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* ''WesternAnimation/AngelWars'': One of the ways they helped keep the budget down for this ReligiousEdutainment show was they usually only had faces for main characters, and even then, they were sometimes copies of other characters--for example, Normal Kuburt's face was clearly a stretched clone of Eli's. And whenever the animators could get away with having helmeted faces, they did so: firefighters' helmets and space suits were examples for humans, and combat helmets for angel RedShirt characters and demon {{Mooks}} were practically ubiquitous. And, of course, those ''helmets'' were also clones of each other.
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** And {{lampshade|Hanging}}d (we hope) in the Superman episode "Knight Time", where Superman is able to 'be' Batman by putting on his costume and disguising his voice. Several characters do wonder, though, whether Batman seems taller all of a sudden. Which is a joke considering that in their previous crossover episodes, Superman and Batman are the same height.

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** And {{lampshade|Hanging}}d (we hope) in the Superman episode "Knight Time", where Superman is able to 'be' Batman by putting on his costume and disguising his voice. Several characters do wonder, though, whether Batman seems taller all of a sudden. [[note]] Superman has a cleft in his chin, which differentiates him from Batman, even when wearing Batman's costume.[[/note]] Which is a joke considering that in their previous crossover episodes, Superman and Batman are the same height.
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** Cleverly lampshaded in the episode "The Coon", in which after spending the entire episode keeping the other characters[[note]]The only characters that Professor Chaos has crossed off his Mysterion identity list are the obvious ones: {{Token|Minority}}, [[FatBastard Cartman]], and [[InspirationallyDisadvantaged Jimmy and Timmy]][[/note]] -- and the audience -- guessing as to his identity, masked vigilante "Mysterion" finally removes his mask, revealing him to be... [[TheUnreveal completely indistinguishable from every other boy in the show.]] Just to rub it in, the rest of the characters recognize him instantly, but don't say his name. Later episodes reveal him to be [[spoiler:Kenny]].

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** Cleverly lampshaded in the episode "The Coon", in which after spending the entire episode keeping the other characters[[note]]The only characters that Professor Chaos has crossed off his Mysterion identity list are the obvious ones: {{Token|Minority}}, [[FatBastard Cartman]], and [[InspirationallyDisadvantaged Jimmy and Timmy]][[/note]] -- and the audience -- guessing as to his identity, masked vigilante "Mysterion" finally removes his mask, revealing him to be... [[TheUnreveal completely indistinguishable from every other boy in the show.]] Just to rub it in, the rest of the characters recognize him instantly, but don't say his name.name (and in a non-canon deleted scene would have had it be Kyle, who took the rap for the ''real'' Mysterion, but it would have just been a retread of the joke when Mysterion revealed himself just to Kyle). Later episodes reveal him to be [[spoiler:Kenny]].
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* A deliberate example is ''WesternAnimation/RightNowKapow'': a SketchComedy in which six “actors” (Candy, Diamond, Dog, Ice Cream, Moon and Plant) play every character.
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** Oddly enough, many of South Park's one-off characters are a complete aversion of this. The primary characters look similar because of a far more simplified character design from the early seasons, while [[ArtEvolution characters introduced later have unique head shapes, hairstyles, hair colors, mouths, and eyes]] -- they've got a ton of different Redneck characters that all look very distinct from one-another. Now, if there were a trope for Only Six Voices... Wait there [[TalkingToHimself is]].

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** Oddly enough, many of South Park's one-off characters are a complete aversion of this. The primary characters look similar because of a far more simplified character design from the early seasons, while [[ArtEvolution characters introduced later have unique head shapes, hairstyles, hair colors, mouths, and eyes]] -- they've got a ton of different Redneck characters that all look very distinct from one-another. Now, if there were a trope for Only Six Voices... Wait there [[TalkingToHimself is]].And most of this characters are ActingForTwo to boot.
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* Comes up in many of the incarnations of ''{{Transformers}}'', since so many characters are re-colors of other characters. This finally was addressed in ''Transformers: Animated'', when it was explained that there were a few particular "body types" that were common, explaining why there were dozens of extras that looked like different colored Bumblebees and Arcees.

