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{{trope}}
[[File:
{{quote|'''Vlad Plasmius''': This can't be happening! You're an idiot! ''An idiot''!
'''Jack Fenton''': That may be, but I'm the idiot who beat ''you''.
|''[[Danny Phantom]]'', "The Million Dollar Ghost"}}
At first glance, he's [[The Fool]]. She's [[The Ditz]]. And no, it's not [[Obfuscating Stupidity]]
Most of the time.
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If you push the [[Berserk Button|right button]] at the right time, things will suddenly change. The goofy smile disappears. [[Glowing Eyes of Doom|Their eyes start glowing.]] An [[Battle Aura|aura of energy]] surrounds them. [[Chunky Updraft|Little pieces of rock start floating up from the ground.]] Alternately, they may simply display a sudden leap in speed, strength, martial skill and weapon use.
After the dust settles, however, they're right back to smiling goofily, tripping over their own feet, and just generally acting like the [[Plucky Comic Relief]]
Basically, the individual has access to [[Stock Super Powers|superpowers]] of some
Common triggers include a [[The Power of Friendship|friend]] or [[The Power of Love|loved one]] in danger (see [[Mama Bear]] and [[Papa Wolf]]), a [[Million
The main point, however, is not the powers, but the radical change in personality that comes with them. The character may ordinarily be harmless, maybe even a [[Technical Pacifist]], but when in [[Badass]] mode, there's no mercy.
Sometimes, this can end up as a full-blown [[Super
In most other cases, the character will gradually learn to control his
In a few cases, things will go bad. The [[Badass]] powers are required too often, and they gradually take their toll on a previously cheerful individual. Usually results in an [[Emo]] or, in the case of females, an [[Emotionless Girl]]. Invariably results in her friends wondering if [[Saving the World]] was really worth the price.
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The Japanese term for this is "dame elite" ("dame" meaning ''no good'').
If intentional, then it might be a case of [[Obfuscating Stupidity]] or [[Good Is Not Dumb]], or perhaps even the [[Eccentric Mentor]] in cases where the character is recognised and respected as a badass by those who know him but who seems idiotic to those who don't. If the body count they rack up is also not intentional, then we're dealing with [[Mike Nelson, Destroyer of Worlds]]
Will sometimes occur as a result of [[Giving the Sword
'''Please do not confuse this with''' [[Let's Get Dangerous]], which is when a seemingly ditzy or harmless character also demonstrates fighting skill, but ''without'' the change in personality and may not involve powers.
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[[Hidden Badass|Check out the index for sub-types of this trope.]]
{{examples|Examples:}}▼
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* In ''[[Highschool of the Dead]]'', Kohta Hirano at first seems like a typical fat, otaku nerd, but once the zombie apocalypse happens, he's quite deadly with firearms. In fact, his knowledge of how to use guns helps save people several times through the series.
* Keaton Taichi Hiiraga from ''[[Master Keaton]]''. At first glance he appears to be a bumbling part time lecturer with a keen interest in archeology. But he is actually an extremely competent ex-soldier with vast networks of important people (he is friends with a British prince!). When the situation calls he can even turns random items into deadly weapons or survival kit a la
* ''[[
* ''[[The Slayers]]'' anime: Gourry Gabriev is a swordsman with extremely poor memory (often forgetting whoever he and his companions fought in the past) and a bumbling idiot who can't grasp onto any explanation, but if he's provoked enough, or if anyone, namely [[Redheaded Hero|Lina]], is in danger, he becomes an utterly badass swordsman and pushes the [[Badass Normal]] creed as far as it can go.
* ''[[
** Narancia Ghirga in Part 5 is terribly immature, uneducated and has the attention span of a toddler. At least, until he or his group are threatened and he has to summon [[Fighting Spirit|Aerosmith]], then he turns into a merciless and fiercely determined killing machine.
* In ''[[
** The normally goofy Shinigami can be wonderfully Badass when the need arises. He reacts to Asura's resurrection by calmly inquiring how he is...and pointing out that, unfortunately the Kishin is "going to have to die again". A Shinigami Chop that smashes Asura to the ground from however high up he was is only the start of the ensuring fight.
** Recently, Patti has been revealed to be quite the skilled fighter when not acting as a Weapon for Kid. She takes down numerous opponents in hand-to-hand combat training, and is very...enthusiastic at a firing range.
** The Death Scythe Tezca Tlipoca initially seems clinically incapable of acting serious, and makes a fool of himself on a regular basis. {{spoiler|Then he fakes his own death, tracks someone halfway across the world, and holds his own against one of the more powerful villains.}}
** Spirit Albarn absolutely is everything he appears to be: womanizing, juvenile, and a miserable failure as both a husband and a father. It's just that he also happens to be one of the most powerful (arguably THE most powerful) Death Scythe in existence, the weapon of Lord Death himself, and one half of the DWMA's designated ass-kicking duo.
* In ''[[Soul Eater Not!]]'', Meme is introduced as a typical big-breasted [[The Ditz|ditz]] character. Then we find out that she can beat people up ''in her sleep.''
* Yuri in ''[[Kyo Kara Maoh
* ''[[Panty
** Also, Chuck is the [[Team Pet]] seemingly only capable of [[Pokémon
* ''[[Bastard!!]]'': A wild variation may well be Luche Len-Len, a sweet but somewhat dim child who can be "unlocked" and turned into the insanely super-powerful evil wizard Dark Schneider.
* ''[[
* Carrot Glace of ''[[Sorcerer Hunters]]'' is a scruffy, scrawny, lazy, largely single-minded [[Lovable Sex Maniac]]...who just happens to be not only basically immune to magic, but absorbs it to power his [[Involuntary Shapeshifting]] into various monster forms.
* Kenshin Himura of ''[[
** This change, unlike many series where a transformation usually comes as a surprise to those who witness it, is understood by the other characters from the start, since he was a legendary and merciless assassin 15 years ago.
** He's not [[The Fool]], it's [[Obfuscating Stupidity]]. Most of the time.
*** It is both this trope and [[Obfuscating Stupidity]]. Kenshin truly is a bumbling idiot by nature, but his Battousai mode is completely under his control and he can activate at will or even be in it full time if he wanted. He just prefers to be his bumbling idiot self.
* Vash the Stampede from ''[[
** This is what separates him from the [[Idiot Hero]], though a tap of his [[Berserk Button]] can make all the difference in his response, from a casual, accidental-seeming sidestep to [[Glowing Eyes of Doom|Glowy Eyes of Wrath]] [[Friend to All Living Things|foreshadowing vengeance]].
* ''[[
** Many of the benevolent main characters, including Goku, Gohan, etc. have displayed this trait (though they are not technically bumbling).
** Master Roshi. He's short, [[Older Than He Looks|old]], and is an [[Dirty Old Man|overly lustful pervert]]. Yet in ''[[
** The best example is Goku's great great grandson from the Dragon Ball GT movie, who didn't even know he had powers and wasn't aware of his actions while using them, as if they were a separate personality.
* ''[[
** When Naruto is fighting Zabuza's apprentice, Haku, [[Jerkass|Sasuke]] ends up getting beaten. As soon as his friend's life is threatened, Naruto's inner fox Emerges and the previously useless Naruto kicks Haku's ass. In fact, most of the Naruto cast has this, to a greater or lesser extent.
** Kakashi especially. When he first appears he appears to be somewhat slow witted and laid back. Turns out he's one of the most elite ninja the village has and is known by many elite ninja outside of the village.
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** Naruto just tends to be this at any time. He will be obsessed with ramen and will pull off stupid moves like a comic-relief, and he's still a ''genin''. However, if you threaten ''anyone'' he cares about (and I mean ''anyone''), he will show you why he is one of the most powerful ninjas in existence.
*** To be fair, he's still a ''genin'' not due to any form of stupidity, but because he spent three years training with Jiraiya in solitude while his friends were busy taking the Chunin exams.
* ''[[Baccano
* ''[[Pokémon (
** Except via tickle torture.
** For that matter, Ash himself in the earlier seasons. [[Idiot Hero]] to a tee, but every once in a while he [[Ass Pull
** Cilan. Sure, he's a former Gym Leader, but he sparkles and "tastes" Pokémon. But when Cabernet shows up to wreak revenge upon him, he utterly destroys her two Pokémon in battle without any significant damage to his Pokémon. He pretty much had Pansage toy with Sawsbuck for the whole match.
** Wobbuffet of [[Goldfish Poop Gang|Team Rocket]]. Time and again, he's proven to be as powerful as his game counterpart, if only Jessie knows how to use him properly. Most of the time, Wobbuffet is just the [[Plucky Comic Relief]].
*** Hell, at one point he successfully held back an attack from an ''[[Olympus Mons|Articuno]]''
* Abel Nightroad (Crusnik 02) from ''[[Trinity Blood]]'' may be a perfect example of this trope. It's hard to tell if its [[Obfuscating Stupidity|just an act]] or not.
* Monkey D. Luffy of ''[[
** Arguably, he is both at the same time, he is always super powerful, and he casually does super human feats, while acting like a moron. Which makes him incredibly badass.
** Give credit where credit is due: there's Luffy's predecessor [[The Obi
** Same goes for Admiral Kizaru.
** I think it's reasonable to say that about half of the show's cast fits in this category. If not more.
* Judai of ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh! GX]]'' is one of those few cases where "things went bad."
* Joey of ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!]]'' is frequently mellow if not just plain goofy, but tends to get incredibly serious when his friends are in danger.
** Not to mention that, in season zero, he shows moments of genius during some of the "games". Oh, and by the way, don't hurt his friends. He WILL [[Good Old Fisticuffs|break your face.]]
* Wolfgang Grimmer from ''[[Monster (
* Kid Muscle from ''[[Ultimate Muscle]]'', a champion wrestler trapped in the body of an abject coward. He's also [[The Ditz]], which doesn't help.
* Amano Ginji of ''[[
* Rushuna Tendou in ''[[Grenadier]]'' has a very ditzy, playful personality while being [[The Gunslinger|the best marksman in the known world]]. And did I mention all the [[Fan Service]] she's ''the'' source of?
{{quote|
* Train Heartnet of ''[[Black Cat (
* [[The Ditz]]/[[Cloudcuckoolander]] Dita proves to be this when she breaks out her [[Determinator]] qualities in the first season finale of ''[[Vandread]]''.
* Having lived through death in his youth due to an accident, Tohno Shiki of ''[[Tsukihime]]'' appreciates life in general and tries to enjoy it as much as possible. That said, when threatened, he instinctively draws on his Nanaya abilities, which when combined with his [[Cursed
** For that matter, a ''lot'' of people in ''[[Tsukihime]]'' show this: Arc speaks and acts like a spoiled child, spends more time smiling and cheering than anything else, and is generally a really pleasant girl to be around ([[Weirdness Magnet|if you don't mind getting into trouble]])...but [[Laser Guided Tykebomb|when faced with Apostles she reveals her true nature as the single most badass vampire in the world]]. Ciel is more the [[Obfuscating Stupidity]] type, but it's still significantly upsetting how one can be a pleasant, curry-obsessed high school student by day and a ruthless Church Assassin by night.
* When Mic Sounders XIII of ''[[
* ''[[Ranma
** Ryōga at least is the main character's [[The Rival|rival]], and as such has to be just slightly weaker than him. Being slightly weaker than the main character pretty much requires that he be stronger than everyone else, he is portrayed as enormously strong and makes the [[Made of Iron]] characters look to be [[Made of Plasticine]]. Of course, Ryōga IS a bit of an idiot and a rather nice guy when not being overly paranoid, so this might still qualify.
*** It is generally thought by fans that Ryōga is physically stronger than Ranma (though the manga does not explicitly show this, it is possible that Ranma just has better control of his strength than Ryoga does), however Ranma is faster, better trained, and better at working out how to overcome any given opponent.
** Also from ''[[Ranma
** Happosai also qualifies. Most of the time he's just a [[Jerkass]] [[Dirty Old Man]] who makes life miserable for everyone by his petty acts. However, he is also the most powerful character in the series capable of defeating both Ranma and Cologne with ease. Fortunately, he rarely gets really dangerous, [[Weaksauce Weakness|and can be quickly distracted and taken out by throwing womens underwear in his direction.]]
* Probably the biggest
** Given the series' comedy origins, a lot of the characters have an element of this, especially Takeshi Yamamoto and Ryohei Sasagawa.
** Also Lambo. Idiot as a kid, still an idiot TYL but badass 20YL.
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** And then of course we have Maes Hughes, who is usually a [[The Ditz|ditz]] who obsesses over his family at every possible moment, until we find out that he's really a [[Badass]] [[Knife Nut]] who has [[Obfuscating Stupidity]] and figures stuff out way before anyone else.
*** Like, maybe {{spoiler|the entire plotline for the second half of the series? About twenty episodes before there's even a clue?}} Of, course, this is also an example of {{spoiler|[[Too Cool to Live]], because, well, he's [[Too Cool to Live]]}}.
** Ling Yao is introduced as a [[Funny Foreigner]] who constantly collapses in the streets out of hunger, weasels his way into getting a free meal, jokes around, and sends his bodyguards to do his fighting while he runs away. It isn't too long before the audience learns he's an excellent fighter himself, has strong beliefs, and is very driven by his goals. Of course, very early on there were hints that there was much more to him that meets the eye, particularly due to any time he opened his [[Eyes Always Shut|often shut eyes]].
* Nyu/Lucy in ''[[Elfen Lied]]'' has this in the form of a [[Split Personality]], triggered through trauma or imminent danger. Nyu is [[Cute Mute|cute, affectionate, and utterly harmless]]
** Well, that's more of a Crouching [[The Woobie|Woobie]] Hidden [[Complete Monster|Monster]].
* Teletha Testarossa, a [[Genius Ditz]] teenage commander from ''[[Full Metal Panic!]]'', despite usually being [[Dojikko|clumsy and tripping over her own feet]], when her subordinates are put in danger, can even recapture a submarine from a freak terrorist group. Also, her claims about not be able to use guns, turn out to be false at these moments.
** As a humorous example, she's capable of holding her breath underwater longer than her bodyguard Sōsuke realizes, considering her below-average performance in other athletic areas. She has to rescue ''him'' from drowning (and tries to smuggle in a [[Kiss of Life]] under Kaname's jealous eye) when he panics and dives in after her.
* Shinji Ikari from ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion]]'' has an unique ability to go berserk in his [[Humongous Mecha]] when having received enough mental pain. He transforms then into an enemy-killing war machine
** {{spoiler|Though really how much of this is actually Shinji and how much is the Eva itself taking over is somewhat debatable. Certainly the most badass moments (such as Shinji's first battle) are all Yui-sama.}}
*** [[Neon Genesis Evangelion
** I think {{spoiler|diving in magma in an unprotected Eva or knifing an Angel with guts torn open}} still qualifies him - no Yui-sama there.
** What? No taking on Zeruel siglehandly and almost winning, even with only one arm? He was only stopped that time because the power went down. Besides, if At-Fields are true to series cannon, they are generated from the pilots (or dummy plugs). Guess what makes berserk EVA 01 undamageable.
** Misato Katsuragi qualifies, as well. At home, she's a slovenly [[Bottle Fairy]], but on the job, she's an extremely daring and competent strategist.
