Conveniently an Orphan

"Refia: I am thankful to Father for taking care of an orphan like me for all these years, but...this is something I have to do. Luneth: Wait...you're an orphan, too? Refia: "Too"? You mean-- Arc: I'm one, too! Ingus: Wait a minute...I, too, have no parents..."

- Final Fantasy III DS

All people come with a past, a family, friends, a heritage, in other words: Every person has roots!

This past can become a large burden on the character: They need an excuse to leave their family behind, or need to constantly visit their parents and other family members inbetween adventures. Otherwise the hero can't believably be a social, likable good guy.

Orphaned heroes on the other hand, never have to deal with all that. They don't need an excuse to go on wild adventures or stay away for days on end, they don't have anyone waiting around for them to come home!

Conveniently, these heroes can answer the Call to Adventure because they don't have other responsibilities. This lack of older responsibilities is also exactly what allows the heroes to take on the new responsibilities that come from being hero.

Often used as character backgrounds in tabletop adventures: Such a character's background often consists of "My parents were killed by (insert Always Chaotic Evil race here), so he's out for revenge". Aside from conveniently leaving no 'annoying' ties to the past to keep the character away from the Call to Adventure, it can also result in a You Killed My Father moment should the villain race (or the Big Bad if he's responsible) appear.

Handily prevents the sadistic Game Master from exploiting 'weak links' that can get kidnapped or killed off. If the fates of the missing parents are left nebulous, it also opens the door for that infamous twist where one of them turns out to be a villain. You know the one.

Oddly enough, family outside of parents is never mentioned. Apparently no one ever has grandparents or cousins, although having an uncle (and sometimes aunt) as surrogate parents is a common mythological motif. Siblings seem to only show up for plot-based reasons -- and not Promotion to Parent, which would give them responsibilities. One wonders how the world manages to get populated when every couple only has one child. Surrogate parents show up more regularly in the form of Raised by Natives, they tend to die a lot too.

The hero's orphaning is also a nice triggering point for the hero's journey. This part of the Hero's backstory is often covered in a Flash Back. If the orphaning happens at the very beginning of the story, instead of in the background, it's usually covered by Doomed Hometown.

If the character does have parents, but they have so little influence on his life that he behaves as if he has no family responsibilities anyway, or it just isn't talked about period, it's Parental Abandonment.

May lead to Tell Me About My Father.

Contrast with Orphan's Ordeal, where the loss of parents is the plot (or at least a subplot), rather than simply enabling the plot.

If the parents happened to be Good Parents before their death, so much so that they continue to affect the main character even after they're dead, then you've got Deceased Parents Are the Best.

Not to be confused with Self-Made Orphan.

