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openNightmare Fuel for Minecraft Mods Videogame
I was planning to add Nightmare Fuel examples describing Minecraft mods that are designed to be "scary." On one hand, I hoped to do this in the Fan Works section since obviously that's what a Game Mod is. On the other hand, I found that Scape and Run: Parasites, one of the mods I wanted to include as an example already had its own link in the Video Games section. Since Video Games doesn't include descriptions alongside the links, should I add a link in the Fan Works page anyway as long as I keep my description brief?
openAsking if these entries are valid Videogame
Originally posted on the BB thread and here but decided to rewrite part of it.
These examples from BrokenBase.Touken Ranbu are kinda shakey. This is primarily because a majority of them were added by one troper (biggestSoap) and since the fandom is fairly niche (in English speaking spheres), I have a feeling that these entries might be biased or apply to other fandoms besides Touken. All opinions I have on the issues are bolded.
- In July 2015, an update changed several charactersnote Izuminokami, Ookurikara, and Doudanuki from tachi to uchigatana. Naturally, fans were divided over this change, with some not really minding while others were unhappy, considering the change a big downgrade for the characters; however, their tachi-grade stats weren't nerfed, making them a strong uchigatana trio. Especially Izuminokami, who currently holds the position as the strongest uchigatana. unsure
- How the Revisionists are portrayed in and out of game counts. Some are fine with their monsterous characterization, since it brings more focus on the Saniwa's swords and leaves less room to root for the empire like what happened with the Abyssal Fleet in KanColle. Others argue that the Revisionists barely have character at all, and treating them as little more than cannon fodder takes away from exploring how the factions operate and the possible implications of how they came to be (See Fanon below). unsure (also has a "see below" mark)
- The announcement of the two anime adaptations had mixed reactions. Some people fear that the adaptations will not be very good (especially considering the low opinions many fans have of the KanColle anime), while others are happy about the prospect of their favorite swords getting animated. Another reason why a part of the fandom (mostly overseas fans) are against the adaptations is because they fear how the new Touken Ranbu fans will be. It was notable how they held the popularity of the franchise back, however, with two upcoming anime, chances are pretty high the bigger mass will discover Touken Ranbu. unsure
- Related to above, will the Saniwa (and by extension, what will the Saniwa's gender will be) appear in the anime or not has sparked debates, similar to the adaptation of KanColle. While the saniwa of Touken Ranbu - Hanamaru sparked some debate over whether or not they should have been depicted in full or just have another sword take the role (amusingly, similar to KanColles own adaptation), Ufotable's version for Katsugeki/Touken Ranbu ended up in some wondering why the saniwa wasn't depicted as off screen like the Hanamaru one, why they looked like a little boy, and whether the decision to go for an androgynous look and not confirm either way instead of featuring the more popular interpretations of the character was an example of pandering, chickening out, a good idea, or something else entirely. not only does it contain Word Cruft (related to the above), I'm very unsure of this entry since a lot games have self-insert like Main characters'
- While Kiwame has been well-received by most players as a way to upgrade the weak tantous to be useful on later maps, some are concerned by the changes in their lines that focus more on that Saniwa's attention and less on their own character tics. In a particular case, many fans of Imanotsurugi are reluctant to give him the Kiwame upgrade because it retcons a huge part of his character, and tragically so. unsure
- However, as later swords got remodels, it seems this trait is only reserved for tantous only. Justified, as tantous are supposed to be protection weapons. natter
- In the Western fanbase, there are quite a few vocal fans that openly question the morality of shipping the younger looking toudan, particularly the tantou, with the swords that are clearly intended to be adults, believing it to be disgusting despite the actual ages of the swords who in reality are well over centuries old; some of the younger looking sword boys are older than the characters that look like adults. There are fans that argue back that the age they appear to be is irrelevant due to the reasoning mentioned. The JP fanbase generally doesn't make a big deal out of this but that doesn't stop the debates from coming up. Valid but I do think it might be better as Values Dissonance