* ''[[Bleach]]'' Orihime is an unaggressive [[Cloudcuckoolander]], but when someone she cares about is seriously threatened and no one else can do the job she uses her powers to scarily strong effect. A good example occurs when she and Ishida have first entered Soul Society. They decide to blend in and disguise themselves as shinigami. Ishida is just about to come up with a plan when Orihime simply dives out of hiding, beats up two shinigami with her ''black belt-level karate skills'' and promptly reverts right back to passive [[Cloudcuckoolander]] mode, leaving Ishida in a state of shock over what he'd just witnessed.
** The vast majority of the time, Nel is a weird, annoying, and frankly stupid toddler. However, when Nnoitra almost kills ichigo, she {{spoiler|reveals herself as the former 3rd Espada, and [[Bleach
** This also applies for Nel's friends {{spoiler|(and fraccion)}} Pesche and Dondochakka. They act ridiculous most of the time, but when Nel needs their help {{spoiler|they nearly defeat the 8th Espada to reach her. Szayel admits they would have succeeded if they had fought him seriously from the beginning.}}
** Wonderweiss Margera is a [[Cloudcuckoolander]] at very best. Then he's revealed as being capable of rescuing the top three espada from their captain opponents and even Aizen from Yamamoto's prison and so completely outspeeding Ukitake he one-hits him {{spoiler|before then being revealed as the one thing capable of sealing the strongest zanpakutou in existence, Yamamoto's sword.}}
** Isshin is the [[Bumbling Dad]] for most of the first half of the series. Then we learn he's a [[Retired Badass|captain-class shinigami]] when he kills Arrancar Grand Fisher in [[Curb Stomp Battle|one blow]], to [[
** Urahara was introduced in this manner. A sweet-shop owner who had weird knowledge of spiritual things, a bizarre sense of humour and who appeared to be a [[Cloudcuckoolander]] at best and an [[Eccentric Mentor]] who favoured [[Training
* The ''[[
* Shiro from ''[[Deadman Wonderland]]'' initially appears to be an unpowered albino [[Teen Titans (
** {{spoiler|Which makes sense when Shiro turns out to be the one and only, Wretched Egg}}
* Shinkuro from ''[[
* ''[[Martian Successor Nadesico]]'' has Yurika Misumaru who is, ninety percent of the time, a hopelessly naive, [[The Ditz|ditzy]] [[Love Freak]] with some [[Clingy Jealous Girl|serious denial issues]] Put her at the command of a battleship however, and she's a [[Genius Ditz|fleet-destroying tactical mastermind]]...[[Idiot Ball|sometimes]]. Then there's her [[She Is Not My Girlfriend|boyfriend]], who's [[Expy|pretty much]] Shinji (above) except on the appropriate medication.
* Nathan Mahler from ''[[Blood
** {{spoiler|And he's the only one still standing ''after'' Saya rips him in two...}}
* The main character of ''[[Hades Project Zeorymer]]'', Masato, is mostly just an angsty teenage boy, who's still trying to wrap his head around how he went from being an [[Ordinary High School Student]] to piloting a [[Humongous Mecha]]. He doesn't want to hurt anybody, not even his
{{quote|
'''Masato:''' To hell with them! Let THEM worry about the civvies and trip themselves up! }}
** Though like Yugi above, it's actually a [[Super
* Highly similar to Takashi Kawamura from ''[[The Prince of Tennis]]'', is Ippo Makunouchi from ''[[Hajime no Ippo]]''. Generally, he's a shy, awkward, overly-polite mama's boy...but once he steps into the boxing-ring, he becomes an intense and unstoppable fighter with a Dynamite Punch that can shatter bones, and an invincible stamina that allows him to keep coming back no matter how many times he's knocked down. It's not uncommon for people who've seen him in the ring, to completely fail to recognize him outside of it. Several times, this has worked to his advantage, since any opponent who've met him outside the ring is bound to underestimate the level of brutality he can unleash inside of it.
* Goku from ''[[Saiyuki]]'' can turn from kid who only thinks about food and fighting to a rampaging, unstoppable demon when his limiter is broken. Usually breaks if [[Ho Yay|Sanzo is in trouble]]. Basically, he's [[
** It's also been revealed by new sidestory series ''Ibun'' that Sanzo's master Koumyou Sanzo was considered a big-time [[Cloudcuckoolander]] as a novice. The only reason people are ''less'' likely to think this when he is older is because he's immediately recognizable as a Sanzo priest and has TWO scriptures, which is sorta a declaration of badass, and Zen koans are pretty out-there to begin with "so maybe he's just THAT Enlightened that we can't understand a thing he's saying". Ukoku says flat-out at one point that he can't tell if Koumyou is a genius or a complete moron (Koumyou replies "I get that a lot.") His disciple Kouryuu (aka, the MAIN CHARACTER) seems to have made his goal in life to curb the moron tendencies. Until his goal in life becomes avenging his master's death, but that's another story (the main one).
* In ''[[World Destruction]]'' (which is also a video game and manga), Kyrie is [[The Fool|utterly hopeless and useless male protagonist]], who pretty much ends up doing nothing useful for almost the entire series. Then, in one [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|magical moment]], {{spoiler|he activates his Destruct Code powers and begins disintegrating everyone into sand. Oh, and he can fly.}}
* Matsuda of ''[[
** Also Ryuk. For all his lovable goofball portrayal, we get a reminder of his status as a Death God at the end of the series, when {{spoiler|he murders Light without a second thought for having used up his entertainment value}}.
* Pai in ''[[
* Gintoki from ''[[
** Gintoki is especially [[Badass]] in the serious story arcs, battling everything from {{spoiler|alien space pirates, a crazed swordsman possessed by a demonic sword, and an alien crime lord from one of the strongest races in the galaxy}}, just to name a few.
** Katsura from the same series is similar. Although he now spends more time making a fool out of himself by taking himself too seriously and [[Clark Kenting|frequently appearing in public with terrible disguises]], he had once been a formidable warrior who kicked major ass when he fought alongside {{spoiler|Gintoki, Takasugi, and Sakamoto}} during the failed uprising against the Amanto aliens. He becomes a complete [[Badass]] when it becomes necessary to protect someone that he cares about, as seen when he (in an awesome [[Big Damn Heroes]] entrance) {{spoiler|saves Ikumatsu (a woman who owns a noodle shop and sheltered him when the police were after him earlier) from being kidnapped by charging through a police blockade on a scooter and taking out her kidnappers using bowls of fried rice, all the while a policeman is shooting at him with a bazooka}}. In the Benizakura Arc, he specifically says that he is fighting against {{spoiler|former schoolmate and brother-in-arms}} [[Nietzsche Wannabe|Takasugi]] and Takasugi's allies because there are too many people whom he cares about in Edo to let the villains carry out their plot.
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* On the Kinda Sorta Maybe Hero side (a.k.a. ''[[Gundam Wing]]''), there's Une. Her [[Alter Ego]] is even more of a pacifist and stooge of Oz (and her military side) than "Queen" Relena turned out to be, despite being a good enough arguer to seriously talk down the most distrusting of souls. As for the Oz side of Une, this is the woman who cold-bloodedly assassinated Relena's foster father (Ambassador Dorlian) and pushed a no longer useful tool of a man out the back of an airplane, shooting him as he fell. It's no wonder she was semi-suicidal on the integration of those personas, the death of Trieze aside.
* ''[[Mahou Sensei Negima]]'':
** The Baka Rangers are probably some of the biggest [[Badass
** [[Obfuscating Stupidity|Jack Rakan]], though he is ''always'' badass. I pity the poor fool who thinks that they can outsmart him easily.
* ''[[Axis Powers Hetalia]]'':
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**** Which is great and awesome to see but is nothing less than we might have expected of him, considering he lifted and (spun around) a buffaloo already when he was a kid. He later grows up to drag England's car behind himself just to ask England if he can borrow said car, and that might still be before he is explicitly stated to have begun actually WORKING OUT, with his strength then reaching "over nine thousand" instead of "up to eleven" levels.
* Nina of ''[[Ultra Maniac]]''. In the manga, her cat Leo is attacked by {{spoiler|Sayaka}} and she blasts a huge hole in the ceiling of the gym with her magic.
* In ''[[Galaxy Angel (
* Yoh Asakura from ''[[Shaman King]]''. He pretty much sits around in his pot leaf t-shirt fondling oranges and listening to Bob CDs but then turns into a badass when people threaten people he wants to protect.
** Lyserg Diethiel to an extent too except it's more of a case of crouching emo hidden badass. Most of the time he's just a little whiner who sits around saying how he needs strong friends but he actually owns a few people in battle.
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** Asakura Mikihisa. He's the goofball dad who just wears a wooden mask and comes from a family of traditional Japanese shamans. Who is also the biological father of Yoh and the current incarnation of Hao. Who also sometimes shows up only in his underwear and gets frequently called a "Pervert" or "Freak", enjoys climbing mountains for training and is apparently handy with a barbecue set. And then the the Hana-gumi tried to kill the Golem kids he was playing guardian for.
* Usagi from ''[[Sailor Moon]]''. She spends a good portion of the anime bitching about how she doesn't want to be Sailor Moon and shrieking at the top of her lungs whenever confronted with a problem. And acting incredibly stupid. But in the end she still beats Queen Beryl and protects Earth!
** That's because she is [[This Loser Is You|the embodiment AND exaggeration of a normal girl's flaws]], and also since ''every'' time she awakens to her powers fully, [[Blessed
{{quote|
* ''[[Gate Keepers]]'' had that woman whose only job is to provide fanservice. Then she pulls out her bazooka in the final episode.
* Queen Horn of ''[[Violinist of Hameln]]'' usually acts like a ditzy [[Cloudcuckoolander]], but when she gets serious, she gets ''DEAD'' serious.
* A mild example is Holi in ''[[Transformers Victory]]''. In the first few episodes, he's portrayed as naive and childlike, but when the rest of the Rescue Patrol Team arrives, he turns out to be a very competent commander in his own right.
* Kukubara from ''[[Defense Devil]]''. Normally portrayed as a complete idiot who couldn't hurt a fly if he wanted, he unleashes his true powers upon proving his client's innocence and generally kills whoever his opponent is in a single attack. {{spoiler|Admittedly, it is later mentioned that he was once one of the most powerful Devils in their world - but was kicked out for being too kind to innocent people instead of simply dragging them to Hell.}} His sidekick, Bichiura, is another example of this.
* Apachai of ''[[Kenichi:
* Ruby from the ''[[
* In ''[[
** Well, she's still incompetent. I don't think having Void magic makes it so you can't use the others. She still sucks at those, and her Void magic doesn't always work, either.
*** Actually in the novels it is explained that Void magic makes using other spells hard until you cast a Void spell for the first time, Louise is even shown using several common spells such as 'lock' on a few occasions with no problems.
*** And her Void magic depends on her willpower; sure since she has quite the inferiority complex that means she can screw it up quite easily, but that doesn't mean she can't do pretty badass things when she has to; like in Volume 11 of the novels where after receiving the proper [[Berserk Button|'motivation']] thanks to Tabitha {{spoiler|She destroyed a giant gollem that absorbed magic by overloading with just one explosion spell.}}
* Patrick Colasour from ''[[Mobile Suit Gundam 00]]'' (in the later part of Season 2).
* In ''[[
** Oh, he's definitely [[Badass]]. When Ciel's attacked in the current 'closed room murder mystery' arc, Tanaka appears out of nowhere to slam the guy into the ground without breaking a sweat.
** And as of the latest story arc, {{spoiler|Lizzy and Undertaker}} - two morons who have been around since Volume one - have proven themselves to be complete badasses given the [[Berserk Button|right conditions.]]. So as a warning, {{spoiler|never threaten Ciel's life in front of Lizzy}} nor {{spoiler|attempt to kill a person who has made Undertaker laugh for five consecutive pages}} or they will rip you a new one while Ciel and Sebastian watch in [[Stunned Silence]].
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* Age in ''[[Heroic Age]]'' is ordinarily a curious and kindhearted boy who really wants nothing more than to just be friends with anyone, but when the time comes for him to go into battle on behalf of the Iron Tribe (humans), and especially the [[Cool Ship|Argonaut]], [[Person of Mass Destruction|he is truly a force to be reckoned with.]]
* Joe from ''[[Viewtiful Joe]]'' is a selfish, idiotic and lazy slacker, but whenever Silvia or Junior are in danger, he kicks some serious ass.
* Tadao Yokoshima from ''[[
* Roberta from ''[[Black Lagoon]]'' isn't very good at being a housemaid, but when her young master is kidnapped, she [[Battle Butler|travels halfway around the world to find him, putting bullets into anyone foolish enough to stand in her way.]] Seems she was a revolutionary known as "The Hunting Dog of Floencia" before going into hiding as a housekeeper.
** And then we have her protégé...
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* Fai D. Flourite from [[Tsubasa Chronicle]]. Comes off as a total, overjoyful, optimistic and somewhat annoying idiot. Seemingly useless without magic. However, when a battle arises and the kids are in danger, he has shown that he has great physical skills and staff skills. Though, sometimes that goofy air is about him in battle, just to piss off Kurogane. Bad ass none the less.
** I find Fai to be more [[Obfuscating Stupidity]], as he's not ''really'' an idiot, he just plays one. He's repeatedly shown to be incredibly insightful, such as when it is revealed that he knew {{spoiler|Syaoran wasn't human all along}} as well as recognizing {{spoiler|that Yuuko was on a separate plane when he and the the other three first met her at the shop.}} He's also very good at lying and manipulating people, to the point where {{spoiler|he was a double agent for most of the series and only Yuuko knew it}}. Playing the fool simply prevents awkward questions about his past from being asked, shielding his competency from unneeded scrutiny. Also, it annoys the hell out of Kurogane.
* ''[[Fairy Tail]]'' gives us [[Playing
** Also Lucy to certain extent.
* In ''[[Demon Diary]]'', Raenef Demon-Lord-in-training is a hopeless idiot who can't remember his lessons and is scared of his own magic. But if you get him scared, angry or upset you will suddenly realise that there is a very very good reason why he's the successor of one of the most powerful demon lords who ever existed. Same goes for Chris. He's an egocentric idiot who can't remember an incantation. However, he draws his powers from a ''god''.
* Any of the main characters of the manga ''Category Freaks''. They may lay around, be lazy, be klutzes, be sex-crazed, have issues with self-esteem, or have the mind of a child...but don't piss ''any'' of them off. If you get entangled with just one, you'll probably end up dead. You don't want to see what will happen when you get the entire group involved.
* ''[[Diebuster]]'': Nono is happy, friendly and goofy most of the time. When she "stops" being happy, friendly and goofy, {{spoiler|[[Earthshattering Kaboom|property values on Titan start falling in a hurry.
* Mikado Ryugamine of ''[[Durarara!!]]'' is a shy and meek [[Naive Newcomer]] who gets overshadowed by his [[Keet]] best friend. He spends the first several episodes poking around and asking questions about the Dollars, a large and mysterious gang in the area. But when push comes to shove, Mikado reveals that he's got a few secrets up his sleeve: namely, that {{spoiler|''he is'' the leader of the Dollars.}}
** Kida Masaomi and Sonohara Anri also counts. Kida's the playboy who simply knows his way around Ikebukuro - and it's most eccentric inhabitants - really, really well. Anri's the quiet [[Meganekko]] who has a nice rack and is the victim of sexual harassment by a teacher, who is worried about a missing "friend". It turns out that {{spoiler|Kida is the founder and former leader of the Koukinzoku, until it got too violent for him, and Anri is the true user of the Demon Sword Saika}}.
