World of Badass



""If all of us are awesome, everyone is.""

- Billy vs. SNAKEMAN World Kaiju teaser

In the World Of Badass, every character is a Badass... even the girliest girly-girl will be a butt-kicking Action Girl, even the nerdiest of nerds will be a Badass Bookworm, far from dying first the black dude will be the guy you least want to mess with, and you should probably just steer clear of gays altogether.

Obviously, this is a dangerous place to be and will often overlap with Crapsack World not only because of said danger but also because the Crapsack World is a fertile breeding ground for the Black and Gray Morality that so often inspires true badassery. This can lead to Anti-Hero, Anti-Villain and Heel Face Revolving Door characters popping up at frequent intervals. Other common character archetypes include the Cowboy Cop, Crazy Survivalist, The Determinator and Blood Knight.

Frequently overlaps with Everyone Is Armed. Compare Everyone Is a Super, HAD to Be Sharp.

If the main protagonist of a World of Badass has a Love Interest, expect them to become (or, in some cases, start out as) a Battle Couple. If they have kids, it's best to avoid messing with said kids. In fact, the kids may well be able to take care of themselves.

The World of Badass will occasionally, due to the comparably high level of HSQ, overlap with the World of Ham and Adventure-Friendly World. However, it's far more likely for this trope to be applied to Crapsack or Dystopian worlds. Curiously, being the World of Badass does not conflict with being the World of Woobie, and in fact often promotes the latter-it's hard to call "Wangst" on the long-suffering inhabitants of the World of Woobie if said inhabitants spend the time not being sad by eviscerating the sources of their misery.

Advertising

 * This Stunt City deodorant commercial.