- Now that the first seasons of the Anime adaptations have concluded, which one was superior? Touken Ranbu - Hanamaru or Katsugeki/Touken Ranbu? In Japan, it's made abundantly clear that Fans tend to prefer Hanamaru's adaptation over Katsugekinote and the dvd/bluray sales only hammer this home but in the west it's more divided. The below examples are arguing with themselves which may be part for the course for a BB entry but I do think that some of it just complain-y
- Some say Katsugeki was better because it supposedly had more of a plot, "relevant" character arcs, played up the oft-forgotten "protecting history" angle, and to some felt more like a Touken Ranbu anime in adapting the more dramatic aspects of the swords' backstoriesnote mainly only with the two leads Izuminokami and Mutsunokami, plus tritagonist Horikawa; the rest of the squad, despite being a part of the main cast, did not really get much development or arc focus and decry Hanamaru as "the Pixiv version" that makes the series look no different than any other Slice of Life series, and overexaggerates the characters and their arcs to match with fan perceptions (leading to events like Yamatonokami's controversial desicion to stop Okita from getting injured at the Ikeda-ya). Some also feel like the series crams too many characters in to make sure nobody feels left out, at the expense of the main pair's arc and development, up until the end. kinda complaining about more casual stories
- However, others argue that Katsugeki was a soulless bore of an adaptation whose only saving grace was it being visually impressive, and that it didn't live up to what it promised/was hyped up to be. In comparison, fans of Hanamaru say that this series felt like it was made for the fans, fun to watch, took an Ensemble Cast approach thus giving all fans more time to see their faves instead of staying focused on one (and to a VERY LESSER degree, two) sword group and was supposedly more faithful to the game and characterization; whereas Katsugeki took various liberties, particularly with their citadel's lore (the multiple Konnosukes in one citadel and being able to only send two swords at a time back in history at one point, in particular) and characterization/dynamics. People who prefer Hanamaru often refer to Katsugeki as a "Fate/stay night with a Touken Ranbu skin" anime and various other snarky nicknames involving that franchise due to their similarities in animation and other things ufotable lifted from their previous Fate adaptations. Complaining that an adaption is bad
- There are some fans who say they like both adaptations but lean more towards one, and those who say that both adaptations sucked or didn't like the heavy Shinsengumi focus on both series' leads (two Okita swords in Hanamaru, two Hijikata swords in Katsugeki) and their commonality of attempting to prevent their masters' most famous historical injuries. Some other fans tend to prefer the Stage play, Musical and Manga adaptations over both, while others just prefer the original game and fan created content. unsure
- Lastly, there are fans who whole heartily liked both adaptations or felt that both adaptations fulfilled their purpose of what they were adapted to be like with Hanamaru being the Slice of Life anime it was promised to be and Katsugeki being the action oriented other half. unsure
- The English translation of the game divided fans. For one thing, the website it was hosted on was largely known for ecchi and hentai games, so playing the game made certain fans uncomfortable, not only for the porn ads that would surround the game window, but for the sheer absurdity of such a tame game about men being hosted in such a place. For another, many fans took issue with the incredibly liberal translation, which often changed the characterisations of the boys, and contained many spelling and grammar errors. Some fans refuse to touch the English version thanks to all of these issues, while others think that the issues are minor and are just glad the game got an official translation at all. maybe valid
- The shipping of swords who are brothers can cause controversy, with one side claiming that it's incest and therefore immoral, and the other side countering that fiction has nothing to do with a writer or consumer's morality and therefore what a person ships doesn't matter. The issue gets muddied further by the nonhuman natures of the Toudan, and that what exactly makes a pair of swords "brothers" varies from character to character. Much like the tantou issue above, this argument is exclusive to the Western side of the fandom due to Values Dissonance. As squicky as it is, its a fairly common talking point in a decent amount of fandoms so this is not a new issue
