Official Couple

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
So official, it's the game's logo.

Some shows are made to be deliberately enticing to shippers, but for the most part relationships in the story are merely heavily suggested. This could be seen as a bit of cowardice to the writers, but a sympathetic view is it allows them to please many potential fans without alienating anyone else. It's what keeps The Unwanted Harem afloat, assures plenty of fun Ho Yay, and allows for plotline flexibility.

On the other hand, these kinds of shows often have a pair of characters who are a little more overtly paired off, usually two people the other characters admire. (This makes The Hero and The Chick the usual suspects, but any combination may prove valid.) They might never kiss on screen or even flirt with other characters, but it's understood by the cast that the two are an item. Naturally, this does absolutely nothing to offset Shipping, as there seems an inexplicable inverse relationship between the officiality of a couple and the actual fervent fan interest in it.

Extremely common in Situational Sexuality plotlines, especially yuri- and yaoi-geared works. Also a common staple of shoujo anime.

Sometimes, there's another couple that sometimes serves as a Foil and/or companion to the "official" couple that involves The Hero. This other couple usually involves The Lancer and a minor female. This couple is called the Beta Couple.

Expect: She Is Not My Girlfriend, Just Friends, Everyone Can See It, Like Brother and Sister, and Lampshade Hanging.

If this trope breaks up a Fan-Preferred Couple, expect Ship-to-Ship Combat to ensue.

Side-Story Bonus Art often has the couple getting married.

See also Love Chart. Contrast One True Pairing, Fan-Preferred Couple.

Examples of Official Couple include:

Anime and Manga

  • Sukisho has Sora and Sunao (or Yoru and Ran) and Nanami and Shinichirou.
  • My-HiME has a few of these: there's Mai and Yuuichi (though they're both in heavy denial), Akira and Takumi, and Akane and Kazuya (who are the Beta Couple). The artbooks also canonize Natsuki and Shizuru.
    • Mai-Otome switches things around a bit (thanks in part to Situational Sexuality), pairing up Shizuru with Natsuki, Chie with Aoi, and Haruka with Yukino (the last two of which were subtexted heavily in the My-HiME anime).
  • Haruka (Sailor Uranus) and Michiru (Sailor Neptune) from Sailor Moon. A rarity in that unlike the show's main couple, they're quite popular and shipping either of them with men usually leads to an extreme backlash.
    • More importantly is the main character Usagi and her boyfriend Mamoru. Each has upwards of five people lusting after them, depending on the canon, but they are literal destined lovers. This doesn't stop the fanon, though.
  • Kimba and Kitty in Kimba the White Lion. Look, they're the only lion cubs in the whole series. It's pretty obvious that when they grow up, they'll marry and have kids.
  • Sakura and Syaoran in Cardcaptor Sakura who confessed to each other at the end of the series, as well as Real Syaoran and Real Sakura from Tsubasa Reservoir Chronicle who also confess their love at the end of the series. spoiler for Tsubasa's ending: the Clone Syaoran and Clone Sakura also married during the infinite time loop and Real Syaoran was apparently their son, not to mention Clone Syaoran was cloned FROM the Real Syaoran, making the whole thing a LOT more complicated and confusing at times, but in the end the clones were paired together as were the real versions.
    • Touya and Yukito in Cardcaptor Sakura, and now in Tsubasa Reservoir Chronicle.
    • Similarly to Touya and Yukito, Gingetsu and Ran in Clover, though they are slightly more canon as Ran is referred to several times as 'Gingetsu's partner', and Word of God states that they were written as an old married couple.
      • Eriol/Kaho is official too, though they never showed up in Tsubasa. There's always a chance they might later show up as a couple in xxxHolic though.
        • In both Tsubasa Reservoir Chronicle and ×××HOLiC, Clow and Yuuko manage to achieve this status despite not appearing together in a single scene, and one (technically, both) of them being long dead.
    • Official I Want My Beloved to Be Happy unrequited love is Tomoyo for Sakura. While most pronounced in Cardcaptor Sakura, it seems that every Tomoyo in TRC has an immediate attraction to Sakura...
  • Chi and Hideki in Chobits.
  • Naru and Keitaro in Love Hina, and by the end only Naru is in denial over this; it helps that Naru is loosely based on the author's own wife.
  • Kare Kano is rife with Official Couples which is pretty much the whole point of the show. In fact, it's easier to list who isn't in a relationship by the end of the manga than the other way around.
  • Ranma ½ has Ryoga and Akari.
  • Inuyasha has the pair of Sango and Miroku, who have had a steadily evolving relationship from their mutual introductions. Interestingly, Inu-Yasha himself is part of a triangle (with Kagome and Kikyo). The Manga finally resolves this issue by re-killing off Kikyo and giving her and Inu-Yasha a bittersweet closure so she can pass away in peace and he can let go of his guilt and be free to go with Kagome. In the Distant Finale Sango and Miroku have children and Kagome manages to return to the past to be with Inu-Yasha for good after some time spent stuck in the future.
  • Kazuki and Tokiko on Busou Renkin.
  • Kei Kurono and Tae Kojima from Gantz.
  • By the "overtly paired-off" and heavily teased definition of the trope, Hikari Yagami and Takeru Takashi in Digimon Adventure fall under this. The second season sunk the ship in the Distant Finale. But who's counting, anyway?
    • Yamato/Sora and Miyako/Ken are however official
  • Digimon Tamers has Takato and Jeri
  • Dan (short and acorn-headed) and Miyako Miyazaki in Bamboo Blade. The cast is still trying to figure out how this one works, although it helps Miya Miya is also a gag character who flips between sweet and psycho.
  • Yusuke and Keiko, Sensui and Itsuki in Yu Yu Hakusho.
    • Yoshihiro Togashi originally did plan for Hiei and Mukuro to be an official item, but severe fan backlash prevented him from doing so.
    • Although the anime kinda implies the above in contrast to the manga
    • In the first drafts of the series Hiei and Kurama were supposed to be in a romantic relationship but Yoshihiro Togashi decided to leave them as close friends which would explain all the Ho Yay between them.
  • Rosette and Chrono and Joshua and Azmaria in the epilogue of the manga version of Chrono Crusade.
  • Ganbare Goemon, involving the titular character and primary Damsel in Distress Omitsu. This is made especially obvious in the TV anime.
  • Shido and Madoka in GetBackers. Despite being the impetus of one side story and one major Story Arc, there isn't much to say about it beyond "it's cute," and "it works." Later in the manga, Hevn and Masaki.
  • Chrono and Amy of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha. Despite what the shippers want to believe, everyone else is still officially listed under "best friends" by the Word of God.
    • Triangle Heart 3 ~sweet songs forever~ has Kyouya and Shinobu as the official couple, as revealed in the OVA and Nanoha. Surprising, since Shinobu wasn't part of the main Love Triangle in the game.
    • While not explicitly said to develop a romantic relationship in Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS, the Toy Ship of Erio and Caro does fit in the sense that, as the trope description states, both are overtly paired off and it seems understood by the cast that the two are an item. Not to mention that their brief cameo in Vi Vid has them apparently sharing a flat together in World #61/Supools, and one of the Sound Stages has Caro actually following Erio into the men's side of a public bath to do some bonding—even suggesting that they take more baths together in the future—much to Erio's sputtered embarrassment.
  • Kiba and Cheza in Wolf's Rain.
  • Many examples in Fruits Basket: Kyo and Tohru, Yuki and Machi, Hatori and Kana (later Hatori and Mayuko), Shigure and Akito, Hatsuharu and Isuzu/Rin, Hiro and Kisa, Ayame and Mine. There are also official couples for minor characters.
  • Jo and Meg from Burst Angel (two main characters who are also a Battle Couple).
  • Renton and Eureka, and Dominic and Anemone from Eureka Seven, among others.
  • Keiichi and Belldandy in Ah! My Goddess.
  • Kaoru and Aoi in Ai Yori Aoshi. Slight subversion in that only two of the other cast members know it for a fact. Mayu's just going to have to live with it.
  • Mytho and Rue get together in the very last episode of Princess Tutu. Ahiru and Fakir have also pretty much become official by then, but it ends less happily for them.
  • The love between Guts and Casca in Berserk proved to be one of the catalysts that sent Griffith tumbling hard into his Face Heel Turn. In the manga's current timeframe, the two things driving Guts are his desire to punish Griffith and his desire to heal Casca's mind. The latter only slightly less than the former.
  • Although there have been some romance in Naruto, the series has yet to officially confirm any canonical couple (Naruto/Sakura for instance, or Naruto/Hinata) despite the endless list of canonical and non-canonical pairings from fans. The Asuma/Kurenai relationship is however confirmed in Part II, as we find out Kurenai was pregnant with Asuma's son/daughter.
    • Minato and Kushina, or Naruto's parents, is also canon.
    • There was also Tsunade and Dan. Jiraiya's feelings for Tsunade are blatantly hinted before the time of his death as well.
  • Fullmetal Alchemist:
  • Gundam has its own share.
    • UC timeline has e.g. Mirai and Bright marrying in between series. Zeta is full of 'em, even if most end deadly for either or both lovers.
    • Mobile Fighter G Gundam has the epic solution of Domon's and Rain's relationship in the very last episode. (And epic is hardly enough to describe it).
    • Mobile Suit Gundam Wing even with all main characters having an opposite sex partner only has a few confirmed couples. Duo/Hilde is implied, Relena/Heero and Une/Treize are heavily implied, but Noin/Zechs or rather, 6x9, is confirmed, played straight and driven over the top with some games giving them cute love hearts when both are fighting close to each other. Awww.
      • As of the Gundam Wing: Frozen Teardrop manga, Zechs and Noin, as well as Duo and Hilde are married, but in the latter case, they divorced later.
    • After War Gundam X has four final pairings (Garrod and Tifa, Jamil and Salah, Toniya and Witz, Ennil and Roybea) but at least two or three are pretty clear throughout the series and just need to evolve into full-fledged love.
    • Turn a Gundam has a couple most notably Loran and Queen Dianna Soriel as well as Harry and Kihel Heim.
    • Mobile Suit Gundam SEED and Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny have these in the end: Lunamaria and Shinn (despite the lack of build-up between the two), Lacus and Kira, and Murrue and Mu. Athrun and Cagalli were an Official Couple in the first series, but things got a lot more ambiguous in Destiny, and fandom has never been able to agree on the subject since.
    • From Mobile Suit Gundam 00, the fourth and presumably final ED could best be described as an Official Couple/BetaCouple montage, namely Saji Crossroad/Louise Halevy (the series' first couple since S1), Allelujah Haptism/Soma Peries, Lyle Dylandy/Anew Returner, and Setsuna/Gundam. The finale adds Patrick/Kati, wedding ceremony and all..
  • Kenshin and Kaoru from Rurouni Kenshin. Marriage and a child in the epilogue: it doesn't get more official than this.
  • Ueki Kyousuke and Mori Ai from The Law of Ueki. While not explicit in the anime it is made clearer in the manga and becomes fully canon by the end of the sequel series, The Law of Ueki Plus.
  • Ran and Rui from Telepathy Shoujo Ran are a couple, and even the tinges of Romantic Two-Girl Friendship between Ran and Midori can't put any dents in that.
  • Tamahome and Miaka in Fushigi Yuugi.
  • Axis Powers Hetalia has lots of Ship Tease among the (mostly male) cast and no relationships are outright stated to be romantic or canon, but some pairs have gotten undeniable canon support that far outstrips mere Ship Tease:
    • Austria and Hungary, who used to be married and are still romantically involved with each other even after the dissolution of their historical union, with Hungary being quite devoted to and protective of Austria and Austria showing his affection for Hungary by sending her gifts for Valentine's Day and being willing to forgo his Neat Freak prudishness to take his clothes off to get her a hat she likes during their Christmas outing.
    • Germany and Italy, who become an Odd Couple right from the get-go and the most overtly paired off male-male couple in the series. There's some vagueness about their feelings for each other, as Italy tends to Love You and Everybody and Germany doesn't take his repeated displays of affection seriously at first but it becomes increasingly clear, especially in the Buon San Valentino strips, that Germany does like Italy in that way and that Italy, for all his obliviousness, might just be reacting to Germany the same way he reacted to the Holy Roman Empire (who he did eventually become a 100% canon couple with before HRE's demise) because Germany and the HRE might just be the same person.
    • Sweden and Finland. Sweden calls Finland his "wife", and while Finland denies that he is, the fans beg to differ and they have a family of sorts going on with Sealand.
    • Japan and Greece fall into murkier territory, as while they're heavily implied to have slept together and Greece heavily implied to like Japan (not to mention the Together Umbrella scene), the possibility that it's just a Friends with Benefits or one-sided crush scenario and them not having quite the same "overtly paired off" vibe as the above three pairs leaves some wiggle room for fans of other pairings for them. Nonetheless, they're considered "all but canon" by pretty much all fans who ship canon pairings, and it's hard to deny that the Subtext for them comes across as awfully texty at times. Whether or not Spain and Romano or America and England fall into this territory too depends largely on personal opinion (Spain and Romano definitely have an "overtly paired off" vibe, to the point where even fans who don't like the pairing will acknowledge this, but America and England are more debatable).
  • Jean and Nadia from Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water, as well as Electra and Nemo. The last one finishes as Her Heart Will Go On, after Neo dies during the Grand Finale and Electra is later shown taking care of their baby.
  • Parn and Deedlit from Record of Lodoss War.
  • Akari and Hiroyuki from To Heart.
  • Macross has Hikaru and Misa, as well as Beta Couple Max and Miria...
  • Let and Julia from Rave Master. Strangely, even after denial from Word of God. Maybe Word of God isn't quite so God-like.
    • And Elie and Haru—let's not forget the main characters, shall we?
  • Kanade and Yukino from Candy Boy, despite its complications.
  • Yumi and Sachiko from Mariasama ga Miteru.
  • Hagino and Mari from the Blue Drop anime.
  • Moka and Tsukune in Rosario + Vampire.
  • Himeko and Chikane from Kannazuki no Miko.
  • Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann has Simon and Nia, who were quite obvious even before the time-skip. To a lesser extent, Kamina and Yoko also are marked as such in other media or merchandise.
  • As of Chapter 252, Mahou Sensei Negima finally revealed two Official Couples in Nagi/Arika and Konoka/Setsuna. Both have been strongly hinted before, but confirmation is always nice.
  • Sket Dance: Himeko and Bossun.
    • Unique in some respect among Shonen because of how much attention it actually gets in the canon, and how even though Himeko is a Tsundere, the two are rather openly affectionate (in a non-sappy way, promise) for any manga period.
  • X 1999 has Sorata and Arashi, Yuzuriha and Kusanagi and Seishirou and Subaru—though "couple" might not be the most fitting term for the latter. Similarly, Fuuma and Kamui can hardly be called a "couple", but they're far enough out of subtext and into the text and have the Word of God.
    • Kamui and Kotori also count as an Official Couple, even though she dies later on. In fact, rather than any of the other couples already mentioned, these two appear on the 'the Lovers' tarot card included with the tankoubon version [1]
  • Mirai Nikki has Yukiteru and Yuno, a Loose Cannon Ship.
  • By the end of Neon Genesis Evangelion: Angelic Days, it's Hikari/Touji and Shinji/Asuka.
    • The original Evangelion itself was famous for avoiding this trope altogether, as Shinji and Asuka never admit their feelings, Misato's love interest Kaji dies, and Touji and Hikari never quite tie the knot. Rebuild of Evangelion seems to be focusing on Shinji/Rei, but of course, the other shoe hasn't dropped yet....
      • Gendo/Yui is official in all versions of Evangelion (original or otherwise)
  • Rock and Revy of Black Lagoon are almost this, due to numerous... implications.
  • Nagasumi and San from Seto no Hanayome. They got "engaged" at the beginning of the series and, romantic shenanigans aside, they're both committed to the other. So much so that, in one episode, Nagasumi gets upset at himself for even thinking about meeting with someone who sent him a love letter because he already has San, even though he was just going to turn her down (and it was a trick anyway).
  • Daisuke and spoiler: Riku become a couple later in D.N.Angel although the series' manga still hasn't ended as it seems to be on hiatus again so it may end with different shippings later, but they seem to be canon at this time. In the anime they were also heavily implied to be canon by the end.
  • Alice and Tonio from Pokémon the Rise of Darkrai, as well as Ruby and Sapphire from Pokémon Special.
  • In Clannad (the Kyo Ani anime), Nagisa and Tomoya are an official couple from the start: neither of them could imagine not being with the other one, and Tomoya doesn't even seem to notice that several other girls are in love with him. Heck, Tomoya was a part of Nagisa's life even before she met or knew who he was!
  • Shiki and Mikiya of Kara no Kyoukai:. Not very surprising, considering it's essentially a romance. Well, there's some stuff in there about the nature of personalities and murder too, but the romance is the important bit. Azaka is really kind of unhappy about it.
  • By When They Cry's standards, a few of the couples from Umineko no Naku Koro ni look to be set in stone (unless it turns out someone's hiding something... again). Among those are: George/Shannon, Jessica/Kanon, Battler/Beatrice (However, these three couples become very messy due to the fact that all three cousins are in fact in love with the same person), and Bernkastel/Lambdadelta.
  • In Durarara!!, the only couples that are together are Seiji and Mika, Kida and Saki and Walker and Erika in the light novels. Mikado and Anri and Celty and Shinra were hinted at it at the end of the anime series if smiling at each other warmly and seducing count.
    • Unless they break up at some point due to obvious complications that may arise in such a relationship or unless the light novels are different (though I don't see why it would be), Celty and Shinra are pretty much official.
  • Hellsing has Pip Bernadotte and Seras Victoria. Though Word of God states that "if Seras wasn't a vampire and Pip wasn't a mercenary, they would be the perfect couple that everybody would be envious of."
  • Chapter 81 of the Ouran High School Host Club manga confirms that the official couple is Tamaki and Haruhi. The anime, on the other hand, left things wide open for any shipping to possibly happen, particularly since Haruhi had had several meaningful moments with the twins, Kyouya, and Tamaki.
  • Future GPX Cyber Formula has Hayato and Asuka, along with Beta Couples Shinjyo and Miki, Osamu and Clair and Shiba and Rena. The series ends with Hayato and Asuka's wedding ceremony with most of the cast attending it.
    • Shiba and Rena themselves are the official couple in the PlayStation game.
  • Sawako and Shouta from Kimi ni Todoke.
  • Taiga and Ryuji from Toradora!. Kinda obvious from the series' name... ("Tora" = Tiger = Taiga, "Dora"gon = Dragon(Ryū) = Ryuji)
  • The anime adaptation of Slayers more or less cemented Lina and Gourry as an official pair since the end of season 2 when they share a kiss in another dimension. There's also Amelia and Zelgadis, but it's a bit more questionable.
  • Chapter 57 of Kaichou wa Maid-sama establishes Usui and Misaki as an official couple. Even before then, it's obvious to pretty much everyone.
  • Noelle and Yuusuke from Tenshi ni Narumon are an established couple already in the first episode, but fans tend to prefer Yuusuke paired with much more mature Natsumi. Also, Raphael and Mikael who in the last episode turned out to be the real main couple of the show, although they were pretty much established as a Official Couple from the moment Raphael appeared.
  • Otome Youkai Zakuro, spoiled from the start by both the opening and ending credits - Kei/Zakuro, Riken/Susukihotaru, Ganryuu/Bonbori&Hozuki.
  • Yes! Pretty Cure 5 has Coco and Nozomi. Really the only 100% official pairing within the rather large Pretty Cure franchise thus far. Every season has at least one highly probable pairing, some of which are basically accepted as canon. But Coco and Nozomi are the only pairing to have kissed, and Nozomi stated that she loved him in the final episode of the first season, among many other lovey-dovey things that certainly didn't happen with other (potential) pairings.
  • The only Official Couples in One Piece are minor couples who are married and even so, majority of the couples have one spouse either missing or dead. Some examples are Usopp's parents (mom dead, father a pirate) and Vivi's parents (mom dead, father still alive) and recently Princess Shirahoshi's parents (mom dead, father alive). In Gold Roger and Rouge's case, they are Together in Death.
  • Several in Dragon Ball: Goku/Chichi, Yamcha/ Bulma first, Vegeta/ Bulma later, Krillin/ Android 18, Gohan/ Videl,etc.
  • Psyren The two protagonists, Ageha and Sakurako.
  • Soul & Maka and Tsubaki & Black*Star in Soul Eater are probably leaning towards this, considering that it was stated early on that Tsubaki's the only one who can stand Black*Star enough to be his partner and the two are raising Angela together - not to mention they share a bedroom, whereas Soul and Maka are have their own Aw, Look -- They Really Do Love Each Other moments, despite being Vitriolic Best Buds. There was also that gender-bending Lust chapter in the Book of Eibon...
  • Gosick, Kazuya and Victorique. After many moments of Ship Tease, it's finally official in the end.
  • In Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's, Yuusei and Aki might never get stated as the official couple in as many words on screen, but it's pretty obvious that this is what they are by the end.
  • Yu-Gi-Oh! GX: Juudai & Yubel, along with Amon and Echo and (quite probably, given he chose to stay with her people) Taniya & Misawa.
  • Coud and Ren in Elemental Gelade.
  • Cross Game ends with three of them: Nakanishi and his girlfriend from the track team, Ichiyo and Junpei, and finally Ko and Aoba.
  • Shaman King has Faust and Elisa who are Happily Married even though Elisa is dead Faust will join her as a ghost eventually, as well as Yoh and Anna. In the epilogue, it was heavily implied that Ren and Jeanne had a child together.
  • Holo and Lawrence of Spice and Wolf open a shop and have a child in the end.
  • Luka and Yuki of Uragiri wa Boku no Namae wo Shitteiru.
  • Katekyo Hitman Reborn: In the future Ryohei and Hana are a canon couple.
  • Caesar and Nakaba in Reimei no Arcana.
  • Louise and Saito of The Familiar of Zero.
  • Nezumi and Shion of No. 6 were confirmed by the end.
  • Akira and Koharu of Koharu no Hibi.
  • The closest thing we have in Code Geass is Suzaku/Euphemia (displayed in opening). Sometimes considered Beta Couple because Suzaku is just the Deuteragonist, but the protagonist is a Celibate Hero. Oghi/Viletta also.


Comic Books

  • Mr. Fantastic and the Invisible Woman in the Fantastic Four.
  • Jean Grey and Cyclops (a.k.a Scott Summers) in X-Men. Many consider Emma Frost coming in to be, well...
  • Clark Kent and Lois Lane in Superman. At least, prior to Retcon to Flashpoint.
  • Ralph Dibny, the Elongated Man and Sue Dibny.
  • Peter Parker and Mary-Jane Watson from Spider-Man. Before a highly unpopular retcon, anyway. The backlash was so bad, that even Stan Lee didn't fully agree with the new direction, and kept the two together in the newspaper comic strip.
    • In the comics themselves however, the current official couple (as deemed by the current editorial) is Peter Parker and (the also highly unpopular) Carlie Cooper.
      • As of the conclusion to Spider Island, Carlie's gone, and Peter and MJ have grown closer. Whether this is actually going somewhere or if it's just Ship Tease to yank the fans' collective chain, only time (and Dan Slott) will tell.
  • Hank Pym has had...three now. Hank Pym and Janet Van Dyne, Hank Pym and Jocasta and now Hank Pym and Tigra
  • Apollo and Midnighter of The Authority.
  • Wiccan and Hulkling, Young Avengers.
  • Xavin and Karolina in Runaways. Chase and Gert, too.
  • If there are two official couples in the X Wing Series comics, it's Tycho Celchu/Winter and Nrin/Ibitsam. Both romances are fed out bit by bit for pretty much the entire length of the comic's run.
  • Hourman and Liberty Belle in the Justice Society of America.
  • Mac and Alix in Les Innommables.
  • Sonic and Sally in Sonic the Hedgehog. Since their status currently is "broken up", however, some consider Beta Couple Antoine and Bunnie to be the official couple.
  • Scott Pilgrim and Ramona Flowers.
  • Bruce and Betty Banner. They're currently on the outs, in the wake of Betty returning from being Mostly Dead.
  • Nexus and Sundra.
  • ROM Spaceknight and Brandy Clark.
  • Hawkman and Hawkgirl are married.
    • Took on a Squicky quality once the Hawkgirl mantle was passed down, as the new one was actually the old one reincarnated into the body of her own niece. Whom Hawkman still tried to pursue a relationship with Because Destiny Says So. Despite being, at least physically, her uncle by marriage.
  • Wonder Woman and Steve Trevor were this for decades, but he has long since dropped off the radar.


Film (animation)


Film (live action)

  • Han and Leia in the Star Wars films. Notably, Luke doesn't get anyone until the Expanded Universe rolls around, aside from Leia kissing him once to mess with Han's head (a scene infamous for its retroactive Squick). Anakin and Padme in the prequels.
  • James Bond and Tracy di Vincenzo. This is the film in which the (in)famous Casanova finally decides to settle down. Pity about the Diabolus Ex Machina. Three decades of movies later, and he almost has another in Elektra King. Pity about her being the Femme Fatale behind the terrorists. Interestingly enough, Bond was intended to have a steady girlfriend in Sylvia Trench, notable as the only Bond woman to appear twice, complete with Running Gag of him always being called away on missions when they're about to have a moment, but, reportedly, the actress refused to work with any director who was not the director of the first two films.
  • Sky High has Will and Gwen which gives way to Will and Layla after Gwen proves to be using him all along. Word of God has confirmed that, had the film spawned a series as was the original plan, Layla would've gone with Warren. Where does this leave Will? Search us.
  • When Across the Universe begins, Jude is happily dating Molly and Lucy is happily dating Daniel. Then Jude and Lucy find each other, and we have a plot! Also, Sadie and Jojo, much to Prudence's chagrin.
  • Jake and Neytiri from Avatar.
  • Sam and Quorra from Tron: Legacy. It was actually quite refreshing to see that in spite of all them being an Official Couple, they kept things so subtle that they avoided what could have easily gotten the characters Strangled by the Red String.
    • In the first film, Tron and Yori - and their User counterparts Alan and Lora. The deleted scenes and novelization play it up.
  • Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann in the Pirates of the Caribbean films, complete with the most Crazy Awesome wedding imaginable in the third movie.
  • The official couples in Harry Potter are, surprising absolutely no one, the same as in the novels.


Literature

  • Harry Potter. It has Harry/Ginny, Ron/Hermione, Lupin/Tonks, etc...
  • Twilight: Bella/Edward, pretty much every vampire and imprinted 'couple', and later Renesmee/Jacob and Charlie/Sue in Breaking Dawn.
  • The Hunger Games: Katniss and Peeta (at least, as advertised by the Capitol), and Finnick and Annie. In Mockingjay, Katniss and Peeta end up together for real.
  • The Meq features this as one of the driving forces of the plot. Justified, and possibly deconstructed, because this is how they're able to reproduce because they Never Grew Up after the age of twelve, and their true love, or Ameq, is the only one, literally, that they can grow old with. Also subverted when the Ameq of a major character dies before the events of the book, meaning he can never get older EVER.
  • An odd example in A Song of Ice and Fire. There are several couples, many of them made up of POV characters, but a lot are loveless (Robert/Cersei) or chiefly political (Dany/Khal Drogo), and most of the remainder are strained by old betrayals and/or current events (Catelyn/Ned.) The only couple who seem to be genuinely deeply in love from the start of Game Of Thrones onward is Jaime and Cersei. At least until they break up in Feast, where the "only couple who seem to be genuinely in love" banner is passed on to Sam and Gilly.
    • This tends to shift around a lot, due to the fact that Anyone Can Die and Westeros is a World Half Empty. A lot of the couples from the start are split up now, and the level of love between the ones that remain is often deeply variable due to circumstance.
  • Deltora Quest have the very obvious Lief/Jasmine pairing. Can't get much more official than being married and having a Babies Ever After at the end of the series; followed by pairing up the very headstrong Barda with Lindal, Marilen and Ranesh...
  • Taran and Eilonwy in the Prydain Chronicles, although it takes them until the very end of the very last book to make it official.
  • Derek and Chloe in Darkest Powers, who double as an example of a Fan-Preferred Couple that persevered. The two are also a shining example of how to not fumble developing a believable relationship.
  • Phedre and Joscelin finally make it official on the last page of the second book of their trilogy, despite having clearly been madly in love since about halfway through the first book.

Phedre: "I wish to present Joscelin Verreuil as my consort."
Queen Ysandre: "It's about time."

  • Hal and Royston in Havemercy are effectively a couple by about the midpoint of the book, but due to the nature of their relationship, it remains...unconsummated. Interestingly, they're not nearly as reviled by the fandom as most official couples, even though very little of the fanfiction focuses on them - the general consensus seems to be that their romance was handled so perfectly in the book itself that there's nothing much to be added.
  • Scarlett and Rhett were pretty much as close as it gets in Gone with the Wind.
    • Also Melanie and Ashley.
  • Richard and Elise in the time-travel novel Bid Time Return, which is also known as Somewhere in Time.
  • Jason and Marie in The Bourne Series.
  • Noah and Allie in The Notebook.
  • Bryce and Juli in the novel Flipped. Although they don't get together during the book, the ending leaves things hopeful.
  • Claire and Henry in The Time Traveler's Wife.
  • Despite being on opposite sides, Amy and Ian are pretty much set up this way in The 39 Clues.
  • In both the book and the movie of The Princess Bride, Westley/Buttercup is the official couple. Humperdinck and Buttercup nearly get married, but it's made very clear that they're not right for, and don't love, each other.
  • Jane Austen had several:
    • Pride and Prejudice: Elizabeth/Darcy, Jane/Bingley, Lydia/Wickham
    • Sense and Sensibility: Elinor/Edward, and both Marianne/Willoughby and Marianne/Brandon
    • Emma: Emma/Knightley, the Westons (whom Emma shipped prior to their wedding at the start of the story), Harriet/Robert, Frank/Jane
  • Les Misérables: Marius/Cosette.
  • A Wrinkle in Time: Meg and Calvin.
  • Percy and Annabeth from Percy Jackson and The Olympians.
  • As of the end of A Wizard of Mars, Nita and Kit.
  • Jaina Solo and Jagged Fel, as confirmed by the last book in Fate of the Jedi (but also heavily implied elsewhere even before said book came out). Hilariously, they were paired up by writer Troy Denning, who did everything he could to break them up back in the Dark Nest Trilogy.


Live-Action TV

  • Dr. Brennan and Agent Booth, and Jack Hodgins and Angela Montanegro, in Bones.
  • Sydney and Vaughn in Alias.
  • Sara and Grissom on CSI.
  • Danny and Lindsay onCSI: NY
  • Olivia Dunham and Peter Bishop, and alternate Lincoln Lee and alternate Olivia Dunham, in Fringe.
  • In Doctor Who, the Tenth Doctor (and his half-human clone) and Rose Tyler, and Amy Pond and Rory Williams.
    • And now, after two years of Ship Tease, as of Series 6, the Eleventh Doctor and River Song are officially a couple.
      • As of the Season 6 finale, the Eleventh Doctor and River Song have married.
    • In Torchwood, Jack Harkness and Ianto Jones, as of Season 3.
    • Forty-five years after their original run, The Sarah Jane Adventures episode "Death of the Doctor" made both Ian and Barbara and Ben and Polly official.
  • Power Rangers has a few, mostly involving the Red Ranger, most notably Kimberly/Tommy a.k.a. "Tomberly" from MMPR, who shared several (and indeed the first) of the few on-screen kisses that went down in PR history. There was no "Dear John" Letter.
    • Kat and Tommy were indicated to be married in the distant future once and there's really nothing that's said otherwise since then. That could actually make them even more "official" than Kim and Tommy, who broke up and never got back together, no matter how much their supporters dislike that fact.
    • The biggest official couple in later series is Wes and Jen, where part of the plot is that Jen's fiance Alex (who looked exactly like Wes) was killed by the Big Bad and she was slowly warming up to Wes and the possibility of a Second Love.
  • Super Sentai every so often follows through with it's ship teasing, one example being Urara and Hikaru of Mahou Sentai Magiranger.
  • Despite the writers' attempts to the contrary -- "PK Tech Girl", "I Do, I Think", and even "Eat Me", for example—there was no doubt who the Official Couple on Farscape were. John and Aeryn were awkwardly falling into tight spaces together or each other's arms in the first episode.
  • Numb3rs has two: Charlie and Amita for one, who have had tension since they were introduced, and Larry and Megan, which nobody saw coming.
    • Three: Don and Robin
  • Victorious: Formerly Beck and Jade.
  • Ross and Rachel in Friends, one of the most recognizable couples in television, whose convoluted romantic relationship was arguably the defining (or at least the most significant) arc of the entire show.
    • Also Monica and Chandler shared this with them in later seasons, although they quickly became a Beta Couple.
  • Star Trek: Enterprise had some confusion over this as there was some hints towards a T'pol/Archer romance, but was actually opposed by the actors themselves as it was a senior officer/subordinate relationship and generally inappropriate. Although there was plenty of T'pol/Trip as well, set up from the pilot with their intimate disinfecting and having Slap Slap Kiss vibes for the first two seasons. It became more overt in the third season and while it never became official in the series it was stated they did spend some time actually together.
  • Star Trek: Voyager: Neelix and Kes, then Tom Paris and B'Elanna Torres, but never Janeway and Chakotay to fan disappointment. In fact, given that the need for everyone to start pairing up was lampshaded early in the series (as they thought they'd take 70+ years to get home) it's surprising how little romance there was on the ship.
  • Captain Sisko and Cassady Yates. In fact this was made possible because she was a freighter captain who frequented the station, meaning he was not her subordinate. All other trek captains had problems with never being able to stay around long.
  • NCIS doesn't have Official Couples so much as it has Official former Couples, specifically McGee/Abby and Gibbs/Jenny.
    • Tony/Ziva has become this. It's basically the only couple actually discussed anymore.
  • Mal and Inara from Firefly, carrying all the requisite drama. Zoe/Wash, being married, are also very official, and have considerably less drama.
  • The American soap As the World Turns has quite a few "super couples", with a clear indication that they are meant to be together. One such super couple is Luke and Noah. Unlike their heterosexual counterparts, they have actually no other possible characters to hook up with, their story lines consisting instead of breaking up and making up every few months. In a soap, you can tell a couple is "truly official" after they make up for the third time. However, with the introduction of Dr. Reid Oliver, Luke has a viable second love interest, and is currently wanting Reid to fight for him.
    • Reid did, and Luke and Reid became the official couple with Noah barely seen.
  • Susan and Mike on Desperate Housewives were set up this way from day one; in fact when they finally got married in the third season finale we got a Lampshade Hanging from Susan's daughter Julie: upon the usual "reasons they shouldn't wed" question she replies "Are you kidding? They've been dragging this out for three years." Even after they broke up in a five year Time Skip, fans are just waiting for them to reunite. They do.
  • Much to the dislike of several fans, Rodney and Keller on Stargate Atlantis.
    • Sheppard/Weir was an example where the actors played their characters together like this, even if the writing didn't exactly follow it.
  • Stargate SG-1 - While they can't be together until one of them quits the military, Jack and Sam are very much the "it" couple of the show. According to Word of God, they were originally not intended to be this; but when the powers that be realized the fandom had latched onto the brilliant onscreen chemistry between Richard Dean Anderson and Amanda Tapping, they decided to go with it.
  • The new Battlestar Galactica had President Laura Roslin and Admiral William Adama, who, in contrast to the other couples on the show, took four years to finally acknowledge their feelings openly (they got off to a bit of a rocky start, what with the whole 'interfering in the military/coup d'état' thing), although they first kissed in Season 2 when Roslin promoted Adama to Admiral.

Roslin: I love you.
Adama: 'Bout time.

—"The Hub", 4x9
  • Chuck and Sarah in Chuck.
    • Also Ellie and Captain Awesome.
    • Besides them, we had Morgan and Anna in the first two seasons as well.
      • And now we have Morgan and Alex.
  • Ned and Chuck in Pushing Daisies, much to the annoyance of Ned/Olive shippers.
  • Viktor and Sierra in Dollhouse pretty much fell in Love At First Sight, and keep doing it with every new personality they're given, and when they don't have personalities.
  • Richard Castle and Detective Kate Beckett from Castle.
  • Robin Hood and Lady Marian in Robin Hood. So obvious that it hardly warrants mentioning, except that the Fan-Preferred Couple of Guy/Marian had some fans vilifying Robin, listing the reasons why Guy was a better match for Marian, and clinging to the hope that they would somehow end up together. Ultimately Guy murdered Marian, effectively ending both ships, and yet there were still some that complained that it was Robin and not Guy who got the Together in Death scene with Marian at the end of the show.
  • Subverted on How I Met Your Mother, where Ted and Robin would be a textbook example of the Official Couple, if it weren't for The Narrator telling us since the very first episode that they actually don't end up together in the end.
    • Played completely straight with Lily and Marshall, however. They've already been together 9 years when the series begins, and flashforwards show them still being happily married in the year 2029. However, once they got married they mostly became the Beta Couple.
    • As of the season 7 finale. Barney and Robin are ulimately confirmed to be this.
    • This show also has the interesting variation with Ted and the mother, it's a couple so official the show's named after it, but half of that official couple is completely unknown.
  • Gilmore Girls had several Official Couples: Lorelai/Luke and Lorelai/Christopher and then Rory/Dean, Rory/Jess and Rory/Logan. By the time the show ended though, Lorelai and Luke decided to split and Rory was single. Naturally, this lead to Ship-to-Ship Combat. There were also the Beta Couples in Sookie/Jackson, Lane/Zach, and Paris/Doyle.
  • The X-Files: Mulder & Scully. I don't think that's really spoiling anything.
    • Funnily enough, Chris Carter insisted that Mulder and Scully were never supposed to be anything but platonic work partners. The writing, however, suggests otherwise.
    • Mulder and Scully do take a backseat to Doggett and Reyes in season 9.
  • Glee: Rachel and Finn are pretty much the flagship couple of the series. Everything romantic that revolves around these two characters, even if it's involving other characters, generally ends up related in some way to them as a couple.
    • There is also Emma and Will.
    • As of "Original Song", Kurt and Blaine are also a couple.
    • As of "Pot O Gold", Brittany and Santana.
  • Psych sets up Shawn/Juliet over and over and over again...and then, at the end of season three, has Juliet confess that she is, in fact, in love with Shawn, while he was on a date with another girl. Since then, it seems to come up occasionally, but it's hard to tell if they've both moved past it or are just waiting for the right moment again.
    • As of the middle of season 5, they're officially together.
  • Phil of the Future: Phil Diffy and Keely Teslow. Planned from the start by Word of God. Got together in the season two turned series finale.
  • Michael and Fiona in Burn Notice.
  • In the last season of Monk Randy Disher and Sharona became a couple.
  • Rizzoli and Isles is called Rizzoli and Isles for a reason. Such a good couple that you can overlook the crappy writing.
  • Mork and Mindy. It's right there in the title!
  • Piper and Leo in Charmed.
    • There was also Prue and Andy, until Andy was killed off at the end of season 1. It is rumored that they may have reunited in the afterlife after Prue died two years later.
    • Phoebe and Cole seemed for a while that they would be one of these, but then she kills him and marries Coop.
  • Gwen and Arthur in Merlin. They aren't married yet, but you know they'll end up together in the end.
  • Kermit and Miss Piggy through The Muppet Show and the rest of the Muppet-verse.
  • J.R. and Sue Ellen and Bobby and Pam were the two main couples for most of Dallas 's run. However, neither ended up together in the end.
  • Gary and Valene were pretty much the one couple that remained endgame throughout Knots Landing 's run.
  • Sam and Diane in the early seasons of Cheers, until Diane left at the end of season 5, although she did return in the series finale.
    • Sam and Rebecca in later seasons.
  • Superboy and Lana in The Adventures of Superboy.
  • Brenda and Dylan were pretty much the main official couple of Beverly Hills, 90210 in the early seasons, but the pairing of Dylan and Kelly became so popular at the time that he ended up with her instead. Of course now, most fans wished he ended up with Brenda instead.
    • Also David and Donna ulimately end up with each other in the end.
  • Clark and Lois of course in Lois and Clark.
  • Cory and Topanga in Boy Meets World.
  • Niles and Daphne in Frasier.
    • Niles and Daphne managed to be an official couple throughout eight whole years of Unrequited Love, UST, and Will They or Won't They? before even making a move, never mind getting together, and despite Niles being married to someone else for the better part of that period. They were relegated to Beta Couple afterwards.
  • Eric and Donna in That '70s Show.
    • Fez and Jackie suddenly become this in the final season, much to the disgust of both Hyde/Jackie and Kelso/Jackie shippers.
  • Days of Our Lives has a few. No matter what happens or how bad it looks, there's no way Bo and Hope, John and Marlena, and Jack and Jennifer don't end up together.
    • Also, of course, patriarch and matriarch Tom and Alice Horton.
  • While Passions had several official couples, the most prominent ones were Ethan & Theresa and Luis & Sheridan, although only the former ended up together with Luis ending up with Sheridan's niece Fancy, and Sheridan ending up with Luis' brother, Antonio, her first husband.
  • Max and Logan in Dark Angel.
  • Ed and Carol in Ed.
  • Smallville had several official couples during it's 10-year run. Clark and Lana were set up this way for the first seven seasons, even though fans know from the very beginning that they don't end up together.
    • After Lana left, Clark and Lois became the offical couple of the series.
  • Joey and Alex in Joey.
  • The main official couple in Grey's Anatomy is Meredith and Derek.
    • Christina and Preston in the first three seasons, until Preston's departure at the end of season 3.
    • There is also Richard and Adele, Alex and Izzie, and George and Lexie, until George is killed off at the end of season 5.
  • Sookie and Bill in True Blood.
  • Elena and Stefan in Vampire Diaries, much to the dismay of Elena and Damon fans.
    • Also Matt and Caroline, although there is definitely a spark forming between Caroline and Tyler in season 2.
    • And Jenna and Alaric.
  • Inspector Sledge Hammer! and his gun is as canonical as it gets, given that he's regularly shown sleeping with it. Justified by Rule of Funny.
  • John Sheridan and Ambassador Delenn of Babylon 5, who, as mentioned elsewhere, walked through fire for their love and lasted the entire run of the show.
  • On ER, couples came and went, with pretty much everyone dating pretty much everyone else at some point or another. The longest-lasting and most plot-driving couples on the show were Mark and Elizabeth and Abby and Luka, with minor pairings being Susan with flight nurse Chuck, Peter and Cleo, and lesbians Kerry and Sandy, which ended tragically.
    • Doug and Carol as well.
  • Joanie Cunningham and Chachi Arcola. After their own series (Joanie Loves Chachi) tanked, they got married.
  • Kamen Rider Ryuki has Ren and his fiancee Eri as an established couple; and also Kitaoka and Reiko as a Will They or Won't They? of this trope. In the movie, Shinji meets Miho and they are an implied Official Couple themselves.
  • Protagonist Tsukasa and Natsumi of Kamen Rider Decade.
  • Lizzie and Gordo in Lizzie McGuire.
  • Zack and Kelly in Saved by the Bell.
  • John Crichton and Aeryn Sun of Farscape. The chemistry between them left many a fangirl panting. And there was a lot of chemistry, right up until the very end. (Also a very neat avoidance of Shipping Bed Death.)
  • Snow White and Prince Charming in Once Upon a Time. They start out the show getting married, so even though in the present they aren't together, ya know it's gonna happen again eventually.
  • In The Closer, Brenda Leigh Johnson and Fritz Howard start out as friends with UST, reunited when Brenda's new job moves her close to him, and their relationship progresses to dating, engagement, and marriage in a fairly predictable manner.
  • Jim and Pam in The Office.
  • Garo has Kouga and Kaoru.
    • There was also Rei and Shizuka but she died before the series began.