Anime and Manga

 * A main trope for the vast majority of fighting series.
 * The fallout post-nuclear war wasteland of Fist of the North Star.
 * The Esper population of Academy City in A Certain Magical Index - as long as they're Level 2 or higher (but we only see one Level 1, who is badass in a different way).
 * And the Mages are no slouches either.
 * In Yu Yu Hakusho you pretty much have to be this if you even hope on surviving in the Demon World, a place populated with A and S Class Demons. Hiei himself slaughtered over 500 A class demons in order to get himself to an S Class demon.
 * To prevent an all out war between three nations, the Demon World had to set up a Asskicking Equals Authority Tournament where the winner would be crowned king of the Demon World.
 * Rosario + Vampire has this as a running theme in the Youkai World, where there is a pecking order based on how strong you are, and it's a ruthless Social Darwinist.
 * Highschool of the Dead has a universe that kills off the weak or zombifies them, leaving the world populated by badasses. In fact, being one has pretty much become a bare minimum requirement for survival.
 * Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann is this and World of Ham.
 * G Gundam, also combined with World of Ham.
 * The world of Dragon Ball where everyone is a super powered martial artist, and even the comic relief Muggle Mr. Satan/Hercule is a Badass Normal who can kick any non-powered human's ass.
 * Baccano!. All named characters can fight. All exceptions learn.
 * Durarara!!. Half of the cast is outright Crazy Awesome, while the other half is badass in one way or another. No exceptions. And since 'Durarara!! takes place in the same universe as Baccano!, this makes sense.
 * Fullmetal Alchemist is an interesting case, in that the premise doesn't sound like its trying too hard to be cool, but then you are given Scar, Major Armstrong, Colonel Mustang, the Elric brothers, Izumi Curtis, Riza Hawkeye, and many, many more. You can count the number of non-badasses on one hand, even though it's a series with Loads and Loads of Characters.
 * In Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha, the world of Midchilda is a non Crapsack World example. Generally, the rule is that if it comes from Midchilda and has a name, it will be able to annihilate you. It doesn't matter whether you are talking about five year old girls, ferrets or six inch cute mascots. Or books.
 * Pokémon Special, a world where humans are more likely to be fighting along side of their Pokémon instead of just hanging back.
 * Soul Eater. Pretty much every single character who isn't cannon fodder for the kids' Gotta Catch Them All schooling is badass at some point in time.
 * Naruto: Why is everyone in this show a f**king Ninja??
 * One Piece. If you don't have have a Devil Fruit or do not already have an inhuman degree of strength, you're most likely to be just Made of Iron. That's mostly the reason nobody usually dies in One Piece outside flashbacks.
 * The post-apocalyptic world of Bastard!! is filled with badassery at every turn, complete with metal themed names.
 * Hellsing. Sure, not everyone is as badass as Alucard, but that's like saying not everything is as hot as the sun. (Or Alucard.)
 * Kouta Hirano's other work Drifters seems to be a World of Badass also. It's to be expected, when your premise is to take notorious Historical Domain Characters, give 'em an upgrade, and have them fight each other.
 * Technically more of a City Of Badass, but Black Lagoon's Roanapur qualifies
 * Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple. Just about everyone except Kenichi to start with, until he undergoes Training from Hell.
 * Hunter X Hunter played this so extremely straight it becomes a Deconstruction. Well, when you have a 10-something hired killer from a Murder, Inc. family...
 * Noblesse: Anyone (attractive) in the series will inevitably be Badass: thanks to the Noblesse, his butler, his butler's employees, as well as their enemies who consists of Elite Mooks and worse, many buildings have been demolished in their fights.
 * Dorohedoro. You can't be non-badass and survive in a world where Devils go for a walk when they're bored, much less in a city where the yearly Zombie Apocalypse is a fundraising event. It's good that Death Is Cheap, otherwise Anyone Can Die would have slaughtered most of the main cast by volume 8.
 * Mahou Sensei Negima, or at least the residents of the Magical World. The most Badass of them all? Evangeline. And that's saying something.
 * In Fairy Tail, 10% of the world's population is made up of mages, and there are surprisingly few Squishy Wizards.
 * Noir depicts a village in France where everybody, with no exception (children, old women and nuns included), is an assassin trained to mass-murdering or die in attempt. As just are the main characters, Mireille and Kirika and most part of the other characters as well.
 * Bleach. Any named character who resides in Soul Society or Hueco Mundo is able to kick your ass. Yes, even the wimpy White Mage, and yes, even the guy who transforms into a pink pumpkin. To say nothing of the human characters.
 * Filled of crap though it may be, Berserk is this. Four out of five people in this world need to be just a little bit badass at one point in their life in order to survive it, and this includes old people, little kids, and princesses (if only for one moment). If they still don't qualify as true badasses, then they're usually big time action survivors. And even under the most horrific circumstances, people don't just stop being badass: they merely shift from one state of badass-ness to another. For instance, Casca starts out as an Action Girl, then had a brief period of  which horrifically ended with the Eclipse and her going insane as a result of it... only to having glimpses of her former self when she becomes a
 * Black Butler. A whole lot of badass, for Victorian England. The butler? A Nigh Invulnerable demon, who can kill you with silverware. The Aunt's butler?    An ex-badass soldier, a ridiculously skilled sniper, and one with Super Strength.   A two sword wielding can of zombie killing
 * Ben-To, full stop. It helps that every single character is pretty much Made of Iron, otherwise they'd all be in traction.
 * High School DxD is a series where everyone is a Badass.

