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* GenderNeutralWriting: In the localization of the manga, Kino is called "Mx. Kino," a courtesy title used on nonbinary individuals.

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* GenderNeutralWriting: GenderInclusiveWriting: In the localization of the manga, Kino is called "Mx. Kino," a courtesy title used on nonbinary individuals.
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* WinterOfStarvation: In one episode, Kino comes across a trio of men in a stranded truck, having been stuck since winter began. They're starving and too weak to do anything. They tell Kino they survived by eating their cargo. Then Kino learns that they're slavers...
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Bokukko is now def-only


%%* {{Bokukko}}: Kino, but only in the anime adaptations.

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** The citizens of the Coliseum country ultimately let their king do as he pleases because he gave them what he wanted. Possibly because of this, Kino doesn't have a problem with decreeing that the citizens must fight to choose a new king, resulting in the populace turning on and killing each other.

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** The citizens of the Coliseum country ultimately let their king do as he pleases because he gave them what he they wanted. Possibly because of this, Kino doesn't have a problem with decreeing that the citizens must fight to choose a new king, resulting in the populace turning on and killing each other.



** In Photo's introductory story, she feels guilty when the merchants enslaving her die from eating poisoned herbs, feeling as though she didn't try hard enough to stop them.



* GenderNeutralWriting: In the localization of the manga, Kino is called "Mx. Kino," a courtesy title used on nonbinary individuals.



** A country Kino encounters in episode 5 of the first anime was ruled by majority rule, and began to kill off the minority voters. Eventually only two people were left alive because of it.

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** A country Kino encounters in episode 5 of the first anime was ruled by majority rule, and began to kill off the minority voters. Eventually only two people were left alive because of it.it, one of whom died from a disease (presumably in part due to a lack of doctors).
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''Kino's Journey'' (''Kino no Tabi''; the English title ''Kino's Travels'' is also used on official Japanese merchandise) is a {{Light Novel|s}} series written by Keiichi Sigsawa and illustrated by Kouhaku Kuroboshi, which was first published under the Creator/DengekiBunko imprint in 2000 and is still ongoing. It was adapted into a thirteen-episode TV anime series in 2003, one OVA, and two specials (all set in original anime's universe). In 2017, it received two back-to-back manga adaptations, and a new anime with a new studio aired in 2017.

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''Kino's Journey'' (''Kino no Tabi''; the English title ''Kino's Travels'' is also used on official Japanese merchandise) is a {{Light Novel|s}} series written by Keiichi Sigsawa and illustrated by Kouhaku Kuroboshi, which was first published under the Creator/DengekiBunko imprint in 2000 and is still ongoing. It was adapted into a thirteen-episode TV anime series in 2003, one OVA, and two specials (all set in original anime's universe). In 2017, it received two back-to-back manga adaptations, adaptations and a new anime with a new studio aired in 2017.studio.
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''Kino's Journey'' (''Kino no Tabi''; the English title ''Kino's Travels'' is also used on official Japanese merchandise) is a {{Light Novel|s}} series written by Keiichi Sigsawa and illustrated by Kouhaku Kuroboshi, which was first published under the Creator/DengekiBunko imprint in 2000 and is still ongoing. It was adapted into a thirteen-episode TV anime series in 2003, one OVA, and two specials (all set in original anime's universe). In 2017, it received two back-to-back manga adaptations, and a new anime with a new studio premiered October 6, 2017.

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''Kino's Journey'' (''Kino no Tabi''; the English title ''Kino's Travels'' is also used on official Japanese merchandise) is a {{Light Novel|s}} series written by Keiichi Sigsawa and illustrated by Kouhaku Kuroboshi, which was first published under the Creator/DengekiBunko imprint in 2000 and is still ongoing. It was adapted into a thirteen-episode TV anime series in 2003, one OVA, and two specials (all set in original anime's universe). In 2017, it received two back-to-back manga adaptations, and a new anime with a new studio premiered October 6, aired in 2017.
Willbyr MOD

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grammar cleanup


* NiceJobFixingItVillain: By knocking the poisoned soup out of the girl; who would become known as Photo; out of her hands, one of the boys in the merchant group that enslaved her unwittingly prevented her death while he and the other members die of food poisoning.

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* NiceJobFixingItVillain: By knocking the poisoned soup out of the girl; hands of the girl who would become known as Photo; out of her hands, Photo, one of the boys in the merchant group that enslaved her unwittingly prevented her death while he and the other members die of food poisoning.
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* NiceJobFixingItVillain: By knocking the poisoned soup out of the girl; who would become known as Photo; out of her hands, one of the boys in the merchant group that enslaved her unwittingly prevented her death while he and the other members die of food poisoning.
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* DeathOfAChild: During Photo's first appearance, the merchant group that horridly treated her gets poisoned to death, including the children.
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''Kino's Journey'' (''Kino no Tabi''; the English title ''Kino's Travels'' is also used on official Japanese merchandise) is a {{Light Novel|s}} series written by Keiichi Sigsawa and illustrated by Kouhaku Kuroboshi, which was first published under the Creator/DengekiBunko imprint in 2000 and is still ongoing. It was adapted into a thirteen-episode TV anime series in 2003, one OVA, and two films. In 2017, it received two back-to-back manga adaptations, and a new anime with a new studio premiered October 6, 2017.

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''Kino's Journey'' (''Kino no Tabi''; the English title ''Kino's Travels'' is also used on official Japanese merchandise) is a {{Light Novel|s}} series written by Keiichi Sigsawa and illustrated by Kouhaku Kuroboshi, which was first published under the Creator/DengekiBunko imprint in 2000 and is still ongoing. It was adapted into a thirteen-episode TV anime series in 2003, one OVA, and two films.specials (all set in original anime's universe). In 2017, it received two back-to-back manga adaptations, and a new anime with a new studio premiered October 6, 2017.
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See also ''Literature/AllisonAndLillia'', a more lighthearted action-adventure series from the same author-illustrator team. Compare ''Manga/ShoulderACoffinKuro''. See ''LightNovel/GakuenKino'' for the HighSchoolAU.

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See also ''Literature/AllisonAndLillia'', a more lighthearted action-adventure series from the same author-illustrator team. Compare ''Manga/ShoulderACoffinKuro''. See ''LightNovel/GakuenKino'' ''Literature/GakuenKino'' for the HighSchoolAU.

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Trying to fix some example indentation


* CatchPhrase: Hermes says ''Yes, that's it!'' each time Kino or some other person corrects his idioms.

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* CatchPhrase: CatchPhrase:
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Hermes says ''Yes, that's it!'' each time Kino or some other person corrects his idioms.
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See also ''LightNovel/AllisonAndLillia'', a more lighthearted action-adventure series from the same author-illustrator team. Compare ''Manga/ShoulderACoffinKuro''. See ''LightNovel/GakuenKino'' for the HighSchoolAU.

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See also ''LightNovel/AllisonAndLillia'', ''Literature/AllisonAndLillia'', a more lighthearted action-adventure series from the same author-illustrator team. Compare ''Manga/ShoulderACoffinKuro''. See ''LightNovel/GakuenKino'' for the HighSchoolAU.



* TrappedInAnotherWorld: The crossover campaign ''Travelers and the Labyrinth Country'' from ''[[LightNovel/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon Danmachi:]] VideoGame/MemoriaFreese'' involves Kino and Hermes(The motorcycle, not the god); Photo and Sou; and Shizu, Riku and Tifana ending up in Bell's world after getting caught in a fog.

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* TrappedInAnotherWorld: The crossover campaign ''Travelers and the Labyrinth Country'' from ''[[LightNovel/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon ''[[Literature/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon Danmachi:]] VideoGame/MemoriaFreese'' involves Kino and Hermes(The motorcycle, not the god); Photo and Sou; and Shizu, Riku and Tifana ending up in Bell's world after getting caught in a fog.
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_30f95ba234117c2d13cd1aa228640372.png]]

->''"The world is not beautiful, therefore it is."''

''Kino's Journey'' (''Kino no Tabi''; the English title ''Kino's Travels'' is also used on official Japanese merchandise) is a {{Light Novel|s}} series written by Keiichi Sigsawa and illustrated by Kouhaku Kuroboshi, which was first published under the Creator/DengekiBunko imprint in 2000 and is still ongoing. It was adapted into a thirteen-episode TV anime series in 2003, one OVA, and two films. In 2017, it received two back-to-back manga adaptations, and a new anime with a new studio premiered October 6, 2017.

It follows the travels of a teenager named Kino as she [[WalkingTheEarth wanders across the world]] on her [[SentientVehicle talking motorcycle Hermes]], encountering all manner of eccentric people and cultures along the way. Yet the world is as dangerous as it is beautiful, and Kino is often confronted by the uglier aspects of human nature. All that keeps her going is her quick wit, the pistol at her side, and a steadfast rule to stay in a country for no longer than three days and two nights.

See also ''LightNovel/AllisonAndLillia'', a more lighthearted action-adventure series from the same author-illustrator team. Compare ''Manga/ShoulderACoffinKuro''. See ''LightNovel/GakuenKino'' for the HighSchoolAU.

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!!This show contains examples of:

* AccompliceByInaction:
** The citizens of the Coliseum country ultimately let their king do as he pleases because he gave them what he wanted. Possibly because of this, Kino doesn't have a problem with decreeing that the citizens must fight to choose a new king, resulting in the populace turning on and killing each other.
** Kino herself becomes this when she meets a man who agrees to travel with a woman in atonement for killing the latter's fiancee. The woman, unwilling to forgive the man, shoots him to death, then says Kino could have stopped her if she wanted to. Kino nonchalantly says she has no desire to play god.
%%* ActionGirl: Kino.
* AdaptationalAttractiveness:
** Older!Shishou has more traces of her younger self beauty in the 2017 adaptation than the 2003 anime.
** In the manga, the SoleSurvivor of the country that overthrew its king is relatively slim and handsome, whereas he's fat, scruffy and disheveled in the 2003 anime.
** King Yukio in the 2017 anime has a more down-to-earth appearance compared to his 2003 version, who was practically a jester in king form.
* AdaptationDyeJob: Kino's hair, jacket, pants and eye color were all changed for the original anime adaption. {{Averted|Trope}} with the 2017 reboot where Kino's updated anime character design closely follows her LN character design better.
* AdaptationExpansion: The 2003 anime significantly lengthen/alters the Coliseum/Avengers arc, giving King Yukio and the guard escorting Kino additional characterization, as well as adding semifinalists with their own characterization and having Shizu appear several times before his fight with Kino to foreshadow TheReveal that he's the king's son.
* AdaptationInducedPlotHole: A minor case, but in the Coliseum arc, adaptations tend to refer to King Yukio as having children, plural--which raises questions when Shizu is clearly alone sans Riku. In the novels, he's stated to be an only child.
* AdventureTowns: Though frequently subverted when Kino passes through without affecting anything.
* TheAllegedCar: Master and her partner ride an antiquated Subaru 360. The novels make it a point to describe just how rundown it is every time.
* AncientTradition: Played straight a few times, then {{lampshaded}} in one episode, where the citizens of one country continually make up new, ridiculous traditions for travelers, though Kino points out that pranking the tourists might actually ''be'' this country's tradition.
* AndThisIsFor: In "Fields of Sheep," Kino dedicates a headshot on a man-eating sheep to a man who died while being pursued by said sheep, since Kino ended up taking the man's car and persuader.
* AnswerCut: In Episode 4 of the anime, Kino's father demands to know who gave her the idea to refuse the operation. The camera then cuts to the original Kino.
* AnswersToTheNameOfGod: Averted.
-->'''Shizu''': My god....\\
'''Kino''': [[AGodIAmNot I am nobody's god.]]
* TheAntiNihilist: Kino. This is one of the main points of the story.
* ArbitrarySkepticism:
** Hermes the Talking Motorcycle complains that Riku the Talking Dog shouldn't exist.
** Kino's skepticism about the possibility of humanoid robots, despite traveling with a sentient, mechanic companion, and having seen many kinds of sophisticated robots along the way.
** Kino is as disbelieving as the other characters when Nimya talks about the concept of airplanes, even though the idea of a flying vehicle shouldn't be anywhere among the weirdest things she's seen.
* ArmorPiercingQuestion:
** When Kino meets the SoleSurvivor of a country that decided everything by majority rule and executed those who disagreed with the majority, he refuses to let Kino leave. Kino then suggests that there are three people here- Kino, Hermes and the man- and asks what would happen if Kino and Hermes deemed the man to be in the wrong. Cue OhCrap as the man realizes he'd be executed.
** In "A Peaceful Country," when Kino is disturbed by the museum curator's defending her decision to have a genocide competition in lieu of war, the curator challenges Kino to come up with a better plan. Kino has no response.
** In "Land of Necessity", Kino is manipulated into killing death convicts as part of the country's version of the death penalty. She's less than thrilled when she finds out, and appears somewhat judgmental when the country tells her that while they apologize for offending her, the system is a necessity. However, when they then ask Kino if she considers killing people for her own survival to be a necessity, she has no rebuttal. They point out [[NotSoDifferentRemark it's the same principle]].
* ArrangedMarriage: The "Land of Couples" is all about these, with everyone ending up in one as they're not considered true adults until they marry. Unsurprisingly, the land is rife with DomesticAbuse, not helped by its attitude that women should StayInTheKitchen.
* ArtEvolution: Being a series that's over a decade long, it's pretty staggering. It also explains why the anime Kino looks so childlike compared to the illustration in the recent novels, since the early novels had a much 'rounder' artstyle.
* ArtStyleDissonance: Despite the cutesy, storybook-like character designs and illustrations, it features a lot of mature philosophical/political parables and on-screen murders.
* AssholeVictim:
** The merchant family in the 6th episode of the 2017 anime reboot. Though she didn't intend for it to happen, their horrendously cruel mistreatment of the slave who would eventually be named Photo made their deaths via poisoned herbs prepared by her ''very'' satisfying.
** Kino once travels to a country that managed to achieve peace with its former enemy by competing to commit genocide against a defenseless tribe. You'd expect that the tribe would be portrayed sympathetically, but then the tribe decides to kill Kino in revenge, [[MisplacedRetribution despite knowing full well that Kino is not part of their persecutors]]. As such, it's hard to feel bad when Kino kills one of them in self-defense.
** In Episode 1 of the 2017 anime, Kino encounters a man asking her to carry some of his luggage. She of course declines, until the man pulls a gun on her. She notices the townsfolk were walking away, until the man gets his hand shot by an old lady with a crossbow. Demanding why they are attacking him [[EntitledBastard when he learned killing wasn't prohibited]], the town's leader tells he just because killing isn't ''prohibited'' does not mean it's ''permitted''. He gets executed on the spot.
* TheAtoner:
** An unnamed man that Kino once met, referenced in a flashback is this. He killed a man, and afterwards regretted it and became a bodyguard to his widow, following her to the ends of the earth and protecting her from any danger. [[spoiler:Subverted when she kills him instead out of revenge.]]
** Photo felt like this after the merchants who took her in as a slave die of food poisoning without her making another attempt to stop them. So the motorrad disagreed, [[AssholeVictim saying they deserved to die]].
** The "Kind Country" being hospitable to Kino was an attempt to atone for being hostile to outsiders in the past.
** "A Tale of Olden Days" has a politician flee his country, due to an uprising from the people who want him dead for his misdeeds. Master and her disciple are hired to escort him out... and EveryoneHasStandards ensues as he's horrified by the way they utterly massacre the people trying to kill him. The epilogue reveals that in atonement, he dedicated his life to the next country he settled down in, which may or may not have been the lesson Master and her disciple were trying to impart.
* AuthorAppeal: Keiichi Sigsawa appears obsessed with minutiae of all sorts of technology, judging by the overly-detailed descriptions of all weapons and vehicles that appear, plot-centric or not. Even his pen name is based on a gun brand. He also has the tendency to write some of the weirdest postscripts to exist.
* BadassLongcoat: [[PlayingWithATrope Played with]]. Kino ''is'' a badass, and she ''does'' wear a longcoat, but the two are rarely at the same time. Usually, [[SubvertedTrope Kino takes off the longcoat before combat]] because it makes it harder for her to draw her guns. Additionally, [[JustifiedTrope she only wears the longcoat while riding Hermes.]]
* BarehandedBladeBlock: Subverted, as Kino wears metal wrist guards when she blocks Shizu's katana with her wrists, and is seen equipping them before the match.
* BerserkButton: The citizens of Kino's home country are cheery, good-natured people who go about their lives with a smile on their faces [[spoiler:due to an operation when they turn twelve that makes them unable to not be satisfied by everything]]. However, if you ask if there's another way to become an adult, as Kino does, [[spoiler:they fly into a homicidal rage and try to murder you]].
* BetterToDieThanBeKilled: Implied in "Fields of Sheep." Kino finds a man whose car was stopped at the edge of a cliff in a region infested by man-eating sheep. Upon examining the man's dead body, Kino notices that his shin was broken and he was unable to walk through the pain, then sees a persuader in his hand. She doesn't outright say that the man committed suicide, but the implication is there.