- Over the years, fans have become conflicted about the statuses of the Series Mascots (Mikazuki Munechika, Yamanbagiri Kunihiro, Kashuu Kiyomitsu, Kasen Kanesada, Hachisuka Koutetsu, and Mutsunokami Yoshiyuki) and how much emphasis the franchise places on them for what they assume is for no other reason than because they're the mascots: Unsure and violates the Examples Are Not Recent rule
- Dissatisfaction with Mikazuki's "special positions" has grown over time because of his frequent appearances in merchandise, attention from advertisers, assurance of an important role in every adaptation, appearance on the cover of anthologies, and other benefits. Also, unlike the five starter swords, he is not limited to being advertised as part of a group, meaning he is often promoted independently of the Sanjou, Tenka Goken, and, on occasion, the starter swords, leading to accusations of preferential treatment, especially over the other Tenka Goken who some believe he is treated as better than, despite there being no evidence of this in the story content that features the Tenka Goken.note While most works focus on Mikazuki Munechika due to his mascot status, every work treats the Tenka Goken group as a whole as special because of their status, even the original game itself. Others have argued back that Mikazuki showing up is justifiable and inevitable because of his status as one of the most recognizable characters and that his appearances don't take away from focus from other characters in the franchise, as he often isn't even the main character of the adaptations he appears in, with the exceptions being the live-action movies and Kabuki, due to the works either featuring an Ensemble Cast or focusing on some other character (ironically usually being some other overused Touken Danshi). There have also been some accusations of hypocrisy on the part of critics, as some other non-mascots like Tsurumaru Kuninaga and the Shinsengumi swords have shown up almost as often in merch and just as often in adaptations without facing the same heat that Mikazuki does because they aren't outright regarded as mascot characters.
- Yamanbagiri Kunihiro has also received criticism over the years, particularly following the announcement of the stage play's anime adaptation, due to his frequent appearance in adaptations, to the point where the only major adaptation he has not appeared in is Kabuki, making him more prominent than even the equally popular Kashuu Kiyomitsu. Like with Mikazuki, fans have argued about preferential treatment because of his popularity and a desire to see other swords promoted more, especially among the five starter swords, as, with the exception of Kashuu Kiyomitsu, the Mutsunokami, Kasen, and especially Hachisuka have made far fewer appearances and most of their advertising comes from being advertised as a part of the five starter swords group rather than because of their individual characters (Although Mutsunokami has been a little better off in recent years than to the introduction of the Jouishishi).
- Kashuu Kiyomitsu receives this as well, albeit to a somewhat lesser extent because he appears in less adaptations unless it somehow relates to the equally oversaturated Shinsengumi group (the first Touken Ranbu Musical being an exception). However, his Spotlight-Stealing Squad tendencies have been highlighted by fans who have watched the musicals (not helped by the fact that his actor is incredibly popular, not just the character, giving the production more reason to promote him over others), and the anthologies that are impossible to get through without at least three chapters that concentrate primarily on Kashuu and his Shinsengumi comrade. Fans of the other five starter swords have also pointed out just how long his Special Investigation event is compared to the other starter swords, leading to accusations of bias.
Any thoughts?
openRequest for Merging Pages Videogame
Well, I found this page and it's good that it's one of the few shows whose flash games have articles here.
However, making individual pages for these games is unnecessary because flash games are basic and short (the articles themselves show few tropes taking into account their short lenght) and because they're made by the same company (when it comes to fangames it's fine for them to have individual pages unless they're made by the same creator).
That's why I request a single article for those games.
PD: I have plans to create more pages about Flash games based on shows.
openHow to make a work page with an underscore in the title? Videogame
I want to create a work page for a Minecraft mod called L_Ender's Cataclysm. Of course the underscore is a special character so I can't just plug it into the URL like every other page I made. I was eventually led to the WikiWord feature but it won't let me do anything when I click on it as it says "Sorry, we do not have a WikiWord for L Enders Cataclysm". Do I actually have to try and fill in the page first before going back to WikiWord to request a title change?
