Summon Everyman Hero



The Resistance is in peril. The forces of evil are knocking on their gate. They have no choice, they must use the Dangerous Forbidden Technique to summon a hero from another world to assist them.

And they get Bob Smith, from Normal, Arizona! An average American kid who just happens to be what they need for the job. The summoners may be unimpressed, or be totally blind that this guy is going to need a lot of Training From Hell to be useful, but since he IS the Chosen One, he will save the day in the end and either choose to stay in the new fantastic world or go home and be normal again at the end of his adventure.

A typical set up for Trapped in Another World stories. This is a very, very popular trope in regards to getting The Everyman from the modern world into the Magical Land.

Sometimes, rather than An Everyman, the spell summons someone who is exactly what's needed for a given situation. If no summoning is involved, he's an Action Survivor. Other times, the everyman really is very average and probably too squishy to last long enough to make a difference, but they will get summoned INTO the body of someone or something more physically impressive as part of the summoning or just by accident.

Named for the Dungeons & Dragons spell "Summon Monster".

See also Recruit Teenagers with Attitude. For some reason, the Everyman will be summoned while doing something embarrassing.

Anime and Manga

 * The Digidestined from Digimon Adventure could count as an example of this, since the summoners were "totally blind that [these guys are] going to need a lot of training to be useful."
 * Digimon Frontier also did this, but with a twist; they summoned a bunch of kids but only kept around the handful that actually got some results.
 * The protagonists of Those Who Hunt Elves were summoned before the start of the story to defeat the Big Bad, which they did immediately by blasting him with the armored tank the spell also summoned. They then spend the rest of the series gathering the parts of the spell that will let them get back to Earth.
 * Miaka and Yui, along with the past priestesses of Genbu and Byakko from Fushigi Yuugi.
 * Magic Knight Rayearth. The Princess Emeraude, the Pillar of Cephiro, summons the Magic Knights at the moment they all meet (coincidentally) in Tokyo Tower. Everyone assumes their calling is to rescue the princess from the evil Zagato.
 * While it wasn't on purpose, Zero no Tsukaima results in this.
 * The TV series MAR (Marchen Awakens Romance) starts this way, though the high school kid accidentally summoned to help La Résistance of another dimension doesn't stay "normal" for long. (It should be noted that the series is an intentional takeoff on this kind of stories, with plenty of fairy tale references.)
 * The guys from the Monster Rancher anime were trying to unlock a powerful monster to help them. What they got was a kid from our world playing a Monster Rancher game beta disk.
 * Dog Days, because The Hero is very athletic. At least they don't summon a random person into their world.
 * Dog Days, because The Hero is very athletic. At least they don't summon a random person into their world.

Films

 * A Kid in King Arthur's Court. Lampshaded in the sequel, A Kid In Aladdin's Palace.
 * In The Flight of Dragons, modern-day scientist and fantasy enthusiast Peter Dickinson is summoned as a champion in a conflict between wizards (his mind gets put in a dragon body, which helps). Nobody is particularly impressed, although his summoner is prepared to trust that 'antiquity' had a purpose in choosing this guy.
 * Justified in the book that the movie was (loosely) based on. Jim Eckert and Angie are transported into the past/alternate dimension using an astral projection machine invented by a colleague, not summoned. And Jim isn't exactly an 'everyman', he's a medieval scholar, which puts him in the perfect position to understand the culture around him but work outside it using modern sensibilities and knowledge.
 * The Forbidden Kingdom did this, with the slight inversion that the normal kid accidentally summoned himself to the magical land. Of course, it was All Just a Dream. Or Was It a Dream?
 * The Last Starfighter did a non-magic version. A con man looking for recruitment bounties wants to recruit the most talented pilot he can find in order to get paid by the Star League. He does this by seeding planets with a testing booth disguised as an arcade game called Starfighter; the one person who beats the game turns out to be a human teenager living in a desert trailerpark.
 * In the second Veggie Tales movie, a princess sends a magic ball to summon heroes to help her kingdom. Instead, they get The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything.

