Sealed Good in a Can



The complete opposite of Sealed Evil in a Can. This entity is usually kind and gentle, and usually (if not always) rewards the one who releases it, if it can. In other cases, the wandering band of travelers are desperately trying to evade capture or being killed by the forces of darkness. They stumble upon the entity and, thanks to a can-opener (which can range from a trinket to a sacrifice), the only thing that can stop the great evil awakens, and prepares to open a can... of whoop-ass. Sometimes it's revealed that there is a baddie in there with them and they were the Barrier Maiden or the ever-fighting guard keeping them in (Sealed Evil in a Duel). In these cases their release also releases the Sealed Evil in a Can. Oops.

Comes in two flavors:


 * Type 1: Sealed by allies. Similar to Sealed Badass in a Can. There was something in the future they would be needed to combat, so to make sure they would be ready, the Good let themselves be sealed. If the future threat was simply "bad guy I need to beat up," it's probably a case of Sealed Badass in a Can instead.


 * Type 2: Sealed by enemies. A straight inversion of Sealed Evil in a Can. There was a great foe that no one could defeat, so they sealed him away instead. Only difference is that the foe is the good guy, and the sealers evil.

Occasionally used as a more subtle form of Deus Ex Machina; may qualify as Holding Back the Phlebotinum, but on some occasions these can be the main hero. See Sealed Inside a Person Shaped Can for when the Good is imprisoned inside a living being, or Sealed Badass in a Can for a neutral variant. Compare Fling a Light Into the Future. Contrast King in the Mountain, who is usually not let out. See also Awakening the Sleeping Giant, which is where the Good is less "sealed in a can" and more "lazy".

Anime & Manga

 * In Mamotte Shugogetten, Shaorin and other spirits were imprisoned in objects for several hundred years at a time, only coming out to serve a master who was pure of heart. Unlike with most cases, exactly why this is done and who does it are a mystery. (Especially since none of them seem to have done anything to deserve it.)
 * Yu-Gi-Oh!!: Pharaoh Atem sealed himself along with the Big Bad so he would be around to defeat the Big Bad again when he was inevitably unsealed in the future.
 * The original sealing away of Alexiel in Angel Sanctuary is a borderline example of this. True, she was captured trying to bring down Heaven's ruling class. On the other hand, the angels and demons vary so much between moralities that it's hard to say whether she's good or evil.
 * Nuts from Yes! Precure 5 was trapped inside the Dream Collet after he let a Kowainaa into his kingdom by mistake.
 * In the end of the first arc of Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch,
 * Gungrave:.
 * Elder Kai from Dragonball Z was mentioned. He was sealed in the Z Sword a few billion years ago and when he comes out he provides lots of help in the effort against Buu.
 * And Tapion in the last movie. Who was also the container of a Sealed Evil in a Can.
 * Before either of them were mentioned, Kami attempted to seal Piccolo (the then Big Bad) in a bottle with the Evil Containment Wave. Piccolo bounced it back at Kami, sealing him until Goku beat Piccolo and freed him.
 * C.C. from Code Geass is almost literally Sealed Good in a Can, since she begins the series locked inside a mechanical capsule that supposedly contains poison gas.
 * The protagonist of the Geass game Lost Colors.
 * Prince Mythos from Princess Tutu does not literally seal himself, but shatters his heart and seals the pieces in order to seal the Monster Raven. As Princess Tutu returns his heart shards and emotions, the seal on the Raven gets correspondingly weaker.
 * An early chapter of Crimson Spell features Sealed Good in a Can in the form of the magical spirit-creature Lizregbel, released by Vald and Havi and promptly renamed "Ruruka" after Val's little brother's pet bunny.
 * The Monster Rancher anime had both Sealed Good and Sealed Evil. The goal of the protagonists became to revive the Phoenix before Mu could fully revive his original body.
 * The Record of a Fallen Vampire / Vampire Juuji Kai: The vampire queen Adelheid was considered to be Sealed Evil in a Can and released only because her Chaotic Evil powers could stop alien invaders... and upon release she revealed the truth that she hadn't
 * This is one of the many potential interpretations of the end of Revolutionary Girl Utena.
 * Lucario in the Pokémon movie Pokémon: Lucario and The Mystery of Mew .
 * Oddly enough, Naruto himself is the subject of both this and Sealed Evil in a Can.
 * This is what Mikael and Silky from Tenshi ni Narumon.
 * In Digimon Xros Wars, it turns out
 * Goldramon has two dragons sealed in his bracers: Amon of the Crimson Blaze, who administers destruction, and Umon of the Blue Thunder, who administers creation.
 * In Tears to Tiara, the long-dead Demon King Arawn is this in the beginning of the series. He is mistaken for a Sealed Evil in a Can by an evil priest who releases him in the hopes of becoming his Dragon. It ends badly for the priest.
 * Mashiro in Tayutama chose to be sealed along with the Tayutai knowing that if they're freed she'll be freed along with them and can seal them again. She wouldmuch rather work with them and get them to get along with humans than fight them. She will fight if necessary however, which is what she does almost imediately upon being released. She then lectures the ones she defeats about how they need to be nice.
 * In Rave Master
 * Zombie Fairy has the zombie fairy, bound in a coffin. This is also a case of sealed evil in a can, as she is under a curse that causes her to go into berserker rages.

