who thought a ''shopping list'' was a carefully-coded demand for a VirginSacrifice.
* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
** The Space Wolves are the one of the very few Sane Men in the galaxy and one of the Sanest in the Imperium. Consider: [[http://wh40k.lexicanum.com/wiki/Months_of_Shame after the first victory on Armageddon]], the Inquisition starts rounding up civilians into forced labor camps and shooting down Imperial Guard ships, all in the name of preventing the knowledge of Chaos to spread, the whole thing masterminded by a ''spectacularly'' inept Inquisitor. The Space Wolves who had fought alongside these people did not take kindly to their eradication, and used their ships to transport Guardsmen, refusing to respond to Inquisitorial and even Grey Knights fire. The whole thing ended up in a cold war that almost ended in open war with the Wolves, their planet-fortress severely damaged, and a Grey Knights Grand Master dead.
** Bjorn the Fell-Handed is practically the only human in the entire Imperium who is old enough to remember the "God Emperor" back when he was alive and [[HollywoodAtheist his real views on religion]], so he tends to react to holy reverence with bitter dismissal. In his words, "calling him a god was what started [[CrapsackWorld this whole mess]]."
** In the literal sense, a Navigator in the warp. Everyone else sees visions from their best dreams and darkest nightmares... a Navigator sees his path, the figurative lighthouse, and the various terrain hazards (such as daemons). He sees them in metaphorical terms, yes, but he can actually parse it in a functional way while everyone else is busy gibbering.
%%** The [[MonsterClown Harlequins]] ironically might be this to the Eldar race, and possibly the setting as a whole.
** According to the Eldar philosopher Uthan the Perverse, the Orks of all people are this due to being the only race with a lifestyle that lets them enjoy [[CrapsackWorld the state of the setting]].
---> "The Orks are the pinnacle of creation. For them, the great struggle is won. They have evolved a society which knows no stress or angst. Who are we to judge them? We Eldar who have failed, or the Humans, on the road to ruin in their turn? And why? Because we sought answers to questions that an Ork wouldn't even bother to ask! We see a culture that is strong and despise it as crude."
** The T'au Empire. The only faction that uses futuristic technology with futuristic tactics (no chainsaw sword-fights, medieval [[PoweredArmor power-armour]] and pointless meat-grinder assaults and {{last stand}}s for them, thank you very much). They're also the only faction that doesn't consider every other species worthy only of extermination. The T'au actually attempt diplomacy first and have incorporated other species into their empire peacefully - though that peaceful annexation is sometimes hinted to be mind control. Although [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] depending on the writer, it may be that their progressive Greater Good ideology is profoundly naive and will eventually drive their species to extinction. In some of the lore of the grim darkness of the far future, mindless zeal and irrational hatred ''keeps you alive'', while tolerance and open-mindedness gets you killed. And sometimes it doesn't, because the T'au punch well above their weight class and characters like Bjorn the Fell-Handed and Roboute Guilliman certainly seem to imply the Imperium is on a terribly self-destructive path, and the T'au sell well enough that the T'au are not likely to go anywhere anytime soon. [[CrapsackWorld That should tell you everything you need to know about what kind of universe this is.]]
** Strangely, given the role his civilization plays, the Emperor of Mankind (at least, he tried):
*** Explicitly told his people to be atheist to prevent the formation of gods from the warp, including himself. Kept the reasoning secret (from everyone) because he knew someone would be dumb enough to do it on purpose if everyone knew. Unfortunately, FailureIsTheOnlyOption in this case, as the gods of Chaos are not sustained by prayer but emotion: to kill them off, you'd have to arrange for every sentient species to stop feeling rage, lust, hope, love or despair (or kill every sentient species, which is what the Necrons were aiming for).
*** Made his children strong enough that they couldn't fall to chaos unless they went willingly, then gave them riches, power, and wisdom so they'd have no reason to do so (he wasn't counting on terminal stupidity or terminal diseases, unfortunately).
*** With godlike power to shape the universe in any way he saw fit... decided to focus on logistics and navigation for his empire above all else. Even over the actual war part of his crusade.
*** Designed his empire to continue functioning after his death, even though he was functionally immortal. Made sure he had an heir (Magnus) actually fit to take (as in, 'install self into') the throne (though that ended poorly, it was still a good idea in a universe where almost every idea anyone has is terrible).
*** De-centralized the knowledge of the greatest technical achievements of his age using super-blueprints on various planets so that no one source of knowledge could be corrupted and screw everything, if the [=STCs=] were him.
*** Generally built an empire that's still running 10000 years after his death despite pretty much every single citizen with even a modicum of power being either too stupid to imagine daemons exist, stupid enough to know they exist and make deals with them anyhow, or literally mind-shattered insane.
** Literature/CiaphasCain has an element of this trope as well. Everyone else can't wait to rush off into battle with the latest horrifying enemy, but [[FakeUltimateHero he wants to save his own skin]].
*** Cain himself realized that while Summary Executions could restore morale in a pinch, those [[ThePoliticalOfficer Commissars]] that do so (especially if they're TriggerHappy) tend to not last long. They either get lynched by their own unit or are "[[UnfriendlyFire accidentally]]" killed on duty conveniently when no one's around. Cain found it better to reward competence (usually with an extra booze ration) and to stand up for his men to earn their respect. Tellingly, he's one of the few (if not only) Commissar to actually make it to [[RetiredBadass retirement]], and made a point of telling this to the future Commissar Cadets.
*** Cain's love interest Amberly Vail is this to much of the Inquisition, an organisation where even the moderates tend to end up firing on each other for doing moderation wrong. Amberly believes in doing her duty, certainly, and she's entirely willing to kill in the name of it, but she mostly seems uninterested in the ideological slapfights that have been Inquisitorial tradition since the original release of ''TabletopGame/{{Inquisitor}}''.
** During the Literature/HorusHeresy, most of the Traitor Legions had a few people who kept their marbles and remained uncorrupted, at least until the chaotic elements got around to murdering them in one way or another -- Loken and Torgaddon for the Sons of Horus, Saul Tarvitz and Solomon Demeter for the Emperor's Children, Garro for the Death Guard and so on.
** The level of corruption varied quite significantly between Traitor Legions during the Heresy, meaning that in engagements featuring multiple Legions, one was probably playing this role. For example, the Iron Warriors (LawfulEvil siege specialists with no regard for human life) were generally not good ''people'', but they were at least likely to be controllable in comparison to the World Eaters (uncontrollable berserkers), Word Bearers (fanatical zealots), Night Lords (sadistic monsters) or Emperor's Children (demented hedonists). Notably, the dying days of the Heresy saw Perturabo, Primarch of the Iron Warriors, ''[[ScrewThisImOuttaHere give up and leave]]'' because the Legions at the siege were, in many cases to a man, no longer able to reliably follow orders and in some cases possibly no longer able to comprehend them.
** Among said sadistic monsters, Captain Jago Sevatarion played this role. Given that Sevatarion was TheSociopath in a very literal sense, had a particular line in FlayingAlive, and coined the phrase "Death to the False Emperor" (which would be repeated by nearly every Chaos Marine for at least ten thousand years), [[DysfunctionJunction that should tell you something about the Night Lords]]; Jago was the rational one not because he was ''good'', but because he at least understood what the Night Lords actually were and how they got to be that way.
** "In an hour of Darkness, a blind man is the best guide. In an age of Insanity, look to the madman to show the way." This saying has been part of the game's lore since the Rogue Trader days.

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