Instant Expert

Congratulations! You just won the Superpower Lottery! You now have at your disposal super-strength, flight, super-speed, nigh invulnerability, fireballs, and heart. And Just in Time, too, because on the other side of the city (requiring you to fly really quickly, even through buildings if necessary), there's an emergency that can only be solved with fire and making animals do things.

There's a few problems, though: you've never thrown a fireball before in your life. Beyond that, you've never flown and you've never had to control the immense speed and strength that you have now. Or heart. But, don't you worry. Powers are programs, and so it follows that you are also programmed with the instruction manual on how to use them. Within seconds of being struck by lightning after being infused with radioactive nanomachines that alter your genetic structure, you're both physically and mentally ready to bathe supervillains in Hellfire and plague them with assorted urban animals.

This is especially true of characters whose main ability is to copy other characters' skills. Whether or not they initially have trouble figuring out their own powers, they are almost universally capable of instantly figuring out how to use their stolen powers, typically to the same level of skill or effectiveness (or even a greater level!) as the character who had the power first. Shapeshifters (especially animal-based shapeshifters, or with otherwise non-humanoid forms) get bonus points for intuitively being able to transform into various objects and intuitively control limbs and other moving parts that weren't there previously.

For some characters, this newfound knowledge doesn't always come instantly. At times, they'll remain blissfully unaware that they have powers, accidentally shooting laser beams out of their eyes when staring too hard or ripping doors off hinges when opening them too abruptly. The opposite end of the spectrum is severe Power Incontinence, where the character can't figure out how to turn off his Telepathy or stop sending people flying with each exhale. Rarely will extensive training be needed to fix this; a Training Montage is enough. Give the new hero a day and he'll be ready to put his newfound powers to use. At most, a mentor will have to stop by to tell the new hero the activation phrase or show the hero how it's done a few times.

Often times, this is coupled with a time limit to become the greatest x in the world. In these cases, Training from Hell is sometimes used, but the character still emerges an expert—one of the greatest people to ever learn the craft—after only a month or so of work. Especially jarring when it's used to explain away gaining a skill most people take a lifetime to perfect. There's rarely even any hand waving to explain this away, the audience is just supposed to believe that the characters are that damn good.

If they become really good at their skills through trial and error, including bruises and collateral damage along the way, then odds are they were Taught By Experience. If a device is shown to give them the knowledge, it's an Upgrade Artifact. If they're an expert while in control of an unfamiliar vehicle, they're Falling Into the Cockpit.

Often a sign of a Mary Sue or Marty Stu.

Compare Possession Implies Mastery and Suddenly Always Knew That. Contrast How Do I Shot Web?. See Neural Implanting for justified In-Universe ways to do this.

Anime and Manga

 * In Ginga: Nagareboshi Gin, it supposedly takes years for the wolves to master a single Battouga. This doesn't prevent the dogs from learning them by just seeing them used in battle (usually against themselves) and then using them just as effectively. Taken to extremes by Gin, who learns three of these moves this way, one from a battle he only watched from the sidelines.
 * Goku in Dragon Ball and the other Saiyans to lesser extent. Roshi took almost a century to master the Kamehameha wave, Goku picks it up by seeing Roshi do it once. Similarly Goku picks up Tien's Solar Flare technique simply because Tien's used it twice on him. Tien explicitly has the ability to pick up and master other people's techniques by studying them briefly, while Cell and Buu can both master any technique known by someone whom they absorbed.
 * Taken to extremes with Goten and Trunks: who somehow master the super saiyan transformation before they even hit puberty, whereas their fathers spent months or years training in deep space under extreme conditions to learn it.
 * Even more than that, they skipped several requirements of achieving the transformation, such as experiencing a moment of pure rage. Handwaved later with the explanation that hybrids are able to access the transformations more readily at the cost of lower overall enhancement from said transformation.
 * Gundam usually averts this, but Kamille Bidan strangely manages to have impressive piloting skills his first time in combat in contrast to Amuro, who couldn't do anything except be Char's punching bag. Although he won a junior MS competition, they use mini mobile suits for that, so it dosen't explain how he can pilot an experimental combat model without any training. Of course the fact he's a Newtype helps, but then again Amuro, had no idea what to do when he first climbed in a MS even with psychic powers.
 * Justified in all three generations of Mobile Suit Gundam AGE. Flit himself created the Gundam, so he's more than capable of piloting it when the time comes. His son, Asemu, was not only in training at a millitary academy, but a member of the school's club for Mobile Suit enthusiasts, and a prodigy on top of that. Flit then started training Asemu's son, Kio, from a very young age by bringing him what Kio then believed to be elaborate arcade games that turned out to be based off of the Gundam's operating system.
 * Ranma ½ (and to a lesser extent his Worthy Opponent Ryoga) can practically osmose an entirely new martial art or technique in the span of a week, mastering it so well that they can beat the rival of the week who may have spent a lifetime honing that skill in a Cooking Duel. Handwaved in that Ranma is the heir of the "Anything Goes" School of Martial Arts, a school that focuses on incorporating moves from other martial arts. Ryoga, almost entirely self-trained, is quite proficient at picking up new moves through observation.
 * * Particularly impressive when you consider how bad he was at some of the needed skills (ice-skating espeically).
 * Zig-zags in Naruto, where the eponymous character, despite being an idiot with little natural talent, is able to pick up highly advanced techniques in a very short time through a cloning technique. By creating a thousand or so clones of himself, he trains a thousand times faster. Even with that, most of his moves aren't perfected, he just gets better at working around the drawbacks caused by imperfection.
 * Averted in Super Dimension Fortress Macross. After Falling Into the Cockpit, the young hotshot pilot prodigy proceeds to fall over repeatedly and cause extensive property damage. A crash course by a pilot who's actually qualified in operating robots keeps him from bumping into things, but only after signing up for the army and undergoing combat training does he become competent.
 * Similarly in Neon Genesis Evangelion, Shinji gets browbeaten into the cockpit of Unit-01 and sent against the Monster of the Week... and promptly falls on his face before getting beaten like a red-haired stepchild until the 'mech' takes over.
 * Somewhat subverted in Macross Frontier, where the main character gets punched in the face and kicked out of the hangar for wanting to repeat his no-training Falling Into the Cockpit experience when a mission alert goes up.
 * Ichigo, from Bleach, goes from rank novice to one of the strongest fighters in the universe, able to go toe-to-toe with shinigami captains and take out lieutenants without even using his sword, after two Training from Hell sessions which collectively comprise about twelve days.
 * Like with many other tropes, Excel Saga parodies this when Excel's bowling training from Nabeshin is over in a matter of seconds, leaving Excel capable of scoring strikes while simultaneously knocking her opponents' balls out of their alleys. Lampshaded when Nabeshin notes there's nothing more he can teach her, whereupon Excel complains, "That wasn't even five seconds!"
 * Downplayed in Mazinger Z. Kouji had quite a bit of trouble using the eponymous mecha in the pilot episode, managing to defeat Dr. Hell's first two Robeasts through mostly dumb luck. But he caught on rather fast after that.
 * Played straight with Boss, however, who took to the Boss Borot Like a Fish Takes to Water. Not that it was the most well-designed mecha...
 * Multiple examples from Fate/stay night:
 * Whenever Shirou uses Projection to replicate a weapon, he will instantly gain all experience of battles the weapon itself has gone through, allowing him to wield it (or, depending on interpretation, for it to wield itself with his body following its lead) with ease as if he were a complete master.
 * Projection itself. Not only is he an instant expert literally better than anyone at it in the entire world, he's even doing it in a form that should be more difficult. And he learns enough to project a perfect Noble Phantasm in less than two weeks. His projection is so good that some of it actually breaks the rules of magic and doesn't disappear, which is apparently almost one of the True Magics. Naturally, he's unconsciously cheating like crazy to do it but...
 * The Saber and Rider classes have the passive Riding skill, which allows the user to ride any mount or vehicle (with limitations in the cases of some exotic or unique mounts—say, dragons) with perfect mastery.
 * Similar to Saito from Zero no Tsukaima below, from the prequel Fate/Zero comes Servant Berserker who, thanks to the skill Knight of Honor, can turn anything even remotely usable as a weapon as his Noble Phantasm and use them to their fullest extent, even better than Shirou and his Projection magic.   Combined with his "Immortal Arms Mastery" he turns out to be a serious combatant who only loses due to a sudden loss of mana supply -- and all this in spite of being insane the whole time.
 * Both subverted and played straight in Code Geass. All the characters who are said to be exceptional pilots are either career soldiers or rebels with experience from the School of Hard Knocks. Especially noticeable is the main character who, despite using a Humongous Mecha as a Mundane Utility annually, is actually one of the worst pilots among the main cast, a fact which the show's creators seem proud of. Made especially ironic in that his late mother was a nigh-legendary pilot back when the Humongous Mecha were still new.
 * Yu-Gi-Oh!:
 * In the original anime, most duelists get the hang of Kaiba's new rules for Battle City (which better resemble the ones of the OCG) rather quickly. The only one who has some difficulty is Jonouchi (who's always depicted as slow) who makes a mistake in the duel with Espa Roba, but he catches on quickly after that.
 * Subverted in Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's, where Aki has a lot of trouble learning Turbo Dueling, and even makes a mistake trying to use a Speed Spell in her test exam, but manages to adapt.
 * Averted in the Pokémon anime, played straight in the games. The anime shows Trainers actually practicing new attacks, complete with funny misfires, while in the games, the mon becomes an Instant Expert with a move simply by reaching the right level.
 * Let's not forget the TMs and HMs, which are Instant Expert on-a-disk.
 * Kintaro Oe of Golden Boy can master complex skills overnight, through nothing more than insane determination.
 * Nanoha and Hayate of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha.
 * Subverted with the former. In supplementaries it is revealed that Nanoha actually goes through Training from Hell to be as good as she is. Justified with Hayate, however, who has absorbed the knowledge of the Book of Darkness/Night Sky.
 * Nanoha in the 1st movie counts, though. She newly gets a magic device from Yuuno then she learns how to fly and use super long range attack to destroy very small targets after a few minutes.
 * Subaru and Erio both could qualify, as they pick up new powers and techniques far faster than either Teana or Caro do.
 * Sesshomaru, from Inuyasha, being Sesshomaru, is stated in his official character profile to be able to use any weapon to its full potential. The only sword he doesn't quite master instantly is Tenseiga, because he doesn't feel he has any use for its healing abilities; the only technique he has to put any effort into mastering is Meidou Zangetsuha, which requires compassion and an understanding of the nature of sacrifice.
 * Averted in One Piece, where Devil Fruit users often have at least some difficulty figuring out what their powers are, and often take a great deal of time figuring out how to use them to full effect. After over ten years for Luffy and over twenty for Robin, the both of them are still learning new ways to utilize their abilities.
 * Also there are Kaku and Califa, two agents of CP9 who were given their Devil Fruits hours (if that) before going into combat against the Straw Hats. Califa in particular, while they should have had barely enough time to grasp the basics of their powers (Giraffe-transformation and strength sapping soap bubbles respectively), is shown to be quite proficient when she faces Sanji and Nami. Kaku flounders a bit more, though, coming up with ideas and attacks on the spot in the course of his fight with Zoro.
 * Saito from Zero no Tsukaima gained this as his power of a familiar. He instantly understands how a given weapon works and how to use it, and also gains a considerable boost in speed, endurance and strength when using a weapon. There is just one condition that must be met: the weapon must have been created for combat. For example, a sword that was created as a decoration won't trigger Saito's powers. Also it can be any weapon, from a simple sword to a fighter plane or artillery cannon.
 * Claymore has a disturbing subversion. Clare tries to learn the Quicksword skill and after several days is told she is mentally incapable of ever mastering it. But her teacher has nothing left to live for and cuts off her own arm so Clare can use it.
 * Adam Blade in NEEDLESS has the power to learn any Needless ability simply by encountering it. Handwaved in that his power is the ability to memorize other powers.
 * Blade cannot perform the abilities of Needless who have their bodies and minds particularly settled to their powers, this includes and other Missing-Links Needless as well; Adam Arclight on the other hand can and has surpassed Blade's Zero power, his own being Positive Feedback Zero, as he can copy ANYTHING.
 * Memorably averted in Slam Dunk. Hanamichi Sakuragi is The Fool and does have enormous potential, but not only does he have no idea of how to use it, his sempai and teammates treat him like the rookie he is and he's stuck for a long time learning the basics.
 * Kurapika from Hunter X Hunter learns the basics of Nen in a few months, and is then able to go toe to toe with, and eventually kill Ubogin and later kidnaps Chrollo. Both are members are the Genei Ryodan, and very accomplished fighters and Nen users. Justified, in that Kurapika's designed some of his powers to work strictly on Genei Ryodan and no one else, on pain of his own death. If he'd been fighting anyone else of similar experience, he would have gotten his tail kicked. Even with fighting Genei Ryodan, it still takes a toll on his body.
 * Played straight with Apollo of Genesis of Aquarion in the first episode.
 * Ku Fei in Mahou Sensei Negima notes that in a mere few hours Negi reached a level of martial arts mastery that would take normal people months. He also learned instant movement after two separate training sessions. Not even training from hell. It is explicitly noted that his specialty is really rapid learning and improvising rather than extreme power, however. Another example is Asuna instantly grasping the kanka technique while Takamichi had to work seriously hard at it. As in, spent years at it.
 * In Prince of Tennis, the main character Ryoma Echizen is shown to be easily copying and mastering techniques such as the snake, Rising Shot, Zero-Shiki Drop Shot, etc., while constantly employing new techniques such as the single-footed split step. However, it's explained that this is because he was trained at a very young age by his father, not because of any natural talent.
 * Averted to an extent in Soul Eater. Maka, Black Star and their Weapons are shown to take some time to get used to new powers/techniques, although in the meantime they do make do with a less refined version. Shadow Star didn't last very long to begin with and was dangerous, and Demon Hunter served its purpose when it first turned up, but Maka only really put it into practice in the fight with Arachne. And between the two she's shown talking with Ox about possibilities for her new technique, which is a nice touch. Demon Hunter's predecessor, Witch Hunter, turns up with less fuss than it did initially.
 * Ui Hirasawa from K-On! is implied to be one. Episode 12 of Season 1 revealed that she was the one that taught Yui how to read guitar sheets, implying that she learned to play the guitar so she could help her sister learn how to play the guitar, which she does very well when she pulled her Twin Switch. In Season 2, when she, Azusa and Jun went to play at batting cages, she overhears a father give his son baseball tips... and hits a home-run immediately after.
 * Haru Glory combines this with New Powers as the Plot Demands in Rave Master. It's an explicitly stated gift of the Rave of Wisdom that it allows Haru to call upon and correctly use the different forms of his sword, the Ten Commandments, as the need arises.

