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* Those who start reading ''[[Akumetsu]]'' for the first time might think that Shinna is the main character. [[Decoy Protagonist|That only lasts for a couple chapters]] before the spotlight shifts to the title character.
* In the ''[[X 1999]]'' movie, Shiyu Kusanagi not only had his [[Gentle Giant]] and [[Friend to All Living Things]] persona stripped away to make him an explicit villain, but his relationship with Yuzuriha was left out, despite being probably ''the key'' aspect of his character, and to top it off, he was [[Dropped a Bridge on Him|killed in a very mean-spirited manner]] by ''[[Et Tu, Brute?|his own ally]]'' after only a few minutes of screen time. It could be justified as being necessary for the short length of the movie, but for fans of the character it was just ''painful''.
* Poor Yuuno. Once the partner to the title character of ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha]]'', his status rapidly degrades with each passing season thanks to the growing [[Improbably-Fundamentally Female Cast]]. It's telling that he's completely absent from the opening of the [[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha As|second series]], and that [[The Film of the Series|the film adaptation of the first series]] excises his role in the plot. Sufficed to say, Yuuno fans were pleasantly surprised when he not only became a playable character in ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha As Portable|The Gears Of Destiny]]'', but [[Took a Level In Badass]] in the process.
** Chrono suffers a similar fate thanks to his Y chromosone, but manages to stave off irrelevance until ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS|StrikerS]]'' due to playing a pretty major role in ''A's''.
** Really, even the female characters aren't immune to this, as a natural consequence of [[Loads and Loads of Characters]], and the series shifting in tone from a [[Seinen]] [[Magical Girl]] Show to a Space Military Show (with Magical Girls)
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* ''[[Family Matters]]'': The character of Judy Winslow, especially in Season 3 until she was [[Chuck Cunningham Syndrome|eliminated without explanation]] completely in Season 4; she usually appeared only in scenes involving the entire family or to move a plot along. To a lesser extent, this also happened with Rachel Crawford (Thelma Hopkins, who was involved with other projects), despite making several bit appearances from Season 6 onward.
* ''[[Step by Step]]'': The character of Brendan Lambert, the youngest son of family patriarch Frank Lambert, was given fewer plots and lines before [[Chuck Cunningham Syndrome|being eliminated completely]] by the sixth season. To a lesser extent, this was also the case with Mark (the nerdy middle son of Carol Foster), although Mark would continue to appear sporactically until the series ended, usually given one-liners or in family scenes whereby his absence would be conspicuous. These reduced appearances were perhaps in part due to the shift in focus on the female siblings, especially one-time tomboy Al (after Christine Lakin grew in desirability as she became an adult); while many of the remaining stories were 5-year-old Lily (who was born in 1995 and was age-advanced to create "little girl" stories).
* When ''[[M*A*S*H (television)|Mash]]'' made it to the little screen, several characters from the movie had this happen to them (when they weren't eliminated entirely): Spearchucker, Ugly John, and Lieutenant Dish were all reduced to second-tier status, and all were gone from the show well before the end of the first season. The character of Spearchucker was supposedly written out for greater historical accuracy, as the writers claimed there was no record of African-American surgeons serving in Korea. (There were, in fact, black doctors in Korea, and Spearchucker was based on an African-American doctor Richard Hornberger heard about at the 8055.)
* In ''[[Kamen Rider Kiva]]'', Basshaa is the only character to not get a specific arc, and never gets a Fever attack when Kiva upgrades to Emperor form. In the next series, ''[[Kamen Rider Decade]]'', Basshaa gets his ass blown away ''effortlessly'' in each fight--in the second, he doesn't even get a single shot off!
* ''[[Happy Days]]'':
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* The American Sports Team from ''[[King of Fighters|The King of Fighters '94]]'', only returned as playable characters in one game and that was ''KOF '98''. Their other appearances in the series were mostly just background and ending cameos.
* Every character in ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog]]'' who isn't Sonic, Tails, Knuckles, Amy, Shadow, or Eggman had this happen to them. Lately even some of these characters are being pushed to the background. Knuckles and Shadow were not even in ''[[Sonic Unleashed]]''. The two and Amy also didn't even appear in ''[[Sonic Colors]]''<ref>At least, not in the [[Wii]] version, anyway.</ref>.