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* Comes up in many of the incarnations of ''{{Transformers}}'', ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'', since so many characters are re-colors of other characters. This finally was addressed in ''Transformers: Animated'', when it was explained that there were a few particular "body types" that were common, explaining why there were dozens of extras that looked like different colored Bumblebees and Arcees.



* This is a very common complaint about the female character designs in ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice'', especially where facial structure is concerned. If not for the differing skin/hair/eye colours, about 90% of the female characters would be identical in appearance. You know it's bad when Batgirl and M'gann or Dinah and Cassie look like they could be siblings as civilians.

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* This is a very common complaint about the female character designs in ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice'', ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice2010'', especially where facial structure is concerned. If not for the differing skin/hair/eye colours, about 90% of the female characters would be identical in appearance. You know it's bad when Batgirl and M'gann or Dinah and Cassie look like they could be siblings as civilians.
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* Appears after the second episode in ''WesternAnimation/AaaghItsTheMrHellShow'', due to the animation team working within a limited timeframe. An outstanding example is the ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'' parody characters reappearing in later sketches with different names and in a different context. Viewers didn't seem to mind, as the series was a British sketch-comedy and having a limited number of faces made it seem like an imitation of sketch comedy's tendency to have a small group of actors playing every role.
* The characters in ''WesternAnimation/AngelsOfJarm'' all use the same basic body design, including the same face with large eyes and a small nose and mouth on a circular head.
* A lot of the characters in ''WesternAnimation/CodenameKidsNextDoor'' follow this pattern, including Sector V, Numbuhs 86 and 362 and The Delightful Children From Down The Lane, excluding the tall, lanky one.
* The Franchise/DCAnimatedUniverse's simplified art style post-BTAS has shades of this, especially the generic 'male' body shape used for otherwise very different characters.
** Very apparent in '' WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'' in the few rare instances when Batman takes off his mask and looks nearly identical to Superman.
** And {{lampshade|Hanging}}d (we hope) in the Superman episode "Knight Time", where Superman is able to 'be' Batman by putting on his costume and disguising his voice. Several characters do wonder, though, whether Batman seems taller all of a sudden. Which is a joke considering that in their previous crossover episodes, Superman and Batman are the same height.
** Also lampshaded in this dialog:
--->'''Superman''': Do I look like Batman to you?\\
'''Flash''': Yeah, you kinda do, especially when you get all scowly like that.
** Even more evident with the female characters. ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'' eventually broke out of this, with broad-shouldered Franchise/WonderWoman and realistically-built ComicBook/AmandaWaller, but earlier efforts had "Bruce Timm Generic Female #2" for almost every distaff character. This is parodied in ''Webcomic/{{Shortpacked}}'', when Batman studies video footage of a female criminal, before concluding that, since the hair isn't visible, she's impossible to identify.
* A lot of animals from the Creator/DingoPictures cartoons are constantly reused for their films.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'' uses this relentlessly, with most child or teenage characters having the exact same face, with the possible variations only extending to two different types of noses and two different types of eyebrows. Timmy, Cosmo, Wanda, Vicky, Chip Skylark, Chester, Trixie, Veronica and many more suffer.
* In '' WesternAnimation/IronManArmoredAdventures'', the same characters repeatedly walk behind the main characters in school.
* Creator/DonHertzfeldt's cartoons, which is {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''WesternAnimation/ItsSuchABeautifulDay''.
* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Jem}}'' most of the females share a similar face. The ''ComicBook/JemAndTheHologramsIDW'' comic reboot averts this by [[CastOfSnowflakes making the designs more diverse]].
* Every character in ''WesternAnimation/{{JOT}}'' shares not only the same face, but the same body design (a white circle with hands and feet). The only difference is that most of the characters have hair to differentiate them from the main character, Jot, who doesn't have hair.
* ''WesternAnimation/MakingFiends''. Vendetta has slightly distinguishable facial features and expressions from the others, especially in the webisodes, but the only difference between everyone else's faces is that they have either a pointed nose or a rounded nose. Also, the adults have the exact same faces as children (unless they have mustaches), so there's no AnimationAnatomyAging to diversify.