Anime

 * Combattler V: Hyoma Aoi, the captain of Combattler team, lived in an orphanage after his parents' deaths. Seeing someone killing the parents of a child -or even an animal cub- is one of his Berserk Buttons. His Love Interest, Chizuru Nanbara not only was an orphan girl but also her only grandfather died shortly after the beginning of the series.
 * Cutey Honey: Honey Kisaragi lost her father early on the series. His death triggered her war against the terrorist group named Panther Claw.
 * Daimos: Kazuya lost her parents before the start of the series. Erika's father died shortly before Kazuya's father, and THAT is what starts off the history.
 * Kotetsu Jeeg: Hiroshi's father dies in the first episode.
 * Mazinger Z: Kouji and Shiro's parents died in a lab experiment gone wrong Sayaka also lost her mother before the beginning of the series.
 * Great Mazinger: Both Tetsuya and Jun are orphan kids, taken in by And the end of the series his adoptive father
 * UFO Robo Grendizer: All relatives from Duke got brutally murdered before the start of the series.
 * Neon Genesis Evangelion: Asuka and Shinji have been selected as the second and third children to pilot Evas because their mothers are dead. Shinji's father couldn't care any less about his son as a person (given what Gendo told in End Of Evangelion  YMMV on this), while Asuka's father, almost immediately after her mother's death, married the woman with whom he was having an affair. It shouldn't surprise anyone that Rei doesn't have any parents at all. Also Misato's father was killed with the entire rest of the Antarctic expedition, and Ritsuko's mother killed herself.
 * Kaji also discovers that Shinji's school is a front for the powers that be, and that all of Shinji's classmates are potential Children candidates, meaning many of them may be orphans as well. It's suggested for two side characters, and canonically stated for one, that their parents are dead as well.
 * In Kanon, triggers the whole plot.
 * Orphen.
 * Pretty much applies to most of the main characters in Chrono Crusade:
 * Rosette and Joshua's parents died in a ship wreck when they were young children, and after that they spent most of their life in an orphanage--until Joshua is taken by Aion (and the orphanage is destroyed in the process), which causes Rosette to join the Order to try to find her brother again.
 * Azmaria's parents either abandoned her because of her powers, or were killed during the war, depending on which version you're following.
 * Satella's parents were killed by a demon when she was a child. Her sister was also kidnapped by the demon--leading her on a journey similar to Rosette's. However, since her parents' deaths are such a turning point for Satella in her backstory, she leans closer to Orphan's Ordeal instead.
 * In Slayers, Zelgadis and Gourry both have no parents (Zelgadis' great-grandfather Rezo killed his, and Gourry's were killed during a family feud), and Sylphiel, Filia, Pokota, Amelia, and only have one parent each (a father, actually); in Sylphiel's case, she falls under this trope when her father is Killed Off for Real in the third Light Novel/late first season of the anime in a townwide explosion. Ironically, the main protagonist's (Lina) parents are both alive and well.
 * And the status of the parents of Lina's later allies in the novels (Luke and Milina) is unknown.
 * 80% of all characters in G Gundam are orphans, major and minor characters, and a few of them have only one parent. The rest are undetermined. For many of them, this plays a role in why they became Gundam Fighters.
 * Almost everyone in Saint Seiya: The Lost Canvas, justified since it's set in the 18th century Europe.
 * Hayate of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha, which allowed her to raise a family of sentient alien programs on her own since the age of nine and, as mentioned in the supplementary comics, move to Mid-childa before she even graduated from high school. Like most orphans, she does have an "uncle" who was a friend of her father's taking care of her, although it's only financially.
 * Most of the Strawhat crew in One Piece are victims of this trope, often more than once. Both Nami and Franky, for example, were orphaned at a young age, but taken in and raised by a kind foster parent...only for them to die as well. But they've still got it better than Robin, who didn't just lose her parents, but HER ENTIRE HOME ISLAND, of which she is the only survivor. Most of the others seem to have absentee parents of one form or another; the only member whose mother and father are both seen is Usopp, a victim of both this trope AND Parental Abandonment (his dad left to become a pirate, and his mom died shortly after. You think he'd hate his dad, but he actually idolizes him.)
 * For a while, it seemed that Luffy was a victim of this trope as well, his lack of parentage explained with a throwaway remark that "that kid has no parents" in the first chapter. Years later, we learned that Luffy was actually raised by his grandfather, and that his dad, at least, is alive (he's just the most wanted man in the world, which can make it tough to raise a kid.)
 * Simon of Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann lost his parents in an earthquake before the start of the series, so when his blood brother Kamina decides they're going to the surface, he doesn't have anything holding him back. In a twist, Gimmy and Darry are chosen to go to the surface explicitly because they don't have family who will mourn their departure.
 * Nearly all of the members of the Gatchaman team are orphans, except for Ryu . This is the main reason Ryu is usually left tending the Phoenix while the others get all of the action; he still has a family that would miss him if anything happened to him.
 * Sousuke Sagara of Full Metal Panic being rendered an orphan helps justify why he can keep risking his life with no regard for consequences. Although his mother dying for his sake and her dramatic Last Words telling him he must "live," "never give up," and "fight!" does have the other purpose of making him the Crazy Survivalist he is today, it mainly seems to serve as a plot device to allow the readers to realize he simply has no one waiting for him.
 * At one point in Hellsing, during the Quiet Drama Scene, while discussing Seras' progress Alucard asks Walter how they covered up her death and how her family is taking it. When Walter replies that she has none and is an orphan, Alucard sardonically replies "Of course she is". However, since Seras was already an adult by the time she died, the circumstances and consequences of her parents' deaths turns out to be a major part of her character and the series veering into Crapsack World territory and running on Black and Grey Morality, it's a justified trope.
 * Son Goku of Dragon Ball. Some time before the series began, he accidentally killed his adoptive grandfather after transforming into a giant were-ape. As for blood relatives, Dragonball Z reveals.
 * Kimba the White Lion: Played straight with Lyra who is able to play and go on adventures with Kimba, but the trope is deconstructed with Kimba due to his "Well Done, Son" Guy relationship he has with his father who was killed off before Kimba was born.
 * In Pokémon Special, Red is the only Dex Holder to have no family even alluded to, leaving him free to travel the world where ever and whenever he wants.
 * Gunslinger Girl. Done plausibly as the Social Welfare Agency only selects girls for its secret killer cyborg program who don't have extended families who'll be concerned about them. As a victim of child sex trafficking, Triela's background is unknown even to the Agency. Henrietta's entire family was murdered and Angelica's parents are in prison. Petra's family are too poor to travel from Russian to see their daughter -- which is just as well as her appearance has been altered completely. Presumably the occasional forged letter is sent back. As Rico is one of the few cyborgs who retains memories of her previous life, the occasional visit from her estranged parents is no doubt enough to reassure them that their Ill Girl is receiving the best of care; the Agency would have no trouble getting Rico to play along.
 * In Berserk, all of the main cast have Parental Abandonment issues, but Griffith is the only one who has absolutely no mention of any sort of guardianship in his early life, making it quite convenient for him to up and decide that he was going to become a king someday and to get there, he needed to start a ragtag bunch of misfit mercenaries.

