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Power Harness

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Armor plating has tradeoffs — it's expensive, slows you down and makes you a bigger target — so when it can't actually block common enemy weapons it's just dead weight. Dreadnoughts have proven to be more survivable with "all or nothing" designs which armor the vital areas but leave the remainder of the ship largely unprotected (at the cost of being hobbled even by vessels with weak guns). A Power Harness is this principle applied to Powered Armor — keeping a basic shell with mounted weapons, thrusters, servos, etc., but dropping the actual "Armor" part. Most suits fall between two extremes of design: the Infantry-style harness is a single unit that mostly follows the shape of the user's body, while the Cavalry-style harness is worn as multiple protruding components which give it a non-human silhouette.

By nature, the user tends to be a Fragile Speedster/Glass Cannon unless the suit compensates with Deflector Shields of some kind.

Often, especially if flight-capable, this equipment is designed for fighting a particular type of enemy against whom conventional weapon and/or armor designs are ineffective; in many cases, it explicitly needs to be worn by some Super-Soldier, Ridiculously Human Robot or otherwise-gifted person who has the Required Secondary Powers to operate such a barebone "combat vehicle". That is, faced with a Kaiju who can easily shoot fighter jets out of the sky, any military would love being able to forgo building a complete jet and just strap the engines and armaments directly to a soldier's body... if they could only find a soldier who can pull off high-speed maneuvers in such a rig without simultaneously suffocating and snapping in half.

While not always, these kinds of suits are often depicted on young women, who may wear them over a Latex Spacesuit or Leotard of Power to provide Fanservice and Technology Porn in one package (acting as a loose sci-fi counterpart to the Chainmail Bikini). The relatively slim silhouette also lends itself easily to the suit having disproportionately large weapons or propulsion mechanisms, making its pilot seem smaller by comparison.

A common aesthetic for humanised forms of military vehicles or Humongous Mecha, as it allows them to retain the original design's most recognisable features while still looking mostly human.

Compare Armor Is Useless, Jet Pack, Mecha Expansion Pack and Small Girl, Big Gun. For protective gear which functions like armor but looks like spandex or regular clothing, see Impossibly Cool Clothes. For Powered Armor which protects everywhere except the head, see Helmets Are Hardly Heroic. For outfits that lack the overt mechanical look of this trope but still make the wearer stronger, see Clothes Make the Superman.


Examples:

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    Anime & Manga 

    Comic Books 
  • BoBoiBoy Galaxy x Lawak Kampus: SUPERIOR: Froggy calls Tony Stuck (an expy of Tony Stark) to have Froggy's personalised battle armor sent to him. The green robotic pieces that fly to his location only consist of enhancements for his arms (to shoot mega blaster cannons), his legs (to help him fly), and one over his backpack.