Video Games

  • Calill and Largo from Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn.
    • While Fire Emblem's support system is designed to allow mix-and-match pairings, several characters in Radiant Dawn have a specific love interest whom they will marry at the end of the game, provided the support level between the two of them is high enough; Calill and Largo are already married when they're introduced, which just means you don't have to do the work.
    • Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade and Fire Emblem (Blazing Sword in Japan) (and to some degree, The Sacred Stones) are an odd mix of following and subverting this Trope. Most Fire Emblem games leave character coupling a bit more open to truly please as many fans as possible. Generally a main character can have around five possible romantic endings, where background cast generally has at least one, with a few Ho Yay and Les Yay pairings that are less obvious in the English version.
      • The first half of Genealogy of the Holy War was a memorable exception to this openness, as Diadora becomes bonded to main character Sigurd as soon as she joins the party. This is the type of Official Couple that is rare in Fire Emblem games.
    • To further show the confusing quasi-subversion here, The Binding Blade and its Prequel Blazing Sword do not deny many Couples. Most of the cast in Blazing Sword that have kids in Sealed Sword don't explicitly name the other parent, so 2-3 other characters can end up marrying them by the player's choice of gameplay. Only six of the characters in Blazing Sword have defined relationships: the Fighter Bartre must end up with the swordmaster Karla, the sage Pent and the sniper Louise are married from the start, and the shaman Canas has a wife and son we never meet (though it turns out he's one of the mages in Sealed Sword, Hugh). Hawkeye is also married, and the father of The Archer Ingrene in Sealed Sword.
      • That said, the game really seems to push Eliwood/Ninian, Hector/Lyn, and Nino/Jaffar, even though most of these characters have other romantic options as well. Unlike other pairings, these three couples have scenes of romantic tension even outside their support conversations.
    • Sothe and Michiah from Radiant Dawn are so official that they start out with max support for each other. You have to go out of your way to make them not end up together.
  • Though they never appear to formally "hook up" in any of the games, the majority of fans of The Legend of Zelda who care at all about shipping generally regard Link and Zelda as the Official Couple. To be fair, this is corroborated a good bit by the manga, the animated series, and the comic books, though none of these are confirmed as canon.
    • Word of God says that in the Wind Waker timeline, there will be some romance between the two. She also has a more active role in that subseries.
      • Finally an official couple at the end of Spirit Tracks; after finishing off the Big Bad, they walk off holding hands.
      • In Zelda II, it is implied the Princess kisses Link behind a closing curtain at the end of the game; in the combined Oracle games, Zelda gives Link a kiss on the cheek, and he swoons.
    • The various games do have official couples not involving the Hero. For example, Majoras Mask had Kafei and Anju, and Twilight Princess had the Happily Married Rusl and Uli.
    • Certain games seem to push the Link/Zelda relationship angle more than others. For instance, they're definitely implied to become a couple in Wind Waker while the ones in Twilight Princess don't even interact that much, appear to have a significant age difference between them, and Link seems way more interested in Ilia. This is likely for the best as all Zeldas are related to each other and at least some Links are, making it incest if they always paired up.
    • Seemingly become a couple at the end of Skyward Sword, where they decide to remain on the surface, renaming it Hyrule and found the royal family.
    • Potential evidence of Zelda’s affection for Link comes in Breath of the Wild Kas, a Rito musician whose song was written by his teacher, who (Kas claims) had a crush on Zelda, but the song seeming to show he knows she is in love with Link:<ref>Two stanzas are omitted here as they simply relate Link’s actions and do not relate to this Trope.<ref>

An ancient hero, a Calamity appears,
Now resurrected after 10,000 years
Her appointed Knight gives his life
Shields her figure and pays the price
The princess’ love for her fallen Knight awakens her power
And within the Castle, the Calamity is forced to cower.
The hero, the Princess hand-in-hand
Must bring the Light back to this land.