Gamebooks

 * While Merlin doesn't summon the body of an everyman hero in Grail Quest Solo Fantasy, he does summon their mind. Yours.

Literature

 * Jon-Tom from Spellsinger by Alan Dean Foster. A Sanitation Engineer (janitor) was summoned to the world where the story takes place by a wizard searching for a more technical type of engineer.
 * That he turned out to be a magician after all, which is what Clothahump expected an "engineer" to be, suggests it's not just Jon-Tom whose magic brings what's needed rather than what's expected.
 * Several of the Narnia books: Prince Caspian, The Last Battle, and possibly The Silver Chair. It's explained in story that the heroes have to been Sons of Adam and Daughters of Eve and that only children and devout believers understand Aslan, explaining the kid thing. Why some kid with ninja training skills wasn't summoned instead, though, is a mystery.
 * In Prince Caspian, the Narnians were trying to summon the legendary kings and queen from the Golden Age (basically their King Arthur equivalent). They just didn't realize that the form they would come in was British schoolchildren.
 * The Silver Chair starts with the kids praying to go to Narnia, and besides one of them already had, so he was already 'part of the story,' and Aslan seems to prefer some form of continuity when linking up the worlds. The Last Battle doesn't involve anyone new, and Jill especially has spent the whole time since her last visit practicing skills specifically useful to a quest in Narnia. Note that the entire history of Narnia occurs within the span of Diggory Kirke's life, so it may have been a setting specifically created and designed to enlighten British children.
 * William "Wiz" Zumwalt from Rick Cook's Wiz Biz series. At first (in Wizard's Bane), he appears to have no magical abilities, despite being summoned to fight against powerful evil wizards.
 * And then improved on in the second book (The Wizardry Compiled) when
 * Out of Time: Yanked! by Nancy Kress.
 * Lots of Dave Duncan's books use this premise.
 * The Seventh Sword trilogy with Wally Smith being transported to the subject world is a good example. On Earth, Wally is a chemist who dies of cancer encephalitis. In the other world, he's a great swordsman (sort of).
 * The five protagonists of The Fionavar Tapestry.
 * Also, this is the basic premise of Un Lun Dun by China Mieville.
 * Thomas Covenant. Infamous for not taking it well.
 * In the Spellsong Cycle by L. E. Modesitt, Jr., magic is done by a combination of song and music. The fact that music has magical effects leads to the paradoxical situation where musical theory is stunted, since the musical experimentation required to advance theory is dangerous. The summoned heroine is a professor of music whose trained singing voice, advanced knowledge of musical theory and Every(wo)man knowledge of science allows her to do things with magic that no one who born in the world could possibly match.
 * The first time Michael Moorcock's Eternal Champion is summoned goes like this; although it's only the mind that he's The Everyman, the body he gets stuck in is significantly more formidable.
 * Interestingly, although recalling his Everyman hero identy staves off a Heroic BSOD near the end of that incarnation, on the instances when the Champion recalls previous incarnations he tends to adopt the identity of his first summoning, as opposed to Mr. Everyman, claiming 'it was the only time I experiened true happiness'. An odd instance of Becoming the Mask, since he's innumerable masks to choose from.
 * Terisa Morgan in Mordant's Need by Stephen Donaldson. What they wanted was a mighty warrior from another world armed with powerful rayguns. What they got was a lonely rich girl with microscopic self-esteem and no combat skills.
 * And anyone who has been reading this Wiki for long enough will not be surprised that
 * Christopher Stasheff's A Wizard in Rhyme series has a couple of these.
 * Done in The Keys to the Kingdom. To be fair about it, they were looking for someone about to die of natural causes.
 * To be more specific, the villain, Mister Monday, wanted to avoid passing his Key onto a mortal, although he was legally supposed to do so. Instead of outright ignoring his obligation, Monday decided to circumvent it by giving the Key to a critically ill mortal who would die shortly afterwards. He could then quite legally take back and keep the Key. Unfortunately for him, he was being manipulated by his enemy, and the power of the Key saved the mortal's life. Whoops.
 * Discworld. Rincewind, after being thrown out of the universe at the end of his previous appearance, is summoned by Eric, who is trying to summon a demon.
 * The Neverending Story is a book that sucks in its reader. Very meta.
 * The Demon Tech series by David Sherman begins with an evil wizard and a good "philosopher" each performing magic to summon assistance for his respective country. The bad guys wanted knowledge, so they wind up with a batch of 20th-century military doctrinal manuals (which they eventually manage to translate and use). The good guys wanted leadership. They get a USMC Gunnery Sergeant (in full dress uniform). His first words to them: "Who's in charge of this circle jerk?" Well, from then on, he is.
 * Grey Murphy, the titular "Man From Mundania", comes to the land of Xanth to save the day.
 * Subverted heavily in Mary Gently's 'Grunts'. Some odd piece of magic summons a U.S. Marine staff sergeant into the middle of a battle between a swarm of alien locusts and a battalion of trainee elf marines and their orc marine sergeants (yes you read that right). However, he panics at being sucked into a new dimension and flees screaming. Later on his logistics skills do help the Orcs defeat the aliens.
 * The War Gods has the novella Sword Brother where a Wencit, in summoning help, ends up getting a gunnery sergeant and a corporal driving a Striker.
 * Played with in the Magic Kingdom of Landover series where the everyman hero is summoned by the Genre Blind villain with the expectation of being useless as a hero, complete with a job interview designed to ensure uselessness. The hero is just the latest in a long line of summoned everymen who were until then as useless as expected.
 * Somewhat subverted in two books of the Darkover series. The summoned characters are both doppelgangers of two members of the main cast. One of them eventually becomes a second protagonist of the book, while the other just serves for a Twin Switch or something like that.
 * In a duology within the Saga of Recluce, a spaceship suffers from a Hyperspace malfunction which lands them in a universe where magic is real. In the second book the main character ends up aiding a magic forest against The Empire, which wants to seal the forest away. The main character's companion speculates that the magic forest might have summoned them by causing the Hyperspace malfunction in the first place.
 * Enchantment, a lesser-known novel of Orson Scott Card: Ivan Smetski, college decathlete but otherwise normal grad student, saves a sleeping princess from a giant bear, and next thing he knows, he's in ninth-century Ukraine. Naked. It's never revealed who exactly summoned him.
 * The protagonist from The Sword Of Good, Hirou, is apparently snatched from our world before the story starts, and aside from a prophecy and ability to wield the titular blade, is less than stellar hero material. He doesn't take the pressure and stress well, and the casual slaughter of "evil monsters" nauseate him to the point of vomiting.
 * The Ru Emerson sextet Night Threads summons 3 people- a lawyer, her sister, who is a hippie, and her teenage nephew, while they were out for a day trip in the desert.
 * Played with in the Myth Adventures series by Robert Asprin with Aahz (no relation). Anybody who travels to a different world, and many people have the ability, are called demons, a variant of dimension hoppers.
 * Several stories in the Chicks In Chainmail anthologies
 * In the first of John Brunner's Traveller in Black stories, a 20th-century Englishman is summoned to a magical land to defend a besieged city against a demon-god its enemies had called up. He reacts to every strange thing he encounters with calm rationality, something in notably short supply in that place at that time. At story's end, he's perfectly happy that the city's people no longer want to revere him, even though he did devise the plan that saved them.

