The Perfectionist

A character that has to be perfect at what they do, or at everything they do.

There's a variation when some sort of special event is going on, where there's usually one crazy organizer who takes charge and the rest just go along. This chief organizer has a pretty good chance of becoming an overbearing perfectionist.

Of course obviously, said person needs to learn that nothing is perfect in life. After all if it was, It'd be pretty boring. But if the message get though or not is up to the character.

In a Four Temperament Ensemble, this character is Melancholic.

Compare and contrast Super OCD, as well as the Ultimate Lifeform, who is "perfect". Also compare the Broken Ace, who often overlaps with this character.

Anime and Manga

 * Death the Kid from Soul Eater, when it comes to symmetry.
 * For Chiri from Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei, everything has to be done "properly" ... even things that are not right, if you don't do them the right way.... let's just say things don't get pretty.
 * Deconstructed with a character in Fruits Basket. Throughout her childhood, she was forced to be absolutely perfect. Now, perfection actually causes her to snap and wreck things on purpose.
 * Asuka Langley from Evangelion, who uses perfectionism as a way of avoiding dealing with her crippingly low self-esteem. Once she loses her status as the number one pilot, bad things begin to happen to her sanity.

Film

 * Nina's Fatal Flaw in the Black Swan.
 * Tron Legacy: "I'm Clu. I will create the perfect system."

Literature

 * Mentioned by the Navy psychiatrist as one of Lt. Queeg's faults in The Caine Mutiny.

Live Action TV

 * Monica Geller from Friends.
 * Bree van de Kamp from Desperate Housewives, especially in the first season. Her second husband Orson could qualify too.
 * Boston Legal: Denny Crane has never lost a case. Nowadays he only takes cases he thinks it's a lock to win, and/or takes second chair in cases so if he side does lose it doesn't count for his stats.
 * In Star Trek, the entire Borg Collective is this trope, with special mention for Seven of Nine from Star Trek Voyager.

Tabletop Games

 * Canonically in most Dungeons and Dragons settings, it's a traditional mentality of elves. This means they spend centuries to improve some or other art, craft or fighting style as far as they can. So they end up regularly doing stuff that amazes others, but being too focused on refinement to ever do much of anything at all.
 * Magic the Gathering: Yawgmoth, and by extention every Phyrexian, is obsessed with perfection. Their methods to reach it always include a good dose of Body Horror.

Video Games
"No room for error. None."
 * Creepily shows up with Sirush from The Reconstruction. One of his passive abilities even revolves around this.


 * Pretty much all of the prosecutors in Ace Attorney, especially Manfred Von Karma, who just because his perfect win record was slightly damaged (and he still won the trial!).

Web Original

 * Grandmaster of Theft's Cassidy Cain strives to be the perfect at anything she aims at, to the point where she relentlessly drills herself, seeks challenges to improve, and won't accept anything less of her.
 * The Nostalgia Critic always wants everything to be perfect and breaks down in disappointment when the movies he's watching inevitably "fail" him.

Western Animation

 * In Avatar: The Last Airbender, Azula is shown to have heavy dosages of this, first seen when she is practicing her Lightningbending. Graceful execution, deadly precision, power, and striking speed... but a single hair out of place. Not satisfied with being "almost perfect", Azula's shown compulsively retrying her technique. Later down the road it turns out that being Daddys Little Villain doesn't save you from being used in Ozai's schemes, and Azula's cool demeanor breaks, culminating in a colossal Villainous Breakdown.
 * Georgette from Oliver and Company.
 * Rarity from My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic.
 * Archibald Asparagus from Veggie Tales.
 * Peggy from King of the Hill in the later seasons who just can't stand being upstaged or wrong in the slightest.