* BewareTheNiceOnes:
** Kino is a very polite, non-judgemental, and often generous character, who does not seem to take any pleasure in fighting, even if it's the only option. Someone delivering a threat, though, will be dead before they know what's going on.
** Likewise, Shizu is polite and helpful--even more so than Kino--but he will respond to threats against his person in kind.
** The citizens in the country where murder isn't prohibited are all friendly and polite to Kino during her visit and it really isn't an act. [[spoiler:If someone kills or attempts to kill in the country though, the citizens can and will kill the offender for breaking the law, as the man that threatens Kino for her refusing to help him carry his luggage to the country earlier finds out the hard way.]]
* {{Bifauxnen}}: Kino has passed herself off as a boy, though in one case it was just that the people around her immediately presumed as such.
* BittersweetEnding: The first anime has one. After all cruel, strange or simply unusual countries that she visited, Kino gets into a strange city with friendly people, where everyone is happy and where one girl reminds Kino of her as a child. Moreover, she herself begins to change as a character. However, at the very end, Kino gets [[spoiler:a real HeroicBSOD when she sees how the whole city with all its innocent and happy inhabitants dies under the lava from the volcano]].
* BladeEnthusiast: Kino is nearly always shown to buy knives when visiting shops, sometimes only because they look 'pretty'.
* BloodSport: One episode features a pair of cities whose constant warfare has been replaced by regular pogroms of the local villages. The cities compete to see who gets the most kills.
%%* {{Bokukko}}: Kino, but only in the anime adaptations.
* BookEnds:
** Episode 1 of the 2017 anime begins with Kino encountering a traveler, who, bored with his peaceful country, wants to go to the country Kino is about to visit in order so he can kill with impunity. At the end, Kino, leaving the country, sees another traveler who's tired of having to kill to survive in his violent homeland, and hopes to find a safe place to live.
** Episode 4 of the 2003 anime/Episode 11 of the 2017 anime begins and ends with Hermes tipped over in a field of flowers, as well as Kino singing. The start of the episode is in the present day, and the end is just after Kino sets out, before shifting back to the present.
* BoomHeadshot: [[spoiler: How Kino kills the king, a.k.a., Shizu's father from the Coliseum chapter.]]
* BornLucky:
** The slave known as Photo is considered this. Despite being orphaned and sold as a slave, she miraculously survives an incident that kills her owners, takes possession of their goods and settles down in a small village, with her fellow residents accepting her despite knowing about her past.
** Kino also tends to have miraculously good luck at times. Invoked in "Beginner's Luck", where she talks about how travelers need luck, and sure enough, good fortune strikes right at that moment.
* BottomlessMagazines: Kino's guns seem to have them...sometimes. The anime's better about keeping gun capacity in mind.
* {{Bowdlerise}}:
** While the anime adaption is largely faithful to the novels, most of the violence was toned down, and some of the characters that Kino meets or the countries Kino visits are portrayed as much more sympathetic. The first film, ''Kino's Travels: Life Goes On'' was much more offending in this regard.
** In-universe, this occurs in an interview Kino agrees to, with her distinctly family-unfriendly past and explanation of traveling's brutal realities significantly altered for the final product.
* ButForMeItWasTuesday: When Shizu and Kino meet each other again, Shizu is ecstatic to meet Kino again, as Kino was the one who saved his life. However, Kino is apathetic to their reunion, and even has trouble remembering Shizu's name.
* ButNowIMustGo: Kino's modus operandi. Reach next town, stay for three days and two nights, then gone.
* TheCaligula: The king from the Coliseum two-parter is incredibly AxeCrazy, from killing [[EvilPrince his father]] and wife[[note]]Only in the 2003 anime; in the novels, his wife was DrivenToSuicide after the king had everyone else in the royal family slaughtered[[/note]], to forcing anyone that comes in his territory to kill each other to gain upper-class status.
* CannibalLarder: In ''A Tale of Feeding Off Others'' after [[spoiler:the three men Kino saved turn out to be slavers and Kino has to kill them all in self-defense]], Kino takes a closer look inside their wagon: it's the second time it's seen, [[OnceMoreWithClarity but this time]], we get a better idea what the three men meant when they said they had to eat their cargo to survive...
* CaptainErsatz: In the "coliseum" episode, Kino fights knockoffs of Franchise/{{Batman}}, Creator/ClintEastwood and [[Franchise/StarWars Luke Skywalker]]. This wasn't so in the original novel where the fights were only briefly described.
* CargoCult: One of Kino's journeys takes her to a country [[CozyCatastrophe calmly awaiting the imminent apocalypse]], as foretold in their [[SacredScripture holy book of prophecies]], which is revealed later to actually be the stream-of-consciousness work of a great but grief-stricken poet whose mind snapped when his wife took her own life to serve as gruesome inspiration for a poem full of sorrow as per the King of their country's orders. Said "Prophecies" come true, as other nations band together to destroy the nation....because of the poems.
* CastingGag: Combined with YouLookFamiliar and RemakeCameo, Creator/AoiYuuki plays Sakura in the 13th episode of the first anime of 2003 and Kino in the new series of 2017. This is doubled by the fact that Sakura is a copy of the main character in her childhood.
* CatchPhrase: Hermes says ''Yes, that's it!'' each time Kino or some other person corrects his idioms.
** The readers will know immediately that a story will focus on Shizu & co. if it starts with the following introduction: ''My name is Riku. I am a dog. I have long, fluffy, white fur. I look as if I'm always smiling, but it doesn't mean that I'm happy all the time. I was just born this way.''
* CelibateHeroine: Kino seems to prefer living as a lone traveller and shows zero interest (romantic or otherwise) in the people she comes across.
* CharacterGenderConfusion: Kino, as she's mistaken for a boy several times. Her character design in the novels is noticeably more feminine.
* ChekhovsGun: Before Kino's final match in the coliseum, she's shown preparing wrist guards and making an explosive bullet.
* ChekhovsGunman: The old man in the Kind Land who gives Kino the Woodsman was actually Master's partner/student and they traveled together in the past. He is a main character in the novels, appearing during the flashback journeys of Master.
* ChildSoldiers: The focus of "What It Means to Fight and Die", which pulls no punches in making it as horrific as possible.
* CityOfCanals: The Sad Country.
* ClonesArePeopleToo: In "The Land of Identical Faces", everyone is a clone, but despite the initial creepiness, they're shown to live happy lives and recognize themselves to be individuals. Kino actually struggles more with distinguishing between non-clone twins when talking to someone outside of the country.
* CloseCallHaircut:
** In the novels, the young Shishou's hair has a [[http://www.filespace.org/xyzzyka/shishou.png ragged, gunshot appearance]], as though this is the only way she cuts her hair. Given the way she's been known to cut down trees later in life, this is perhaps unsurprising.
** Also, in the first coliseum fight, Kino faces an assassin with a bladed boomerang that manages to give her a tiny shave on the way back. Later Kino does this deliberately, clipping the hair of [[MasterSwordsman Shizu]] to test his resolve. He doesn't flinch.
* ComicBookTime: Despite the fact that traveling is noted to take days just between nearby countries, and seasons are mentioned to be passing, the main characters don't appear to be aging--Kino, for instance, is always described as appearing in her mid-teens.
* CompressedAdaptation: The 2017 anime compresses the Ship Country arc--one of the lengthiest stories in the series, but also a necessary story to adapt to introduce Ti--in order to fit it in a single episode, via taking out some of Ti and Shizu's interactions, most of Shizu and Kino's fight, and altering the final confrontation with Ti.
* CrapsaccharineWorld: Kino's home country, the Land of Adults, is a place where people over twelve get a brain operation that allows them to be happy while performing ''any'' task. Thus, nobody is ever unhappy at their job... or at anything else... including state-sanctioned murder. Questioning this system is the only thing that seems to make them angry and promptly go AxCrazy on the offender.
* CrapsackWorld: Perhaps as part of AnAesop, every major land and town Kino visits in her travels ends up having some major flaw. From corrupt rulers, to amoral slavers, to strict and downright DisproportionateRetribution laws, among many others. One of the times it seems like she's come across a seemingly-flawless village [[spoiler:ends with the whole place wiped out by an erupting volcano, as the idealistic society was effectively people having come to terms with their imminent and inevitable deaths.]] Everywhere and everyone has flaws, and many characters end up having to figure out for themselves if they even want to pursue happiness in these numerous scenarios.
* ContinuityNod: Lots of these, especially in the novels.
* CombatPragmatist: Kino, who even goes as far as to use the decapitated head of an enemy's comrade as bait once. Kino also uses a gun in what was supposed to be a knife duel in a lesson during training with Shishou.
