Save the Princess



"''Link! He come to town,

Come to save, the Princess Zelda!''"

- Joe Pleiman, "The Legend of Zelda", from The Rabbit Joint.

"Mario: We gotta find the princess!

Luigi: And YOU gotta help us!"

- Hotel Mario

The defining Excuse Plot of the 8-bit era. A Damsel in Distress (whether it be the princess, your girlfriend, whatever) has been kidnapped and put in a tower, and you (and you alone, unless it's a 2-player game) must fight your way through a veritable army of evil minions, dodge horrific death traps, etc. to save her from the Big Bad. Your only reward is probably going to be a Smooch of Victory, unless, of course, you get the Standard Hero Reward. Hope she's worth it!

Once in a rare while, the villain will decide to Hypnotize the Princess and marry her.

The trope derives from the ancient concept of "Princess and Dragon," where The Hero must save a woman from an invading monster. This is usually used as a metaphor for real-life conflict.

Pretty much a Dead Horse Trope these days; while video games still feature the occasional Damsel in Distress, rescuing them is only part of the overall plot; either that, or it's covered by the Grandfather Clause. In his book Power-Up: How Japanese Video Games Gave the World an Extra Life, Chris Kohler credits this progress to some Girl Gamers who wrote to Nintendo in The Eighties to say they were tired of saving princesses; Nintendo eventually announced they'd stop using it as a final goal except in the Super Mario series.

This plot has become quite a popular target for subversion or deconstruction in indie games, and newer references to it in popular culture can be classed with Pac-Man Fever. For a similarly overused plot, see Fake King.

Named because it's often a princess. You know why.

Action Adventure

 * The Legend of Zelda had Link trying to rescue Zelda from Ganon, and the second sees him trying to rescue another Zelda from a spell that causes her to sleep eternally. All the games after that, though they usually do have Zelda kidnapped at some point, do not make it the major driving force of the plot; those games which are an exception to this rule usually do not feature Zelda at all (e.g. The Legend of Zelda Links Awakening, The Legend of Zelda Majoras Mask).
 * Majora's Mask has a kidnapped princess that is the basis for reaching the first dungeon. However, you can finish the game without needing to free her from her prison.
 * Both The Legend of Zelda the Wind Waker and its sequel, The Legend of Zelda Phantom Hourglass, are kicked off with the kidnapping of a young lady -- your sister in the first, and the actual princess in the second; much of the story centers around their rescue. Four Swords also has very little plot beyond this.
 * The Legend of Zelda Spirit Tracks both averts and lampshades this. While Zelda's body is stolen, she, in spirit form, sticks with Link. When she realizes there's a Big Bad to be defeated, she promptly tasks Link with the entire task, claiming that sitting around and waiting for the hero to rescue her is a "family tradition". Soon after, though, they discover that Zelda can be useful in combat and they work as partners from then on.

Action Game

 * The first two Ninja Gaiden games on the NES has Ryu defeating some form of Cosmic Horror to Save the World while also saving the CIA agent Irene Lew, who becomes his girlfriend at the end of the first game. In the third game, Irene is presumed dead in the beginning but is alive and doesn't require rescuing.
 * Fat Princess turns this into a Capture the Flag game, with the goal being to get to the opposing team's base and carry their princesses back to their side. You can hinder the progress by feeding the Princess cake, which will have her grow fatter and becoming heavier to carry.
 * "The Prince Gilgamesh wore golden armor and attacked monsters to save Ki in The Tower of Druaga." In this case though, Ki (pronounced "Kai") is not actually a "princess" per se, she's a shrine maiden in service to the goddess Ishtar (who lends her name to the game's sequel, "The Return of Ishtar").
 * The goal of Penguin Adventure is to find a golden apple to restore the health of the penguin princess. Because of Guide Dang It, it's easier to get the bad ending in which she dies.