Comics

 * Let's not forget Captain America (comics), frozen in 1944 and thawed out again in... well, whenever the current continuity says (roughly 12 years from whenever you're reading).
 * As per the 2010 Spider-Man annual, Captain America was thawed out five years ago from that date.
 * And also Primus, god of the Transformers, who sealed himself away at the core of Cybertron itself in order to also seal off his opposite number, Unicron. He was also present in the Unicron Trilogy, but he was created in the comics.
 * Though it's worth noting that Primus' sealing himself off less directly sealed Unicron and more caused Unicron to pick up a moon-sized Idiot Ball and do it himself just to prove he could.
 * Well, whatever works. They never said Primus wasn't a sneaky bastard. They just said he wants the universe to keep on existing.
 * In The Legion of Super Heroes, M'Onel (Mon-El, Valor) was trapped in the Phantom Zone for 1,000 years before the Legionnaires freed him.
 * Camelot 3000 is all about the Sealed Good of King Arthur being revived from a millennia-long hibernation to battle alien invaders.
 * If newspaper comics count, then there's the Ekert from Non Sequitur.
 * Tiamut the Dreaming Celestial was the only member of his race that objected to their genocidal policies and was punished for it.

Films
"Genie: It's all part and parcel of the whole genie gig: PHENOMENAL COSMIC POWERS, "
 * In Disney's Aladdin, the Genie is a kind and good spirit who wants to help his masters. In Disney's version of the story, genies -- good and bad -- are naturally sealed. In the original Arabic folklore, sealed genies are, according to one of the stories in the Arabian Nights, the criminals of genie society. The lamps they are often found in are their prisons, and genies choose to grant wishes to show their gratitude for being released.


 * The title character of the Austin Powers series was cryogenically preserved and revived in response to similar efforts by his evil counterpart, Dr. Evil.
 * In Dogma, keeping God on life support in the real world so She could not return to heaven and blink things back to normal could be seen as Sealed Good in a Can, in this case a more direct borrowing of Sealed Evil in a Can by the dark side.
 * The White Queen in Mirror Mask.
 * In The Garbage Pail Kids Movie, the titular Kids are trapped inside an outer space garbage can that lands on earth, and are discovered by an antiques store owner. He does his best to keep them in the can, but they always manage to find a way out. Much like the Animaniacs example below, the Kids aren't necessarily good, but they aren't evil either. A more apt definition would probably be Sealed Jerkass in a Can.
 * In The Gamers: Dorkness Rising the... adventurers... players... whatever you may call them are officially on a mission to regain a cursed artifact for the High Priest of the local goddess of Lawful Good, Therin.
 * The icy Breath of Valkur in Kull the Conqueror had to be retrieved from the far north, to counter the fiery evil Big Bad.
 * According to his backstory, Mushu the dragon was actually turned into an incense burner inside the Fa family altar as punishment by the Fa family ancestors for his laziness. But when Mulan decided to run off disguised as a male soldier, the Fa family ancestors decided to change him back so he can keep his mistress out of trouble.
 * Sentinel Prime in Transformers: The Dark of the Moon. He's been rusting away in the Ark since he crashed on the moon in The Sixties.