Comic Books

 * Golden Age and Silver Age Superman is orphaned by both his biological and adoptive parents. Other versions have Martha and sometimes Jonathan alive as well.
 * Iron Man
 * Batman
 * Spider-Man. He has his beloved aunt, and his uncle lived long enough to say the thing that has shaped most of Spidey's career.
 * Also more than a few members of the supporting cast have lost one (Mary Jane, Harry Osborn, John Jameson) or both (Betty Brant, Gwen Stacy) parents.
 * The debut issue of The Incredible Hulk makes it clear up front that Rick Jones (Bruce Banner's newly-acquired teenaged sidekick) is an orphan.
 * Much later, we learn that Bruce is also an orphan. Bruce's mother was killed by his father when he was a child, and Bruce (accidentally?) killed his father shortly before the explosion that made him the Hulk.
 * Several mutant characters from Marvel's X-Books are orphans; sometimes by abandonment, sometimes by death, by murder, or by parents becoming a demon bear...
 * Wait, what was that last one?!
 * Orphans were extremely common in Golden and Silver Age Marvel comics, in addition to those already mentioned for example Namor, Captain America, Bucky, the Fantastic Four (Reed Richards' father reappeared in the 1980s, though), Alicia Masters, Daredevil (although Frank Miller would eventually change that, revealing that his mother had actually become a nun), Iron Man, Ant-Man and the Wasp, and the Black Widow, Professor X, and Cyclops. Angel became one before long.
 * Hal Jordon and John Stewart's parents are all dead.
 * Mace and Whip of Dreamkeepers.
 * The Plutonian of Irredeemable is yet another convenient superhero orphan. The series actually deconstructs this Trope, examining the effect it can really have on a little boy with super-powers.
 * The Plutonian was also abandoned by his subsequent foster parents, after he accidentally crippled their biological son. They even devoted themselves to never speak again just so he wouldn't pick up their voices by superhearing.
 * Tom Strong. Orphaned at around age 8, after being raised in a gravity chamber by his parents.
 * Tintin. Most members of his recurring supporting cast come without familial attachments.