Adventure Game

 * The plot of several King's Quest games:
 * In King's Quest II, Graham has to rescue Lady Valanice, who is kept in a tower by an evil witch.
 * In King's Quest VI, Alexander has to rescue Princess Cassima, who is being forced into marriage to the Grand Vizier.
 * In King's Quest III, the Oracle of Llewdor first lets "Gwydion" know about about the three-headed dragon terrorizing the faraway land of Daventry, and the young princess sent as its latest sacrifice. The Oracle then drops the second bombshell, and the third.
 * And inverted in King's Quest IV and King's Quest VII where it's the princess doing the rescuing.
 * Princess Tomato in The Salad Kingdom. The princess to be rescued (by a heroic cucumber) is the one in the title.
 * Fantasy Quest has this as its excuse plot, but a twist awaits players who make it to the end. In the sequel, you are tasked with rescuing dozens of princesses.

Beat'Em Up

 * The objective in the first Double Dragon is to rescue Billy's girlfriend, Marian. In the second, it's a little different; you're avenging her death.
 * Although she does come back to life in the ending of the NES version, only to be kidnapped in the third game.
 * In Final Fight, your goal is to rescue Jessica, who is both Cody's girlfriend and Haggar's daughter.
 * And since Haggar is the mayor, Jessica is the local princess, and you are off to rescue her.
 * Bringing back the classics (though in a hilarious, over the top way) through Castle Crashers. This time there are four princesses, and an achievement for getting the Smooch of Victory from all four!
 * Which is incredibly funny when all the people playing it don't care at all about it, and just stand around waiting to be killed in order for someone to smooch the princess and end the level.
 * Pretty much all the classic (1989-1994) Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles games have you rescue April, though only the first and third Game Boy ones have you save her at the end of the game.
 * Kung Fu Master: "Save Sylvia from Mr. X!"
 * In Vigilante, you had to rescue your girlfriend Madonna (not that Madonna).

First-Person Shooter

 * The Wii game Red Steel featured its One-Man Army hero tearing through the machinations of the Yakuza in an international battle to bring down their new, more violent and corrupt leadership, learning legendary sword techniques along the way, after they kidnapped his fiancé and killed her father, the previous and attempting-to-go-legal Yakuza leader at their engagement announcement dinner.

Light Gun Game

 * The arcade Light Gun game Time Crisis has The President's Daughter as a hostage of the bad guys who must be rescued.

Miscellaneous Games

 * Retro Game Challenge has a princess to save in Guadia Quest and in the first two Haggleman games. Arino comments that the Haggleman princess gets captured an awful lot.

MMORP Gs

 * In World of Warcraft, a quest charges you with saving the dwarven princess Moira Bronzebeard from the emperor of the dark dwarves.