Comic Books

 * Sin City. Even the Comedy Relief bad guys, Shlubb and Klump, can withstand an explosion from close-range.
 * But come on, the Yellow Guy is anything but badass.
 * Scott Pilgrim. At first it seems like only a few people can really fight, but it becomes pretty clear that almost every minor character or random background extra could probably throw down with some bizarre fighting style or weapon if sufficiently provoked.
 * Jim Valentino's normalman features the planet Levram, where everyone has super powers. Everyone, that is, except the eponymous character normalman. And as the series progresses he gets increasingly badass without ever gaining super powers.
 * Last Man Standing is filled to the brim with Badass characters. The only one who isn't is a Robot Girl, ironically.
 * Really, any major super hero comic universe fits here. Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Image Comics, Valiant Comics, Wildstorm, etc. They all have hundreds of super-powered characters and martial artists running around planet Earth alone. That's ignoring the various cosmic beings and powerful aliens outside of Earth.
 * And even side-characters and civilian allies can step up to the plate without being bitten by a radioactive anything. J. Jonah Jameson may be a jerk but he won't back down from Doc Ock when his people are in danger. Mary Jane does not make a cooperative damsel in distress (outside the movieverse.) The X-Men's scientist friend Moira Mc Taggert once pulled out a machine gun to battle a monstrosity calling itself Kierrok the Damned. Lois Lane knows kung fu. The list goes on.

Fan Works

 * The now-deleted Snow Angels. Every single character kicks copious amounts of ass, such that even Muggles can punch out Cthulhu.

Film

 * Kung Fu Hustle. With the exception of The Axe Gang, EVERYONE's a kung-fu master.
 * The Predator series. Even the women are manly, and Predators has a doctor who seems inoffensive
 * The Terminator series, complete with a waitress and a veterinarian becoming Action Girls.
 * The Expendables. Besides the girl, the entire main cast is pure badass.
 * Interestingly enough, in The Incredibles,.
 * The entire Marvel Cinematic Universe as a whole. But ESPECIALLY The Avengers.

Literature

 * David Eddings flirts with this trope from time to time.
 * The Star Wars Expanded Universe can be this, Depending on the Writer. It certainly is when Matt Stover or Timothy Zahn writes it.
 * Pride and Prejudice And Zombies. Even Lydia is decapitating "unmentionables."
 * Very few characters in The Dresden Files are not some degree of awesome:
 * The seven-year-old girl can demolish fallen angels and vampires without blinking.
 * The tiny, nerdy little medical examiner helps fend off hordes of zombies.
 * The housewife is... well... herself.
 * The five-nothing, hundred-pound blond lady who looks like a cheerleader will kick your ass and arrest you.
 * The fairies will steal your soul, then eat your face.
 * Goblins are only seen briefly, but apparently vampires fear them.
 * Pixies are one-foot-tall hyperactive winged people... who recite the Rifleman's Creed, but with box-cutters.
 * The three Billy Goats Gruff.
 * There is an
 * The CEO of a security company? None other than
 * The Malazan Book of the Fallen series has badass characters in droves, ranging from Physical Gods to Badass Normals. Among the hundreds of named characters it would be easier to list who isn't a badass. Those would include... well... the Mhybe and Challice D'Arle. That's about it.
 * Honor Harrington is the Action Girl par excellence, but after looking at the rest of the cast, one begins to feel she's hardly remarkable in a universe that contains (among so, so much more) her parents, her pet, Space Marines, super-spies, an Amazon Brigade, and Victor Cachat.
 * Belisarius Series: Almost every character is a badass. Aside from the title character, his wife is a retired hooker who is somehow able to kill half a dozen assassins with a meat cleaver and a cauldron of stew, his wife's best friend is a spymaster of spymasters, the seeming Damsel in Distress can kill men with her bare hands, and convince her former captors to pledge loyalty to her; her husband is one of the two greatest warriors in India. And on and on.
 * From the creator of the above-mentioned Dresden Files we also have the Codex Alera. The humans are descendants of a Roman legion who all have Elemental Powers. (The one exception is way, way more awesome than most of them could ever hope to be) They share the place with neanderthal-elves that bond with giant ground sloths and terror birds, telepathic yetis, 8-foot-tall centuries-old wolfmen with Blood Magic, and the Zerg the Vord, a Horde of Alien Locusts led by a Nigh Invulnerable juggernaut of a Hive Queen. Other denizens include nature spirits that start to resemble Eldritch Abominations and sea monsters that are about forty feet long as infants and tend to eat anything that comes close.
 * Even the accountants can kick your ass.
 * James H. Schmitz's Federation of the Hub: its society is purposely being manipulated in order to raise the vitality of the human race. Since the Hub's main exports are Magnificent Bastards, it works.
 * Many Cyberpunk novels e.g. William Gibson's Neuromancer, Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash, The Diamond Age are like this. In a more or less Crapsack anarchy dominated by MegaCorps where life is cheap some badass-y would be recommended for better survival rate.
 * Discworld. If you intend to mess with someone here, make sure they're not witches, wizards, dwarves, trolls, Mrs. Cake, demons, gods, gnomes, Mrs. Cake, werewolves, vampires, pictsies, heroes, Mrs. Cake, assassins, monks, Sir Samuel Vimes, Death, Susan Sto Helit, the Luggage or last, but not least, the Librarian (and Mrs. Cake). It's a wonder that anyone else is left in the place.
 * An entire town called Bad Ass appears in Wyrd Sisters. Unsurprisingly it is the home town and base of Granny Weatherwax. Visitors to Lancre have been warned. Apparently a donkey once stopped midstream and refused to go either forwards or backwards. But that's their story.
 * Possibly a Shout-Out to Shea and Wilson's Illuminatus trilogy, in which the Texan town of Bad Ass is a throwback to earlier ornery Confederate ways and has a robust attitude to all those northern carpetbagging liberal sissy notions such as desegregation. Bad Ass is an embarrassment to the rest of the USA, which uncomfortably realises that Badass is how the rest of the world sees the whole of America.
 * World of Badass is a literal description of what happens to the setting of Men. There are only eleven people left on the planet, all men, and they are all incredibly damned awesome.
 * In order to be a Time Scout, you have to be a badass. Hell, just to associate with a time scout will probably require you to be a badass. The only people who aren't badasses are tourists. They're just kind of annoying.
 * Warrior Cats. Yes, nearly every single one of the 700-some characters is trained to fight and can hold their own in a battle.
 * World of Badass is an excellent description of Barsoom where the Mad Scientists carry sword; the Damsels in Distress are likely to slip a dagger between your ribs and little old men can give the best swordsman on two planets a fight to remember.