Film

 * In Idiocracy, Joe is chosen for the freezing experiment partially because he is orphaned, so nobody would come ask questions if something went wrong with the experiment.
 * James Bond is an orphan.
 * Used as a (possible) plot point; he was chosen because he's an orphan, so family is not a factor upon training/traveling, nor will it be leverage should he be captured.
 * A great many of the main characters in Star Wars are orphans. Han Solo and Anakin Skywalker are both orphans. Both Luke and Leia are orphaned - twice. Every Jedi raised back the Clone Wars era (and a long time before that as well), save Anakin and a few others I may have forgotten, was taken from their parents when they were still an infant and brought to the Temple.
 * has this trope as part of his backstory in Tangled. His motivation behind  is because of growing up poor.
 * The two aliens of Megamind are both orphans in the extreme, given that their entire home planets have been destroyed. This allows them to experience two very different childhoods upon arriving on Earth.
 * An extreme number of Disney characters have missing or killed parents. The characters where both parents are absent are: Aladdin, Lilo and Nani, Snow White and all seven of the Dwarfs, Cinderella, Quasimodo, Esmerelda, Mowgli, Peter Pan and the Lost Boys, Tarzan, Arthur, and Tod.
 * Subverted in Ordinary People (the novel more than the film, though it's mentioned in both). Calvin, the father, grew up in an orphanage in Detroit. While he lives a very stable life as a successful tax lawyer with a wife and children, he's haunted by his past and admits to feelings of rootlessness when he talks to his son's psychiatrist.

