Paper Master

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
The... Paper!!!

Paper doesn't seem like it would make too great a weapon. Yeah, a paper cut might sting for a while, and a rolled-up newspaper could possibly slay seven flies with one blow, and it could certainly cover a rock, but nobody kids themselves that a sheet of paper is going to be useful in a real fight. Even the dreaded Paper Fan of Doom has much more bang than bite.

Sounds like a pretty lame power, right? Not quite. Imagine that paper cut going all the way to the bone.

There are actually a fair amount of characters in fiction that use paper in battle very effectively. These characters have near-Elemental Powers to control or even transform into paper, and usually can create a vast amount of weapons only limited by their imagination and paper folding skills. Often when this happens, the paper itself seems to take on the qualities of said weapon (i.e. a paper spear piercing someone like a normal spear would, instead of crumpling up). These characters are often weak to water and fire (or anything that will soak or burn their paper).

Be very careful, dear reader, when confronting these characters in offices, libraries, bookstores, newspaper printers, or banknote mints.

Popular in anime as origami (the art of paper folding) is a big tradition in Japan.

See also The Gambler, who is basically a Death Dealer, only his paper has plastic laminated on them. Compare Feather Flechettes. Closely related to Paper Talisman. Not to be confused with Paper Cutting or Black Belt in Origami.

Examples of Paper Master include:

Anime and Manga

  • Read or Die, the Trope Namer, the Trope Codifier, and the source of the picture above: Yomiko Readman and the Paper Sisters are examples of what apparently is the most common type of superhero in their universe. (However, R.O.D is not the Trope Originator.)
  • Saicho of Flame of Recca, a fighter who can manipulate papers to act like weapons much like the Read or Die characters that he pre-dates by a few years. For example, he can make a paper sword that's harder than steel.
  • Kalluto, youngest sibling of lead character Killua, in Hunter X Hunter. He (yes, if you've looked it up, that's a little boy) uses a paper fan as a weapon – a bladed weapon, that is – administers the Death of a Thousand Cuts with confetti, and eavesdrops on people using paper dolls of them once they've got a bit of his paper on them. Oh, and he's a lethal assassin.
    • One of abilities of Nen is the ability to strengthen objects, including paper. At one point Wing tears a page out of a book, strengthens it with Nen, and hurls it at a wall, neatly slicing a metal soda can that was in the way. Also, at various points in the anime, Hisoka tends to do the same with playing cards.
  • Inuyasha:
    • In the anime, a thief is thin front to back and can hide by turning sideways.
    • Byakuya uses an origami crane as his mode of flight transport. He also uses origami lotus flowers as a focus for his illusions. These illusions are so good they can fight on his behalf. However, if they receive what would be a killing blow, they revert back to an origami lotus flower thereby revealing the illusion and also the real location of the real Byakuya.
  • Onmyodo, via Shikigami or Ofuda, is very powerful in the Mahou Sensei Negima universe. Setsuna is a notable heroic user.
  • Konan from Naruto, the lone female member of Akatsuki. She's made it into such things as wings and fake trees, and is capable of both turning into paper and making a copy of herself out of paper which she can control from a remote location (though she/it can apparently be prevented from moving if something sticks to it, like oil). This also include the paper explosives that are a main-stay of the series.
  • Sailor Moon:
    • Sailor Mars uses an Asian Rune Chant and ofuda-throwing with "Akuryō Taisan!" (literally "Evil Spirits, Begone!") to kill monsters. This is taken Up to Eleven in the R movie, with an enormous spiral of ofuda used as a weapon.[context?]
    • Garoben, the youma from episode 8 of the original anime series, manifests and throws paper at Sailor Moon as its ranged attack.
  • Keisei in Shikabane Hime has displayed the ability to turn a scroll of Buddhist scripture into a magical staff.
  • Aono in Sola can control paper.
  • Curren Huckebein of Magical Record Lyrical Nanoha Force has this as her Weapon of Choice. She introduces herself by having the tome she carries create a paper storm that slices up and critically injures Vita and Erio.

Comic Books

  • Stalker with a Crush Paperdoll: compressed the bodies of those she envelops and administers lethal papercuts strong enough to slice through Spider-Man's webbing.
  • Marvel Comics' Thin Man has the ability to flatten himself razor thin, in addition to Rubber Man powers. Again, razor thin. And he's a sadistic, bitter old man. And a good guy.
  • Gambit's real power is his ability to force small objects to explode by "charging" them, converting their potential energy into kinetic energy. His favorite tool is playing cards and the impossible things he can do with them sometimes evoke this trope


Film

  • Cast a Deadly Spell. Tugwell uses a spell to slice a man to death with a whirlwind of cut-up pieces of newspaper.


