Trigun

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Deep space planet future gun action!!
"I've never seen anyone kick so much ass in my entire life."

On the desert world of Gunsmoke, outlaw and absolute pacifist "Vash the Stampede" is being sought after by two young women: the tall, ditzy Milly and the tiny, short-tempered Meryl. They work for an insurance company that's getting bankrupted by all the property damage caused by Vash: collateral from the ridiculous fights he tends to get into which result in his nickname of "The Humanoid Typhoon". The reason? Vash has a bounty of $$60,000,000,000 (sixty billion double-dollars) on his head, and every Bounty Hunter on Gunsmoke aims to collect in true Wile E. Coyote fashion.

Wacky hijinks ensue for a few episodes, then the mood darkens. Lots of people die, in many cases slowly and horribly. Survivors discover new things about themselves. Personal growth takes place. There are hints of romance. Mood gets still darker. For the eggheads out there, there is even a fair amount of analysis of certain aspects of Christian theology (though Jesus is never mentioned by name), as viewed from a very Japanese perspective, having to do with the contrast between pacifist ideals and the moral obligation some characters perceive to protect the innocent even if they must kill in order to do so.

In 2010, Yasuhiro Nightow started a modest series of new works for the Trigun universe in anticipation for the movie: Trigun Badlands Rumble. First it was a two-chapter story, going by the same name as the movie, drawn by Yasuhiro himself it serves as a preview for the movie. The second was a One-Shot, Trigun: Rising, it is a short tale about Rai The Blade, one of the original Gung-Ho Guns, drawn by Yuusuke Takeyama. The third, and final, was another One-Shot, entlied Trigun: The Lost Plant, a story set 6 years after the original manga ending; it was drawn by Boichi and later published as an extra for the 12th Volume of his own series, Sun Ken Rock.

This series has a character sheet. Feel free to expand on it.

An exceptionally thorough and entertaining analysis of the anime can be found here. The English dub was one of the flagship shows of Adult Swim (along with Cowboy Bebop) and helped to set the mood that the sub-channel was simply for mature audiences and not necessarily "adult" audiences.

The show, formerly licensed in the US by Pioneer/Geneon and now licensed by Funimation, is on YouTube, Hulu, and Netflix [dead link].

Tropes used in Trigun include:

Frank Marlon: ...You drink too much.
Vash: I'M SORRY! *heave*

  • And Now for Someone Completely Different: Trigun The Lost Plant, introduces Verona Tsubasa, a woman following Vash around on search for the titular lost plant; the setting is placed six years later the original manga ending, Verona is the real focus of the story, Vash is just kind of there, and no other characters make a return, in fact, they are not even mentioned.
  • And the Adventure Continues...: Manga ending falls somewhere between here and Here We Go Again. Since the Knives situation has been resolved, Vash is free to enjoy his wandering life more, but the gag of Meryl and Millie becoming TV reporters hired to chase him around is kinda out there, and worse than insurance by a long way.
  • Anti-Hero: Wolfwood; Livio.
  • Apocalypse How: Vash prevents a Class X-4 in The Lost Plant.
  • Are We There Yet?: Towards the start of episode 15.
  • Armor-Piercing Slap: Vash gets one in episode 19.
  • The Atoner: Vash; Wolfwood.
  • Author Appeal: All the elaborate cowboy-like outfits and uniforms with all sorts of useless straps and buttons, huge collars etc. Also present in Nightow's other work, Gungrave. See for yourself.
  • Averse Adept: The first few episodes of Trigun show that Vash the Stampede is good at defeating armies and handling villains. He also hates being a Person of Mass Destruction owing to the harm it causes, which is why he keeps traveling a lot.
  • Awesome McCoolname: Brilliant Dynamites Neon.
    • Nicholas D. Wolfwood.
  • Ax Crazy: When Knife Nut just isn't enough.
  • Back-to-Back Badasses: Vash and Wolfwood.
  • Badass: The whole franchise seems to be about pitting badasses against each other and seeing what happens, making badasses even badasser, etc. And Love and Peace, of course.
  • Badass Adorable: Young Knives. Vash occasionally even grown. The girls periodically.
    • When was young Knives badass and adorable at the same time?
  • Badass Longcoat: Vash's coat is basically an elaborate red duster, which was inspired by the dusters worn by gunslingers in Westerns. Vash has probably one of the most extreme examples of this trope. In the show's opening and at other times, Vash's coat is shown billowing in the wind looking considerably longer than usual. But then, the Rule of Cool applies here, I guess.
    • Also keep in mind that, in Japan, red is the traditional color of the hero. And the English dub mentions that Red Geraniums (Rem's favorite) mean "determination".
  • Badass Transplant: Legato's Mind Manipulation ability is because he has Vash's arm.
    • What? No it isn't. Or in the anime you could give that a resounding 'maybe.' In the manga it certainly is not; he had his powers already when Knives sliced up the building around him when he was a kid, because he managed to keep the angel-arm blades from making him sashimi long enough to make his case using that power.
  • Barbie Doll Anatomy: Manga Knives lacks certain "parts"; similarly, the female plants lack nipples.
    • ...the blankness on Knives may be mere artistic license censorship, given the way it's drawn. And given that if they'd been born with no genitalia they would have been default gender-id'd female, and Rem raised them as boys well before they had the bones or muscle development to suggest it...
  • Bash Brothers: Vash and Wolfwood would actually be the Bashu Brothers. Includes a good spoonful of Back-to-Back Badasses.
  • Beard of Sorrow: In the anime, Vash grows one after he Heroic BSOD's after the incident with Legato during which time Meryl and Milly are taking care of him.
  • The Bechdel Test: Passes thanks to Meryl and Millie who may talk about something other than a man, especially at the beginning of the series.
  • Berserk Button: Vash snaps if he witnesses mass murders or if he gets mind raped; Knives snaps even harder than usual if Vash contradicts him; and Vash must be Meryl and Brad's Berserk Button...
    • Mind Rape counts as a specific berserk button now?
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Vash.
  • Beware the Superman: What everyone tends to think of first when they start to understand just how special Vash is.
    • Wolfwood even has a disturbing yet awesome moment in Maximum where they're hanging out and brooding together, and he seriously considers shooting Vash (by this time firmly established as his best friend) in the back right then and there, just to get at least one of the twins out of the way. He doesn't, but Vash gives him a sad, knowing look later and Wolfwood sort of smirks and thinks, 'who am I kidding? He knew exactly what I was thinking, and he would have survived.'
  • BFG: The Cross Punishers and Angel Arms are the cream of the crop.
    • Or at least they would be, until Caine the Longshot's hundred foot long sniper rifle is taken into consideration.
    • One of the bounty hunters in the first episode has a gun that takes the cake for sheer impracticality: a two-barreled rifle, each barrel having its own long clip. In firing it looks like a propeller.
    • Don't forget the huge starship gun Chronica tries to blast Knives with.
  • Bifauxnen: Though the voice and the name are clear giveaways, some people (i.e. viewers/readers) tend to doubt Milly is a woman when they first see her.
  • Big Bad: Knives.
  • Big No: "NOOOO, don't kill them!! BIGGER NOOOOOOO!!!" Vash screams a lot whenever rendered impotent in a life-or-death situation. Also weeps. Man has no dignity to speak of.
  • Bishonen
  • Bittersweet Ending: Manga only; it barely avoids being a Downer Ending.
  • Bizarre Sexual Dimorphism: The plants in the manga seem to have this until Domina and Chronica turn up from earth. In the anime we never get a good look at the girl plants or actually informed that Vash and Knives are plants. The flashback episode made it look like the infants had turned up in an airlock, implying they were extremely hardy aliens.
    • Well, the manga established them as a special subrace back in volume 7 when we had the flashback to the Tessla research documentation. She was a girl like them.
  • Bloodless Carnage
  • Body Horror: Vash's body is interesting; involves a generous helping of Transformation Trauma.
    • After he finally starts to learn how to use this (traumatically), the first time his angel arm instinctively puts up some 'feathers' to catch a bullet he gets stoned. And Meryl 'I Wouldn't Run Away' Stryfe breaks down screaming and hiding from him because that first time traumatized her, too. You gotta wonder why he doesn't just let us all die.
  • Boomerang Bigot: Done seriously with Legato. He was at least born human (prior to getting a ton of modifications), but is an Omnicidal Maniac who wants to kill all humans and anxiously awaits the day when his own boss will kill him.
    • There is no evidence Legato was modified—well, apart from anime Legato having Vash's severed left arm in place of his own. He's presumably a psychic mutant. This is not improbable, in the setting.
    • He could very well have been modded in childhood by the people he hated so much at the place where they were keeping him. At any rate they paid him more careful attention than your average boy whore, worked out he was planning to kill them all, and the simplest explanation for how they were able to use the method they did for killing him is that they developed the cancellation technology from the coin-box, and were using it. Given Legato couldn't stop his death-by-rape but after the building got sliced up a bit could brain-hack Knives enough to stay alive.
  • Bounty Hunter
  • Breaking the Fourth Wall: In the episode Little Arcadia, Vash breaks the fourth wall and says, "Hey, is that all the time I get?" It is also fairly obvious that he does it again a couple times in the series.
  • Break the Cutie: "Eternal sufferings to Vash the Stampede!"
    • Also Knives and Vash in the manga backstory. Poor, sweet little Knives.
  • Bring My Red Jacket: Arguably the reason for the color of Vash's trademark coat. Debatable: in the anime at least, Vash inner-monologues about Rem and her love of red flowers while the camera pans over his coat.
  • But Now I Must Go: Vash, the initial premise being informed by just the type of Western that codified the trope.
  • But Your Wings Are Beautiful: Averted. Knives has people around him who think his freakiness is pretty damn awesome, but so does he. Vash could do with hearing this, but no one can actually bring themselves to say it. His wings freak them out way too much. In fairness, they are pretty terrifying wings.