Literature

 * In the Backstory to Shakespeare's The Tempest, Prospero releases Ariel from the cloven pine where he had been imprisoned for twelve years by the evil witch Sycorax for refusing to do her bidding. Ariel is thus bound to serve Prospero for twelve years to repay his debt.
 * In Terry Pratchett's Moving Pictures, there's a
 * Lords and Ladies has a parody of the King in the Mountain: the ancient king complains he hasn't had a wink of sleep for the last century, because some bugger keeps ringing the bell.
 * In Alan Dean Foster's Humanx Commonwealth novel Bloodhype, the Tar-Aiym Guardian, Peot, was charged with containing and finding a way to destroy the Vom, a planet-scouring Eldritch Abomination. Half a million years later, Peot is dormant and must be awakened in order to counter the Vom's renewed threat. Flinx turns out to be the key to accomplishing this.
 * In Guy Gavriel Kay's trilogy, "The Fionavar Tapestry", King Arthur and Lancelot are both examples. King Arthur is awoken by one of the protagonists to fight the big bad. Arthur finds Lancelot under a mountain and wakes him. Guinevere is already present, Sealed in A Person Shaped Can. Arthur is doomed to fight evil when called upon to do so, and the others are doomed with him to relive their own tragedy whenever he does so.
 * Vangerdahast's subplot in the Forgotten Realms novel Elminster's Daughter involves him attempting to seal dragons in a can to protect Cormyr. (The country's previous Sealed Good was unsealed, then destroyed, in a prior war.)
 * Jim Knee in Septimus Heap was sent to Septimus as this and eventually succeeds, despite several incidents and being rather reluctant.

Live Action TV

 * Farscape: As seen in the Peacekeeper Wars post-series finale, the Eidolons. There were actually two separate groups of them, one group was The Remnant, and the other were a Type 2, saved by an Inversion of Critical Existence Failure. They can lull any other species into a receptive state, and read their minds, to construct a good argument. Besides being Super-diplomats, they are the ones that
 * In I Dream of Jeannie, Jeannie was sealed in a bottle for 2,000 years by the Blue Djinn as punishment for refusing to marry him.
 * In Stargate SG-1, the progenitor of the Tokra, Egeria, was almost literally sealed in a can (a symbiont containment vessel) by her Goa'uld enemies. Egeria fared less well than usual -- the humans who eventually found her were unable to tell her from any other queen Goa'uld and basically tortured her to death. Uhh... "Sorry"?
 * Zordon in Power Rangers. Technically he was in a "time warp" and broadcasting his face into a tube, but they freed the man by making him actually trapped in the tube. To make matters worse, the poor guy was kidnapped as soon as he was "released", and when he was rescued, he promptly had to commit a Heroic Sacrifice to save the day. Shoulda stuck with the time warp.
 * Kai in Lexx starts and ends many episodes frozen in a stasis chamber, showing up to save the other characters in the nick of time. You know, because he's dead.
 * The Outer Limits episode 'Sarcophagus' had an archeological dig find an alien in a tomb. Upon awakening, the friendly being was quite happy to find that humanity had come a long way from the cavemen that had attacked him on sight, forcing him to seal himself up to recover from his injuries.
 * In Doctor Who,
 * Who would have expected the depths of the planet Za'ha'dum, home of the evil Shadows in Babylon 5, to contain ? Though it wasn't so much sealed as waiting for someone worthy to find it.
 * The Zyurangers in Kyoryu Sentai Zyuranger were put in suspended animation rooms in an underground temple, to make sure they would still be alive and ready to fight Bandora if someone released her.

Mythology

 * In Hesiod's Theogony, the Cyclopes and Hundred-Handers who were locked in Tartarus by their father Ouranos and later (again) by their brother Cronus, are freed by their nephew Zeus and the other Oympians when the Titans make war on the Gods, and in turn they forge weapons -- most importanly, Zeus' thunderbolts -- and help in the Titanomachy, the War with the Titans.
 * Many, many variations of the King in the Mountain myth, including King Arthur, Frederick Barbarossa and Bran the Blessed. These heroes are almost never sealed by an evil power; in fact they are generally sealed to "preserve" them to fight some coming evil or hardship. The promise that they will returning "at the time of their country's greatest need" is a key element of the myth in many cases.
 * On a related note, Excalibur itself might be considered an example, as this powerful weapon for Good was kept hidden by the Lady of the Lake until the right wielder came along. Like many cases where this trope applies to objects, it was Sealed In A Can Again after Arthur was through with it.
 * In Journey to the West, Monkey was first birthed from a giant stone egg. After gaining power and immortal indestructibility, he caused such trouble in Heaven that the Buddha sealed him under a mountain. Just five hundred years later, he was freed by Kuan Yin (Avalokiteshvara, the boddhisatva of compassion turned Chinese Goddess) after he promised to reform and help the monk Tripitaka/Xaunzang retrieve the Diamond Sutra from far in the West. This legend has been adapted many times in many ways, including Milo Manara's dark The Young Ape, the rather Bishounen Saiyuki, and Stephen Chow's A Chinese Odyssey films.

Tabletop Games

 * Dungeons & Dragons examples:
 * In module Q1 Queen of the Demonweb Pits, one possible encounter in Lolth's Web is a chance to rescue a ki-rin (powerful Lawful Good unicorn-like creature) trapped in a transparent cube that keeps it in a state of suspended animation. If rescued, the ki-rin will offer its services to its rescuers.
 * Module I12 Egg of the Phoenix. The ki-rin Da-weng allowed himself to be changed to stone so that at a future time he could be returned to normal and fight against Evil. If released, he gives the party an amulet that will allow them to summon him to aid them.
 * Benekander, a benign Mystaran Immortal, was Sealed inside the Mirror Shield for millennia before being released in time for the Wrath of the Immortals boxed set.
 * Etienne d'Amberville, an extremely powerful wizard  from the Castle Amber adventure, must be freed from his tomb to complete the scenario successfully.
 * One way to destroy the Eye of Arik in Palace of the Silver Princess is to release the benign white dragon Ariksbane from another dimension, so it can shatter the evil gem with its icy breath weapon.
 * The Dragonlance setting is made of this trope: the Disks of Mishakal, the brass dragon Blaize, the rest of the good dragons, plus of course the dragonlances themselves. Half the campaign is uncanning sealed goods.
 * The God-Emperor of Mankind. As much as there IS "good" in WH40k, of course.
 * Technically, he's on psychic-fueled life support in a coma. His death would mean his rebirth, but a lot of bad things would happen in the mean time. So he's Sealed Good in a Can, with the Can being as vital to humanity as the Good. What, you thought we were joking when we said that 40k is GRIMDARK?
 * Eldrad might be an example too.
 * The Eldar in general might qualify, but they are more Awakening the Sleeping Giant in most cases.
 * To a lesser extent than the Emperor are the Space Marine Dreadnoughts, and Eldar Wraithlords. On the plus side, you're now a near-immortal warrior that can crush hordes of enemies that plagued entire squads of your fellows in the palm of your hand... often literally. The downside? You have to be nearly dead (or for the Eldar, FULLY dead,) be rescued by your compatriots, and have been such a glorious badass among badasses that they plug you into a huge, lumbering war-machine. You're also hooked in there forever, or at least until the machine breaks and you die, and you tend to spend years, decades or centuries in between humongous battles in total stasis, hence fitting into this trope in multiple literal ways.
 * In the old World of Darkness, most of the werebears have been in hibernation for millennia. Werebears in the setting are the most powerful healers created by Gaia. Possibly subverted in that a number of them went to sleep very angry, and wake up in the same mindset.
 * The Fianna have a Rank Six Gift that puts their greatest heroes to sleep until the Apocalypse. There are approximately three dozen of their greatest warriors in cold storage somewhere, waiting for the end of the world.
 * Mirage block of Magic: The Gathering has Mangara of Corondor sealed in the Ember Prison.
 * Lord Ith was imprisoned by Mairsil the Pretender during the years of The Dark (between the Sylex Blast and the Ice Age).
 * Avacyn, archangel and guardian of the humans of Innistrad, was sealed within the Helvault alongside the demon Griselbrand, until Thalia of Thraben was manipulated into freeing them both by Liliana Vess.