    • While not officially confirmed, in Tears of the Kingdom, if Link enters his old house in Hateno Village, a diary (Zelda's) implies they were living together after the events of Breath of the Wild, Zelda helping build a school in the village. The cavern in the well behind the house seems to have been a secret redevous place for them, with children's crayon drawings of Link and Zelda (presumably students in said school, but you never know...) and even a Well-Worn Head Braid that Link can use to switch his hair to his old style.
  • Super Robot Wars, largely due to reveling in The Power of Love, generally has one set per game/route when it comes to their Original Generation characters:
    • The first set comes from Super Robot Wars 4 with Irmgult "Irm" Kazahara and Ring Mao, who were later given cameo appearances in Super Robot Wars Alpha.
    • The Alpha series has, starting with the second game, Kusuha Mizuha and Brooklyn "Bullet" Luckfield, Arado Balanga and Seolla Schweizer, and Touma Kanou and Minaki Tomine.
    • The Super Robot Wars Compact 2 trilogy and Impact has Kyosuke Nanbu and Excellen Browning, whose dynamic is so strong in Super Robot Wars Original Generation they have thus far become the Spotlight-Stealing Squad.
    • Of course, the Original Generation games carry all of the above, but also ropes in the forgotten character archetypes from the first Alpha game and pairs them up (Ryoto Hikawa/Rio Mei Long, Tasuku Shinguji/Leona Garstein, Yuuki Jaggar/Ricarla "Carla" Borgnine).
    • The Masou Kishin story also has Masaki Andoh and Wendy. It also features Tytti Noorbuck and Ricardo Silvera (although the latter coupling's played tragically.
  • Gordon and Alyx in Half-Life 2. Gordon is silent and controlled by the player, but Alyx has clearly fallen for Gordon.
  • Knights of the Old Republic and Neverwinter Nights (the main campaign) suffer from only having one option for each gender of player character (Juhani doesn't really count; that arc was never really developed). Cut content in Neverwinter Nights 2 ensures that there is only one option for each gender in the main campaign and in Mask of the Betrayer, but technically with restored content plus the fact that the same character is running through both stories gives each gender three options, but the fact that the main campaign options all died in the Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies ending and Neeshka was one of the cut characters forces us to the conclusion that male character/Safiya and female character/Gann were what the writers intended.
  • Mass Effect does its best to avert this. However, the trailers always feature a male Shepard and pick a single woman to market as his love interest, for the most part. A traditional human choice is picked for both games: Ashley in the first (with the other option being a blue—albeit very human-looking—alien) and Miranda in the second (opposed to the bald-and-crazy Jack or The Faceless alien Tali).
    • However, other than the trailers, almost everyone, devs included, stay away from calling the human love interests 'official.' Good thing too, because the majority of the fandom would rip them apart if they did.
  • Meryl and Johnny of Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots definitely counts. The wedding at the end kind of makes it obvious.
  • Cecil and Rosa in Final Fantasy IV.
  • Marle and Crono from Chrono Trigger.
  • Locke and Celes in Final Fantasy VI.
  • Cloud and Tifa in Final Fantasy VII, after the lifestream event, and Aerith and Zack Together in Death.
  • Squall and Rinoa from Final Fantasy VIII, whose relationship is so integral to the game's plot that the game's logo is the two of them embracing.
  • Zidane and Garnet from Final Fantasy IX.
  • Tidus and Yuna from Final Fantasy X, as well as Wakka and Lulu who receive confirmation in Final Fantasy X-2.
  • Serah and Snow from Final Fantasy XIII.
  • Sora and Kairi from Kingdom Hearts. As "official" as the No Hugging, No Kissing series will get, at least; we get no real intimate scenes, but the feelings they share for each other are obvious (except to a Yaoi Fangirl.)
    • Let's not forget all the Disney Canon couples who appear in the series. Sora and Kairi's relationship is actually compared to quite a few of them.
  • Mario and Princess Peach from Super Mario Bros. and all of its sequels and spinoffs. For all the times he's had to go to "another castle" to go after her, you'd figure the poor guy would get some sort of reward.
    • "Unusually", Peach has a ring on her middle finger in Brawl.
    • Super Mario Odyssey takes this concept further. At the end of the main story, after rescuing her from being forcibly married to Bowser, Mario tries to propose; unfortunately, due to Mario and Bowser fighting over her, Peach decides she doesn't want either of them, leaving the two old enemies to console each other.
    • Given how much the two appear together in side games, Luigi and Daisy may be moving in this direction as well.
  • The Mega Man Battle Network series has Lan Hikari and Mayl Sakurai, who are revealed to be married with a kid during the post-series epilogue. The sequel, Mega Man Star Force, equally leans towards Geo/Sonia and Geo/Luna, so it has Love Triangle fun every now and then.
  • Even Drakengard, a series known for its dark tragedy, morbid horror and almost complete lack of romance, gives us an Official Couple with Nowe/Manah in the second game.
  • The Tales (series) usually has one in every game:
    • Emil and Marta from Tales of Symphonia: Dawn of the New World.
    • Luke and Tear from Tales of the Abyss.
    • Natalia and Asch also; the escort titles in particular like to get some extra mileage out of this one. Of course, there's only one Luke in the end, so only one of the couples gets a happy ending.
    • Cless and Mint from Tales of Phantasia.
      • Chester and Arche as well. When everyone had died in the far future, Arche grieved Chester's death the most.
    • Stahn and Rutee from Tales of Destiny, and since their kid is the main character in the sequel, it's probably the most official of all Tales's couples.
      • And said kid (Kyle) forms another official couple with Reala. In fact, in the end of the game the universe acts to put the timeline back on its tracks, but opens an exception for Reala for her to be with Kyle. Because the couple is just that official.
    • Lloyd and Colette from Tales of Symphonia. The game has Relationship Values, but Colette is the official one according to the intro, the storyline, the Road Cone, and to top it off the Word of God.
    • Tales of Eternia was very Official Couple-y: with Reid/Farah and Keele/Meredy both being official by the end and Max already married, Chat is left as the only member of the party not in an Official Couple when the credits roll.
    • The official couple for Tales of Graces is Asbel and Cheria, even though Cheria's not the main heroine. The kicker is the Distant Finale scene of Sophie looking after a kid who looks like Asbel and Cheria.
    • Tales of Rebirth, on the other hand, doesn't have a clear official couple. You could make a case for Veigue and Claire, but they seem to be really just friends (or Like Brother and Sister), even with Veigue's She's Not My Girlfriend moments.
    • Tales of Hearts has Shing and Kohaku. The game even end during Shing's official confession to Kohaku.
    • Tales of Innocence pulled a page out of Reincarnation Romance for its official couple, Luca and Iria. However, Innocence has an extensive Relationship Values system, meaning that, like Lloyd and Colette in Tales of Symphonia, while Iria is the designated love interest, you can hook Luca up with whoever you want to, really. ( And the Reincarnation Romance thing kinda gets a hefty wrench chucked in it when you find out that Iria's past life murdered Ruca's past life and caused lots of bad things to happen. But Iria has severe Amnesiac Dissonance, so it's all good. Kinda.)
    • Tales of the Tempest gives us borderline-Toy Ship Caius and Rubia. If you're willing to recognize its existence.
    • Tales of Legendia... well, it's complicated. Both Shirley and Chloe are in love with Senel who, despite Ship Tease, doesn't seem to like any of the two particularly, instead claiming to not be over Stella, his dead girlfriend. In the end of the first half of the game, he seemingly hooked up with Shirley... but then Character Quests kick in, and he's still in the single men zone. So, you could say that Senel and Stella were an Official Couple, but after she was Killed Off for Real so was the Official Coupling, but Senel just can't seem to get that through his head.
      • Food for thought - when Zelos lists all the Tales series' official couples in Viva Tales Of, he puts Senel with Shirley. That's the closest we got to official word by Namdai about the subject.
  • Assassin's Creed: Revelations has Shaun Hastings mention that Lucy Stillman said that she "liked" Desmond Miles, not that that does anything now that killed her under Juno's possession.
  • Jak and Daxter gives us three: Jak and Keira, Ashelin and Torn, and Daxter and Tess. God help you if you begin Running the Asylum and you try to mess with their relationships.
  • Chaz Ashley and Rika in the 4th installment of the Phantasy Star series. Word of God via the prelims for a canceled sequel support this.
  • Fox and Krystal in the Star FOX games. Ever since her introduction, it's been made clear that one of Krystal's roles (outside of the more obvious) is that of Fox's Love Interest. Command left things in doubt when they split up briefly (some endings featured them getting back together, some featured them splitting apart), but it seems that game is being ignored and her profile in Super Smash Bros Brawl the later year, whilst acknowledging their "relationship problems" from Command still cites them as being romantically involved at current time.
  • EarthBound has Ness and Paula.
  • As soon as it was announced that Golden Sun: Dark Dawn would feature the children of the characters from the first two games, the fallout was easily predictable as Golden Sun is a fandom rife with Ship-to-Ship Combat. Sure enough, the Isaac/Mia and Garet/Jenna shippers were disappointed, as Isaac/Jenna was made canon.
    • In the second game, Sheba makes a comment to Jenna along the lines of "Aren't you and Isaac, like... an item?"
    • However, the corresponding Garet/Mia, while not technically sunk, would require some serious violations of Occam's Razor and even then wouldn't result in them being Happily Married, as each has a playable child (as does Ivan).
  • The third Professor Layton game gives us the background of Layton's only known canonical relationship—his college sweetheart, Claire. It's heavily implied that he was going to propose to her the day she was killed in a time machine explosion.
  • Lunar Silver Star Story has Alex and Luna, Nash and Mia, and Jessica and Kyle. Lunar 2 has Hiro and Lucia, as well as Ronfar and Mauri.
  • In Silent Hill Homecoming, Alex and Elle are heavily implied to be around that area or moving toward it, if not already there.
  • Breath of Fire II strongly implies that the Ryu and Nina from the original Breath of Fire married.
  • Persona 3 and Persona 4 don't really have an "official" couple for the main character, despite both protagonists being Chick Magnets (Persona 3's protagonist can't even max out his Social Links with most of the female characters without forming a relationship, while Persona 4's protagonist can stay faithful to one girl or even be a Chaste Hero), there is Junpei and Chidori, who are so official that even though she dies, the Female Protagonist can only be friends with Junpei.
    • The Manga adaptation of Persona 4 looks to be pushing The Protagonist and Rise into this direction. There's been additional Ship Tease between the two that wasn't even in the game.
    • Likewise, the film version of Persona 3 has largely made The Protagonist and Aigis official.
  • King's Quest : Graham and Valanice are Happily Married, as are Alexander and Cassima. Rosella and Edgar wisely agreed to a proper courtship canonically, but the Fan Sequel opens on their wedding day.
  • Space Quest: Roger Wilco is fated to marry and have a son with Beatrice. However, that didn't stop Flo from shamelessly flirting with him, nor did it prevent the Two Guys from throwing in some interesting Ship Tease with Stellar Santiago in the final game.
  • Maxim and Selan from Lufia 2 Rise of the Sinistrals. Thanks for the game to be the prequel of the first game, in which showing them being Together in Death, Tia has no chance.
    • The Hero and Lufia in the Fortess of Doom. Aguro and Jerin may or may not be the Beta Couple.
    • Wain and Seena in the Legend Returns. Seems like Maxim's descendants are destined to end up with blue hair incarnations of Erim for most of the times.
  • While it's left ambiguous enough that shippers could argue either way, Skies of Arcadia hints heavily that its official couple is meant to be a Vyse/Aika/Fina OT3.
    • Enrique and Moegi is more official. The first scene of the ending is their marriage.
  • Arguably in BlazBlue, this seems to be the case of Litchi Faye-Ling X Lotte Carmine/Arakune. However, Litchi never once referred him as her 'love' (nor declared her love), but more like a really close friend she's desperate to save.