    • (Manga) Meryl is so badly traumatized by the situation in which she first sees them that she burrows into Millie's arms and screams, the next time he reflexively puts up a feather to catch a bullet. 'Colorless Emotions' is a depressing chapter all round.
  • Cain and Abel
  • Captain Obvious: Knives "captain obviouses" Vash at least once in the manga. Vash tells him that his true fight should be with himself, meaning his priority should be learning to control his destructive urges. Knives misunderstands this and answers "Yes, the pain I feel is horrible. Thanks for enlightening me to the situation."
  • Carnival of Killers
  • Casanova Wannabe: Anime Vash.
  • Cast From Lifespan: Vash's Angel-arm is ridiculously powerful, but every shot costs him life energy and shortens his lifespan.
  • Cast Full of Pretty Boys: In the manga, at least; the only seriously recurring women are Meryl and Millie, who are absent for at least half the story and fairly useless most of the time, and eventually Elendira, who is m-t-f transsexual. (Transgendered?) In the anime only slightly, as there are Meryl as viewpoint character and Millie as her stalwart companion, and regular appearances by women like Mary-Anne, Elizabeth, and Jessica. All the actually significant characters are still male, though.
    • Dominique is the only actual female antagonist, and she had only one trick and didn't last long.
  • Catch Phrase: "Love and peace~!"
  • Cats Are Magic: Kuroneko-Sama, the black cat, randomly appears across the desert planet Gunsmoke where our heroes show up. Fan Wank is that Kuroneko-Sama is God.
  • Cat Smile: Milly.
    • Vash during the first episode.
  • Cattle Punk: A prime example, although Nightow chose to make his setting so desert there is no space for any actual herdbeasts. They aren't actually compulsory despite the name.
  • Cerebus Syndrome: The manga, at least, had 'moved from shounen to seinen title partway through' to blame for Nightow holding back and then cutting loose.
    • The anime just held the plot until halfway through, till they'd established the world and its people. This was probably a good idea. It would be hard to care half so much for what happens once the bad times start if one didn't already have a connection to the people involved.
  • Character Exaggeration: Manga Vash may do just anything he can to be silly, he doesn't harass ladies 'for the lulz'. Anime Vash becomes a Casanova Wannabe.
  • Charge Into Combat Cut: In the opening scene of the first episode after an armed gang demolishes a bar that Vash was drinking in, he slowly stands up after finishing drink, adjusts his glasses and points his gun at the gang... cue a cut to another town, in which the insurance adjusters on Van's trail are introduced.
    • We later flash back to what happened then and it turns out to be his gun clicked on no bullets and he screamed and ran away.
  • Chaste Hero: Vash, possibly due to Yasuhiro Nightow's Christian overtones. (He's a Roman Catholic... and Japanese!)
  • Chekhov's Gun: Wolfwood's Cross after Vash takes it. It saves his life in his fight with Knives.
  • The Chessmaster: Knives. Steps up his game after the Last Run disaster reveals that he's actually mortal and just can't play around forever.
  • Chivalrous Pervert: Vash, in the anime. In the manga, he's more of a Chaste Hero.
  • Church Militant: Nicholas; Chapel the Evergreen in the anime. Nicholas, Chapel and Livio as part of the Eye of Michael in the Manga.
  • Clothes Make the Superman: Livio is only half competent without his beautiful hat and cape. Also, Vash's coat is bullet-proof and contains airco and bullets.
  • Cold Sniper: Some of the Gung-Ho Guns, but Caine the Longshot is the absolute embodiment of the trope. He has no lines, a huge sniper rifle, and straight-up suicides when Vash breaks it (though at least in the anime, this may have been Legato's doing rather than purely his own choice).
    • He doesn't exist in the manga. He's instead of Elendira.
  • Compensating for Something: In volume seven Knives attempts to...fuse with Vash and let him survive as part of Knives when he accepts that his brother is never going to come around. Only, as Legato has already noticed, Vash has more raw power at his disposal, and almost overwhelms him. Knives does not like this. He then fuses with every other plant on the planet and becomes the controlling consciousness of a vast collective entity that sprawls across the sky with a thousand wings.
  • Confessional: Wolfwood even sells confessions despite probably being a Protestant priest.
    • 'Protestant priest' means Anglican or Episcopalian, pretty much. Both of which practice confession. Most sects that abolished confession also abolished priests, as such, and most sacraments, since they're something of a package deal and distrust of priestly corruption and its impact on the efficacy of sacerdotal endeavor was a major article of reformist heresy and eventually the Reformation. Wolfwood seems to be some kind of Space Episcopalian.
      • Though apparently, inasmuch as he was ordained at all it was through the Eye of Michael, who are purportedly an assassin ring fused with an underground plant worshiping cult. So yeah. He can be forgiven his scattered doctrine.
  • Conservation of Ninjitsu: With gunfighters in place of ninjas.
  • Cool Mask: Vash. The 'little round glasses' variant. In the manga, Livio.
  • Cool Shades: Vash; Wolfwood; Knives in a few manga artworks.
    • Yasuhiro Nightow is fond of giving his gunslingers glasses, especially in his designs for Gungrave characters (Brandon Heat, Bear Walken, Blood War).
  • Cool Starship
  • Couldn't Find a Lighter: At a shooting competition, one contestant can be seen lighting his cigarette with a submachine gun.
  • Covered with Scars: Vash. The girls walk in on him after a shower. The prosthetic arm the audience knew about, after Monev, but the girls didn't have the angle. The scars are what he pays for trying to save everybody all the time. Of course, what some of those metal bits are doing on him is a deep mystery. What, does he have some pressing medical need to tack his skin to his spleen?
    • He's a plant. Plants don't heal, they just grow back. The metal is keeping him in one piece.
    • He isn't that kind of plant. Also, citation needed. Vash heals normal wounds like a cut to the head, and whatever restorative procedure Knives was going through before he came out pulling his Lady Godiva....
  • Crapsack World: The world is full of gunslingers. Shootouts and property damage seem to be the norm. The planet itself is a desert and the competition for scarce natural resources is definitely bringing out the worst in people. The fear of the Humanoid Typhoon hangs over every town. Death is never far away.
  • Creepy Cool Crosses: Wolfwood, duh. His main weapon looks like a giant cross with a gun handle in its middle. The elongated bottom spoke conceals a machine gun, the top spoke above it holds a rocket launcher, and the two side spokes slide outwards to reveal racks for about a dozen pistols. The anime also has Chapel the Evergreen of the Gung-Ho Guns, who also carries a giant cross, though his separates into two heavy machine guns.
    • Man: "Whoa, this is HEAVY!" Wolfwood: "That's because it's full of mercy."
  • Cross-Popping Veins
  • Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: Vash is the definitive example, especially when he's played by Johnny Yong Bosch. He seems like a simple gangly fellow with a penchant for donuts and beer... until you piss him off. There's a very good reason why he has a $$60 billion bounty.
  • Crucified Hero Shot: Wolfwood and Vash.
  • Cultural Cross-Reference: So many, it'll be faster to check the Shout-Out section.
  • Cute Monster Girl: (Arguably) Zazie the Beast's girl terminal in the manga.
  • Cute Shotaro Boy: Noteworthy examples are young Vash, young Knives, and several kids from Zazie's group in the anime.
  • Dark-Skinned Blond: Manga Zazie. Both of...it.
  • Dark and Troubled Past
  • Darker and Edgier
  • A Day in the Limelight: In the anime, Meryl and Milly in episode 14 (lampshaded by Vash when he realizes how little screentime he got). The manga experiments with different points of view, including those of Villain Episode and side characters.
  • Desert Punk
  • Despair Event Horizon: As it is set in a Crapsack World heavy on Rule of Drama and one of its major questions is whether idealism has any real meaning...so many characters, all the time. Especially in backstories, but the 'eternal suffering to Vash the Stampede' gives us a couple heroic ones in the main timeline. Meryl and Millie are actually notable for never falling to this point, in either version. (In fact, the odds of things not going completely to shit increase significantly in their presence. Too bad the guys never notice.)
