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* Creator/PoulAnderson's "Literature/CallMeJoe": "Joe" is the character played by Edward Anglesey, on {{UsefulNotes/Jupiter}}. Joe is a [[ArtificialHuman pseudojovian manufactured]] to live on the surface of Jupiter. Since Anglesey was paralyzed as a young man, he operates an [[PsychicLink esprojector that conveys his thoughts]] along a [[{{Technobabble}} psibeam]] to fully immerse himself in the pseudojovian's mind. He eventually leaves his human body and lives entirely in his pseudojovian body.
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Created Red Link to encourage page creation, but also commented-out because the only "context" was a reference to another work.


* Done by Creator/PoulAnderson in ''Call Me Joe''. A lot of people accused James Cameron of ripping him off in the ''{{Film/Avatar}}'' example above.

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* Done by Creator/PoulAnderson in ''Call Me Joe''. A lot of people accused James Cameron of ripping him off in the ''{{Film/Avatar}}'' example above.%%* Creator/PoulAnderson's "Literature/CallMeJoe":
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The character in question is disabled, [[Main/LittlestCancerPatient sick]], or otherwise prevented from living a normal life. They are however lucky enough to live in a world advanced enough to feature virtual reality games, where [[Main/DigitalAvatar their limits are nullified]]. Moreover, such a person tends to fare even better than most players, since they usually spend way more time online.

May be a form of DarkLordOnLifeSupport. See also DisabilityNegatingSuperpower when disability is actually negated in the real world.

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The character in question is disabled, [[Main/LittlestCancerPatient [[LittlestCancerPatient sick]], or otherwise prevented from living a normal life. They are however lucky enough to live in a world advanced enough to feature virtual reality games, where [[Main/DigitalAvatar [[DigitalAvatar their limits are nullified]]. Moreover, such a person tends to fare even better than most players, since they usually spend way more time online.

May be a form of DarkLordOnLifeSupport. Sub-trope of ThrowingOffTheDisability. See also DisabilityNegatingSuperpower when the problems of a disability is actually are negated in the real world.by new powers.
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* In ''[[Film/SpyKids Spy Kids 3D]]'', Grandpa Cortez - an elderly, retired spy using a wheelchair - joins Juni Cortez on the adventure in the virtual world, and they immediately come across a powerup that lets him stand on his feet for the first time in years. Unfortunately, he has to go back to using the wheelchair when their mission is over...

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* In ''[[Film/SpyKids Spy Kids 3D]]'', ''Film/SpyKids3DGameOver'', Grandpa Cortez - an elderly, retired spy using a wheelchair - joins Juni Cortez on the adventure in the virtual world, and they immediately come across a powerup that lets him stand on his feet for the first time in years. Unfortunately, he has to go back to using the wheelchair when their mission is over...

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* ''Anime/DotHackSign'': In the epilogue, it is revealed that [[spoiler:Subaru's player is an introverted paraplegic girl in RealLife, who plays ''The World'' for the freedom to travel anywhere and to make friends she doesn't have offline]].



* ''LightNovel/LogHorizon'': Touya is paraphlegic in real life. In the world of Elder Tale, he's trying extra hard to fight for and protect what he considers precious.

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* ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'':
** In ''Manga/DigimonVTamer01'', Rei Saiba lost the use of her legs after an accident in the real world, which is the reason for her brother Neo's evil actions. When Rei's transported to the Digital World, she can use her legs, though she somehow still doesn't feel anything through them.
** In ''Manga/DigimonNext'', Yuu has a heart condition in the real world, which disappears when he's in the Digital World, leading to him not wanting to go back because he's afraid of the heart surgery awaiting him. He grows out of it eventually.
* ''LightNovel/LogHorizon'': Touya is paraphlegic paraplegic in real life. In the world of Elder Tale, he's trying extra hard to fight for and protect what he considers precious.precious.
* Masamichi Haru from ''Anime/RealDrive'' woke up from a 50 year coma to find his body is now 80 years old. He can't move around without a wheelchair or Minamo's assistance. It's not possible for him to upgrade into a full-prosthetic body, but he does have a cyberbrain. This allows him to find a purpose as a "diver" into [[TheAlternet The Metal]], where he can conduct research and investigate anomalies being caused by the interactions of others.