Visual Novels

  • Mia and Diego from Ace Attorney. Diego's even referred to Mia's boyfriend by Grossberg at one point.
    • Also to some extent, Gumshoe and Maggey. If only the big lug could work up the courage to ask her out, weenies just don't quite have the same effect.
    • Ron and Desiree Delite
  • Tomoya and Nagisa in Clannad. While it is a Dating Sim, Nagisa has both the anime, the movie, the cover of the game and the after story (plus its anime) on her side.
    • Oddly enough, despite being quite clearly the official couple (every other route is also canon... as a build up to the grand finale dedicated to Nagisa), Nagisa doesn't get the sequel. Tomoyo did.
  • Technically, she doesn't even really have an appearance except in the first two routes and Shiki can end up with one of five girls, but Arcueid/Shiki is basically Tsukihime's official couple. Her own path is first, the anime is based on her, the manga is based on her and she gets a Tenchi Solution in Ciel's good ending. Oh, and despite Melty Blood supposedly being based off Satsuki's route, Sion mentions that Shiki and Arcueid are lovers, though apparently they don't live together.
    • Since her route is the name of the game, does that mean that the story of the game is her route?
      • That's not so much because her route is the name of the game, but because she herself is the name of the game (specifically, tsukihime, "moon princess").
    • Actually, yes. According to a side-story where all of the girls meet up in a cafe to discuss how things went, Arcueid's path is the story of Tsukihime. On the other hand, though, her path is not the story of Shiki Tohno, the main character. That honor belongs to either Akiha, Hisui, or Kohaku. Still no word which one of them is part of the Official Couple though.
      • The Far Side routes could be considered the story of Tohno Shiki in that it reveals a lot about Shiki's history and secrets, much in the same way as the "Unlimited Blade Works" path in Fate/stay night being, by Word of God, the story of Shirou or Shirou's route. However, again by Word of God, Arcrueid's and Saber's routes are the true story in each respective game.
      • It appears that Akiha's route is most likely the "official" Far Side route, due to Carnival Phantasm's focus on her more than Hisui and Kohaku. Not to mention Akiha being alongside the Near Side characters as the three main heroines from the Tsukihime side of the Nasuverse.


Web Comics

  • Ash and Emily from Misfile are dancing around the issue right now, mostly due to personal issues, but it's fairly obvious that they are going to end up together. The forums like to refer to the two as "lovers without benefits".
  • Elan and Haley in Order of the Stick.
    • Extraplanar version: Roy and Celia.
    • Evil version: Nale and Sabine.
  • Jeph Jaques is on record saying that Martin and Faye were the official couple for the first 500 strips or so; however, before it visibly materialized, he changed his mind (later saying in the comic that they would have been a terrible couple) and delivered a Wham! Episode that got rid of Martin/Faye and set up Martin/Dora. He later paired Faye up with Angus McPhee. However, he then broke up Marten and Dora and put Marten together with Padma, a new character, only to reveal that Padma would be leaving soon to California to take care of her mother. There's no other official word on it yet.
  • In Red String, there's Miharu and Kazuo, Schoolgirl Lesbians Fuuko and Hanae, and the almost Beta Couple of Reika and Eiji.
    • Except until recent developments where Kazuo goes off the deep end and Miharu gives him up. The author has a way of messing with official couples—remember when everyone thought Maya and Fuuko were SO going to be a couple?
  • Lance and Silvia in Shape Quest, despite being rather oblivious to it.
  • Aubrey and Jason in Something*Positive.
  • Tom and Karla in Home on the Strange.
  • Piro and Kimiko from Megatokyo.
  • Helen and Dave from Narbonic Also Mell and Caliban as the Beta Couple.
  • Rikk, Aly and Rumy Oberf in Fans. Also Will and Shanna Erikson and Tim and Julia Mitts as beta couples.
  • Alan/Bea in the 18th - century in the The Dreamer.
  • El Goonish Shive has three: Tedd/Grace, Elliot/Sarah and Ellen/Nanase.
  • Homestuck has Mr. Egbert/Ms. Lalonde. They even had a romantic dinner together. Then they died. Sollux/Feferi also happened, much to Sollux's confusion, before Eridan snapped and killed her.
    • Karkat and Terezi. It's more than confirmed in several of their conversations, as well as when they hug right before Gamzee shows up in a murderous rage to try and kill everyone.
  • Predictably, the Girl and the Fed from A Girl and Her Fed.
  • Bob and Jean in The Inexplicable Adventures of Bob.
  • Walkyverse has Walky and Joyce.


Web Original

Western Animation