The Nudifier: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
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{{quote|''"Can you not solve anything without blowing people's clothes off!?"''|'''Asuna''' (to Negi), ''[[Mahou Sensei Negima]]''}}
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* ''[[To Love Ru]]'' has a teleporter example, and many others. Weird alien technology leaving people naked is a running gag in the series. For example, Lala's clothes are created on her by her sentient robot helper, which she wears in the form of a hairclip, and if it ever gets knocked off, distracted, or dizzy, her clothing vanishes in a poof. Another device randomly [[Instant Cosplay Surprise|switches costumes out for cosplay]] (including [[Hadaka Apron]] and Hadaka... whipped cream) oufits. Yet another device is a clothes dissolving gas. Lala, for the most part, doesn't care, but the rest of the cast does.
* Melona from ''[[Queen's Blade|Queens Blade]]'' [[Improbable Weapon User|squirts acid from her breasts]] that dissolves clothing quite readily.
* Suehirogari's ero-manga ''TAG'' combines [[The Nudifier]] with [[Hypno Fool]]. The main character makes fun of a gypsy fortune teller, which turns out to be a bigger mistake than usual: She's given a post hypnotic suggestion to compulsively stay naked whenever certain (also naked) women kiss her. Of course, she's not ''[[Laser-Guided Amnesia|told]]'' about this suggestion until her best friend [[Full-Frontal Assault|ambushes her at her college campus]] and plants a wet one on her, leaving her trapped with an [[And I Must Scream|overwhelming urge to stay naked]] against her will. (Her friend wasn't even told that much -- justmuch—just smooched by a stranger and left with a note and a paper bag to put her clothing in.) Of course, since this is ''[[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|"TAG"]]'', you can see where he's going with this -- thethis—the only way (outside of years of hypnotherapy) to bring herself to put clothing back on is to kiss someone else ([[The Virus|thus passing on the urge to stay naked to the new victim]]), with the ever-present danger of [[Nightmare Fuel|looking up and discovering another scared looking nude woman running at her later on]]. And since it's [[Author Appeal|Suehirogari]], she (and her entire cadre of friends) discover an exhibitionism fetish after the "game" (and the subsequent blackmailing by the Gypsy and her friends).
* There's one in ''[[Inukami!]]'', but it only works on men.
* One contractor in ''[[Darker than Black]]'' has the ability to teleport herself and others... but not their clothing. So she and anyone else she teleports effectively gets hit with this trope.
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== Films -- Animation ==
* From ''[[Interstella 5555]]'', the process turning the kidnapped aliens into humans (during "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger") includes lasers reducing their clothes to shreds -- whileshreds—while not grazing at all their skin.
 
 
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* One of the non-lethal superhero weapons used in ''[[Mystery Men]]'' is an energy beam that makes clothes ''shrink''. It's used on some already scantily-clad women, making them writhe and moan. One can presume that eventually they burst (the clothes, not [[Squick|the women]]).
* The orgasm piano device in ''[[Barbarella]]'' strips the subject first.
* Alec Guinness in ''The Man in the White Suit'' invents a fabric that is unstainable and indestructible -- theindestructible—the clothing industry tries hard to suppress the discovery, but by movie's end, the fabric proves chemically unstable, and his suit disintegrates off of him.
* The [[All Cloth Unravels|string factory]] from ''[[Mousehunt (film)|Mousehunt]]'' turns into this [[No OSHA Compliance|if you push the wrong button]].
* In ''Loose Screws'', one of the students comes up with a chemical to put into the girl's swimming pool that dissolves all fabric.
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'''Captain Jack:''' Ladies, your viewing figures just went up. }}
* ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation|Star Trek the Next Generation]]''
** One Ferengi transporter when transporting women. In their society, women aren't allowed to wear clothes. Which is '''[[Fan Disservice|two]]''' reasons we've never seen much of actual Ferengi society. Later in the series, Quark's mother starts openly wearing clothing -- Quarkclothing—Quark reacts the same as the average human discovering his mother is a nudist ([[Naked First Impression|the hard]] [[Please Put Some Clothes On|way]]) would. She later starts working getting the rules changed based on the idea that ''someone'' would have to ''sell'' all those newly-clothed women outfits, and jewelry, and makeup...
** In the episode ''The Most Toys'', having abducted Data and unsuccessfully ordered him to wear something other than his uniform, Kivas Fajo splashes a solvent on him which dissolves his uniform. He then explains Data's choice to go naked or follow his programmed sense of modesty and wear the other clothing.
* In ''[[Star Trek: Voyager|Star Trek Voyager]]'', Q's mischievous son uses his [[Reality Warper]] powers to make Seven of Nine's clothes disappear. He's rather disappointed when this [[Innocent Fanservice Girl|doesn't faze]] her. Having spent most of her life among the [[Hive Mind|Borg]], the idea of modesty is somewhat mystifying to her.
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** A spell reserved for fae and the humans raised by them will have all clothing slip off the target and tangle around its feet. The GM is advised to penalise use as combat preparation, since that'd be bad roleplaying for the character type.
** Another spell disintegrates dead matter, but not living bodies, so it can be used for this effect.
* One of the joke items featured in an April issue of ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' was the "Snazzy Ring", a magical ring that would make the wearer's armour take on the appearance of an [[Gorgeous Garment Generation|elegant gown or suit]], while still providing the same level of protection. Unless it went wrong, in which case it left you genuinely naked and destroyed your outfit, making it [[The Nudifier]] as well if you roll a 1.
 
 
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* ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'''s TV Funhouse cartoon series had an episode of The X-Presidents where Bill Clinton wants to join the X-Presidents and creates this robot that has a magnet that sucks the clothes right off people's bodies.
* In the ''[[Tripping the Rift]]'' episode "Miss Galaxy 5000", Six is reciting a poem during the talent portion of the eponymous [[Beauty Contest]] when Chode McBlob decides to liven things up by zapping her with a "Clothes B Gone" device.
* In ''[[Codename: Kids Next Door]]'', Sector V tries using a "Nude Torpedo" against Professor XXX-L; however the coordinates were wrong and instead it hits them. And note that it happens at the ''North Pole'' -- sure—sure, the kids weren't happy about the nudity, but the cold was a much more pressing matter.
* Bob Clampett's ''[[Looney Tunes]]'' short ''Eatin' on the Cuff'' is another example of fast-acting clothes-eating moths.
* A '70s ''[[Sesame Street]]'' cartoon has a man getting disrobed by moths.
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