** Shizuo Heiwajima is also a case. Most people's first impression he's a thin, quiet, unassuming young man whose only noticeable quirk appears to be the inexplicable tendency to dress, as noted by some, "like some kind of nineteenth-century nightclub pimp." This impression typically lasts all of five minutes before [[Hair
** Walker Yumasaki and Erika Kurosawa. A couple of wacky, out-of-touch-with-reality fun loving otakus, who spend their days making doujinshi and cosplay and visiting conventions. {{spoiler|They are both psychotic [[Torture Technicians]] infamous for their extremely creative (and unbelievably horrible) ''manga themed practices'', and when they want to be, they can be badass heroes all on their own. With molotov cocktails.}} Other then that, they really are possibly the two friendliest guys you are likely to meet in the crazy hellhole that is Naritaverse Ikebukuro.
* Played around with in ''[[Samurai Deeper Kyo]]''. Kyoshiro seems to have this going on, being a kindly [[Lovable Coward]] and perverted medicine seller with Kyo as a [[Super
** While Benitora really IS a idiot who is head over heels for Yuya. He doesn't really want to become the {{spoiler|Shogun}} like his Dad wants him to. (Yukimura is probably more Obfuscating Stupidity than this trope, though.)
** Bontenmaru is a [[Boisterous Bruiser]] and only came to the Forest because he heard that a group of [[Hot Amazon
** Really, all of the Shiseiten fits this trope - except probably Akira.
* The entire premise of ''[[Rune Soldier]]''. The better part of the show is about priestess Melissa who has been given a mission by her god to support apprentice mage Louie to become a "Valiant Champion", for which he seems to be completely unfit. Instead of using his magic in combat, he rather punches monster in the face with his fists and when told to use his magic wand, he breaks it by whacking it over a monsters head. But with Melissa's guidance and combat training by Genie, he becomes a much better fighter and shows to be a genuinely good person who never gives up helping people in need.
* Remember Touka from ''[[Saki (
* Badou Nails from ''[[DOGS Bullets and Carnage]]'' is a textbook example of this trope. He's an idiot, he's a coward, he'd rather run like hell from you than actually stand up to you...until you [[Berserk Button|take his cigarettes away]]. At that point the MAC-10s come out and your best course of action is to get the hell out of range, and fast.
* ''[[Kaiji]]'': in the series of the same name. In the first episode he's so paranoid that he reveals that he committed a crime the affected didn't even suspected him from, in the second episode he gets raped in the ass and even needed someone to explain to him what happened, midway through the series he's betrayed (twice) by a fat asshole, but then he gets into serious mode and gets revenge on everyone, he once went as far as to {{spoiler|cut off his own ear}} to fool his opponent into believing that he was calm because {{spoiler|He had device that monitored his cardiac rhythm which gave info to said opponent}} and thus making wrong decisions which led into his victory {{spoiler|Then he returns to retard mode and loses everything}}.
* In the manhwa ''[[Dorothy of Oz (
* Rio from ''[[Spiral]]'' is a cutesy [[Dojikko]] who loves melons and cute things, but is [[Fear of Thunder|scared of thunder]]. Cross her, however, and she'll reveal her true self, as one of the 'Blade Children' - a ruthless, calculating murderess with a degree in [[Magnificent Bastard
* ''[[
** While not as [[Badass]] as some, Fumi has proven herself to be extremely capable in certain subjects, her first appearance has her doing a complicated math problem in her head, but nearly overshadows Isumi when it comes to [[Cloudcuckoolander]] status in other departments. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem like she'd be a badass [[Student Council President]]
** Isumi is also a [[Cloudcuckoolander]], plus she has [[No Sense of Direction]], but give her a demon to clean up, and she's one of the most powerful spiritual fighters in generations and is actually called out by a chapter title and a powerful character herself to possibly be the most powerful character in the story.
* Sakura Kinomoto/Avalon of ''[[
* Keroro from ''[[Keroro Gunsou]]''. He may act like an idiot most of the time but God help you if you [[Berserk Button|touch his Gundam...]]
** Or if his surrounding air is hydrated as strong as on his home planet, which is how he got to be General in the first place: heartlessness and efficient. But then the Nyoro creatures come from the sky to [[Not What It Sounds Like|suck him dry]], [[Status Quo Is God|cancelling out his effectiveness]].
* The anime version of ''[[Virtua Fighter]]'''s Akira Yuki is an [[Idiot Hero]] who [[Big Eater|can't stop eating.]] Whenever the situation is going out of control, though, [[Transformation Sequence|he equips his gi]] and turns himself into a serious fighter until his enemies are defeated, sometimes so far that it reflects his original persona in the game.
* In ''[[
* Various installments of ''[[Pretty Cure]]'' tend to have someone like this, including Nozomi Yumehara of ''[[Yes!
* Shigure of [[Fruits Basket]] comes across as a goofy [[Chivalrous Pervert]], but in reality he's {{spoiler|a [[Magnificent Bastard]] and [[The Chessmaster]] behind the entire plot.}}
== [[Comic Books]] ==
* Sheemie in the ''[[Dark Tower]]'' prequel comics {{spoiler|is the village idiot who gains incredible psychic powers and rescues the lost Gunslinger princes.}}
* Chin-Kee from ''[[American Born Chinese]]'' is a pitch-perfect example. Superficially he appears to be a clueless [[Funny Foreigner]], encapsulating every negative Chinese stereotype available in broken [[Japanese Ranguage|Engrish]]. {{spoiler|But when Danny attacks him for being an embarrassment, Chin-Kee turns into an unstoppable martial arts [[Badass]]. Justified in that he's secretly the [[Journey to
* Larfleeze, the wielder of the orange light in the [[Green Lantern]] universe. Most of the time, he comes off as completely insane, with a Gollum-like drive to own ''everything'' and a tendency to talk to himself. At one point, Sinestro and Red Lantern Atrocitus get so annoyed by him they suggest just killing him and taking along whoever his ring goes to next. Despite his [[Cloudcuckoolander]] tendencies, however, he's incredibly powerful, as his light represents avarice, and is at its most potent when wielded by one lone ringslinger. In terms of sheer raw power, he's probably the strongest Lantern as his ring is capable of charging to ''100,000 percent energy''- in comparison, Hal Jordan's maxes out around 210% under certain circumstances, and it's explained any more might blow up the ring and take his hand with it. Insane? Yes. Take him lightly, though, and you're dead.
** All those Orange Lantern constructs he has hanging around? Those are beings he's killed and stolen their identities.
* [[Celebrity Resemblance|Rasputin]] in the ''[[Corto Maltese]]'' series. He's a [[Foil]] to the title character and a [[Heroic Sociopath]] sidekick. Totally unpredictable, too.
* [[Squirrel Girl]], hands down. Cute. Fuzzy. Talks to squirrels. Lips taste like hazelnuts. Defeated [[Doctor Doom]], The Mandarin, Giganto, MODOK, [[Thanos]], Terrax, Bug-Eyed Voice, Bi-Beast, [[Deadpool]], Pluto, Fin Fang Foom, Baron Mordo, Korvac, and Ego the Living Planet...
** Somewhat related is the Fabulous Frog-Man. Fat, clumsy, untrained, and with no idea what he's doing, he's proven time and again capable of taking on the most nefarious villains and coming out on top. Usually by virtue of sheer luck or coincidence, but he often exhibits the bravery necessary to charge at baddies who give [[Captain America (comics)]] pause nonetheless.
* The entire population of [[Superman|Metropolis]] is pretty much this trope. Of course, when you've [[Seen It All]] the way they have, it's taken for granted that you should look both ways for [[Stupid Jetpack Hitler|invading nuclear fission-powered nazi clone armies]] before crossing the street, and be handy with a crowbar so you don't have to [[
* [[Plastic Man]] has been largely considered this due to the non-serious nature of most of his appearances. One must not forget that he is a trained CIA operative, can go toe-to-toe with many other big names in the DCAU (he can take punches from SUPERMAN without so much as batting an eye!) and survived dismemberment for thousands of years.
* [[Scott Pilgrim]]. Face it, you too though he was just a 23 year old hipster video gamer slacker without any shame or glory, hanging onto his gay roommate to pay for everything, and just being a bad bass player on a semi crappy band. Then, the first evil ex of Ramona came, and we learned that not only is he capable of fighting, he's the best fighter in the province. Dumb and with a little of OCD, yeah, but don't mess with his girlfriend or his friends.
* {{spoiler|Monchito}} from ''Negation''. Most of the time {{spoiler|he does little more than eat a lot and get underfoot}}, but in a highly stressful fight scene late in the series, {{spoiler|he hulks out and gets uber-powerful for a brief moment, clobbering one of the bad guys and expending all his power in one blow before reverting to normal}}. Even the bad guys were shocked.
* [[Deadpool]] sometimes slips into this, [[Depending
* Takato and {{spoiler|Terriermon}} from Daneel Rush's ''[[
▲== Fan Fics ==
* Wheatley in the ''[[
▲* Takato and {{spoiler|Terriermon}} from Daneel Rush's ''[[Tamers Forever Series (Fanfic)|Tamers Forever Series]]''.
* [[Dumb Blonde|Lindsay]] from ''[[
▲* Wheatley in the ''[[Portal 2 (Video Game)|Portal 2]]'' fic ''[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/6953776/1/Test_Of_Humanity Test Of Humanity]''. He's normally a dim-witted [[Gentle Giant]]. But, push him too far, and he won't hesitate to punch you in the eye. {{spoiler|[[G La DOS]]}} found this out the hard way.
* [[Stealth Pun|Thunderhead]] from ''[[
▲* [[Dumb Blonde|Lindsay]] from [[Keepers of the Elements (Fanfic)|Keepers of the Elements]] turns into this if you hit her [[Berserk Button]]. Although to be fair, {{spoiler|[[Took a Level In Jerkass|Courtney]]}} had it coming...
▲* [[Stealth Pun|Thunderhead]] from ''[[Rise of the Galeforces (Fanfic)|Rise of the Galeforces]]''. [[A Worldwide Punomenon|His name pretty much sums it all up.]]
* Kasumi of all people managed to [[MacGyver]] a fuel-air bomb using the Dojo's oven, flour, spices, and a bottle of cooking spray to knock back a trio of Youma in ''[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/7696140/1/ War in Tokyo]''. She comments that she used too much Cayenne in a complete normal tone of voice. Genma and Soun only stare at her.
** Also the above is very possible. Old
== [[Film]] -- Animated ==▼
▲== Film -- Animated ==
* ''[[The Incredibles]]'': Jack-Jack (not a moron, but a baby) demonstrates a startling array of powers (which, by most reckonings, are probably more [[Badass]] than those of the rest of the cast) when threatened by the [[Big Bad]], Syndrome.
** Or the babysitter. In the fairly amusing short packaged with the DVD of ''[[The Incredibles]]'', ''Jack Jack Attack'', Jack-Jack reduces the babysitter to a [[Badly
* The CGI movie ''[[The Magic Roundabout]]'', in which the affable stoner rabbit, Dylan, suddenly snaps and opens up a can of Whup Ass.
* Pumbaa from the ''[[The Lion King]]''. Just look at him go bowling for hyenas. And [[Berserk Button|don't call him a pig]] or he will go [[Incredibly Lame Pun|pork-chop]] on your ass!!
* ''[[An American Tail]] 2'': The only nice cat, who gets repeatedly pushed around, abused, and chased (either by dogs, native american mice, or even dog fish!) all the way to the American west, takes a level in badass when he gets trained by a reluctant aged, canine gunslinger. When he sees his love in danger, he goes into a literal barking rage and takes down almost the entire Big Bad's cat mook army.
* Po from ''[[Kung Fu Panda]]''. While not totally inept, he's a bumbler and a daydreamer. After some focus and hardcore training, however, he not only managed to take down the [[Big Bad]], but {{spoiler|his idols are so impressed, they kneel before him}}.
* ''[[Cars 2]]'': Mater, oh excuse me Sir Tow Mater. He spends most of the movie being his lovable bumbling self. Then he finds out Lightning
== Film -- Live Action ==
* ''[[Kung Fu Hustle]]'':
** Sing, the hapless hero, starts off as a complete failure of a small-time street crook. Then he double-crosses the Axe Gang, gets beaten into a bloody pile of
** Just about the entire cast fits this trope. Ranging from the pervy landlord and bitchy landlady, to a secretary geek wearing golden glasses kicking both Sing and his partner's arse, and the farmer lady who managed to make Sing vomit blood with a
* ''[[Police Academy|Police Academy 5: Assignment Miami Beach]]'' had Commendant Lassard being kidnapped and held hostage by the [[Big Bad]]. He mistakenly thinks it's all a game being put on for the media, and when someone points out that it's not, he rather quickly frees himself without breaking a sweat.
* ''[[Get Smart (
* Loren Visser, the private detective in ''[[Blood Simple]]'', comes across as a goofy, loudmouthed, dumbass joke at the start of the movie...{{spoiler|until he shoots Julian, the man who hired him.}} From then on, he's a nigh-unstoppable killer.
* In ''[[
* Elle Woods from ''[[Legally Blonde]]''. She starts out appearing to be [[The Ditz]], but apparently superior knowledge of fashion and haircare do not preclude intelligence.
* The Mad Hatter in [[Tim Burton]]'s ''[[Alice in Wonderland (
* ''[[
** The scene in question may be a homage to the first version of the film ''[[
* In ''Destry Rides Again'', the eponymous character (played by [[Jimmy Stewart]] in his finest "nice guy" style) becomes the deputy of the marshal in a lawless town. At first, he seems to be completely harmless; he doesn't carry a gun, drinks milk at the bar, tells anecdotes to everybody, and makes napkin rings as a hobby. However, he eventually proves to be a very capable gunfighter.
* In the ''[[Josie and
* Kwan-Yin from the ''[[Journey to
* ''[[Mystery Men]]'''s Mr. Furious, when his love interest was threatened, wiped the floor with Casanova Frankenstein.
* In the 1986 film ''[[Alien (
{{quote|
* Wikus van de Merwe of ''[[District 9]]'' is a sniveling, naive corporate pencil-pusher with a silly mustache - and when the chips are down, he {{spoiler|climbs into a suit of alien [[Powered Armor]] and proceeds to vaporize the local voodoo gang as well as the psycho PMC troops sent to retrieve him}}.
* Zen from the Thai film ''[[
* Lance, the token white temp in ''[[Undercover Brother]]''. [[Berserk Button|NEVER CALL HIM A SISSY!!!]]
* ''[[Toxic Avenger]]'': Melvin worked at the Tromaville gym, Ninety pound weakling who got pushed around!
* ''[[Danny the Dog|Unleashed]]'' stars [[Jet Li]] as the slave-enforcer of a British gang boss, raised as something approximate to an attack-dog, leaving him with the mind of a child. In fact, the character only achieves contentment when he is able to abandon his history of violence and embrace a life of non-badassery.
* Tuco, "The Ugly" from ''[[The Good, the Bad
* ''[[Star Trek (
** If getting your ass kicked throughout the movie and choked about half a dozen times is badass, then yes, he definitely qualifies. Actually, yes, I guess it is kinda badass.
* Count Vile from ''[[Press Start]]'' spends most of the movie acting like a complete dolt, leading many to question how he managed to assume total control, only revealing his true power and psychopathic ferocity in the final battle.
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*** [[The Scrappy/Film|This]] [[Rhetorical Question Blunder|is why.]]
