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openNo Title Anime
I tried searching around but I can't seem to find any examples or tropes that come near it. At least not with any commonly used words.
It's mainly an anime trope where you can visually see someone's soul emerging out of their mouth or another open orifice because they suffered some kind of sudden shock or wound that leaves them so stunned that they feel like they could die at any moment. In short, giving up the ghost.
I've seen it numerous times in manga and anime series like:
- Historys Strongest Disciple Kenichi (two such examples
among numerous others)
- Full Metal Alchemist Brotherhood
- Love Hina
And many other series that I can't think of right now. I've seen it all over the place though. Among others. If this trope doesnt' exist, then I'm gonna go make it on YKTTW in a couple days.
Edited by DRCEQopenNo Title Anime
I know this happens in anime a lot. Is there a trope for when one character has suddenly reveals him/herself to be the ice cold pessimist, knower of awful truths, or just plain ominous, usually denoted by a shadowy face, and no eyes?
- MORE IMPORTANTLY**, is there a trope for when the person who is supposed to be intimidated by this turns out to have even darker secrets, more power/wisdom, etc., in turn freaking the first character, who has realized that he/she is actually the one in the dark?
openNo Title Anime
I know there's a Cat Girl trope, Unusual Ears trope, In the Hood trope... But what about Nekomimi Hood? It's quite popular in certain animes (to be honest, I'd love to own one in real life) and even more popular in Fan Art. You know what I'm talking about, right? It's when a character doesn't have actual nekomimi but their clothes do. Like here
or here
or here
. I'm surprised there's no page for this.
openNo Title Anime
Is there a specific trope for action-oriented harem series where the girls are all generally strong, or at least fight often? I've looked through a couple shows that fit this description and the harem anime page and haven't found anything that fits it. Working on a YKTTW for it now if no one can find it.
openNo Title Anime
Not sure if this applies just to anime, but it goes like: A likes B, but B likes C. A & B's circumstances cause them to be together/live together/spend time together and eventually B falls in love with A, or it could go: A likes B and C likes D, but eventually after spending time together, A and C fall in love. Examples are:
- Toradora has Taiga in love with Yuusaku and Ryuuji in love with Minori, but the two end up falling for each other.
- Kimi no Iru Machi has Yuzuki liking Haruto, but Haruto likes Nanami, but Haruto and Yuzuki live together, and eventually Haruto falls for Yuzuki.
Is this already defined?
openNo Title Anime
3 eyelashes = ugly
All general examples aside, Is there a trope for the 3 eyelashes given to anime characters that is used to symbolize ugliness? I thought it might just be a sub trope but then again, Cute Little Fang and Big Ol' Eyebrows, got their own pages. So where is this one?
The two most notable examples I can think of off the top of my head are Ussopp of "One Piece" and Rock Lee of "Naruto"
Edited by supermanwich23openNo Title Anime
Okay, RPG Mechanics 'Verse is supposed to be "non-game setting that extensively uses Role Playing Game Terms and RPG mechanics in-universe", right? Do we have a trope for cases where a non-game setting uses terms and mechanics from other kinds of games, like Fighting Games, Real-Time Strategy, etc.?
openNo Title Anime
I've been reading doujins and I've noticed these two tropes:
-After sex, the man's face is shiny, I mean there's a gleam spot. Shiny like polished tile.
-When a woman (or "uke") is "deflowered", there's a visual of a flower falling off a stem or a branch. In the example I have she also says "yome ni ikenai" (I can't get married). And also the phrase "taisetsu na mono" (precious thing) may be involved.
Are there already entries for these tropes?
openNo Title Anime
In East Asia, there is an association of chestnut trees with (male) fertility; chestnut blossoms are reputed to smell like semen and "kuri" (chestnut) is a euphemism for a clitoris
.
