Sometimes, two characters of the opposite sex are very close — so close that you might expect them to be dating. Except they're not. They admit that they matter a great deal to each other, that they would die for each other, that they can't imagine life without each other. They aren't just any pair of friends. They're as close as family. They're like brother and sister!
Often, other people don't believe this. They assume that the couple must be dating — or at least that they secretly wish they were. When the couple say they are like brother and sister, they will point out the one tiny but debilitating flaw with their theory: they are not brother and sister.
The couple are at pains to explain that their love is completely platonic with no sexual attraction on either side. No matter how other people view them, they can't see each other in that light. They love each other, like siblings love each other, but they're not in love. They really are just friends.
The Greek word for this love is storge, as explained in detail in C. S. Lewis' book on the subject, The Four Loves (Lewis). The fact that this doesn't stop everybody is a whole other can of worms altogether. Relative Error would be somewhat the inverse of, but definitely comparable to, this trope.
Platonic Life-Partners is a sub-trope in which the characters are not only close, but their relationship is the primary one in their lives. If you can imagine the same-sex versions of the characters being Heterosexual Life-Partners, then they belong under Platonic Life-Partners. Of course, almost all instances of Platonic Life-Partners fall under this trope, but to avoid redundancy they should not be listed on this page.
If one character, male or female, feels this way about someone, if can make them very uncomfortable if the other starts doing things like Copping a Feel or trying to kiss them.
Simply being friends doesn't make a pair an example, nor does just being True Companions. Because most childhood relationships are inherently platonic, friendships between children do not qualify unless they continue into adulthood and remain platonic. Contrast Just Friends for when this does actually blossom into romance. Not to be confused with Unlucky Childhood Friend, in which one side does have feelings for the other. Compare with From Cousin to Honorary Sibling and Stupid Sexy Friend. The trope may be averted if the relationship becomes a Childhood Friend Romance, (for actual siblings) subverted by Brother–Sister Incest, and (for step-siblings and foster siblings) also subverted with Not Blood Siblings. This trope is sometimes the result of the No Hugging, No Kissing rule. Goes with The Power of Sisterhood, a bond between women based on concerns, shared experiences, and support used to overcome adversity and hardship, if both characters are women.
Fanfics may confer such a bond onto characters for one of two reasons: to make up for the characters' lack of actual siblings, or to justify unwanted attachments for the sake of shipping; the unwanted character needs not die for the ship.
Example subpages:
Other examples:
- Big Finish Doctor Who: Ace and Hex, and the Eighth Doctor and Lucie. The latter pair are so close, the Doctor is utterly broken by Lucie's death.
- Cloak and Dagger: Cloak and Dagger, in most incarnations, are more like siblings than anything else. They were initially written as runaways who teamed up to survive, and the nature of their powers means they have to stick together to mitigate the worst of the side effects.
- Elseworld's Finest: Supergirl & Batgirl: Barbara Gordon alias Batgirl and Bruce Wayne have this kind of relationship. The Wayne family took her in after she was orphaned, and although she changes clothes around Bruce, there doesn't seem to be sexual tension between them.
- The Incredible Hulk: The Hulk and She-Hulk. They're cousins, but they treat each other as siblings, and they're pretty protective of each other.
- Iron Man and Black Widow appear to fall into this category, they do have some Unresolved Sexual Tension but in the majority of comics they appear Tony and Natasha simply trade barbs with each other and relax on each other’s company. It’s especially noteworthy considering how many relationships they both respectively have had, that againist all odds they’ve never officially been a couple in the mainline comics. Widow is even one of the few people who’s called him “Anthony” and gotten away with it.
- Runaways: Chase Stein and Karolina Dean. They're close enough that Chase even stopped using "gay" as a pejorative after Karolina came out as a lesbian.
- Saga: Against all odds, the children of Alana and Marko and their former enemy, Prince Robot IV (now simply Sir Robot IV), Hazel and Squire, become family.
One day, a boy decides to break the rules. And that boy would become my brother.
- Sin City: Dwight and Miho have this relationship. Keep in mind Miho Does Not Like Men so seeing her display care and even affection for Dwight — including a Sleep Cute is quite heartwarming.
- Spider-Man: Peter’s relationship with Betty Brant, though she was his First Love (and they’ve had some flings now and then), is most certainly this
and has remained this way for multiple decades. She’s probably one of the only women other than Aunt May that Peter genuinely relaxes around, whilst his relationships with MJ and Black Cat are by comparison more passionate, more painful and more complicated.
- He's also this with the Invisible Woman, even beyond Spidey's status as the honorary fifth member of the Fantastic Four. While Sue can often take the role of being a mother/older sister figure (complementing the relationships Peter has with the others on the Four), she does appreciate how Peter treats her as an equal without the baggage that comes with her role as a wife, mother and sister to the rest of the team. Much like Betty above, she's also among the women that Peter can properly let his guard down around.