Comic Books

 * Taskmaster, in the Marvel Universe, can instantly learn how to do any physical skill or martial arts maneuver his body is physiologically capable of surviving simply by watching anyone else do it once, either live or via recorded media. Handwaved away by explicitly giving him the superpower of "photographic reflexes," or the ability to instantly learn by watching. His most recent mini-series also gave him the more conventional form of photographic memory in addition to his superpower, further enhancing his rapid learning abilities. He also has Awesomeness By Analysis in that he understands what he learns so thoroughly that he can teach other people how to do it.
 * The whole thing worked against him, however, when he tried to use it on Deadpool, who is just too unpredictable. He even started dancing partway through the fight with Taskmaster, just because.
 * Similarly, Gold Digger has Arrogant Kung Fu Guy Ryan Tabbott, who is very proud of his ability to learn any skill just by watching someone else do it. His fighting style comes from having watched martial arts movies, and he is a strong fighter. Nevertheless, he gets taken down a peg when the Highly-Visible Ninja member of the Peewee's Terrible Trio uses a Hadoken-like energy attack and Ryan soon finds out that while he can mimic the physical action perfectly, he doesn't know how to focus his chi properly.
 * Similarly, Prometheus, a supervillain of the DC Universe, has a helmet with some fancy technology where he can just pop in a disc with whatever skill or knowledge he needs. This can range from the blueprints for a space station to the skills of the top thirty martial artists in the world—with which he handily defeated Batman.
 * Once. The rematch was far more humiliating... and that was while it still was a hand-to-hand fight, before Prometheus pulled a gun and then Batman triggered the logic bomb he'd hidden in Prometheus' helmet software: So awesome.
 * Reed Richards has done this a few times. In one instance taking a piece of heretofore unknown alien tech that transmitted information by smell and rigging a device that translated it. Into a video. In ten minutes.
 * A character from The Tick (animation) comics, Oedipus Ashley Stevens, is a bored rich girl who becomes one of the world's greatest ninjas... after training for "nearly two weeks!"
 * Justified by the fact that ninjitsu had essentially become a comically bottom of the barrel fad franchise by this point and the ninja in these comics couldn't do many of the things ninja are normally shown doing, even when they thought they could.
 * Black Alice from The DCU can temporarily steal the magical powers of any spellcaster she can think of, and is shown to be pretty proficient with their powers with no prior experience. At one point she stole power from two spell casters at once. She even stole the powers of the Spectre. Crosses over with Power Copying. She was nerfed to hell and back in the Reign In Hell event but has made a comeback in Secret Six, where it turns out the trope has been subverted...
 * The second Mr. Terrific Michael Holt from The DCU. It's not an explicit metahuman power—he just has a natural talent for learning. Before he became a superhero, he had 14 PH.D's on top of being a gold medal winning Olympic decathlete.
 * Batman does this, occasionally in-frame, but constantly by implication. Advanced use of computers, forensic chemistry, multiple martial arts disciplines, stunt driving, acrobatics, marksmanship with a variety of ranged weapons (firearm, thrown and otherwise)... all these are barely scratching the surface of the immense collection of formal training and acquired skills Mr Wayne apparently acquired by the time he was 30. Considering he didn't even start seriously training for anything except CEO-hood until after his parents were killed when he was 8, and that some of the skills he's obtained would normally take even an exceptionally talented real-world student more than 20 years of dedicated training to learn, individually, to Batman's degree of proficiency. And don't forget that, the entire time he was doing all this learning, his training had to compete for his time with nocturnal crimefighting, running a major corporation, cooking the books so that anyone receiving a Wayne Enterprises stock report wouldn't immediately know his secret identity, designing tons of cool, but distinctively branded, toys, jumping through hoops to purchase such toys in ways that wouldn't immediately give away the identity of the purchaser of the world's entire supply of Batarangs, and all of this while maintaining enough of a carefree social life to maintain his cover identity.

Fan Works

 * gains Mind Over Matter powers in Kyon: Big Damn Hero, and instantly knows how to use them.
 * In With Strings Attached, as soon as John opens himself up to the Kansael, he knows how to use it and its water powers perfectly—as opposed to the others, who all have a learning curve with their magic (especially Paul). That's because the Kansael is semi-sentient and grants him complete control.
 * Also, he did fly the first time he jumped off a cliff, but Varx noted that when he transformed him into a Winged Humanoid, he made sure to give him the requisite instincts to be able to fly.
 * Although when George shapeshifts he does gain all the instincts of the creature he becomes, it takes him a while to get used to the actual change. And sometimes he gets a little too expert....
 * In the Twilight Princess fanfic The Golden Power, Link is revealed to have always had an instinctive knowledge of weaponry, allowing him to adapt and use any weapon he comes across. The fic calls such a person a "Blademaster".

Film
"John Spartan:I come out of cryo-prison and I'm Betsy-fucking-Ross."
 * The enslaved humans from Battlefield Earth. Despite never having worked with any technology at all, they quickly become expert pilots, due to a "teaching machine" which beams information straight into the user's brain.
 * In Demolition Man, cryogenically frozen prisoners can have information implanted into their minds. Simon Phoenix/ Wesley Snipes is implanted with martial arts styles and a password that help him escape, while John Spartan/ Sylvester Stallone is implanted with knitting skills. And is still badass, of course.


 * In Deep Rising, the ship's owner, Simon Canton, knows facts about the sea monster attacking them for no apparent reason.
 * Well, not quite. He was only guessing as to what the creature was. And at the end, turns out he wasn't quite right either. He assumed that the tentacle-like creatures were individuals from a family of deep sea worms known as Ottoia. In the end, it turns out the creatures were actual tentacles attached to a monstrous cephalopod-like creature.
 * Lampooned mercilessly in the "We Need A Montage" sequenced of the film Team America: World Police, where the protagonist Gary goes from being a talented actor to a talented actor capable of performing at Special Forces levels with any or all weapons and his bare hands... in about ten minutes of real time. But hey, he had a really cool montage sequence, complete with 80s-style power ballad, so why not?
 * This was not even the first time Parker and Stone used this gag. The exact same song was previously used to accompany a montage of Stan learning to ski in the South Park episode "Asspen." Which is immediately subverted when Stan hasn't gotten any better at skiing.
 * Daniel-san, of Karate Kid fame, manages to go from dweeb to a Force To Be Reckoned With in the space of a few weeks, with some yardwork thrown in. To the point of being able to defeat Cobra Kai dojo and Johnny who had far longer training. Although Daniel does learn exceptionally quick, this is treated more that Mr. Miyagi was teaching him a superior discipline than what the Cobra guys were taught. This is reflected in the way the fight scenes were choreographed, others moved faster and more aggressively but Daniel behaved more efficiently.
 * Lampshaded a bit in The Matrix, where all humans spend most of their lives plugged into a computer network through which they receive simulated experiences anyway—their Unusual User Interfaces can also act as Upgrade Artifacts, making it a trivial matter to have a full training regimen for anything from martial arts to piloting written directly into your brain in a matter of seconds. Whether this carries over to the real world is up in the air.
 * Many characters in various Star Wars media. This is usually justified by explaining that the reason they're so good is due to their Force-sensitivity.
 * Luke becomes a Jedi in the unspecified period of time it takes the Millennium Falcon to reach Bespin sans hyperdrive. It takes only a few minutes of screen time and no indication is given of extreme time passing. Although real Jedi apparently started training in early childhood, Luke is able to put up a good fight against Vader and use powers such as force jump by the time he leaves the planet. By Return of the Jedi, Luke, who's otherwise spent most of his time looking for Han rather than training, is now a full-blown Jedi, being able to employ mind tricks and numerous other Jedi powers with little effort. He's also a far better swordsman, able to defeat Vader this time.
 * Paploo the Ewok in Return of the Jedi gets the basics of speeder bike operation instantly, despite coming from a stone-age culture and being too short to reach most of the controls.
 * Madison from the movie Splash was able to learn English in a single afternoon simply by watching TV. Granted, she's a mermaid with magical powers, but this does seem a bit of a Hand Wave.
 * The protagonists of Zombie Apocalypse movies seem to become Instant Expert at any weapon they pick up. But that may just be adapting as a survival mechanism.
 * In the film Meteor Man, anyone with meteor powers can temporarily absorb all the information in a book just by touching it. Apparently, they can also apply it, considering that at one point the protagonist acquires martial arts skills from touching a book on the subject. And immediately afterward? Runway modeling.
 * The Last Samurai has Tom Cruise's character, Nathan Algren. He was built up as a quick study at linguistics and warfare, and before being captured by a Samurai group he was already intensely studying their ways. However, in the course of one winter (three months) that he stays with them, he picks up enough Japanese to carry a conversation. He also becomes proficient with the katana, but he was already shown to be a badass fighter with various other weapons.
 * In Push Nick has been telekinetic all his life, but sucks as the film opens because he never practices. It doesn't really take him very long to become quite adept at it, and he starts kicking ass once he confronts Carter and Victor.
 * Troy and Gabriella in High School Musical, despite neither being a trained singer, manage harmony and perfect pitch with a song playing on a karaoke machine.
 * And highlighted at the end of HSM2 where Troy is told to learn a new song, literally two minutes before going on and after goggling for a moment tells Ryan "I can't learn a new song." Of course, when he goes on stage two minutes later, he's not only learned a new song, but learned how to harmonise with his absent partner.
 * In The Fifth Element, Leeloo (a cloned human-alien-hybrid-thing) learns English in the space of about a day. She does this by speed-reading the 23rd century equivalent of the Encyclopedia Britannica.
 * Averted in the first Spider-Man movie, where Peter has to learn to use his spiderweb (and gets hit quite a bit for it). Though his technique isn't terribly graceful the first time out, by the middle of the film he can web-sling his way across town with ease.
 * Col. Rhodes from Iron Man 2 is immediately adept at piloting his stolen suit, which is in direct contrast to the slow, awkward process of mastering the controls Tony Stark went through in the first film - and he designed the damn thing.
 * Avatar, so much. Jake goes running out the door as soon as he physically can, while Norm is still doing motor skill tests. And that's only the beginning: Jake learns to speak the native language, ride a direhouse, ride a Giant Flyer, archery on the Giant Flyer, and all inside 3 months.
 * Downplayed in The Rocketeer. When Cliff uses the jetpack for the first time, he does okay for about five minutes, but then spirals out of control, crashing through clotheslines and crash-landing in a lake, damaging the device in the process, something that becomes a Chekov's Gun later.
 * In Short Circuit, Johnny 5 can learn how to operate a complex device in seconds by speed-reading through the instruction manual. For instance, he learns how to drive a car this way.

