Fullmetal Alchemist (manga)/YMMV

"I know, I know I've let you down
 * Alas, Poor Villain:
 * Hohenheim invokes this on in the Brotherhood adaptation, standing solemnly at the site of the battle and reflecting on
 * Alternate Character Interpretation:
 * Did last words show that he really did care about his family or that he was a Complete Monster who didn't give a shit about them at all? It's actually fairly obvious (see Alas, Poor Villain) but people love to argue.
 * And then there's Truth. God Is Evil? Good Is Not Nice? Divine distributor of ironic punishment or just does it For the Evulz? It's up for debate.
 * 4 Koma Theater. Scar. Winry’s Parents. Will never be able to look at Scar the same way again. We need a “Crowning Moment of Ridiculous” page, but “Funny” will do for now.
 * And the Fandom Rejoiced:
 * The announcement of a new anime series that would follow the manga's storyline much closer.
 * In the Latin American dub, Most (if not all) of the main cast of the first anime returned back for Brotherhood.
 * Anvilicious: The flashbacks of the extermination of Ishbal have a distinct 'war is bad' vibe to them.
 * Broken Base:
 * Is the 2003 anime adaptation a very well done Pragmatic Adaptation or a completely unnaceptable mess that perverts the original source material?
 * Is Brotherhood's animation style bold, crisp, and original, or ugly, washed out, and far too cartoony?
 * Was the manga's ending incredible or did it feel like fanfiction?
 * Envy: Lovable gender-confused palm tree with a completely acceptable excuse for his/her psychopathy or Complete Monster who doesn't deserve a bit of the fandom? Moreover,
 * Edward Elric: Obnoxious Bratty Half-Pint or total Mr. Fanservice?
 * Along the same lines, is Al a good foil for Ed, or just really, really annoying?
 * Is Brotherhood a better adaptation of the manga or not?
 * Are Roy and Riza 'obviously' in love with each other or just platonic?
 * Elricest. That is all.
 * Complete Monster: This trope has its own page.
 * Crowning Music of Awesome: Has its own page.
 * Die for Our Ship:
 * I dare you to say Rose's name in an EdWin forum. C'mon. I'll pay for the funeral, promise.
 * This doesn't count for all of them, but there seems to be a tendency for RoyAi and RoyEd fans to...rub each other the wrong way.
 * On top of Rose, Winry has also been on the receiving end of anger from Yaoi Fangirls because of this trope.
 * Draco in Leather Pants: Envy, Kimblee and Lust in particular.
 * Ear Worm: Basically any of the Brotherhood openings, especially #3, Golden Time Lover.
 * Ensemble Darkhorse:
 * Though the series is full of likeable people, Lan Fan is very popular among the Brotherhood fandom, despite only being a secondary character.
 * Ditto Sheska, who many fans lament the disappearance of in the manga, where she simply goes "poof" plotwise.
 * Being an Ensemble Darkhorse has been passed down the Armstrong line for generations!! Both the Major and his sister are definite favorites of the fandom.
 * Amongst the bara fans, Scar is a big time example. Darius and Heinkle were also popular enough in fanart to get a doujinshi.
 * Evil Is Cool:
 * Envy is a bastard/bitch in every sense. S/he's just so damn awesome at it that the fans tend to find him/her amusing anyway. Kimblee also fits. Greed also seems to lampshade this trope as he alternates between Cool Evil and Cool Good at massive Face Heel Turn and Heel Face Turn speed.
 * And of course, there's Wrath. A guy who can do all those feats of implausible awesome should have been here by default.
 * Heck, most of the Homunculi, then.
 * Fan Disservice: Al's severely malnourished real body from beyond the gate.
 * Fashion Victim Villain: Envy
 * Genius Bonus: Van Hohenheim is named after Paracelsus, a.k.a. Phillippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim. In-story, the dwarf in the flask names him Van Hohenheim but initially suggests he take on the name Theophrastus Bombastus.
 * Germans Love David Hasselhoff:
 * Maes Hughes is very popular with the American fanbase, much to the surprise of the Japanese creators.
 * Why is that a surprise? He's a Bunny Ears Badass Normal Knife Nut who LOVES his family. Why wouldn't we like that?
 * Because he participated in a genocide.
 * More than half the cast did.
 * Harsher in Hindsight:
 * The scene in Brotherhood where Ed and Al see Bradley while talking with his wife and son is already quite unsettling for them because they know that, but it gets even worse if you know that.
 * In a flashback to Xerxes, the king ordered a "waterway" to be dug around the kingdom. One of the workers comments "Nothing less to be expected from the King of Xerxes, he even thinks about commoners like us!" Eeeeugh.
 * Hell Is That Noise: . If that first scream from was from a character in any series being tortured by Satan in Hell, it would've been among the more terrifying examples. Which, considering their very state of existence as well as the Big Bad of the series, well…
 * Hilarious in Hindsight:
 * Ed mentions that if he ever went to see God, he'd probably get sent right back to earth.  And that's without accounting for the very start of the story in the first place, meaning he's secretly speaking from experience.
 * Travis Willingham and Laura Bailey, who are the dub voices of Roy Mustang and Lust respectively, are now married. With that knowledge, just try to watch episode 19 without laughing at some point.
 * Years ago, Vic and Cait did a funny/adorable marriage proposal skit at a con.
 * Ho Yay Shipping: There are some subtle events here and there that might be suggestive, such as.
 * Iron Woobie:
 * Alphonse, Edward, Izumi, Lan Fan, Alex Armstrong, Hawkeye, Mustang... oh, hell, almost every good guy.
 * The trope might as well be called "Fullmetal Woobie".
 * from the first PlayStation 2 video game.
 * Launcher of a Thousand Ships: Lust
 * Level Breaker: The final fight pretty much had every character being as hammy and taking as much screentime as possible.
 * Magnificent Bastard: Kimblee and Father straddle the line between this and Complete Monster.
 * Roy Mustang always has a plan when he is involved. He is also considered a favourite character by many fans of the manga.
 * Memetic Mutation:
 * Regarding everything that happens once :
 * Regarding everything that happens once :

I've been a fool to myself..."