Platform Game

 * The original Super Mario Bros and 3 both have this plot, as does the Japanese version of 2 (The Lost Levels), Super Mario World, Super Mario 64, the first half of Super Mario RPG, the second half of Super Mario Sunshine, Super Mario Galaxy, the Paper Mario games (excluding Super Paper Mario, where Peach is a playable character), and New Super Mario Bros. Bowser must really dig Peach...
 * In fact, the plans of pretty much every villain in the Mario universe always involve kidnapping Peach at some point. In fact, in some games she's even somewhat of a Barrier Maiden. In Superstar Saga, her voice can awaken the Beanstar (the MacGuffin of the game), while in Super Paper Mario she is forced to wed Bowser in order to bring about The End of the World As We Know It.
 * At the very beginning of the Mario franchise, Pauline in Donkey Kong, who gets kidnapped again in the Game Boy version and in most Mario VS Donkey Kong games.
 * Also Daisy in Super Mario Land, one of the few games where Bowser isn't present. Apparently he only got a license to kidnap Peach.
 * Super Princess Peach inverts the trope - Bowser jacked the Vibe Scepter and sends his minions in to use it to paralyze THE ENTIRE CASTLE in emotional distress, using the chaos to imprison THE MARIO BROTHERS (arguably one of his smartest moves in some time)! Peach was Late to The Party, and thus puts it on her shoulders to bail the brothers out.
 * The earlier Prince of Persia games.
 * Braid is ostensibly about this, but the truth behind Tim's pursuit of "the Princess" is a bit more complicated and considerably more depressing.
 * It's possible that the game is actually a Deconstruction of the standard "save the princess" plot.
 * To give an example of how this trope was so prevalent to the point of getting absurd, in the NES games Tiny Toon Adventures and Muppet Adventures, you are charged with saving rather strong and self-sufficient characters Babs Bunny and Miss Piggy, respectively. The latter example in particular is rather egregious, since it's far, far, far more likely that Miss Piggy would have to save Kermit from a bad spot (And she did, in The Muppet Movie. She'd also have saved him in the episode where the pigs took over the show, except she got offered a star position).
 * This is the initial premise of Eversion.
 * This was uncannily anticipated by the ending of Monster Party: In that case, though, it was All Just a Dream...in one country's version, at least.
 * Done in an antiheroic way in Wario Land: The Shake Dimension, where saving the princess is only Wario's secondary goal, with him being promised treasure at the end. In fact, at the end where Princess Merfle congratulates Wario, he stops her in the middle by grabbing her and tossing her out of his way.
 * At the end of Earthworm Jim 2, it appears that "having defeated the nefarious Psy-Crow, our hero, Earthworm Jim, has won back the heart of the lovely Princess What's Her Name." Except.
 * The main plot of the first Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers game on the NES is to rescue Gadget. This notably doesn't start till after you've beaten the first level where the goal is to find a lost kitten (which it turns out was Fat Cat's way of distracting you), and the game goes on for three more levels after you rescue Gadget.
 * This is inverted in the PC game version, where Chip and Dale spend the game collecting screws so that Gadget can finish the Ranger Plane and rescue Monteray Jack from Professor Nimnul.
 * You have to rescue your love interest in Gish.
 * You have to rescue your love interest in Meat Boy.
 * The Clonk level "Dragon Rock" plays this unashamedly straight, right down to the evil mage-with-a-dragon doing the kidnapping. In "Tower of Despair" it's the king, and the dragon itself is the capturer, but otherwise it's pretty much the same.
 * Ghosts N Goblins and its sequels begin by showing Princess Prin-Prin getting kidnapped by some horrible demon.
 * In Jackie Chans Action Kung Fu, Jackie has to rescue Josephine, who is either his twin sister or his girlfriend, from an Evil Sorcerer who abducts her in a Ghosts N Goblins-like opening scene.
 * Crusader, an obscure Platform Game by Compile for the MSX, is the source of the quote: "Princess has been kidnapped! You must save princess."
 * In A Boy and His Blob in: The Rescue of Princess Blobette, you have to rescue Princess Blobette.

Puzzle Game

 * Tower Of The Sorcerer, an indie puzzle game masquerading as a dungeon-crawl RPG, plays this straight, complete with the opening line "A brave man is walking for to save the princess". The plot from there is actually not too bad, but it's clearly an Excuse Plot, as the princess is hardly mentioned thereafter and seen only once before the endgame. Then the trope is subverted in the game's Twist Ending:
 * The goal in Castlequest is to rescue Princess Margarita from Groken Castle.
 * Kickle Cubicle actually has four princess to rescue, one at the end of each area.

Real Time Strategy

 * Lampshaded in Supreme Commander: Forged Alliance, in one mission you must fend off the alien attackers from Princess Rhianne Burke's personal palace, Mission Control tells you that "You have a Princess to save, Commander."

Role Playing Game

 * The first Dragon Quest essentially has only two objectives: Save the Princess, and kill the Dragonlord. Unlike most Save the Princess games, however, you actually rescue the princess from a dragon (usually the first one you kill) in the Marsh Cave long before you beat the Big Bad.
 * Your very first objective in Final Fantasy I is to rescue Princess Sara of Coneria/Cornelia/Corneria, who has been taken by good-knight-gone-bad Garland.
 * Similarly, Final Fantasy Tactics starts off with you needing to rescue Princess Ovelia. Then it gets complicated.
 * There is a mission in Valkyria Chronicles where your squad has to quite literally save the princess after a kidnap attempt.
 * Being an Affectionate Parody of RPG cliches, The Bards Tale naturally uses this as it's main plot.
 * One segment of the main plot in Dragon Age: Origins has the Warden breaking into Arl Howe's estate to rescue Queen Anora, who is kept there by her father against her will. The Rescue the Princess aspect is really overshadowed by the Fort Drakon escape following it and the fact that Howe finally gets what's coming to him.
 * Your first real goal in Knights of the Old Republic is to rescue Bastila from the swoop gang that recovered her from a crashed escape pod and is now offering her as a prize in an upcoming swoop race. Then, two-thirds of the way through the game, Malak captures her... (Of course, the movie whose universe KotOR is set in had Save the Princess as a good chunk of its plot as well.)
 * Oh, so very, very much subverted in Live a Live: Orsted sets out to rescue his princess bride-to-be in an opening obviously inspired by Ghosts N Goblins. By the end of the chapter,
 * Your first real objective in Chrono Trigger is to retrieve the girl who has fallen through a time warp; and sure enough she turns out to be a princess. Subverted in that when you get back, you're put on trial for kidnapping her in the first place. You end up having to dive through another time warp in order to evade the guards, and that's where the real adventure begins.
 * One mission in Mass Effect 3 will have Shepard saving a  princess.
 * Hydlide combined this with Fetch Quest, with the Big Bad somehow having transformed the princess into three fairies.