* ''[[Super Robot Wars]] OG Gaiden'' hammers this trope to one of Duminuss' Homunculi, Laliar, [[The One Guy|the only male]]. In his origin game (''[[Super Robot Wars Reversal|SRW R]]''), at least he gets to get involved in the grand schemes along with his siblings, joining some factions to screw them up. But in ''OG Gaiden''... Tis gets to deal with the Wendigo and G Thunder Gate, Despinis gets to guard a [[Brainwashed]] Lamia, {{spoiler|and later ends up surviving, unlike in the original series}}... and Laliar? He's relegated into just contacting Tis and Despinis from afar in case they're about to screw up, and doesn't do much in the grander scheme (obviously, he had a bigger role in his original game). Makes this editor wonder if Duminuss prefers an [[Improbably-Fundamentally Female Cast]] for her main Homunculus.
** A similar case can be seen with the [[Bridge Bunnies]]. Early in ''OG 1'', Rio becomes a pilot and stays that way until the end of ''OG 2''. After {{spoiler|Daitetsu's death}}, Eita and Tetsuya end up taking charge and commanding the Kurogane to the best of their abilities. And poor Eun, best friend to the Hiryu Kai's captain Lefina? She is just there to give bits of information every so often, lacking even the hint of a [[Day in The Limelight]].
* In ''[[Fire Emblem]]'', most characters cease to have dialogue by the first 1-3 chapters after you've recruited them. Although slightly subverted by the revolutionary character development advent of ''Support Conversations'' in the majority of later games (including almost every game released in English, save for a single oddity and a sequel), as well as the base conversations of FE 9 and FE 10 (which incidentally served the character development purposes in FE 10).
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* Isn't it sad, [[Guilty Gear|Justice]]? After the first game, sure its understandable you're dead, but you barely had any lasting impact beyond {{spoiler|possibly being Dizzy's mother}}. Even this wiki has forgotten it was YOU who was the first to use the Gamma Ray move in a ''GG'' game. Also, Kliff Undersn, who after ''GG1'', story-wise, dies offscreen with barely any mention why or how. When they do appear they're probably only added due to fan demand and are usually removed due to balance issues.
* Victor Sullivan in ''[[Uncharted]] 2: Among Thieves'', who was a major character in the first game but only accompanies you for two chapters of the second before deciding he wants out. In "Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception," Sullivan becomes a main character once again, only for the main female leads of 2, Elena and Chloe, to be demoted to extras.
* Ogres suffered this in the ''[[Warcraft]]'' series. In ''Warcraft II'' they were the most important part of the Horde next to orcs and the only non-orcs who led orc clans and there were several important ogre-mage characters. In ''Warcraft III'' they were no longer part of the Horde, and now had the small role of neutral mercenaries and hostile creeps. They were also inexplicably weaker compared to the [[Elite Mooks|powerful units]] they were in ''Warcraft II'' and resorted to using clubs rather than [[Good Old Fisticuffs]]. In the expansion pack a [[Nonhuman Humanoid Hybrid|half ogre]] was introduced, and an ogre/goblin [[Hero Unit]] was introduced. Most importantly they rejoined the Horde in the story hinting at a greater role in future games. But then, in ''[[World of Warcraft]]'' the ogres' home is destroyed by [[Colour-Coded for Your Convenience|black]] [[Always ChaoticExclusively Evil|dragons]] and they show up for a minor role in one zone. As of the extension ''Cataclysm'' they are the only race from ''Warcraft II'' not playable in some form.
** Happened to the Blood Elf race - except for Kael'thas - in the ''Frozen Throne'' expansion of Warcraft 3. The "human" campaign largely on the plight of Kael'thas and his Blood Elf remnants... for about two and a half missions. Then they grew [[Out of Focus]] as the story importance shifted to Illidan and his Naga (the fact that the Blood Elf forces were completely irrelevant compared to the much stronger Naga didn't help). By the middle of the Undead campaign, the Blood Elves were out-and-out [[Mook|Mooks]] with the exception of [[The Dragon|Kael'thas]] himself.
** While trolls in general seem to be the go-to race for evil mooks, troll heroes tend to either vanish into obscurity or be [[Driven to Villainy]]. And the playable Darkspear tribe—a late (and somewhat rushed) addition to the baseline game to begin with—have been largely sidelined.
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