* ''Anime/DotHackSign'': In the epilogue, it is revealed that [[spoiler:Subaru's player is an introverted paraplegic girl in RealLife, who plays ''The World'' for the freedom to travel anywhere and to make friends she doesn't have offline]].
* Masamichi Haru from ''Anime/RealDrive'' woke up from a 50 year coma to find his body is now 80 years old. He can't move around without a wheelchair or Minamo's assistance. It's not possible for him to upgrade into a full-prosthetic body, but he does have a cyberbrain. This allows him to find a purpose as a "diver" into [[TheAlternet The Metal]], where he can conduct research and investigate anomalies being caused by the interactions of others.
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* TheCatLady has this with the final villain of the piece, a person who [[spoiler: uses internet chat rooms to gaslight numerous people to death, including eventually his father]] despite only being able to move his eye.
* {{Downplayed}} in VideoGame/TronTwoPointOh. In the analog world, both Alan Bradley and his son Jet need glasses to see. TheGlassesComeOff once they're digitized.

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* TheCatLady ''VideoGame/TheCatLady'' has this with the final villain of the piece, a person who [[spoiler: uses internet chat rooms to gaslight numerous people to death, including eventually his father]] despite only being able to move his eye.
* {{Downplayed}} in VideoGame/TronTwoPointOh.''VideoGame/TronTwoPointOh''. In the analog world, both Alan Bradley and his son Jet need glasses to see. TheGlassesComeOff once they're digitized.
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* PlayedWith in the Franchise/{{Tron}} fanfic [[http://archiveofourown.org/works/9436712/chapters/21352286 "The Contingency."]] Alan Bradley is dying of a brain tumor (though not incapacitated), and is brought to The Grid with the hopes he can be cured. [[spoiler: The cure works, but it involved a transfusion of Iso code, effectively making him a hybrid of User and Iso, both of which paints a big target on his back because of Clu's coup.]]
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[[folder: Fan Works]]
* Roleplay/DCNation had a similar plotline to the ''Batman Inc'' example. Jericho's powers misfire, sending Barbara Gordon-Grayson into cyberspace. Babs then realizes two things; she doesn't need a wheelchair there, and that she can [[RealityWarper alter the world around her by thinking about the code needed to do what she wants]].

[[/folder]]


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* {{Downplayed}} in VideoGame/TronTwoPointOh. In the analog world, both Alan Bradley and his son Jet need glasses to see. TheGlassesComeOff once they're digitized.
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* TheCatLady has this with the final villain of the piece, a person who [[spoiler: uses internet chat rooms to gaslight numerous people to death, including eventually his father]] despite only being able to move his eye.
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* A variant in the ''Literature/GuardiansOfTheFlame'' books. James is severely disabled on Earth but when he's transported to the other world is transformed into the physically hale dwarf warrior Ahira.

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* A variant in the ''Literature/GuardiansOfTheFlame'' books. James is severely disabled on Earth but when he's transported to the other world is transformed into the physically hale dwarf warrior Ahira. As a result, he's one of the few members of the group who isn't in a great hurry to get back to the real world.
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* In ''Supreme Commander'' by Nikolay Gudanets, General Andrey Berezin has lost both his legs during the Second Russian Civil War. He's now in command of an VideoGame/{{XCOM}}-like task force charged with fighting with alien attacks on Earth. Physically, he spends all his time in his apartment with his batman serving his needs, such as shopping and cooking. However, his VR helmet allows him to work in a virtual office, where he moves around on virtual legs. He also attends all meetings as a virtual avatar, capable of walking. During some missions, he personally remote-controls a small tank. At the end of the novel, [[spoiler:he has been relieved of command, but the reverse-engineering of some of the alien biotech now allows people to regrow lost limbs, so he may be able to walk again after all]].

