The TVTropes Trope Finder is where you can come to ask questions like "Do we have this one?" and "What's the trope about...?" Trying to rediscover a long lost show or other medium but need a little help? Head to Media Finder and try your luck there. Want to propose a new trope? You should be over at the Trope Launch Pad.
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openRogue & Gambit & Poochie Print Comic
The comic "Mr and Ms X" is starred by Rogue and Gambit, a beloved X-Men battle couple... and (in the first issues) also Deadpool, who was basically forced into the plot.
Meaning, there is a duo that works well, but they added an unneeded third guy into the mix, just because he's popular.
Edited by GrigorIIopenAlien mistaken for human Print Comic
Do we have a trope for when an alien is mistaken for a human being, but not due to shapeshifting? For instance, a Kryptonian is on Earth, undisguised, and a human thinks she's a human since Kryptonians look just like humans? (Just to be clear, it doesn't have to be humans; it can be other things too, like how Rocket Raccoon isn't a raccoon—or so he claims now and then—but still is mistaken for one.)
openToken... "other superpower origin"? Print Comic
I'm looking for a trope pertaining to the X-Men. Basically, what I'm referring to is that the X-Men mainly consists of mutants, but have had several non-mutant members in their history that include super soldiers, cyborgs, mutates, aliens, magical beings, interdimensional beings, robots, and ordinary humans.
I struggle to figure out what trope would best describe this. Not sure if Token Minority (dealing with real world minorities) is applicable, nor is Token Non-Human (mutants aren't baseline humans), Token Enemy Minority (they aren't necessarily enemies with the others), or really anything else. I feel like this is worth troping, but I can't figure out what trope to put it in.
Any ideas?
openPost-apocalyptic world turns out to be mostly okay Print Comic
I've read a couple of comics that take place in post-apocalyptic worlds, but in a surprising twist, it turned out that the world was actually still okay. Modern civilization was actually fine, and it was only in the region where the story took place that things had become post-apocalyptic. (I could name the actual comic series, but since it's usually a spoiler I won't.)
Is that a trope?
openTime travel gives me a headache to understand Print Comic
In countless time travel stories, the time traveler gets things explained, like "You'll need to go to the past and meet her, but don't worry, because technically you've already been going to have had met her," and the time traveler replies "Understanding this stuff gives me a headache" or make some similar complaint. Is that a trope?
openFront-Heavy Guy? Print Comic
You know that thing in some comic book art and anime where a ridiculously muscular character is probably just meant to be leaning forward, but they're so heavily muscled and/or the art style is so exaggerated (or poorly drawn) that it looks like their head and neck (if any) are in the middle of their chest rather than above their shoulders? Not exactly a hunchback, but inhumanly muscular. I don't quite know what to type to bring up an example in GIS, but I feel like some artists made this part of their design for characters like The Hulk (the page image is a slight example but with more realistic anatomy) or Juggernaut, or Overtkill from Spawn.
Would that be Cephalothorax? Top-Heavy Guy? Tiny-Headed Behemoth (though the head isn't necessarily as tiny as some examples)? Its own thing?
Edit: Like the hezrou from D&D, the guy in the back here
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openHome Base Cross Section Print Comic
Is there a trope for when a comic book shows a Cross-Section map of the heroes' Home Base, as a sort of "sneak peek" for the readers? Usually, the map makes no sense since artists are making the base up as they go, and they need to fill space with stuff like "supply room" and "bunker".
openSome type of homage? Print Comic
So the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles were originally created as a parody of Daredevil (same origin stories, similar villains and settings etc). What exactly trope is that? Spiritual Successor? Homage? Shout-Out?
openStockCharacter transition Print Comic
We've god Genre Refugee, where a stock character from one genre shows up in the wrong genre, but is there a trope for when a Stock Character becomes a different type of stock character?
openUntitled Print Comic
So here's the situation; the protagonist wakes up in the morning and finds out that a bounty hunter is after his superhero alter ego and is minutes away from finding his apartment. He does so by following old heat signatures. So the protagonist, who knows who that bounty hunter is cause he's read his file, immediately comes up with a plan to cover his identity; he jumps off the window to get a drop on the hunter (the window is almost on top of a skyscraper, so nobody on ground level would notice when it broke), and then he follows the same path he took the previous day to cover his old trail, and jump out of his apartment again, while telling the AI assistant to pretend she didn't know who the masked guy is. All to disassociate his heroic alter with his real identity.
I was thinking Indy Ploy, but the whole thing seems too complicated for that. So is it that or Xanatos Speed Chess?
Edited by Lermisresolved Don't use the character's name! Print Comic
I've been reading some superhero comics paperback collections, and I've noticed that on supplementary material, the creators avoid using the names of characters published by a different company - for instance, in the Batman: Hush deluxe edition, Jim Lee mentions he wanted Nightwing to jump around like "a certain spider-theme hero", instead of saying Spider-Man.
I dunno if that's just a joke, or if they're not allowed (either legally or by editorial mandate) to mention the competition... is there a trope for that?
resolved Klingon Romance Print Comic
A society is structured so that if a guy kills someone, the victim's fiancèe/wife is now bethroded to the killer.
resolved "Everyone is super easy to kill in the future" Print Comic
Is there a trope for a scene, in the beginning of the story, where the characters are desperately trying to get to a time machine, and the villains start killing them, one by one, despite the fact that those characters are extremely powerful (or have Plot Armor) in regular continuity? And then, the one survivor manages to reach the time machine to go back into the present and Set Right What Once Went Wrong?
open"Time travel makes my head hurt!" Print Comic
Do we have a trope for when a character complains that the details of time travel are complicated to keep track of?
openDreamed the solution but it was gibberish Print Comic
This has been told verbally (or printed in magazines) as a joke, and as a Dave Berg "The Lighter Side" comic in MAD Magazine. I would give a cosmic gold brick to learn what was the original source for this.
Someone has been struggling with a problem at work and is still thinking about it while going to sleep. A few hours later, Eureka! they wake up with the perfect answer. It's so profound it'll solve everything! They write it down so they won't forget.
So then they get up in the morning and look at the note and it says "five dollar gardener." (Or in the Dave Berg cartoon, it was complete gibberish).
Edited by CaptEquinoxopenQuick to pick sides Print Comic
A character is thrown into a strange scenario, wherein two groups are fighting. He immediately sides with one of them, despite knowing nothing about the conflict (usually because Beauty Equals Goodness). He's usually right, but if not, it can be a Tomato Surprise.
For instance, our heroes land on an alien planet and see a Green-Skinned Space Babe. They look at her for about three seconds, then Big Creepy-Crawlies show up, and they're already fighting by her side - though she might be the evil one in the first place...
Edited by Mac_RopenComic-Book Trope? Print Comic
Is there such a trope for when works are re-issued for nostalgia reasons, even though the content is obviously an Unintentional Period Piece?
I'm basing this on a What Could Have Been for when Motor Trend planned to re-issue the November 1996-2003 issues as a collector's item for fans, with no edits to the original (the idea was nixed).
It's not a comic book, but is there a trope for re-releasing a comic-book or other print medium with no changes ?

Do we have this one?
Similar to Seasonal Rot, except applying to artwork in a comic book, not the storyline?
Basically... a comic book (maybe a DC Comics New 52 one as an example) gets better on each new issue, but the artwork declines in quality each new issue that comes out.
Checking before I make any new trope at TLP.