Literature

 * The Lord of the Rings: Frodo Baggins was orphaned at twelve, but was raised in his family's home by said extended family; when he turned 21 (adult-ish but not yet legally adult for hobbits) he was adopted by and went to live with his 'uncle' Bilbo (who, of course, conveniently leaves).
 * Bilbo himself, though not an orphan, manages to avoid marriage, and thus has no family ties holding him back when he goes on his adventure.
 * Oliver Twist is an orphan.
 * Molly Moon from the Molly Moon books, as well as most of her friends.
 * Kinsey Millhone loves being an orphan (was raised by her aunt).
 * Harry Potter is an orphan, raised by his aunt and uncle. J. K. Rowling has admitted to using this trope in interviews, and that the original drafts of the first book killed off Harry's parents rather anticlimactically--it wasn't until she lost her own mother that Harry's parents' sacrifices became an important plot point.
 * Warhammer 40000 features many of them.
 * Commissiars are required to be orphans. As a consequence:
 * Sandy Mitchell's Ciaphas Cain. Amberly Vail notes that he gives out little information about his past, and that about his parents contradicts known facts.
 * Dan Abnett's Ibram Gaunt of Gaunt's Ghosts. Down to a plot-significant Orphan's Plot Trinket and Tell Me About My Father. Also Ludd, although this receives only brief mention, and Hark, though this gets no mention at all.
 * Ragnor Blackmane, of William King's Space Wolf novels, is orphaned in the opening of the first. A major motivation for him is desire for Revenge on a fellow Space Marine who had been part of the opposing force.
 * You would not believe how many characters in the Star Wars Expanded Universe are orphaned. Wedge Antilles lost both his parents when he was around twelve, Tycho Celchu was a pilot for the Empire whose entire family was on Alderaan, Corran Horn lost his mother to a speeder accident and his father to a criminal. Most of these characters are adults, and the loss of their parents spurred them to join the Rebellion. While her parents aren't dead, Mara Jade was taken from them at an early age and never looked back.
 * The Essential Guide to Characters (first edition) says that Palpatine had her parents killed. There you go, Ben's never going to meet his grandparents now...
 * The two assassin protagonists in Brotherhood of the Rose, by David Morrell, initially meet in an orphanage from which they're recruited by CIA chief Elliot, who presents himself as a surrogate father figure. They later discover that Elliot (and other members of his worldwide conspiracy) have done the same thing with other orphans, in order to create a team of Elite Mooks who'll obey their orders without question.
 * In the CHERUB books, every character as part of CHERUB is an orphan. Means they can be trained up as spies without parents wondering whats going on.
 * Although in the later books the rules are changed slightly so the children of staff members can become CHERUBs as well, partly because it's hard to find conveniently orphaned/abandoned children that fit CHERUB's other recruitment criteria.
 * A Series of Unfortunate Events has many orphans, including the three main characters and
 * This How To Write Badly Well entry explains the concept
 * In The Belgariad, Garion's parents are killed by a servant of the enemy before the story starts.
 * In Magician, Pug is an orphan and we never find out what happened to his parents (well, unless it's mentioned in one of the innumerable sequels).
 * Number Ten Ox in Bridge of Birds is an orphan, raised by an aunt and uncle.
 * Rincewind from the Discworld novels has no idea who his parents are/were.
 * His mother left before he was born.
 * Lampshaded/mentioned in Unseen Academicals when only people with a note from their mother are excused from playing football. Rincewind asks the Arch-Chancellor for permission to go ask his mother for such a note. "I thought you said you didn't have a mother." [beat] "Permission to go find her, Arch-Chancellor?"
 * Simon from Memory Sorrow and Thorn is an orphan. Adopted and raised by the mistress of chambermaids, he has no family to pine for when evil comes and he is forced to flee his home. His orphaning becomes a plot point later.
 * In the Replica series, Nancy Candler is an orphan with no living relatives, making it easy for her to pass off an adopted genetically altered clone as her biological daughter without anyone raising eyebrows.
 * The title character in James and the Giant Peach was orphaned at a young age, and is being raised by his two evil aunts until they get squashed by the peach.
 * Moses in the Bulrushes. Moses is an orphan. This way the author can give him Jewish heritage and have him sacrifice his privileged Egyptian social status.
 * Actually, Moses biological parents weren't only alive when they cast him off, his mom wound up becoming his nurse, so they raised him too.
 * Doc Savage lost his father in his very first adventure, The Man of Bronze, and his mother had died at some point prior to that. Which begs the question, if you're full grown when your parents die, are you still an orphan?
 * In A Song of Ice and Fire, Yoren deliberately invokes this, telling  to claim to be an orphan, since no one will give an orphan taking the Black a second glance.
 * Per Word of God, virtually everyone in the web-novel Domina. "If a character's parents aren't mentioned, its safe to assume its because they're dead." That's what happens when you live in a Wretched Hive.
 * Harry Dresden, from the Dresden Files. His mother died shortly after he was born, and his father died when he was around 7. Then, later on, while living with Justin Du Morne he's orphaned again when.
 * Sisterhood series by Fern Michaels: Okay, Nikki Quinn's parents are dead. Kathryn Lucas's parents are dead. Isabelle Flanders's parents are dead (maybe). Yoko Akia's mother is dead and her father is a Complete Monster. Abner Tookus's parents are dead (maybe). There's certainly a lot of orphan characters to go around!
 * The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: Ford Prefect is not only an orphan but the Last of His Kind, which provides a convenient explanation for why his original alien name is totally forgotten.
 * Subverted in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz; Dorothy is stated to be an orphan, but lives with her foster parents in Kansas. She loves them enough that despite all the beauty of Oz and the friends she made, she is determined to go back anyway.

Live Action TV

 * Bones - Dr. Brennan's emotional interface may be glitchy, but any one she deals with who comments on her inability to sympathize gets slammed when they find out she lost her parents at a young age, conveniently explaining why she might come off disturbed but assuring everyone that she understands.
 * Doctor Who companions in the classic series are often orphans - sometimes with Death by Origin Story, or else have Parental Abandonment. Companions in the new series have parents. Oh man, do they have parents.
 * Now the Doctor himself is basically orphaned after the Time War, providing buckets of angst.
 * Amy Pond has an aunt, but is essentially a orphan.
 * Revenge is centered around this trope. Amanda/Emily's whole purpose is to avenge her father, who was framed for aiding terrorists and later died; her mother passed away when she was a small child.