Literature
""It's very un-Jedi-like of me, but I want to break his record.""
 * Twilight: After becoming a vampire, Bella is instantly good at hunting, has no blood lust, is beautiful, and has all the same wonderful strengths of the other Cullens.
 * Eragon in The Inheritance Cycle goes from never having used a sword before to being skilled enough to hold his own after a month of practice. He similarly goes from totally illiterate to being able to read to a basic level in a month. Of course, these are not as implausible as some people might want you to believe.
 * He also manages to write a fourteen-page epic poem about his experiences up to the point where he's getting trained by the elves. In an hour and a half. In a language that a few months ago he only knew a couple of words of (although since then he had been learning every day while living among people who speak it as their main language, which is Truth in Television as far as that effect goes for learning real languages).
 * Eragon learning magic, considering that we are told that most Riders are years into their training before they are even told that they can do magic, although it is both acknowledged as exceptional in-universe, while also not being unheard of, just rare, since the normal method for training magic users involves forcing them to attempt physically impossible tasks, causing them to eventually unconsciously use magic to perform it. It's also notable that doing so leaves him unable to walk from exhaustion after the first time, and once the instinctual moment has passed, he was unable to so much as levitate a pebble until he learned to use it consciously, this being far closer to how magic users are generally trained.
 * Memoirs of a Geisha revolves around this trope, deconstructing it at one point: The protagonist explains that, due to a wager made between her legal guardian and her teacher, she wasn't given much time to actually practice certain skills. Instead, she would visualize them constantly, study when her mind was most pliable and invented a plethora of mnemonic devices to help her, because there was absolutely no other way for her to achieve her goals and change her situation. She explains that while it looked to others like she was mastering her skills without ever practicing, in truth her mind was working on little else.
 * Lord Hong of Interesting Times regularly masters in a matter of weeks disciplines that require other human beings a lifetime of study. Everyone else's problem is that they just don't focus.
 * Subverted in Vernor Vinge's novel Rainbows End, where JITT (Just-in-Time Training) allows anyone to become an Instant Expert in anything, but
 * Kellhus from Second Apocalypse does this a lot, but it is justified by him being a super-intelligent result of a breeding program. That's why he can do things like become fluent in a foreign language in a matter of days.
 * In the second Sword of Truth book, the protagonist learns the "dance with death" using the titular blade. The sword apparently stores all the sword fighting skills of anyone who's ever wielded it, and Richard is able to download the knowledge into himself, to the point where he can slaughter garrisons of trained soldiers even without the magic blade.
 * How did you do that new and incredible thing? I just felt it inside of me.
 * Becoming an instant expert in more or less anything that takes their fancy is one of the advantages of the transhuman Luculenti in John Meaney's To Hold Infinity. Many taught themselves to paint or dance at the level of the masters of those arts on Earth... as hobbies, taking them perhaps a month or two of practice alongside their normal day jobs.
 * Another science fiction story invoking this trope is Galactic Odyssey by Keith Laumer, in which the protagonist is put to work sorting indistinguishable glorm-bulbs... which turns out to give him the ability to learn essentially anything with a single run-through.
 * The heroes of the Piers Anthony fantasy novel Centaur Aisle end up in possession of a magical sword which turns anyone who wields it into an example of this trope.
 * Though the sword doesn't really teach you how to fight, it just moves itself for you. This becomes important in a later book when someone wielding the sword has an object thrown at them (a metal-destroying sphere I think) that would be completely harmless if they just let it hit them, but because the sword is enchanted to block everything, ends up disarming them.
 * In the Heralds of Valdemar series, this is usually averted (mastering magic and mind-magic powers usually takes years and a lot of practice). When played straight, it is justified, usually through the agency of Need, a possessed blade which can take over a user and work through him/her with consent.
 * Averted in Metamorphosis, turning into a cockroach doesn't mean you know how to move like one.
 * The wielders of the famous BFS in the Redwall series can all pretty much do it instantly, even though they're mostly aged about twelve and may not ever have picked up a sword before. Possibly partly justified because it's heavily implied that they're the reincarnations of the Sword's first bearer, Martin, and the skills carry over between lifetimes.
 * Peter F Hamilton's The Night's Dawn Trilogy thrives on this. Everyone with neural nanonics can partake of 'Didactic Learning', which basically embeds any knowledge they might need. They might not be quite as good as someone who's been doing it for years, but they can certainly operate complex objects or understand the local phlebotinum competently. It has basically abolished school. If only we had this tech.
 * Subverted in the Isaac Asimov short story Profession. Nearly everyone, on reaching their majority, gets an instant education implanted into their brains for the occupation that they are best suited for, based on aptitude testing. There is a downside to this, though: people who receive their education this way become incapable of much in the way of original thought. Only a selected few, with the aptitude to learn the hard, old-fashioned way, are capable of developing new technologies.
 * Left Behind takes place after all the 'good' Christians have been taken from the earth, and follows a group of people who converted to Christianity after witnessing this explicit miracle. And who talk, think and behave like those 'good' Christians instantly after their conversion. Justified in the case of Bruce, who was a pastor before all this and just lacked proper faith. Not at all justified in case of Buck, who can quote Bible passages, uses unusual lingo, and starts considering holding hands with his new girlfriend to be taboo after knowing each other for just a few weeks. This man is supposed to be a 30 year old sophisticated high-profile journalist who never cared about religion before. While this is likely due to Creator Provincialism, the authors probably wouldn't object to the message that all those rules they live their lives by follow naturally if you just accept Christ in the proper way.
 * In the Semper Fi, the first novel in W.E.B. Griffin's The Corps series, Malcolm "Pick" Pickering's flight instructor nearly brings him up on charges after his orientation flight, as Pick is so comfortable in the cockpit (and is able to easily fly and land the aircraft) that it implies that he lied when he wrote "none" in the previous flight experience box on his application.
 * In the Old Kingdom books, Sabriel's father, the previous Abhorsen, only let her read one page of The Book of the Dead at a time, ever, spaced out over careful intervals to prevent her from going mad from the information, because that book contains Things Man Was Not Meant to Know. Along comes Lirael some years later. She polishes off the entire Book of the Dead in one night. And when she officially takes up the mantle of, she's instantly proficient at it (though, granted, she's had some years of practice fighting Free Magic nasties.)
 * In the Star Wars Expanded Universe, this is explicitly one of Luke Skywalker's abilities, extrapolating out from the movies. After all, he was able to deflect blaster bolts within minutes of practicing with a lightsaber for the first time. Combined with the authorial tendency to give him New Powers as the Plot Demands, he can be a very Showy Invincible Hero. Though if you are rebuilding the Jedi Order after having had no more than a few months' training, it doesn't hurt to be a quick study.
 * Lampshaded in Outcast when Luke goes to learn a technique from the Baran Do Sages, one allowing him to produce and control a low level electromagnetic charge in his own body. Since he's the highly experienced exiled Grand Master of the Jedi Order, not a sage-in-training, he's put through the accelerated course, without ritual or training artifacts. All the same, it takes thirty seconds for him to produce a charge - since he knows a vaguely similar technique - and his teacher dryly says, "Well, that's about eight weeks of apprentice training bypassed." Now he has to learn to control it, which is the tricky part. Luke then asks how long it took his nephew to learn to control his charge, and was told three days. Luke smiles.