* Abby in [[Death Proof]]. {{spoiler|She disapproves of Kim's gun and whines a bit. Until the [[Big Bad]] attacks them that is. She's the one who suggested killing him and later stomps in his head after beating him up}}
* In ''[[
* Subverted in ''[[Indiana Jones]] And The Last Crusade''. Indy has given his father's Grail Diary to Marcus Brody, an apparently goofy, harmless professor. The villains indicate that Brody will be easy to find, but Indy tells them that Brody fits this trope. {{spoiler|As it turns out, he does not. [[Gilligan Cut|The camera then cuts]] to a scene of Brody in a crowded market, conspicuously wearing the same thing he always does, calling out "does anybody speak English?}}
{{quote|
'''Indiana Jones''': The hell you will. He's got a two day head start on you, which is more than he needs. Brody's got friends in every town and village from here to the Sudan, he speaks a dozen languages, knows every local custom, he'll blend in, disappear, you'll never see him again. With any luck, he's got the grail already. }}
* [[Dustin Hoffman]]'s character in ''[[Straw Dogs]]''.
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* Both Scooby Doo AND Shaggy step it up at the end of ''[[Scooby Doo]] 2: Monsters Unleashed'', although they tried (and failed) throughout most of the movie.
* The eponymous ''[[Mystery Team]]'' takes a level in Badass by the end of the movie.
* Sergeant Gerry Boyle from ''[[The Guard]]''.
* Adam Sandler's eponymous hero in "The Water Boy" looks like the poster child for the trope.
== [[Literature]] ==
* ''[[Redwall]]'': King Bull Sparra does this really well. Maybe a little too well...
* The character of Alfred from ''[[The Death Gate Cycle]]'', written by Weis & Hickman, is an over the top example of this trope. He first appears as a stumbling, clumsy butler, but in dire circumstances, at times off-screen, he is the pinnacle of his wizarding tradition and can perform miracles in [[Functional Magic]] up to and including resurrecting the dead, the ''right'' way, whereas other mages can do so only by draining the life of another being of the same race, somewhere in the multiverse. Of course, a lot of people want to get hold of Alfred for his magical prowess. Problem is, ''he doesn't remember how he pulls his magic off'', pulling a complete black-out, more than often enough accompanied by an undignified fainting. It eventually turns out that he originally just used [[Obfuscating Stupidity]] to avoid revealing his powers to the
** In the same series, a character named Zifnab appears to be a senile old man who can't remember the color of his own robe. He is later discovered to be one of the oldest living beings in the universe. Although he is afflicted with Alzheimer's, he is questionably the most powerful magician in the series, complete with his own pet dragon.
*** I always thought it was less Alzheimer's and more way too many bad memories from when the world as we knew it was broken asunder and billions died. You go around with that mucking up your head and you would be daffy yourself.
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* [[Dresden Files|Harry Dresden]], to those who do not know who he is and what he is capable of. He tends to utilise this and a constant stream of sarcasm to pull [[Obfuscating Stupidity]] on his opponents, many of whom are in strict terms far out of his weight class.
** People consistently underestimate him, or are utterly terrified of him. You steal his girlfriend, he'll destroy you and your servants horribly, starting a war in the process. Take {{spoiler|his daughter, and [[Papa Wolf|he will commit genocide]] }}.
** Listens-to-Wind seems to be a quiet, benevolent, animal loving healer. Then he sends a demi god of imaginative sadism running with its tail between its legs in a full on [[Shapeshifter Showdown]]. Harry later refers to Listens-to-Winds expression when he realises how the traitor was manipulating the Senior council, as 'preparing to adjust another ass to ears ratio'. Listens-to-Wind had said this earlier in the aforementioned fight.
** Ebenezar [[
** {{spoiler|From what we hear about Harry's mother, she was just as dangerous as her son and father.}}
* From the ''[[
** In ''[[
** ''[[
*** Also in the volume before that, ''[[
** ''[[
** {{spoiler|[[Obstructive Bureaucrat|A.E. Pessimal]]}} from ''[[
** A constant example given are the wizards; Seen one way, they are rather large, simple minded men who like big dinners and tend to argue with each other, with a tendency to regard the end of the world as a minor curiosity. In another light, they are an elite group of men who are given quite a bit of leeway in return for consistently and conscientiously refraining from causing the laws of causality and physics to metaphorically do handstands and jump through hoops. It's not difficult at all to refrain from turning people into small amphibians when you can't, but it's much much harder when you know exactly how easy it is. On top of that, the natural number of wizards is one, and the arguments they have are harmless ways of expressing that, rather than, as it was in the past, all out thaumonuclear war. There are places on the Disc where the wizards weren't quite so harmless and simple minded; grass may never grow there again and you're lucky to leave one the same shape as you went in.
* Lennie from ''[[Of Mice and Men]]'' may be a mentally impaired [[Gentle Giant]], but that doesn't mean you can just push him around. Curley finds out the hard way.
* Eddie Dean in ''[[The Dark Tower]]'' is a washed-up cynical junkie loser when he first falls into Midworld, and seemingly dependent upon the Last Gunslinger for basic survival. He reveals himself to be a talented gunfighter when provoked.
* The wizard Schmendrick of ''[[The Last Unicorn (
* In [[George Macdonald Fraser]]'s ''[[McAuslan]]'' stories, Private McGlinchy is, in a football game, either completely useless or completely amazing, depending on factors that other characters are trying to figure out.
** Fraser pulls it again in the ''Flashman'' series, with Flashman's wife Elspeth. Flashman regards her as a dunce, and she certainly seems shallow and vapid, but in ''Flashman's Lady'' and even more in the ''The Subtleties of Baccarat,'' she proves to be a vicious little minx that you trifle with at your peril. The crowning irony is that Flashman never figures this out, even though he's usually so perspicacious about others' strengths and weaknesses, and he's married to her for sixty years.
* In [[Raymond E. Feist]]'s ''[[The Riftwar Cycle|Riftwar Cycle]]'', a gibbering, mindless beggar barely capable of feeding himself is later revealed to be the mortal shell of {{spoiler|Macros the Black, the most powerful sorcerer in the world.}} His mind was not in his body, until suddenly it was imperative for him to be present to fight the darkness and chaos.
** And then there's Nakor, a wandering con man and chronic goof-off who just happens to know more about magic, the nature of the multiverse, and beating down evil than anyone else in the series, with the possible exception of Pug.
* Alan Dean Foster's ''[[Spellsinger]]'' series has JonTom Merryweather, the spellsinger of the title. A [[Fish Out of Water|modern human]] in an alternate, [[The Dung Ages|medieval-equivalent]] universe filled with [[Talking Animal
* While this editor isn't sure how much this is true of the character in actual mythology, some stories of Ganesha present the jolly [[Big Eater]] god as equal in power to his fearsome father Shiva, capable of stopping the sun and destroying the world, but luckily [[Gentle Giant|too nice to do so]].
* The novel ''Armor'' by [[John Steakley]] follows two storylines set about five years apart, with the earlier one framed by the discovery of the [[Powered Armor]] used by the earlier protagonist on a distant, non-wartorn colony in a crashed escape pod. The armor's owner, Felix, is quite literally an unstoppable killing machine: in a war where no one has survived more than ten major missions, armor notwithstanding, Felix makes it through over twenty before {{spoiler|being killed by another human soldier}}. Meanwhile, in the present-day, a rebellion is brewing right underneath the nose of the colony's drunken, dimwitted owner, Lewis, causing great consternation to the present-day protagonist...especially when it breaks into open war and a nearby space pirate decides to capitalize on the situation. With a military grade dreadnought. {{spoiler|Fortunately, Lewis ''is'' Felix, lying low and enjoying life. At least, until he decides to save his colony by putting his armor back on, slaughtering an army's worth of pirates, and then ''takes down the dreadnought with his bare damn hands.''}}
* Neville Longbottom of ''[[Harry Potter (
** Notable in that [[Took a Level
** Culminates in a [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]]. Consider also that the prophesy nominating Harry as "the chosen one" easily applied to Neville as well. The fan meme is, "Neville is the Boy-That-Could-Have-Been-But-Did-Anyway."
** Let's face it; this trope could easily be renamed "The Neville."
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* In the books ''Operation: Red Jericho'' and ''Operation: Typhoon Shore'', Posh Charlie has a very minor role and is known for his constant stuttering and nervousness. Put him in a combat situation and he becomes a confident soldier, immediately dropping the stutter. This may possibly be [[Obfuscating Stupidity]] due to the knowledge in the latter book that he is actually a very competent researcher.
* Lovable the raven, from the ''[[Firekeeper]]'' series, is described as a "bubble head" and has a love for anything shiny. This is in stark contrast to her far more serious mate, Bitter. However, in the fifth book, ''Wolf Hunting'', when Bitter and Lovable are ensnared by magic vines that can kill their victims, Lovable forgoes her shot at escape to stay and keep the vines from getting Bitter completely. She manages this for quite some time until help arrives and is the only reason that help wasn't too late for Bitter.
* Ceallio, in [[Tad Williams]]' ''[[Memory,
* Orbek Black Knife from ''[[The Acts of Caine
* ''[[The Belgariad]]'' and ''Malloreon'' have several of these and several subversions. Played straight with Silk who normally plays the thief/rogue member of the cast, but in ''[[The Malloreon]]'' when {{spoiler|Bethra is murdered, he tortures the killer into revealing who hired him and then proceeds to assassinate half the family before being stopped by his companions. Later, when the Dagashi assassin Brill pisses him off at Rak Cthol, he beats the hell out of him and kicks him off the mountain. He then coolly informs Belgarath that Brill was learning how to fly, and not all that successfully.}} These were, of course, [[Literature/Awesome|Crowning Moments of Awesome]]. Also in the same series, when Belgarath gets pissed he has been known to destroy entire mountains and also buries {{spoiler|Zedar, who betrayed him and his master, alive for [[And I Must Scream]]}}. He likes to let the world think he is a [[Dirty Old Man]], and he likes to make remarks of his time with the fully female Dryad race and of the ''very'' open-minded Marag women. [[Berserk Button|He also tends to become badass when his family is threatened]].
** Brill himself also counts. For the first two books he appears to be a footpad and hired thugh for Asharak, the starter villain. He's easily evaded by the cast, and the only remarkable thing about him seems to be his ability to catch up with them. And then in book three he {{spoiler|reveals that he's a freaking ninja. And that Asharak was probably working for ''him'' and not the other way around. This culminates in his battle with Silk, which is pretty epic for both combatants}}.
* Tyrion's squire Podrick Payne in ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]''. He's tongue-tied and incompetent most of the time to the extent that Tyrion suspects the boy was inflicted on him as a joke, but {{spoiler|when Tyrion is caught on a bridge of wrecked ships on a burning river with Ser Mandon Moore, one of the elite Kingsguard, trying to kill him, Pod somehow manages to kill Mandon and drag the unconscious Tyrion to safety.}}
** {{spoiler|He's also seen cutting down a few enemies when Tyrion storms out to meet Stannis' men.}}
* ''[[
** Perhaps even more aptly: Samwise Gamgee. His name roughly translates to "halfwit", and it applies. He's overweight, easily frightened, and not very bright. He also [[Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu?|beat a man-eating giant spider demi-god in single combat,]] single-handedly [[Storming the Castle|stormed a tower full of hostile orcs]] [[No One Gets Left Behind|to save his friend's life]], was the only Ringbearer to steadfastly resist the temptation of the [[Artifact of Doom|One Ring,]] and literally carried another man up the side of a volcano for the fate of the world while starving and suffering from dehydration. There's a reason Tolkien considered him the true hero of the story.
** This is a characteristic of Hobbits as a whole. As a race, they spend most of their time eating, drinking and making sure they have enough to eat and drink (the only function of their police force -the Sherrifs - is to chase of wild animals). Yet as Wolves, Orcs and Saruman have found out, there's only ''so'' far you can push them.
** The Ents are an entire species of Hidden Badasses. At first glance, they look like a race of [[Gentle Giant
*** That wizard REALLY should have known better, but it should be noted that where Sarumon is concerned, it was more of a case of karma; the Ents attacked almost ''right'' after Sarumon sent his entire army off to Helm's Deep, leaving only a handful of Orcs to guard against an army of trees.
* From L.J. Smith's ''[[Night World]]'' series, Iliana Dominick spends most of the story as [[The Load]] and [[The Ditz]], but when her friends and bodyguards are threatened at the end of the book, she finally unleashes the magic in her blood that she's been denying her entire life.
* The ''[[Codex Alera]]'' series gives us the slave Fade. He's not just a moron, he's obviously severely brain-damaged, and is generally not much good for anything but some minor blacksmithing. Except that {{spoiler|he's actually a legendary swordsman [[Faking the Dead|believed dead]] by the rest of the country, and he will miss you up ''bad'' if given a reason to do so. He's also much, ''much'' smarter than he acts, and the only reason he's acting as a slave is to keep an eye on Tavi.}}
* Fishlegs from the ''[[How to Train Your Dragon (
* [[The Culture]] is normally regarded as being hedonistic and extremely eccentric by most members of the galactic community. This doesn't just include the biological citizens, but the godlike AI's with 6 figure IQ's, and almost every single one of their starships are like this too. Most non-Culture sentients consider it strange that the Minds can be bothered to care about beings so intellectually below them. Similarily, a lot of starships give themselves silly / ironic names, and are often fully developed personalites. Despite this apparently goofy, peaceful image, if you threaten the lives of the Culture's citizens, pray that they only declare war on you. You WILL lose, but are most likely to be killed in a swift and conventional way. If not, then you can look forward to being killed in the most obscenely painful manner possible.
** "Do Not Fuck With The Culture".
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* Telnan, introduced in the [[Dragaera]] novel ''Dzur'' may carry a terrifying soul-destroying [[Empathic Weapon]], but he's a cheerful, ditzy guy, and not too bright. However, he still very much fits the [[Proud Warrior Race Guy]] and [[Blood Knight]] credentials of the Dzur, and he's somewhat more competent than he initially seems.
* In the ''[[Sword of Truth]]'' novels, Zedd is initially known to the reader as a goofy old man who's introduced talking to clouds. Naked. What the reader finds out later is that he was once known as the "Wind of Death," is a wizard of the first order, and in the past earned that nickname by winning a magical war.
** Other wizards in the series fit the mold in one way or another, such as Warren who's a total nerd and [[Non
* Somewhat of a subverted trope, but {{spoiler|Orion}} in ''[[
* When we meet [[The Wheel of Time|Matrim Cauthon]], he plays pranks, jokes around and generally serves as the comic relief in the group of main characters. He then gets cut by an evil knife and gets infected by said evil. Barely out of his sickbed after a major healing, he stumbles out on a training field where arguably the finest swordsmen in the world are training, and needing money, challenges two of them at the same time to a fight. [[Curb Stomp Battle|With a quarterstaff]], [[The Wheel of Time
** {{spoiler|It helps that due to a certain incident he gains the memories and battle experience of [[Past Life Memories|thousands of generals and soldiers throughout history]], effectively turning him into the greatest battle tactician known in the world.}}
* Those who grew up reading the books of [[Lloyd Alexander]] will remember the bard and minor king Fflewddur Fflam, who at first seems like only a half-trained musician with a gift for exaggeration and a magic harp that calls him on it every time. But drop him in a fight with something important at stake and you realize he's also a capable and dangerous warrior...though still one with his heart in his mouth until the battle is over.
* [[Stephen King]] and Peter Straub's collaborative book ''[[
* [[Jack the Ripper]] in ''[[
* The Clutch Turtles from Sharon Lee & Steve Miller's [[Liaden Universe]] aren't really ''morons per se'', so much as they ''appear to be'' large and slow, with a child-like innocent naivety regarding human culture. But those who get on their bad side discover, very briefly, the error of their ways.
