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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tiga_blue_ray.png]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:''Gotta Tiga, take me, take me higher!'']]
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4''Ultraman Tiga'' is a {{toku}}satsu series, part of the ''Franchise/UltraSeries'' franchise, that aired from 1996 to 1997, making it the first official entry of the franchise's Heisei era following a fifteen year hiatus after ''Series/UltramanEighty''.
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630 million years ago, beings of light came to Earth during mankind's infancy. Seeing the potential for humanity to become superior beings amongst the galaxy, the beings of light set up a colony to help and guide humanity. The beings of light would also neutralize and control a horde of giant monsters who once roamed the Earth with their destructive ways. Using their powers, the beings of light either destroyed the monsters or tamed them, allowing humans to live with no fear of predators.
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8Malevolent factions within the colony began to oppose their own kind, stressing that they should remain the superior race and to subjugate humanity lest they rise and overtake them. A civil war erupts, destroying the colony and the beings of light, and regresses humanity to the point that it will take millennia for humans to achieve powers beyond their scope.
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10Three of these beings, which the pre-historic humans with their telepathic powers dubbed "Ultras" survived the war and imbued humanity with their DNA powers of light, hoping to one day jumpstart the humans back to greatness. The last of the great advanced humans, a woman named Yuzare, is chosen to be the keeper of the light, and leaves behind clues throughout time that one day, the monsters will rise again, and beings of light will be needed to combat them yet once more.
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12With various monsters rising from the Earth in modern times, the United Nations forms the T.P.C. -- the Terrestrial Peace Consortium, a think tank looking for ways to neutralize the monsters. T.P.C. itself forms G.U.T.S. -- Global Unlimited Task Squad, a strike team made up of combat specialists to counter the monsters if no other option but force is warranted.
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14On an archeological dig, T.P.C. discovers a pyramid-like device left by Yuzare foretelling the arrival of the monsters, and that only the beings of light can beat them. The G.U.T.S. team heads out to a location given to them by Yuzare's message and discover a previously-invisible pyramid housing statues of the 3 Ultras that survived the war. Two monsters arrive and destroy two of the three statues, but a beam of light contacts G.U.T.S. Officer Daigo Madoka moments before his demise, informing him that he is a true blood descendant with the DNA of the Ultras and awakens a power within him to save the entire world, saving his life in the process.
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16Using his inner heroism, his passion for justice, and his commitment for defending the innocent, Daigo accepts his heritage as the inheritor of the greatest power of them all -- hope, as this era's Ultraman Tiga!
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18In 2002, ''Ultraman Tiga'' was dubbed in English by 4Kids in an attempt to revive ''Ultraman'' amongst U.S. audiences (and possibly as a SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute for ''Franchise/PowerRangers''-- [=4Kids=] had taken over programming of Creator/{{Fox}}'s Saturday morning block at the time, as Creator/FoxKids and its assets had been sold to Creator/{{Disney}}). Rather than a direct translation of the source material, this dub was an AffectionateParody, paying homage to Creator/PeterFernandez's 1966 ''Series/{{Ultraman}}'' dub. However, this time around, the dub took it to another level, as it was filled with a [[GagDub plethora]] of lampshading humor. Audiences weren't amused, however, and the show was abandoned about halfway through. However, it was revealed on the 4Kids Flashback Podcast flashback in 2024 that the entire series had been dubbed, with the dubbed version of the finale dropping on the podcast, but over half of it was unreleased.
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20In 2021, in celebration for its 25th anniversary, ''Tiga'' received a SpiritualSuccessor series, ''Series/UltramanTriggerNewGenerationTiga''. ''Trigger'' is not set in the same timeline as the "Neo Frontier" timeline as ''Tiga'' and its SequelSeries ''[[Series/UltramanDyna Dyna]]'', but shares many elements and even a few connections with them.
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22!!''Ultraman Tiga'' provides examples of the following tropes:
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24* AdvancedAncientHumans: Yuzare's civilization, which was wiped out by Gatanazoa and its servants: Gijera and the Zoigers millions of years ago. Captain Iruma is a descendant of them.
25* AllOfTheOtherReindeer: Episode 39 introduced Makio Kirino, a man with supernatural abilities such as telepathy and can predict monster attacks, who was bullied and shunned when he was younger by other kids due to his powers.