Tabletop Games

 * The Castle Falkenstein backstory tells of Tom Olam, computer game designer, who is summoned into a world of Victorian Steampunk Fantasy by a mighty spell. Although he proves to be of some value, the real prize is the book he brought with him - he picked it up at a used book shop cheap, and it holds the secret to Saving The Day.
 * Traveler is based on this- the players are sucked into a fantasy/cyberpunk/whatever-genre-the-GM-is-running world with the items within a 10' radius.

Video Games

 * Played with in Brave Fencer Musashi. The summon spell summons Miyamoto Musashi, one of history's greatest swordsmen, instead of some average high schooler with no idea what he's doing. He's summoned as a kid, yes, but still one that obviously has some combat training.
 * The sequel, Musashi: Samurai Legend (which takes place in a different setting and different characters) also kind of fits, except that once again he's actually the hero they were trying to summon.
 * The Avatar/Stranger from Ultima (not to mention Lord British himself and his friends, perhaps a LITERAL Author Avatar.)
 * This is the basic plot for the Westwood game Nox, though it also features a twist: it is actually the villainess who summons Jack to the Land of Nox. Moreover, it happens accidentally, as she is only after the Orb that he unwittingly possesses.
 * Spyro the Dragon: Ripto's Rage has the denizens of Avalar trying to summon a mighty dragon to save their world, and get... well a mighty dragon, but much smaller and younger than they expected.
 * Cythera, where you're summoned from your home to a strange island by the EarthKing. It's implied that the island's human population are descended from ancient Greeks swept there by a storm.
 * Myst has you stumbling on a mysterious book and... VOIP!
 * The Heroes are summoned this way via Gold Box game "Secret of the Silver Blades." Completely naked. Pity the summoners forgot to request their equipment from the previous game.
 * Disgaea 2: Cursed Memories starts with the protagonist's mother trying to summon Lord Zenon, the evil overlord that took over the planet, so her son could defeat him. What they got instead was Rozalin, the overlord's sheltered daughter, who they have to then protect as they take her back home.
 * While he's not exactly an everyman, Sonic gets this in Sonic and The Black Knight. When Merlina cast the spell, she likely wasn't expecting a blue hedgehog with an attitude.
 * The term for this in the Touhou universe is "spiriting away," and Yukari likes to do this with mortals she finds interesting.
 * Also, severely deconstructed; outsiders are considered fair game for more predatory youkai unless they can find protection by nightfall.

Web Comics
""Dibs on his dice.""
 * Captain N's spiritual successor, Alex Williams of Captain SNES.
 * Parson from Erfworld. The trope is even lampshaded when he outright states he wishes he could be transported into a tabletop game, just before vanishing (complete with a "plot!" sound effect when he disappears and rematerializes in said world). Of course, he's exactly the Turn-Based Strategy master they need, but he has to learn the local rules first...
 * One of the people who saw him disappear remarks that it's the first plan he's ever followed through on.


 * A problem for the returning hero is pointed out by this Xkcd strip.
 * Torg from Sluggy Freelance gets this during the "That Which Redeems" Story Arc. Justified since, while Torg is ordinary (if kinda stupid) by our world's standards, in the dimension he's summoned to, he's unique in being the only person who's not a complete, totally dedicated pacifist. So, while there are plenty of other people in that world who could fight off the Demonic Invaders, Torg's the only one actually willing to.
 * He picks up some Badass Normal abilities along the way, too.
 * Nedroid has played with this several times, perhaps most notably here.

Western Animation

 * Captain N: The Game Master.
 * Done en masse in a cartoon series King Arthur and the Knights of Justice. The Knights of Camelot are imprisoned by Morganna le Fay so Merlin summons an entire high school football team from modern day America to replace them. They get by entirely by being ridiculously huge.
 * The Dungeons and Dragons cartoon.
 * Inverted in the Darkwing Duck episode "Planet of the Capes", where a planet full of superheroes has lost its only powerless ordinary guy. They fetch Darkwing Duck to replace him since, though he's a "superhero" in his own world, they know he has no actual superpowers and thus should make a perfect ordinary guy.
 * Cyberchase and other similar normal-child-becomes-the-hero cartoons. Partly subverted in that it's partially their fault in the first place.
 * In Teen Titans, this happens to Cyborg when he is pulled back in time to the Bronze Age by a witch to help save her people from monsters. Subverted twice in that Cyborg is not an "everyday" hero (he does begin to lose his powers, from lack of electricity, though) and in that . It does otherwise fit the trope, however, including the part about falling in love with someone you cannot stay with.
 * Captain Planet and the Planeteers begins with Gaia magically casting the five rings to the corners of the Earth, where they apparently homed in on just the right people to bring to her.