Toys

 * In Bionicle, the Great Spirit Mata Nui's soul is sealed inside the Mask of Life by Makuta and thrown out of the universe.

Video Games

 * In the early Sonic the Hedgehog games, Dr. Robotnik's plans usually involved sealing innocent creatures into his robots as power sources. Recently, he seems to have found another source of energy for them (Chaos Drives?). Why he didn't just use batteries in the first place is anyone's guess.
 * He might indeed use batteries, and the Small Furry Animals merely serve as the "intelligence" part of the robot. In other media, however, Robotnik relied upon the roboticization process. This other media includes Bioware's Sonic Chronicles: Dark Brotherhood.
 * First major straight example in the series is Tikal in Sonic Adventure. Sealed up right alongside Chaos, she gets released at the same time as god of destruction, and spends the rest of the game playing Exposition Fairy in the form of a glowing ball, and occasionally causing visions of Chaos's origin and nature. At the end she helps Chaos Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence. Somehow.
 * Sonic Unleashed has this as well
 * In Sonic and the Secret Rings the good genie, Shahra, is sealed inside a ring found by Sonic at the beginning of the game. Another cosmic being in the game, the evil Erazor Djinn, becomes Sealed Evil in a Can at the end of the game.
 * In the NES game The Krion Conquest, a good witch is released from a magic staff to fight off an Alien Invasion. Why she was sealed in it in the first place is unknown.
 * The hero Melvin in Dragon Quest VII put himself to sleep so he would be alive to fight should the demon lord rise again.
 * In Super Mario World, the Yoshis are trapped inside eggs until Mario rescues them.
 * Used in the SNES classic Act Raiser; at the beginning of the game the forces of evil control the world, and your character is the Sealed Good In A Can. The game was remarkably lacking in controversy, since said character is strongly implied to be the Judeo-Christian God, or at least the local equivalent.
 * In the Super Famicom version, it's explicit.
 * Holy, in Final Fantasy VII, is cosmically powerful Sealed Good in a Can, the opposite number to Sealed Evil in a Can Meteor. It takes a couple steps to successfully unseal it, mind.
 * In Final Fantasy III, friendly and mighty Unne is trapped in the dream world until you grab the magic lute that awakens her.
 * Bahamut and Leviathan in Final Fantasy V were sealed along with the twelve legendary weapons and the ultimate magic spells after a battle against an evil wizard.
 * The finale of Halo 3 seals in a can.
 * It can also be said that Master Chief is sealed good in a can at the beginning of Halo: Combat Evolved.
 * The Forerunner, Didact, is sealed in the titular Cryptum for one thousand years as a meditative exile after his political defeat by the Builders. He is released early in the book.
 * Likewise, the finale of Half Life seals  in a can, to be reheated and served in the sequel.
 * And at the end of Half-Life 2, he is resealed until Episode 1. Then things get weird, and Episode 3 has yet to come along and explain it all.
 * In The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening, the benevolent Wind Fish is asleep in an egg until it is awoken by our hero. Phantom Hourglass harkens back to this, with the mighty Ocean King left powerless by the Big Bad.
 * Link himself becomes this in Ocarina of Time. The Master Sword chose him to be the Hero of Time as a child, but since he was too young, he was sealed away in the Sacred Realm for seven years.
 * Amaterasu of Okami, who is awakened at the start of the game when after someone cracks open the Evil Sealed Can of Orochi.
 * Sakuya, a wood sprite with trees extending all across Nippon, is also sealed away until you can awaken her. Reviving her various Guardian Saplings will break the curse over an area.
 * For that matter, the brush gods as well, requiring you to free them and regain their powers
 * Happens again in Okamiden with Chibi releasing Shiranui he he was frozen in ice.
 * The druids in Warcraft III, whom the player must wake up during the Night Elf campaign. Some of whom are really, really cranky.
 * They can be real bears when you wake them.
 * A Mess O' Trouble (an excellent Mac WorldBuilder shareware Adventure Game) has two godlike creatures trapped inside time dilation bubbles in some ruins. You know from local historians (and abominations lying around in the ruins) that their civilization was practically constructed by a good creature and then fooled into nearly destroying itself by a bad creature. One is a beautiful Energy Being, the other a dull-looking lizard man. Guess which is which?
 * Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door has sealed cans of good who seem to think they are Sealed Cans of Evil. They grant Mario new paper-based abilities. Supposedly they're being magically forced to be evil, but they get around it by being really creative with "evil".