** Their space drive could be considered a metaphor for the Turtles themselves: normally slow, quirky, and meandering, it can move ''very quickly and directly'' if the Turtles see sufficient need.
* Lieutenant Panga in ''[[Someone
* ''[[Married...
▲== [[Live Action TV]] ==
* ''[[
▲* ''[[Married With Children]]'''s Al Bundy. On occasion, for whatever reason, Al - schlubby loser Everyman Al - would take it upon himself to beat the living shit out of some poor bastard and he would do so with the psychotic glee you would expect from a man with often literally no other joy. Of all the things Al Bundy failed at - and Al Bundy failed at almost everything he put his hand to - he never once lost a fist fight (or was even mentioned to have lost a fistfight) in the show's entire history.
▲* ''[[I Carly (TV)|I Carly]]'': Gibby. If you are a friend, but betray his trust, or someone who dares kidnaps his friends, he won't think twice about beating the fudge out of you.
** T-Bo, a background character who runs the Goovy Smoothy and is normally seen just putting random items on sticks to sell and being wierd, reveals himself to be one in ''iStill Psycho'' when he helps [[Mama Bear|Mrs. Benson]] [[Big Damn Heroes|rescue the iCarly gang]] from [[Ax Crazy|Nora]] and her equally insane family. Not only does he kick down the basement door so Carly can rescue Spenser, he singlehandedly takes down Nora's father.
* Played with in Disney's ''[[The Suite Life of Zack and Cody|The Suite Life]]'': Apparently London Tipton is quite the athlete (notably in volleyball), but only when she's mad.
* In ''[[
* R.J., [[Trickster Mentor]] of ''[[Power Rangers Jungle Fury]]'', seems at first to be nothing more than an overly-mellow pizza restauranteur. Then he steps out of the kitchen and reveals himself by taking down a squad of [[Mooks]] without breaking stride, and suddenly the guy who seemed like bumbling comic relief a few seconds ago takes on a whole new light. He barely changes at all, busting out the crazy martial arts skills while remaining as calm and carefree as ever.
* River from ''[[Firefly]]'' is a Crouching ''Crazy'' Hidden Badass. Most of the time, she tends to be a [[Cloudcuckoolander]] with some endearingly whimsical moments mixed in with seriously disturbing fits and a few [[Ax Crazy]] moments. But mess with her brother Simon or her friend Kaylee, and she will take you down, whether by gunning down three men with her eyes closed or orchestrating an impressive [[Batman Gambit]]. And that's even before the [[Big Damn Movie]].
* Drusilla from ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'' exhibits only [[Cloudcuckoolander|the loosest connection to reality]], and spends most of the time behaving like an idiot child (e.g. cooing over her pet bird, which died because she left it in the cage and forgot to feed it). But when she does fight, she's extremely dangerous, and capable of killing a Slayer with a slash of her fingernail.
** Let's not forget Xander. Whether it was magic tuxedo, skill with a crane, or just a combination of borderline [[Too Dumb to Live]] and luck, Xander managed to be a useful and functional member of a team that included a slayer, a powerful witch, a werewolf, a vampire, a half-demon, and [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking|a high school librarian.]]
* From ''[[Stargate SG-1]]'': [[Colonel Badass|Colonel]] Jack O'Neill. Probably more a case of [[Obfuscating Stupidity]], as you couldn't get to officer rank(much less Colonel) without being fairly smart; he's just a very "military" guy and would like to be told that yes, this alien/Ancient technology/doodad '''will''' do what he thinks it will, instead of listening to a lengthy technical explanation about '''why''' it will do what he thinks it will. He acts [[Book Dumb]] in everything remotely scientific. He never reads Carter's reports, he refuses to listen to Daniel explain some ancient piece of writing or technology, and acts as if nothing matters except ''[[The Simpsons]]''. But...when some dumb Goa'uld or other bad guy threatens his team or the Earth, he gets '''very''' serious, and reminds you just why ''he's'' leading this team. In the season 5 episode "Rite of Passage", Cassandra observes that Jack is smarter than he pretends to be.
** A single conversation with Ba'al during a [[Enemy Mine|temporary alliance]] pretty much sums up why he floats between this and [[Obfuscating Stupidity]].
{{quote|
'''Jack:''' Oh I can! I just ''choose'' not to. }}
** He also happens to be an amateur astronomer (a single comment about an accretion disc results in Daniel hitting a figurative brick wall while talking). When he's not using the telescope on his roof to spy on neighbors, that is.
* HM "Howling Mad" Murdock from ''[[
* Adrian [[Monk]]: Socially inept, obsessive-compulsive and afraid of everything. But he manages to solve the most baffling crimes and he can hold his own in a
** Also, in the episode where the suspect was a marathon runner, who grabs the key piece of evidence and takes off on foot. Monk proves that he used to be a great runner in school by giving chase (especially in his new sneakers which he got from his idol).
* Otoya Kurenai from ''[[Kamen Rider Kiva]]'', who at first blush seems to be nothing more than a [[Ted Baxter|foolishly self-absorbed]] [[Casanova]] who doesn't have a serious bone in his body. But then he starts pulling [[Batman Gambit]] after [[Batman Gambit]], demonstrating an incredible degree of character judgement, and kicking monster butt with an experimental [[Powered Armor]]
** Kagami Arata from [[Kamen Rider Kabuto]]. He's pretty much [[Good Is Dumb]], esepcially compare to the show's protagonist [[Insufferable Genius|Tendo Souji]]. Doesn't stop him from kicking ass, especially after becoming Gatack
* Jackie Burkhart serves [[The Ditz]] with a [[Hair
* Brendan "Hot Dog" Costanza of ''[[Battlestar Galactica
** By the end of the series, most characters who weren't introduced as straight-up badasses (and are still alive) have turned out to fit this trope. Off the top of my head I can think of {{spoiler|Felix Gaeta's leading an armed mutiny, Laura Roslin's raging refusal to surrender when it appears that said mutiny has succeeded, Romo Lampkin's escaping from a marine who had a gun to his head by stabbing the guy's jugular with a pen, and Gaius Baltar going all Rambo on the enemy Cylons during the battle in the Series Finale}}.
* [[Merlin (TV series)|Merlin]] may be bumbling, clumsy and at times, naive, but I dare you to get on his bad side. He can certainly kick anyone's butt with the use of his powerful and dangerous magic. [[Papa Wolf|Especially if you hurt his loved ones.]]
* The 1991 series ''[[Step
{{quote|
'''Cody''': Cha, me neither! I'm gonna have to go back and re-read some of my old diaries! }}
* Jason Stackhouse spends most of ''[[True Blood]]'' constantly doing absolutely stupid shit, because he's dumb as a stump, and is often led about by just about anyone. Threaten his sister Sookie, however, and he will not just step up; he'll absolutely take you down and make the audience's jaws drop. But he's still dumb as a stump for the most part.
** This
* Brilliant but baffled Professor Yana in the three-part 2007 series finale of ''[[
** Rose Tyler could qualify. She certainly has her fair share of ditzy moments; she has to get saved a lot, and sometimes, if she's feeling particularly helpful, she's shouting ineffectually at the villains. {{spoiler|She does, however, absorb the power of time and become a demi-goddess at the end of series 1, sacrifices herself for the universe at the end of series 2, and blows things up like all-get-out at the end of series 4.}}
** While he's hardly a moron, the Doctor himself can fit this trope at times, particularly in his tenth incarnation. Say you're an alien invader. You captue this odd fellow in a suit and hi-tops; he appears to be batshit insane, jabbering on, often in rather inane ways. And just after he finishes talking, you realize he has just taken down your entire armada.
*** Case in point: the Family of Blood. {{spoiler|The Doctor (using his human disguise/alias John Smith) stumbles into the Family's ship, trying to stop them from destroying the academy where he hid from them. While negotiating with them, the Doctor stumbles about pressing random buttons on the ship before turning over his fob watch (which holds his Time Lord powers). The Family tries to absorb said powers, but they are not there. The Doctor then drops the bumbling human act and reveals he's back to normal. And has just set their ship's reactor to overload. The kicker is that after the ship blows up, the Family realizes that the Doctor hid from them because of ''what he would do to them as punishment'', not out of fear for the Family itself.}}
** The second doctor was probably the most representative of this trope. While all incarnations of the Doctor are capable of deadly seriousness and incredible skill, and most (Exception for the fifth Doctor) were usually goofy, [[Patrick Troughton]] brings the apparent goofiness up to eleven. The vast majority of the time, the second Doctor pretended to be a bumbling idiot, constantly stressed out and panicking. However, when faced with the right danger, he drops the act and becomes dead serious and sometimes even diabolic. This is especially pronounced whenever he encounters Daleks or Cybermen.
* Companion [[Doctor Who
{{quote|
* Vir from ''[[Babylon 5]]'' is introduced as a timid and shy comic relief, used to being pushed around by his boss Londo. However as the show goes on he gradually shows more and more backbone, first by not backing from a huge monster (a hologram, but he didn't know that) when sent to deliver a message to technomages, then by telling off an emissary of [[Eldritch Abomination
** There's also the small part about him becoming Emperor.
* [[Ashes to Ashes|WPC Shaz Granger]] is hardly a moron, she's just sweet and isn't as badass as the rest of CID. It's kind of hard when you're a plonk in your mid-twenties, trying to live up to the examples of Gene Hunt and Alex Drake. Even Ray and Chris are pretty badass, holding their own in gunfights and having multiple [[Big Damn Heroes]] moments - Shaz doesn't even ''carry'' a gun. And then 2.08 hits, where {{spoiler|a bent copper is holding Chris hostage, about to shoot him. A gunshot sounds, and it's Shaz, holding a smoking gun and wearing her wedding dress. To cap it all off, she quips "How you doing, baby?" to Chris.}}
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* Agent Bill Hoyt of NBC's ''[[Undercovers]]''. He's usually the [[Hollywood Nerd|nerdy]], [[Plucky Comic Relief|sycophantic]] tech guy for the Blooms; but in the episode "Xerxes" he {{spoiler|single-handedly takes down the villainess after learning that she had almost manipulated him into falling in love with her.}}
* ''[[Boardwalk Empire]]'' has Eddie Kessler, Nucky's bumbling assistant who often messes up and is often treated as a [[Butt Monkey]]. When an assassin comes after Nucky, he {{spoiler|makes the assassin miss his shot, takes the assassin's gun away and then coldly shoots the guy in the back as he is trying to run away}}
* This is pretty much Castiel from ''[[Supernatural (TV series)|Supernatural]]''. Perpetual confused look, especially when it comes to humans but piss him off and he can kick your ass to hell and back.
** Also {{spoiler|Gabriel}} in a sense. This is an {{spoiler|archangel}} who is pissing around messing with humanity.
** To quote Dean: "Word to the wise: don't piss off the nerd angels."
* ''[[
* Todd "The Todd" Quinlan from ''[[
* ''[[Highlander (TV series)|Highlander]]'s Methos poses as a mild-mannered, sheltered scholar with the Watchers; even with his friends who know he's the oldest living Immortal, he'd rather lounge around drinking beer than accept a challenge. And he would just as soon not talk about how he {{spoiler|used to be Death of the Four Horsemen}}.
* [[Sledge Hammer!]]; his [[Catch Phrase]], "Trust me, I know what I'm doing." is a [[Blatant Lies]], but when the chips are down, his [[Crazy Awesome|crazy awesomeness]] kicks in.
* In social game shows like ''[[Survivor]]'' and the American ''[[Big Brother]]'', a good (albeit boring) strat is to make everyone think you're not a threat to them, so they won't target you for eliminations. Then, you start playing much harder and make them regret not taking you out in hindsight.
** Perhaps the most triumphant example in ''[[Survivor]]'' was Fabio. His entire strategy was basically him flanderizing his [[Dumb Blonde|himbo]] personality and flying under the radar while the alliances pick off at people perceived to be bigger targets. Then when he was the only target in between the [[The Load|easily beaten Dan]], he finally started to win immunity, and then [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|tricked Chase and Sash into telling Jane they were voting her out TO HER FACE!]] He then chain-won immunity all the way into the final three, making Chase and Sash both think "[[Oh Crap]]".
** Attempted but failed with Brett and Ashley. Both Brett and Ashley just kept their mouths shut and hid behind numbers so they wouldn't be targeted. Then all of a sudden, they start competing well in challenges and force the dominant alliance to vote each other out first. Immediately the person in charge of the game thinks [[Oh Crap]] because this person they perceived to be a nothing is actually not bad at the game. Unfortunately; Brett & Ashley both failed to win the final immunity and were therefore the final member of the jury.
** Before either of those three, we had Lillian Morris. She was very emotional and would cry at the drop of a hat...and became Fairplay's personal [[Butt Monkey]]. After a bit of [[Fridge Brilliance]] where he avoided elimination at the final four and had to face two people who weren't good competitors, Lil ''immediately'' takes to the final immunity challenge and doesn't move a ''muscle'', while Fairplay starts trying to cut a deal, only for Lil to constantly shoot him down and taunt him to break down his spirit.
* Hiro of ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]'' is a [[Wrong Genre Savvy]] [[Otaku]] who spends most of each season suffering from severe [[Plot Induced Stupidity]]. But when he gets his act together and wades into the fight, he will ''own'' you. He has basically singlehandedly defeated [[Arch Enemy|Sylar]] (a couple of times), two seasonal [[Big Bad
* Walter Sherman of ''[[
== [[Music]] ==
* Inverted with Japanese singer [[Gackt]]. He often portrays himself on TV as a [[The Stoic|stoic]] [[Badass]] with few emotions and exceptional [[All Asians Know Martial Arts|martial arts]] skills... until he answers a silly or private question, thus revealing himself as a [[One of Us|hidden dork]] with a habit of saying goofy or embarassing things.
** This is especially evident in Gackt's later "Platinum Box" DVDs. No matter how hard he tries to remain serious and stoic, his bandmates will always reduce him to hysterics with their shenanigans, shattering his well-practiced persona.
== [[Newspaper Comics]] ==▼
▲== Newspaper Comics ==
* In an early ''[[Bloom County]]'' strip, Opus serves as the bouncer at a New Years Eve party. Seems pretty stupid, until he drags a particularly large, menacing looking guy down under the bar, then asks for some rope.
** And if you are a mime, do not taunt Opus or he will beat you down. With a salami!
*** Wasn't it an olive loaf?
* Typically, the Crocodiles in ''[[Pearls Before Swine]]'' are [[Too Dumb to Live]] (oftentimes literally so). But on one occassion, Rat, in a variation of the Pied Piper, used music to lead stupid people to a lake to drown them. When he attempted to do this to the Crocs, he gloated about this, and in an uncharacteristically angry (but characteristically badly-pronounced) reply, one croc mentioned "We can sweem."
** This could be [[Canon
* Satchel from ''[[Get Fuzzy]]''. The guy has about half the IQ of a rock, but as Bucky is often reminded, pushing Satchel too far is a very bad idea.
▲== Pro Wrestling ==
* WWE worker Festus has this as his entire gimmick. Most of the time, he was little short of catatonic, staring blankly into space with his tongue hanging out as his tag team partner Jesse dragged him around. However, when the ring bell rang, he would wake up and destroy all of his opponents, and would not let up until the bell sounded the end of the match.
** Unfortunately for Festus, several of his opponents (notably [[The Miz]] and [[John Morrison]]) have shown themselves to be fairly [[Genre Savvy]] in using this against him.
