The Power of Love/Playing With

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


Basic Trope: Love is the Strongest Force in the Universe.

  • Straight: The heroes' love for each other lets them overcome their trials.
  • Exaggerated: The heroes embrace each other as they are set on fire, and when the fire dies down the heroes are unharmed.
    • Alternatively, their love becomes an actual, tangible weapon or forcefield.
  • Justified: The villain tells the hero that his love interest betrayed him, but the hero doesn't believe him, and doesn't fall for the villain's trap.
  • Inverted: The Power of Hate. (Hate is the Strongest Force in the Universe.) The hero's overwhelming hatred for the villain and all the horrible things he's done sees him through all his trials just so he can take that son of a bitch down hard.
  • Subverted: The hero makes a stirring speech about how his love will prevail over all, but when it gets to the fight, the villain beats him handily. As the hero lies dying on the floor, the Mooks lead his love away to be executed.
    • Alternatively, an Anti-Hero dismisses the Power of Love and proceeds to slay the wicked demigod with the Power of......POWER
    • Unimpressed by the hero's speech about love, the villain responds with a filthy limerick and a whuppin'.
  • Double Subverted: The hero makes a stirring speech about how his love will prevail, before he is punched out by the villain and left for dead on the floor. The next day, as his love interest is led to her execution, the hero's reincarnation charges in, skewers the villain in mid-gloat, and rides with his love off into the sunset.
  • Parodied: "I love you" becomes a command word that creates Deus Ex Machinae.
    • Alternately, the power of love is used as a literal power source.
  • Deconstructed: The hero's adventures are narrated by a psychologist giving a lecture on the chemicals of the brain that cause love, and their effect on a person's physical capabilities.
  • Reconstructed: Said psychologist falls in love himself and is at a complete loss when asked to explain his new-found powers in chemical terms.
    • The Asexual character is nevertheless capable of feeling emotional attachment.
    • Loving to make people happy, or love for another, is much more powerful than sadism and/or selfishness because there's more people involved.
  • Zig Zagged: The Power of Love saves the heroes one minute, then fails to save them the next. Then later, love saves them later on when their love is "renewed".
  • Averted: The hero and his love interest clearly love each other very much, but it does nothing to help them with most of the troubles they face throughout the story.
    • No one loves anyone.
  • Enforced: We can't just let the hero fail here, but him and his love interest have no sort of weapon or tactic to get them through this. Let's have their love let them make it through.
  • Lampshaded: "Oh, look. Our love helped us win some random challenge again."
  • Invoked: Something bad happens, so the hero shouts "I LOVE YOU!" at his love interest in the hope that this will save him.
  • Defied: The Evil Overlord chooses all marriages for minimum possible attraction.
  • Discussed: "You know, I wish this was like one of those movies, where our relationship would somehow get us through all these stupid unrelated troubles in life."
  • Conversed: "Have you noticed how many shows have the heroes survive because of their love for someone?"

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