    • Especially notable is the one Vash and Knives had when they were a year old. Their reactions were actually relatively similar—check out Vash's Slasher Smile after he stabbed Rem—but Vash due to not passing out from the starvation thing worked through his and got better, while Knives pretended to have forgotten and then...killed everyone. At least he feels kinda bad about how many plants were included in 'everyone' later.
  • Despair Gambit: Knives' main plan with regard to Vash. In the anime, this ultimately pushes him into a Heroic BSOD.
  • Destructive Saviour: Vash is called the "Humanoid Typhoon" for a reason, and while he doesn't like people's homes and so one being wrecked, the only Collateral Damage that's really important to him is human life. He's willing to die for you, but not for your car.
    • The dark side of this, as it were, comes up in the anime: apparently his wish to not kill anyone affected the Angel Arm enough when Knives set it off in July that he managed to wreck an entire city without directly killing anybody. But now they were a city full of refugees in the middle of a desert...
  • Determined Expression: Vash looks like this whenever he drops his facade of idiocy and decides to get serious. Only to be expected from a man whose byword is determination.
  • Deus Exit Machina: In the chapters where Meryl and Millie are protecting the oasis owned by the old couple, Vash is almost entirely absent. The plot instead focuses on giving us a better idea of who the insurance girls are. Vash even lampshades it at one point when he pops out to make a single assist. The camera then pans away and he says "Hey that was it? That was my turn?"
  • Devil in Plain Sight: Legato out to lunch in a bar or having a sandwich on a village plaza; in the manga, Knives hanging around in bars before freakin' killing everybody, in Midvalley's memories.
    • I thought Midvalley killed everybody? Knives just sat there and applauded.
  • Diabolus Ex Machina
  • Did Not Do the Research: It's minor but it's still there. In the Victorian Language of Flowers, geraniums do not mean "courage". That's garlic flowers. Most definitions, depending on the species, are friendship, ingenuity, consolation, or wanting to meet someone. Though people usually let it slide because it's surprising that Nightow even knew about such a truly Western concept as the Victorian Language of Flowers in the first place, let alone, the details of it.
    • A truly Western concept? What about Hanakotoba?
    • But he wasn't using Hanakobata. Was he?
    • Victorian Language of Flowers is actually a pretty popular idea in Japan, inasmuch as you can consider anything that marginal popular. There's a mini-fetish for the whole Victorian motif, actually—where do you think the Meido thing came from?--and it's colored the Japanese perception of the British rather hilariously.
  • Died Kneeling Before An Altar: Anime Wolfwood.
  • Die Hard on a futuristic sand-train thing: B.D.N.
  • Disaster Scavengers
  • The Ditz: Vash, or so it seems...
  • Does Not Like Men: Amelia in the Badlands Rumble movie.
  • Does This Remind You of Anything?: Legato mind controls a kid to eat a hot dog he is holding in his lap, before holding her head down. Yeah.
    • Also, Knives is swimming in bucketloads of Freud Was Right, especially when interacting with his siblings, who provoke genuine-but-psychotic emotional reactions from him. And the forced absorptions that are too rapey for words, especially the attempt on Vash. And when Vash first catches up to him after the Fifth Moon he's asleep after multiple fusions, with enough pieces of his sisters lying around not yet fully dissolved into his body that it looks distinctly like the aftermath of an incestuous orgy....
  • The Dragon: Legato.
  • Dramatic Wind
  • The Drifter
  • Drowning My Sorrows
  • Dying Like Animals
  • Dysfunction Junction: Oh boy...
  • Earn Your Happy Ending: Both versions, particularly the manga.
  • Enfant Terrible: Young Knives.
  • Environmental Symbolism
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Neon sticks to what he says and REALLY likes it when someone "sparkles" brightly. he outright refuses to kill Vash despite he and Vash being in a gun duel where Vash is wounded pretty badly. He even helps stop the massacre he STARTED because he agreed to do whatever Vash said if Vash won their duel.
  • Even the Guys Want Him: Legato.
  • Evil Counterpart: Knives to Vash; Livio to Wolfwood might be a case, if you believe Wolfwood can have an Evil Counterpart.
    • Don't forget Midvalley! For one rather confusing fight, there was Midvalley in his white suit and Wolfwood in his black, both kind of ambivalent but fighting like hell, with the whole 'wolf fangs' theme going. Manga only.
  • Evil Gloating
  • Evil Twin
  • Evolving Credits: Each episode's opening (except for episode 2) shows a couple of scenes from that episode. Starting in episode 18, the wanted poster also changes to one warning people that Vash is coming.
  • Exactly What I Aimed At
  • Explosive Overclocking: Wolfwood after taking two vials of serum. He regenerates almost instantly from almost any wound, but burns out his life and dies shortly afterwards.
  • Expy: Knives has been accused of being a Vegeta expy.
    • Monev the Gale is very intentionally a Venom expy.
  • Eye Scream: In the manga, Zazie's flies crawl in and out of his eyes. Midvalley's horn playing also seems to make eyes bleed/explode.
  • Face Heel Turn
  • The Faceless: Knives during most of the first Trigun manga and almost all the anime. Even when he does show up at the end of the first manga, much of his face is hidden by a mass of improbable curly hair—presumably because Nightow still wants to conceal his resemblance to Vash.
  • Fan Disservice: Legato in the manga... *shiver*
  • Fan Service: Lots of eye candy if you love big muscles.
    • Or long legs. Or glowering.
  • Fantastic Measurement System: Distances are measured in "iles" and "yarz," although it's never made clear whether those are actually miles and yards with letters removed and different spellings, or something different.
  • Fearful Symmetry: Vash and Knives in the anime. Very strange and gratuitous because it's extremely unlikely Knives would have the same gunfighting training and practice as Vash, having just left Sealed Evil in a Can state and being secluded from the real world.
  • The Fettered: Vash. Source of his philosophical dispute with Wolfwood; arguably the same with Knives; Knives is just much further on the other end of the scale.
  • Fill It With Flowers: Being a desert planet, the setting touches on this a lot, but especially in the episode "Little Arcadia".
  • Four-Philosophy Ensemble: Wolfwood is the Cynic (or the Conflicted), Vash is the Optimist, Meryl is the Realist, Milly is the Apathetic (when being silly) or Conflicted (the rest of the time).
  • Freak-Out
  • Freudian Excuse: Most of the villains and even some of the 'good guys'.
  • Friend or Foe
  • Friend to All Children: Vash. Playing with children is one of his many activities whenever he stays in one place more than a few hours, and if he stays more than a few days the local kids will all consider him their personal minion. Wolfwood doesn't play with them quite so much, but they're an even bigger part of his world.
  • Full-Frontal Assault: Knives.
  • Gallows Humour: The humor tied to Legato and Knives's insanity and to Vash goofing around in the most desperate circumstances gets particularly disturbing—so much that Nightow edited out some of the "offending" passages of the last three or four volumes, presumably under fandom pressure.
  • Gecko Ending: The anime—an odd example, though, as Nightow was in on the whole planning process, and many events play as a shorter dry run of things in the manga.
  • A Glass of Chianti: Knives in the anime.
  • The Gloves Come Off: Happens to Vash when he's forced to kill Legato in order to save Millie and Meryl. Unusually for the trope, the act itself is rather understated.
  • Glowing Eyes of Doom: Vash in "Diablo", the episode where the anime gets Darker and Edgier, as a sign of his Unstoppable Rage. In hindsight, also an early indication of how damn freaky his body is.
    • Vash also happens to be the page picture for this trope.
  • A God Am I: Knives's megalomaniac tendencies and belief that he is a kind of noble crusader or even a kind of Jesus figure. Then it gets worse.
  • Go Mad from the Revelation: Knives. Used to Be a Sweet Kid. Vash too, briefly.
  • Gonk: The vast majority of antagonist characters are either that or Mr. Fanservice.
    • Also a lot of the background characters.