- Superboy (1994): To Roxy's chagrin she learns Superboy sees her as a sister, which makes sense as they've been living as a dysfunctional family for most of his life. Over time her crush on him fades and she finds herself viewing him as family herself.
- Superman and Supergirl are extremely close in most continuities.
- In the Pre-Crisis universe, Clark cared about Kara more than almost any other
◊, and when he is told that she will die, he goes ballistic
◊ and then becomes very, very distressed
◊ in DC Retroactive Superman.
- Post-Crisis universe, Superman took care of her as soon as she arrived on Earth. Threaten her and you'll set his Papa Wolf instincts off. And you really, really don't want that.
- They were not so close in the New 52 continuity, at least to begin with. Still, in Red Daughter of Krypton, Kara can only think of Kal when she believes she is dying, and it's notable that after that they start getting closer.
- Power Girl was also very close to him, even during the time they thought that she was not his Alternate Universe cousin.
- In the Pre-Crisis universe, Clark cared about Kara more than almost any other
- Teen Titans:
- Dick Grayson and Donna Troy from the New Teen Titans. They really act like brother and sister and shared leadership of the team. George Perez deliberately played this up — when he drew them, they looked like they could pass for fraternal twins. And since this was The '80s, they got the nicknames "Donnie and Marie" (the Osmond siblings) in and out of universe. Which is surprising given that he is the Chick Magnet and she looks like a younger version of Wonder Woman. Also, they both really prefer redheads (see Batgirl and Starfire on his end, Red Arrow and Terry Long on her end).
- Dick also sees his relationship with the post-Crisis Supergirl this way. On the other hand, Supergirl was attracted to him at the beginning
◊, but after a while she started treating him like a big brother.
- Tom Strong: Zig-Zagged Trope. When Tom leaves Attabar Teru for the first time, Dhalua tries to confess her love for Tom. He answers that he loves her like a sister and gently kisses her forehead. A few pages later, Tom comments, after a fight with Paul Saveen that nearly killed him (and during which his life presumably flashed before his eyes), that he has to take care of something back on Attabar Teru. The next page is a full-page drawing of Tom and Dhalua's wedding.
- Wonder Woman and Superman: they've been shipped together for years (both in-universe and out, to a lesser degree), and are frequently paired up in Elseworlds and Alternate Universes, but they've never been anything more than close friends in the main continuity. A common Alternate Character Interpretation is that while they do love each other, it's just that Clark loves Lois Lane more, and Diana respects that so they keep their relationship at this level, and the New 52 turns them into an Official Couple for a while. However, they ended up as Amicable Exes, before being retgonned by DC Rebirth.
- Wonder Woman: In the Golden Age of Comics Steve Trevor and Etta Candy were good friends who enjoyed snarking at each other and each trusted the other to have their backs in a fight, or even to make excuses for them to escape an unwanted conversation. The only person they were closer to than each other was Wonder Woman.
- X-Men:
- Storm and Gambit have had this relationship ever since they met in Cairo. Storm got Gambit into the team and they've been tight ever since, despite Gambit's secrets putting a strain on their relationship.
- Rogue had this kind of relationship with Nate Grey, being one of the few people in the 616 universe that he completely trusted. He usually acted as her grumpy little brother, but generally listened to her, while she was the sympathetic and occasionally protective big sister (including giving Bishop a memorable bitching out for all but attacking Nate on suspicion of being suspicious). Amusingly, thanks to the fact that they both had a skunk stripe in brown hair, they could actually pass for siblings quite easily.
- Jean Grey has this with Angel, Beast, and Iceman, the latter moreso, due to the four of them plus Cyclops having been the original students and more-or-less growing up together. Originally all the boys had crushes on her (and she in turn was attracted to them in turn), but she ultimately picked Cyclops, and in time her relationships with the others all morphed into this.
- The Flash:
- Similar to the Superboy example, this was how Wally West saw Jesse Quick, whom he met right before he made it official with Linda Park, his future wife. Jesse by contrast was shown to have had a crush on him, which caused some heartbreak on her end when not only did he not reciprocate, but he was so oblivious to her feelings he casually hurt her feelings. However, after they aired out their tension, the two grew much closer, and after working together on the Titans it was shown they'd grown into this, enough so that when Linda was erased from everyone's memory and their friends tried to play Shipper on Deck between Wally and Jesse, it was Jesse who objected as she'd began to see Wally as a brother.
