Kryptonite Factor

""Likewise, in fiction, whatever power a character has must have a downside somewhere, or he becomes a boring Superman type of character who can handle anything and get out of any difficulty, and he won't interest readers for long.""

- Timothy Zahn

The Kryptonite Factor is an Achilles Heel, where the weakness is a substance or state that only affects the Superhero. It serves a few purposes.

The artistic one is to show that no one is invulnerable, not even our godlike main character. This is especially ironic if the vulnerability is completely arbitrary and commonplace.

The more powerful a character is, the more likely the Kryptonite Factor will be abused. Writers in particular tend to dislike immensely powerful characters with a single Kryptonite Factor, because not using it creates a drama-destroying sense that the character is never under a serious threat. Conversely, working a rare Kryptonite Factor into the plot repeatedly can seem even more contrived.

The most obvious example is kryptonite, the bane of Superman regardless of how powerful he is being portrayed at the time. A literal green rock, it seemed unusually abundant in supervillainous hands for being radioactive bits of planet that exploded light-years away. Many Elseworlds and spin offs to the Superman mythos include characters who are more resistant to kryptonite, but conveniently, not as strong.

In contrast, writer Joe Quesada has mentioned finding sorcerous characters such as Doctor Strange difficult to write for, because there is no established Kryptonite Factor, as magic tends to have fewer set rules and more contradictions. Likewise, the DC character Zatanna has very open-ended powers - she just has to say something backwards to have it magically happen. (At times, she may not even have to say it out loud.)

See also Kryptonite Ring, Kryptonite-Proof Suit and Fight Off the Kryptonite. Contrast De-Power, Cross-Melting Aura and Drama-Preserving Handicap. Related to Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?. If the character is vulnerable to something comparatively mundane (and even non-threatening), that makes it a Weaksauce Weakness. When this trope turns up far more often than seems probable, see Kryptonite Is Everywhere. When this extends to having characters whose powers are nothing more than a Kryptonite Factor, you have a Man of Kryptonite.

Not to be confused with The Krypton Factor. Contrast Logical Weakness, wherein the weakness logically comes about as a direct result of the powers.

Anime

 * In Fairy Tail, Natsu is a very powerful mage who often defeats his opponents handily. He, however, is completely incapacitated by motion sickness when on any mode of transportation (including piggy backs). This was even actively weaponised against him at times, such as when a villain lured him into a shallow river and rigged a raft from underneath his feet, instantly bringing him to his knees.
 * This weakness of his is at least partially a psychological one, as he only falls ill on anything that he believes to be transport. Thus, since he doesn't consider Happy the cat to be transport, he can fly with him.
 * In Inuyasha, the titular character temporarily loses all of his demon-powers on nights with a full moon.
 * In the 2003 anime version of Fullmetal Alchemist, the homunculi become vulnerable when
 * In One Piece, anyone who has eaten a Devil Fruit has two, related Kryponite Factors: The ocean, which causes power leeching and an inability to move due to weakness, and Seastone, also known as Kairouseki or as "Sea Prism Stone", which replicates the effects of the ocean and out of which most prisons in the One Piece world are built.
 * Smoker also has some Kairouseki on the end of his jutte, despite his being a fruit user himself (the weapon is long enough to keep him from coming into direct contact with the stone).
 * Often applies with individual Devil Fruit in a sort of insanely complicated, poorly understood Elemental Rock-Paper-Scissors, particularly Logia. As an example, the fact that Luffy is a Rubber Man allowed him to totally break the normal Sorting Algorithm of Evil by easily defeating Enel, whose power was like unto a Physical God.
 * In Dragon Ball, the main protagonist Goku severely weakens when he does not eat for long periods of time. Also, his original race, the Saiyans, usually posses a common weakness; if their tail is pulled, they will be rendered completely immobile. However, the Saiyans ability to adapt in battle allows them to adapt this weakness away so it is not that significant.
 * In fact, in Dragon Ball Z, this weakness is only ever successfully exploited in a single episode. It is only ever tried one other time, and never used or mentioned again.

