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* In general, many players will take on this trope also as a means to avoid the cliché plotline of having the villain kidnap the player's parents as hostages. For many other players, this is just an easy character development device to justify their character's attitude towards the world.
* The ''TabletopGame/VampireTheMasquerade'' and ''TabletopGame/MageTheAwakening'' core rulebooks specifically advise players not to play orphans or people who are estranged from their parents specifically because this trope is used so often and there are lucrative storytelling possibilities involved in having mortal/[[{{muggles}} Muggle friends]] and family.
* Present in ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'': the Emperor's twenty clone sons were lost in a warp storm due to the Chaos gods and scattered across the galaxy to be raised by whoever-or whatever-found them. [[RaisedByWolves Wolves, on one occasion]].
** Also mandatory for Commissars. Whether they are "heroes" [[AlternateCharacterInterpretation is a varying impression]], [[BlackAndGrayMorality them being in Warhammer 40000.]]
* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'': Malekith has parental issues that stem back from his childhood. His father, the Phoenix King Aenarion, died trying to stave off Chaos, leaving Malekith to be raised by his mother Morathi. Even after getting corrupted, seared beyond recognition and becoming enemies towards the High Elves, Malekith and Morathi stick together, forming the Dark Elves and governing Naggaroth until the [[TabletopGame/WarhammerTheEndTimes End Times]], where [[spoiler:upon becoming the Phoenix King, Malekith ditches a majority of the Dark Elves, causing Morathi to abandon her son and instead seek retribution]].
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