Survival Horror

 * In Resident Evil 4, Leon pretty much spends the entire game going through the Big Bad's trap-filled castle, fighting off undead minions, so he can rescue the President's daughter, Ashley. At the end of the game, Ashley offers him a lot more than just a Smooch of Victory, but given he's part of the secret service in that game, that would obviously not have been a good idea, and he rightly turns her down.

Turn Based Strategy
"Almaz: I must save the princess!
 * Super Robot Taisen: Original Generation for the GBA is a Turn Based Strategy game with sci-fi themes and SuperRobots. Your squadron still ends up needing to Save the Princess, but at least it's only a subplot that's introduced and then resolved rather quickly.
 * Disgaea plays with this.
 * Absence of Justice take...

Sapphire: * Groin Attack*

Almaz: The princess! She touched me! I can die happy now..."


 * Disgaea 3 also looks at it more seriously with the reasoning behind its Inversion: Princess Sapphire has seen far too many people go off and die all in the name of protecting her. So she became a Badass Princess capable of destroying anything that might kill a hero.
 * The Cursed Memories take involves Axel kidnapping Taro and Hanako as bait for the 'wild tribesman' Adell so he can "rescue" Rozalin.
 * Fire Emblem: The Sword of Seal gives you two "save the princess" missions, one with Princess Guinevere of Bern (the half-sister of the Big Bad, who becomes your protegé) and the other with Princess Lilina of Ostia (who joins your troupe as a Magic Knight as soon as she's rescued)
 * In Genealogy of the Holy War, Starting in Chapter 10 you have to find Princess Yuria... in classic style she's in another castle every time you conquer the previous castle... this lasts until the final part of the final chapter, where she's That One Boss hanging out in your way.(Note that she's That One Boss who you can't kill (or the game will become practically Unwinnable- she's needed for the Final Boss fight.)
 * In The Sacred Stones Princess Eirika is the main character of the first several missions, and is at least initially most concerned with saving herself. Depending on what route is taken there may also be a mission where Princess Tana must be rescued.
 * In addition, after getting to safety (And Saving Tana) Eirika sets out on a quest to save her brother making this 'Save the Prince'. Except that, in the end, he's the one who rides to her rescue.

Visual Novel

 * While technically not a princess (unless you count her as one for being the daughter of the Fey clan's leaderess), poor Maya Fey in the Ace Attorney series has to be saved from death four times! The first two involve Maya being accused of murder and you have to get a not guilty verdict to save her. The third occasion has Maya kidnapped by an individual who uses this as leverage to force Phoenix into taking a case. The last case has Maya being trapped on a freezing mountain. And things just get worse from there...

Web Comics

 * The game that Radd is from in the webcomic Kid Radd has this plotline. Interestingly, due to the premise of game sprites as sentient beings who are created for the express purpose of being in games, Radd has no idea he even has a girlfriend until the narrator tells him so.
 * This is how Exiern starts.
 * Swap out "Princess" with "CEO and former Magical Girl Warrior", and we've got the main plot for Last Res 0 rt. Of course, both halves of the rescuer/rescuee equation are female (and said Rescuee is reasonably capable of saving herself), so...
 * In Sinfest, Fuschia reads the damned a story about rescuing the princess from the dragon.