* ComputerEqualsTapedrive: In keeping with the [[SchizoTech eclectic technology]] of the series.
* ConvectionSchmonvection: Heartbreakingly averted in episode 13. When the volcano erupts, Hermes gives us a stark description of how the people in the village below died with their blood boiling in their bodies.
* CoolBike: Hermes, the sentient motorbike who is Kino's only companion and closest friend.
* CrazyPrepared: Kino thoroughly maintains the Woodsman and the Cannon every night, gets up at the crack of the dawn to practice shooting, and always carries two guns and many, ''many'' knives, and a gun ''disguised as a knife'', just in case.
* CreepySouvenir: Master and her student took on a job to get rid of a couple who ensnares passing travelers for their [[ImAHumanitarian dinner]] and ''fun hobby''.
* CruelMercy: Kino tells the SoleSurvivor of a country that killed each other through majority rule that under his rules, she could have him executed if she and Hermes voted against him. She decides not to do so, and simply leaves him behind, possibly knowing that he will likely die, just like his wife did.
* CruelToBeKind: In ''A Kind Country'', Kino tells the guards at the gate she plans to stay three days. At the end of those three days, the guards show up at the hotel she was staying at and abruptly ask her to leave, holding her to her earlier promise despite her having changed her mind. At first it seems kind of cruel considering how friendly everyone in that town was, but they at least send her off with some food and ask her to visit again sometime. [[spoiler:Later that night, Kino wakes up just in time to witness a pyroclastic flow quickly engulf the town within a matter of seconds, killing everyone there. The bagged lunch also contained a note from Sakura's mother which told her the adults knew about the impending doom, and chose to stay behind. So by kicking her out so suddenly, they actually saved her and Hermes from death.]]
* CruelTwistEnding: In the novels, many of the stories are cruel enough to make the viewer suffer their own [[HeroicBSOD BSOD]].
** One episode where Kino helps a stranded group of people survive a harsh winter, we found out [[spoiler:they were slave traders who had eaten their previous haul and look to enslave Kino to make up for it.]]
** Another episode has Kino visiting neighboring countries who used to constantly be at war. When Kino asks how they achieved peace, [[spoiler:she finds the opposing countries have made their battles into a game in which both countries see who can slaughter the most inhabitants of an adjacent defenseless village.]] And just to twist the knife further, [[spoiler:the "innocent victims" in that village have taken to senselessly murdering travelers, simply as a means of venting their frustration.]]
** In another episode, ''A Kind Country'', Kino finds a country so likable that Kino nearly breaks the three day rule of staying in one place, yet the townsfolk mysteriously refuse to let her stay longer. [[spoiler:When Kino leaves, the next day she wakes up to find the country destroyed by a nearby erupted volcano.]]
** In "A Land Without Walls", Kino comes across a seemingly friendly traveling clan who, of course, [[WolfInSheepsClothing are actually much more sinister than they present themselves as]]. She's saved by one member who brings down the clan by burning the grass that the adults have become addicted and literally dependent on--including himself. He decides to spend his remaining days encouraging the clan's children to lead new lives, before the withdrawal can kill him. [[spoiler:The children kill him before he can explain how despicable the adults were, only seeing the murderer of their families, before the children then smoke what little remains of the grass...]]
** Subverted with "A Land of Identical Faces". While the concept of a country full of clones might seem unsettling, it's made clear during Kino's stay that this is a peaceful, friendly nation... [[spoiler:and then another country, disturbed by them, razes the country to the ground. However, as it turns out, all the people survive and take the destruction in stride as they begin to rebuild.]]
* DeadAllAlong: In the viewer participation drama, one of the possible paths results in [[spoiler:Master receiving a wound from a laser-like attack]]. To everyone's surprise, she's unfazed and the wound begins to close (without her noticing it). The audience and her partner [[FridgeHorror realizes]] that this must be ''why'' she has never "ever" been grazed by a single bullet before.
* DeadlyEuphemism: If someone talks about "persuading" another person, they almost inevitably mean they're going to pull a gun on them.
* DeadManWriting: [[spoiler:Sakura's mother]] leaves Kino a letter in the breakfast she gives Kino, which Kino opens and reads after [[spoiler:the volcanic eruption wipes out the country]]. A second note in the same bag strongly implies that [[spoiler:Sakura also knew about the coming eruption]].
* DeathSeeker: In one of the stories, a country gathers its suicidal citizens and grants their death wish by sending them off to war. They happily abide.
* DecadeDissonance: In most cases it's best to think of the different countries as existing in separate universes. Handwaved, in that travel between towns is dangerous and rare, and few individuals could ever imagine leaving their town.
* DecoyProtagonist: Kino herself in the second anime series, since a large portion of the episodes either only feature her as a supporting character or cameo appearance or she doesn't even appear at all.
* DeliberateValuesDissonance:
** A major theme among several countries Kino visits, which practice things that would be considered unthinkable by most modern countries.
** Also occurs occasionally in stories about duelling countries, such as in "A Land Divided" where one country hunts forest animals but considers killing sea creatures to be inhumane, and a country that thinks the opposite. Kino, on her part, is perfectly fine with both.
* DemocracyIsBad: The town run by majority rule quickly falls apart when the majority proves willing to execute anyone who questions the status quo.
* DemotedToExtra: Shizu and Riku in the first series don't get any focus beyond the Coliseum episodes.
* DidNotThinkThisThrough: In the story about the country where killing is legal, a man seemed to think that by living there he'd be able to live a life of murder with impunity. He openly mugs Kino under threat of death in broad daylight, and is absolutely shocked to discover that, by virtue of living in a country where killing is legal, ''anyone is free to kill him if he pisses them off'', which he just did by threatening an innocent in public. The townsfolk proceed to execute him and save Kino's life.
%%* DiesWideOpen: In the episode/volume with the country where killing is legal, one man's eyes were still open when he gets executed for trying to take advantage of said country's murder laws for his own selfish ends, moments before Regel, the old man who executed him, closes them.
* DissonantSerenity:
** Various countries have its citizens blase about things that would be horrifying to anyone else. In "Country Of Adults," Kino's parents and the other adults are remarkably calm as Kino's father prepares to kill her [[spoiler:then stabs the original Kino when he intervenes]].
** Kino, Shizu, etc. also have a case of this going on most times, as they've witnessed so much on their travels that not much seriously fazes them anymore.
* DistaffCounterpart: Kino is a badass gunslinger with a talking motorcycle. Shizu is a badass swordsman with a talking dog.
* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:The SoleSurvivor of a town where everyone votes for any decision, and whoever is in the minority is killed, kills himself when Kino and Hermes outvote him while visiting.]]
* DueToTheDead:
** In "Fields of Sheep," Kino buries the dead body of a traveler she finds while escaping the sheep, then asks to use his car and persuader against the sheep.
** "Land of Journalists" has Kino implicitly angry that the original Kino's memory is being besmirched, as she discreetly tries to fix it.
** In general, the main characters pointedly avert this--looting corpses is pretty much a necessity while traveling.
* EmotionlessGirl: Master/Shishou when she was young. She does [[DefrostingIceQueen mellow out and become much kinder]] by the time she teaches Kino how to 'persuade' (fighting) though.
** Tifana when Shizu and Riku first encounter her in the Ship Country.
* TheEndingChangesEverything:
** In "A Kind Country," the revelation that [[spoiler:the country was doomed all along]] casts the citizens' actions throughout the episode into an entirely new light, particularly Sakura's parents encouraging her to join Kino on her journey.
** In "Country of Liars," the man's final confession that [[spoiler:he knew all along that his housekeeper is the princess he loved]] turns the entire story on its head.
** In Episode 10 of the 2003 anime, it turns out that the supposedly robotic housekeeper was actually an elderly human woman, and that the family she served are the robots she made a long time ago. As such, the family isn't being ungrateful when they dump the meal the nanny made down the trash disposal; they actually can't eat it.
** In "A Land Not Permitting Discrimination", the people criticize the immigration inspectors living outside of the city walls, describing them as barbarians [[MalevolentMaskedMen who always wear masks]] and are unwelcome in their beloved society within the walls... [[spoiler:and then it's revealed that the people inside the walls are living in a dumpster, and the immigration inspectors are living in ''vastly'' better conditions who understandably wear the masks for hygienic reasons.]]
* EnfanteTerrible: Several characters, and arguably, Kino.
* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: Two countries achieved peace with each other by turning their wars against each other into a competition... in which they commit genocide against a defenseless tribe. The architect of the plan is a woman who lost all her children to war, and met a woman from the opposing country who felt the same way. The first woman tells Kino that Kino will understand how she feels once Kino has children.
* EveryoneIsArmed: A few countries that Kino visits has everyone carry around weapons, whether to be ready for a fight, out of love for the weapon itself, or to dissuade violence with mixed results.
* TheEvilPrince: King Yukio murdered his father, a good king who was strict with his son, then became a cruel ruler who kept his subjects entertained with gladiatorial games.
* ExactWords: In a country Kino visits, the law states that murder isn't prohibited. [[spoiler:As a citizen points out to an offender, just because something isn't prohibited doesn't mean it's allowed. The offender is then promptly killed for threatening to kill Kino in public.]]
* ExtendedDisarming: Kino, when being held at gunpoint by some slavers, drops many, many knives. This leads one of the slavers to remark, "Are you a knife merchant?!"
* {{Fanservice}}:
** Nimya in the "Land of Wizards" episode; it's the only time it really shows up in the anime. Also played straight in some of the illustrations.
** The HighSchoolAU spinoff ''Gakuen Kino'' is basically a fanservice series.
* FaceDeathWithDignity: One of Kino's opponents in the Coliseum, an old man with a flamethrower, insists that she finish him off, and when Kino agrees, he closes his eyes to await the end. She ends up knocking him out, though.
* TheFarmerAndTheViper: The trio of slavers aided by Kino before she knows their profession.
* {{Foil}}: Kino to Sakura. Both are girls whose names (in Kino's case, her original name) are derived from flowers, and both meet a traveler named Kino at a critical point in their lives. Kino refused to follow in her parents' footsteps and become an "adult," resulting in her fleeing her home. Sakura refused her parents' suggestion to travel in favor of staying at home and inheriting the inn.
* ForeignQueasine: In a welcoming feast in honor of travelers, Kino was served raw seafood (still moving), grilled monkey, sheep brains, whale steak and elephant steak. She loved it.
* FreudianExcuse: The museum curator Kino meets in "A Peaceful Country," as well as an acquaintance of hers from her country's enemy, both lost family members in a war, and so came up with a plan to compete to kill the indigenous peoples in lieu of war.
* FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse: Neither Kino nor Hermes approve of the museum curator's plan, with Kino pointing out that she's causing pain to the families of the people the soldiers kill, while Hermes has a similar opinion.
-->'''Hermes''': "Sure, I feel sorry for her because she lost her entire family, but I could do without that kind of peace."
* FullCircleRevolution: One country overthrows the king, who'd executed anyone who disagreed with him, then not only executes the king and his family, but also anyone who they see as a threat to the new order.
* FurryReminder: Played for laughs with Riku's occasional quips that remind Shizu that he is still a dog.
* GettingSmiliesPaintedOnYourSoul: Kino's hometown does this via an operation on everyone's brain before they become adults. She just barely escapes the same fate.
* GladiatorGames: The aptly named Coliseum (Avengers) arc sports these, where travelers compete for the right to become a first-class citizen (and to avoid becoming a slave).
* GratuitousGerman: Hermes is called a ''motorrad'' throughout the first series. "Motorrad" is the German term for "motorcycle". Kino's name is also German for 'movie theater'.
* GunPorn: The firearms in the series tend to be described in loving detail.
* TheGunslinger: The title character herself; specifically, of The QuickDraw variety. Notably, she's one of the rare few of the type who is seen actively ''practicing'' the skill regularly.
* HadToBeSharp: Every traveler in this series did, given how dangerous the world is for them.
* HateCrimesAreASpecialKindOfEvil: Kino visits a nation where the wars between them and their neighboring nation are now settled by seeing how many members of an indigenous tribe can be killed by the competing armies. The people targeted had nothing to do with the war between the two nations, and are targeted because they aren't part of either nation, and also incapable of defending themselves against the superior weaponry their oppressors possess. Though little is said, it is clear that these two nations have Kino, who rarely if ever expresses a moral judgement of the nations traveled through, disgusted.
* HeelFaceTurn: Apparently Riegel, a notorious serial killer, went through this after living in the country where killing is allowed. He has nothing but kind words to Kino and listens to her travels. When Kino was face to face with the man who wanted to live in his country so he can kill, Riegel and his townsfolk arrive save Kino while executing the man. Kino parts ways with him after she leaves.
* HeroicSacrifice:
** [[spoiler:The original Kino]] dies protecting [[spoiler:the protagonist's life]], in her backstory.
** Rafa's plan to have Shizu buy her involves this, as it turns out, as [[spoiler:combined with the money she obtained from selling her organs, she's pulled her family out of poverty even though it means her death]].
* HeroOfAnotherStory:
** Younger!Shishou during her traveling years with her then-partner, Aibou, have stories that dedicated their time together.
** Shizu, particularly in the 2003 anime where he only showed up once, compared to the novels where he regularly has his own stories that are largely separate from Kino's, including a few that chronologically take place before his debut.
** In the novels only, Photo, who had [[ADayInTheLimelight a single episode focusing on her]] in the 2017 anime, has adventures that actually deviate from both Kino and Shizu’s stories together.
* HowWeGotHere: About once a volume, one story starts off with its ending out of context, and then a later chapter reveals how things reached that point.
* ICallItVera: All of Kino's guns are named. "The Woodsman" is a .22 Colt Woodsman Match Target semiautomatic pistol; named after Kino shot off a branch to take out a bandit/the gun's real-life counterpart (Apparently, this was an added detail in Tokyopop's English translation; in the novels, it was already called "The Woodsman" even before it was given to Kino by the old man in the Kind Land.) "The Cannon" is a .44 Colt 1851 Navy single action revolver that takes liquid explosives instead of gunpowder; it's named after what it can do. Later in the novels Kino acquires "The Flute"; a Arisaka type 99 bolt-action sniper rifle.
* ImAHumanitarian: The ending of the episode where Kino saves the three starving men in the tent.
* {{Immortality}}: Several chapters of the novels have played with different versions of the concept.
** Kino visited a country after hearing rumors that none of its citizens ever get sick, hoping to learn their secret. It turns out that everybody gets their [[HealingFactor healing factor]] from the bite of an insect. As usual, there's a catch: [[spoiler:they only live for 50 years after getting bit.]]
** In one chapter, Kino talks to a [[WhoWantsToLiveForever depressed]] man who claims to be immortal. The truth is [[spoiler:he's an experimental subject on [[TransferableMemory transferring memories]] to [[BrainUploading other people]] generation after generation. But the purpose of the experiment is to actually ''[[ImmortalityImmorality discourage]]'' people from seeking immortality, and will go on until the man [[GoMadFromTheIsolation goes mad]].]]
** Once, Kino meets a 12-year old boy who is [[spoiler:actually [[ReallySevenHundredYearsOld 93 years old]] already.]]
** In volume 18, Master and her student arrives at a country filled with babies in capsules. Apparently, [[spoiler: this [[SocietyOfImmortals country]] considers [[NeverGrewUp remaining an infant for life]] as the most ideal form of immortality. Except they don't live forever.]]
* ImportantHaircut: Kino's hair was cut into its current style after it was stained with blood from the first person she killed.
* ImprobableUseOfAWeapon: One country has so much surplus of weapons, they decided to use them to entertain their citizens with an annual fireworks display.
* ItGetsEasier: Kino, Shizu and especially Master have killed so many people they don't even feel remorse anymore. When minor characters call them out for murdering so casually, they reply with IDidWhatIHadToDo.
* IWasQuiteALooker: Shishou [[spoiler: and Aibou in "The Kind Land" episode]] were Bifauxnen and Bishounen during their travels together.
* KarmicDeath: When the SoleSurvivor of the country run by majority rule refuses to let Kino leave, Kino asks what would happen if a majority vote of Kino and Hermes decided that the man was in the wrong. The man promptly has an OhCrap reaction as he realizes he would be executed in the same way as all the other dissidents. Subverted when Kino [[CruelMercy leaves the man alone]], quite possibly realizing that he'll probably die of a disease, like his wife did.
* KickTheDog: Shortly before the merchant family and their entourage succumbs to the poison, the son of the family proposes brutally killing their slave, who'd tried to warn them about the poison, [[ARealManIsAKiller to become strong enough to protect the others]], and his parents and their companions approve of it. That final act of cruelty ensures that no tears are shed over their deaths.