Tabletop Games

 * This is about as frequent as You All Meet in An Inn in this medium. In any given party, someone probably has this as his or her backstory.
 * Demotivational posters refer to parents as "DM Hostages".

Video Games
"Orphan Ollie: My mother is especially dead!"
 * A really common occurrence in Final Fantasy:
 * Cloud from Final Fantasy VII (covered in a flashback halfway through Disc 1).
 * And Aerith (though she was raised by Elmyra for fifteen years), Tifa, Marlene (raised by Barret), Red XIII...
 * In Final Fantasy III, all the main characters are orphans, although three had been adopted and one was working for the king by the time the game begins.
 * Most of the main characters are orphans in Final Fantasy VIII as well, with the exception of Rinoa who was a Rebellious Princess. Most side characters were as well as SeeD specifically recruit from orphanages, because that is what Gardens started off as. Tyke Bomb gone into a full blown army.
 * Final Fantasy IV: Cecil and Kain were orphaned and taken in by King Baron, and Rydia becomes an orphan in-game. Edge orphans himself, killing his parents after they become chimarea. Polom and Porom are raised by Mysidia's elder and may or may not be orphans.
 * Final Fantasy V has the Idiot Hero being an orphan at the game's beginning, the rebellious princesses losing their father halfway through the game and the Sixth Ranger being a replacement for her dead grandpa, who was also her last relative. To sum up, in the end of the game, nobody in your party has elder family members left.
 * Final Fantasy VI has Terra, Edgar, and Sabin explicitly stated as orphans as part of the plot. Gau is essentially and orphan. Relm may or may not be an orphan, it may just be a Disappeared Dad. The rest of the cast never mention their families.
 * Zidane in Final Fantasy IX. Truth be told,
 * In Final Fantasy X, Tidus, Yuna, Seymour, Wakka, and Lulu are all missing both parents . Kimahri's family disowned him, Rikku's mother is dead, and we never hear anything about Auron's parents. Only two of the main characters have siblings, and one of them is dead. Probably justified to demonstrate that Sin has touched everyone's lives.
 * Final Fantasy XI has, Prishe, Aphmau, and Lilith. (Although the last one is trying to avert the trope through Time Travel.) Can we get Square into a 12-step program to deal with their addiction to this trope?
 * Both Vaan and Penelo from Final Fantasy XII
 * Ditto with Ascended Extras Kytes and Filo from the sequel Revenant Wings.
 * Lightning, Serah, and Snow in Final Fantasy XIII. Presumably Fang and Vanille as well, since they . Only Hope is the exception, and both his parents are seen during the course of the game, though his mother dies less than an hour in.
 * Though this is totally averted with the Big Bad.  Unfortunately the heroes never discuss this.
 * Rafa and Malak in Final Fantasy Tactics.
 * Similarly, Dart from Legend of Dragoon, in addition to the Doomed Hometown at the beginning of the game.
 * Samus Aran was orphaned and raised by Chozo, who have since withdrawn from the universe, leaving Samus with no familial ties.
 * Disgaea: Larharl and Etna are orphans.
 * As is Cornet, the main character of Rhapsody: A Musical Adventure. She lives with her grandfather.
 * La Pucelle: Prier, Aloutte and Coulette are orphans.
 * Phantom Brave: Marona and Ash become orphans in the introduction.
 * Soul Nomad and The World Eaters: Revya and Danette are orphans.
 * The Legend of Zelda's Link is often an orphan. Zelda might also count in some of the games.
 * She definitely counts in The Legend of Zelda the Wind Waker, where her figurine clearly spells it out and an NPC early in the game mentions that her mother died.
 * Fire Emblem viciously delights in killing off family. It's gotten to the point that if a character has a parent/sibling/uncle that loves them, nine out of ten times they're dead before the game is up, if not killed before it.
 * You missed the worst part of Nino's family situation:
 * What about the other part?
 * In Tales of Vesperia, just about everyone in your entire party is an orphan. With most of them, all we get is either the parent left or the parent died, or both, no further explanation. We only find out how one parent died, although it's implied (very very subtly) that several of the mothers died in childbirth. In all honesty, it feels a little ridiculous at times.
 * Skies of Arcadia: surprisingly, not the hero, but both other core members of your party. Aika is established early on to be an orphan, and Fina... well, there's no other Silvites left but some Elders, and Ramirez.
 * In Baten Kaitos, Kalas has no parents, although he makes mention to being raised by his grandfather, and to having a brother.
 * The prequel, surprisingly, averts this: Sagi's implied to be the only biological child of the woman who runs his town's orphanage, and Milly's dad is . Also played with: One of the boss fights culminates in YOU orphaning one of the original game's party members.
 * In Golden Sun, the trope is very much zig-zagged for the main cast.
 * Isaac's father and Jenna's parents and brother are killed off right in the intro. Then it quickly turns out that the brother survived and seems to be an enemy. Then in the second game, Poor Isaac's mother has to almost force her son to keep going on his quest and is a source of worry, as she falls gravely ill in his absence.
 * Ivan is an orphan and his adoptive father is kidnapped as you meet him, but the trope is toyed with: you're told that you can't do anything about it and you should just leave the father behind, but Ivan worries a lot, and you get an optional sidequest to free his father and ease his mind; and in the second game.
 * Sheba is also an adopted orphan and joins the group because she was kidnapped, but she's an inversion of the trope: in the second game, she refuses to drop by her hometown because her worried adoptive family would force her to stay.
 * Piers is a straight and extreme example: he spends the first half of the game trying to go home, then when he finally does, he learns that his mother just died and he quickly gets exiled.
 * Mia would be a straight example, having simply no mentioned family at all... but she is the one character who is sad to leave (she says farewell to her two young apprentices) and it's more a case of "conveniently rid of her town-healer duties".
 * And Garet is a complete aversion: he's the only cast member who has a large, living and functional family, but they all encourage him to save the world and fatherless Isaac gets more angst; then in the epilogue cutscene of the second game.
 * The first four heroes of Golden Sun: Dark Dawn all have at least one parent still alive and caring for them-- the previous games' heroes (whom the kids strongly resemble). However, the second set of heroes include two straight examples (Sveta, whose parents died in Morgal's revolutionary war, and ), a subversion (Amiti, who doesn't have parents but lives with his affectionate and overprotective uncle, who tries to forbid him from heroics), and an aversion (Himi's parents aren't happy to see her going into danger, but they have to let her because she's the only one who knows what needs to be done any more).
 * In the Metal Gear Solid games, the circumstances which led to Otacon being an orphan are a significant aspect of his woobie status.
 * Averted to a certain degree for some of the Origins in Dragon Age: Origins. The character does have relatives, and not all of them die in the prologue. For practical purposes, it still amounts to the same, though.
 * Played straight with some of your companions (Leliana, Zevran, etc.), and in Alistair's case, it's even a plot point.
 * Also parodied in the elven Alienage, where the number of "orphans" is directly proportional to the amount of money you're giving the beggars.