 * Actually, according to Ingame Myths the black boxes are actually
 * In Star Control 2: Ur-Quan Masters, races defeated by Ur-Quan Kzer-Za have choice between enrollment as battle thralls or imprisonment on their own homeworld under an impenetrable slave shield. One of the latter must be fetched out of can by the player in order to win.
 * The Biometal (or "Live Metal") from the Mega Man ZX series are the sealed memories of many past characters. Namely, Model X is obviously X, Model Z is Zero, And Models H, L, F, and P are the Guardians From Mega Man Zero.
 * Before that are X and Zero themselves, found in such a state at the beginning of their respective series.
 * Ironically, Zero was actually Sealed Evil In A Can at the start of the X series, as shown in X4: he  That version of Zero made a return in Zero 3 as, who was again Sealed Evil in a Can.
 * In Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance and Radiant Dawn, is sealed in a medallion, locked away by, who found her chaotic whims too dangerous. While neither is technically good or evil,  After her long sleep,
 * In Quest for Glory 4, you finally learn the fate of the legendary mage and Friend to All Living Things, Erana..
 * In the second game of the original Bard's Tale series, the Zen Master Arkast qualifies. (He singlehandedly took on Lagoth Zanta and his mercenary army before you showed up, and only failed by lack of being an unkillable Destiny Knight.) You don't technically have to free him, but travel into his can to group with him (and would thus normally bring him out with you). The start of the relevant poem in the manual: "A tale once told of ages gone, which bards once sung in deep despair / of he who fought the evil one, and cast his fate within the Snare..."
 * In Might and Magic V: Darkside of Xeen you later find a box and after a quest to seal a guy in it he will then fight and kill the Big Bad for you when you enter his room.
 * Touhou has Byakuren, who was sealed away after trying to establish equality between youkai and humans. Bizarrely enough, you fight her as the final boss, after unsealing her, on purpose. Of course, given how the heroines usually behave, that probably isn't too surprising.
 * In Arcanum,.
 * In Shadow Hearts: From The New World, the light of Will (the good counterpart of the Malice animating the Big Bad and The Dragon) is sealed inside a big tower in a salt lake.
 * Andraste's ashes from Dragon Age.
 * During the ending of The Legend of Spyro: The Eternal Night, In the sequel, Dawn of the Dragon, taking place three years later, a group of Malefor's minions come and chisel them out, for a sacrifice days before Malefor's plan would have ultimately succeeded without their interference anyway.
 * Nice Job Fixing It, Villain?
 * in Deus Ex Invisible War. He, but the result was unstable. Before he could turn the world into a utopia, he had to go into cryogenic storage and wait for upgrades to be developed. Furthermore,   was the test subject on some of these upgrades, which proved to be unsuccessful, meaning he also had to be put into cryogenic storage. The player can wake them both over the course of the game.
 * In Mass Effect, an eccentric Volus billionaire is spending his fortune excavating a planet of ruins for "lost beings of light" who are intended to fight "machine devils from beyond the stars." Considering the nature of the ME universe, and the fact that one such planetary description in Mass Effect turns out to be highly relevant in Mass Effect 2, this may be more important than it seems.
 * Turns out it wasn't. However the third does have Javik, a Prothean that was sealed to help rebuild the Prothean Empire once the Reapers had departed. Things didn't go quite as planned so he joins up with Shepard.
 * The events of the game Graffiti Kingdom are set in motion after the Prince Pixel releases both Pastel and the Devil from a wall mural when he decides to play around with the Graffiti Wand he finds lying adjacent to the mural chamber hidden in the castle.
 * In Lunar 2 Eternal Blue Complete, Lucia is Sealed In A Crystal until she is awakened - and not on schedule - at the beginning of the game.
 * Pokémon can become this in their Poké Balls, especially if their Trainer deposits them indefinitely into the Pokémon Storage System.
 * It is arguable that from Kirby's "Meta Knightmare" is this, since his alignment is never stated . Either way, he's also Sealed Badass in a Can.
 * In Puzzle Quest: Challenge of the Warlords, the player character and his/her allies must help the minotaurs revive their god, Lord Sartek, so that he can defeat the evil Lord Bane.
 * Alucard from Castlevania seals himself away on multiple occasions, seeing his powers as evil. He isn't intentionally a Sealed Badass in a Can, but when Dracula rises and the Belmonts are unable to act, he awakens anyway and goes out to deal with Dracula. After Julius Belmont's victory, he appears to be permanently unsealed.