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** Nick "Eugene" Dinsmore would act like Dustin Hoffman's character in [[Rain Man]], as well as wear two large foam hands.
* Maria was a WWE diva so vapid she could leave viewers wondering how she hadn't died from forgetting to breathe but apparently possessed an impressive breadth of knowledge about law.
* Santino Marella is [[Cloudcuckoolander|probably one of the silliest guys on the roster]], but when the man does have genuine wrestling skill and now that he's [[Took a Level
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* The Autistic Psychic Savant class in Palladium's ''Beyond The Supernatural'' game pretty much has to be this trope. Most of the time, they can barely communicate, but in the presence of supernatural evil they prove to be smarter and more powerful than anyone else.
* Jerry-R-Igg, one of the characters in the ''[[Paranoia]]'' Second Edition sample adventure, is a total coward, constantly freaking out at the slightest thing...while anyone's looking. Truth is, all of that's a front. As soon as he's sure nobody can report it back to the Computer, he becomes Captain X-Cess, standout in Deth Leopard and lover of [[Stuff Blowing Up]] (one of his possessions is a set of explosives disguised as snack food).
* Orcs/orks from ''[[Warhammer Fantasy Battle]]'' and ''40k''. Just...yeah.
== [[Theater]] ==
* Leaf Coneybear from ''The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee'' is an airhead until he is asked to spell a word, at which point he turns into a scary blinking robot and gives the right answer.
== [[Video Games]] ==
* In ''[[World of Warcraft]]'', prior to the release of the ''Wrath of The Lich King'' expansion, a Hunter using the Survival talent tree was an example of this trope. Survival was the least played class/spec combination in the game, at somewhere between 3-7% of the overall playerbase, and was generally ridiculed. During an Expose Weakness, or ten second Deterrence proc, however, things changed. The spec went from a typical DPS output of 400 outside an instance, (barely enough to kill non-elite mobs during questing) during "crouching moron," mode, to 1200 when appropriately raid buffed and proccing EW. The dodge/parry chance during a ten second Deterrence activation also doubled, sometimes reaching a potential maximum of 110%; which meant that Surv could theoretically (and often did, practically) finish tanking 75%+ dead raid bosses after the main Warrior or Paladin tank died.
* In ''[[Disgaea 2: Cursed Memories]]'', Rozalin shows off a particularly fearsome variant of this. Having spent her entire, pampered life in a palace, surrounded by servants waiting on her every whim, she's a complete novice when it comes to fighting (thus giving the hero, Adell, an excellent opportunity to [[Justified Tutorial|explain the combat-system to her]]...) It's up to the player how much he wants to level her, but she'll probably still only be around level 50 when you first encounter, and are soundly defeated by, a level 1200 Overlord. At which point a seal is broken, and she suddenly jumps to level 1700, learns a world-destroying special move, and kicks seven different shades of ass. Afterwards, when she snaps out of it, she's got no idea what happened.
* ''[[The King of Fighters]]'' has a game play example in Hotaru Futuba. Sure she looks harmless and is usually so personality wise, but in the hands of a competent player, she's an utter monster.
* Arado Balanga of ''[[Super Robot Wars]] Original Generations'' is exactly like this. He's normally a reckless idiot who gets shot down more than not, but if his partner Seolla (who he was trained to work as a perfect partner to) is threatened with death, he'll be there to take it and go down in flames and ''utterly kick ass''.
** Though it is worth mentioning that Arado isn't necessarily a bad pilot by normal means. His tendency to get shot done most of the time is because early on he was stuck using long ranged machines when he had been trained exclusively in close ranged combat. Once he gets his eventual upgrade to a mech that better suits his skills, the other characters note that his piloting performance goes way up, even without Seolla around.
* Demyx from ''[[
** Or is it? Considering the massive [[Mind Screw]] the ''KH'' universe has going on, not to mention the [[Retcon|Ret Cons]] which are [[All There in the Manual]] and more canon then the games, as [[Word of God]] stated, it may or may not be.
** ''358/2 Days'' shows that he's not a coward, he's lazy (or rather [[Dismotivation|Dismotivated]]).
** In regards to the "philosophical zombie" thing: This may also explain his unusual line when Sora tries to invoke [[What Measure Is a Non
{{quote|
* In ''[[Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots]]'', we are introduced once more to Johnny Sasaki, who had spent a majority of the earlier games on the toilet. This time around, however, {{spoiler|his cowardice proves to be a hidden strength, as his [[Afraid of Needles|fear of needles]] leaves him without nanomachines, making him immune to the [[Big Bad]]'s trump card. Along with [[The Power of Love]], this leads him to develop [[The Gunslinger|amazing Gun Fu and sniping skills]].}}
** And turned right back around for comedic effect in multiplayer, where Johnny's lack of nanomachines robs him of SOP-linking and the benefits it provides; if you try to link while standing still, he does an anime pose, and if you try while running, he does a ''Rainbow Six''-esque hand signal. He also can't do CQC and will flail hilariously if you try. His diarrhea, however, turns him into a ''walking gas grenade'' as it will incapacitate anyone he runs by.
* A less specific example would be RPG characters with a [[Limit Break]]. Your reg'lar everyday [[Designated Hero]] suddenly wipes the floor with every single one of those [[Goddamned Bats]]. The one that springs to mind is Selphie Tilmitt in ''[[Final Fantasy VIII]]'', who is essentially a [[The Ditz|young blonde airhead]], but can pull an attack that instantly defeats anything. Yes, anything. Armoured Slimes, [[Goddamned Bats]], [[That One Boss]], the ''[[Big Bad]] of the entire game''
** What's more is that the attack (like her personality) seems pretty innocent. How you say? It's a beautiful field of flowers that appears on screen, that's it.
* In ''[[
** The additional side stories for Wigglytuff (as a child Igglybuff) and for Team Charm from ''Explorers of Sky'' further explains this. Wigglytuff has a tremendous talent for solving puzzles and getting through traps, almost accidentally, hidden beneath the overtly cheerful demeanor. No wonder he's a Guildmaster despite seeming totally clueless.
* King Trode from ''[[Dragon Quest VIII]]'' would be a great example. He spends most of the game just sitting in the wagon and generally complaining about various things like his curse or how you haven't found Dhoulmagus yet. But in the ending? He can be seen beating up several Argonian guards. His weapon of choice? A twig. You heard me. He beats up men twice his size, who are reportedly tough enough to kill Argon lizards, and he does it with a 2-inch piece of tree wood.
* In Pokemon, at first Whitney seems like a generic teenage girl, with some [[Genki Girl]] mixed in. However she's renowned by the fanbase as being one of the hardest gym leaders in the games due to her Milktank.
* Grit from ''[[Nintendo Wars|Advance Wars]]'' is a top-notch distance weapons specialist (And considered an overpowered CO in earlier games by the players), but he hardly ever shows it due to his incredibly laid-back, agreeable demeanor.
* ''[[Touhou Project]]'' is positively ''brimming'' with examples of this trope. Shall we start with [[Brilliant but Lazy|Yukari]] [[Heavy Sleeper|Yakumo]] herself, wielder of powers [[Reality Warper|far beyond godly]] who nonetheless prefers to spend her time [[Immortal Immaturity|goofing around]], [[Trickster Mentor|bothering Reimu]], and generally acting like a little trickster imp? Or [[Cute Ghost Girl|Yuyuko]] [[Big Eater|Saigyouji]], who ''is'' genuinely amiable and nice and enjoys a good meal and sake under the cherry blossoms far more than anything else in the world, but who has been heavily implied by the author [[Obfuscating Stupidity|to know a lot more than she lets on]], being able to keep up with aforementioned Yukari? (Not to mention her power is to ''cause the death in anything that can die''.) Maybe Komachi Onozuka, who is a God of Death and the Ferryman of the
** Conversely, Rumia, the youkai ''of Darkness''. She consistently walks into trees (the powers ''of Darkness'' rendering her blind), is nearly harmless, and is sought out by people hoping to evade the sun on hot summer days.
*** However, ever since ''[[All There in the Manual|Perfect Memento in Strictest Sense]]'' announces that her ribbon is an amulet that she can't remove on her own free will, the fans [[Wild Mass Guessing|wonder]] what may happen if it's taken off, the most popular [[Epileptic Trees|theory]] being "[[True Final Boss|EX-]]Rumia".
** Also, Flandre Scarlet, an eternal (literally) [[Cheerful Child]] who loves to play with the humans who visit her home, and has [[Does Not Know His Own Strength|absolutely no control]] over her [[Person of Mass Destruction|ridonkulous levels of magical power]]. Even Marisa, who has faced all of those mentioned above and then some, makes it a point to avoid ever meeting Flandre whenever she goes to the Scarlet Mansion to [[Kleptomaniac Hero|steal books]], not-so-subtly implying that she scares the crap out of her.
** Also deserving of her own bullet-point is Cirno after starring in her own [[Gaiden Game]], ''Great Fairy Wars''. For all that she's rightfully regarded as the [[Ted Baxter|series]] [[Baka|dumb]][[The Ditz|ass]], she shows the near-unique ability to destroy enemy projectiles in flight without using a spellcard.<ref>Only above-mentioned Youmu has shown a similar skill, in a much more restricted way</ref>
* The Black Baron of ''[[
* In one instance of ''[[
* [[Shrinking Violet|Emil Castagnier]] from ''[[
** In this case, Emil seems to take a leaflet out of [[Harry Potter (
* [[
** Even more so in the "Super Mario Adventures" comics where, after being kidnapped by Bowser, she easily breaks herself out, finds out Mario has been captured trying to rescue ''her'' and proceeds to break back in and rescue Mario.
** [[Cowardly Lion|Luigi]] is a better known example.
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* One could argue whether Mario himself, a somewhat clumsy [[Big Eater|pasta-obsessed]] plumber fits into this category as well. Especially evident in the [[DiC Entertainment]] cartoons.
* [[Street Fighter|Dan Hibiki]]...sort of. In canon, he's a horrible fighter who's [[Arrogant Kung Fu Guy|way too full of himself for his own good]]. In-game, however, he's a [[Lethal Joke Character]] (or, in the case of ''Street Fighter IV'', just plain ''lethal''.)
** He's not really a horrible fighter. Much like [[Dragonball Z|Hercule]], [[Badass Normal|he's actually miles above most fighters in the world]], it's just that [[Overshadowed
** UDON played with this in the ''Street Fighter Legends'' comic, where Dan briefly managed to tap into the Dark Hadou, only to trip and fall on his face before he could attack.
* Travis Touchdown, the main character of the ''[[No More Heroes]]'' series, is a very skilled swordsman, [[Made of Iron]], can move at superhuman speeds and transform into a ''tiger'', owns a [[Humongous Mecha]] the size of a large building and could probably cut an average human to pieces in the blink of an eye...if he's not too busy pleasuring himself to Moe Anime, playing video games, or clumsily hitting on his female opponents..
* The Vortigaunts in the ''[[Half Life]]'' series are an entire species of this trope. In ''Half-Life'' and its expansions they're a relatively weak mid-level enemy slaughtered by the dozens and used as manual labourers by the more powerful members of the Nihilanth's army. By ''Half-Life 2'' they are freed from their enforced servitude [[Heel Face Turn|and join Earth's]] [[La Résistance]] against the Combine, providing Gordon with cryptic statements and the occasional charge for his [[Powered Armor|HEV suit]]. At the beginning of ''Episode One'' however they render the nigh-unstoppable GMan ''[[Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu?|completely powerless]]'', saving Gordon and Alyx in the process, and when three of them are faced with an army of [[Big Creepy
* Maeda Keiji from ''[[Sengoku Basara]]'' is usually a laidback, jovial guy who enjoys drinking, pulling pranks, chasing girls and generally goofing around. However if you dare to hurt his friends, family or any innocent person when he's around, you'd better get the fuck out before he either punches you in the face or cuts you neatly in half with his [[
* Dick Gumshoe in ''[[
** Gumshoe has fought of members of both a Yakuza crime boss and a group of Mafia thugs, showing up the next day completely uninjured.
** In the third case ''Investigations'' he repeatedly breaks away from Lang's men in order to give Edgeworth an important piece of information and in the fourth {{spoiler|he actually pulls out a [[Big Damn Heroes]] moment. Though to be fair [[Running Gag|everyone was doing it by that point.]]}}
** {{spoiler|He was also part of an investigation where armed SWAT teams tracked an assassin, lead them to his hideout and steal vital evidence from the hideout while there was a firefight going on, then driving top speed to the courtroom through the busy LA streets, only stopping when he crashed, and even then, he was conscious and determined to keep going for a few seconds. He later turned up with little more than a bandaged head.}} Why did he do all this? His friend was in danger.
** While you don't see it onscreen, {{spoiler|1=the wimpy and easily-ignored Ron DeLite is also the [[Gentleman Thief]] Mask DeMasque.}}
** Heck, Phoenix Wright himself. He's the world's [[Straight Man]]/[[Butt Monkey]] and often behest to the whims of his immature sidekicks, and in the first two years of his career defeated three of the best prosecutors out
** And the head of the State Police force, and a man who can blackmail Presidents.
* {{spoiler|Missile}} in ''[[Ghost Trick:
* [[Dragon Age|"Enchantment!"]] That's right: do ''not'' piss off Sandal.
** Hordes of hundreds of dead darkspawn did nothing more than get some blood on him. In the sequel, he freezes an Ogre solid and wipes out dozens of demons, up to and including a Pride Demon.
* The Khajiit race in ''[[The Elder Scrolls]]'' series come across as quite thick. But just ask the wood-elves how their border-disputes with the Khajiit are going, the phrases 'vertical ambush' and 'terrifying humanoid lions' will probably come up.
* ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog]]'': Big the Cat. He was originally voiced by [[Duke Nukem|Jon St. John]], is now voiced by [[Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann|Kamina]], then [[Took a Level
* Katze Kotolnos from ''[[Endless Frontier]]'' is a [[Camp Gay]] cat person who is constantly making passes at protagonist Haken Browning. Then there comes a point where you have to fight him and he proceeds to kick your ass with his hands in his pockets. When you first fight him, he fights alongside Ezel, who you've been chasing for a while, and who wears an intimidating skull helmet and looks like a total [[Badass]]. ''Katze'' is the more dangerous of the two.
* Hewie of the H-Game ''[[Castle Fantasia 2 Renewal]]'' is this to degree. He acts a carefree moron who always sent one of his team member angry over and over again, but turns out he's a very great war strategist.
* {{spoiler|Piu-Piu}} of the ''[[
{{quote|
* Cielo in ''[[Digital Devil Saga]]''. Usually a calm and cheery ALBINO BRAZILIAN WITH JAMAICAN ACCENT, untill {{spoiler|a guy from the security eats his comrades in order to get power. Cielo proceeds to make a badass speech}}. There's also the time {{spoiler|that in order to protect Sera and Serph, he destroys two fighter jets by chewing on their pilots and cutting their wings, dying in the explosion.}}
* Karl Blaine in ''[[Just Cause (
* Tyrell in ''[[Golden Sun: Dark Dawn]]'' nearly qualifies for a [[Too Dumb to Live|Darwin Award]] in his intro cutscene and [[
* [[Space Quest|Roger Wilco]] will even admit he's far from the sharpest knife in the drawer. Hell, he's a marginally competent janitor who is prone to taking on-shift naps in the closet. When "it" hits fan, though? Tricks a nasty creature twice his size into blowing itself up. Kills an ''entire ship'' worth of Sariens to prevent them from nuking his home planet. Stops an evil genius from invading his home planet with a clone army (granted, it was an army of insurance salesmen...), rescues two programmers from slavery and beats their [[Bad Boss]] with a [[Humongous Mecha]], destroyed the evil genius in a rematch after the evil genius took over his homeworld, took down the Confederation's shiny flagship with a garbage scow, and stopped another mad scientist from committing [[Grand Theft Me]] on a close friend. Do not piss off the [[Almighty Janitor]]!