Comic Books

 * The color yellow has until recently been a major weakness to the Green Lantern Corps. This was eventually explained by the influence of a fear demon the creators of the rings had entrapped corrupting their powers, but also authorically served to constantly remind them their potential godlike power has limits (a Green Lantern Ring being otherwise limited only by the intelligence, creativity, and willpower of the wielder). For a while, there were rings being used with no yellow vulnerability (and one of these can be seen on Justice League). Once the fear entity was recaptured, the yellow vulnerability was reinstated, but can now be overcome by facing one's fears with sufficient will.
 * Alan Scott, the Golden Age Green Lantern, had no vulnerability to yellow, but a similar vulnerability to wood. This was due to his more magical ring being connected to "green, growing things".
 * This was retconned into a long story involving one of Earth's first GLs. He was mad with power, so the Guardians gave him the wood weakness so primitive humans could club him to death. However, instead of dying, he put his soul into the power ring and battery, which collided with a Meteorite, becoming the Starheart. Alan Scott got his ring from the Starheart. Seriously.
 * The entire 'wood weakness' may have been a retcon itself; some of the earliest comics indicate he has 'invulnerability to metal' but not really anything else, allowing him to be, among other things, knocked unconscious by a (presumably clay or ceramic) vase.
 * It's worth noting however that because of this on-again/off-again vulnerability, the fact that Sinestro always has a yellow power ring is almost a Grandfather Clause.
 * Not quite. He was assumed to be dead while the fear entity was out doing whatever fear entities do.
 * In the Elseworlds storyline Generations, it was revealed that the yellow vulnerability was just a hoax made up by the Guardians to keep the Green Lanterns from getting too cocky. Alan Scott's wood weakness, however, was psychosomatic and imposed by himself; during his early adventures, while fighting some ruffians, one snuck up behind him and hit him with a wooden club. While the truth was that he just didn't pay attention and thus allowed the foe to get in a cheap shot, he instead convinced himself that he had a weakness to the wood and thus couldn't defend himself. Guess he had a bit of an ego going...
 * The recently created Blue Lanterns are a bit different. Instead of having a weakness to another color, the Blue Lanterns are dependent on another color, namely green, in order to use their powers effectively. This is because green is the color of willpower and blue is the color of hope. You can hope all day long that something good will happen, but that won't accomplish anything unless you also have the will to help your hopes come true.
 * The Martian Manhunter (who is both powerful and has a variety of useful powers) has a vulnerability to fire. And a rather powerful addiction to cream-filled cookies, though this is more a comedic device. (See 2000's Martian Manhunter #24). In The Silver Age of Comic Books, fire was treated by him as equivalent to Superman versus kryptonite, but Post-Crisis, it became more of a crippling phobia. (They seem to keep going back and forth on this one.)
 * At least once, his fire vulnerability was explained by saying that he almost died in a fire once, and has feared it ever since. This falls apart when one considered that every Martian who's ever appeared in DC Comics has been vulnerable to fire.
 * Current canon is that it's a genetic block implanted by the Guardians to lock away the burning Martians.
 * Early versions of Wonder Woman had her lose her powers if she was tied up by a man, under "Aphrodite's Law", leading to some bondage imagery that must have been blatant even at the time of its introduction. As noted in her entry, that was quite deliberate. In The Silver Age of Comic Books, she went into an Unstoppable Rage if her bracelets were removed. Currently, Wonder Woman has no Kryptonite Factor weaknesses.
 * Partly because she is not as invulnerable as Superman or Manhunter. Bullets can penetrate her skin if she doesn't block them with her bracers and she needs to breathe, just as examples.
 * She does (or at least recently did - her continuity is a moving target) lose her powers when she changes back to her secret identity, thanks to a spell cast by her Arch Nemesis Circe. Which raises the question of why she ever turns back to her secret identity, given that they look exactly the same. The only possible benefit to transforming is that it saves her the trouble of changing clothes.
 * In one fairly recent (as in, within the past 10 years - not exactly yesterday, but well after Crisis on Infinite Earths) story, Batman defeated an Amazon footsoldier by throwing a magnetic baterang at her, which stuck her bracelets together when she blocked it and removed her powers. Suggesting both that the weakness is common to all Amazons, and that it survived into the modern age ... or possibly that whoever wrote that story was taking a few liberties.
 * Superman is the Trope Namer of course, with his weakness to Kryptonite (radioactive Green Rocks from his home planet) established back in the 40's radio dramas (though it was called "K-Metal" back then). Since then, he's gained a few other vulnerabilities: he has only basic resistance to magic (though some authors treat magic as a bona fide weakness for him and his kin), red sun radiation can temporarily rob him of his powers, and there's a whole spectrum of coloured Kryptonite with varying effects (from Red Kryptonite that causes a random change for 48 hours, to Gold Kryptonite that robs him of his powers permanently). He can be killed by a huge amount of brute force, as seen during The Death Of Superman, though of course he turns out to be Only Mostly Dead.