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Merged two Sword Art Online entries


* In ''Anime/SwordArtOnline'', the [[spoiler:Sleeping Knights]] is a Guild entirely composed of terminally ill players. {{Exaggerat|edTrope}}ing it even further, their leader is [[spoiler:Konno Yuuki]], who is dying of AIDS and has been voluntarily living in a virtual environment 24 hours a day for three years - a whole year longer than the victims of the SAO incident were trapped in the game.

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* In ''Anime/SwordArtOnline'', the ''Anime/SwordArtOnline'':
** The
[[spoiler:Sleeping Knights]] is a Guild entirely composed of terminally ill players. {{Exaggerat|edTrope}}ing it even further, their leader is [[spoiler:Konno Yuuki]], who is dying of AIDS and has been voluntarily living in a virtual environment 24 hours a day for three years - a whole year longer than the victims of the SAO incident were trapped in the game.game.
** An inversion: it's possible for otherwise non-disabled people to suffer a "Full-Dive Nonconformity" of varying levels of severity that can leave them at a crippling disadvantage during gameplay. In ''Progressive'', Nezha suffers from this and is essentially legally blind in-game. His group worked long and hard to find a way for him to fight well alongside them, but ultimately decided to put him to use scamming players for money to buy better gear.



* Inverted in ''LightNovel/SwordArtOnline''. It's possible for otherwise non-disabled people to suffer a "Full-Dive Nonconformity" of varying levels of severity that can leave them at a crippling disadvantage during gameplay. In ''Progressive'', Nezha suffers from this and is essentially legally blind in-game. His group worked long and hard to find a way for him to fight well alongside them, but ultimately decided to put him to use scamming players for money to buy better gear.
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May be a form of DarkLordOnLifeSupport.

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May be a form of DarkLordOnLifeSupport. See also DisabilityNegatingSuperpower when disability is actually negated in the real world.

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* ''LightNovel/AccelWorld'': Played with. Kurasaki Fuuko (alias Sky Raker) is legless in real life, but able to live normally with prosthetics. Her Accel World form on the other hand looks a lot like a person in a wheelchair, and while she used to have legs, she lost them [[spoiler:when Kuroyukihime, on her request, destroyed them because Sky Raker hoped that without the extra weight, she'd be able to fly]].

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* ''LightNovel/AccelWorld'': Played with. with.
**
Kurasaki Fuuko (alias Sky Raker) is legless in real life, but able to live normally with prosthetics. Her Accel World form on the other hand looks a lot like a person in a wheelchair, and while she used to have legs, she lost them [[spoiler:when Kuroyukihime, on her request, destroyed them because Sky Raker hoped that without the extra weight, she'd be able to fly]].

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* ''LightNovel/AccelWorld'': Played with. Kurasaki Fuuko (alias Sky Raker) is legless in real life, but able to live normally with prosthetics. Her Accel World form on the other hand looks a lot like a person in a wheelchair. However, her avatar's abilities are not really worse than the others, which makes it a straight example after all.

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* ''LightNovel/AccelWorld'': Played with. Kurasaki Fuuko (alias Sky Raker) is legless in real life, but able to live normally with prosthetics. Her Accel World form on the other hand looks a lot like a person in a wheelchair. However, wheelchair, and while she used to have legs, she lost them [[spoiler:when Kuroyukihime, on her avatar's abilities are not really worse than request, destroyed them because Sky Raker hoped that without the others, which makes extra weight, she'd be able to fly]].
** Utai Shinomiya, also known as Ardor Maiden, is unable to speak in real life without using her Neurolinker to type messages (she can say the "Burst Link" command, but
it takes a straight example after all.great deal of effort), but can speak in Brain Burst.