  • Good Costume Switch: Livio.
  • Good Feels Good: Vash, obviously. The show also underlines that even though it may seem so, evil doesn't feel good: Legato is suicidal, Knives seems to have a chronic nervous breakdown, Villainous Breakdowns abound, Wolfwood is terribly conflicted over his questionable actions, etc.
  • Good Scars, Evil Scars
  • Good Thing You Can Heal: Wolfwood, Livio (in the manga) and Knives. Vash has the power but refuses.
    • Or something. Knives appears to have spent a long time in a tank of something to grow back whatever bits of his body Vash blasted off in July. Vash doesn't really have the resources, and given he's put his apparently genius intellect toward calculating bullet trajectories and not much else all these years he may not even know he has the potential.
  • Gratuitous English:
    • All of the series' writing is in English, and there is one point in the second episode of the anime where we see a flier for a "BODYGARD" who is a "CREAT SHOOTER LIKE VASH THE STANPEAT".
    • There's also a sign that says "Coffe & Restlant!!" in episode 5, and when Vash uses the computer in episode 26, it says "Searth Target, All People Relate to Lem Sayblam". In the manga, there's one instance where there's a container of salt labeled "solt".
    • The Quickdraw application in the eponymous episode is pretty legible, though. Maybe Wolfwood is just a better-than-average speller?
    • The whiskey labels are very faithful reproductions of actual brands.
  • Gratuitous Foreign Language:
    • Vash occasionally utters a few words in French, crying for his "maman" and greeting his food with "Bonjour! Je t'aime!" The first time, he then questions why the hell he's speaking French.
    • "Danke, danke!"
    • In the anime, Rai-Dei presents him with a formal Japanese challenge... whereupon Vash notes he can't understand a word of it.
  • Green Aesop
  • Gun Fu: Vash vs. Knives in the anime and Wolfwood vs. Midvalley in the manga seem lifted directly from a John Woo flick.
  • The Gunslinger
  • Gut Punch: Legato's introduction.
  • The Gwen Stacy: Rem is Vash's. Except his foster mom.
  • Hacker Cave: You wouldn't think manga Knives is a tech geek. Oh wait, he's actually made of tech geek material.
  • Hair of Gold: Vash is a male example.
  • Hannibal Lecture
  • Heartbroken Badass: Vash.
  • The Heartless: The manga heavily implies that Knives and to a lesser extent Legato function symbolically as The Heartless.
  • Heel Face Turn
  • Here We Go Again: The manga ends with everyone once again chasing after Vash. And he couldn't be happier.
  • Heroic BSOD: Once or twice in the anime, repeatedly in the manga.
  • Hero with Bad Publicity: Vash, so very, very much.
  • Hidden Eyes: The manga contains quite a few variations on this, including Scary Shiny Glasses.
  • Hive Mind: Apparently kinda sorta the case with the bulb plants, even before Knives starts subsuming them into his giant body. In the manga also to some degree the case of the sand worms, whose psychic network extends over most of Gunsmoke's native life and learns how to invest itself in a human vessel, giving Knives the Gung Ho Gun 'Zazie the Beast.' They have some kind of alliance with him against the human invaders, although this is never properly explored.
  • Hope Spot: In episode 21 of the anime, Vash looks like he's about to revive a wounded plant and save the ship...just when Hoppered regains consciousness and destroys the plant with a suicidal Last Breath Bullet.
  • Hot-Blooded
  • How to Stop the Deus Ex Machina: Vash is incredibly skilled with his weapons and probably capable of taking out every single baddie he ever faced, short of his own brother. What holds him back? Technical Pacifism. If he really unleashed himself, he'd hurt a lot of people, and he doesn't even want to hurt the bad guys. Unfortunately, attempting other options often allows harm to come to innocent bystanders.
    • Surprisingly rarely, though. In fact, the impression is given that before Knives sicced the Guns on him he pulled off a miracle practically every time, if at great personal cost, so his world goes through a bit of a paradigm shift while we watch.
  • Huge Guy, Tiny Girl: Being at least two times taller than Meryl, Vash really has to bow down when he wants to hug her. That or he hoists her up.
  • Human Popsicle
  • Humans Are the Real Monsters: The root of the problem.
  • I Have Many Names: Vash only ever gives 'Vash' if actually pressed into introducing himself [1] but he's also 'The Stampede,' 'The Humanoid Typhoon,' 'The Demon of July,' 'The Walking Disaster,' 'God's Armed Arm,' 'The First Human Act of God,' and Broom-head. And Spiky.
    • Oh, and Eriks. That one time when he finally gave up.
    • Nicholas D. Wolfwood is also Nicholas the Punisher. And Chapel.
  • "I Know You're in There Somewhere" Fight: Vash does this pretty much every time he meets Knives in the manga; from Knives's perspective, he must be the one doing it to Vash, which brings once again the question of whether the twins are by "nature" peace-loving or mindlessly violent.
    • Given their silent sisters appear to all be sweethearts, although easily influenced, Vash appears to have a leg up in this argument. Chronica, meanwhile, has a bit of a temper and apparently a rather military mindset, vaguely like a sane Knives, while Domina is sweet and spunky.
  • Implausible Fencing Powers: Rai-Dei the Blade can block bullets.
  • Impossibly Cool Clothes: Also note than in the Trigun verse, nothing is cooler than a coat with the bottom part torn apart by dozens and dozens of bullets. With Scary Shiny Glasses, fuck yeaaaah!
  • Improbable Aiming Skills: A must for any Technical Pacifist operating as a gunslinger. Vash almost invariably hits what he aims at, no matter how absurd the shot, though a combination of rigorous training and superhuman potential count for a lot. On one occasion a terrible hangover made him reflexively hit all the targets in a quick-draw tournament he'd been forced into, when he'd meant to miss some.
    • In the same episode, he throws pebbles from the sidelines to knock bullets askew and make sure all wounds are nonfatal during other people's duels. And moves so fast no one notices. Kind of disappointing after that that he was never reduced to 'throwing stones' as a combat technique.
    • In another, he concusses an opponent by flinging the bullets out the back of his gun, and blocks the hammer of another guy's gun with the bubblegum he had been chewing, apparently at range.
    • On the other hand, on one occasion his response to an ambush netted one accidental potentially-fatal blow somewhere on the abdomen, so he interrupts his role as John McClane in a Die Hard on an X episode to staunch the enemy's bleeding in alarm, to the consternation of his young ally. So he's not infallible or anything.
  • Improbable Weapon User: Played straight (?) with Midvalley, whose saxophone is actually pretty sinister in the manga. Also, the deadliness of Creepy Cool Crosses is directly proportional to their size and probably inversely proportional to the size of your penis.
    • Objection! Wolfwood didn't design his Punisher, he should not be forced to take responsibility for its size!
  • In Love with Your Carnage: Legato is this way towards Knives. Especially in the manga.
  • Instant Dogend
  • Instrument of Murder: Midvalley's saxophone.
  • Insult Backfire: "Knives, you're inhuman!" and "Knives, you calamity!" Also, go ahead and try to insult Legato, we'll wait for you.
  • Interrupted Cooldown Hug
  • It Got Worse: Everything does. Also, the apocalypse kinda comes and goes during the manga. Story proceeds.
  • It's Personal: Vash's conflict with Knives becomes personal very early; his feud with Legato soon becomes this too, with Vash announcing loudly "From now on, YOU are the hunted!"
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Nicholas D. Wolfwood. The manga never quite explains why his True Companions inflict it upon themselves to put up with him in the first place, knowing that he never uses Honorifics and expresses his affection by distributing humiliating nicknames ("Tongari / Spikey", "big girl", "small girl", "crybaby Livio"), "playful" insults and various blows. Plus, his manga version is particularly macho and even tries to protect Milly from Midvalley... by pretending he'll shoot her if she doesn't leave immediately. Borders on Values Dissonance when his mistreatment of Vash is played for fun. It's even a wonder Nightow still manages to make him such a likable and well-written character for all his Knight Templar and Jerkass traits.
    • From the anime. Dying Wolfwood goes for a cigarette. Flashbacks