 * Of course, Doomsday was also from Krypton, leaving the reader to wonder if that gave him some sort of edge over the Man of Steel.
 * Recently the Gold Kryptonite part is now "powerless for 30 seconds", mostly so it wouldn't be overused.
 * He even has at least three villains -- Metallo, Conduit, and the Kryptonite Man -- possessing powers that boil down to being Kryptonite. And now that Gold K has been Nerfed, minor villain Radion has been revised into this as well.
 * Ironically, Superman is infamous for ignoring Kryptonite through sheer Heroic Willpower. The only thing he is always shown as vulnerable to is magic. This has proven a loophole to give Captain Marvel a a firm place in The DCU as a valuable ally for the Man of Steel.
 * Superman also had problems with Red Kryptonite, special kryptonite that could randomly alter Superman's powers, doing anything from making his hair grow to actually slowly killing him.
 * In fact, Brainiac once used a special mix of red and green Kryptonite that gave him a third eye in the back of his head. In order to protect his secret identity, Supes pretended that the kryptonite had addled his brain to make him wear whatever hat is near him.
 * Green, gold, and red kryptonite are only the tip of the iceberg. There are more colors of kryptonite than you can shake a stick at, each with its own effects -- including "pink kryptonite", which can turn Superman gay (!).
 * Makes him act like it was the Silver Age.
 * One Superboy story had him meet Mon-El, an amnesiac with powers like his, who assumed due to this that he was Kryptonian. Near the end of the story, Clark gets suspicious and lobs lead boulders painted to look like Kryptonite at him. Mon-El collapses, and Superboy flies in to accuse him of fakery -- but the trauma has brought his memory back; he's a Daxamite, a member of a race similar to Kryptonians, but with a weakness to lead poisoning instead of Kryptonite. To keep him from dying, Superboy puts him in the Phantom Zone, preserving him for a thousand years until The Legion of Super Heroes finds a cure.
 * Later retellings have Clark and Mon-el seeing if Mon-el was a Kryptonian (whose memories were slowly coming back) getting sick after Clark takes out a lead box containing some Kryptonite, mostly so it doesn't make Superboy look like a massive dick.
 * In Preacher (Comic Book), Jesse Custer's power of the Word (his ability to force people to do what he says) has a catch: the Word must be both heard and understood to work. Among other things, this means it doesn't work on animals, various characters avoid it by covering their ears, and at one point it's rendered moot when a squad of soldiers who only speak French are sent after him.
 * In X-Men, Cyclops' optic blasts can be entirely contained by even a thin sheet of ruby-quartz. This is used to his advantage, as he can't normally control his optic blasts at all, and so wears glasses with lenses made of the material.
 * This was used against him exactly once, the robot Nimrod gave itself an armor made of ruby-quartz so Cyclops couldn't attack him directly.
 * At least twice: he was once ambushed in a supermarket by a human paramilitary commando wearing ruby quartz enhanced fibers. Not that it helped them much.
 * Thrice. During The Dark Phoenix Saga, when the X-Men were captured by the Hellfire Club. Everyone else got power damping collars, Cyclops just got a ruby-quartz helmet latched to his head.
 * If you count all the times an enemy has stolen / smashed his visor, it's been used against him any number of times. Fortunately, there is one other substance that can completely block his energy blasts: his eyelids.
 * His brother Alex is also immune to his powers, as is he to Alex's.
 * Wolverine, X-23 and some other fast healers in Marvel, have trouble healing when having "strange (or foreign) metals (or substances)" on their composition (such as Wolverine's adamantium skeleton, or being struck by carbonium) and thus not heal as fast (read: instantly)
 * The New Gods of the DCU, while far from completely invincible (with the exceptions of the stronger ones like Darkseid) are all vulnerable to the very rare element Radion. In Final Crisis
 * Common vulnerability of aquatic superheroes like Aquaman and the Sub-Mariner is the need to remain hydrated (moreso than a normal person, that is). Generally, it's relatively mild - the need to be submerged in water at least once every 24 hours, for example - and comes up more as a way for villains to keep them prisoner than as something they need to worry about on a regular basis, but it does make them extra vulnerable to villains with heat-based powers, and a Crazy Prepared villain will always find a way to exploit it (Aquaman was once made to be afraid of water, for instance).
 * Aquaman's hydrophobia is especially notable because it was brought about by Batman. That was one of the stories that solidified his status as Crazy Prepared.
 * There is a certain gas that can remove Spider-Man's Spider Sense temporarily. It is often used by the goblin-based villains (Green Goblin, Hobgoblin etc.) or by Mysterio. Venom and Carnage are completely immune to it all together, since their powers come from the alien suit Spiderman wore. Removing his spider sense or being immune to it is always shown to be disastrous for Spider-Man. For instance, his Aunt May is immune to his spider-sense due to being a trusted family member. Trying to get to his bedroom, he snuck into her house one night, still dressed as Spider-Man. She managed to sneak up on him and ended up whacking him over the head with a vase, KOing him.
 * One of the plot points in Spider Island was Peter temporarily losing his Spider Sense and realizing just how much he depended on it. He spent some time training with Iron Fist to become less reliant on it.