Live Action TV

 * Alias. Even relatively dorky characters like Mitchell got to save the day or make sassy remarks while being horrifically tortured from time to time.
 * Anything Joss Whedon has ever done. (Except Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog). You had to be badass to survive any of his worlds besides for that. One's infested with vampires, demons, useless Powers That Be, Hellgods and everything else, one is much like the Old West... with lazers, spaceships, compressed air instead of gunpowder and space zombies.
 * Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles.
 * Walker, Texas Ranger, especially in later seasons where the fights lasted longer.
 * Stargate SG-1. Even the resident nerds are badass. And then there's Bra'tac - 130+ and still kicking arse.
 * Hercules: The Legendary Journeys. Almost every character in this show, be they princess, middle-aged mother, or barmaid, seems to be a rather good fighter. (Salmoneus may be an exception.) This rule seems to also apply (perhaps to a lesser degree) to the spinoff Xena: Warrior Princess.
 * Everyone in Lost gets their Badass moment.
 * Twenty Four. Put it this way: Kim Bauer has fought off psychotic kidnappers, smashed her abusive employer in the face with a crowbar, broken out of police custody by setting fire to the transport van while she's in it, fought off seasoned, bloodthirsty war criminals with a hot coffee pot, and more. In any other series? She'd be a bona fide Action Girl. In this one? She's a Damsel Scrappy. That's right - these are the accomplishments of the LEAST badass person in the main cast. And then there's Behrooz Araz, a doe-eyed teenager, who enacts some seriously badass Shovel Fu on Day 4.
 * Babylon 5: This is a show that has diplomats that can endure torture, break chains, personally command battle fleets, or even out- Chessmaster multi-million year old space demons. It also has an outpost commander who goes back in time and becomes a Messianic Archetype. Not to mention Battle Butler s that can pick up a man with one hand or fiendishly arrange for the prisoners to be lost in paperwork and found somewhere where they won't be exterminated.
 * The Doctor has a habit of making his companions Badass. Over the course of this series alone, Amy Pond goes from a flirtatious Fiery Redhead to a full on Action Girl, while her husband has broken the Badass scale because he has taken so many levels. And that's not taking into account the other 45 years of continuity. Let's face it, the Whoniverse is as much a World of Badass as it is a World of Ham.
 * Considering that the whoniverse is full of |god-like psychopaths, Sufficiently Advanced Aliens, Time-Traveling mutant Super Nazis in flying minitanks, EldritchAbominations and other baddies like flesh-eating shadows, there's no wonder it's this trope.
 * The least Badass character would be a tin dog, and even he wields a built in gun.
 * NCIS: With the most seemingly harmless member of the team can kill you without leaving a single trace.
 * Prison Break: If you didn't become a badass on Prison Break then most likely you would end up dead.
 * The cast of Merlin is comprised of a Badass Abnormal (Merlin), a Badass Normal (Arthur), a Badass Princess (Morgana), a Badass Damsel (Guinevere), a Badass Grandpa (Gaius), a Badass King (Uther), a regular Badass (Lancelot), and a Badass Crew (the Knights of the Round Table). Oh, and a giant fire-breathing dragon.