 * He learns it after one day and four hours of study.
 * Harry Potter is an instant expert at flying the first time he rides a broom the first book,.
 * In High Wizardry, the third book of the Young Wizards series,
 * When the refugees from a high-tech society end up living off the land in Orson Scott Card's Homecoming series, they need to relearn things like making/using bows and arrows. So they go to their computer god and ask. Unfortunately, transferring thoughts from one mind to another is painfully impossible, so they end up receiving muscle memory instead, as that's just reflex rather than conscious thought.
 * Second-stage (and above) Lensmen in E. E. "Doc" Smith's stories are capable of extracting huge chunks of knowledge and skill from others' minds with some rapidity, and also of granting such to others (eg. 'teaching' someone used to 1940's tech everything about the operation of blaster pistols and spy rays near-instantaneously).
 * Doctors in James White's Sector General stories can, if of sufficient mental health, have the entire medical knowledge of a master-surgeon of an alien species temporarily downloaded into their heads, to allow them to operate on that species without having to spend years learning their anatomy. With the downside that the donor being's personal quirks, racial traits, nightmares, sexual fantasies, and concepts of what makes a good lunch are also stuffed in there...

Live Action TV

 * Heroes
 * Charlie (and Sylar through power theft) can not only remember everything she read but could also properly apply it as well.
 * In Season 2 there's also Monica who is able to instantly learn how to do any physical skill or martial arts maneuver she's physically capable of simply by watching anyone else do it once, either live or via recorded media.
 * Sylar's main power is the ability to "understand how things work," which goes towards explaining how he's able to rapidly master all his stolen abilities. And even he has to take a few days to iron out the kinks in particularly cumbersome abilities, such as superhearing (high pitched noises become a Weaksauce Weakness) or shapeshifting (involuntary shapeshifting due to major psychological issues).
 * The 1980s show Greatest American Hero is a funny aversion to this trope. The main character receives a super-powered suit as a gift from aliens, but unfortunately lost the manual. So he has no idea what powers he has, or how to use them.
 * Lana Lang in Smallville learned kung fu in three days. She also learned how to successfully run her own coffee shop instantly and while still in high school. The big issue with her was that she kept knowing how to do things someone in her situation would not know in order to keep her plot-relevant. The coffee shop was to explain why she kept getting involved in things-the whole school hung out there, Clark included. The kung-fu and so called "military training" were becuase the writers had finally listened to all the Damsel in Distress complaints about her character. The second she needed to know something, it was known so they could say she was still relevant (when she was well past that very quickly).
 * Subverted in Firefly. Malcolm has to learn to duel with swords overnight. In the actual duel, he seems to be doing well at first, but his opponent is only playing with him. He does win the duel, but with combat pragmatism rather than fencing skill.
 * Buffy the Vampire Slayer:
 * Xander kept his military knowledge for a couple of years after the Halloween incident where everyone became their costume. By season 4, two years after the initial incident, his soldier memories were pretty much gone.
 * One of the powers of the Slayer is knowing how to use a weapon just by picking it. They still have to train to master it, though.
 * The ability of imprinting technology to make Actives experts in any given field at the press of a button is a series premise of Dollhouse. However, it's not possible for a Doll to possess more than one set of skills at a time without being wiped and reloaded....
 * This trope is pretty much what makes the title character of Kyle XY so special.
 * The whole shtick of The Pretender: with a little learning time, Pretenders such as Jarod could master any role from janitor to astronaut.
 * A standard of the Power Rangers series, where the characters generally are barely old enough to have a driver's license, yet can handle a giant robot without so much as a training montage.
 * The very first episode has Trini and Billy lampshade the fact they can pilot the Dinozords. It seems their powers provide the knowledge as well as fighting skills. Played with in that the heroes don't retain these skills when they change back: Billy still has to train with Jason and Zack to build his martial arts skills.
 * Downplayed a little the first time Tommy appears as the White Ranger. He has a little trouble piloting the White Tigerzord, mostly because Saba is something of a back seat driver.
 * Also lampshaded a little in Power Rangers Turbo/ Gekisou Sentai Carranger where Tommy/Kyousuke has to break out a manual (mid battle) to figure out a function of his Zord. (Note to beginning drivers, Don't Try This At Home.)
 * Averted with Ziggy the Green Ranger in Power Rangers RPM (it only took them 17 seasons) who doesn't get an instant martial arts download into his brain, and the other rangers were hand picked martial artists. Though he can pilot his Zord better than he can a car, he still needs to get to grips with it.
 * Also averted in Power Rangers Lost Galaxy. Waving your arms and yelling "Galactabeasts, over here!!" is not how you summon the Megazord
 * Also, a bit of a subversion for Power Rangers Time Force since their in-helmet visors show them what to do when operating their megazords for the first time as well as some new weapons. Eric even has a nice AI to instruct him on his new tech. And since the others were time force operatives and Eric was a trained fighter, the rest probably came naturally. Wes, on the other hand, had some difficulty at first, though he got the hang of it.
 * In Power Rangers Lightspeed Rescue, the heads-up display also tells them of their new tech and Mission Control tells them how to operate things as well. It was the first series to have tech-tech instead of Magitek and so such things were often turned on their heads.
 * The title character of John Doe is a perfect example of this - he can look up any piece of information at any time, making him an expert in every field. This is consistently shown as he flies a helicopter with no training, is a capable doctor, makes significant profits in the stock market, and pulls off MacGyver-esque stunts.
 * Not content at being the World's Greatest Diagnostic Physician, an accomplished musician and speaker of several languages, House recently was advised to get a hobby to help manage his pain without Vicodin. He accompanies Wilson to his cooking class, and by the end of the episode is told he has created "the best thing I have ever eaten."
 * Between seasons nine and ten of CSI, Ray Langston went to CSI school in a big way, and instantly caught up to (and possibly surpassed) the regular crew on suspiciously specific scientific knowledge.
 * It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia: Resident ding-bat Charlie apparently learns to play the keyboard with almost no practice, saying, "Keyboards just make sense to me."
 * As the carrier of the latest version of the Intersect, Chuck can do about anything that a World Class Spy can do, and then some. Justified as that is what the Intersect was designed to do.
 * It's never drawn attention to but Dharma from Dharma and Greg is repeatedly shown to master complex skills in a matter of hours. All of them are forgotten by the end of the episode.
 * In the two recent Milestone Celebration Tokusatsu shows (Kamen Rider Decade and Kaizoku Sentai Gokaiger), the protagonists have the ability to copy the forms and abilities of their precursors. Apparently knowledge comes with this as well; when the Gokaigers transform into the Dairangers or Gekirangers, for example, they bust out the super-powered Kung Fu for which those two teams are known.
 * In Stargate SGA, season 5, "The Prodigal," Michael and his hybrids are immediately able to use the Atlantis computer systems with ability similar to experts like McKay or Zelenka. When Michael was on Atlantis, he was never given the opportunity to learn how to use their computers, nor were any of his hybrids exposed to Atlantis' computers. It is not credible that they would be able to use the Atlantis computers to lock everyone out or to set a destruct, or even use them at all without some prior training in human and Atlantean computers.
 * In Stargate SG-1, "Prometheus Unbound" the enemy character, Vala Mal Doran, not only is able to take over the ship, which is not possible the way she did it, but she instantly knows how to use the Prometheus' computers and is able to lock Jackson out and to run the ship. This is not possible, as it's the enemy's first exposure to human technology. She wouldn't even be able to read English using the Latin alphabet, never having been exposed to it before. But she can run the computers like Steve Jobs? "Wow, a screen with many symbols that I can't read the language of and it's nothing like the computers I'm used to. I know exactly how to take over this ship." It doesn't work. It would be far worse than a 1990 Soviet vacuum tube computer user, suddenly trying to use a Macintosh. The only computers she had exposure to are Goa'uld computers, which are more advanced in technology, but far, far simpler to use than human computers would be, since human computers are not advanced enough to use voice technology for more than a few simple commands.
 * Star Trek can be prone to this.
 * Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Once Bashir is revealed to have received genetic engineering to massive enhance his intelligence beyond the human norm, he is increasingly prone to this trope to the extent of becoming a human Deus Ex Machina for various episodes, being a case of Suddenly Always New That and a Marty Stu.
 * Star Trek: Enterprise, In a Mirror Darkly, has four individuals who become instant experts on running a Starfleet vessel, the U.S.S. Defiant, 100 years more advanced than they are used to. They are able to get it up and running and into combat within ten minutes. This would be like naval officers in 1912 trying to run a 2012 nuclear-powered aircraft carrier. They might be able to navigate the carrier, but they would have no clue of what most of the systems on the carrier would be. Fission didn't exist back in 1912, nor did the electronics, nor did the weapons systems. It would take a week just to crack open the manuals and find out what the major systems did. Starting up the reactors and running them would be impossible without a knowlegeable crew. Learning the basics of arming and firing the weapons would take days. Ironically, Archer and company could easily do it if the timeline was anything like the original one that Roddenberry wanted (the 1980 book Star Trek Spaceflight Chronology is based on that timeline) as the technology of the Defiant would about roughly 20 years more advanced than what they were used to. The Baton Rouge Class of the STSC of 20 or so years before the Constitution Class is roughly the equivalent of the NX Enterprise (except it had shields but no phasers) but it would not be that much of a stretch for a Baton Rouge crew to start up and operate a Constitution Class like the U.S.S. Defiant in the manner shown in those few minutes.

Tabletop Games

 * GURPS has the advantage Wild Talent which is an odd version of this trope. A few times per game you can try absolutely any skill at better than default (a Medieval ascetic can try to program a superscience computer from ten thousand years in the future). For a few points extra this event provides enough experience to gain a level of skill.
 * Mind Mages from Mage: The Awakening are the kings of this trope (especially the powerful Mind mages, apprentices still exhibit this trope but to a lesser extent). They can, at any time, instantaneously learn any human skill, talent or knowledge. A Mind mage can become the master of kung fu, a virtuoso, a genius computer hacker or compete with a Nobel prize winner in his own field within seconds. Coupled with their ability to instantaneously alter their innate intellectual and social capabilities(becoming more intelligent, more charismatic etc.) and there's virtually no non-athletic human achievement they can't duplicate(and even if they can't be the absolute and utter pinnacle of physical achievement, often they can still be scarily good). If they combine that with Life magic - which allows for the raising of physical attributes - then there's virtually no mundane feat that they can't duplicate. This is a slightly contentious issue.
 * In Exalted, training in favoured or caste abilities takes no time. Spend the XP, and presto - instant competence.
 * Many Exalted (especially Solars) can also learn Charms that allow them to instruct others in record time.
 * One notorious goof in the first edition Autochthonian book's widely hated Locust War chapter had the Autochthonian invasion force become masters of ship-to-ship combat who neatly pwned the Realm Navy, despite it being only a few months since the first time they saw an ocean.
 * Since its creation, Dungeons & Dragons has allowed characters to instantly gain new skills, languages and even entire classes at level up.
 * Pointed out in this episode of Order of the Stick. With Elan deciding to multiclass as a bard/wizard.
 * Pathfinder has a clearer example. A character who raises their intelligence may gain new skills. Pathfinder, unlike some editions of Dungeons & Dragons, makes all bonuses for high scores retroactive, including skill points gained for a high intelligence. This means if a very powerful character raises their intelligence and gains skill points, they could dump them all into one skill and become one of the best in the world instantly.
 * In Changeling: The Lost, the titular changelings can use pledges to raise some types of skills or gain new ones at will, albeit temporarily. They can even use pledges to give other people those skills, and if the other person is a normal human, they can achieve even greater levels of expertise, up to a rating of five on a five point scale; supernaturals can only gain ratings up to three.
 * Members of VASCU in Hunter: The Vigil have a high-level power that enables them to temporarily become expert in a skill (or competent at a group of skills).
 * An explicit power of Tech Specialists in the Star Wars d20 RPG; the Instant Mastery class feature gives them proficiency in a new skill at certain levels, raising any skill they previously didn't have to 4th rank (the maximum a level 1 character can have).
 * In Aberrant, Mega-Intelligent Novas can take the "Mental Prodigy" enhancement, which makes them an instant expert in a particular intellectual field (be it science, engineering, medicine, investigation, finance, or something else), usually better at it than those who have trained in it all their lives. The sourcebook Brainwaves, which was only released unofficially after the line had already been cancelled, would have added the "Fast Learner" enhancement, which would have allowed the Mega-Intelligent to learn new skills faster (i.e., with less Experience Point expenditure) than other people.

Video Games

 * In Deus Ex, the player is allowed to train JC's various skills by using skill points gained at various points in the game. However, all that is needed to gain/upgrade a skill is the appropriate amount of skill points, and they can be learned at any time with immediate effect.
 * At least some justification in that JC already took extensive training in those skills at the UNATCO academy. And that in normal gameplay, he's practicing those skills all the time.
 * Celes from Final Fantasy VI is somehow able to not only pick up the ability to learn opera, but is also able to memorize an entire musical score in the space of an afternoon. She does it well enough to be a convincing facsimile of the famous opera singer she resembles, to boot. But damned if singing her Leitmotif isn't nifty.
 * She does only end up singing in Act I, before an unexpected interruption or two; and it would seem that she only had one big aria, a small piece of recitative and a couple dances. There's no reason that, coming from a cultured Empire, she couldn't have learned to act, sing, and dance in her upbringing - Kefka has some serious vocal projection abilities and a flair for the theatrical, and Gestahl proves a capable actor (or at least liar). And we have no real idea how popular that particular opera is; it may be all the rage in the Empire these days, so she might have prior knowledge of all the music. All that being said, of course, the woman is a general, not some opera floozy.
 * Dante from Devil May Cry seems to be able to use a new type of weapon just by picking it up, as well as gaining new moves just by paying for them. Some cases, however, can be partially Justified as an extension of normal abilities, like the bat-conjuring electric guitar/scythe Nevan, and the move-acquisition is handwaved by the existence of the Time God, who grants "the power of the ancient magic clans."
 * Vergil can do it too, so it's hand waved as just being something that Sparda's family is capable of doing. Nero, on the other hand, never gains different weapons from those he starts with- he simply gains new techniques.
 * Also note that, except for the weapons they start out with (and presumably have trained with for years), all of their Devil Arms are living weapons that have acknowledged them as their master. The weapons themselves could be contributing to their skills.
 * An explicit power of Mega Man, Bass, Mega Man X, and sometimes Proto Man, in their games. Falls under Powers as Programs.
 * All Navis in the Mega Man Battle Network series, in which powers really are programs.
 * Link displays this to the degree that fans argue that it might be a side-effect of the Triforce of Courage. No matter how odd a new item is, he instantly acquires the knowledge how to use them when he picks them up, despite the fact that he usually starts the games living a fairly normal life. It's more believable in The Legend of Zelda Twilight Princess, where he had Epona for a while and had a mentor teaching him a thing or two. Then again, the game also had some of the weirdest items in the series such as the Spinner (an apparently magical cog that can be used to ride on rails).
 * However, it is questionable if this is because of the Triforce: In The Legend of Zelda the Wind Waker, where he starts out without the Triforce of Courage (he gets it near the end of the game), Orca gives him his very first sword-lesson ever, because he reached the age of twelve - and comments on how amazingly good he already is for a beginner.
 * Ancestral memory?
 * In The Legend of Zelda Majoras Mask he demonstrates that he can also master new bodies. For instance, after getting a Goron body, he succeeds where the Goron hero failed, rescues all the Gorons, wins their races, and gets himself nominated as their new leader.
 * It's implied that knowledge and memories come with the transformation. Link couldn't read Goron before putting on that mask. Likewise with the Zoran alphabet.
 * In many MMORPGs, learning a new spell or ability is usually just a matter of shelling out the appropriate amount of cash. World of Warcraft averts it with weapon skills, which need to be trained to be effective (although any effect from equipping a weapon other than being able to whack things with it are instantly available when you learn the skill. Depending on the item, this can vary from improving spells to being able to open a portal to a specific location).
 * Well WoW removed the weapons skills fairly recently, playing this straight.
 * There is a Hand Wave in City of Heroes, in that you gain immediate benefits from leveling (increased HP), but in order to get new skills, you have to visit a trainer.
 * In Knights of the Old Republic, the main character picks up Jedi proficiency with a lightsaber and Force powers in a matter of weeks, where most Jedi apprentices take years. In this case it's almost entirely justified, as.
 * Knights of the Old Republic II actually makes this a plot point. You spend much of the game seeking out Jedi masters who teach you new force forms or lightsabers techniques, afterwards remarking in amazement that you're able to learn highly advanced techniques that should take you years to perfect in a matter of minutes. If you choose to attack the Jedi you find instead of gathering them, you go one better and can actually learn their techniques by watching their technique as you're in the process of killing them, which horrifies them.
 * Gordon Freeman, a theoretical physicist from MIT, came to work one day, and the place swarmed with aliens. Ever since he picked up a crowbar, he started kicking unfathomable amounts of ass, including use of every weapon he ever finds without even the slightest hint of natural inaccuracy. This is the guy who can hold and use a rocket launcher with both hands while climbing a ladder.
 * This is even lampshaded in one of Dr. Breen's broadcasts, chewing out the Combine Overwatch for their inability to capture or kill Gordon despite his lack of weapons or tactical training.
 * While still qualifying as this trope, it isn't as ridiculous as it sounds, as the optional training level for the first Half-Life has Gordon receiving firearms training in a hazard course, so he at least has some experience with them. It's when he proficiently uses things he's never even seen before (like the nuclear cannon or the alien weapon that fires hornets) that it becomes silly. It also makes Adrian Shephard from the Opposing Force expansion an example of this trope, as not even career soldiers receive training on operating a symbiotic insect that fires electricity or a larval alien used to launch spores.
 * Vagrant Story gives us Ashley Riot. Physically, he's an unstoppable powerhouse who gradually "remembers" techniques he once knew, and can use every weapon he finds. With the proper equipment, he can smith his own armor and weapons, even though some of the metals are explicitly described as not being found outside of Lea Monde. But the real kicker is that he can learn magic just by reading a tome. And after killing a Lich, Ashley learns to teleport by its spirit speaking to him. There is some implication that The Dark is awakening latent talents within Ashley, but that doesn't change the fact that Agent Riot has a steep learning curve.
 * In Prototype, Alex Mercer gains the knowledge of those he devours, giving him an easy two step process to becoming an instant expert: 1) find an expert who's spent the requisite years and years of training and practice, and 2) eat him. He uses it to learn how to use firearms, operate helicopters, and lots of other stuff a biologist wouldn't otherwise be able to do so well,.
 * In Star Wars: Dark Forces II: Jedi Knight, the protagonist (who had previously just been a first-person shooter hero for a game and three levels) is instantly and completely proficient with a lightsaber, having the exact skill level as he does at the end of the game, arguably better than all seven bosses at dueling. Then he goes on to gain powers at the Jedi Master (later "Jedi Lord") skill level after a few days or weeks at the most.
 * In Real Life, changing from one aircraft type to another requires at least some cross-training. In Ace Combat, Airforce Delta, Tom Clancy's HAWX and other flight sim-shooters, the player characters cancan jump between aircraft from any country in the world and have no problem controlling it flying it to its maximum capability and leaving a trail of smoking aircraft wreckage. Of course, this is partly excusable by Rule of Fun; Anyone remember flying school from Grand Theft Auto San Andreas?
 * This trope is almost ubiquitous in RPGs. You can rest assured that within the handful of days or weeks or months that make up the game's plotline, your utter weakling character who sets out to save the world with the clothes on his back and a pointy stick will reach the end as a nearly unstoppable engine of pain and death armed with an Infinity+1 Sword and capable of going toe-to-toe with nigh-Godlike entities. NPCs with many decades - or possibly centuries/millennia - more experience than you simply can't compete.
 * Done unusually in Morrowind and Oblivion. You can equip probably any type of weapon as soon as you find it, but you only become stronger with weapons and skills (including specific types of magic, such as destruction or restoration) that you actually use. The part about being able to outclass ancient NPCs still applies, though.
 * In Fallout 3, you can go from being a totally useless unskilled vault-dwelling teenager who has had some practice with a BB gun as a child, to being a complete badass after only a few weeks in the wasteland, mastering a range of extremely difficult skills and professions, such as:
 * Picking complicated locks and hacking military grade computer software like a professional security expert.
 * Performing complicated surgical procedures that should take years to learn for a medical degree.
 * Becoming an expert in the art of communication and negotiation, to the point where you can persuade almost anyone to do anything, and be such a master salesman that you can convince people to buy sand in the desert.
 * Learning to be as stealthy as an actual ninja, hiding in plain sight where you should easily be seen and being able to kill people in one blow with your bare hands if necessary.
 * Most importantly, being able to not only proficiently use any firearm you encounter, from a simple hunting rifle to a plasma gun, laser minigun, gauss rifle, or almosr any weapon you can imagine, but you also intimately understand how they work and how to cannibalize other weapons to keep them working in absolute perfect order.
 * Averted in the second Master of Orion game, where only telepathic races can immediately use captured ships.
 * This is actually part of the plot in Assassin's Creed II: the main character (Desmond Miles) is put in a machine called the Animus to relive the genetic memories of his assassin ancestor, Ezio, in the hopes that he'll gain Ezio's skills in a few days rather than years. Still used straight with Ezio himself, though: The various kinds of weapon-fighting might have been taught to him in the past, and the training under Paola and Mario is given the flavour of a Training Montage - made explicit in semi-novelisation Renaissance - but he takes to the Hidden Blade incredibly fast with no apparent reason for it.
 * Super Mario Bros. (and it's spinoffs). Mario doesn't apparently even need to train to suddenly learn new abilities once per game, master new power ups and items per game, and be good at every single sport he's tried in some way. In the RPG games like Paper Mario and Mario & Luigi, he can literally get a new item or ability one minute and have apparently completed mastered it the next.
 * Double subverted with the Bros. Attacks in Superstar Saga in that the powered up Advanced versions can only be learned after using the original a bunch of times (and a cutscene when they are unlocked where Mario thinks of the technique), but both the original and the Advanced are instantly mastered (provided you know the button combos) upon unlocking them.
 * Kirby. Despite just having copied a creature's ability, he's able to use it instantly without problems (unless certain abilities are problems themselves...I'm looking at you, Sleep Kirby). Plus, at least by anime Canon, Kirby is only an infant (which isn't farfetched, seeing him in-game).
 * In Company of Heroes, even though a battle hardened American Riflesquad can crew a German Pak-38 and know exactly how to use it, any combat experience they have as Riflemen is lost, and must be regained as an AT Crew.
 * Furthermore, is the American Veterancy System. For example, a Riflesquad takes about 18 kills to gain Vet 3 (the highest). A Vet 3 Riflesquad can outfight an Elite Stormtrooper squad fairly easily. So that's 3 kills per person, and suddenly they're more skilled than Germany's best.
 * In all of the Grand Theft Auto games the protagonist can learn how to use any weapon or vehicle from the moment they see it. The most ridiculous example is CJ from San Andreas, who can load and fire any weapon from an M1911 to an SA-7 Grail rocket missile launcher simply by picking it up, and goes through a few (videotaped) lessons to learn to fly any aircraft. The height of ridiculousness is "Vertical Bird", where he sneaks aboard an amphibious assault ship, eliminates about a dozen trained soldiers with either stealth or firepower, and hijacks a Harrier jumpjet to shoot down two other fighters and destroy several boats. Quite impressive for a two-bit gang member from the ghetto.
 * God bless the idiot proof Air Force.
 * Travis Touchdown from No More Heroes, who won a beam katana in an online auction and entered the assassination scene and entering the country's top 11 seemingly with no training in between.
 * Stocke from Radiant Historia, although it can be handwaved as him literally having all the time in the world to practice. Having a time travel mechanic at his disposal means his skill acquisition could only look instant to an outside observer.
 * In Skyrim, anyone willing to devote themselves to a lifetime of training can learn to use the reality warping language of the Dragons, the Thu'um. But only a Dragonborn like the protagonist can master Dragon Shouts instantly after reading the words and absorbing dragon souls. This is because the Dragonborn is a mortal with the soul of a Dragon.
 * Pointedly averted in Homeworld: Cataclysm. Whenever a new technology is researched, it's not applied instantly to all units but small craft have to be recalled into a hangar for refit and capital ships have to go offline for a short while as the crew installs the new equipment.
 * It gets even better with the Beast who can only aquire some technologies by capturing an enemy ship in possession of said tech; once the unit is captured, it must be brought into a hangar and disassembled before the tech is even available for research. What makes it an aversion? The Beast is a technoorganic subversion entity that otherwise plays this trope straight by growing upgrades in the field and presumably sharing instructions among their selves.
 * Dynasty Warriors: Online has each weapon contain the move-set of a character. The trope comes into play that one can copy that weapon's moveset from the original holder the moment they touch it, so they could go from welding a spike ball as big as them to knock enemies 50 feet in the air to using a fan with such grace they glide through enemies. While they do have practice it's very optional, but it is fun to do so you might not avoid it all together. The only real change his first charge attack in the combo and the 6th, but those vary from individual weapon to individual weapon, so two flutes might have a slightly different combo.

Web Comics

 * In The Inexplicable Adventures of Bob, peanut butter monsters reach physical maturity at the age of one month, and spend that time learning voraciously.
 * Parodied and played straight in this strip from The Order of the Stick.
 * Played straight in this strip, where Vaarsuvius casts a single spell on Belkar (the callous, bloodthirsty halfling) that unlocks his potential as a healer and enlightens him to a life of kindness. Luckily for the fans, the spell doesn't last.
 * In that case, though, the trope if not the attitude adjustment is justified; these are skills he should and technically does have, but he can't use them because he's using a suboptimal build for his class (like, way below par; even with his race and size bonuses, he's out-stealthed by Haley, a vanilla human rogue). V's spell gives him the capacity to do what he'd be able to do anyway if he had any interest at all in actually being good at his job.

Web Original

 * Played straight with annoying regularity in Survival of the Fittest. Many characters pick up their weapons and seem to immediately know everything about it, despite there being absolutely no (or only a tenuous) reason for their knowledge. Although instructions are provided this still does not fully justify this trope's presence. On the other hand, there are, admittedly, some characters who would have the knowhow due to prior experiences.
 * Invoked and parodied in Immersion when they decided to test how well two shapely martial artists would cope fighting in video game costumes. They erred on the side of shapely since it is quicker to learn martial arts than to improve your looks.
 * Chaka in the Whateley Universe has the power to manipulate chi instinctively without the sort of training that anyone else requires. When her powers manifest, she does the sort of thing that takes a master fifty years to learn by accident, in her judo class. In the ninja fight, she watches the leader do a really complicated chi technique that is supposed to allow a paralyzing strike, then blocks it and does it back to him, perfectly, the first time. Oh, and she paraphrases his attack name (Coiling Viper Fang Strike) as "Something something strike!"
 * Despite all this, she still needs to keep working on basics—so in a sense, she has to learn backwards.

Western Animation
"Ron: Since when do you know how to fly a spacecraft? Kim: Oh, I watched him on the way up. No big."
 * Kim Possible.
 * Say that to the poor car...
 * And the poor kitchen. But besides that...

"Fry: Have you even read the captain's handbook? Bender: (flips through entire manual) I have now. And what's Peter Parrot's first rule of captaining? Fry: (defeated) Always respect the chain-o-command...captain."
 * Katara from Avatar: The Last Airbender masters the art of Waterbending without explanation in three weeks, an act that normally takes a lifetime. On a lesser note, Aang as well, but he's supposed to.
 * Sokka also inexplicably learns to use the sword in a matter of a days. Not even Training from Hell would be able to give normal people any passable sword skills in that manner of time—and Sokka seems to spend just as much time doing calligraphy and feng shui as actual sword practice during said days.
 * In the interest of fairness, they had been training their skills casually since before they met Aang. Sokka was already proficient with his boomerang, club, spear (though it got broken right away), and machete at the start of the show.
 * It makes more sense that what Sokka picks up from Piandao is not so much proficient swordsmanship as it is adaptability when using a sword, even if you're not very good, because it's that which can make the difference. Something which as a non-bender Sokka was already aware of; he's at a clear disadvantage but survives because he's figured out how to get by when others rely on bending.
 * Averted by Korra in The Legend of Korra. While she can bend multiple elements years long before she's supposed to be able to, it still takes her fourteen years of intense training to master three of them. That amounts to a little over four and a half years per element. Once the series starts and she begins her airbending training, her progress is slow due to Air not being suited to her non-spiritual personality and confrontational attitude.
 * In Danny Phantom, Danny masters his ice power to a tee through extensive training in the same episode when he first received them. Especially notable in that it took both time and practice for him to be even reasonably proficient in his other abilites.
 * Toyed with in Megas XLR. The main character, Coop, is (usually) an expert at piloting his enormous mecha, Megas. However, this is only because he had specifically modified it to control just like the video games he'd been playing his whole life. When Kiva (an experienced pilot who was designated to pilot Megas before Coop modified it) attempted to pilot it, she could barely get it to go in the right direction.
 * Averted in The Real Ghostbusters when Janine tries using a proton pack for the first time.
 * In the Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers episode "Prehysterical Pet", an alien dinosaur learns English in just a few hours by reading Dale's comic books.
 * Starfire of Teen Titans can learn languages instantly just by kissing the speaker on the lips.
 * That's straight from the comics. Like in the show, she does this with Robin when she first arrives on Earth.
 * Lexington of Gargoyles, despite having only lived in the twentieth century for a matter of weeks, manages to build a motorcycle from spare parts and restore a crashed helicopter to functioning condition. He also pilots said helicopter, having practiced his skills by fiddling with a helicopter flight simulator game given to the clan by Elisa.
 * Frequently averted on Jackie Chan Adventures, which features a set of talismans that grant any of a variety of magical powers. Even the good guys don't always use them to their full potential (though of course they do so most often), especially if someone gets them to drop their talisman.
 * Occasionally subverted for comic relief. An excellent example is the super-speed talisman, which has been defeated at least twice by dodging to the side, leaving the overconfident user to smash face-first into a wall.
 * The Highdefdigest review for Iron Man: Armored Adventures likes how in the first episode Tony's still (realistically) getting the hang of the suit, but gripes about how by the second episode he's already an (almost-)Instant Expert at it: "It's unfortunate he's already a pro by the second episode, but it's still nice to have some bit of believability, if even brief."
 * Used in Futurama when Bender temporarily becomes captain of the Planet Express, much to Fry's annoyance. When Fry lambastes him and accuses him of not knowing the first thing about being a captain, Bender instantly reads the entire manual and then uses the info to chastise Fry. Justified by the fact that he's a robot.


 * My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic has the Cutie Pox, a disease that makes a pony an Instant Expert at anything they get a Cutie Mark of. The problem is that they can't stop doing and are stuck doing multiple actions at once without break.
 * Downplayed in the Elena Of Avalor episode "Shapeshifters". After using Esteban's potion to turn herself into a jaquin (that's a tiger with wings) she has some trouble adjusting, at first trying to stand up straight on two legs (Esteban tells her he had that same problem the first time he used it) and having a few unintended stumbles while flying. Having said that, she does manage to fly a lot better than one might expect.
 * In a Tom and Jerry cartoon, Tom teaches himself how to play the piano by doing five very easy keyboard exercises in a book. He's then able to play beautifully.

Real Life

 * There is a concept called "The Natural Athlete," where the knowledge, skill, and physical ability of an individual allows them to succeed at nearly any sport whether or not they have spent time training for the needs of the game. Just having a natural gift for hand-eye coordination is invaluable in shooting a basketball, being a fast runner with quick feet is useful in football, etc.