Millie (flashback): "It's bad for the baby, dear!" (It Makes Sense in Context).
Wolfwood (present): "I'm sorry, honey."

  • Kill All Humans
  • Killed Off for Real
  • Klingon Promotion: How Wolfwood got into the Gung-Ho Guns in the manga back story. Shot his teacher, Chapel, in the back, and used the contractual auto-replace feature to step in as the new Chapel.
  • Knife Nut: Especially in the manga. Vash's special boot-knife is neat, too.
  • Knight of Cerebus: Legato.
  • Knight Templar Big Brother: Knives is a big brother complex gone horribly wrong. He's pretty much of a Yandere over Vash, with huge emphasis on the "Yan". Also, he basically decided he was the older twin and it's up for debates which of them is the more childish.
  • The Lancer: Wolfwood.
  • Large Ham: Lazlo; Legato; Wolfwood; Knives very often; Vash, in quite a different style.
  • Laxative Prank: It's arguable that Kaite does this to Vash in episode 7 "B.D.N."
  • Little Useless Gun: Meryl's derringers are neither taken seriously as a threat or used to deliver meaningful damage over the entire course of both series. This is because of the Inverse Law of Utility and Lethality; Millie's stun-gun can be used with impunity, but since Meryl's little guns can't invoke Rule of Cool and the beaten-up-by-bullets effect and she's not a killer, they aren't allowed to actually do much of anything. Still good that she doesn't go around unarmed, and she does take some useful actions; the derringers themselves are just useless. Even though a real derringer can kill you very dead.
    • Part of this is that the only enemies there is ever any chance Meryl might really need to shoot are effectively immune to the level of damage her guns can inflict; it's a shonen and then a seinen series, where being Badass automatically renders you immune to things like ruptured arteries.
  • Living Battery: All Plants are this.
  • Living Forever Is Awesome: Vash doesn't age and has a lot of angst, but he's also a goof who spends his time helping the people of Gunsmoke. He doesn't like outliving people and the alienating effect it has, but there are definitely a lot of things that bother him more, and on the whole it's an advantage.
  • Love Triangle: Arguably, Vash has one with a lot of people. None official.
    • One official. Sorta. Legato and Elendira both like Knives. He hates them both, of course. Very uncompromising racist.
      • With extremely screwed-up sexuality due to his extremely screwed-up understanding of interpersonal relations, period. He probably would have been straight if he'd stayed sane enough to have something as plebian as a sexual orientation, though. Sorry, Bluesummers. The Crimson Nail has yet another leg up.
    • Also there's Jessica liked Vash and Brad liked Jessica and Vash was like 'can't we just pretend you're still seven like you were last time I saw you?'
  • Lower Deck Episode
  • Made of Iron
  • The Magnificent: Most major characters have one of these. Whether the name was earned by exploits or assigned as part of Theme Naming by employers etc. seems to vary. At least one was inherited via Klingon Promotion. Meryl and Millie shake up the trend by having nommes de guerre that come before their proper names and do not involve prepositions.[2]
  • A Man Is Not a Virgin: Subverted hard by Vash, especially in the manga (though his sexual harassment excruciatingly inept flirting with ladies in the anime can be seen as a sign of sexual frustration). He fakes being passed out in order to avoid the "favours" of already-paid-for-by-jovial-benefactor prostitutes, spends an inordinate amount of his free time thinking about his dead mother figure, doesn't want any woman to see his scars and avoids any kind of romantic or sexual relationship, be it with Luida, Meryl or Jessica. He may have had sex before, but his scars and the fact that Knives's henchmen endanger everybody close to him probably prevent him from doing so. As for manga Nicholas, the gag covers suggest he has a scandalous love affair with... a blow-up doll!? Make of it what you will.
    • Knives...is rife with sexual imagery. Dripping with Does This Remind You of Anything? Especially when he's absorbing his family members. It is also really damn hard to imagine him ever having any actual sex.
  • Manly Tears: Vash; Wolfwood; manga Knives; manga Legato; Livio.
  • Mayfly-December Romance: Anyone Vash could hypothetically hook up with would be about a hundred years younger than him, and he'd still probably outlive them. Except...his twin brother? And potentially that plant woman Chronica in the manga? A major factor in his status as Chaste Hero, since he's the emotional type.
    • Applies to Knives, too, except he really doesn't care.
  • Meaningful Name: Rem can be translated to English as "the world", depending on the context. Knives somehow acquired, as an adorable child, a name much more suited to his future as a homicidal maniac.
    • Legato named himself. Presumably he meant something by it. It will forever be a mystery what.
  • Megaton Punch
  • The Messiah: Vash borders on this towards the end of the manga.
    • He borders on this all the time.
    • He gets it from his mother figure, Rem, who died to save everybody during the crash landing.
  • Messianic Archetype
  • Mexican Standoff: Happens a few times throughout the anime and manga, but by far the most over the top one occurs in Volume 5 in the manga. Those involved include Wolfwood, Zazie, Hoppered, Legato, and Vash, in a sense. Wolfwood has guns trained on Legato and Zazie. Zazie has guns on Legato and Wolfwood. Hoppered is crippled and is trying to fire on Legato. Legato is holding back Hoppered with his powers and is trying to contain Vash. Vash's involvement is debatable, as he's simply losing control of his Angel powers and trying not to freak out. The standoff is broken by Meryl leaping up from beneath Vash and taking a shot at Legato. Guns go off all over the place, but the only one who dies is Hoppered.
  • Mismatched Eyes: Livio, sort of.
  • Mistaken Identity: A bit of a running gag early in the anime. Due to there being no proper pictures of Vash, just a vague description, people with a red coat, blond hair, and a big weapon become mistaken for Vash. It gets to the point that two guys even mistake each other for Vash.
  • Monster of the Week
  • Mood Whiplash
  • Mook Horror Show: Vash sometimes plays up the horror factor that his reputation gives him, since it gets him out of fights and he actually has a strict moral code against killing. He's done the sneak-around-and-pick-your-dudes-off thing and the Implacable Man advance-while-singing-a-terrifying-ditty-about-genocide thing.
    • A note: singing "Total Slaughter, Total Slaughter, I won't leave a single man alive. Ladi-Ladi-Die, Genocide. Ladi-Ladi-dud, an Ocean of Blood. Let's begin the killing time" didn't work.
    • Further note: Kicking a rocket fired from an RPG by the terrified mook, AFTER singing that, into the ceiling DID work.
    • Monev the Gale found out the hard way how scary a genuinely angry Vash can be when Monev gunned down a bunch of innocent civilians. He compared Vash's Glowing Eyes of Doom to the eyes of the devil himself.
      • Note that he had never actually met his boss.
  • Moral Event Horizon: In-Universe; Vash doesn't believe in this, claiming that no one is beyond redemption.
  • Mordor: Pretty much everywhere!
    • Except geo-plant areas.
  • More Dakka: Within five minutes of the first episode, an entire BAR is torn to pieces by a giant and his Mook army's gunfire.
  • The Movie: And the Fandom Rejoiced.
  • Mr. Fanservice: A few characters fit this trope, but Wolfwood is practically the archetype. Too bad his only mate is an inflatable doll, as the gag covers suggest.
    • Anime Wolfwood hooks up with Millie right before he dies. They complement each other nicely, and I'd hold the death timing against him except it wasn't his idea.
  • Murder, Inc.: The Eye of Michael. Bonus points for the Ancient Conspiracy undertones.
  • Must Make Amends: In the Trigun manga, Young Vash and Knives discover that there was another sentient plant called Tesla like them before and worse, they made several experiments with her and in the end lead to her death. The problem is that their surrogate mother was one of the researchers from the experiment. Knives after facing the truth, fell in a coma and Vash simply refused to eat. In an attempt to make him eat,Rem started peeling a fruit, Vash leapt for the knife in what was almost certainly a suicide attempt, but wound up stabbing Rem in the side when she put up a struggle for it. At first he seemed relieved but quickly started panicking and put her to bed in a med-birth and patched her up.
  • My Death Is Just the Beginning: Legato uses his own death to psychologically torture Vash. It worked.
  • My God, What Have I Done?: Vash.
  • Names to Run Away From Really Fast: Millions Knives.
    • Legato Bluesummers, on the other hand, just carries an air of faint menace.
    • Most of Vash's nicknames count: the Human Typhoon, the Demon of July, the First Human Act of God, etc. etc.
  • A Nazi by Any Other Name: Knives is an Aryan on steroids who rants about being a "superior breed"; Legato has his own particular brand of Nietzschean philosophy; genocides involving high technologies.
  • Never Found the Body: In the movie, after Vash gets shot by one of Gasback's henchman. However, nobody in the audience would believe it, especially on the basis of canon and all...
  • Nietzsche Wannabe: Several characters, but Legato practically defines the trope.
  • Nonchalant Dodge: Vash does this a lot.
  • No Romantic Resolution: In the anime, the relationship between Meryl and Vash is left hanging.
  • Nun-Too-Holy: Wolfwood is the male version, obviously.