Web Comics
"Torg: I heard the story before, but I assumed it was metaphor."
 * The picture from Sluggy Freelance probably deserves some explanation. When the demons first conquered the world that became the Dimension of Pain, they sealed away all that world's goodness in a Zip-Lock bag and stored it in the Demon King's refrigerator.


 * Abraham, the wizard who created the dewitchery diamond in El Goonish Shive. Sure, he almost kills Ellen because she was created by the diamond, but it's pretty obvious that she was the first non-evil thing created by it.
 * He also revises his statue's inscription to say  after he realizes both good and evil creatures can be created by the diamond. This is a step above "I rise to reap what I have sown" which suggested destroying everything the diamond created.

Web Original

 * The Web novel There features sealed good -- the life force of the world, without which environmental decline happens at a rapid rate.
 * Fine Structure's Big Good is revealed in an Optional Canon story to have been sealed in a can and released before the main action of the series began. Ironically, that story is evidence for a much darker Alternate Character Interpretation of him.
 * In Terramirum, Animusara finds herself trapped in a reliquary for 1,000 years.

Western Animation

 * Human Popsicle Aang of Avatar: The Last Airbender was sealed in an iceberg by accident or fate for a hundred years, and is awakened to find that The Empire has caused the genocide of his people and is about half a year away from absolute victory. Katara unseals him in the pilot episode.
 * In the prequel of Code Lyoko, Jeremie turned back on an abandoned Supercomputer inside which resides what he thinks at first is a benevolent A.I., Aelita. He will spend the next season trying to materialize her in the real world. This comes of course with its counterpart Sealed Evil in a Can.
 * In Futurama, it's revealed that Human Popsicle Fry was deliberately frozen by because he's.
 * In one episode of Justice League,  is leeching off a Sealed Good's energy gradually to fuel his powers. When it's completely freed, he's toast.
 * There is, however, an alternate Character Interpretation of the.
 * In Barbie and the Diamond Castle, Melody accidentally traps herself in a mirror while fleeing from the Big Bad's (literal) dragon, and keeps herself hidden inside, effectively becoming sealed good in a mirror. Until she's coaxed out by the singing of the main characters, of course.
 * In Beast Wars, stasis pods were the writer's means of introducing new characters. Whenever they needed a new character the character would usually come from a stasis pod, a sort of cocoon that provides life support for a spark and basic body for a transformer until they can scan an alt mode and become a fully conscious character. All the stasis pods in the show were Maximal by default, but were occasionally altered to give birth to Predacons. So in almost all cases stasis pods were essentially Sealed Good in a Can until they were altered, with one exception (Rampage).
 * In the Dungeons & Dragons episode "The Box," the good sorceress Zandora has been sealed in the eponymous container by the evil Venger; her attempts to reward the shows' heroes for freeing her are somewhat less than successful.
 * A Story Arc in Galaxy Rangers was about Tarkon's benevolent Master Computer that had been "sleeping" since an ancient war. The Heart of Tarkon controlled sophisticated defense systems for the planet and had to be "awakened" to repel a Crown invasion.
 * The Autobots in the original Transformers cartoon, who were all sealed away inside a volcano with the Decepticons after both factions crashed into it in the distant past, making them all unconscious. It wasn't until the volcano's eruption that both were set free.
 * Dark Heart does this to the Care Bears at the end of Care Bears Movie II: A New Generation, before Christy frees them.

Real Life

 * Time capsules. Any effort in preserving human culture or providing aid for future generations in general, as a matter of fact.