Edited by TheGrayShadowopenSpyro: Shadow Legacy armadillos in Spyro 1 Cliff Town- what trope does it fall under? Videogame
I just played through all of Spyro: Shadow Legacy, adding tropes to its page here, and just started playing through the Reignited remake of Spyro 1. Due to this technically out-of-order play order and reaching a certain stage in Spyro 1 Reignited, an odd, idiosyncratic question has come up.
In the original Spyro game, Cliff Town was implied to just be inhabited by Peace Keeper dragons. Here in Shadow Legacy (where the trope is meant for), the armadillos live there instead, with no dragons there. However, while Spyro 1's instruction book at least affirms the Peace Keeper dragons lived in their territory as a whole, nothing in it or the original game necessarily says no-one else lives in Cliff Town, and Shadow Legacy doesn't say anything to contradict Spyro 1 regarding Cliff Town despite the armadillos. As a result, I don't believe it can be considered a Retcon. In addition, since this is part of the same continuity as the classic games and is also a video game itself, I don't believe it falls under Adaptation Expansion. I also want to say Remember the New Guy? or New Neighbours as the Plot Demands, but some little details stop each from being a perfect match.
So I guess the question is "What trope would a new species living in a past canon location fall under, let alone the Shadow Legacy armadillos living in Spyro 1's Cliff Town?" Is it one of those tropes after all, or another one?
openHow is Bravely Default related to Final Fantasy? Videogame
I know that Bravely Default started as a sequel to Final Fantasy: The 4 Heroes of Light, and even the main franchise index for Final Fantasy mentions it as related to Final Fantasy and even the character page for Final Fantasy lists Bravely Default's character pages as subpages. Outside of the heavy referencing to Final Fantasy, however, how is it truly related to Final Fantasy?
openUFO 50 Sub-pages Dilemma Videogame
UFO 50 is a compilation game made up of fifty full games, each one very different from the others.
Right now, the individual trope pages for each game are set in the 'Recap' category of the main page, with the main page being used, in theory, for the tropes shared by the games as a whole.
Personally, I don't know if the Recap category is appropriate for what are, essentially, trope pages for essentially entire games, and it would make more sense for each game to have its own dedicated sub-page that is then wicked into the main page, instead of being in an entirely different sub-category.
Thoughts?
Edited by MakiropenQUESTION: can I add the pale garden to the fridge horror page on minecraft? Videogame
CCONTEXT: The name kind of speaks for itself. I have a fridge theory based on how the creak is behaving, along the way to defeating it. Can I begin the small edits? Also, if you find some errors, it will be nice if you'd be the one to fix it, since it won't be easy for me to be aware of it.
EDIT: made it a bit more lively to myself, while fixing a few spelling errors
Edited by bereshpoop19openAdaptational Nationality for a character with no confirmed nationality Videogame
Does Adaptational Nationality require the character in question to have a confirmed nationality before the adaptation?
For context, one of the characters in the Make a Good Mega Man Level Contest series is Punch Donkey, a character originally from the game Mega Man Dongs. While Mega Man Dongs never confirms Punch Donkey's nationality, MaGMML makes the character French.
Edited by BrashBusteropenMetaphor Refantazio's YMMV Page - Does this sound very complainy to anyone else? Videogame
For context of those not aware of Metaphor: ReFantazio, the game's still not out other than a demo that was recently released, which was met with broadly positive feedback other than a pretty unoptimized PC version, and it's a game made by the same key people (though not the same studio) who made Persona 5.
- Tainted by the Preview: Early promises made about the game were that Project: ReFantasy would try to reinvent the wheel, so to speak, offering a brand new, phenomenal JRPG experience. When it later resurfaced as Metaphor, presenting a turn based battle system inspired by Persona and Shin Megami Tensei, many who had been hoping for the experience the original pitch had promised were quick to point out that this was far from a new kind of game, considering it lazy and derivative at worst and a game that's doomed to never live up to that initial claim or escape the shadow of Persona 5 at best. Not even the story has been safe from this as some are now expecting to game to follow the familiar Persona plot structure beat for beat (Something Persona 5 was already criticized of doing), all based on the previews alone.
