Born Winner

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

The winner!!
The winner is born a winner!
He never will have to worry about his dinner!
He never will have to think about getting thinner!
‍'‍Cause he's a winner,
A Nature Boy,
A hero,
A hero in a story,
A story with a wonderful sequel:
Men are created unequal!!

Sam, Trouble in Tahiti

The Born Winner is a Badass. Of course they are; they were born that way. Born Winners are badasses because of what they are rather than what they do. They're Aliens among Puny Earthlings, demons among mortals, robots among meatbags, or a magic-user among Muggles. The Hero is usually the Born Winner; if there's a group of people besides "normal" humans, the main character will be one, or at least partially. If other's in the setting have superpowers, expect the Born Winner to have won the Superpower Lottery by comparison. If The Hero is a Born Winner, The Rival usually will be too. Usually, a mundane human will be part of the main character's True Companions and generally be able to hold their own at first, but as the Sorting Algorithm of Evil kicks in, expect them to be Overshadowed by Awesome or even Killed Off for Real in order to fuel the main character's Unstoppable Rage.

The heart of this trope is that a Born Winner is absurdly powerful because they were born that way, not because of anything they ever did. They have some innate trait that makes them awesome; no one lacking that trait can ever acquire it, any anyone without it is doomed to mediocrity. Done badly, it comes off as a cheap ploy to make the Born Winner seem more awesome by dropping the effectiveness of his companions to somewhere just above that of the Redshirt Army (and often has a This Loser Is You side effect, seeing as viewers would presumably identify more easily with the now-useless Badass Normal than the alien/demon/vampire/whatever Born Winner). When it's done well, it can be a compelling reason for why the main character is the Only One without relying on a blatant Because Destiny Says So.

Compare Puny Earthlings, where the earthlings are so puny that not even Training from Hell or a Charles Atlas Superpower lets them overcome it; they simply Can't Catch Up. Born Winners are a leading reason why Hard Work Hardly Works. They may or may not have been Born Lucky. Beware those who are Weak but Skilled, though...

Examples of Born Winner include:

Anime and Manga


Comic Books

  • Daywalker Blade: Born right after his mother was bitten by a vampire, he got superhuman strength and senses but isn't affected by sunlight. He counters his thirst for human blood with a serum, but whenever needed, there's some willing victim or pool of anonymous blood to regain his full potential.
  • Superman, particularly the Silver Age one.
  • Basically any of Marvel's mutants (although many of them have drawbacks). That said, most of them manifest as puberty superpowers.
  • Subverted in normalman who was the only person on the planet Levram without superpowers... but it might also be a double subversion in that he was ultimately destined to rule Levram as President and stuff...
  • Batman can be considered a subversion, as his prowess comes from intense training than any inborn power. That said, he was born into wealth and his extreme intelligence is definitely an inherited trait, so he's at least a partial example.
    • However, his characterization can also portray the downside to being a Born Winner. For example, people have stolen plans from him to allow them to take down the Justice League, and his perfect memory that helps make him the world's greatest detective also forces him to remember his parents' death with perfect clarity, which keeps the pain from fading at all.


Film


Literature

  • The Wheel of Time, I'm looking at you. Rand al'Thor is the umpteen millionth reincarnation of the hero who has saved the world (or destroyed it) since the beginning of time.
    • There are those who are basically explicitly Born Winners, the ta'veren, who are special in that they specifically do exert an influence on people and events around them.
    • Hell, Channelers period. Walking nukes in a medieval world.
  • In the Merchant Princes series by Charles Stross, the ability to travel between worlds is a recessive genetic trait.
  • The Sleepless in Nancy Kress's Biopunk story Beggars in Spain. Sleepless are genetically engineered to, well, not sleep, but this genemod ends up unlocking all sorts of other useful traits, such as increased mental stability, higher intellect, and (eventually) some sort of mad Healing Factor that essentially halts aging. Nobody knows what the upper limit of a Sleepless lifespan is (none of them ever undergo a natural death).
  • The Howard Foundation, from Robert A. Heinlein's Future History mythology, is a centuries-old breeding program, extending the human lifespan through genetics. There's no secret to it: you're born, and then you live for five hundred years or so. Of course, just try telling that to all those angry, envious short-timers...
  • Replica: the Designer Babies are ultimately meant to breed so they become a master race and take over the world.
  • A Certain Magical Index:
    • Gemstone espers are espers who were born with their powers, as opposed to having to have to develop one. An example would be Academy City's #7 Level 5 esper, Sogiita Gunha.
    • Saints, who are born able to draw on a portion of God's power, giving them incredible strength, speed and magical power. Valkyries are their Norse equivalent.
    • Fiamma of the Right was born with the Holy Right, which can defeat any opponent at any range, automatically intercepts anything that would attack him and counterattacks, lets him teleport, and many other things.
    • Played with in the case of Touma, who was born with Imagine Breaker. While it can negate any supernatural power, it also negates his luck, and he wasn't even aware he had it until moving to Academy City.