    Films — Live-Action 
  • Aliens: The P-5000 Powered Work Loader, better known as the "Power Loader", falls somewhere between Power Harness and Mini-Mecha — a 3m (9' 10") humanoid forklift whose operator is strapped in front with no protection other than a rollcage over their torso. Its arms (ending in clamps and an optional blowtorch) follow the operator's movements only when gripped by an external control stick, letting them easily free their hands when needed. While not designed for combat, Ripley makes use of its incredible strength to manhandle the Alien Queen in the climax of the movie.
  • In Avatar: The Way of Water, the RDA have started equipping their troops with "skel suits" — essentially a set of long mechanical limbs that a soldier straps into to make them about as tall, strong, and fast as a Na'vi, though without offering significant protection.
  • Edge of Tomorrow: The "Jackets" used by the humans fighting the Mimics grant the wielder greatly enhanced strength and come with several heavy-duty weapons (including machine guns, explosives, and shoulder-mounted turrets), but don't come with any armor beyond their frame and sometimes a helmet — either because the things were expensive enough as is or simply because most armor you could fit on them wouldn't be strong enough to stop a Mimic's attacks in the first place. This is one of the many changes from the book All You Need Is Kill, where Jackets fully cover the user's body.
  • Elysium: Max DaCosta dons a powered exoskeleton to keep himself mobile and fighting fit amid his terminal radiation poisoning, allowing him to rip the heads off androids and pile drive soldiers into metal floors. The movie shows that a medical procedure is necessary to don the thing, as hardware has to be installed in the skull, and the body has to be reinforced where the exoskeleton will be mounted onto it. The movie's villain, Kruger, also uses an exoskeleton, and later upgrades to a more advanced version with more armor plating before he attacks Max in the movie's final battle.
  • Marvel Cinematic Universe:
    • Iron Man: During Tony's first flight test, he is wearing a skeletal form, the gloves and boots of what would become the MRK 2, along with a harness over his arc Reactor.
    • Iron Man 2: In Whiplash's first appearance he wears a minimal version of the Iron Man tech, largely consisting of an Arc Reactor strapped to his bare chest along with two energised whips which draw on it for power. He later builds a complete set of Powered Armor which incorporates the same functionality.
    • Black Panther: Wakanda Forever: Riri "Ironheart" Williams straps herself into a bulky harness which outfits her with a Jet Pack and Arm Cannon while leaving most of her body visible. Though in this case it's a prototype for a suit of Powered Armor similar to Iron Man's, and is only unarmored because it's not finished. She gets a more sleek suit of Powered Armor later in the film.
  • The Pumaman: Tony gets most of his powers from a belt given to him by his Aztec mentor Vadinho which comes from the Andes Plauteau.

    Literature 

    Video Games 
  • Call of Duty:
    • Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare's speculative gimmick is a 2050s where exo suits have become practical. The devices take the form of a backpack that powers a set of limb braces, which allows soldiers to leap great distances, cling and crawl up flat surfaces, hover and dash about, and punt human-sized targets across a room. The result is a small but significant way to create highly mobile super soldiers.
    • Downplayed with Call of Duty: Black Ops III, where similar powered harnesses exist in the background as a "budget" option for troops, since the militaries in this timeline have chosen to focus on full-limb replacement cyberization.
  • Cosmic Break features a cast of customisable mecha ranging from blocky faceless machines to Ridiculously Human Robots with bulky mecha parts slapped on their limbs.
  • Densou Tenshi VALFORCE is a Virtual-ON clone featuring Bishoujo characters in this style — ranging from leotard-clad Expies of the Triggerheart Exelica cast, to Hokyou Mei's heavy gear which more resembles an open-cockpit Mini-Mecha or Cool Chair.
  • Marvel's Avengers: The Makeshift armour suit, in reference to the Iron Man example above, sees Tony wearing a gauntlet and boots from one of his suits. As it is only cosmetic, it offers as much protection as the normal suits.
  • In StarCraft II Co-op, Arcturus Mengsk's army consists of citizen-soldiers who can be equipped with work frames (a set of clawlike grippers and a skeletal frame of struts and hydraulics to give them the strength to carry them) for resource harvesting. The whole thing resembles a Hardiman man-amplifier.
  • The Surge has Exo-Suit Rigs, a robotic power assist rig that enhances the user's strength but by default doesn't offer any significant protection. It is possible to upgrade it with additional armor but in most cases this armor only covers the front and sides of the user in critical locations leaving the back and less critical areas unprotected.
  • Triggerheart Exelica is a Shoot 'Em Up series starring female Artificial Humans with combat equipment which makes them resemble the Space Fighters more common of the genre — largely consisting of a Leotard of Power, Jet Pack, and leg armour.

    Real Life 
  • Unarmored powered exoskeletons see some use in real life as mobility tools and for lifting heavy objects.
  • The Hardiman was a 1960s prototype "man-amplifier" that the user strapped on — including blocky mechanical legs fitted to the sides of the wearer, and a pair of Power Fists ending in crab-like claws. It was purported to make a construction worker strong enough to one-hand a bundle of I-beams, but the power requirements were never solved, causing it to be abandoned.

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