- Likewise, Jesse Quick and Bart Allen/Impulse were like this, with Jesse immediately trying to be a Cool Big Sis to Bart upon meeting him. The two maintained a pretty strong Vitriolic Best Buds-type dynamic, often expressing both annoyance, amusement at the idea of annoying, and genuine affection and concern for one another. Together with Wally (who had an Aloof Big Brother dynamic with Bart), the trio formed a pretty solid three-sibling-type dynamic when working together.
- Lilo & Stitch has the titular duo. He's supposed to be her pet, but their relationship is very much like that of loving siblings, They squabble, fight, forgive, play, and love each other. She sometimes also seems almost like a mother to him.
- Toy Story: Woody and Jessie, being toys from the same collection, are equivalent to siblings and act like it: they fight, apologize, love, and care for each other in a sibling-like fashion. (It's possible that the characters actually were siblings on the original Show Within a Show which spawned the toys, but this is never stated outright.)
- Wreck-It Ralph: This is how the creators describe Ralph and Vanellope's relationship. The mini-kart baking minigame, for instance, is like watching a guy indulge his hyperactive little sister badgering him into playing with her. Ralph even outright calls Vanellope "sister" a few times in both films.
- According to Johnny Depp, this is the relationship between Alice and the Hatter in Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland.
- Anyone but You: Ben and Claudia since the former was the best friend of the latter's brother Pete growing up have also had an incredibly close-knit relationship over the years as a result to the point that the bond of feeling like siblings themselves is definitely there between the two—especially with Ben having Belligerent Sexual Tension with Bea and Claudia about to marry Bea's sister Halle as well.
- Bart Got A Room:
- Danny's longtime best friend Camille's sister calls him "like a brother" to justify her casualness about being undressed near him.
- Alice, the cheerleader Danny carpools with, is quick to compliment him, change in front of him, and give him a friendly kiss on the cheek but says they have this kind of relationship when he asks her out and softly yet firmly rejects how much he reads into their interactions.
- In Blood Harvest, Jill tells Gary that she loves him like a brother after she wakes up to find him trying to rape her.
- Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves has Edgin specifically use this trope to describe his and Holga's relationship, with the two firmly shooting down any ideas of romance between them.
- The Hunger Games: Katniss Everdeen believes this to be her relationship with Gale in the first movie. Turns out it's not quite that simple. It also turns out to be an unrequited love from Gale's side.
- In Kingsman: The Secret Service, Eggsy and Roxy are close and stick up for each other a lot, but there's no romance between them.
- Marvel Cinematic Universe:
- Natasha Romanov and Steve Rogers seem to have this relationship following Captain America: The Winter Soldier; she spends most of it trying to set him up with dates and make constant jokes about his advanced chronological age, while Steve becomes uncomfortable when having to fake being lovers in public — though he also doesn't seem to mind her making out with him as part of that faking at all, with the two having genuine chemistry. After that, however, they settle into this dynamic, with Natasha developing an interest in Bruce, and the two of them playing team parents to the New Avengers at the end of Avengers: Age of Ultron.
- In Avengers: Age of Ultron, Natasha's dynamic with Hawkeye also appears to be this, as he is Happily Married to a civilian and has some adorable tots who call the master assassin "Auntie Nat".
- For that matter, since the third act of Iron Man 2 Natasha’s relationship with Tony has been this, with them playfully bickering and teasing each other to no end
. Sadly for Tony though Nat’s friendship and loyalty with the aforementioned Steve ultimately wins out leading to Nat (due to their shared experiences) to betray Tony’s side at a crucial moment in Captain America: Civil War at which Tony makes clear to Nat afterwards the trust and friendship between them is gone. They appear to least forgiven each other by the time of Avengers: Endgame with Natasha giving Tony a Meaningful Look while he holds his daughter Morgan in his arms. Though tragically Natasha dies and Tony soon joins her in the grave before any spoken resolution happens between them.
- "The Fantastic Four: First Steps", Ben and Sue have this type of friendship. Ben is seen about to cry after Sue temporarily dies.
- In Mission: Impossible III, after Lindsey Farris's death, Luther Stickell notices how upset Ethan Hunt is about it and asks him whether something was going on between the two of them. Ethan negates and tells him that she was like a little sister for him.
- Invoked in The Parent Trap (1998) in terms of Nick and Elizabeth's relationships with Chessy and Martin respectively, Chessy being Nick's housekeeper while Martin is Elizabeth's butler. While they are employees on paper, Nick and Hallie clearly see Chessy as a close friend to the point that Chessy gets very emotional when she learns that Hallie has switched places with her twin sister Annie, and when Elizabeth is having a stressed rant about seeing Nick again, she mentions that Martin is more than a butler and more like a dear brother who just happens to work for them. Not to mention, Martin's interactions with Annie have more of a loving uncle vibe than you would expect from someone who's just a butler. The elaborate secret handshake they share is probably the best example of this relationship.