Live Action TV

  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer got 'lucky' and was born a Potential Slayer. Once her predecessor died, she got 'lucky' again and became The Slayer. which grants her amazing strength and reflexes. Of course, she didn't get her powers until she was 15. So really it's a Puberty Superpower.
    • At the end of the series, they manage to give all potential Slayers their full powers, so we get an entire army of Born Winners...
    • At least in this case, the Born Winner is not even remotely the most powerful person in the series. Looking at you, Willow...


Tabletop Games

  • In the RPG Exalted, the most powerful of the titular god-kings earn their magic powers through displays of badassery so incredible that the rulers of the heavens choose them as champions. However, the most numerous of the Exalted, the Dragon-Blooded, receive incredible magical powers for no reason other than that they were born with the blood for it.
    • And even the Celestial Exaltations favor those who already have an "important destiny", to cite the rulebook...to say nothing of the basic requirement to be lucky enough to attract the attention of a major deity at the right moment in the first place. The epic-level badassery that's basically expected of player characters just isn't something that mere mortals could possibly achieve on their own.


Theatre


Video Games

  • Too many games to list have you take the role of some sort of super soldier or half-human hybrid that is much more powerful than an ordinary citizen by genetics alone. You might even say that being a player controlled character can make most protagonists born winners - because they're controlled by you, even the badass normal variety of hero ends up being unimaginably more successful than other theoretically equal humans.
  • Several of the Servants of Fate Stay Night and Fate/Zero derive as much, if not more, of their power from popularity and the circumstances of their birth than having an impressive legend. Gilgamesh is perhaps the greatest example; he is two-thirds god and owner of all the Noble Phantasms in the world because of his status as the first hero, although his legend does contain several heroics.
  • The Gifted in Final Fantasy Tactics A2. It can actually end up as being Blessed with Suck, as some don't manage to master their power before it destroys them, and even the ones that survive usually end up outliving their non-Gifted friends.
  • Galen Marek/Starkiller from Star Wars: The Force Unleashed seems to have been born with his incredible power. As a toddler, Darth Vader was able to sense him and commented that he was far more powerful than Kento Marek, his own father, and Galen was able to steal Vader's lightsaber with telekinesis. In comparison, the ten-year-old Anakin Skywalker merely had enhanced reflexes.
  • Reimu Hakurei, main heroine of the Touhou series. Born into a position granting her immense spiritual power, hates anything like work, has canonically only ever lost one fight in her entire life.
  • Torn to shreds in Mass Effect 2 with Miranda and Grunt, both products of genetic engineering, and neither taking it well. Miranda angsts over having all her personal victories cheapened by her father's manipulation while her failures are all her own, and Grunt angsts over being born and bred to fight with the best of them, but never being given something to fight for.


Western Animation

  • The title character of Avatar: The Last Airbender was born into having the combined powers of dozens, if not hundreds, of bending predecessors. The Rival is notably not an example of this, and embraces it fully: he describes his sister as "born lucky" while he was "lucky to be born."
  • In Ben 10 Alien Force, the reason Gwen's Evil Counterpart Charmcaster gives for hating her is that she had to work hard to become such a powerful witch whereas Gwen was born partially made of magic and was able to grow strong easily. Gwen actually comes to really feel bad about this when she learns just WHY Charmcaster works to be a powerful witch...


Real Life?