* ''[[Crash Bandicoot]]'' [[Adult Child|isn't particularly smart]], he has a [[Attention Deficit Ooh Shiny|terrible attention span]] and [[The Unintelligible|can't even speak English]] for the most part. He has also consistently beaten the evil schemes of Cortex and any other [[Big Bad]] Wumpa Island has faced for "fifteen flippin' years" now. Oh, and [[Big Brother Instinct|don't hurt his little sister]], especially if you value your throat...
* Laguna is this in ''[[Final Fantasy VIII]]'' and ''[[Dissidia Final Fantasy Duodecim]]''. In the original game he's a goofy, laidback soldier with a terrible sense of direction who {{spoiler|becomes the head of a rebellion to overthrow a sorceress and then the leader of the world's largest and most advanced nation.}} In Dissidia, he's as goofy and directionless as ever, is the only character to have no magic but still stands up to world destroying demi-gods like Sephiroth, Kefka and Exdeath. His boss is Cloud of Darkness, who is literally the personification of darkness itself.
** If not even Vaan takes your directions seriously, then you go ahead and snipe Chaos you're probably this.
* ''[[The Legend of Zelda:
** The manga adapation of ''Ocarina of Time'' seems to interpret Link this way, in contrast to his very serious and stoic appearance in the game. He's very sweetly boyish and mischievous, at times outright silly and clumsy, up through a large part of the manga - at least until the [[Bad Future]] elements of the adult section start to sink in.
* ''[[Skyrim]]'': Cicero the jester. He's a crazy loon dressed up like a complete idiot. He's also the Keeper of the Night Mother (meaning he was chosen by the Void to be the Night Mother's protector) and a deadly knife fighter. When he snaps after Astrid dismisses the Night Mother one time too many, he nearly kills the entire Dark Brotherhood in his fury. The guy who pursues
* The shopkeeper from the ''[[
* Valvatorez from ''[[Disgaea 4:
* Wheatley from ''Portal 2''. The "moron" is intentional as he's "the product of the greatest minds of a generation working together with the express purpose of building the dumbest moron who ever lived." This, however, precludes the fact that he was the person who woke Chell in the first place, willingly performed a series of personal efforts that he had been told would kill him, came up with the plan to {{spoiler|sabotage [[
== Web Comics ==▼
▲== [[Web Comics]] ==
* Skull the Troll from ''[[
** He's such a crouching moron, that while he's fighitng the [[Big Bad
** Also [https://web.archive.org/web/20120220063506/http://www.pvponline.com/2011/10/26/swing-and-a-prayer/ more recently], he's shown catching a war hammer in one hand.
* {{spoiler|Gamzee Makara}} from ''[[Homestuck]]''. He starts being introduced as the most useless of the trolls. But we later find out from references that in the trolls' final battle in their session, {{spoiler|Gamzee}} did more damage to the Black King than anybody else, which shocked his teammates and their opponent. {{spoiler|When [[Suddenly Sober|he's cut off from his mind-rotting sopor pies]], he also becomes sadistic, competent and utterly terrifying as he [[Hero
** Also John, who is by now {{spoiler|the most powerful out of his group of friends, being the only one to have reached his God Tiers so far}} despite being the most "average kid-like" out of all of them. He's also managed to masterfully counter-[[Troll]] Karkat despite apparently being the most naive and innocent of them all (with the possible exception of Jade).
** Courtyard Droll, despite being a complete idiot, still {{spoiler|managed to kill both Jake's dream self and Jade}}, albiet in incredibly stupid ways. At this point, {{spoiler|He's the only one of the four agents in the post scratch universe to succeed in his mission; Jane came back to life after Jack stabbed her, Dirk killed the Hegemonic Brute when he was attacked, and Roxy has gone [[Incredibly Lame Pun|Rogue]]}}.
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* Ray from ''[[Achewood]]'' happens to be the son of Ramses Luther Smuckles, an all-around badass and one of the most celebrated brawlers in American history. He enters the Great Outdoor Fight with essentially no training but manages to destroy a number of stronger men when his best friend Roast Beef is apparently in danger and his latent fighting instincts are aroused.
** For example: during the GOF, another army leader (in the GOF, the first few days involve groups of fighters forming ad-hoc armies led by the most badass members) approached Ray at night, knocking him to the ground and calling him a coward and a liar. Ray's response? He ''ripped the dude's face off with his bare hands.''
* Zap Vexler from ''[[
* Trace from ''[[
* Arguably Liquid Snake of ''[[The Last Days of Foxhound]]'' also applies, considering it's been implied that despite his borderline idiotic behavior he is in reality a killing machine, but has lost the majority of his skills due to an accident caused by his overly aggressive behavior. He gets more intelligent as the comic moves closer to the events of the Shadow Moses rebellion of ''[[Metal Gear Solid]]''.
* Both Joyce and Walky from ''[[Walkyverse|It's Walky!]]'' fall under this. Joyce in particular is ordinarily a complete innocent, with a passion for puppies, stuffed animals, and all things pink and frilly. However, if you push her [https://web.archive.org/web/20120329144754/http://www.itswalky.com/d/20001015.html just far enough...] whoops, maybe that was a bit ''too'' far.
{{quote|
'''Professor Doc:''' Big Boss, we can't ''afford'' to fix her! Do you know how many times she's saved the world's collective ass with her psychotic outbursts?
'''Big Boss:''' Three.
'''Professor Doc:''' Well, I'm holding out for five. }}
** Walky meanwhile is an excellent example that the trigger doesn't ''have'' to involve an immediate threat to yourself or your loved ones. [https://web.archive.org/web/20110404001146/http://www.itswalky.com/d/20000523.html This], for example, is what happens if you mess with his favorite snack food.
* Ping from ''[[Megatokyo]]'' is a dating-sim accessory who is just a regular [[Ridiculously Human Robot]] girl...whose way of dealing with rejection involves [[Super
* Grace from ''[[
* Mega Man in ''[[Bob and George]]''. Ordinarily he's a complete buffoon. But when he goes into battle, particularly against the Robot Masters, he becomes [[Badass]], often coming up with clever ways to defeat them. The fans figured out a reason for this, and the author said "[[Sure Why Not]]": In one of the early comics, the punchline is that Mega Man was accidentally programmed first to defeat evil robots, and second to be an idiot. He later retconned that this was the reason Mega Man was a default moron whenever there wasn't evil around, but when a bad guy shows up, he becomes an instant badass for the duration of the crisis.
* Lemmy in ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20131105222659/http://www.fanboys-online.com/ F@nboy$]''. Normally he's a timid, goofy Nintendo fanatic. However, should anyone ever accuse Nintendo of being "kiddy" within his vicinity, [[Berserk Button|he literally phases out into a trance and turns into a rampaging lunatic, with little to no memory of what he has done afterwards]]. This may also be triggered by getting hit in the head, or more precisely, accidentally hitting other things with his face.
* Fighter of ''[[
{{quote|
** He once used his swords as chainsaws to destroy an entire flight of unstoppable dragons just because he was too stupid to realize said action was impossible.
** Not to mention he once survived a fall of several thousand feet by blocking the planet before it hit him. Seriously.
{{quote|
* Smoke from ''[[WTF Comics]]'', starting as a little pocket Monk with seemingly no real battle capabilities besides dodging things, until {{spoiler|Nikisha stabs Anna in front of him, and make him go "all out" in rage with annihilating an entire bridge of Mooks along with the bridge itself under them, nearly killing her too in the process.}}
** Oh, and did we mention that he can also {{spoiler|teleport, modify his own perception of time, resurrect the dead, and see the very fabric of the Timespace around him}}?
* In a couple of ''[[Ctrl
** While lacking the Crouching Moron element, Lilah is notable for having insanely good game playing skills whenever she's really angry with Ethan.
* [[Complete Monster|Xykon]] in ''[[The Order of the Stick
** Also, Elan. He may have [[Took a Level
*** Ah, but he's a [[The Ditz|Ditz]] with a firm grasp of [[Genre Savvy|"bardic tradition,"]] so much that he has accurately predicted future events based solely on how good a story they'd make.
** The Monster in the Dark is also a nearly textbook example. He's pretty much a moron {{spoiler|(although he has been thinking a bit more lately since his friendship with O'Chul)}}, and a [[Minion
* In ''[[The
* ''[[Sluggy Freelance]]'':
** Torg, despite [[Took a Level
{{quote|
'''Torg:''' I've been taking an Internet college correspondence course in kickass.
'''Riff:''' You have not.
'''Torg:''' But I ''so'' want to teach one! }}
** Riff is a milder (or more complicated) example. He's superficially cool much of the time, but under that "strong and silent" act he rivals Torg in stereotypic male dumbness (and beats him in insensitivity); in the presence of the opposite sex, whenever he tries to do anything but look cool, he puts his foot in his mouth and becomes a total fool. However, he's right at home being a [[Badass]] action hero or heroic leader when the right opportunity arises. So in this case you might actually miss the "moron" part of the trope if you only saw the superficial everyday coolness and the hero mode.
* Daniel "Dan" Ti'Fiona of ''[[Dan and
** Dan's best friend, and the other half of the title, Mab, also qualifies, though for different reasons. She generally seems innocent-to-downright-nuts, with her main hobby being 'hugging things', feared mostly for her nightmare-inducing brownies...however, she IS a Fae, and resultingly, has god-level magical abilities - and when forced to use them, she can frighten ANYONE into submission - and then go right back to her perky, airheaded self again. {{spoiler|Also, it turns out she's actually a [[Magnificent Bastard]] above all other [[Magnificent Bastard
*** By extension, this applies to pretty much the entire Fae race - Mab is merely the one most often found mixed up in the main plot. Being superdimentional beings of pure magic and/or insanity will do that to a race.
* Subverted in ''[[
* Hod from ''[[Brat Halla]]'' is one of these after he [[Took a Level
* Stanley the Tool from ''[[Erfworld]]'', who on first appearance seems more concerned with the fact his [[MacGuffin]] turns walnuts into pigeons when cracked than the impending destruction of his forces. [https://web.archive.org/web/20130830161949/http://www.giantitp.com/comics/erf0125.html Then he decks Chief Warlord Caeser in one hit].
* Ordog from ''[[
* Diva Beelze from ''[[Evil Diva (
* Sir Muir, a scarred old Darsai knight from the webcomic [https://web.archive.org/web/20130318061244/http://www.drunkduck.com/Harkovast/ Harkovast] appears to be a prattling, senile goofball when nothing exciting is happening. However he proves that he's quite a competent (though distractible) fighter when the situation calls for it.
* Kharla'ggen from ''[[
* {{spoiler|Buwaro}} from ''[[Slightly Damned]]'' is like this without {{spoiler|his star pendent.}}
* Hanna of ''[[Hanna Is Not a
* [[Cloudcuckoolander|Eddie]] from [[Emergency Exit]], if [http://eecomics.net/?strip_id=998 hit] [http://eecomics.net/?strip_id=999 in] [http://eecomics.net/?strip_id=1004 the] [http://eecomics.net/?strip_id=1005 head.]
* Gregory of [[Dominic Deegan]]. Loves making couch forts. Can take on about a dozen members of [[Quirky Miniboss Squad|the Chosen]] by himself.
** May run in the family. Consider
* Dave from ''[[Narbonic]]'' is the [[Butt Monkey]] and [[Unlucky Everydude]] for most of the strip's run, until the final few chapters where {{spoiler|it's revealed that he's the most powerful and dangerous character in the whole series.}}
* Tip from ''[[Skin Horse]]'' is generally considered the laughingstock of the eponymous organization - even next to a talking Canadian dog and a sociopathic zombie girl. Then he turns out to have gone through Afghanistan and have rescued three fellow soldiers from a burning humvee.
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* Crusader of [http://www.jaydenandcrusader.com Jayden and Crusader] is a mild mannered artist often subject to the whims of his more extravagantly crazy house mates. But by god, if you threaten his friends, you'd better be [[A God Am I|prepared for the consequences.]]
* Arthur Wight of ''[[Suppression]]'' is introduced getting ordered around by his daughter, who looks to be all of ten. He mopes, chain smokes, and trails around behind Maxwell, right up until he takes on Red Cerene and [[Half the Man He Used To Be|cuts her in half]] without once showing more effort than "yeah, I'm evil, cause...yannow."
** Also Nick, who's practically a walking [[Funny Background Moment]]. He tends to run away a lot and is something of a coward. Then you corner him, and he [[Playing
* Bill of ''[[Legend of Bill]]'' is a wannabe barbarian hero with no actual fighting skills. Given that the strip is generally humorous, it's easy to assume that the title is a joke. Then [http://legendofbill.webcomicsonline.com/2008/09/18/a-barbarian-is-born/ this happens]{{broken link}}. [http://legendofbill.webcomicsonline.com/2011/01/31/bill/ And this.]{{broken link}}
* Zac of ''[[What the Fu (
* Denver in ''[[Exiern]]'', usually a bumbling nerd, in fact he is a bumbling, lovable, nerd. Hurt someone he likes and he'll [http://www.exiern.com/?p=976 smash open giant solid oak doors] with his bare hands, or [http://www.exiern.com/?p=1422 rewrite the laws of magic] with a gesture.
* Grymm from ''[[Voodoo Walrus]]'' tends to be light-hearted, silly, and more than a little oblivious to the world around him. But more than a few times he's switched to his [https://web.archive.org/web/20190814153145/http://www1.voodoowalrus.com/?
** Though recently the creators seem to be pushing the idea that Grymm and the Masked T-Square aren't even the same person despite multiple past pages existing as proof.
* [[The Ditz|Donald]] from ''[[Dark Legacy Comics]]'' is shown to be [[Too Dumb to Live]] and is completely useless at fighting (and pretty much everything). However during a Raid Boss the group had been stuck at for three months, Nyte whispered something that caused Donald to lose it and slice his head off in a single strike.
{{quote|
* Mr. Fish from ''[[Manly Guys Doing Manly Things]]'' does it twice over. He's a [[Pokémon
{{quote|
== [[Web Original]] ==▼
* Subverted with {{spoiler|Arthur Williams}} in ''[[Survival of the Fittest]]'', who shoves aside his shyness and fear, charging an armed player in order to save a hostage, and gets shot in the face for his trouble. Paul Smith, also from ''Survival of the Fittest'' is usually a [[Chivalrous Pervert]], pretty goofy and laid
▲== Web Original ==
▲* Subverted with {{spoiler|Arthur Williams}} in ''[[Survival of the Fittest]]'', who shoves aside his shyness and fear, charging an armed player in order to save a hostage, and gets shot in the face for his trouble. Paul Smith, also from ''Survival of the Fittest'' is usually a [[Chivalrous Pervert]], pretty goofy and laid back -- very much a comic relief character. However, from time to time, he almost seems to "switch on" and become one hell of a lot more dangerous. And try ''lethally'' dangerous.
* Essentially the entire core cast of ''[[Mega 64]]'', but special mention should go to Sean and Horatio. Do ''not'' make them mad.
