Post em.
>cutesy wholesome character is actually really aggressive and will say some variation of "yay violence!" at least once every episode
Tropes you hate
>mc gets two tickets to go to awesome themepark/concert/whatever
>has to decide which friend to go with
>friends do bullshit to gain mc's favor
>episode ends with either mc sacrificing his ticket so that both friends can go instead, or some shenanigan causing a 3rd ticket to appear
>Producers/Writers tries to force a shipping putting both characters together having their own adventures or implying that they have been hanging out offscreen
>But when you think about it, the shipping does not make sense because they don't help each other even in crucial moments
>MC is objectively stronger than the rest of his team combined and the others are just tag alongs
>MC destroys the world
>World magically saved
>"It's ok, MC, you didn't mean it"
>two or more characters have an arbitrary falling out that's almost always resolved
>Show starts with MC getting superpowers through deus ex machina
>Writers get lazy and start giving superpowers to every character and their dog as the story advances
>Bonus if the fallout started and gets resolved in one episode.
>Show ends on a cliffhanger
>Promises that everything will be resolved in a movie that'll never happen
>If it does it will be sorely disappointing
>character has a relative that has never been mentioned before and comes to visit
>told lies to them and relative has unrealistic expectations
>begs friends to act along during visit
>everything falls apart
>relative goes "you really did great if your friends care this much"
>relative fucks off, never to be seen or mentioned again
>"I was actually the real villain all along"
It's okay, you can say SVTFOE.
>character gets superpowers
>tries to be a hero
>does a better job than the mc
>makes one mistake that leads to damage similar to a mistake in the mc’s past
>mc berates them and tells them that they’re a bad hero, then somehow takes the character’s powers away
>everyone agrees that the mc is a better hero
Remember kids, never try to do the job of someone above you, even if you’re better at it. Just stick to the status quo and don’t cause any changes, after all, change is scary
Is that Contessa from worm?
>double bonus if it's because of a cheap conflict the writer forced in for drama.
>"That. Was, AWESOME!!"
user.... thats almost all superhero shows
>kills off all the likeable characters
>Show has a plot
>Show has characters
>Show has songs
>Show is show and not a pilot
>triple points if it lasts way longer than it should
That's what makes them shit.
>Love triangle That results in a ally turning traitor and joining the bad guy.
>Prolong the main paring with pointless and evil gf's and bf's
Gumball?
Gumball, Panty and Stocking, and Kamen Rider Decade.
>outcasts good
>popular kids bad
The inversion is always a bit fun
>character starts at a new school
>rejects popular kids offer of friendship out of belief that they’re bad
>befriends outcast
>slowly regrets their decision as they realize that their new “friend” is an outcast for a reason
any cartoons that avoid this trope all I can think of is Class of 3000
>Characters have thing that's fallen apart and not worth it
>Everyone but one person complains about it
>Get new thing that's better
>New thing is now too much or has something annoying about it
>Old thing is now better because memories
>Get old thing back regardless of how much new thing cost/ They have to lose something else.
There was no outcast besides the challenging schools (other than andre being a literal member)
You know I see this posted a lot but I can't think of more than 3 examples, maybe you could elaborate on this?
>guy is waiting for the thing
>other characters keep interrupting him
>guy eventually misses thing because of his obliviousness
>annoying characters don't miss it
I could see the twist coming a mile away. Saw it on Camp Lazlo. This is the same guy who made the wonderfully-subversive Rocko's Modern Life, but it turns out Dan and Jeff were the real geniuses, because all Joe can do is cliche's without them.
I hated this episode of Chowder. Implying that buying a new car is bad somehow.
>Hero kills a bunch of mooks
>Won’t kill the main villain or else he’ll be just like them