* Nearly every incarnation of ''Franchise/MyLittlePony'' has featured a cast of identical ponies, [[PaletteSwap distinguished only by their colors]], because all the toys used the exact same mold. In the [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyAndFriends 1980s]] and [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyG3 2000s]] series, they even often had the same hairstyle. ''[[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Friendship is Magic]]'' gave the main characters unique eyes and hairstyles, but their face shapes and bodies are identical to most every other pony. Stallions were given [[TertiarySexualCharacteristics larger, more angular snouts]] and are visibly larger. Some characters were designed with entirely unique heads, bodies, and/or facial features, most of which were recycled into new background extras in Season 2.
** Their WesternAnimation/EquestriaGirls counterparts are similar, differing eyes and hairstyles but otherwise similar faces.
** Oddly inverted with Trixie, who originally had a [[https://mlp.fandom.com/wiki/File:Trixie_casting_her_magic_S1E06.png unique eye and horn design]][[note]]She had eyelashes used only by her and Mayor Mare, only one reflection in her eye, and a fatter longer horn than typical unicorns[[/note]] but as of ''To Where And Back Again'' has been given a [[https://mlp.fandom.com/wiki/File:Starlight_%22magically_stole_everypony%27s_cutie_marks%22_S6E25.png more standard design]] shared by countless characters.
** Lampshaded in one episode when Ember is unable to tell Twilight Sparkle and Starlight Glimmer apart, remarking how they look and act exactly the same. It also doubles as RacialFaceBlindness.
* ''WesternAnimation/RobotChicken'' parodies this within a ''Film/{{Cloverfield}}'' parody.
--> '''Girl:''' Which one's Josh? All the guys here kinda look like the same generic douche. ''(pan to show more partygoers; all the male ones shown share the same face)''
* Often lampshaded in ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'':
** In "Super Best Friends," Stan and Kyle get buzz cuts and identical clothes as part of joining a cult, and don't even wear their trademark winter hats. Stan, Kyle, and Butters (who also joined the cult) look identical now, and it becomes impossible to tell them apart. Then, when Stan decides to leave, he and Kyle get confused as to which one is Stan and which is Kyle:
--->'''Stan:''' Let's go!\\
'''Kyle:''' I'm not going anywhere!\\
'''Stan:''' [[DuckSeasonRabbitSeason Goddamnit, I'm not going with you! I wanna stay here!]]\\
'''Kyle:''' Huh? I thought you wanted to leave!\\
'''Stan:''' Oh wait, who am I again?\\\
'''Stan:''' Kyle, I'm beginning to think this was a bad idea.\\
'''Butters:''' I'm not Kyle, I'm Butters, I thought you were Kyle.\\
'''Stan:''' No, I'm Stan.\\
'''Kyle:''' You're Stan? Where's Kenny?\\
'''Stan:''' Who are you?\\
'''Kyle:''' I'm Kyle!\\
'''[[FatBastard Cartman]]:''' Heheh, guess who I am, you guys!
** In the [[ShowWithinAShow Terrance and Phillip]] episode, "Not Without My Anus", the character "Ugly Bob" wears a paper bag over his head. When he takes it off, he looks exactly like all the other characters, but they react as if he's [[InformedDeformity traumatically hideous]].
** Cleverly lampshaded in the episode "The Coon", in which after spending the entire episode keeping the other characters[[note]]The only characters that Professor Chaos has crossed off his Mysterion identity list are the obvious ones: {{Token|Minority}}, [[FatBastard Cartman]], and [[InspirationallyDisadvantaged Jimmy and Timmy]][[/note]] -- and the audience -- guessing as to his identity, masked vigilante "Mysterion" finally removes his mask, revealing him to be... [[TheUnreveal completely indistinguishable from every other boy in the show.]] Just to rub it in, the rest of the characters recognize him instantly, but don't say his name. Later episodes reveal him to be [[spoiler:Kenny]].
** "Naughty Ninjas" has the boys starting a ninja club to keep homeless people away from Kenny's house. Cartman tries to convince everyone Kyle shouldn't be in the club and tries to discuss it with the others but he keeps confusing everyone because most of them look the same with their hoods on (the exceptions being Cartman due to his size, Token and David because of their skin tones, and Jimmy who has his crutches).