Film

 * The title character of Bolt is a dog on a TV show who thinks his superpowers are real. When he is accidentally placed in a box and shipped to New York, he finds that he no longer has superpowers, and thinks the styrofoam peanuts in the box are the cause of it.
 * Godzilla, in the film Godzilla VS Biollante is revealed to be weakened by the ANB (AKA The "Anti-Nuclear Bacteria"). Though, for some odd reason, it's never used again in later films.
 * Lampshaded in Unbreakable. David is a horrible swimmer and nearly drowned once as a kid. Discovering this was evidence reinforcing that he was actually "unbreakable" because all heroes have some sort of weakness. Another character points it out to him, saying "that's your Kryptonite."
 * In a dream sequence in Harold and Kumar Go To White Castle (aka H&K Get the Munchies), the bullying sheriff gets to say this terrific line after he gets shot: "Bullets! My only weakness! How did you know?"
 * In Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, Toons are invulnerable to conventional damage, but can be injured or killed by a specific blend of paint-and-ink-thinning chemicals, known as "the Dip". Immersion is fatal, and a Toon cab who'd skidded through a puddle of Dip suffered four flat tires and was left limping in pain.
 * They also can't let the ol' "Shave and a Haircut - Two Bits" go unfinished. Roger ends up ruining they hiding spot because of it.
 * Lampshaded in Sky High - instead of arbitrary medical checkups, students are exposed to Green Rocks of different colors to check for weaknesses.
 * All superheroes in Up, Up, and Away are weakened by tin foil. Too much is fatal. When the main character's friend brings over a meal that's wrapped in foil, the parents (all supers) treat it as a bomb and then bury it in the yard. Of course, the Big Bad finds out about this and then goes to the nearest grocery store.
 * In Megamind, the eponymous villain accidentally defeats Metroman by trapping him in a room lined with copper, his previously unknown weakness..

Literature

 * Star Wars got in on the act in the Expanded Universe by having creatures who "pushed back" the Force (in the case of the ysalamiri), hunted with the Force (thereby making them far more aggressive around Force-users, as with the vornskrs), or who had been "severed" from the Force, and so were unable to be sensed or affected by the Force (like the Yuuzhan Vong). The idea, of course, was creating handicaps so that a simple kidnapping plot, for example, would work against Jedi, who would normally be able to shrug off drugs, sense someone walking up behind them, open locked doors, etc.
 * Let's not forget the mighty lightsaber's weakness: the totally useless cortosis, which renders a lightsaber useless for a few seconds.
 * Oh and for most you can't immerse them in liquids without the blade switching off. Rain's fine though, and Jedi from water worlds fix this problem with some modifications.
 * Parodied by Captain Underpants, who thinks he loses his powers when he's sprayed with starch. It's actually a Placebo Effect, because he only believes it because that's what George and Harold wrote in their comic book.

