Contrasting Sequel Character

The tendency of long-lived franchises and Legacy Characters to get the protagonists of the newest installment to deliberately contrast, either in personality or appearance, to the characters in previous or concurrent installments.

Anime and Manga

 * The Digimon Franchise has a story of this. Just going with the anime, we have, in order: Taichi Yagami from Digimon Adventure, a hot blooded kid with an aptitude for lateral thinking; then Daisuke Motomiya from Digimon 02, idiot protagonist extraordinaire and a determinator to boot; then Takato Matsuda from Digimon Tamers, who is sweet, introverted, and a bit timid; then Takuya Kanbara fron Digimon Frontier, an extreme extrovert; then Masaru Daimon from Diginon Savers, whop is quite confrontational, and an anomaly on not having the trademark "googles look" of protagonists before and after him fitting the "more realistic" setting; Taiki Kudou, from Digimon Xross Wars, a talented tactician; Tagiru, from The Young Hunters Leaping Through Time arc/season of Xross Wars, an exitable biorderline Leroy Jenkins ; and Haru Shinkai, from Digimon Universe Applimonsters, an introverted bookworm.
 * Just every JoJo's Bizarre Adventure protagonist seems to deliberately the opposite personalities and motivations than the protagonist than preceded them.
 * Yu-Gi-Oh, big time.

Live-Action Television

 * Star Trek: This is the source of interminable "Kirk vs. Picard" (vs. Sisko vs. Janeway vs. Archer vs. Reboot!Kirk vs. Lorca vs...) debates.
 * The Power Rangers franchise, there's a new group that are different than their predecessors.
 * The Doctor and his/her companion(s) have this trope in spades; it's the reason the Nth Doctor exists.
 * The whole purpose of the Young Blades series focuses on a new next generation of musteekers, which consists of a Spanish poet, the original D'Artagan's son, a genius inventor, Jacqueline Roget, and a Spanish poet.

Myths and Legends

 * Classical Mythology has the current gods, like Zeus, Apollo, Hermas, and etc. has different personalities, appear human-like, and have powers that are different than the previous titans, which are more of giants or just inhuman appearing monsters.

Theater

 * In Harry Potter and The Cursed Child, the play focuses on Albus Potter and Scorpius Malfoy, who are both sorted into Slytherin, destroying the "Slytherins are evil" stereotype in the process. This is a huge contrast to the characters that appeared in the first seven Harry Potter books, who were sorted in their rival and ideologically opposite house, Griffindor.

Video Games

 * The Persona franchise, big time. The original main character was more or less an Heroic Mime; the Persona 2 duology has, in order of release, a troubled pessimistig young delinquent and a very genki and optimistic young woman; the protagonist of Persona 3 is a depressive youth who tries to keep to himself; the protagonist of Persona 4 is a way more social character who tries to uphold to justice, while the protagonist of Persona 5 has a delinquent backgoroud and authority issues.
 * The Assassin's Creed franchise, each of the protagonist has a whole different personality than the one from the previous game (save the Ezio trilogy). For example, Altaïr is a cold yet arrogant and silent, in contrast to Ezio who is a complete opposite. Just to name a few.