- Scream: Ever since the very first film, Dwight "Dewey" Riley and Sidney Prescott have proven to be insanely and intimately close without ever being romantically-involved. Specifically, this is with Sidney having been best friends with his sister Tatum and her and Dewey having constantly remained in touch over the years and always happy to see each other. Dewey was always ready to put himself on the line to protect Sidney no matter what while she also was very protective of him too.
- In Written on the Wind, Mitch views his and Marylee's relationship like this. She doesn't, which leads to conflict between them.
- X-Men Film Series:
- X-Men: First Class: Charles Xavier and Raven Darkholme grew up together as foster siblings for 18 years, and he introduces her as his sister to Amy. He later cites this when Raven, feeling insecure about her looks, asks if he would date her... although it falls a little flat coming right after he's answered the question with "of course" in reference to her human form before she clarifies that she means in her real form.
- X-Men: Days of Future Past: Lampshaded by the older Professor X when he mentions that Mystique was like a sister to him. It's later referenced when a nurse wonders if the blue, scaly woman at the Paris Peace Accords has a family, and Raven replies, "Yes, she does." On the plane ride to Paris, Charles argues that he had raised Raven to be something better than a killer. Erik is quick to point out that Charles didn't raise Raven — they grew up together. This is what it takes for Xavier to realize that Raven is not his to control.
- X-Men: Apocalypse: Mystique tells Magneto, "I'm going to fight for what I have left," which specifically refers to her foster brother Charles.
- While they never admit it out loud like Charles and Raven in the later films, Wolverine's entire relationship with Rogue throughout the first three films is more than implicit.
- Subverted by French singer Jean-Jacques Goldman in Elle a fait un bébé toute seule: "I'm like her big brother... a little incestuous when she wants to."
- El Desperado of New Japan Pro-Wrestling and Starlight Kid of World Wonder Ring ST★RDOM have this type of relationship, fitting a pair of Japanese luchadors.
- This was how Solo Darling saw her CHIKARA Tag Team The Rumblebees, even though fans on YouTube seemed to want romance between them.
- In Communication, Taylor views Homura as this due to them both being a previous Host of Consensus.
- DC Nation:
- It takes the Troia and Nightwing dynamic and cranks it to eleven. One of the alternate universe plotlines even implied that they may have been brother and sister in several of Donna's other "short and unhappy lives."
- In the same universe, Connor Hawke will say his feelings for Mia (Speedy) are like this... the truth is a bit more complex.
- Clopin and Esmeralda in Notre-Dame de Paris. Clopin even calls her "my little sister".
- In the Mrs. Hawking play series, this is Mary and Nathaniel's relationship. While they're extremely close and have a genuine love for each other, it's not romantic in the slightest; Nathaniel is Happily Married to Clara, and Mary has a sweetheart in Arthur Swann. It's part of the play's many subversions of tropes — in the late nineteenth century, the idea of close, platonic male/female relationships was unheard of.
- Ace Attorney:
- Phoenix Wright and Maya Fey consider themselves a little family and Maya calls herself Phoenix's sister.
- Miles Edgeworth and Franziska von Karma were raised together since he was 9 and she was 2 and consider themselves siblings. She makes it a point to call him her "little" brother and it's really not wise to correct her on that.
- Apollo and Trucy seem to fit into this trope perfectly until it's revealed that they, unbeknownst to them, actually are half-siblings.
- C14 Dating: Upon Rosemarie's introduction, she and Hendrik are shown to know each other extremely well and their banter makes it clear that Rosemarie will be staying in Hendrik's place while she's in the area. When Melissa asks, Rosemarie confirms that they are not a couple and mentions that she's not even attracted to men. She remains the person Hendrik is the most likely to be found hanging out with and Hendrik's romantic route has him mention Rosemarie figured he had romantic feelings for Melissa before he did.
- In Collar × Malice, when helping a lost little girl and being mistaken for a couple, Yanagi tries to simplify things for the little girl and tells her that Ichika is like his little sister, something that does bother Ichika. Ichika's friend Saeki also mistakes Ichika and Yanagi as siblings due to Yanagi's "brotherly" air.
- Corpse Party has Mayu Suzumoto and Sakutarou Morishige. Sakutarou does not take it well when he finds out that the mutilated corpse he's been obsessing over is Mayu's.
- Galaxy Angel: Vanilla's ending in the first game didn't quite make it out as romantic as the other girls, not helped by the fact that she's the only Angel who doesn't share a kiss or a direct Love Confession with Tact. Starting from the second game, however, half the plot is about Vanilla wanting to be "more than just a little sister" to Tact (in fact, her first chapter is titled "Brother and Sister?").