Live Action TV

 * Because the writers of Smallville have small[ville] imaginations, they are unable to construe ways of having Clark Kent face danger without invariably introducing some form of the Kryptonite Factor. They did bring up Clark's vulnerability to magic but rarely use it because of how much one can stomach magic in a thematically sci fi show. This led to the Green Rocks factor exploding with Kryptonite being used for nearly every villain's plot so that it had some reason to be around, e.g. Kryptonite being needed to print money.
 * Parodied on the Nickelodeon sketch comedy show All That, where recurring character Superdude's weakness was "lactose intolerance", meaning in his case that merely being in the proximity of dairy products was harmful to him. Naturally all of his opponents were dairy themed.
 * Or would fight in an area where dairy products would be common. Such as a cow barn.
 * Non-super example: James May of Top Gear appears to have mild to moderate obsessive-compulsive disorder. His co-presenter Jeremy Clarkson once drove him offstage by rotating the bezel on his watch until it was out of alignment with the face
 * In Doctor Who, the Doctor's sonic screwdriver was notorious for having no specific guidelines or limits to how it could be used, so much that lazier writers would rely on it too much as a Deus Ex Machina to get the Doctor out of any predicament. The Fifth Doctor broke it and went hands free. When the series returned in 2005, two very specific limitations were put on it: a), the screwdriver can't break through a Deadlock Seal, and b), "it doesn't do wood". The latter has been repeatedly lampshaded as "rubbish".
 * For Sportacus from LazyTown, it's sugar; eating any sugary food renders him immediately comatose, and fresh fruit (despite having a high sugar content) or vegetables (a classification that includes the Sugar Beet) are required to restore him.
 * Cole on Tracker was vulnerable to Lodestone-it interfered with his life force sensing ability and weakened him a bit.

Tabletop Games

 * The Ravenloft game setting's Van Richten's Guides not only expanded on a lot of creepy D&D monsters' powers, but also gave plenty of them unique Kryptonite Factors of their own. We're not talking about the usual garlic-vs-vampires stuff; in Ravenloft, even golems have their own personalized Kryptonite, which players have to figure out if they're going to use it against the baddies.
 * Vulnerability and Weakness are used to represent this in GURPS.
 * A rather spiteful example in Warhammer 40k with the Grey Knights Space Marines, Magitek Super Soldiers that comprised the fighting arm of the Ordo Malleus, also called the Daemonhunters. Back in 3rd edition and earlier, Daemons were generally pretty rare but powerful shock troops that were small auxiliary subsets of other armies, like the Eldar with their Avatar and the Chaos Marines with their Chaos Daemons. One usually wouldn't fight an all-daemon army, and if an all-daemon army ever was fielded (usually by the Munchkin, given that this was a major Game Breaker back in the day), it usually was by the player's choice. So if you spammed Daemons and came up against a Daemonhunter player, you were just getting your well-deserved comeuppance for fielding a cheap army. But then Games Workshop went and split the Chaos Marines from the Chaos Daemons into two separate books in one of the most maligned decisions in the history of the hobby (which is saying a lot!), and suddenly you had an entire faction who fell prey to another army almost by virtue of the other army showing up.
 * As of April 2011, the Grey Knights themselves were given their own book to replace the Daemonhunters Codex. They're still insultingly effective against Daemons, if not more so. They just got better against other armies.
 * Grey Knights have more or less became the Elite Mook of the Imperial forces, rather than a dedicated Daemonhunting branch. However they still have a horrendous number of special rules against Daemons and it's even possible to statistically destroy 33% of a Daemon player's army before the game even starts, and that's without tailoring. Before these rules came with an additional rule that benefitted Daemons, to balance out the power. It's gone now.
 * Mutants and Masterminds has the Vulnerability and Weakness drawbacks.
 * The official adventure module, Time of Crisis adds a weakness to in the form of  which will completely bypass all of his defenses, potentially turning the final battle into a curb stomp.