* In ''[[Red vs. Blue]]'' Caboose is usually a complete idiot who loads his gun with crayons and keeps killing his teammates, however in episode 40 Caboose thought about everything that made him angry (spiky kittens, Red bull and Babies) and was able to kill every single one of the flag obsessed zealots in about 10 seconds.
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* [[Homestar Runner]] is one of the most idiotic characters to hit the internet. In "The Strongest Man in the World", he bicycle kicks the Cheat, ''while upside down'', into the far horizon
** In ''4 Branches'', it's mentioned that Homestar's stupidity occasionally reaches such heights that it "flips back to start", and shows him answering the calculation "2 + 2" by defining Coulomb's law. When this is pointed out, he reverts to normal, revising his answer as "22".
* Tristan from ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!:
** "Yeah, I can break necks with my mind."
* When he's not reviewing movies, [[
* Linkara from ''[[
* Paul of ''[[Loading Ready Run]]''. Ridiculously techy, he can make anything from time machines to nerf rocket launchers from the junk in his garage.
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* ''[[Popeye]]''.
* The Flash, in ''[[Justice League Unlimited]]'' appears to fall into this category. For the most part he's a goofy dope who doesn't take much seriously and is always the one to crack a joke at the expense of drama and badass-ism. However his role is ''not'' to be underestimated (in one universe his death motivated the League to turn into a [[Knight Templar|totalitarian dictatorship]]). Many people found it surprising to discover he's a ''forensic scientist'' in his normal identity. His big [[Let's Get Dangerous|transforming moment]], however, came during his [[Justice League (
** Also during that battle, not only was he the first to defeat his Justice Lord robotic double (even though there wasn't one in the alternate universe), he was also the only one who wasn't effected by his double's [[Hannibal Lecture]] speech, meaning not only that he doesn't have any doubts in his abilities as a hero, but it furthers his role as the heart of the group.
*** Adding onto this, everyone else needed assistance on their double. He took his on single-handedly and was the first to finish. While everyone was busy with theirs, he just shrugged off the doubts his double was trying to create and whooped its metal ass.
** Back in ''[[Justice League]]'', when the team split up for an episode, Flash is attempting to interrogate a mook who insults his technique -- "You're no Batman." Flash drops him off a building, races down and catches him at the bottom. He got the info.
** When Lex Luthor [[Body Swap|got ahold of his powers once]], he almost took out the entire Watchtower single-handedly, effectively proving that Flash is far more powerful than most people realise. And not only that, he's ''[[Obfuscating Stupidity|aware]]'' of this, and so doesn't use his powers nearly as much as he could.
** In his [[A Day in
** In one episode, all the rest of the Justice League are infected by the shards of the Eclipso diamond and are trying to kill him, while he doesn't want to hurt any of them. He wins.
* Cody from ''[[
** Harold fits this even better. He's ''Total Drama's'' "The Deluded Dork" and "The Geek", but once [[Total Drama Island
** {{spoiler|Cody again when he knocked out Duncan in ''Total Drama World Tour'' when he finds out that Duncan kissed Gwen the goth girl he has a crush on}}.
* Maggie from ''[[The Simpsons]]'' has her moments. She has shot people on two
** She also saved Homer from drowning in one episode.
** Or Homer himself; normally and idiot and a jerkass, he will frequently slip into a state of hypercompetency to solve the situation at hand.
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* Ron from ''[[Kim Possible]]'' seems useless much of the time. His primary contribution to most missions appears to be serving as a distraction, and even after he's exposed to the Mystical Monkey Power, he admits that his skill at monkey kung fu "comes and goes." But when necessary ([[All Up to You|i.e. when Kim is busy, incapacitated, or not present]]), Ron displays extraordinary skill in both martial arts and general resourcefulness. As a matter of fact, when one reviews the majority of episodes, one finds that Ron is the person to actually foil the villain's [[Pointless Doomsday Device|plot du jour]] while Kim is keeping the help busy.
** His Mystical Monkey Kung Fu is shown three times, especially in the [[Grand Finale]] where Ron suddenly becomes [[Badass]] enough to get a [[Chunky Updraft]] [[Battle Aura]] that Kim, Rufus and even Shego just stared at him while he beat those Aliens' asses.
{{quote|
'''Shego:''' I think the sidekick just stepped up...monkey-style! }}
* ''[[Darkwing Duck]]''. The change from incompetence to determination was usually signified by the [[Catch Phrase]] "[[Let's Get Dangerous]]!"
** From the same show, Comet Guy also fits this trope. With as much power as Superman and fewer brain cells than Bizarro, this bumbling, moronic superhero manages to get his act together when Steelbeak threatens St-Canard with his remote controlled rubber wrecking ball.
* Aang from ''[[
** Iroh also didn't start as much more than a tea loving old man. That changed VERY quickly.
*** Made even funnier in that Iroh uses this trope as a disguise in Season Three.
** And then of course there's Bumi. He appears to be an insane old man. [[The Wonka|And he is]]. He's also built like [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]] (normally concealed by his cloak) and one of the greatest Earthbenders in history.
*** When the Fire Nation attacked his city with overwhelming force, he surrendered and let them close him in a metal coffin to prevent him from Bending. When an eclipse stripped the Firebenders of their power, he bent with his face to break free of the coffin, [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking|kicked the Fire Nation out of his city and defaced Ozai's giant statue]] ''in less than eight minutes''. I repeat, he defeated an army in less than eight minutes and still had enough time to deface a metal statue as big as Lady Liberty if not bigger, and then [[Badass|threw it down of a cliff]]. And he's an insane old man.
** And then there's Sokka. At first he seems like a guy who ''wants'' to be a capable warrior but is [[Can't Catch Up|constantly outstripped by the others.]] Then, as the series goes on, he [[Character Development|turns into a]] [[Gadgeteer Genius]] who has a space sword and is a much more capable leader and a skilled fighter to boot, who has gone toe-to-toe and ''WON'' with such deadly foes as Mai, Wan Shi Tong, and {{spoiler|'''Combustion Man.'''}}
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* [[Inspector Gadget]], of all people, occasionally demonstrated this. When Penny and Brain were in real danger from Dr. Claw's traps in one or two episodes, the normally [[Too Dumb to Live]] Inspector would [[Let's Get Dangerous|skilfully use his gadgets to save them.]]
* On ''[[South Park]]'', Pip becomes a super dodgeball player after being repeatedly insulted.
* Captain Fanzone of ''[[Transformers Animated]]'' is often portrayed as the bumbling, technologically inept Comic
** And in "This Is Why I Hate Machines" he proves himself to be a damn fine cop, using the Autobots on Cybertron's apparent fear of organics to get information, as well as {{spoiler|easily realizing he and Ratchet were being tailed by Jazz, and that he was on their side.}}
* ''[[The Venture Bros]]'': Dean Venture snaps and beats the crap out of Dermott, a kid twice his size, after Dermot insults [[Perky Goth|Triana]].
** 21 and 24 are bumbling [[Mooks]]. However, thanks to being dangerously [[Genre Savvy]], they can do things even the most competent henchmen wouldn't dare attempt. Well, until one of them and does something [[Genre Blind|genre-dumb]].
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** Hank Venture tries to invoke this when rescuing his brother Dean [[Long Story|from being married to Baron Underbheit]], but fails. So it's really more like Crouching Moron Hidden...Moron.
*** Then Hank {{spoiler|plays it straight in season 04's "Pomp and Circuitry." He tries to join SPHINX and passes every single test, including foiling Hunter and Shore Leave's intentions to mind-wipe him.}}
* Odd Della Robia in ''[[
** Jim Moralès also qualifies. Although he's the comic relief of the show most of the time, whenever the children are threatened he can prove to be [[Let's Get Dangerous|entirely fearless and a nasty fighter]]. Most notably in "False Start", where [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|he single-handedly destroyed a dozen Kankrelats and kept taunting them at the brink of death]].
** Also, for a single episode of season 4, William II falls under this. As stupid as he is, he does go toe-to-toe with the real William and win. Sort of.
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* Bubbles in ''[[The Powerpuff Girls]]''. While technically the whole concept and style of the show has echoes of [[Grotesque Cute]], Bubbles is the cute and ditzy "sugar" in "sugar, spice [Buttercup] and everything nice [Blossom]" and occasionally gets to go berserk.
** "Hard Core!"
* ''[[The Fairly
** There was also that one time he watched a video called "Five Second Massive Pecs," and then proceeded to kick large amounts of ass against Crocker...who was in a mech suit.
* In one episode of ''[[G.I. Joe]]'', three Cobra [[Mooks]] dogpile on the simpleton Bazooka, which causes him to exclaim, "Darn it, ''swallowed my gum!''" and knock them all out with one punch each.
* Beast Boy in ''[[Teen Titans (
** And then there's ''Beast Within''...
* GIR of ''[[Invader Zim]]'' is even more inept than [[General Failure|Zim himself]]. His brain is literally made of chewing gum, coins and a paper clip and he seems to have both feet [[Cloudcuckoolander|firmly planted in space]] and his mind on waffles or tacos. However, when issued a command, his eyes occasionally turn from a bright blue to a glowing red and he acknowledges the order like a perfect Irken SIR unit. He usually forgets the order or becomes distracted by something else within seconds, but when Zim locks GIR into this "duty mode" after one-too-many failures that ''weren't'' due to him, the little robot becomes scarily competent and almost kills Zim after, correctly, determining he is the greatest threat to "the mission".
* [[Duck Dodgers]] himself has moments such as these. Even despite being incompetent 95% of the time with his successes mostly due to [[Hypercompetent Sidekick|his Cadet]], he can manage some pretty amazing feats, such as saving the entire [[Green Lantern]] Corps after Sinestro captures them all single-handedly.
** Or single-handedly defeating the Martian Queen in order to save The Cadet, with a ''[[Star Trek II:
** [[Daffy Duck]] as a whole could fit this trope, his attempts to prove his superiority over Bugs and look like a suave hero nearly always fall flat, but when a true push comes to a shove, he can prove rather cunning and formidable. Even excluding earlier shorts, this is the same guy that ''beat the crap out of the Tazmanian Devil'' for stealing one dollar from him, oh and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5RIvO74ZC5c he has beaten Bugs at least once...]
* Chester. Spike's yappy little sidekick from ''[[Looney Tunes]]''. Much, MUCH stronger than he looks.
* Michaelango in the 2003 ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2003
** Lampshaded with Mikey's victory over The Entity in Notes from the Underground, where he is complimented by his brothers for "really stepping up".
* ''[[Family Guy]]'' actually has a few. Glenn Quagmire is a sexual predator, but an absolutely ace pilot (it's "Hidden Badass" because it's so rarely we actually get to see him do his piloting job). Plus, it turns out [[Adam West]] was a KGB sleeper agent who managed to single-handedly beat the crap out of Brian, Stewie, [[Dan Aykroyd]], AND Chevy Chase all at once when accidentally activated.
* Jack Fenton in ''[[Danny Phantom]]''. Granted he's an [[Genius Ditz|eccentric inventor]], a bumbling ghost fighter, and an [[Amazingly Embarrassing Parents|embarrassing parent]]. But when his family is in danger, he'll show everyone just how competent he can be, then proceed to kick the opposer's ass. Vlad (his old college friend turned supervillan) learned this the hard way. Twice.
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** The Box Ghost becomes appropriate for this trope near the end of the series, when he decides to finally get his due by utilizing [[Sealed Evil in
* The eponymous character from ''[[Martin Mystery]]''. Normally he's a lazy goofball who Diana has to kick into line. Mess with Diana, Java, or the Center (something that happens nearly every episode), and he WILL make you regret it.
* Fry from ''[[Futurama]]''. Not only is he a
** Fry has also saved the universe on several occasions. This is always due to his lack of the delta brainwave. Fry is a badass BECAUSE he is a moron.
* Sterling Archer, title character of the series ''[[Archer]]'' is the world's dumbest secret agent. But he is a secret agent, and can dole out a secret agent level ass whooping when the need arises.
* ''Johnny'' of ''[[Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy]]'', in the Big Picture Show. Several others as well, but particularly Johnny.
** ''Ed'' deserves to be notably mentioned, as at one episode, he went into a nasty mood to a point where he proved he could even intimidate [[Bratty Half
* In ''[[Scooby Doo Mystery Inc]]'', Scooby may be the same lovable goof he always is, but when a robotic dog actually tries to kill the gang (as opposed to just scaring them), Scooby steps up, {{spoiler|fights and destroys it with a forklift}}, and manages to dish out some really [[Badass]] [[Pre
* [[Goofy]] of [[Walt Disney]] fame is pretty much a gangly, clumsy hayseed, but there has been more than one occasion where he's become [[Let's Get Dangerous|scary focused]] on what he needs to do and manages to pull it off, as unorthodox as it may be.
** "Its about staying focused...''ON YOUR GOALS!!!"''
* Palmer and Sasha from ''[[Titan Maximum]]'' are both ego driven, booze swilling, dumbasses. But as the hicks on Eros, and Titan security found out, they didn't become pilots of the titular robot for nothing. They can both kick your ass ''very'' easily.
* The Sultan from ''[[Aladdin (Disney film)|Aladdin]]'' of all people is like this.
** You have to admit, ''somebody'' had to run a place so rife with catastrophe before Aladdin showed up, right?
** If you need definitive proof that he's more than he seems, remember this: the guy who's all of about three-foot-nothing in height and of a distinctly round shape, who chuckles more merrily than Santa Claus and is often-times found playing with little figurines, once wooed [[Meaningful Name|Queen Hipsodeath]], the ''queen of the Amazons'' because of his sheer badassery when rescuing his daughter from them, a plight even Aladdin hadn't overcome!
* Also Tigger of ''[[Winnie the Pooh]]'', most evident in the Disney incarnation, which is [[Cloudcuckoolander|no less brainless]] than he is the original novels, while having saved the lives of almost all his friends in the Hundred Acre Wood from an avalanche to name at least one example.
* Rigby from ''[[Regular Show]]'' can open up a serious can of whoop-ass when he wants to.
* [[Plastic Man]] in ''[[Batman:
* Penfold on ''[[
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* ''[[
* Orko in ''[[He
** Prince Adam himself is this in the 80s cartoon. He puts on a lazy, clumsy, cowardly, combat-incompetent rich kid act to help erase any suspicions that he might be He-Man. Every so often, however, he reveals a tremendous depth of knowledge on Eternia's ancient cultures and science, he's been able to use his intellect to defeat bad-guys when even He-Man's strength had failed, and with one notable exception that saw his father get kidnapped, when he is forced to play the hero as Prince Adam instead of He-Man he can be surprisingly effective.
* [[American Dragon: Jake Long]] has Jonathan Long, Jake's father. He's usually a goofy [[Amazingly Embarrassing Parent]], but [[Berserk Button|hurt or threathen his family]] and...well, the first time it happened, he mistook the [[Jersey Devil]] (who had just defeated Jake's dragon form) for a bear and ''pushed it off a cliff after blinding it with bear spray''.
* Don't let his lack of booksmarts fool you, there's a very good reason Numbuh 4/Wallabee Beatles of ''[[Codename
** Of course, there's also Numbuh 2/Hoagie P. Gilligan Jr., who may act like a goofball most of the time, but has actually proven himself to be the team's most efficient [[Gadgeteer Genius]].
** Likewise, Numbuh 3/Kuki Sanban may act like a [[The Ditz|ditzy]] [[Genki Girl]], but threaten her stuffed animals, and '''''YOU WILL DIE A SLOW AND PAINFUL DEATH!!!!'''''
* ''[[
* Even in spite of his clumsiness and the fact that he unintentionally causes a lot of problems, [[
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