This feels overtly negative and biased, as it's not a common opinion I've seen online at all. Thoughts?
Edited by MakiropenGeometry Dash Gauntlets Videogame
Geometry Dash has "Gauntlets" - officially-curated lists of community-made custom levels that sort of fall under Official Fan-Submitted Content (at least, they're listed as such on the game's trivia page). Examples relating to them show up on the game's YMMV and That One Level pages.
Adding tropes about unofficial UGC levels to a main page is a no-go from what I can tell (and it makes plenty sense why). However, the Gauntlets are as close to official as the game's UGC gets - there's unique in-game rewards for beating them, and plenty have been picked through official creator contests. I have a draft in the works for troping their levels, and I'm wondering: should they be added to the main page since they're official? If they do go there, should they have their own folder to separate them from tropes related to the base game?
openPotential edit war Videogame
Lucie made this edit
on Characters.Xenoblade Chronicles 2 Pyra And Mythra that I commented out
for being a Zero-Context Example (an issue I've noticed they've had on numerous edits), only for them to remove
the markup again.
openCould this count as an edit war? Videogame
Recently, Aj Wargo added the following text highlighted in bold to this entry in YMMV.MultiVersus:
- Spiritual Successor: The closest we'll ever get to having a sequel to Cartoon Network: Punch Time Explosion, given how many of the characters in the initial roster have appeared on Cartoon Network in some fashion, and several characters featured in that game (such as Mojo Jojo, Samurai Jack and the Powerpuff Girls, among others, although the girls were all individual fighters in that case) eventually made their way into this one. The feeling's so pervasive through the fanbase that requests for Cartoon Network and [adult swim] characters easily dwarf discussion for any other property on the main subreddits for the game.
For better structuring of the entry, I'd like to slightly modify convert that bold text into a note like this:
- Spiritual Successor: The closest we'll ever get to having a sequel to Cartoon Network: Punch Time Explosion, given how many of the characters in the initial roster have appeared on Cartoon Network in some fashion, and several characters featured in that game (such as Mojo Jojo, Samurai Jack and the Powerpuff Girlsnote although the three girls were individual fighters in that case, among others) eventually made their way into this one. The feeling's so pervasive through the fanbase that requests for Cartoon Network and [adult swim] characters easily dwarf discussion for any other property on the main subreddits for the game.
My question could sound a bit redundant considering how minor the change is, but I'd like to ask if this would come off as an Edit War due to me removing some text from the place in the parenthesis (which I had originally added in the first place) added by another troper, even if I'm moving it to a note.
openAdding examples to unreleased works without citations Videogame
Samz added some examples in VideoGame.Call Of Duty Black Ops 6 that I commented out for lacking citations, and one also being a Zero-Context Example, only for them to remove
the commenting out.
I sent them a PM about it and had a brief exchange, but judging by this edit
made afterwards they don't really understand the issue.
openMetacritic as a source? Videogame
I was looking at the history for the Critical Dissonance entry on the YMMV page for The Last of Us Part II. It used to say that the dissonance has gotten less extreme over time with a reference to the game's 7.7 user score on Metacritic, but that was deleted by Super_Weegee, who was "not sure if using Metacritic is a reliable source for these metrics."
My intuition is that it should be added back, but I wanted to check if there was a ruling/precedent on referencing rating sites like Metacritic. If it's not a valid source, what should be used instead?
openFair use issues with in-game biographies Videogame
In Kaiserredux, many of the character pages have an "In-Game Biography" with that biography from the game attached in a hidden note, in some cases people like Jean-Bédel Bokassa and Padre Pio have four. Given that this is using an excessive amount of copyrighted material, I take it this is a violation of fair use policy outlined in About Images and Copyright?
openCrime Scene Cleaner Videogame
I would like to submit a trope to the Crime Scene Cleaner game, though this would be my first ever trope submission. (Long time reader, first time poster) So I wanted to do it correctly.