Professional Wrestling

 * Professional Wrestling itself is a world of badass. Many wrestlers are legitimately badass outside of the ring, and some people have found this out the hard way.

Tabletop Games

 * The Warhammer 40,000 universe, of course. This happens largely through a twisted form of natural selection; the insufficiently Badass simply die in droves at the hands of the rest.
 * Warhammer Fantasy Battle Fantasy, although in this case it's one-third natural selection, one-third the will of the gods, and one-third taking on Bloodletters without semiautomatic rocket grenade launchers or tanks the size of small cities.
 * Exalted. If your character can't be described as an utter Badass, you are doing it wrong. You know that you are living in a World of Badass when the fairies are soul-eating Eldritch Abominations, and are some of the weakest beings in the setting.
 * Feng Shui, naturally, since it's based on action movies, especially Hong Kong ones.
 * Chess gives us one of the smallest ever Worlds Of Badass, where even the un-promoted Pawns can potentially force the enemy Queen to retreat. Well, since everyone on the board is a One-Hit-Point Wonder, this is pretty much justified.

Video Games

 * In any given Fighting Game all the characters can kick your ass.
 * The Fallout series, bare minimum, requires EVERYONE be an Action Survivor, and if you want to enjoy a healthy lifespan in a post apocalyptic world where quite often Everything Is Trying to Kill You, being some sort of badass is about the only way to enjoy most of your natural lifespan.
 * Metal Gear, where everyone is a hard-boiled double agent who may or may not have supernatural abilities. A world where a women gives birth via a messy c section and then immediately leads the charge at Normandy on D-day.
 * Every Shin Megami Tensei game and their spinoffs ultimately turn into this over the course of the game or already are from the get go. In fact, Devil Survivor, Shin Megami Tensei III: Nocturne, and Digital Devil Saga pretty much have this as a survival prerequisite.
 * Devil Survivor 2 recently took this Up to Eleven. In other SMT games, if you didn't have demons, demon power, or could otherwise fight them in some way, you were screwed. In this game, though, not only is demon summoning ability available to pretty much everyone worldwide as long as you have a cellphone (which IRL and ingame easy to get and very widespread) and a free downloadable app, even that isn't necessary in one level where unarmed, non demon summoning civilians are fighting demons and demon summoners and doing pretty well.
 * Not to mention the fact that the first game had an ingame justification/HandWave on why normal unarmed humans could hope to stand up to demons in a fight and not be killed in a single hit from them: no such thing exists in the second game, implying that everyone's just that strong normally.
 * Guilty Gear, a tradition continued in its Spiritual Successor, BlazBlue.
 * City of Heroes for the most part has a rather large percentage of the population being superheroes and/or supervillains.
 * Devil May Cry: there isn't one character that isn't an absolute Badass. (Unless you count the animated series.) (Actually there is one character in the games that isn't badass: Kirye.) Even normal humans like Lady have ridiculous stamina, when they're not outright Made of Iron.
 * Fire Emblem, where a little girl can with a little experience and luck destroy an entire army by herself.
 * No More Heroes, where everyone with a name has some degree of Badass in some completely insane way in them. Might as well call it a World of Crazy Awesome.
 * Super Robot Wars (Yes, even Boss and his Borot get to be badass)
 * Likewise, the Endless Frontier. It's more like several interconnected worlds, who are all badass in a unique way.
 * Sengoku Basara, also know as Epic Manly Badassery: The Video Game.
 * It's H-game parody, Sengoku Rance, basically is the same formula, just with a different gameplay engine and tons of estrogen due to massive amounts of Gender Flip (though non of women are less badass as a result).
 * Brutal Legend is a world of badasses, fueled by the epic awesome of Heavy Metal.