- Ikemen Sengoku: Hideyoshi, the Team Mom of the Oda forces, becomes a protective older brother-like figure to the female main character after he gets past his initial suspicions of her. In most routes, their relationship is genuinely platonic, but in his route, their growing romantic feelings for each other make it increasingly impossible for them to keep treating each other as only "family".
- In Little Busters!, if you don't get together with the main heroine Rin, she and Riki stay friends like this.
- In Tavern Talk, Zephir becomes Melli's "foster brother", as Rhea puts it, as he grows to protect the kitten detective, and she likes having him as her assistant. According to the Lorebook, they move into a flat together, and Neilnote pays for all the bills. In Tempest Tantrum, the quest info for "Night at the Library" reveals Melli's last name as Brume, implying that Neil adopted her and became her Parental Substitute.
- In Umineko: When They Cry, Shannon and Kanon's relationship is like this. It's eventually made clear that they're actually the same person, created as alter egos of Sayo Yasuda; Sayo even created Kanon to be a "little brother" for Shannon.
- Zero Escape:
- Sigma and Phi from Virtue's Last Reward have trusted each other nearly since the first time they met, he's a lot more outspoken when in her presence, and when the two of them are about to be poisoned with only one antidote, he uses it on her without hesitation, the thought of using it on himself never even crossing his mind (which she calls him an idiot for). In Zero Time Dilemma, their teammate Diana even comments that they bicker like siblings. Turns out they're actually father and daughter, though neither of them know it until the end of the game. Primarily because Phi is actually concieved during the game. And then named after herself. And Diana's the mother.
- Carlos and Akane in Zero Time Dilemma develop this bond over the course of the story (at least in the timelines when she's not murdering him for killing Junpei). Their friendship is purely platonic given that Akane only has eyes on Junpei, and Carlos not only ships them, but is not interested in romance whatsoever. In the True End, Carlos actually says that he feels like he gained a new sister.
- Journey to the Quest has Pepper and Elliot. While Pepper is much closer to Jackson, she and Elliot are by far the two party members with the most similar personalities, tend to get paired up whenever the group splits up, and generally just act like the youngest siblings of the party (despite Elliot being 42).
- Supermarioglitchy4's Super Mario 64 Bloopers has Mario and Meggy Spletzer. Although the two's personalities wildly contrast one another, with Mario in the series being a dumb and idiotic sociopath while Meggy is a competitive Action Girl, being one of the smartest members of the cast, the two got along very well ever since their first meeting in 2017, with the two supporting each other to achieve their objectives on many occasions. During a few episodes where either Mario or Meggy came close to death, the other is shown in great distress, often breaking into tears and desperately trying to help the other to get out of danger. Meggy even outright calls Mario "like a brother to me" during a video where she answers questions.
- Her boyfriend's insecurities notwithstanding, Credenza of Archipelago has a completely platonic relationship with Uru. They first adopted each other as siblings when she was about ten, and he in his late teens. Ten years later, Uru has the sort of Big Brother Instinct to subtly threaten the aforementioned boyfriend, but he also feels no need to pretend he's cooler than he really is in front of Credenza and will listen to her, comfort her when she's down and try to genuinely be a better person for her. She worries about him, gives him a What the Hell, Hero? when needed and a gift from him is her most prized possession.
- Bittersweet Candy Bowl is Mike and Lucy when they are younger, though they later develop a romantic interest in one another. Paulo claims to feel this way about Daisy, and Daisy seems to feel this way about Paulo, but there are some hints that Paulo, at least, is somewhat interested in his friend. Mike also sees Daisy this way, much to her frustration.
- In Crankrats Jack (an Altavian orphan turned crankrat, then adopted by a Fatherly Scientist) and Lettie (the aforementioned scientist's biological daughter) consider themselves siblings and look out for each other no matter what. They're both romantically involved with other people, though.
- Dumbing of Age:
- Billie and Walky. They've known each other since childhood (though Billie avoided him in high school), bicker near-constantly, and Billie seems to view Walky as her Annoying Younger Sibling. They tend to act angry
or nauseated
when someone suggests they could be a couple. (Although Walky, being a troll, is not averse to bringing it up himself
for the lulz.)
- Even Walky's actual sister Sal acknowledges this, telling Billie she's the "daughter [our parents] like" and smiling when Walky tells her he wants to be a good brother — to Billie — as a backhanded way of acknowledging he hasn't always been a good brother to Sal.