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* Inverted in ''LightNovel/SwordArtOnline''. It's possible for otherwise non-disabled people to suffer a "Full-Dive Nonconformity" of varying levels of severity that can leave them at a crippling disadvantage during gameplay. In ''Progressive'', Nezha suffers from this and is essentially legally blind in-game. His group worked long and hard to find a way for him to fight well alongside them, but ultimately decided to put him to use scamming players for money to buy better gear.
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* Main/InvokedTrope in [[Creator/JamesCameron James Cameron's]] ''Film/{{Avatar}}'': Jake Sully is paraplegic. Using remotely controlled, artificial Na'vi body, he has full use of his legs again. As he becomes increasingly athletic and in tune with nature in Na'vi form, his human form feels like more and more of a shell.

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* Main/InvokedTrope in [[Creator/JamesCameron James Cameron's]] ''Film/{{Avatar}}'': Jake Sully is paraplegic. Using remotely controlled, artificial Na'vi body, he has full use of his legs again. As he becomes increasingly athletic and in tune with nature in Na'vi form, his human form feels like more and more of a shell. [[spoiler:At the end of the film, he undergoes a ritual that transfers his mind into that of his avatar permanently]].
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* In the ''Series/{{Robocop}}'' tv-show Diana is physically just a brain in a jar thanks to the scheme to use her as a living computer. She can interact via an intangible hologram, but can only actually touch someone if their brain is also plugged into the virtual computing system.

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* In the ''Series/{{Robocop}}'' tv-show tv-show, Diana is physically just a brain in a jar thanks to the scheme to use her as a living computer. She can interact via an intangible hologram, but can only actually touch someone if their brain is also plugged into the virtual computing system.
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* In the ''Series/{{Robocop}}'' Diana is physically just a brain in a jar thanks to the scheme to use her as a living computer. She can interact via an intangible hologram, but can only actually touch someone if their brain is also plugged into the virtual computing system.

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* In the ''Series/{{Robocop}}'' tv-show Diana is physically just a brain in a jar thanks to the scheme to use her as a living computer. She can interact via an intangible hologram, but can only actually touch someone if their brain is also plugged into the virtual computing system.
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* In the ''Series/{{Robocop}}'' Diana is physically just a brain in a jar thanks to the scheme to use her as a living computer. She can interact via an intangible hologram, but can only actually touch someone if their brain is also plugged into the virtual computing system.
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* In the ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'' episode "Lifesigns", Denara Pel, a Vidiian suffering from an incurable flesh-eating disease (the Phage), has her mind transferred to a holographic body by the Doctor which is notably disease-free.
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* Also an InvokedTrope in ''Film/StrangeDays'' where illegal technology exists that allows people to record their own experiences and for other people to play them back. One of the sleazy dealers of these recordings has a special one made for his legless friend of someone running along a beach, seeing a pretty woman and [[DistractedByTheSexy falling over in the surf]]. The friend is overjoyed to watch it but starts crying when the recording stops.
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* In ANightmareOnElmStreet 3 Will, who is paraplegic, can walk when in the dream world. He also has magical powers, inspired by his D&D game. [[spoiler:Neither save him from Freddy]].

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* In ANightmareOnElmStreet 3 ''Film/ANightmareOnElmStreet3DreamWarriors'', Will, who is paraplegic, can walk when in the dream world. He also has magical powers, inspired by his D&D game. [[spoiler:Neither save him from Freddy]].
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** Similarly, Joey is mute in the real world, but has YouMakeMeWannaShout powers in the dream. His disability seems to be psychological however, as he can speak normally in the sequel.

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** Similarly, Joey is mute in the real world, but has YouMakeMeWannaShout MakeMeWannaShout powers in the dream. His disability seems to be psychological however, as he can speak normally in the sequel.
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* In ANightmareOnElmStreet 3 Will, who is paraplegic, can walk when in the dream world. He also has magical powers, inspired by his D&D game. [[spoiler:Neither save him from Freddy]].
** Similarly, Joey is mute in the real world, but has YouMakeMeWannaShout powers in the dream. His disability seems to be psychological however, as he can speak normally in the sequel.
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Some clarification.