Light Spoilers Ahead
In the mission "Modern Art" you are tasked with cleaning up after the events of a death game in a Museum hosted by the rich and plopping some random civilians for their entertainment. When you make your way to the VIP lounge where the rich folk were locked away and watching there is a large screen listing the participants. Ten to be exact.
Nine out of the Ten are all labeled as DEAD With one in the lower left corner upon entry labeled ALIVE. Your objective for this map is dispose of Ten bodies.
Well as it so happens that once you enter the VIP lounge proper that ALIVE very quickly turns to DEAD and there is a body behind the bar of a participant. Implying that the "Winner" is that body in the VIP lounge very recently bled out just as you got there.
I felt like this would be a good spot for "Killed Offscreen" trope and then I could even add a bullet with the explaining that a lot of the deaths in the game are also off-screen since you're cleaning up crime scenes.
Does this sound solid, or would another trope fit this better?
Edited by GrimJayopenRE4R Trope Help Videogame
In the Resident Evil 4 remake, one of the files in the castle gives a very brief chronology of the Salazar family - it mentions that the third count, Gregorio II, was a very paranoid individual who wasted much of the family fortune on the varioue elaborate traps around the castle. Since he is only mentioned in this file, he doesn't meet the criteria to go on The Paranoiac, so which trope would this fall under?
openMisused examples on Neptunia character pages Videogame
[This comment has been repeatedly burried on the "Is this an example?" thread, so I'm posting it here. Also edited to add Pippih's Light Is Good example.]
Going back to the topic of misused "X is (not) good/evil" and "X wears X" tropes on the Neptunia character pages from this thread
; I also want to bring the attention with Light Is Not Good, the remainder of Dark Is Not Evil, the former two's polar opposites, Good Wears White, and Evil Wears Black.
- Dark Is Evil: They are an organization built around their obsession with reviving their Goddess by taking the Shares from the other nations. They represent the negative aspects of the gaming industry and its community, such as the unhealthy obsession the consumer has on their presumed idol or the wrath of game developers whose games don't sell well. They live in a graveyard that houses deceased Makers and shovelware, and their designs all have a dark color scheme (except for Brave, who is white, and Trick, who is orange).
- Dark Is Not Evil: Heavily downplayed with Iris Heart. She's an out-and-out sadist who enjoys seeing her victims, allies included, squeamish in terror as she gleefully inflicts pain on them, so it's surprising that she's not only one of the heroines in Victory, but also the leader of the Ultra Dimension's Planeptune. She also shows some aspects carried over from her human form, such as helping Blanc get her nation back and trying to soothe IF after punishing Arfoire for kidnapping her. This aspect is made much more prominent in the anime, where she gets a good dose of Adaptational Heroism by only targeting the opposers instead of both them and the heroes, and having more Jerk with a Heart of Gold moments like comforting an emotionally broken Neptune who has been mourning over the kidnapping of Peashy in Episode 10.
Gold Third (F-Sha)
- Dark Is Not Evil: At first glance, F-Sha is an intimidating hardass in a suit of gray armor, is shown working with Croire at the beginning of the game, and whose Battle Aura is mostly made up of dark energy. In reality, though a very no-nonsense person, she's actually trying to save the world from Psychostock, an Eldritch Abomination responsible for the creation of the cursed game discs — an artifact that she wants to demolish, and her initial antagonism towards the Failure Goddesses stems from the fact that they accidentally created Psychostock in the first place.