 * The Dynasty Warriors/Samurai Warriors series quickly spring to mind, where even a 90 lb girl wielding beautiful twin fans can kick epic levels of ass on a battlefield filled with thousands of sword-wielding Mooks.
 * Bayonetta, with a select few, is filled with these and is also a world of camp.
 * Well, go figure. The game is the Spiritual Successor to Devil May Cry and the titular protagonist is very much a female Dante.
 * As the page image shows, Serious Sam.
 * Australia in Team Fortress 2 is a Country of Badass: the men fight everything they can get their hands on, the women have epic moustaches, and the girl scouts have been known to wrestle bears.
 * Actually, the whole world still counts. Abraham Lincoln was the first BLU pyro, and George Washington was a spy.
 * Also, Shakespearicles.
 * Kicasso
 * Mabinogi: Even aside from the PCs, you see a lot of memory sequences (and actual fight scenes) of NPC army characters being extremely badass.
 * The Mass Effect series is a definite aversion. You very frequently run into completely ordinary people - scientists, merchants, random civilians - who are out of their depth in even a fistfight (Though the Krogan homeworld plays this straight in a very literal way). Usually, it puts the typically badass gameplay in sharp relief.
 * Dragon Age II, more so than the first game. Fewer cowering screaming people, bigger dragons, and nobody flinches from battling the guy that according to the tales killed a High Dragon with a rusty spoon.
 * Touhou is set in Gensoukyou, a realm that has become the nexus of the planet's magic and badass. When a character that can freeze their opponent solid in an instant and another that can shatter boulders with their fists are mocked by fans and other characters for being too weak, then this trope is inevitable.
 * Guild Wars is a game where major characters who can't fight are extremely rare.
 * Resident Evil oh very much so! Ashley from Resident Evil 4 even has one or two moments and she is a Damsel Scrappy.
 * Arc the Lad is a world where even a pathetic coward in the Seyran army's drum corps can become a fearsome One-Man Army Magic Knight. The real heavy hitters on every side are outright Persons of Mass Destruction. And it takes thousands of years and entire civilizations composed of these people to defeat the Big Bad.
 * STALKER: When the entire setting of the game is a Class 0 filled with eyeless rabid dogs, monkey-like mutated soldiers, Cthulu-mouthed abominations, psychically augmented monsters, and periodic class 3b emissions, it's pretty hard not to be anything but a Badass Normal.
 * Oh, and did we mention that there are also localized physical anomalies, ranging from scorching jets of flame to space-time portals?
 * StarCraft. Especially in StarCraft II. The medics wear power armor.
 * The Rance series definitely counts. From the heroic sociopath, to his Badass Adorable slave to the king of each of the three continents, to the demons, to the Kalars, and the gods of the game. And unlike the rest of the ones listed, this game is still ongoing after twenty years.
 * Front Mission. Everyone knows how to pilot an asskicking wanzer. Everyone.
 * In World of Warcraft, even the lowliest, non military NPC you come across will generally have as many hit points as the big, tough monsters you fight, and be able to dish out nearly as much damage as said monsters just with his bare fists.
 * Pretty much any named character who's done something relevant is likely to be a badass - such as Illidan, Malfurion, Tyrande, Jaina, Thrall, Arthas, Uther, Varian, Fandral, Archimonde, Kil'jaeden, Medivh, Maeiv...
 * Asura's Wrath is MADE of this trope. From a rampaging demigod whose strenght seemingly has no limit and who gets stronger the angrier he gets, a deity that becomes bigger than the Earth itself, to another one who has a sword that can extend all the way from Earth to the fucking moon, and pierce right THROUGH IT! And that's just the three characters revealed in the demo.
 * Urban Rivals. When 22 factions are vying for control of the city, even the weakest combatants have to be Badass Normal.