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** PlayedWith since the dream body is meant to reflect a player's dream self. Vriska, who lost an eye and an arm, has them back in the dream world, but Terezi, who went blind, is also blind in the dream world because she prefers it.
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none of the examples are straight and I prefer it to be pointed out when it\'s the case


* ''Series/{{Noob}}'':

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* ''Series/{{Noob}}'':''Series/{{Noob}}'' has played with this trope a few times, but has yet to do it straight:
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\"Red Dwarf\" should be a wikiword








* A subtle one in ''Series/Red Dwarf'' with Rimmer, who is [[IntangibleMan intangible]] due to being dead, being able to have physical form and interact physically while in the VR game "[[LotusEatermachine Better Than Life]]".

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* A subtle one in ''Series/Red Dwarf'' ''Series/RedDwarf'' with Rimmer, who is [[IntangibleMan intangible]] due to being dead, being able to have physical form and interact physically while in the VR game "[[LotusEatermachine Better Than Life]]".
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* A subtle one in ''RedDwarf'' with Rimmer, who is [[IntangibleMan intangible]] due to being dead, being able to have physical form and interact physically while in the VR game "[[LotusEatermachine Better Than Life]]".

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* A subtle one in ''RedDwarf'' ''Series/Red Dwarf'' with Rimmer, who is [[IntangibleMan intangible]] due to being dead, being able to have physical form and interact physically while in the VR game "[[LotusEatermachine Better Than Life]]".
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* John Scalzi's novel ''LockIn'' uses this as its central plot device. A plague left a significant portion of the planet with Locked In Syndrome and so the government built a huge VR system to allow Locked In folks freedom of movement in a simulated setting. This includes one of the central protagonists.

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* John Scalzi's novel ''LockIn'' ''Literature/LockIn'' uses this as its central plot device. A plague left a significant portion of the planet with Locked In Syndrome and so the government built a huge VR system to allow Locked In folks freedom of movement in a simulated setting. This includes one of the central protagonists.
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Article initiated.

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The character in question is disabled, [[Main/LittlestCancerPatient sick]], or otherwise prevented from living a normal life. They are however lucky enough to live in a world advanced enough to feature virtual reality games, where [[Main/DigitalAvatar their limits are nullified]]. Moreover, such a person tends to fare even better than most players, since they usually spend way more time online.

May be a form of DarkLordOnLifeSupport.