26* AlternativeForeignThemeSong: It has foreign theme songs in mainland China and Hong Kong at the very least. [[note]]Due to copyright issues, the mainland Chinese version of the show (edited by Shanghai media) omits "Take Me Higher" and "Brave Love, Tiga" with their ''own'' take of the song. Namely, "Take Me Higher" is replaced by an original Mandarin song titled "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ux73bYE9yNg When Miracles Appears]]" and "Brave Love, Tiga" is substituted with another theme called "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFY6o2odIrU Forever Our Ultraman]]". Hong Kong instead has a completely original Cantonese song simply titled "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4h65xRSLuk Ultraman's Theme]]", that most bizarrely has a well-known Hong Kong songwriter (江志仁) and lyricist (黃偉文) who are credited with fake Japanese names (山本洋太 and 田中小百合) to disguise that it is an AlternativeForeignThemeSong.[[/note]] No doubt, a whole generation of Chinese 90s-kids would end up being unfamiliar with "Take Me Higher" despite being Ultraman Tiga's fans...
27* BigBad: Gatanozoa in the series.
28** In ''The Final Odyssey'', it's Camearra, Tiga's former lover and the self-proclaimed Queen of Darkness. [[spoiler: Who fuses with Gatanozoa to become Demonzoa at the climax of the film.]]
29* BookEnds: [[spoiler:The series begins with the statue of Tiga being discovered and brought to life through a merger with Daigo and ends with Tiga being turned into a statue again by Gatanothor during the final battle, only to be brought to life again thanks to the light of the children cheering on for Tiga.]]
30* {{Bowdlerize}}: Creator/FourKidsEntertainment's infamous GagDub of it. Fortunately, an uncut, subbed DVD set was released, sadly out of print.
31* CallBack: Episode 1 is titled "The One Who Inherits the Light". The name of the episode where [[EvilTwin Evil Tiga]] appears? "The One Who Inherits the Shadows".
32* ChekhovsGunman: Makio Kirino and Keigo Masaki return in the final to provide a much needed assistance to GUTS when [[spoiler: Tiga is defeated. The former tries to guide the seperated GUTS member while the latter tries to summon light for the petrified ultra.]]
33* ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve: [[spoiler: How Tiga is revived at the end of the series, complete with the power of children being responsible.]]
34* CombiningMecha: The GUTS Wing EX-J (Extra Jet) is essentially an [[InvertedTrope inversion]] of the typical setup - rather than a group of machines that combine into one, it's a single large jet that can divide into two smaller ones.
35* TheComicallySerious: The GagDub makes Munakata this for comedic effect. The deep, brooding voice in contrast to the tone of everything else doesn't help.
36* ContinuityReboot: Of sorts, it kickstarts a new continuity, but the other series are still canon, just in a different Universe.
37* ConvenientlyEmptyBuilding: In episode 3, the G.U.T.S. crew remarks that it's a good thing the building that got smashed earlier was under construction because it CouldHaveBeenMessy otherwise. No, that was ''not'' a dub addition. Though later in the episode, another building is destroyed, and this incident is said to have resulted in heavy casualties. The dub, however, rewrites this so that the entire town is on holiday at the time.
38* CoolStarship: Artdessei, the centerpiece of the opening sequence, which comes complete with a WaveMotionGun.
39* CreditsMontage: Aside from episodes 48, 49 and [[GrandFinale 52]], every episode's end credits consists of footage from that episode or, in the case of episodes 50 and 51, footage from across the show's entire run thus far. However, there are a few episodes whose end credits included brief scenes of original footage.
40* DarkerAndEdgier: Compared to ''Series/UltramanEighty'', at least. Even so, ''Tiga'' didn't shy away from horrifying/tragic moments such as children abduction, a MonsterOfTheWeek treat hunting HumanAliens as a [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame game]], a father tragically [[OutlivingOnesOffspring outliving]] his daughter and constantly haunted for decades, TragicMonster who lived in never-ending agony, and the bigger implication of a CosmicHorrorStory with the Lovecraftian threat that is Gatanozoa.
41* DrillTank: The Peepar, one of the many vehicles in GUTS' arsenal.
42* EldritchAbomination: Gatanazoa, the Ruler of Darkness. He's actually heavily based off Ghatanothoa, an elder evil from the Franchise/CthulhuMythos.