* KlingonScientistsGetNoRespect: One country focuses on increasing their crop yields to the exclusion of all else, and ends up ostracizing a scientist for bringing back knowledge that doesn't help with that. His protégé, a young woman named Nimya, receives similar treatment when she tries to build an airplane, but the country changes their minds when they see the airplane fly.
* LandOfOneCity: Most countries Kino visits consist of a single city.
* LaserSight: Kino's semi-automatic pistol is equipped with one. "The Bothersome Country's" laser is compared to a much more powerful version of that laser.
* LegacyCharacter: Kino takes on the name of the previous Kino, a traveler who stopped by her country. Likewise, the original Kino named the motorrad he repaired "Hermes" after his previous motorrad.
* LethalChef: Kino is apparently a terrible cook. When the doctor in volume 7 says that the cooking was delicious, Kino is visibly surprised, remarking that that was the only time someone said that with a straight face, and the only characters we see enjoy it had been starving for weeks. While they were training together, Master was so terrified of Kino's food that she wouldn't let her cook.
* LimitedWardrobe: It's made clear that the main characters have only the one outfit, as they can be identified in stories even if not mentioned by name. Justified as they're travelers, so they actually don't have spares.
* TheLostLenore: In "Country of Liars", Kino is greeted by a man waiting for his lover, who left on a journey and had yet to return. Kino learns later that the man was driven mad with grief when he unwittingly killed her during a revolution he took part in. Things get twisted, however, with the dual reveals that [[spoiler:the woman killed was a double and the man's caretaker is, in fact, his lover and that the man is aware of fact but hasn't let on. Both are content to leave things as they are]].
* LonelyFuneral: In Episode 8 of the 2003 anime, an old man who studied abroad ends up being ostracized because he couldn't increase the crop yield. His funeral is held without any attendees besides the pallbearers.
* {{Malaproper}}: Hermes does this sometimes, as he refers to a volcanic eruption as a "corruption."
* MagicRealism: Any fantasy elements in the world tend to be lowkey or simply accepted as fact. Given how strange the non-fantastical countries can be, magic is hardly the weirdest thing to go around, even if there's the occasional case of ArbitrarySkepticism.
* MatureWorkChildProtagonists: The titular Kino is a VagueAge, but still clearly young compared to the adult characters who appear in the series. In the course of her travels, she encounters a group of slave traders who, when snowed in, ate their [[ImAHumanitarian "goods"]]; a country where a brutal form of democracy saw the losing end of a vote subjected to the death penalty; a nation where travelers were forced to compete in gladiatorial games to the death; and a land where warfare between two nations had been turned into a competition to see who could slaughter the most members of a nearby native tribe.
* MercyKill: Shizu delivers this to [[spoiler:Rafa, granting her a quick death rather than a slow, painful one from her artificial organs failing]].
* AMindIsATerribleThingToRead: This is the entire plot of the premiere of the first series, where one country developed a technology to allow its citizens to read one another's minds. This becomes so unbearable that they all move out to the countryside and stay out of each other's "mental ranges."
* MeaningfulBackgroundEvent: In Episode 4 of the 2017 series, after Ti [[spoiler:stabs Shizu in the chest]], you can see the ship's doors slowly close, and the ship pull away from the shore.
* MindScrew:
** The Land of Books episode, especially at its end, when it's suggested that Kino is just a character in a book which is itself part of a virtual reality simulation cooked up by the last man on earth to entertain his daughter...or maybe that guy was just crazy.
** "Various Tales" has Kino go through especially bizarre adventures with various characters she's met on her journey... only for the end to reveal it was AllJustADream that younger!Kino is having, with no explanation as to how she dreamed of people she's yet to meet.
* MinorFlawMajorBreakup: In the first episode of the 2003 anime, Kino meets a man whose wife left him because he didn't share her interest in flowers, and she didn't share his interest in music, although the word choice implies that they were merely indifferent to each other's hobbies. This is PlayedForDrama, since being able to read each other's minds caused a small difference of opinion to spiral out of control and cause them to be unable to live with each other.
* MirroringFactions: Two countries that are at "war" formed a truce so that instead of fighting each other, they make a sport of slaughtering the civilian population of a third country. The victims in turn "fight back", by capturing clueless travelers and brutally killing them, invoking very similar arguments as the other two did. It looks like the only reason they are the ones getting slaughtered is because they just don't happen to have a military.
* MisplacedRetribution: When Kino encounters some members of a tribe that are being slaughtered, they decide to kill her in revenge. She denies having anything to do with the genocide, and they believe her, but decide to kill ''someone'' in order to get their revenge.
* MuggingTheMonster: Subverted and lampshaded in episode nine of the 2017 anime. A young bandit being trained by an elder one is on the look out for easy targets. He first sees [[OneManArmy Shizu]] with [[EnfantTerrible Ti]] And Riku. The younger one thinks they're easy pickings. The Elder wisely disagrees and even more wisely tells him to leave them alone. Next the younger spots [[LittleMissBadass Kino]] and thinks she's an easy target. The Elder again wisely disagrees. He then tells the younger that their ideal target carelessly attacks anyone, to the point they'll someday attack a weak-looking opponent that turned out to CurbStompBattle them. Played straight when it turns out the reason the elder is so wise in picking targets is years ago when he was younger he tried to rob [[TheDreaded Master]] and her [[BloodKnight apprentice]].
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Photo's reaction when her hesitation in warning the merchant family about the poison they're eating (although she doesn't realize that it's poison until the dinner's on the table) costs everyone but her their lives.
* NaiveNewcomer: Ti after being taken in by Shizu and Riku.
* NiceGuy:
** Photo, so much so that even during her time as a mistreated slave, she never hated her home country (who sold her out in the first place), or even the [[{{Jerkass}} the merchant family full of assholes]] who constantly beat her just for breathing the same air as them.
** Shizu is a generally friendly individual. One country describes him as the nicest traveler they've had, and during the Ship Country story, he pleasantly surprises the citizens by choosing to do menial labor rather than be an overseer who has a more comfortable job pushing the citizens around. (He did it more so because he was hoping for physical work to stay sharp, but it's implied he also found the idea of the other job distasteful, and it's worth noting that he's the ''only'' traveler to ever not choose it.)
* NoAntagonist: While Kino might get into conflict with some characters who are hostile to her in her journey, the overall plot has no antagonist to speak off: Just Kino going place to place in search of cities to travel to.
* NoEnding: The 2017 anime ends with Kino taking a nap in a field on a beautiful day, declaring that it's the end of her journey, and when she awakens, another one will begin. In TheStinger, she wakes up and sets off on Hermes once again.
* NoNameGiven: Master/Shishou and her apprentice have no given names. Instead, Shishou is referred to as 'the woman' or described as 'the beautiful woman with long hair'. Her student is referred to as 'the man' or described as 'the slightly short but handsome man'.
* NoPartyLikeADonnerParty: In the second episode, Kino meets a trio of starving merchants who had been snowed in all winter and had eaten their cargo early on to survive. Only, they were slavers, and their cargo was people destined for the slave market.
* NoodleIncident:
-->'''Hermes:''' ''(in response to Kino being forced to disarm to enter a country)'' This is still better than that time when you had to wear those weird clothes to get in.\\
'''Kino:''' ...I don't even want to think about that anymore.
* NotEnoughToBury: The fate of the museum curator's husband in Episode 12 of the 2003 anime.
-->"One year, they brought my husband's legs home to me... because they couldn't the find the rest of him."
* NotSoStoic: Kino holds a reserved demeanor throughout, and though she remains open and pleasant, she keeps a guarded calmness throughout. This peels away in some rare moments.
** "A Peaceful Land": After learning that the whole reason for the peace in this land was violently killing the native population to maintain peace of mind, she departs, but not before questioning such violent ideas. Later, she's attacked and almost killed by the native population who use similar logic and it all just leads up to a cycle of people killing those lesser than them. After driving them off, Kino looks considerably shaken before leaving with Hermes.
** In "A Kind Land", Kino's reaction to [[spoiler:the town's destruction]] completely strips away the calm neutrality she maintained for much of the series.
** One of the stories in the second series' ninth episode has a scene of Kino completely losing her cool over the fact that staying at a country Master recommended required a MindWipe of having been in the country in the first place. Even more frustrating for Kino, Hermes remembers everything (as the drug used only works on humans) but promised not to say anything about it.
** In Episode 10 of the 2003 anime, Kino gasps in shock when her hosts dump the meal their housekeeper made down the garbage chute while the housekeeper is away, then lie and claim they enjoyed it.
* ObfuscatingInsanity: The hero of the revolution in "Country of Liars" pretends to have gone mad with grief over the loss of his love and doesn't let on that [[spoiler:he knows that his housekeeper is actually his lover. He keeps up the facade for the sake of his love, and of the revolution he and his friend led.]]