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!!Examples

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder: Anime & Manga]]
* ''LightNovel/AccelWorld'': Played with. Kurasaki Fuuko (alias Sky Raker) is legless in real life, but able to live normally with prosthetics. Her Accel World form on the other hand looks a lot like a person in a wheelchair. However, her avatar's abilities are not really worse than the others, which makes it a straight example after all.
* ''LightNovel/LogHorizon'': Touya is paraphlegic in real life. In the world of Elder Tale, he's trying extra hard to fight for and protect what he considers precious.
* In ''Anime/SwordArtOnline'', the [[spoiler:Sleeping Knights]] is a Guild entirely composed of terminally ill players. {{Exaggerat|edTrope}}ing it even further, their leader is [[spoiler:Konno Yuuki]], who is dying of AIDS and has been voluntarily living in a virtual environment 24 hours a day for three years - a whole year longer than the victims of the SAO incident were trapped in the game.
* ''Anime/DotHackSign'': In the epilogue, it is revealed that [[spoiler:Subaru's player is an introverted paraplegic girl in RealLife, who plays ''The World'' for the freedom to travel anywhere and to make friends she doesn't have offline]].
* Masamichi Haru from ''Anime/RealDrive'' woke up from a 50 year coma to find his body is now 80 years old. He can't move around without a wheelchair or Minamo's assistance. It's not possible for him to upgrade into a full-prosthetic body, but he does have a cyberbrain. This allows him to find a purpose as a "diver" into [[TheAlternet The Metal]], where he can conduct research and investigate anomalies being caused by the interactions of others.
* ZigZaggingTrope in ''Anime/YukiYunaIsAHero'': Togo, one of main cast of heroines, is normally in need of a wheelchair. Then the Hero System comes and Togo's powered-up form is quite versatile, highly mobile and hardly hindered by her bad legs. Then more of Hero System comes into the light, starting the "[[spoiler:Free disabilities]] for everyone!" campaign. And even that is not enough by the time of story climax, [[spoiler:the wheelchair changes hands]].
* In the Virtual World FillerArc of the ''Anime/YuGiOh'' anime, Seto Kaiba's adoptive father Gozaburo Kaiba originally had the virtual world created for his biological son Noah after Noah was hit by a car and left permanently disabled.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Comic Books]]
* In a somewhat ''Film/{{Tron}}''-inspired issue of ''[[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman Batman Inc]]'', Barbara Gordon gets to be Batgirl again...in cyberspace.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Film]]
* Main/InvokedTrope in [[Creator/JamesCameron James Cameron's]] ''Film/{{Avatar}}'': Jake Sully is paraplegic. Using remotely controlled, artificial Na'vi body, he has full use of his legs again. As he becomes increasingly athletic and in tune with nature in Na'vi form, his human form feels like more and more of a shell.
* In ''[[Film/SpyKids Spy Kids 3D]]'', Grandpa Cortez - an elderly, retired spy using a wheelchair - joins Juni Cortez on the adventure in the virtual world, and they immediately come across a powerup that lets him stand on his feet for the first time in years. Unfortunately, he has to go back to using the wheelchair when their mission is over...
* In the ''{{Film/Apocalypse}}'' series, virtual reality technology is being developed, as demonstrated to the protagonist by Willie Spino, a computer whiz in a wheelchair. The Antichrist offers a form of the tech that makes the virtual real, letting the blind see in real life and letting Willie walk again if they turn to his side.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Literature]]
* ''Literature/{{Otherland}}'': Orlando. He's dying from progeria and spending most of his time in a VR game as Thargor the Barbarian.
* The main character of [[Creator/PiersAnthony Piers Anthony's]] novel ''Killobyte'' is Walter Toland, a newly paraphlegic former cop who suffers from depression because of his new disability until he discovers Killobyte, a deep-immersion virtual reality game.
* Done by Creator/PoulAnderson in ''Call Me Joe''. A lot of people accused James Cameron of ripping him off in the ''{{Film/Avatar}}'' example above.
* In the short story collection ''Warriors of Blood and Dream'', ''Fearless'' by Dave Smeds is about a teen wheelchair user who competes in virtual martial arts tournaments and wins consistently.
* A variant in the ''Literature/GuardiansOfTheFlame'' books. James is severely disabled on Earth but when he's transported to the other world is transformed into the physically hale dwarf warrior Ahira.
* ''Literature/SnowCrash'' has Ng, who was disfigured and rendered quadriplegic by a Southeast Asian war. He travels in meatspace in an enormous armored truck he calls the ultimate motorized wheelchair, and conducts most of his life in TheMetaverse, where he walks through his mansion and drinks tea with visitors.
* In ''Literature/{{Idoru}}'', Zona Rose, the supposed leader of a ''Chilanga'' girl gang, [[spoiler:is ultimately revealed to be the severely disabled daughter of a lawyer.]]