** Another episode has the girls create a league table of the boys' attractiveness... which is, naturally, entirely of the {{Informed|Attractiveness}} variety.
** Oddly enough, many of South Park's one-off characters are a complete aversion of this. The primary characters look similar because of a far more simplified character design from the early seasons, while [[ArtEvolution characters introduced later have unique head shapes, hairstyles, hair colors, mouths, and eyes]] -- they've got a ton of different Redneck characters that all look very distinct from one-another. Now, if there were a trope for Only Six Voices... Wait there [[TalkingToHimself is]].
** In a particularly meta sequence in which the boys create an animated Christmas special featuring themselves (and which is represented by the original Spirit of Christmas special that served as a proto-pilot for the series), the boys react to the animated versions of themselves as though there were fine details that the audience is incapable of seeing:
---> "They ''kind of'' look like us. I mean, Stan's got blue eyes and I've got a sharper nose, but I mean, they ''kind of'' look like us."
** Possibly the best LampshadeHanging however came in a ''Magazine/{{Cracked}}'' magazine parody[[note]]''Cracked'' used to be a parody mag akin to ''Magazine/{{Mad}}'' before it became a humor website[[/note]]. At one point in the comic, the characters go to a beach to gather sand to throw into [[ItMakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext a giant butt threatening their town]], but due to the LimitedWardrobe trope, they overheat in their winter clothing and faint. They all wake up naked in a hospital bed, and the Stan and Kyle expies (who both have the exact same hair, because [[OutdatedByCanon the show had not revealed how they actually looked without their hats at the time]]) can no longer tell which of them is which. The Cartman expy suggests they look under the covers, since "Kyle" is Jewish. You can work out the joke from there.
* '' WesternAnimation/SpiderManTheNewAnimatedSeries'' had six background characters that were continuously reused in different contexts. Sometimes they even played different "roles" in the same episode.
* The religious-themed video series produced by Richard Rich's studio post-'' WesternAnimation/TheSwanPrincess'' feature characters that are almost visual clones of that movie's characters.
* Also happens with ''WesternAnimation/TitanMaximum'', a ''WesternAnimation/RobotChicken''-styled series. Just watch the fight in the second to last episode. The same guy gets an ass-kicking no less than three times, two of those being at the same time in different spots.
* Comes up in many of the incarnations of ''{{Transformers}}'', since so many characters are re-colors of other characters. This finally was addressed in ''Transformers: Animated'', when it was explained that there were a few particular "body types" that were common, explaining why there were dozens of extras that looked like different colored Bumblebees and Arcees.
* In the ''WesternAnimation/WinxClub'', every girl has the exact same body, head, and face shapes. If it weren't for the vastly different hairstyles, clothes, and colors you wouldn't be able to tell any of them apart. The background characters also fall victim to this, to the point where one character could be both a witch and a fairy. Sometimes it was just the same character with a different hairstyle while other scenes had repeated, recolored characters to fill out the masses; Shilly (a witch from Cloud Tower who featured a few times in the comics) makes an appearance (in a blue dress instead of a red one) in Season 4 as "Sally", one of Mitzi's friends. Not even the Winx escaped; there was a brown-haired Bloom in a crowd at Redfountain in Season 2.
** Some characters are copied exactly. Priscilla ([[RedheadInGreen a red-headed girl in an all-green outfit]]) appears in both Alfea and Cloud Tower, leading many early fans of the show to believe that there was a pair of twins attending both schools. And Darma (Mitzi's fuschia-haired lackey in Season 4) showed up regularly in background shots from Cloud Tower, leading to a debate over whether or not she's actually a witch; the Cloud Tower version was never named or even spoken to (like most of the characters at Cloud Tower), so it's entirely possible that it really was her.
* Becomes extremely evident in most crowd shots seen in ''WesternAnimation/WordGirl'' where there are actually duplicates of the same people!
* This is a very common complaint about the female character designs in ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice'', especially where facial structure is concerned. If not for the differing skin/hair/eye colours, about 90% of the female characters would be identical in appearance. You know it's bad when Batgirl and M'gann or Dinah and Cassie look like they could be siblings as civilians.
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