- Billie and Walky. They've known each other since childhood (though Billie avoided him in high school), bicker near-constantly, and Billie seems to view Walky as her Annoying Younger Sibling. They tend to act angry
- El Goonish Shive: When Elliot tried to assess why his recent feelings toward another girl are different from his feelings towards his girlfriend Sarah, he suddenly realizes
that he sees her more like a sister than as a girlfriend, but had been oblivious to it all that time.note While his girlfriend didn't feel the same way about him, she ultimately wasn't too disappointed as she had her own reasons
for wanting to break up with him.
- Elsanna – Bram Stoker's Dracula: Anna and Kristoff are this, despite their canonical relationship in Frozen (2013) and Mina Murray being Jonathan Harker's wife-to-be in the 1992 film.
- The Friendly Winter: Da-Jeong and Min-Seong are like this. The manga has implications of their parents pairing up so they could literally end up siblings one day.
- Girl Genius: Bang and Gil, to the horror of Klaus. After the time skip, Gil finds nothing odd about waking up with Bang in bed with him. Apparently she had been struggling to stay awake as much as him, but she doesn't have his training, so she can't just do a few mental exercises and be good. She is extremely protective of him, but they both have other canon Love Interests. DuPree acknowledges it during a tea break with Zeetha and Violetta
.
- Cousins Tarvek and Violetta are more like this than anything else. Violetta bullies and bickers at Tarvek mercilessly, but very obviously cares, regardless. It's reciprocated in a slightly quieter (but no less underhanded) way on his side, and seems as intense. Both practically gag if anybody even remotely suggests they're compatible in that other way.
- Homestuck has Karkat Vantas and Kanaya Maryam. Karkat is a raving, permanently angry misanthrope who hates everyone, including himself, but he will never get mad at Kanaya and is a Jerk with a Heart of Gold through and through. Similarly, while Kanaya can sometimes be condescending and aloof she's mostly a Nice Girl, and rarely raises her tone to Karkat. If either needs advice or support they talk freely. Since Trolls have no formal definition for siblings, they refer to each other as "best friends". This probably originates in the past, when Kanaya's ancestor adopted and raised Karkat's ancestor.
- Scarlet and Brook from I'm the Grim Reaper eventually develop this dynamic. While they often argue with each other, after all that Judah does to Brook, he ends up breaking down and asking Scarlet for a hug, which she gives him, showing that deep down, they care a lot about each other.
- In JL8, when Clark went to comfort Diana after her mother embarrassed her at her birthday party, Diana embraced him, telling him that she was like the brother she never had. This was of little comfort to Clark, as he had a crush on Diana, but he nonetheless took to heart, considering that this was still better than not knowing her at all.
- Joseph & Yusra have been best friends ever since Yusra came to America as a toddler and they discovered they had a telepathic link. Yusra has no problem taking off her Hijab at his house and openly admits that she can't see him as anything other than an older brother. Ironically, she says this right before running into her actual brother.
- Lavender Tea: Nina shows sisterly affection to Jasper. Later this frustrates Jassie as he feels he's not respected as a guy but a child.
- Ozy and Millie had this so much that in the final arc their parents get married.
- Sluggy Freelance: In "Brain Games", Torg claims
this trope about himself and Gwynn... but it's clear it doesn't really apply, even if the fact that it doesn't seem to confuse him. (Really it's leading up to the conclusion that they're like family in a different sense.)
"That girl has a lot going for her, I mean besides being gorgeous! I mean I think of her as a sister, not that I'd find a sister hot. That's sick! And I'm healthy! And a healthy guy finds Gwynn hot!" - Something*Positive:
- Davan and Aubrey are like this, especially since they've known each other long enough for the Westermarck Effect to be in place.
- Davan and Pee-Jee are almost as good an example, although they haven't known each other nearly as long and Davan had a crush on her prior to the comic's beginning. Davan even refers to her as Mei-Mei (Chinese for "little sister") on occasion. She's also shown to be good friends with his wife, Vanessa, whom she affectionately calls "teeny-tiny".
- TwoKinds: Kat has a crush on her master Eric, but Eric reveals that he thinks of Kat as his little sister. This causes issues, so Kat takes an interest in Natani instead.
- Grog Strongjaw and Pike Trickfoot from Critical Role were both raised together. He is a hulking goliath barbarian who likes to rage, and she is a more down-to-earth gnome cleric, but the sibling-like bond they share is one of the strongest in the Vox Machina party, second only to twins Vex and Vax.
- Lulu and Lala from Kittisaurus grew up together, love to eat, and have a record of stealing treats as a team. They are also some of the more energetic cats among the bunch.
- Midnight Screenings: Brad Jones and Sarah Gobble have appeared together in the reviews probably more than any other male-female duo (or just any duo in general). They’ve never had a romantic relationship with each other as they’ve each had romantic relationships that have come and gone; and now Brad is married to Laura while Sarah is married to Dave with a daughter. Brad and Sarah are still clearly very close though.