* John Scalzi's novel ''LockIn'' uses this as its central plot device. A plague left a significant portion of the planet with Locked In Syndrome and so the government built a huge VR system to allow Locked In folks freedom of movement in a simulated setting. This includes one of the central protagonists.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Radio]]
* There was an ''Radio/AdventuresInOdyssey'' two parter "A Touch of Healing" where Jason Whittaker modifies the Imagination Station (a virtual reality exhibit) so that blind users can see and lame users can walk. However, when he tests it on a girl born blind, it does not make her see, but when he uses it on a boy who became lame through an accident, he can walk. Jason thinks it is because the boy knows what it is like to walk, but the girl does not because she was born blind.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Live-Action TV]]
* A subtle one in ''RedDwarf'' with Rimmer, who is [[IntangibleMan intangible]] due to being dead, being able to have physical form and interact physically while in the VR game "[[LotusEatermachine Better Than Life]]".
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Video Game]]
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyTacticsAdvance'', Doned is a sickly boy who uses a wheelchair because of his unspecified illness. In the dream Ivalice, he's perfectly healthy and able to walk, and very much does ''not'' want to return to the real world. When his older brother Marche (the protagonist) starts working to dismantle Ivalice, Doned sabotages him in various ways.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Visual Novel]]
* In ''VisualNovel/SuperDanganronpa2'', we find out in the final chapter that [[spoiler:every one of the students besides Nanami were once members of [[BigBad Enoshima]]'s despair group, and in multiple cases were covered in self-inflicted mutilations from their desire to feel despair (with some severing their own body parts to be replaced with limbs from Enoshima's corpse). The survivors from [[VisualNovel/{{Danganronpa}} the first game]] placed them all inside the Neo World Program with the intent of reforming them by erasing sections of their memories from before they all entered high school and got involved with Enoshima in the first place, which restores them to their youth to keep the illusion real and gave them bodies to reflect this]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Webcomic]]
* ''Webcomic/SomethingPositive'': Davan introduces his family to role-playing games (specifically a superheroic one). His sister, who's a wheelchair user, spends the session describing her character dancing around.
* ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'': When characters are warped into the videogame Sgrub, there's a mechanic where any time a player sleeps, they assume control of a "dream body"--a completely healthy version of themselves that can also fly. Tavros is paraplegic (and has dreamed of flying even before he lost the use of his legs) so when he enters Sgrub, he spends as much time flying around in his dream body as possible.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Web Original]]
* ''Series/{{Noob}}'':
** Subverted with Kevin, Sparadrap's player. He first appears in a wheelchair, but quickly turns out to be messing around with one belonging to his grandmother and be perfectly able-bodied.
** Ivy's player happens to be narcoleptic, but it mostly causes her to frequently be late or asleep in front of her computer. She's a decent player provided she's awake.
** [[spoiler:Spectre]]'s player has what could be considered a gamer's BeneficialDisease: it basically gives him HyperAwareness, but has the drawback of making him addicted to the game to the point of neglecting his health. Another character aware of his condition heavily implied that if anything, playing actually makes his condition worse.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Western Animation]]
* In ''WesternAnimation/JonnyQuestTheRealAdventures'', they try to get [[Main/EvilCripple Jeremiah Surd]] to become a Main/BoxedCrook in exchange for access to [[Main/{{Cyberspace}} Quest World]]. This backfires, and trying to take it over because of this trope becomes his main motivation for antagonising them. [[spoiler: Eventually inverted when he's [[AndIMustScream trapped in Quest World in his crippled form]].]]
* In the ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' episode "Brian in Love" Brian falls in love with an old woman who was a movie star in the 1930s. He convinces her to step outside of her house for the first time in years, and she gets hit by a car. As she is dying in the hospital Brian uses a pair of VR goggles (which had been set up earlier in the episode) to show her a virtual version of them getting married, having kids, etc. so her last moments would be happy.
* Felix in ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'' uses a wheelchair in their RL, but has the use of his legs in their virtual reality game world. Also played with, in that badass, athletic Kim is a tiny little helpless pixie who can do little more than float in the same game world, and the Mighty Tunnel Lord is Rufus, the naked mole rat, tiniest of them all in the real world.
[[/folder]]

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