Video Games

 * MMORPG Example: In City of Heroes, one can unlock the "Kheldian" Epic Archetype, a form of Energy Beings from outer space that have merged with humans. Though they possess a greater arsenal of powers than "ordinary" heroes, as well as the unique ability of shapeshifting, they also possess a fatal weakness to a particular form of Quantum Energy. Thus, while playing or teaming with one, enemies wielding Quantum Array Guns are mixed in randomly with the ordinary enemies -- as are the lethal "Void Hunters", mercenaries specifically trained to hunt and kill Kheldians, adding implants that protect them from Kheldian attacks to their Quantum Array Guns.
 * This weakness was recently toned down due to years of player complaints as the Quantum Weapons were considered to be too commonplace for such a powerful attack. Now the quantum weapons deal less damage and only stun the player for a fraction of a second rather than taking over a third of their life and leaving them stunned for too long to defend themselves.
 * Having a Kheldian on the team will occasionally spawn Shadow Cysts that spawn spirits that ruin accuracy and attack speed of everyone on the team. Oh, and they explode when destroyed. And they're surrounded by Mooks who will probably kill you because you can't aim or fight back. For the most part, Shadow Cyst = Total Party Kill. Thanks Kheldians!
 * To add insult to injury, Kheldians aren't really particularly overpowered. They're actually pretty lackluster in comparison to the other archetypes, at least without a whole lot of work and expense tricking out your build.
 * Haar in Fire Emblem 10 is an otherwise One-Man Army mechanically, but (also mechanically) is pretty much always 2 hit killed by thunder mages.
 * This applies to almost every unit with a weakness in the Fire Emblem games: Attacks with an advantage do triple damage. And pray you don't get unlucky enough to get hit by a critical hit by your weakness

Web Original

 * In the superhero spoof Adventure Game The Frenetic Five versus Strum und Drang, the character Pastiche has various powers, the most notable of which is an ability to become an Intangible Man (woman). Her only weakness: she can't phase through rope.
 * Tales of MU: Mackenzie may be partially invulnerable, but crossing yourself is the only thing needed to repel her. In peoples of faith, this actually pushes her away and causes unbearable pain.
 * Incredibly powerful mage Fey in the Whateley Universe is indeed one of The Fair Folk, and so she has a weakness to cold iron. And synthetics, which give her really nasty rashes. She has wardrobe problems because of that one.
 * Played with by Phase, who's managed to slip a fake Kryptonite Factor into her official file. For the record, it's.
 * Upon entering melee range of any anti-dragon Noble Phantasm, Uther from Fate Nuovo Guerra suffers a rank-down for all of his stats, in addition to any damage bonuses they have against him.
 * Fidget, a Kid Hero speedster from the Global Guardians PBEM Universe, takes actual physical damage if you tie him down and prevent him from moving. If you stop him from moving, his power literally builds up and starts vibrating his cells to pieces.

Western Animation
"Freakazoid: Dumb, dumb, dumb! Never tell the villain how to trap you in a cage!
 * Spoofed in an episode of Freakazoid, in which bad guy Guttierez tries presenting a variety of weaknesses (the color yellow, water, and kryptonite itself), failing each time, as Freakazoid points out that that's some other iconic character's weakness.
 * Freakazoid himself has two rather obscure and ridiculous weaknesses, though: he can be imprisoned in a cage with graphite bars charged with negative ions, and he has an aversion to "poo gas".

Guttierez: You probably shouldn't have helped us build it, either.

Freakazoid: I know! Dumb!"