- The Nostalgia Chick and The Nostalgia Critic, as well as their real-life counterparts (Doug Walker and Lindsay Ellis), have been described as such. Even after Lindsay left the site, she said she loved him like a brother and was disappointed in 2018 when - while he could apologise again for the Troubled Production on the movies - he completely sided with his boss over supposed friends.
- Out With Dad: Rose and Kenny. They're quite close, though only as friends, reinforced as Rose realizes that she's a lesbian.
- Arcane: Jayce with Caitlyn, as he is several years older than her and the two enjoy each other's company. Their first appearance has Caitlyn interestedly asking about Jayce's trip to Zaun, and neither are happy when she's forbidden from seeing him following his expulsion. This relationship continues in the present, with the two happily exchanging teasing banter and Jayce supporting her choice to be an Enforcer while her parents disapprove.
- Avatar: The Last Airbender:
- In "The Ember Island Players", the Show Within a Show portrays Aang and Katara as this. Aang, who has had a crush on Katara since the first episode, freaks out and begins to wonder if Katara really thinks of him this way.
- In The Legend of Korra, Asami and Korra ultimately develop this with Bolin, who is like a younger brother to them. Now close friends after failed romances, Mako has shades of being a big brother to his ex-girlfriends like he is to Bolin.
- Terry (Batman) and Maxine in Batman Beyond have this, being really really close. Although many fans think they'd just be better off dating, neither character actually shows any interest in the other that way, aside from a teasing banter here and there. Word of God states that one writer suggested making them a couple, but the creator decided to have them stay purely as friends.
- In the Brandy & Mr. Whiskers theme song, the eponymous duo are described as "like a dysfunctional brother and sister."
- Carmen Sandiego: Back in her V.I.L.E. days, Carmen had this relationship with older student Graham/Gray, until she saw how he was willing to go lethal during a heist. Since her defection, they see each other as enemies, though the remains of their old relationship still linger. Subverted after Gray's mind-wipe, where his feelings towards Carmen take a more romantic direction.
- Castlevania: Nocturne: Having grown up together since they were children, Richter Belmont and Maria Renard have this dynamic, bickering and teasing each other but caring strongly for their well-being. Maria is even explicitly referred to as the closest thing Richter has for a sister.
- Jeremie Belpois and Yumi Ishiyama of Code Lyoko have this relationship as do their respective love interests Aelita Stones/Hopper/Schaeffer and Ulrich Stern. Yumi is also technically this trope with teammate Odd Della Robbia.
- Wallabee Beatles and Abigail Lincoln, AKA Numbuhs Four and Five, from Codename: Kids Next Door, with Five taking the big sister role and Four being the little brother (both are the same age, but of the two, Five is slightly older). Ironic, considering they're the youngest sister and oldest brother of their respective families
- From the DC Animated Universe, this is how Clark Kent seems to have come to view his ex Lana Lang, though she threatens to go back to Lex Luthor if he ever calls her that.
- The Dragon Prince:
- Soren and Rayla quickly settle into this in season four, obviously caring about each other, but also not afraid to tell each other off over stupid or thoughtless actions.
- Played with Rayla and Callum. During the first two seasons they seemed to have this type of relationship, but they became a couple in the third season, although Rayla dumped him before the fourth season, so it is ambiguous which route they will take.
- DuckTales (2017): Huey, Dewey, and Louie are initially put off by Webby due to her having No Social Skills, but they quickly come to treat her as a fourth triplet of sorts (though of the three, she's closest to Dewey due to their interests overlapping the most). By the time the second season rolls around, you could easily mistake her for having always been a part of their lives. Of course, the series finale reveals that she actually is related to them. Specifically, she's their first cousin once removed due to being an Artificial Human created from their great-uncle Scrooge's DNA.
- Elena of Avalor: Despite Esteban being their cousin, Elena and Isabel view him as this, and it would appear this sentiment is reciprocated. Elena even admits as much while giving him a "Reason You Suck" Speech while sentencing him to exile for his compliance in her parents' murders and Shuriki's regime. What happens next leads to Elena and Esteban's relationship devolving into Cain and Abel.
- The titular character and Ingrid Third in Fillmore! are the Safety Patrol's best officers and the best of friends.
- Gaspard and Lisa (from the All-CGI Cartoon based on the illustrated books) are much like brother and sister. They met at school and are almost inseparable, perhaps because their personalities clicked very well. Although, the nature of the dialogue-heavy drama that unfolds between them (always resolved by the end of an episode, of course) makes them look a whole lot Like an Old Married Couple despite being kids.
- Gravity Falls,
- As of the end of the series, Dipper and Wendy fall into this trope. If not for his own relationship with his actual sister, Mabel, Dipper and Wendy could have become Platonic Life-Partners.
