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none of those exemplify Designated Hero. for that to be the case, the hero has to truly be a hero in name only, and the author has to have clearly meant them to be an actual hero. "occasionally does morally grey or outright bad things" isn't Designated Hero.
Migrated to Chloe Jessica!Agreed that none of those are examples. Aslan isn't even a hero in the first place; he's essentially God in the Narnia universe, so if any of his decisions seem questionable, they would fit better under Omniscient Morality License. Harry and Hermione are just imperfect, as humans generally are; they do more than enough good things to qualify as heroes despite their flaws.
Hermione was framed in the right when she disfugured someone so at least I think that one might be legit.
^no, it's not. that's one instance. that doesn't make her a designated hero. no one is saying she didn't do that, but it's not a pattern of villainous behavior in someone we're supposed to root for. applying this trope to her is shoehorning in an effort to bash the character.
Migrated to Chloe Jessica!There are, at most, shades of Protagonist-Centered Morality but definitely not Designated Hero.
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I must contest the use of Designated Hero in The Chronicles of Narnia and Harry Potter.
The main Designated Hero page says Aslan qualifies for the trope because:
Since C. S. Lewis was a devoted Christian and Aslan was meant to be a fantastic version of Jesus Christ, I think this has more to do with religious differences than anything else.
As for Harry Potter, the YMMV page says that Harry and Hermione qualify for the trope because:
J. K. Rowling said that Harry and his friends were never meant to be saints, they are fallible human beings that make mistakes, get angry and are forced into extreme circumstances, not to mention, the Harry Potter fandom is one of the most notorious and controversial fandoms in recent memory.
What do you say?
Edited by MasterHero