Spin-offs
- Corrupted Character Copy: She is based on Kuroyukihime/Sayuki Kuroba from Accel World; they both wear primarily black outfits despite not being a villain, they both serve as a helpful companion figure to their leads (†Black Cat Princess† to Kiria, Kuroukihime to Haruyuki), they both have a non-human avatar (†Black Cat Princess† has a cat motif while Kuroyukihime has a butterfly motif), and they eventually mellow out into a better person by the end. But whereas Kuroyukihime is a sweetheart who genuinely cares for Haruyuki's well-being, †Black Cat Princess† is a two-faced cheater who will take advantage of her partner Kiria in order to achieve her goal. (Black Cat Princess; bolded pothole)
- Dark Is Not Evil: Vice has black hair, wears a black outfit with some teal on it, and is described as a "devil" due to her appearance and personality; but is overall a good person. (Vice)
- Evil Wears Black: Her outfit is a black version of Hyper Dimension Neptune's, and despite starting out as an ally, she joins the antagonists midway through. However, she was secretly messing with their plans.
Antagonists (General)
- Evil Wears Black: Black is a recurring color scheme for almost all villain's attire; major, minor, or recurring. Arfoire, Croire, Rei Ryghts (especially in her HDD state), and Kurome Ankokuboshi are chief examples.
Spin-offs (Kado)
- Evil Wears Black: Her attire is black and serves as one of the Big Bads in Virtual Stars, with her goal is to invade Planet Emote with her army of Antis.
- Good Wears White: A portion of her outfit is white, and she's one of the main heroines of the game. Her Goddess form is entirely white as well. (Pippih)
- Good Wears White: Reedio wears a white lab coat, shorts and socks, and is also one of the main heroines of the game. (Reedio)
Spin-offs
- Good Wears White: Downplayed; her clothes are white and is a part of the villainous Bombyx Mori, but she's the Token Good Teammate. (Paix)
- Good Wears White: In contrast to Kado, she wears a white leotard with streaks of blue and pink and is the kind-hearted leader of Emote. (Faira)
- Light Is Good: In addition to wearing white clothing, her Goddess form is made up of bright colors — the yellow Unusual Halo on the top of her head, the light green wings on her back, and the left side of her hair being light peach. Additionally, the wings and halo on her design resemble that of an angel.
Antagonists (CFW Brave)
- Light Is Good: In addition to being the fellow heroic member of an otherwise cruel syndicate, unlike the other Felons, is color palette is pure white and gold, and his overall design is reminiscent of the more heroic mecha robots of the 90s a la GaoGaiGar, complete with a lion's face on his chest.
Spin-offs
- Light Is Good: Her dress is white and is one of the good guys of Cyberdimension, being a supportive ally to the Beta Testers. (Bouquet)
- Light Is Good: Zig-Zagged. Licht's primary color scheme is composed of bright colors, has angelic elements to her design, and is the designated "angel" to Vice's "devil". Her name, in fact, is the German translation for "light". Personality-wise, she's a good-hearted girl who often serves as the Cool Big Sis of the V-idols, but has a perverted side that doesn't really match her image at all and loves to mess around with her friends a little bit to much. (Licht)
- Light Is Not Good: Unlike the other members, her dress is colored white. She's also one of the main antagonists of the game.
As I said previously with the DINE/EWB examples, LING and LIG is NOT when villainous/mean/heroic/friendly characters who wear white clothing; they have to be associated with concepts/powers/creatures (like Light 'em Up) universally considered good for them to qualify. Nor is GWW for Anti Villains who wear white clothing (even the aforementioned example, Paix, is a subversion, as she's revealed to be the true Big Bad of her game). The only examples that do qualify (for me at least) are ASIC (Dark Is Evil), Brave, Bouquet, Licht, HDD Pippih (all four Light Is Good), Iris Heart, Vice and probably F-Sha (all three Dark Is Not Evil). Bouquet, Vice, Licht, and F-Sha's examples might need some tweaking though.
As for Evil Wears Black and Good Wears White, they're omnipresently used in the series (and practically every media in existence) that listing individual examples would feel redundant, chairs-y, and too much of a hassle.
Edit: Removed folder control since it doesn't work here.
Edited by ToonAbby

Okay. Tom Clancy had a habit of accurately predicting real life events. And despite him passing away before the release of The Division 2 the final mission involves basically anti vax anti government terrorists storming and taking over the Capitol.
Would this be too controversial to address in any form?