I've seen this trope used in Bondage Fairies (Pamila finds a squirrel with marital issues in a chestnut tree), the Color of Water trilogy (Ehwa is blossoming into a young woman and smells the aroma of such a tree), Susumu Katsumata's "Red Snow" anthology (a chestnut tree spirit is a woman's lover), and even a Japanese automated Twitter account for an Axis Powers Hetalia character. Is there an article that covers this? I feel like the current symbolism tropes don't cover this well enough because of the significance in Japanese culture that just isn't widely known in English-speaking internet forums.
Edited by RNAopenNo Title Anime
This is mostly a shonen trope; what I'm looking for is essentially this: "when all of a sudden, he finds a beautiful girl in <place>. Said girl is <name>, one of the members of the <whatever> trying to <whatever> from the <whatever>."
Basically I'm looking for a shonen trope for a situation where the protagonist (a normal, average, everyday dude) finds/is introduced to/tracked down by some girl out of nowhere, and she reveals some whole new world to him that basically kicks off the whole series and/or reveals some truth that he's known or had an inkling about that proves that he's not crazy.
She may or may not be naked on arrival.
Examples: Psyren, Bleach, Psycho Busters, The World God Only Knows, Ga-Rei, Lucifer and the Biscuit Hammer (kinda), Change 123, Mai-Hime(manga), etc.
Edited by 98.121.94.34openNo Title Anime
In a DBZ-style show, the tendency for every character except the main character to be completely worthless. It's a one-man The Only One, or an ostensibly ensemble show doing an It's Up to You *every single time*.
This isn't the same as an Eigen Plot in which each character fights one enemy, and the main character fights the main villain, it's more like the main character is otherwise engaged in training or something, and it's all the entire rest of the cast can do to barely hold off the first minor villain, often losing several members in the process, while they wait for him. When he arrives, he usually curbstomps the enemies and then moves on to fighting the real villains.
Around my circle, we like to call it Goku Syndrome; for example, when Nappa and Vegeta arrive, the Z Fighters can barely beat the Saiba-Men, and almost everybody is killed fighting Nappa... Then Goku arrives and beats him in half an episode. It's painfully obvious that Vegeta could have wiped out the entire good guy side without breaking a sweat, and they're really just there to stall and cheer on Goku when he arrives.
What's that thing called?
Edited by Confusion567openNo Title Anime
So many anime seem to be set in what appears to be 19th century Middle Europe, perhaps Germany or Italy, judging from dress and architecture, yet all the characters are culturally Japanese. Examples: Princess Tutu, Haibane Renmei, Last Exile, various Ghibli movies.
Is there a trope for that?
openNo Title Anime
In that episode of Ranma½ where Shampoo uses that "Hissatsu Shiatsuken" technique to erase Akane's memories of Ranma, and then she gets snapped out of it when Ranma says Akane "isn't sexy", what's the trope where someone loses their memory or gets brainwashed and then gets it back when someone says something shocking or offensive to them?

Is there a Trope for the various bad guys in a franchise always having some sort of common signifier, regardless of their origins or relationship (or lack thereof) to each other?
I'm thinking of the fact that in the first part of the Universal Century timeline in Mobile Suit Gundam, mono-eye sensors are almost always used by the series antagonists. Granted in Zeta Gundam, both sides used them, but the Titans used mono-eyed suits almost exclusively, and used Zeon-syle patterns on their uniforms for rank insignia, despite being specifically created as an anti-Zeon force.
With the rise of Neo-Zeon in Gundam ZZ, pretty much all of the Zeon influence in the Federal forces suddenly evaporates - not a mono-eye to be seen. And the Neo-Zeon mobile suits are nearly exclusively mono-eyed, with only the Qubeleys and the Quin-Mantha being exceptions, if I remember correctly.
Although G-Savior was de-canonized, it did the same thing. CONSENT mobile suits have mono-eyes, while the Saviors and Freedom MS follow the Gundam/GM pattern.
I don't know if this pops up in any other media/franchises, which could explain why it isn't a trope, but I'd be surprised if Gundam is the only place where this appears.