Useless Boyfriend



"Never did like that sumbitch. About as useless as a pecker on the pope."

- Sheriff McGraw, Planet Terror

It is very common that when women are the main characters, they will have a boyfriend that is depicted as a complete Badass or a Badass Normal. They singlehandedly fight the Monster of the Week and even rescue their action/Magical Girl friends when they are still learning how to use their powers/skills. They are more than capable of facing the Big Bad and his/her goons without powers.

In short, they are completely badass... Except whenever their action/Magical Girl friends are around. Then they somehow become very ineffective fighting against the Monster of the Week and are completely useless against the Big Bad. Sometimes, they even get demoted to Dude in Distress. Many times, they are not allowed to win a fight unless their girlfriends are somehow incapacitated. Most of the time they are somehow unable to get the same powers/abilities as their action/Magical Girl friends.

One potential (in-universe) explanation for this is that the boyfriend in question is a Badass Normal, while the "Girlfriend," has actual magical powers, special abilities, or is a much better Badass Normal. And while the boy is no doubt skilled, he can't really compare to soul-eating monsters or the ability to shoot fire from one's hands.

Another explanation is that though the boy has powers of his own, and is more than a badass normal, he isn't the Chosen One, or lacks the local monster-killing MacGuffin, which the girl noticeably has.

When this trope is played straight, it is used to denote Girl Power. This trope is a necessity due to the fact that the girls are the ones that are supposed to have the spotlight and be the heroines, as most of this shows are primarily intended for girls.

Compare to The Worf Effect, where a Badass character is taken out easily to show how tough the new villain is. The difference between a Useless Boyfriend and the Worf Effect is the setting and how frequently the Badass in question is beaten down. The Worf Effect will overlap with Useless Boyfriend, but the Boyfriend is characterized by his uselessness. Though he may also serve a similar purpose, the "Worf" will be actually effective against a wide variety of enemies, and will gain victories for their side, whereas the Boyfriend serves as a punching bag until his girlfriend shows up.

See Girl Power, Action Girl, Informed Ability, Magical Girl, or Dude in Distress. Also look at Badass Decay. Contrast Faux Action Girl, which is a part of the Distaff Counterpart.

Anime and Manga

 * Hailing from Sailor Moon, Tuxedo Mask is one of two Trope Codifiers. He was the mysterious protector of the main characters while Usagi and her team got stronger. He becomes completely useless against the first and last Big Bads, often leaving Usagi alone for the bigger battles. (In his defense, it's not like he wants to: in the first series, in S , in Super S , and in Stars .)

Comic Books

 * Wonder Woman:Steve Trevor, Wonder Woman's official Love Interest for decades, was a USA Air Force pilot and agent and the second Trope Codifier. But he ended up rescued by Wonder Woman as often as Lois Lane was by Superman. Eventually they wrote him out of the series, even marrying him to Wonder Woman's female sidekick, Etta Candy.

Fan Works

 * Shows up quite often in Touhou Project fan fiction, due in part to the fact that many such fanfics involve Muggle humans accidentally finding themselves in Gensokyo, a land whose chief population seems to be magic bullet-shooting Action Girls.

Live-Action TV

 * Buffy the Vampire Slayer's boyfriend in seasons 4-5, Riley, was a Badass Normal who was completely and utterly outclassed by Buffy. The show even deconstructs the trope, with all the Unfortunate Implications that come along with it. Riley eventually feels useless (in combat and even emotionally because Buffy refuses to really open up to or rely on him when she needs help) and weak compared to Buffy and leaves her. Later it turns out that he marries a different, and less empowered Action Girl with whom he can form a more equal Battle Couple.
 * In Charmed, Cole turned into this after his Heel Face Turn, but then turned into a Muggle.
 * Played straight with Mickey of Doctor Who at first, then subverted.
 * What about Rory Pond (also subverted later on)?

Literature

 * The Servant series, by Lori Foster, has Gaby as the supernatural protagonist and Luther as her Muggle love interest. If it were a straight up detective series, Luther would be pretty badass. Unfortunately, since he's not supernaturally empowered, he can't hold a candle to Gaby.

Web Original

 * Fey of the Whateley Universe has immense magical powers and has beaten The Necromancer in one-on-one duels. Her boyfriend Stalwart is an inventor, and not all of his inventions work.

Western Animation
"Steve Trevor: Have to say, being a secret agent is a cinch when you have a super-powered girlfriend."
 * In Winx Club, the specialists are depicted as completely badass warriors, due to the fact that they are training all the time to be Badass Normals.For this reason one would logically expect them to be able to fight effectively competently at all against the forces of evil. Despite this, they are completely useless against the Big Bads, and very weak compared to the Winx Club against magical threats. Which are, like, 90% of the threats.
 * In WITCH, Cornelia's boyfriend, Caleb, is an undeniable badass, leading the resistance forces in Miridian, running daring raids against Phobos' forces, and even saving the girls in their first encounter. Despite all of this, he is next to useless against Phobos, Cedric, or any of the Big Bads, really.
 * Matt Olsen, Will's boyfriend, subverts this trope. When he finds out of Will's second life, he decides that he isn't going to let Will get hurt with him around. He takes copious amounts of Taking a Level In Badass, gets himself new powers and is now on equal footing with them! Sadly, the series is canceled before we can find out if he'd end up getting shunted back into this category.
 * The comic was also good at subverting it. When Matt learns about The Masquerade, he helps the girls hiding it from their parents. Next story arc, he is a Dude in Distress, but at then end he manages to save the day.
 * The wielders of the Forest Stones from Princess Gwenevere and the Jewel Riders, despite riding Badass wolves and having their own magic stones, were unfortunately made all too aware of this trope. They have been kidnapped, transformed, and in short are pretty much useless.
 * In Kim Possible, Ron Stoppable is this for Kim. Despite the act that he has "mystical king Fu powers" he is unable to beat Shego nor any villain of the week. Most of the time Kim does all the work. He becomes aware of this trope at the last episode and feels outclassed compared to Kim. Even in the last episode when he was allowed to
 * Ron really is more of a subversion however. He is, in fact an attempt at lampshading this trope. The main difference is that Ron hasn't made any claims to be badass, he knows he isn't badass.
 * The other thing is that it's Kim's show, so she's usually the hero with Ron as loyal support, though he has a number of All Up to You moments.
 * Lampshaded and... Parodied?... with Steve Trevor, love interest of Wonder Woman in his appearance at Batman the Brave And The Bold: In all other incarnations (animation, live action TV) he is a fairly proactive guy, (except comics, as you can see above) in the Cold Opening of “Scorn of Star Shappire” he is a secret agent so confindent that Wonder Woman will come to her rescue that he doesn’t move a muscle to get out of a Death Trap, left her do all the work, and gushes in her presence. And this immortal line: