Papa Wolf/Comic Books

"Batman: You all know who I am. You know what I can do. But I'm holding a small child here. And if you make me do anything that could possibly endanger this baby... you will be very, very sorry. Forever."
 * Of course, being the nice guy and great hero he is, Superman obviously falls under this trope. Especially mess with Conner, Kara or his adopted son Chris and you'll be under a worse ass-beating than usual from Supes.
 * He's stood up to the U.S. government when they wanted to take Chris away. And there was that time when General Zod tries to slap Chris, and Supes catches his hand at the last second and crushes it.
 * Also, when Atlas looks over an unconscious Supergirl, who had just been shot by a Kill Sat, he makes a comment that implies that he's going to rape her. Superman's all "HELL NO!" and knocks him into the sky. Sure, Supes would save anyone from that, but Kara is practically his daughter.
 * Gary Hampton in The Astounding Wolf Man which is fitting because he's in a fact a werewolf. I pity anyone who attempts to harm his daughter.
 * In at least two alternate universes, Batman has broken or has been really close to breaking his Thou Shalt Not Kill vow when either his adoptive son/sidekick Robin or his protégé/also sidekick Batgirl are in trouble. There is one named The Nail where ; in that particular world, . Another was created when Jason Todd was killed; in this Alternate Universe,
 * It's not just the Alternate Universe Batmen that fall into this trope. In the regular universe, the only times Batman has come REALLY close to killing occur when any Robin/Batgirl/sidekick was threatened or killed. When Jason Todd was murdered, Batman struggled with the urge to kill the Joker (to the point where Superman showed up to help Batman stop himself from doing anything he might regret later), and the same occurred when Barbara was crippled by the same villain. Then when Black Mask tortured and killed Stephanie Brown a.k.a. Spoiler, Batman really tried to beat him to death, and was only stopped by Babs endangering herself on purpose. Finally, when Nightwing was almost killed by Alexander Luthor Jr. in Infinite Crisis, Batman grabbed a gun and was about to blow Luthor's brains out at point blank range.
 * It's kind of a known fact that if you want to grab Batman's attention the best thing to do is threaten the people he works with - especially Nightwing or Robin. It's the kind of thing the more deranged villains frequently do, e.g. Joker and Two-Face. Papa Bat knows the kids can take care of themselves, but that's not going to stop him from showing up and 'dealing' with whoever dares to harm his children.
 * There was also a story where Batman has to do a night of crimefighting while toting a baby around...


 * That story ends with the revelation that he was willing to risk revealing his identity in order to give the baby a chance at a normal life with his parents.
 * It goes back to his father, Dr. Thomas Wayne. The good Doctor was a classic example of The Stoic: in control of himself, logical and not given bouts of emotion. But one night at a Halloween party the Waynes attended (with Dr. Wayne dressed as Zorro and Little Bruce dressed as a skeleton), Lew Moxon needed Wayne's help with an injured man. Dr. Wayne agreed, sewed the man up and calmly informed Moxon that he was going to report the incident to the police the next day. And then, Moxon made an offhand threat against Martha and Bruce. Poor Moxon had no idea he'd just flipped Dr. Wayne's Berserk Button until Wayne decked him so hard his grandkids felt it while shouting, "YOU TOUCH MY FAMILY AND I'LL SEE YOU IN HELL!" It's an awesome case of In the Blood.
 * Goes so far with Thomas Wayne that in the Flashpoint storyline, HE becomes Batman after Bruce and Martha are killed in the mugging. Mind you, he's as good as Bruce at the job, but he's probably pushing sixty AT LEAST.

"Punisher: Tell the new guy to behave himself. [walks off] Old hooker: ...that was not my fuckin' fault."
 * Batman's fellow crime fighter and Mama Bear Black Canary's boyfriend Oliver Queen/Green Arrow isn't any different. When his son Connor was shot in the head, Ollie forced an arrow between Onomatopoeia's (the shooter) teeth, angrily asking why he tried to kill his kid and just a hair away from making shish-kebab out of his brain. He then decides he doesn't care why Onomatopoeia tried to kill Connor, and tells him that he will die if his son doesn't pull through, holding his bow in that position while the surgeons work. For 30 minutes. With a 200 lb. pull longbow. After giving blood. More recently, poor Connor was shot again (guy has no luck), fell into a coma, and was kidnapped from his hospital bed. Lord only knows what Ollie will do NOW to the ones responsible...
 * Recently, in the Cry for Justice mini-series, the villain Prometheus's plans managed to result in the maiming of Roy Harper and the death of Roy's daughter, Lian . This results, at the end of the book, in Green Arrow putting an arrow through Prometheus's brain via his forehead,.
 * Even one of the villainous rogues in Batman, Dr. Jonathan Crane aka Scarecrow, is implied to have tendencies of this. When an Alpha Bitch outright bullies a distraught girl who was one of his patients, he was apparently angered enough to exact revenge on the same Alpha Bitch and her friends by gassing them with the Fear Toxin.
 * In the premiere issue of The Batman Adventures, Jonathan Crane begins teaching again under an assumed name and grows to care for a bright young student under his tutelage. When she gets abused by a Jerk Jock, Professor Crane goes away, and Scarecrow comes back.
 * Bigby in Fables. Notably, he's an actual Papa Wolf, being the Big, Bad one.
 * His father the North Wind as well. After spending most of the series acting like a Jerkass God who never seemed to care much for Bigby
 * Rick Grimes in The Walking Dead will do almost anything to protect his son Carl.
 * When a couple of bandits attack them on the highway,
 * In The Punisher MAX series, during the arc "The Long, Cold Dark," Castle's vengeful nemesis Barracuda targets the Punisher by When Castle finds out, he is pissed, to say the least, and at one point he
 * Let's not forget the beginning of the comic, when Barracuda actually gets the drop on Castle and handcuffs him to a chair, then reveals . Frank goes into Unstoppable Rage and has to piece together the following events by examining his injuries in a hospital bed. (He snaps his wrist in a heartbeat to get out of the chair, lunges across the room and tears a chunk out of Barracuda's cheek with his teeth. If 'Cuda hadn't thrown him out the window, he would have torn him limb from limb.)
 * Another Punisher MAX moment. In the story arc "Mother Russia", Castle is charged to rescue a little girl from Russian bad guys (to put it brief: There's a big plot about germ warfare). Upon entering the complex where she is held and meeting her, he says "My name is Frank. If anyone else tries to be mean to you, I will be much, much meaner to them. I promise." Soon after, a skinny, half naked Asian super agent comes and kicks the crap out of Castle with the butt of an AK-47. In a daze, he sees the agent slap the girl. He gets up. The agent throws a kick. Castle grabs his ankle, twists and slams him against the floor, walls, and ceiling until the agent is a pulpy mess and twists his leg off "like a drumstick." Do not fuck with kids around Frank Castle.
 * Even then, the only reason he stops is because he's scaring the kid.
 * And yet another MAX moment. Castle is conversing with one of his hooker informants. He's glaring at a pimp, who's guarding over a young girl. He asks the hooker how old the girl is. She says she's about 13 and mentions drugs. Castle walks to the pimp, pulls him into an alley, and emerges from the alley alone.

"SHORYUKEN!"
 * "Kitchen Irish" features a Grandpapa Wolf in Napper French, a retired mob cleaner and the best of his kind. French was legendary for his ability to pull a "Houdini" on a body, to make it disappear completely off the face of the Earth. Irish gangster Maginty kidnaps Napper's grandson to force him to pull one last Houdini... on a live man. He has no choice but to comply, but near the end of the job, Maginty, for his own amusement, shows Napper's grandson what his grandfather had been doing, traumatizing the young child. So Napper decides to give Maginty a firsthand demonstration of how one pulls a Houdini....
 * And let's not forget, the whole reason the Punisher has embarked on his war against crime is one bad day in the park with his wife and kids...
 * The MAX arc "The Slavers" is another Papa Wolf moment for Frank. Encountering some human traffickers, Castle is so enraged with what these scum do to their victims, that by the end of the arc, he's shocked at what he has done. Including carving up one of the ringleaders, wrapping his intestines around a tree, and then waking the man up.
 * James Howlett aka Wolverine is very protective of Kitty Pryde and Jubilee. Too bad his relationship with his biological son Daken isn't nearly as good... since said son is a supervillain.
 * It's pretty much tradition for Wolverine to have a female Kid Sidekick Morality Pet whom he will fiercely protect. Deadpool actually exploits this at one time to pick a fight with him.


 * Even villains can fall under this trope. When Marvin and Wendy suffer their utterly ridiculous, cruel, and pointless death and maiming respectively at the jaws of a demonic Wonder Dog while working with the Teen Titans, their father is somewhat understandably pissed. Being a villain, he acts as a very dark Papa Wolf. His vengeful scheming has already claimed the life of . He's even gone so far as to  in the hopes that it could restore.
 * Nathaniel Christopher Summers aka Cable (pictured above, with Hope in his arms) is this nowadays and a rather good one too. Hard to believe he used to be an amoral Liefeld character.
 * Marv from Sin City is like this to the girls at Kadie's Bar, especially Nancy. Granted, it's due to his enormous chivalry, but given his age and the ages of most of the dancers, I say it counts. He mentions one moment when a frat boy roughed up Nancy, which hit his Berserk Button about hitting women in general, and he "straightened him out but good," mentioning that he maybe went a little too far (implying that the other guy didn't survive). There's also the short yarn "Silent Night," where Marv.
 * The corrupt police commissioner Liebowitz turns against the Wallenquist crime organization in "Hell and Back" after his Dragon The Colonel orders the assassin Mariah to break Liebowitz's son's arm to remind Liebowitz of the organization's power over him. Liebowitz responds by organizing a police raid on the organization's human trafficking operations. Then he personally blows The Colonel's brains out and orders his officers to "make a missing person out of the fucker."
 * Luke Cage, Hero for Hire: Norman Osborn learned the hard way to not endanger Luke Cage's girlfriend (now wife) Jessica and their (then unborn) daughter - Luke beat the tar out of him in public, not caring if his already revealed identity took a nosedive in regards to reputation.
 * Later, after Dark Reign, Cage's New Avengers took on Norman's new Dark Avengers. Norman was savvy enough to invoke this trope beforehand, knowing it would anger Cage into doing something impulsive (and make Norman appear to be defending himself from a Scary Black Man).
 * Spider-Man examples:
 * Peter has his moments in Spider-Girl. Sure, he may be retired and missing a leg, but you shouldn't mess with his kids.
 * Kaine also shows this trait from time to time when his "niece" is in danger. Must be genetic.
 * Pretty much every incarnation of Peter Parker has this to some extent.... Granted, most versions don't have children, but they all have a big blinking button somewhere in their psyche labeled 'someone hurt my loved ones', and the majority of the New York underworld can tell when some idiot has pressed it.
 * Hint: the reason the motor-mouthed superhero hasn't talked in the last sixty seconds is because he's using all his superior intellect and enhanced nerve conduction velocity (IE: ability to think faster than normal) to consider the merits of the 6,000 different ways he intends to hurt you.
 * There's also ASM #645. He's led to believe an infant he was trying to protect is killed. He then proceeds to go on a rampage. It's so bad, that some of his rogues gallery don't believe it...until he comes for them.
 * Also, Ben Parker, his deceased uncle; he was never a violent man, of course, but he was a retired MP in the U.S. Army, and at least one flashback story showed he would show this Trope if May or Peter were threatened.
 * Scandal Savage and Bane of Secret Six have something of a father-daughter relationship, with Scandal's biological father being... well, Vandal Savage and Bane being a Genius Bruiser when not on his venom, and it seems the one surefire way to get Bane to use said venom again is to put Scandal in danger, at which point anyone who happens to be in the way gets to experience what the Batman went through in Knightfall -- that is, a broken back.
 * The Marvel Universe Ares could, would, and has gone to war with The Heavens Themselves to protect his son, tearing his way through both Olympus and the Japanese heavens to save Alexander.
 * Thabian Polotsk from Gold Digger IS this trope: a super-strong werewolf gentle giant with two young children he would (and almost did) die for.
 * Adversely, Brendan, another werewolf, disdains his children to the point of homicidal hatred.
 * In a short Ultimate Marvel story arc focused on Remy Lebeau, aka Gambit, the mutant finds a recently orphaned girl who immediately clings to him. Resigning himself to looking after her until he can find somewhere permanent for her to stay, Remy quickly grows fond of her. Then Hammerhead, the one responsible for making the girl an orphan, kidnaps her to remove the witness to his crime. Cue completely awesome Roaring Rampage of Revenge to save her.
 * Apollo and Midnighter are like this with their adopted daughter Jenny (even though, being vastly more powerful than either of them, she can take care of herself pretty well). Midnighter deserves special mention, however, for being like this with all kids.
 * In The Mighty Thor, Volstagg is a big, cheerful, friendly fellow, always ready for a fight or a frolic. Harm, or even threaten, any of his children, biological or adopted, and he will come down on you like the wrath of the angry god he is.
 * Odin was willing to burn the entire world to ash if it meant he could avert
 * A rather twisted example would be Sinestro. Harm his daughter,, and you will have the wrath of the entire Sinestro Corps bearing down on you and your entire planet, as the learned. Of course, being Sinestro, this happens after he lets his daughter's boyfriend,, fail in a rescue attempt first just to show her how unworthy he is.
 * Reed Richards, along with his Mama Bear wife Sue Storm, of the Fantastic Four, especially given that both their children (Reality Warper Franklin and Child Prodigy Valerie) do have vast powers that make them desirable targets for just about every supervillain out there.
 * Ultimate Marvel Howard Stark. Who, for the occasion, had come prepared with a 26-man SWAT team and a team of paramedics, all of which he had (presumably illegally) bribed to do his personal work. "Exactly where is my boy, and how many people do we have to kill to get to him?"