Literature

  • The main character of the appropriately titled book Paper Mage is...well...a paper mage; a young chinese woman who has the ability to summon guardians by using origami.
  • In one of the books of "The Adventures of Samurai Cat," Tomokato (the eponymous samurai cat) faces off against another cat named "Origami Ito" (a pun on the name of the protagonist of "Lone Wolf and Cub.") Origami Ito has a huge roll of paper which he can fold into weapons, walls, soldiers, and tanks, which come to life to attack his enemy.
  • In Harry Connolly's Twenty Palaces book series, the main character uses a spell to create a "ghost knife" which is basically a laminated piece of notebook paper with some magical symbols written on it in marker. It is supposed to be able to cut "ghosts, magic, and dead things," but the definition of "dead things" is broad enough to include any inanimate object, and in this universe, every living thing has a soul or spirit that qualifies as a kind of ghost. Add in the ability of the ghost knife to respond to it's owner's will by flying wherever the creator mentally directs it, and you have a weapon that cuts through doors and bullets, leaves any living opponent exhausted and weak by injuring its soul, and destroys your enemies' magic, giving you a perfect all-purpose (mostly)nonlethal weapon that fits in your pocket. Even when someone else grabs it, the creator can will it to fly through the opponent's hand and back to the creator, leaving the enemy soul-drained in the process. The protagonist can even use it to slice up meat, and it's safe to rinse, as it's laminated.
  • Lazy Dragon, a character from the Wild Cards universe, can create and then "possess" animals. He needs some kind of symbolic image of the animal to do it, and usually finds it most practical to make little origami tigers or snakes or birds or whatever, since he has easy access to paper and origami needs no tools.
  • In Jules Verne's Robur the Conqueror, the title character's super helicopter is made of laminated paper. Steel knives break when prisoners try to cut through this paper.

Everything—framework, hull, houses, cabins—were made of straw-paper turned hard as metal by compression....


Live Action TV

  • There was a villain of sorts in The Adventures of Pete and Pete appropriately named "Paper Cut".
  • The MythBusters made working crossbows out of newspaper. DEADLY crossbows.
  • Tsuruhime (the white ranger) in Ninja Sentai Kakuranger. One of her attacks is a storm of paper cranes. This attack is occasionally replicated at a larger scale by the first Humongous Mecha of the series, Muteki Shogun (Invincible General).

Tabletop RPG

  • RuneScape has Lexicus Runewright, who summons magical books that attack with all three types of combat, and summons books that explode for incredibly heavy damage (enough to oneshot people under 500HP).
  • In Exalted, the Dreaming Pearl Courtesan Style has a technique that allows you to turn paper fans into sharp and deadly weapons.
  • In Werewolf: The Apocalypse, the Kitsune werefoxes have a set of Gifts that utilize Ju-fu, or paper magic, using a combination of origami and calligraphy to make single-use magical items out of (preferably) natural paper.


Video Games

  • Sketch Turner, the comic book artist sucked into his own creation in Comix Zone, can tear a chunk out of the comic page he's fighting on and turn it into a lethal projectile by folding it into a paper airplane. His pet rat, Roadkill, scratches at panel borders to reveal weapons and power-ups. The villain of Sketch's comic, Mortus, draws monsters to attack him.
  • One Piece had a video game where the villain eat a Logia-type Devil Fruit that granted him power over paper and fabric.
  • Paper Mario. Sorta. To explain, in this game, the characters are absolutely flat, and as a result almost every power-up Mario gets includes origami-ing himself.
  • Melody, one of the Portrait Ghosts from Luigi's Mansion, attacks with sheet music.
  • Ultimate Marvel vs Capcom 3 has Phoenix Wright. Most of his attacks involve paper and documents. His "Break the Witness" attack (an upgraded version of "Press the Witness" and only available in Turnabout Mode), where he walks forward while emphatically smacking some papers, can do insane amounts of damage, and if used as an assist it becomes an Invulnerable Attack.


Web Comics

Web Original

  • From YouTube Poop, the most unusual thief, the infamous Paper Doll Man.
  • Mister Origami, a Golden Age villain from the Global Guardians PBEM Universe, was an expert origami artist, and could mentaly transform his folded creations into giant examples of the real thing that would attack his enemies. (For example, he would make an origami bear, then animate it into a fifteen foot tall angry bear that would attack at his command).
    • Hallmark is a mutant criminal with telekinetic control over paper. For the most part he was considered a joke in the supervillain community of the Global Guardians PBEM Universe, until he took down half the Global Guardians team singlehandedly using the contents of an office supply store.


Western Animation

  • Origami from Jackie Chan Adventures, a shape-shifting thief who could fold his body like paper.
  • The sole shtick of Paul the Samurai villain Papercut.
  • In an episode of Phineas and Ferb, Doofenshmirtz's latest -inator is one that takes paper and compacts it into extremely sharp and durable bullets and shoot it at people and give them... PAPERCUTS!
  • One Justice Friends short featured The Joker-esque Manic Mailman, who wielded razor sharp letters.

Major Glory (after having his face cut) "Ah! Bills!


Real Life

  • The Millwall brick, a club made out of newspaper.
  • Discovery Channel had a convict mentioning the combat potential of newspapers folded and/or rolled up tightly enough... Spears... Hammers... keep in mind that paper used to be wood, and only its thinness and flexibility separates it from that mechanically. High density cardboard (which tightly enough rolled newspaper could approximate) doesn't hold a candle to steel for ability to apply bludgeoning force, but it is a lot better than bare hands for reach.
  • The History Channel had an episode of Ancient Discoveries that tested the validity of paper armor from ancient China. The paper armor they created was able to completely stop a crossbow bolt from 20 meters.