43** Zoiger's name is derived from Lloigor, a race from the Cthulhu mythos.
44* EvilCounterpart: Kyrieloid, the giant guardian of fire demons race Kirie -- much like Tiga being the guardian of humans. From their point of view, Kyrieloid is the rightful protector of Earth since Kirie have been inhabiting the Earth for much longer. Its successor, Kyrieloid II even has [[MultiformBalance ability to switch forms like Tiga]]. [[spoiler: And then we have the Dark Ultramen from ''The Final Odyssey'' movie.]]
45** Daigo himself would later met his own in Keigo Masaki, a power crazed genius that intends to use Tiga's power as his own. He later becomes an ultra himself, Evil Tiga, and fought Daigo in an Ultra vs Ultra showdown. Fittingly the episode where he appeared was titled "Inheritance of Shadow", clearly meant to mirror the first episode's title, "Inheritance of Light".
46* EvilTwin: Evil Tiga. An ancient ultra that Keigo Masaki merge with. He resembles Tiga himself and even has his own dark version of Zepperion Ray, as a finishing move.
47* GoldenSuperMode: [[spoiler: Glitter Tiga, a form that Tiga obtains when [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve every child on earth empowers him with their light]]. He gains it again in "The Final Odyssey" when the destroyed Giants Of Light send Tiga their power.]]
48* GilliganCut
49** The GagDub has this.
50--->'''Horii:''' I'm just glad the other monster didn't show up today.\
51(''cut to a monster rising from the ground'')
52** It happens in the original dub in the second episode. The G.U.T.S. team dispatches a monster without an Ultra in sight, leading to TemptingFate at its best: "Well, that was a breeze. I'm almost looking forward to the next time we meet a monster..." (ground shakes, the second monster comes out of the ground).
53* GoryDiscretionShot: In the movie, when during Daigo's vision as Tiga Dark, he almost went out of control and squashed an innocent girl with his fist, as the only focuses on his bust, followed by his hand punching the ground and the little girl's balloon flying up. Subverted that the death is actually a vision.
54* GratuitousEnglish: The {{Europop}} theme song. "Wanna take you, baby, take me higher!" and "Gonna TIGA, take me,take me higher".
55* GroinAttack: Tiga dispatched more than one monster with these.
56* HeelFaceTurn: Keigo Masaki, the former power crazed maniac who turns into Evil Tiga, provides a much needed assistance in the finale when [[spoiler: Tiga is petrified]].
57** In the movie, it is revealed that [[spoiler: Tiga himself does this way before rhe series starts.]]
58* HongKongDub: Much like the original [[Series/{{Ultraman}} 1966 English Dub]], Tiga's GagDub naturally falls into this.
59* HourOfPower: As ever. However, this one is ''not'' from some nebula and being weakened by Earth's conditions, so you'd expect that he wouldn't suffer from the three-minute time limit. Worse, he has a tendency to fly off ''way'' into the sky/distance instead of just out of sight after a battle. [[FridgeHorror If he ran out of juice in midair...]] However, the danger of timing out is reduced in this series; only under special circumstances can an M78 Ultra ''survive'' this ("...If it should stop, Ultraman will ''never rise again!''") but Tiga will only demorph. Though that's a ''bad'' thing if there's a {{Kaiju}} trying to kill you, or again, if you're in midair or some other human-unfriendly environment.
60** Although in this series the sensor is just a measure of the Ultra exhausting his energy in general as he fights, and doesn't signal him getting close to a time limit that translates into an oddly round measurement of Earth time.
61* IceCreamKoan: Played with in the GagDub. The dialogue purposely renders the scene just as useless as the sayings used in it. [[RuleOfFunny For laughs, of course.]]
62-->''"I have an old saying. One weird sight cannot be right. But make it three...it has to be. What's yours?"\
63[[{{Malaproper}} "A ship in time saves nine."]]\
64"Ugh. That's wrong. It's a STITCH in time. And it doesn't even apply...you're COMPLETELY OFF!"''
65* ItsASmallWorldAfterAll: Lampshaded in the GagDub.
66-->'''Daigo:''' All that changed one night with the arrival of a meteor that seemed to steer its own descent to Earth. It aroused even more suspicion because of how close it landed to TPC headquarters.