* OffingTheOffspring: In Kino's home country, any child that doesn't submit to a medical procedure similar to a lobotomy and brainwashing at the appropriate age is killed.
* OneManArmy: Kino, Shizu and Master. Kino singlehandedly kills an entire band of war veterans and mercenaries in a few chapters, but Master is even more impressive as she takes out hundreds of people all in one chapter. Meanwhile, Shizu slashes away at 22 bandits armed with rifles in just one afternoon.
* OnlyAFleshWound: Averted. Injuries inflicted by persuaders are serious. Kino's opponents are incapacitated after getting shot in the legs or arms. In volume 8, Master and her student's [[ImprobableAimingSkills aiming skills]] enabled them to keep every single one of their attackers alive by aiming at their legs, but gave them a limp for the rest of their lives.
* OnlyOneName: We never do learn most of the characters' full names, including Kino's.
* ParentalAbandonment: [[spoiler:Kino.]] Well, Parental Attempted Murder, at any rate.
* ParryingBullets: Shizu, in the Coliseum episodes, deflects bullets with his sword.
* PercussiveMaintenance: When Hermes says embarrassing things, or [[DeadpanSnarker just acts like a total jerk]], Kino usually shuts him up like this.
* PetTheDog: The unnamed member of the [[JerkAss asshole merchant family]] freed Photo by unlocking the chain around her neck and had her perform a MercyKill on him, after digesting part of the poisonous soup that was slowly killing the man.
* PinnedDown: In the Land of Heroes, while fighting 7 veterans, Kino does this with a sniper rifle. The end results are a man losing several limbs and another having [[YourHeadAsplode half of his head blown off]].
* PlanetOfHats: Elevates this trope to an artform.
* PragmaticVillainy: The two formerly warring countries in Episode 12 of the 2003 anime don't wipe out the indigenous people they're competing to kill, since doing so would be wasteful, both of the people they're competing to kill for the sake of peace, and of the government's defense budget. By merely "hunting" the indigenous people, they keep military spending down.
* ProfessionalKiller: [[spoiler:Master's apprentice]] is implied to be one. In a chapter adapted to the second anime, it was shown that one of his belongings is a [[IKEAWeaponry briefcase]] containing persuader accessories and tools for assassination.
* PronounTrouble: Due to her androgynous appearance, Kino is sometimes subjected to this, sometimes letting it pass uncorrected.
* ProperlyParanoid: Being this is a necessity while traveling. Kino, Shizu, and Shisho, for instance, don't accept drink unless they're certain that it hasn't been laced.
* PsychoSupporter: One pacifistic woman travels around to spread her peaceful ideals in spite of the danger, but unbeknownst to her, he's been killing anyone who would threaten her. Kino and Hermes suspect the woman would kill herself if she ever found out what he did for her.
* PullTheIV: Averted. In one of the chapters in the novel, [[spoiler:Master's student]] joined the front lines of a war carrying the IV drip, including the stand.
* TheQuietOne: Ti/Tea qualifies by not talking most of the time, and sometimes speaking without fully saying the word when she does talk.
-->'''Riku:''' [[LampshadeHanging Strange that they chose someone who doesn't talk for our guide...]]
* RasterVision: The 2003 anime is deliberately made to resemble this.
* ReformedCriminal: [[spoiler:The citizens of the country where murder isn't prohibited judging by rumors are heavily implied to have been criminals that just want to live a peaceful life. Regal the serial killer admired by the man wanting to be a citizen to freely kill people is the polite old man that invites Kino for tea on her last day to tell him stories about her travels.]]
* RefugeInAudacity: In "Historical Country," Kino's master doesn't just break her disciple out of prison, but instead of sneaking out of the country, holes up in the clock tower and snipes the soldiers sent to surround her. Not only does the government grant them safe passage out of the country, it even pays them to leave.
* RevengeMyopia: Kino meets a woman and the man she had hired as a guard as they're about to set out on a journey. She sits with the man for a while, and learns that he had killed her husband several years ago accidentally while robbing his store, and had been reformed and set free by their justice system, on the condition that he make it up to the woman by mutual agreement. It's made clear that his reform and desire to help the woman any way he can in penance for his crime are genuine. They part, and later Kino is riding through the woods when she hears a gunshot... It turns out the widow was not as big on redemption as her society was.
* TheRevolutionWillNotBeCivilized: While the series has plenty to say on corrupt rulers, it also doesn't shy away from how the process of overthrowing monarchies can get ''very'' bloody, including the massacre of entire royal families regardless of individual members' guilt.
* RidiculouslyHumanRobot: Subverted. She's actually human, and an inventor, who started believing she was a robot after a severe trauma. The actual robots are VERY obviously non-human.
* RotatingProtagonist: Downplayed, as the majority of the stories are focused on Kino, but Shizu and co./Shisho & co./Photo & co. will each get ADayInTheLimelight about once per volume.
* RunningGag:
** Hermes misusing figures of speech, to a point where Kino has to wonder if he's doing so intentionally. The game takes this to another level by including a mini-game where the player has to guess the correct proverb.
** In the novels, Kino always asks Hermes to wake up early. Still, he has to be beaten awake almost every morning.
* SamusIsAGirl: Kino is a girl, but her traveling clothes and demeanor both encourage the people she encounters to miss that and assume she's a boy/young man, due to their preconceptions about travelers. In the first light novel Kino's gender is only revealed after more than half of the volume.
* SchizoTech: Not just between country to country, but even within the same country. A place might have both psychic nanotech and cobblestone streets and typewriters and phonographs and talking robots, while another country has hoversleds and tape-based computers. The eponymous character's equipment includes a racing motorcycle made between 1929 and 1940, a pistol from 1947 to 1955, a revolver from 1''8''51, and a rifle that comes from the 1930s.
* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: Kino is pretty much the master of this trope, as she'll immediately bail on situations if she feels that she's stayed long enough. (Contrast to Shizu who'll stick around long enough to try and help or to Shisho who'll stick around to make things worse/turn things against the other party.)
* SelfDeprecation: "Sane people don't become writers, Hermes."
%%* SmallGirlBigGun
* ShamedByAMob: The man Kino encountered in episode 1 of the 2017 anime wants to go to the country where killing is allowed, and when he was allowed citizenry, he tries to bribe her by demanding half of her stuff just so he can make a living there. The moment she declines, he pulls a gun on her until he gets shot by an old woman with a crossbow. The entire mob at that point were armed to the teeth, and their apparent leader tells him while murder is not prohibited, it is not ''permitted''. The man gets executed on the spot.
* ShootTheDog: Kino has to do this several times, and several stories revolve around this idea.
* ShootTheShaggyDogStory: A number of stories end up as this. A prime example would be the railroad scenario, in which Kino, going backwards on the tracks, encounters in order: a man who's spent 50 years repairing the tracks, a man who's spent 50 years destroying the repaired tracks, and a man who's spent 50 years setting new tracks. In her usual fashion, she elects not to tell them that they're all wasting their time.
* ShoutOut:
** In Episode 3 of the first anime, a soldier, relieved that the plan to attack the country Kino left managed to avoid involving unrelated individuals, says [[Series/TheATeam he loves it when a plan comes together.]]
** In the preview for episode 9, Hermes asks Kino what she would do if she had a typewriter that was a [[Film/NakedLunch talking cockroach]]. And Episode 9's subtitle, "Nothing Is Written", and opening in the desert, may be references to ''Film/LawrenceOfArabia''.
** In the episode "Her Journey", a king offers a boon to an old man, whose only request is that the king move out of the way of the sun. This is a common folklore attributed to several philosophers and mathematicians. Also, the alleged wise hermit was part of country's experiment with TheLudovicoTechnique. As in ''Film/AClockworkOrange'', it ended very badly for him.
* SinkOrSwimMentor: Kino's "Master", in the first movie, in the series' usual brutal, understated fashion.
* SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism: Kino meets idealists and cynics all throughout her journey, each one with their own thoughts and opinions on the state of the world or more often the country they live. The most prominent example of the series' contrast between cynicism and idealism is the episode "Her Journey -Love and Bullets-" in which a young woman and a man traveling together cross paths with Kino. The woman claims to be on a quest to bring peace to the world and proclaim the glory of pacifism. Kino asks how she could have survived this journey so long without encountering any danger that would have to be solved with violence. To which the woman responds that she doesn't know, she has always assumed that they've just been lucky. [[spoiler:The truth is the man traveling with her has quietly killed off anyone in their path who might make themselves a problem. He kept this a secret because he loves her and doesn't want to shatter her vision of an ideal world.]]
* StealthEscortMission: Kino encounters a man and woman traveling the other direction. The woman is an ActualPacifist, and explains to Kino that they're traveling unarmed in order to spread a message of peace and love. Then when she's out of earshot, the man reveals to Kino that he's packing heat. For the entire trip, he's been sneaking ahead and dealing with any bandits or outlaws before they can threaten the woman, so she never realizes he's been killing on her behalf.
* StealthInsult: Kino meets a man who overthrew the king of his country, a tyrant who'd executed anyone who disagreed with him. Unfortunately, the newfound system of majority rule executed all dissidents the same way until only the man and his wife were left, at which point the latter died of a disease. As Kino says goodbye to the man, she calls him "Your Highness," thereby saying that he's no better than the king he replaced.
* SteamPunk: Several countries have this distinct feel to them.
* TheStinger:
** "Ship Country" has a post-credits scene revealing that [[spoiler:Shizu survived being stabbed, and Kino successfully prevented Ti from blowing herself up]].
** At the end of the 2017 anime, Kino wakes up from her nap and embarks on another journey.
* StrawCritic: One country has an entire council of them to decide which books are deemed harmful or harmless. At one point, the Librarian calls critics "an evil breed".
* TakeThatCritics:
** The whole episode 8 of the first anime is in fact a thinly disguised attack on literary censorship and critics who are portrayed by a handful of pompous snobs who self-actualize themselves with the help of criticism and bans of any fiction or scientific literature other than children's books and reference books.
** The episode also contains a light TakeThatAudience using the mocking image of avid readers as a conspiratorial group of people, half of whom lost touch with reality.
* TalkingAnimal: Riku, Shizu's loyal canine retainer.
* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill:
** One country Kino went to was bombarded with artillery cannons, missiles, and a bomb implied to be a FOAB for [[CreatingLifeIsBad creating clones]]. Of course, [[spoiler:no one is actually killed by this, though no buildings are left standing.]]
* {{Telepathy}}: One country has developed a concoction that would allow citizens who drink it to read the minds of others who also drank it. Then everyone drank it, nobody wanting to be left out of the brilliant discovery. This turned out badly.
* ThreeKindsOfScienceFiction: ''The Land of Wizards'' episode is the gadget variety.
%%* {{Tomboy}}
* TooDumbToLive:
** A country Kino encounters in episode 5 of the first anime was ruled by majority rule, and began to kill off the minority voters. Eventually only two people were left alive because of it.
** The merchant family shown in Episode 6 of the 2017 anime serves poisonous herbs in their food, and refuses to listen when their slave warns them. Their motorrad reassures their slave that they died due to their own stupidity.
* TownWithADarkSecret: If a country seems perfect and the story isn't going to end it with being destroyed, there's a good chance it's actually harboring something sinister instead.
* TrappedInAnotherWorld: The crossover campaign ''Travelers and the Labyrinth Country'' from ''[[LightNovel/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon Danmachi:]] VideoGame/MemoriaFreese'' involves Kino and Hermes(The motorcycle, not the god); Photo and Sou; and Shizu, Riku and Tifana ending up in Bell's world after getting caught in a fog.
* TroublingUnchildlikeBehavior: Ti's stock of grenades. Riku has to convince her to leave them behind when she goes outside for a walk.
* TryNotToDie: An important rule for all travelers. Kino gives this advice to the man who serves as a woman's bodyguard in atonement for killing her husband... not long before the woman kills the man.
* UnfinishedBusiness: One of the characters introduced in the viewer participation drama is revealed to be a [[GhostlyGoals vengeful ghost]] of the [[spoiler: princess of the ruined country. It was a traveler who caused the demise of her country, so she takes revenge on all passing travelers by luring them to their deaths.]]
* UntranslatedTitle: The first novel was released in English under the title "Kino No Tabi".
* UnusuallyUninterestingSight: No one seems the least bit surprised that a motorcycle can talk, and no explanation for how Hermes is sentient is ever provided. Similarly, it's never explained why Riku can speak; when Shizu asked, Riku's answer was pretty much "why not." Lampshaded by fellow SentientVehicle Sou, who tells Photo not to question it, and whose narration acknowledges that no explanation exists so there's no point in even wondering.
* VagueAge: Due to ComicBookTime being in effect.
** Kino is 12 when beginning training with Shishou, but other than that no age is revealed. The woman who voices Kino in the English dub is just a circumstance of the casting; it's implied that Kino is meant to be 11-12 during the flashbacks, and around 15 for the rest of the series.
** Averted in the novels as it's stated in volume 10 that Kino started traveling 'three years after her 12th birthday', meaning that Kino left Shishou at the age of 15. However, it's insinuated that several years had passed since she started traveling. The stories are not generally in chronological order, so her age in each story is up in the air, though she's consistently described as being in her mid-teens, at least.
** Similarly, Shizu is 22... at ''some'' point in his chronologically early appearances, but it's unclear how much time is passing between stories.
* VoiceoverLetter: In the 2017 anime adaptation of "A Kind Country," Kino gets one from Sakura's mother, as well as Sakura herself, which she opens [[spoiler:after the volcano erupts and destroys the country.]]
* WalkingTheEarth: The premise of the series. Kino travels from country to country, not staying for more than three days at a time, and says traveling is the only way she knows how to live.
* WasJustLeaving: The chief uses this phrase when kicking Nimya out after refusing to listen to her plea.
* WellIntentionedExtremist: The museum curator in Episode 12 of the 2003 anime lost her husband and sons to war, so she managed to broker peace with the enemy with the help of a like-minded woman in the enemy power... by turning the war into a competition to kill indigenous peoples. She fully acknowledges that they're killing innocent people, but notes that this was the only solution that would appeal to the enemy countries' violent and competitive nature, and claims that the overall death toll is lower than when the two nations were fighting each other.
* WhamShot:
** In Episode 4 of the 2017 series, Shizu has an encounter with a gunslinger working for the rulers of the Ship Country. Eventually, the gunslinger's disguise comes off, revealing the person as [[spoiler:Kino herself]].
** In Episode 10 of the 2003 series, there are few. First, the nanny takes Kino to a cliff over a lake, and when the light is right, it reveals a relatively recent city submerged underwater. Second, after the robotic nanny passes away, the family places her body in a grave next to the remains of her husband and children, the latter of which are represented by human skulls. Third, the family take off their heads, revealing that the three of them are robots.
* WholeEpisodeFlashback: In the 2003 series, Episode 4 details Kin's origins. Episode 13 is either this or AnachronicOrder, since it takes place before episode 1.
* YamatoNadeshiko: Naturally, there's one when Kino stays in Japan.
* YouCantGoHomeAgain: [[spoiler:Kino and Shizu.]] Further enforced since it's implied that she did go back to her home country once more -- only to find it in a complete ruins.
* YouDontLookLikeYou: Kino's appearance in the first anime is quite different from the descriptions and illustrations in the novels. In addition to having a different hairstyle and eye color, wearing differently colored clothes and being much taller, she is noticeably more feminine in the novels. The second anime's design follows the novels much more closely.
* YouRemindMeOfX: It's strongly implied that Kino sees a lot of herself in Sakura, a girl she meets in "A Kind Country." Like Kino, Sakura is the daughter of a couple that owns an inn, and often gets mocked for her name, like Kino did. The difference, however, is that Sakura insists on staying in her country and inheriting her parents' inn, [[spoiler:despite most likely knowing that her country is about to be destroyed by the volcano]].
* YourHeadAsplode:
** In Episode 7 when Kino shoots the king. It also happens quite frequently in the novels, and is described quite graphically.
** In the country run by majority rule, the punishment for disagreeing with the majority, [[FullCircleRevolution one they inherited from the previous king]], is to be dropped head first onto the pavement. When people are shown being executed, you can see a blood splatter, possibly implying that the victims' heads split open.
* ZombieApocalypse: ''The Land of the Dead - Spirit of the Dead'' chapter of the sixteenth novel, Land of the Dead is infested by undeads.
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