Visual Novels

 * The Nasuverse itself. If they have a name, they have badass points:
 * In Fate/stay night every main character has severe badass credentials by the end except Shinji, really. Yes, even Ilya and Sakura. Fate/hollow ataraxia barely changes the cast, but even those few it adds are amazing, such as Bazett Fraga McRemitz, a human who can go toe to toe with Servants—in fact,.
 * Angel Notes, a virtually unknown piece of work within the Nasuverse, involves swords so long they can carve out chasms in the earth, and humans slaughtering an Eldritch Abomination. World of raging badass indeed - then again, it did give us Archer.
 * And by extention of the Nasuverse, Battle Moon Wars.
 * In Maji De Watashi Ni Koi Shinasai, there are very few characters who can't fight, and many who takes it to a ridiculous degree. The anime even opens with a war game which includes the entire school. The same event is also in one of the routes.

Web Animation

 * Shock, on Stickpage.com, is a stick animation based in a world so badass, that this is what happens when you want to apply for a position AS THE FUCKING JANITOR

Web Comics
"Peasant's wife: How was work, honey? Peasant: (looking bored) Oh, you know... Undead, demons, a few heroes here and there. The usual."
 * Girl Genius comes very close. Every character from top to bottom seems to get at least one moment of absolute Badass, from the protagonist, to her Love Interest, to a traveling show full of minor Sparks, to some random soldier who woke up to find his airship on fire, to that pretty pink princess.
 * In the world of Axe Cop, if you have a name, chances are good that you are either a good guy with superpowers or a bad guy about to be destroyed.
 * The Adventures of Dr. McNinja is pretty much this combined with Rule of Cool. Ninja doctor with a velociraptor-riding, revolver-toting bandito sidekick. Whole family of ninjas. Pirates that fly around in their airships. A zombie-killing astronaut for a mayor. The list of badasses goes on.
 * One story involves an army of primitively-armed humans attacking, successfully at first, a fortress full of gun-toting dinosaurs. Some of the humans turned into giant lumberjacks and wrestled the dinosaurs to death. In case it's not obvious, insane badassery is pretty much the entire point of this comic.
 * Homestuck: If you've managed to get into the Medium and you're not badass already, you will be soon enough.
 * In a more literal Crapsack World example, Alternia. Even surviving past infant-hood in Troll society requires a certain degree of Badassness, since wigglers are put through a series of harrowing trials immediately after they hatch. It says a lot that a thirteen year old blind girl from Alternia is one of the most badass characters in Homestuck, and that even the wimpiest among the trolls has strong psychic abilities that allow him to tame and raise a virtual army of monsters.
 * St. Louis is a city of badass in Lackadaisy. All the characters have their moments
 * Here's a list: Rocky Rickaby, who dances in and out of danger and gets in all sorts of trouble; Aunt Nina, a badass grandma; Freckle McMurray, who goes from quiet ex-cop to "murders three recurring villains with a tommy gun while laughing like a maniac" almost immediately after finding the Lackadaisy; Mitzi May, who is simply an Action Girl; Dorian "Zib" Zibowski, who is a total badass without ever picking up a weapon; Mordecai Heller is, well, Mordecai Heller and the list goes on.
 * Schlock Mercenary has a truly fascinating example. The galaxy is just filled with Mooks for Tagon's Toughs to savage, and Worthy Opponents to return the favor. But the Toughs themselves have a contagious case of Badass. They pick up a (ir)reverend (because he was the sole applicant) and a doctor (based on her cup size). The reverend is soon skewering enemy eyeballs with a fencing foil. The doctor ends up leading troops into curbstomps and delivering speeches "Like Patton with boobs". They grab a bunch of loser thugs off from a Wretched Hive on a Scavenger World. The one with no arms can float like a butterfly(with gravitic assists) and sting like a bee(as in wrestle entire gangs with her tongue). They grab a Wrench Wench off a UNS battleplate that wants to get rid of her. She slaughters mobs singlehandledly (with Powered Armor and Post Dramatic Stress Disorder). Join The Toughs. Be Badass.
 * Lyle Phipps manages to invoke this trope in Great. Everyone he interacts with is inspired to become awesome in what they do because of him.
 * ''Supernormal Step' goes beyond Willing Suspension Of Belief in its diverse range of Badass characters. The whole series seems like an Original Character Tournament waiting to happen.
 * Nerf Now points out how unflappable commoners of a typical CRPG world should become after a while:

Web Original
"Bard: So you're NOT a WARRIOR..?! But... but you're wearing full PLATE ARMOR! Dwarven farmer: Laddy, you never know what be lurking out on them fields!"
 * Neopia can be described as being a planet that wears Badass Adorable as its hat.
 * Dwarven Farmer of War by Fredrik K T Andersson:


 * The world of Remnant from RWBY -- just about every named character in it is a Badass of one kind or another. Including the Corgi.

Western Animation
"Ruckus: "What? You think you the only one to learn the ancient and deadly art of the Nunchaku?""
 * In Avatar: The Last Airbender, you can count the characters who aren't badass on one hand. Even most of the ones who don't bend make up for it. To wit, one episode opens up with a random old guy in a fight with a platypus-bear.
 * Well, not really a fight. He just smilingly sidestepped the platypus-bear's every attempted blow.
 * Sequel series The Legend of Korra involves a brewing city war between the benders and the badass normals and a main character who is already possibly the biggest pre-debut Memetic Badass in the history of 21st century Western cartoons yet can still be driven to tears.
 * Cybertron, homeworld of the Transformers. Even the planet itself is badass, what with being a badass god, Primus in disguise. Even the least badass of Transformers is usually still a twelve foot tall car/robot hybrid with built in missiles and stuff.
 * The least badass Transformers are probably either the Mini-cons (until they unleash their full  powers and become a   or G1 Wheelie (except in the versions where he lived on a Death World all his life and has a necklace made of Sharkticon teeth. And still does the annoying rhyming thing which was made cool).
 * In Fairly Oddparents, Timmy wished that his life would be like an action movie. And like an action movie, things went from bad to worse.
 * The Boondocks. Though Huey's portrayed as a martial arts expert, he's constantly matched or bested by senior citizens, psychotic women, and even Uncle Ruckus.


 * The entire cast of Gargoyles. The least Badass character would probably be the mutated flying Catgirl who can shoot electricity out of her hands. Yeah.

Other

 * Honorable Hogwarts has done this with the Harry Potter universe.
 * Bionicle. There are vicious, the Makuta, the brain washing bohrak, a sleeping god, corrupt politicians, and freaky looking vehicles. To deal with it, they have Toa warriors. Hell. Yes.
 * Darwin's Soldiers - With few exceptions, everyone, everywhere can kick serious ass.
 * Systems Malfunction: A Cyberpunk LARP which takes this trope Up to Eleven.

Real life

 * You're a badass and you know it!