- Mabel describes Gideon as "a little sister I can do girly things with." Unfortunately, he feels differently about the situation.
- Played with in Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law:
Birdgirl: You realize there's absolutely no chance we'll be kissing, right?
Peanut: Yeah, duh, of course; you're like my sister. [pause] Which, given a little thought, could be a very hot concept. - In He-Man and the Masters of the Universe (2021), the amnesiac Adam and orphaned Krass were reared together by the Tiger Tribe. The two are as close as siblings, occasionally squabbling while deeply caring about each other. This leads to some initial friction between Krass and Teela when the hand witch arrives in the Tiger Tribe, as Krass doesn't like the idea of Teela tempting Adam away from their home.
- As seen in the page quote, Flash and Hawkgirl in Justice League. Any flirting between these two can be entirely attributed to Flash's tendency to hit on anything in a skirt (Hawkgirl never wears those, though...), and even that stops by the shift to Unlimited. He even describes her as being like his "big sister" in the final season of the series.
- Iron Man: Armored Adventures:
- Tony and Rhodey are best friends who are practically brothers, especially since Tony lives with Rhodey and Roberta after his father died.
- Rhodey and Pepper are also best friends who often bicker and banter like brother and sister.
- The relationship between Kaeloo and Stumpy. In fact, one episode even has her call him her "little brother".
- Milo Murphy's Law has title character Milo and his best friend Melissa, who besides being his best friend is also often invited to events that are otherwise for Milo's immediate family only.
- Monkie Kid has MK and Mei Dragon's close relationship being strictly platonic. In the episode "Calabash", he realizes something is up while he's trapped in a Lotus-Eater Machine because "Mei" says she was in love with her, which makes him visibly ill.
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic:
- Depending on the Writer, Twilight's relationship with Spike slides between this trope, Platonic Life-Partners, and Twilight being a Parental Substitute toward Spike. One constant throughout all these interpretations is that they are utterly inseparable, to the point where the Season 3 premiere establishes Spike's greatest fear as being Twilight not needing him anymore and sending him away.
- Spike's relationship with most of his friends can be seen like this too. It's clear he really loves the Mane Six and the feelings appear to be mutual. He said he considers them family in "Dragon Quest" and the tie-in book We Like Spike! ends with the narration saying that the Mane Six are Spike's family. In the "Nightmare Rarity" arc, Twilight said that Spike would do anything to help the girls if he could, and there's a scene in the background of the movie where Pinkie Pie is seen protecting Spike as the Sky Pirate Ship is getting attacked by Tempest.
- The Owl House:
- Willow and Gus. They were each other's Only Friend for years until Luz showed up and spend most of their free time hanging out together with absolutely zero romantic interest between them. Their interactions are very reminiscent of a goofy little brother and the responsible older sister, she's often trying to look out for him but she'll also let him know when he's being an idiot.
- King's relationship with Luz is a hybrid between a younger brother and a pet, something that is further reinforced by the fact that both of them view Eda as a Parental Substitute. He even refers to her as his sister in both "Edge of the World" and "King's Tide".
- Luz and Hunter's relationship is quite similar to siblings close in age, complete with petty squabbling and bickering. Their first meeting face-to-face even included the infamous "licking the hand covering your mouth" move familiar to fans who grew up with siblings. However, they seem quite protective of the other when push comes to shove and even put themselves in danger to make sure the other doesn't get hurt, especially in the second half of season 2. In "Thanks to Them", Luz outright tells Hunter he's family now, prompting him to start sobbing into his mask.
- Redakai: Ky and Maya have a close relationship that seems to be platonic rather than romantic. They have no problem with being physically close to each other, such as through frontal hugs, and they are protective of each other but also like to tease each other, especially when one of them shows romantic interest in someone else.
- Initially, this is how Shaggy and Velma were envisioned in the earliest Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! episodes. Velma kept a bottle of cough medicine for Shaggy ("What a Night For a Knight") and Shaggy kept an extra pair of glasses for Velma ("Decoy For a Dognapper"). They had also been seen clinging to each other in fright when one of the faux ghosts appear.
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars: Even though they are Master and Padawan, Anakin and Ahsoka have this sort of dynamic. It helps that they're only a few years apart from each other.
- Steven Universe: Steven and Amethyst. Steven is the cute little brother who looks up to Amethyst and likes to have fun with her while Amethyst is the cool, rebellious older sister who can be both a good and bad influence on him, but still cares about him.
- Lance and Ilana from Sym-Bionic Titan pose as siblings in their high school. Genndy Tartakovsky said before there was to be no romance between those two.
- All the Teen Titans are in this sort of familial friendship, except for Starfire and Robin.