Vash: What the hell kind of churchman are you, anyway?!

  • Obfuscating Stupidity: Practically the definition of the trope. Vash didn't even fire his gun once until the end of the fifth episode, surviving the previous episodes by making it look like dumb luck. Another early episode had him rocking out on his headphones and going into a bar seemingly ignorant of the current hostage situation, but carefully and methodically diffused the situation all while seemingly harmless.
    • This episode was based on an early one-shot chapter written in the process of developing the character, which has differences and is not actually in the manga continuity.
  • Oedipus Rex: Both in the manga and in the anime, Nicholas D. Wolfwood has a bad complex towards his tyrannical mentor/father figure. No mothers need apply.
    • On the other hand, Vash has only a foster mother, and has been accused of spending way too much time thinking about her.
  • Omake: The gag covers, and they're a doozy; also, the end-of-volume pages involving Super-Deformed Nightow prancing around in near-insanity.
  • Omnicidal Maniac: Legato wants to witness and be part of The End of the World as We Know It because he feels his existence is meaningless. Actually creepier than Knives, who (at least in the manga) has actual motivations and intends to save his species. The world would be way scarier if Legato was the Big Bad, instead of a young creep psychologically dependent on someone stronger than him.
  • Once an Episode: Appearances from Kuroneko-sama.
  • One-Winged Angel: Manga only, but it was pretty awesome.
  • Older Than They Look: Vash looks like that he's around 27, but he is actually over 100.
  • Only Six Faces: All the non-Gonk characters must have only four faces or something. So much in Nightow's work that most "Kekkai Sensen" characters look like Trigun expies. Vash's face must be the most overused one, too, Livio even looks like Vash/Knives with a fancy tattoo.
    • Anime Vash and Knives have moderately different coloring. Some of the manga scenes are almost incomprehensible at first or second look, especially if both of them are in it and there are a lot of sound effects.
      • This looks intentional in the flashback to the twins as kids—wow, can't even tell which one said what, they're joined at the hip!--but problematic later.
  • Orcus on His Throne: Knives. Less than totally ridiculous example since Knives' only deadline is his and his sisters' lives expiring, which he starts moving pretty promptly after he learns about, and his only threat is his brother trying to pose one. Which he likes Vash doing. And which Vash is pretty bad at.
  • Pals with Jesus
  • Papa Wolf: Wolfwood, for any child he happens to encounter at all. Made his anime killing of Zazie all the more shocking (and even more of a gesture of attachment to Vash, but Vash wasn't really in a state to appreciate that).
  • Parental Abandonment: Most of the cast are either abandoned or orphaned; some even killed a father figure or mother figure as a result of abuse or insanity...
    • Manga Legato gets triple points.
      • Was tortured by, was plotting to kill, was being killed by, swore self into service to being who killed them for him out of gratitude...quadruple, I'd say.
  • Pastel-Chalked Freeze-Frame: Wolfwood in "Quickdraw", right after he turns around screaming with Guns Akimbo. Only one.
  • Person of Mass Destruction: Vash is classified as a Human Act of God.
    • For insurance purposes. For some reason this also causes the bounty to be taken off his head. Gunsmoke must have some weird torte law.
    • And Knives, of course. Shooter of satellites and spaceships. Bringer of the Apocalypse.
  • Pillar of Light
  • Pillow Pregnancy: In the anime, Milly Thompson tries to hide a slave-girl who is being chased by having her cling to her belly under her coat, then pretending she is pregnant and Wolfwood is the dad.
  • Pirate Ninja Zombie Robot: Nightow's official genre classification. Also, some of the character designs. Rai-Dei is a Cowboy Samurai Assassin on Steampunk Rocket Skates!
  • Power Gives You Wings: Creepy ones. And only the twins.
  • Pre-Explosion Glow
  • Professional Killer: The Eye of Michael are a ring of the planet's scariest assassins with a front as a respectable church.
  • Prophetic Name
  • Psycho for Hire: Legato and the Gung-Ho Guns.
    • And then there are the Eye of Michael, who have slots in the Guns as an organization instead of individuals. Of course, even they as high-end assassins are less than qualified as simple professionals, since there was a plant-worshipping cult involved in their evolution as an organization.
  • Psycho Supporter: Legato, especially in the manga.
  • Puppy Dog Eyes
  • Rape as Backstory: Legato in the manga.
  • Rated "M" for Manly
  • Razor Wings: One of Knives' powers is part of his body turning into feathers which are monomolecular blades.
  • Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Interestingly, some other characters are Younger Than They Look in the manga.
  • Reckless Pacifist: Vash.
  • Recurring Extra: Kuroneko-sama
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: Vash vs. Wolfwood; Vash vs. Legato; Vash vs. Knives is a more complex case, as Knives is the more cerebral one but also the more impulsive and violent. In all these cases, it's often reflected in their clothing and/or background colours, though Knives often appears in red too—but often in darker shades such as crimson.
  • The Reveal: Vash is an Artificial Human! Knives is his Evil Twin! The Gung-ho Guns' coins are meant to activate a device that de-powers Legato!
  • The Revolution Will Not Be Vilified: When La Résistance is made out of trauma-fueled genocidal psychos and a massively oppressed species.
  • Revolvers Are Just Better
  • Ruined FOREVER: The reaction to the fans of Funimation recasting for the Trigun movie dub.
  • Rule of Cool: Deep Space Planet Future Western Gun Action!! Also see Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot.
    • In the third episode of the anime, Vash somehow manages to deflect machine-gun fire using only a garbage-can lid. Which he'd previously been wearing as a hat.
  • Rule of Funny: Right now, someone is talking to his donut. In Gratuitous French.
  • Samaritan Syndrome: Vash.
  • Save the Villain: This is practically Vash's core belief.
  • Scary Shiny Glasses: Fear Vash when he gets into this mode.
  • Schizo-Tech: Somewhat justified by the After the End setting.
    • There is some degree of reason to what's become 'lost technology,' in that basically everything everyone needs to survive comes from the plants, which are generally municipally owned,[3] and therefore it all comes down to rationing.
    • Computers and miniaturized tech seem to have been mostly and most visibly lost. On a world of quartz this may seem odd, but many of the elements required, in Real Life, to get silicon pure enough for chips would be available only via plant manufacture. On the other hand, all that red sand? Iron is to be had far more conventionally.
      • Nevertheless, the entire society is completely schizo, since it's ruled be Western tropes instead of any logical progression of how being utterly dependent on the plants would impact social structure and lifestyle.
  • Sdrawkcab Name: Monev the Gale's name backwards is Venom, a Shout-Out along with his costume to the Marvel character.
  • Sealed Evil in a Can: Knives is Sealed Evil In A Friggin Lightbulb for most of the anime and till the very end of the first Trigun manga.
  • Sexy Priest: Wolfwood. Whoa, boy....
  • Shirtless Scene: Vash; occasionally Livio, Wolfwood and nekkid!Knives)
  • Shout-Out: Several.
    • The sandworms, among others, are an obvious allusion to Dune.
    • The name "Wolfwood" (Urufuudo) is an allusion to a Japanese band called "The Ulfuls" (Urufuuruzu) and the character in question is designed after their singer.
    • Many to American popular culture. Includes such gems as "double dollars", country-style music, and countless loans from western movies and American comics, noticeable both in plot elements and graphic references.
    • Often in chapter titles, such as the one to Quentin Tarantino in the chapter "Reservoir Dogs".
    • Tessla probably alludes to a certain Serbian inventor and engineer, himself a glorious Steampunk hero (click if you dare). (Alternately, she might be named after one of the companies named after Nikola Tesla.)
    • The Gun Fu battles may be shout outs to John Woo.
    • Monev's name and costume are a Shout-Out to Venom from Marvel.
    • Vash seems to be riding a wheeled Vanship during the trailer for Badlands Rumble.
    • Blink-and-you'll-miss-it one in the very last episode. The photo shown for the man related to Rem that Vash was tracking down in July is a still of single-episode character Shiro Tokita from Neon Genesis Evangelion, right down to his outfit in said shot.
  • Sibling Yin-Yang
  • Single Biome Planet: Although, with the twin-suns, is it any surprise it's a desert world?

Pretty Butterflies.