"Hiromu Arakawa: MOE, MOE, MOE! Everything's coming up MOE! Enough already!"
 * Roy Mustang loves dogs.
 * Roy Mustang has a dream once he becomes Fuhrer. It involves female officers and tiny miniskirts..
 * Moe:
 * May Chang. Small and cute. Also badass, but that's another story...
 * Also Nina, Elysia, and any cat that finds its way into Alphonse's armor...
 * Also complained about in one volume's opening pages.


 * Moral Event Horizon:
 * They might be on the heroes side, but it's hard to ignore the fact that several of Ed's allies in the military participated in the genocide of the Ishvalan people. You can't really atone for something like that.
 * Heck, throughout the series Mustang talks about wanting to become the Fuhrer specifically so something like that never happens again.
 * Bradley not only headed Amestris during the rebellion, but rejected Loug Lowe's proposal to sacrifice his own life to end the violence, saying one life is only equivalent to one life (and presumably intending to kill all the Ishvalans).
 * Also, Shou Tucker turning his daughter and the family dog into a chimera. Some even believe him to have already been past the MEH back when we first met him, as he had already done the same thing to his wife.
 * Envy, and starting the Ishval rebellion by killing a child and framing an innocent soldier for it (who got court-martialed and presumably executed).
 * Arguably Pride crosses one when he . Given the reactions of everyone else involved in the incident.
 * Homunculus Father crossed his.
 * Narm Charm:
 * also qualifies. How ridiculous it looks only makes the shit that much crazier.
 * The aforementioned eyecatches actually manage to come off as pretty badass in episode 44, where they're played just after
 * The ham-tastic delivery Father's dub voice actor does as he would normally induce huge spiels of laughter in any other scenario. In this one, it induces that nervous, Oh-my-god-I-feel-my-brain-breaking-MAKE-IT-STOP sort of laughter.
 * Nightmare Retardant: If something terrified you in a volume, chances are the omake will make fun of it in a such a way you'll never be able to take it seriously again.
 * Off-Model:
 * In the Manga, Riza's pupils ocasionally tend to change from completely black to with an iris from scene to scene (sometimes even from panel to panel). They became brown in the Anime however. Done intentionally with Al's armor though (Going from detailed to a blob), a trait carried over to the Anime.
 * In Brotherhood, Alphonse is a very frequent victim of this trope. It borders on They Just Didn't Care at times.
 * Portmanteau Couple Name: Royai for Roy Mustang/Riza Hawkeye, Edwin for Edward/Winry, LingFan for Ling/Lan Fan and AruMei or AluMei for Alphonse/May Chang.
 * The Scrappy:
 * , for
 * The gold-toothed doctor is also not well liked, often being referred to as a "bastard"
 * Both happen to be Complete Monsters, but unlike Father and Kimblee, lack the charm and badass appearances.
 * They Just Didn't Care: A criticism frequently leveled at Brotherhood, mostly on account of the rushed early episodes.
 * Ugly Cute:
 * Envy's chibi true form is guaranteed to make you giggle or want to huggle him/her . Perhaps even more in that case. Also, Gluttony.
 * Slicer could count, when he's reduced to just a helmet.
 * Uncanny Valley:
 * The cyclops army.
 * Then there's the . Even the characters got a bad vibe when they showed up.
 * Ultimate Showdown of Ultimate Destiny: 'The Military Festival' gaiden.
 * What Do You Mean It's Not Political?: The Ishvalan genocide has been noted by many people to be essentially the 2003 invasion of Iraq taken Up to Eleven. Word of God, however, says it's really based on the plight of the Japan-native Ainu people.
 * The Woobie: Basically half of the sympathetic portion of the cast need hugs.
 * Woolseyism: Xing's answer to alchemy (renkinjutsu) is rentanjutsu. This word refers to Chinese alchemy, but actually using something like "Oriental alchemy" or "Xingese alchemy" would get pretty stale and unwieldy after a while. The rentan refers to the goal of Chinese alchemy, the elixir of life. Drawing off of this, Funimation renamed it "alkahestry", after alkahest. As a universal solvent, alkahest was another hypothetical goal of alchemy and would have had valuable medicinal applications; if you understand the reference, "alkahestry" manages to convey Chinese alchemy's greater concern with medicine than with gold and sounds exotic next to "alchemy". Not to mention, the substance was supposedly invented by Paracelsus, whose birth name was Von Hohenheim, and the fictional Von Hohenheim was the inventor of Xingese alchemy.
 * Woolseyism: Xing's answer to alchemy (renkinjutsu) is rentanjutsu. This word refers to Chinese alchemy, but actually using something like "Oriental alchemy" or "Xingese alchemy" would get pretty stale and unwieldy after a while. The rentan refers to the goal of Chinese alchemy, the elixir of life. Drawing off of this, Funimation renamed it "alkahestry", after alkahest. As a universal solvent, alkahest was another hypothetical goal of alchemy and would have had valuable medicinal applications; if you understand the reference, "alkahestry" manages to convey Chinese alchemy's greater concern with medicine than with gold and sounds exotic next to "alchemy". Not to mention, the substance was supposedly invented by Paracelsus, whose birth name was Von Hohenheim, and the fictional Von Hohenheim was the inventor of Xingese alchemy.