 * Two of the three options in Mass Effect for Shepard. With the spacer background, Shepard's mother is not only alive and well, but also helps him/her out during one of the optional sidequests (though that's the only conversation they have in all three games).
 * Implied to be the case with the eponymous characters of the Jak and Daxter series. They get flung forward in time in the sequel, and don't have any problem staying around. The orphan thing is explored/confirmed for Jak, but is still only an implication for Daxter, though no one is saying otherwise.
 * Ratchet of Ratchet and Clank believes he is the only Lombax left in the universe. Although in Ratchet and Clank Future: A Crack in Time, Ratchet is forced to.
 * Of the eight human protagonists of Persona 3; three are orphans, one is probably an orphan (dead mother, no mention of father but is being supported by a distant cousin), as are all three villains, two only have a mother, one only has a father, and only one has two living parents. Whether it is a matter of convenience or not is arguable, as the family situations of the cast of Persona 4 (one case of parents are both alive but traveling so staying with uncle, three cases of parents both alive and living with them, one case of dead father but living mother, one case of living parents but staying with grandmother, and one case of parents dead and living alone with aid of grandfather) rarely become an issue.
 * The tone of the game may help. Persona 3 is darker than Persona 4 and most of the time, the abandoment is ether a direct or indirect result of the Krijo group's expermentation on the Shadows, with the other two members having parents that made it personally preferable to live in the dorm.
 * In Neverwinter Nights 2, your mother died when you were a baby, during . Your father is a complete question mark, a point that might have made an excellent sidequest.
 * Deconstructed with a vengence in Drakengard.