  • Sinister Shades:
  • Slap Yourself Awake: In a variant, Vash concentrates on the pain from his previously injured finger to counteract a villain who uses hypnosis to paralyze people.
  • Slasher Smile: Knives; Legato; manga Wolfwood; Livio; Lazlo; Elendira.
    • Little Vash between when he tries to kill himself and when he decides to save Rem.
  • Sliding Scale of Anti-Heroes: Wolfwood is a mix of Type II (the Disney anti-hero) and Type IV (the "What the Hell, anti-hero!?").
    • As necessary, though. Whatever it takes, and generally no more. At least with Vash acting as Morality Chain.
  • Slipped the Ropes: Vash once slides out of ropes to protect a young woman from bandits. Said bandits catch him before he can get back into them... the second time.
  • Slouch of Villainy: Manga Knives, generally with a hand over his eyes of forehead to show he's Full of Upset.
    • He grinned while doing this at the flashback to Midvalley's concert (at which, naturally, everybody died).
  • Small Girl, Big Gun: The girl in this case (Milly) isn't exactly small; it's just that her gun is just that big. Meryl is an interesting variation, as her guns are tiny but so numerous she must be carrying her weight in derringers.
  • Space Western: And the soundtrack reflects this extremely well.
  • Spell My Name with an "S": Lazlo/Razlo is a noteworthy and oddly controversial example. Also note Livio de Pupe (?), Chronica/Cronica/Kronika, Revnunt/Revnant Buskus/Buskuz/Vasquez, Tesla/Tessla, Kaito/Kite, and the names of several cities.
    • Rem is a particularly confusing example. Rem or Lem? Seibrem, Saverem, or Seiburem? It doesn't help that the manga lists her name as "Rem Seibrem" while the anime lists it as "Rem Saverem".
  • Squick: In the manga, when Zazie the Beast pulls a worm out of her crotch.
  • Start of Darkness
  • Steampunk: Even though it takes place in the future.
  • Stepford Smiler
  • Stop or I Shoot Myself: Wolfwood seems to do this, to provide a visual example on how someone's chosen action will lead to the death of hundreds. It is quickly revealed however, that he never intended to put himself in any danger, and was using an empty clip.
    • There's a chilling scene in the manga, on the other hand, where to prove how serious he is, Wolfwood holds Vash's (loaded) gun to his own forehead while it's still in Vash's hand and demands, shoot. Saying if he could trigger a willingness to do what's necessary and keep moving in Vash, that would be completely worth his life.
  • Strike Me Down with All of Your Hatred: When the Gung-Ho Guns fail to kill Vash, Legato uses this as his final gambit to ruin his life. It works, until Meryl convinces him to snap out of it and finish his business with Knives.
  • Stuff Blowing Up: The reason why everyone runs Vash out of town.
  • Sufficiently Advanced Alien: Vash and Knives are technically not alien lifeforms, but there are strong suggestions of this trope, especially in the anime since there are no "There Is Another" plants from Earth. And, let's face it, manga Vash and (even more) Knives are very god-like, which ties in with the religious subtext.
  • Suicide by Cop: None literally, since there is almost nothing by way of law enforcement on Gunsmoke. However, this is part of the modus operandi of several of the Gung-Ho Guns, especially Legato.
    • In the anime, this is also an interpretation for Vash's complete failure to say a word or make a move in his own defense while being lynched by the town that recognizes him as the Stampede, in the episode after he shoots Legato in the head. He wasn't actually catatonic, as he demonstrates at a couple of points, but he kept acting almost as though he was while they tied him to the back of a truck and dragged him around on his face.
  • Super-Deformed
  • Super-Powered Evil Side: Livio/Lazlo; Vash might fit too.
  • Super Speed: Vash shoots about six times faster than a human gunman, which is impossibly awesome. Also played with with Dominique the Cyclops.
    • He makes gunpowder explode faster than normal. He breaks physics through physical contact! And we thought he didn't have the girly family superpowers.
    • Elendria rams nails through peoples bodies faster than the eye can see.
  • Supervillain Lair
  • Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Livio, for Wolfwood.
  • The Sweat Drop
  • Take a Third Option: Vash constantly adheres to this.
    • Which is the reason why episode 24 of the anime is a Wham! Episode; there is no easy way out this time, which forces Vash to kill Legato, and later have a mental breakdown over it.
  • Teach Him Anger: Likely the intent of the Break the Cutie campaign that forms the backbone of the plot, the part that isn't just Knives' inner child throwing a tantrum about his brother not doing what he wants. Vash is already perfectly Badass, with a sizable temper if pushed far enough, but as a Technical Pacifist and Friend to All Living Things he lacks the genocidal anger his twin wants to see.
    • Also one of the many contradictory goals of poor Wolfwood, especially in the manga. He is perfectly willing to die for the sake of convincing Vash to actually kill the bad guys (specifically Knives) and really solve problems, because he's pretty sure Vash would fill his chosen role of righteous executioner much better and longer than he can.
  • Technical Pacifist: Vash, in spades. It even says 'pacifist' on his Quickdraw tournament application, if you look![4] Partakes of the irony of someone whose life is defined by combat but who still thinks in 'pacifist' terms.
    • Vash's entire character can be seen as a sort of deconstruction of the Technical Pacifist trope. Devoting his life to saving everyone around him takes a very, very heavy toll on him, as not everyone is happy that saving everybody includes the worst, most depraved monsters out there, and as Vash's Shirtless Scene shows, he's damn near falling apart because keeping everyone from killing each other is a very hard job. And by the end, he's forced to learn the hard way that he can't save everyone all the time.
  • Ten-Minute Retirement
  • Tender Tears
  • There Is Another: Manga only.
  • This Is Sparta: Legato, Knives and Wolfwood, occasionally. Lazlo, ALL. THE. TIME!!
  • Those Two Guys: Those two girls, Meryl and Milly, fit the description to a large extent.
  • Thou Shalt Not Kill: Vash believes in not killing, ever. The ramifications of this are explored as Vash is shown to have been torn to shreds under his jacket from numerous wounds he acquired while winning fights without hurting people.
  • Time Skip: Two years passes after Vash blows a hole on the moon, transition from Trigun to Trigun Maximum. Six years passes after Vash defeats Knives and most Plants dies during the conflict, transition from Trigum Maximum to Trigun The Lost Plant.
  • Time Stands Still: Dominique the Cyclops pretends to be able to do this. In fact, she uses hypnosis to momentarily freeze her target.
  • Training from Hell: Vash; Wolfwood; Livio; Monev; Rai Dei hints at this too. Strangely enough, Knives's apparent lack of regular training doesn't reduce his deadliness and muscle mass, because being an Ubermensch apparently gives you a near-unlimited supply of cool.
  • Transformation Trauma
  • Transsexualism: Elendira the Crimson Nail; also fits into the Villainous Crossdresser trope as a result of Did Not Do the Research.
    • Well, her surgical status is ambiguous and Villainous Crossdresser embraces scary trasgendered persons, given they have at least as much alarm capital to cash with the public.
  • Trauma Conga Line: Poor Vash...
  • Trickster Archetype: Vash, in particular, is an incredibly impish, baffling, and tricky character.
  • Trope Overdosed
  • True Companions
  • Try to Fit That on A Business Card: Vash's "real name".
    • Wolfwood's Word of God middle name is Dokonokuminomonjawaresumakinishiteshizumetarokakora.
  • Tsundere: Meryl towards Vash.
  • Twincest: Fan Wank notwithstanding, nothing actually happens, but manga Knives has a very... fusional and obsessive relationship with Vash to say the least.
  • Ubermensch
  • The Ugly Guy's Hot Daughter: In the anime, the (only identified) daughter of the Nebraska clan is an attractive teenage girl, while her dad is an ancient-looking ugly guy with three teeth and her mom is, basically, an Opposite Gender Clone of Gofsef Nebraska, the deformed, cybernetically augmented giant, only without the cyber-mods.
  • The Un-Reveal: Among other important plot points, the existence of independent plants is never explained and suffers from a borderline Hand Wave. In Fan Fiction, many fans suppose that they are the result of plant engineers "playing" with plants, which is a likely explanation.
    • Genetically, it's logically more likely than their being mutant throwback versions of normal plant reproduction. Because all the plants are girls and the twins are boys. Story-wise, the latter is more likely, if only because the only person not in cryo on the ship in the time frame for Vash and Knives to get sired was...Rem. Also because the crew would have worked that out while experimenting on Tessla and intentionally reproduced the event if at all possible.
  • Unflinching Walk: Vash and Wolfwood in "Goodbye for Now".
  • Unstoppable Rage: Frequent. Vash's is the most impressive, manga Knives' the most destructive.
  • Used to Be a Sweet Kid: Knives.
    • Also Wolfwood, Livio, and Legato, for a given value of 'sweet'; they were respectively already bitter, already carrying an Enemy Within, and already vengeance-driven at the earliest points in their lives we see them, but by comparison they come across as heart-twistingly innocent.
    • Vash, by contrast, has forcibly changed as little as possible over the years leaving him ridiculously childish at times. Of course, it's not all genuine.
  • Unpronounceable Alias: Vash introducing himself to Wolfwood.

"I am known as Valentinez Alkalienella Xifax Sicidabohertz Gombigobella Blue Stradivari Talentrent Pierre André Charton-Haymoss Ivanovicci Baldeus George Doitzel Kaiser the Third...Don't hesitate to call."

Vash (to Elizabeth): Aw, you aren't after that stupid reward, are you?
Elizabeth: No.

  1. except that one time when he met Wolfwood and said he was Valentinez Alkalanela Zeehok Sushira Boheres Gombigonela Blue Stradavari Tralentent Pierre Andre Charlatenhemost I'vanovitchi Baldos George Doitzel Kaiser the Third
  2. Stun Gun Millie and Derringer Meryl, in case you're interested. They share with Nicholas the Punisher the convention of being named after your weapon.
  3. (there are presumably a variety of quasi-socialist arrangements to allow the plant-manufactured foodstuffs and things to be disseminated to the public and from there bought and sold, although probably some places are outright capital-feudalist about it and the public essentially belongs to whoever controls the plant in exchange for their lives)
  4. Evidence that Wolfwood, who did the paperwork, had already been briefed on his target before their first encounter, since they'd interacted by fighting robots and sharing a bus, and the no-kill rule had not had a chance to come up.