"Composite Santa: Temperatures over 32 degrees Fahrenheit! My only weakness!"
 * Though as Guttierez pointed out, no one likes "poo gas".
 * Captain Planet has a very odd weakness in that it's pollution, the very thing he's trying to fight. It'd be like J'onn J'onzz deciding he wants to be a fire fighter.
 * Well, fire fighters aren't exactly immune to fire themselves. In the same way, Cap can work around pollution, helping to clean up large messes and save people from disasters, but he can't plunge headlong into it. That's part of the heroic thing: he braves the stuff that could kill him to use his powers for mankind's benefit.
 * They aren't immune, but it isn't their main weakness or something they usually have a fear of, either. It's like sending Superman on kryptonite cleanup duty.
 * His Evil Counterpart Captain Pollution, is weak against pure wind, water, earth, and fire while being composed of concentrated pollution. This makes it interesting in that they're literally walking kryptonite to one another.
 * In a Bad Future segment on The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy, rebels led by Irwin use frogs as weapons, as they've learned that they are giant worm/planetary tyrant Future Mandy's Kryptonite Factor. [[spoiler: They're wrong, as Mandy had leaked that information herself.
 * In an episode of Tiny Toon Adventures spoofing the Superman movies, "Super-Babs" was weak to carrot cake -- she couldn't stop eating it, and the villain continued feeding it to her until she was too overweight to fly after him.
 * The Justice League cartoon downplayed or ignored the Kryptonite Factor of every character except Superman. Green Lantern's vulnerability to yellow was never actually mentioned (though occasionally, if you watch closely, you'll see yellow stuff getting through his force barricades). J'onn J'onnz had no particular vulnerability or phobia regarding fire (though he had a bad case of The Worf Effect in the first season, and he would occasionally struggle in situations where there was a lot of fire). Aquaman never seemed overly discomfited by being out of water for extended periods. Wonder Woman... well, she'd lost most of her Kryptonite Factors by the time the series started anyway. Hawkgirl eventually gained a Kryptonite Factor that was more emotional than physical and ended up resolved by series end anyway. The Flash almost never used his powers to their full extent (not unlike Superman), with the idea that he never really pushed himself to excel...and when he did, he was given a convenient excuse not to again. Batman's "Kryptonite Factor"--that he was a perfectly mortal human--came up time and again, but doesn't really count.
 * Fair enough, though, they used the weaknesses against Amazo, particularly Kryptonite.
 * The Thundercats are vulnerable to "thundranium", a rare mineral that is pretty much a poorly disguised knock-off of kryptonite.
 * In the Teen Titans cartoon, Starfire is allergic to metallic chromium. The allergy is more dangerous to others than herself, as it causes her to sneeze energy blasts. It even turns out to be an advantage, as it allows the team to track a chromium-based bomb.
 * It's also a big case of Did Not Do the Research, as chromium is used in a lot of common technologies.
 * Imaginary Man, a superhero imaginary friend on Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends, is weakened by girly things, particularly flowers. Similarly, his evil nemesis Nemesis, loses her powers whenever her hair is messed up. It later turns out they were thought up by a boy and his sister, respectively, just to annoy each other.
 * The Sushi Pack are weakened by heat, and since they have a tendency to announce it, their most recurrent villains usually keep a couple of heat lamps around.
 * On The Mighty B, Bessie (who fancied herself a would-be superhero) once tried to find her Kryptonite Factor by going through every food item she could think of alphabetically. By the time she got to zucchini she was so full that she became violently ill, and thus thought that zucchini was her weakness.
 * In The Powerpuff Girls the titular girls lose their powers if they come in contact with Antidote X.
 * On Batman the Brave And The Bold, when Batman
 * Parodied in a Robot Chicken sketch when after a fireball destroys another enemy, it also melts half of Composite Santa's body.

"Superman: You have all my strengths... and weaknesses."
 * The animated film Superman: Doomsday contains an almost amusing example in that even Superman needed Kryptonite to defeat his clone with identical powers. Admittedly, the real Superman isn't quite at full strength at this point.


 * Specifically parodied in one episode of the Earthworm Jim animated series. Jim is helpless against the substance known as Wormtonite (which Peter Puppy claims they found at the back of the fridge, and might once have been cheese). Bizarrely, its effects include turning Jim into a bowl of candied corn.
 * Spider-Man would occasionally make sly references to a "guy who's allergic to green rocks".
 * Haggarium drains the power of Voltron in Voltron Force, as well as its component lions.
 * The Simpsons: Bart once discovered principal Skinner's allergy to peanuts, and used it to practically enslave him. Skinner soon learns that Bart has an allergy too; Shrimp. They end up in a "sword" fight with sticks with their opponent's kryptonite on the end.
 * Danny Phantom is weakened by a flower called Blood Blossom. It removes his powers while causing him extreme pain. That's not to mention the various weapons his parents and Vlad have devised that can remove his powers or hurt him while he is intangible.
 * Ectoranium, introduced in ther Series Finale, is a green glowing rock that ghosts can't touchwithout being painfully shocked; they can still phase through it, which is an important plot point. Kind of an obvious Expy of Kryptonite, but in this case the Ectoranium is as much of a danger to humans as ghosts since it's a large asteroid that got knocked off course towards Earth.
 * Word Girl loses her powers and gift of perfect vocabulary when exposed to lexonite, a radioactive mineral from her home planet.

Real Life

 * Aspirin is kryptonite to cats. This article even acknowledges the trope.
 * Chocolate to canines.
 * Any human with a severe food allergy. Peanuts are frequent culprit here, with some unlucky folks unable to be in the same room as peanut products without going into respiratory shock.
 * Salt to snails/slugs.