Web Comics

 * The protagonist in Holiday Wars is one, which can be seen in this episode.
 * Characters from Gold Coin Comics, such as Lance and Theo.
 * "Onion Kid" alias "Rex" alias  from Eight Bit Theater was orphaned so often, that he's stopped looking for foster parents or even an orphanage who'd still take him in. This trauma is actually the cause for pretty much everything that happened in the comic to begin with, thanks to a Stable Time Loop.
 * Hanna of Hanna Is Not a Boy's Name never mentions his family, but it's implied that he has no immediate relatives in the city.
 * The Dreamland Chronicles: Felicity lightly mentions that she was orphaned.
 * Jade Harley from Homestuck, who was raised by her pet dog after her grandfather died.
 * And as of
 * Troll society is entirely like this, as the adults go off to conquer the universe while they leave the planet in the hands of the youth for the most part, leaving them to be Raised by Wolves. At least until events cause all of said Wolves to die, but they remained as their sprites.
 * In the Alpha universe, . It's hinted that   had their parents killed in order to get them interested in playing Sburb.
 * Most of the cast in Dubious Company. Sal is the only character firmly established as having living relatives.
 * The Sues were adopted by Izor after their family was killed by a series of random fires.
 * Gary Stu appears to have taken the parental role for his brother.
 * Walter, Tiren, and Elly have fond childhood memories, but appear to no longer have ties to their families. They were visibly distraught when Sal asked if they had a home.

Western Animation

 * Ronaldo from the Brazil episode of The Simpsons. Conveniently as an orphan, he doesn't have parents hogging his money he gets from perfoming on Teleboobies, and he assists the Simpsons in paying Homer's ransom.
 * Sinedd of Galactik Football is able to run off and join The Shadows despite a large song and dance being made in the very same episode about the need for parental permission. His departure isn't justified with this trope for another 18 episodes.
 * Orphan or not, Sinedd was already of age, making the parental permission unnecessary for him.
 * The Disney version of Aladdin. The original folklore version had a dead father but a living mother; the Disney version has neither parent until we find out in the third movie that his father only disappeared.
 * According to Word of God, the Disney Aladdin was originally supposed to have a mom, who functioned as his conscience of sorts; however, it was decided that the Aesop would be more meaningful if he learned it on his own.
 * Likely a requirement to be part of the Teen Titans, because what sort of parents would let their children put their lives on the line in weekly superheroics? And sure enough, the only living parent to any of the Titans ever seen in the series is not a very nice guy.
 * Cyborg's father is (presumably) alive. In the comics he was the one who made him a... well, Cyborg.
 * We also get to meet Beast Boy's (adoptive) parents, Elasti-Girl is pretty nice, but Mento is bit of a jerk.
 * In Teen Titans Go Raven's mother is alive after.
 * Robin's parents are dead as always, but this incarnation heavily implies that he even ditched his "father" Batman so he could move on. (And ended up gathering a bunch of friends around him instead, but no adults. The closest thing to a parent he has is Slade purring about what a great apprentice he could be...)
 * Buck and Larry 3000 of Time Squad needed Otto from the 20th century since he knows more history than they do. Since he's an orphan with no real roots, they adopted him despite the fact that it might alter history.

Real Life

 * Advertisements for The Pony Express mentioned that they preferred their hires to be orphans. Presumably a lot of dangerous occupations would prefer to have as few grieving parents as possible.