67* JustTestingYou: In the GagDub, Daigo insists that the team must find Tiga to prepare for Melba and Golza's imminent attack. Megumi is convinced that the land of Tiga doesn't exist. Lo and behold, Yazumi is able to pinpoint the exact location of Tiga... to which Megumi plays this trope straight.
68* KabukiTheatre: The episode "Flower" revolves around a pair of Kabuki-themed alien invaders who invades a TPC picnic, intending to make planet Earth their personal kabuki stage. Their outfits resembles kimonos worn by Kabuki stagehands, with their faces being modelled directly after Kabuki masks, and the final battle even takes place on a Kabuki-like soundstage!
69%%* KillItWithFire: Kilieroid %%Does not explain the trope
70%%* MascotMook: Golza %%Does not explain the trope
71* MeaningfulName: Tiga means "Three" in Malay/Indonesian. As noted below, Tiga has three forms.
72* MultiformBalance
73** Tiga can switch between three forms, [[JackOfAllStats Multi Type]], [[FragileSpeedster Sky Type]] and [[MightyGlacier Power Type]]. He becomes [[SuperMode Glitter Tiga]] in the last episode.
74** In ''The Final Odyssey'' movie, it's [[JokeCharacter Tiga Dark]], [[StoneWall Tiga Tornado]] and [[MasterOfNone Tiga Blast]]. They're really EvolutionPowerUp represent how Tiga Dark is slowly purging away darkness from himself.
75* MythologyGag:
76** In Episode 8, the HalloweenEpisode, a random kid is shown dressed as [[Series/UltramanLeo Nova]].
77** Daigo meets both [[spoiler:Eiji Tsuburaya and the original Ultraman]] in Episode 49.
78* NamedByTheAdaptation: The 4Kids dub named Ultraman Tiga's attacks "Luminizers" and TPC Headquarters the "Citagon". Both were unnamed in the original, and the "Citagon" retains its name in the Dark Horse comics, though "Luminizers" doesn't.
79* NewPowersAsThePlotDemands: Episode 13 shows that Tiga can transform to a human-sized version of himself. Technically, every Ultra can do this; they turn spandexy and ''then'' turn giant, so there's no reason one can't fight human-sized-threats without growing. However, this power is only seen in this series and on extremely rare occasions. Of course, in the Franchise/UltraSeries, non-giant threats are ''themselves'' quite rare.
80** Previously, ''Series/Ultraseven'' and later ''Series/UltrasevenX'' would have lots of battles in human scale.
81* OlderThanTheyLook: The GagDub lampshades this with Yuzare's appearance after the team views the holographic message.
82-->'''Doctor:''' I know that it may seem as if this time capsule is real but... she looks too good to be 30 million years old.
83* PurpleIsPowerful: Tiga has red and purple linings in his body, not to mention his sky type which is all purple coloured, and is one of the most powerful ultras in the franchise.
84* RecursiveCanon: Not only does Tsubaraya Production exist in Tiga's world, the original Series/{{Ultraman}} series exists as well.
85* SayMyName: "DAIGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!"
86* ShoutOut
87** A distress signal in GagDub does this.
88--->''"Do not adjust your TV set. [[Series/TheOuterLimits1963 There is nothing wrong.]] The recording is designed to appear wavy."''
89** The basic plot of episode 22, involving our heroes trying to avoid a monster-infested fog, owes a certain amount to the Creator/StephenKing novella ''Literature/TheMist'', with one character outright comparing their situation to a story she once read about a bunch of people trapped in a supermarket.
90** The full version of the title theme, "Take Me Higher", is bookended by samples from Music/DavidBowie's 1995 album ''[[Music/{{Outside}} 1. Outside]]'': the start of the song samples "Wishful Beginnings", and the end of the song samples "Hallo Spaceboy".
91* TakeThat: The English version has this in its theme music lyrics: "When [[Franchise/SuperMan Super's]] just not enough..." This phrase was also used as the show's unofficial tagline in the promos.
92* TakenForGranite
93** The Gakumas in episode 2 also did this, but they were easily taken out.
94** [[spoiler:Tiga is transformed back into a statue after he was defeated by Gatanozoa in episode 51.]]
95* TimeTravel: Goldras
96* WaveMotionTuningFork: The G.U.T.S. Wing 2 aircraft has one.
97* WouldHurtAChild: Giranbo disguises itself as a kindly old woman before giving out drugged candy on Halloween and kidnapping children.
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