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Palette Swap
- 657 statements
- 124 feature instances
- 1160 referencing feature instances
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In 2D game development, the creation of sprites is labor-intensive. One cost-effective method for increasing the variety of game characters is to reuse the same sprite, but using a different color palette. This is seen in some platformers, but it most often appears in Role Playing Games and Fighting Games. In fighting games, this is commonly used to differentiate players using the same character, but it is also employed to create "new" characters. In the 8- and 16-bit era RPGs, it was pervasive: because of console limitations, disk and screen space were serious concerns. Palette Swapping was used to create a large variety of different enemies, often using different colors for various power levels. The most famous group of these are probably the Slimes, topped by the powerful Metal Slime, of Dragon Quest fame. A more elaborate variation found in 3D games is the Texture Swap, where the textures on the character's uniform are changed, but the actual model used remains the same. While the concept is a little different, these are often called Palette Swaps anyway as they're still easier for developers to make than a full-fledged alternate costume or character. The Head Swap is another tried-and-true technique for making more out of less. Massively Multiplayer Online Roleplaying Games (MMORPGs) are often set in a very large world that must be populated by monsters. Palette Swap to the rescue! By changing the size and textures used on the same model, the designers can make many types of monsters from only a few basic meshes. Sometimes even bosses are simply re-textured and are huge versions of weaker monsters. Some fans of fighting games use the term to refer to characters that use the same animations and move sets, even if the characters look very different. Such characters are also known as "clones". Individual characters may also have a choice of several different colors or costumes (or both). Caution: Tropes Are Tools. Palette swapping may be a shortcut, but it does allow designers to create enemies that keep pace with the player's progress while still hinting that the enemies will follow a familiar pattern. This is especially important when a given area is intended to be fast-paced or lead up to a climax, and the designers don't want the player stopping constantly to study "new" enemies. Also, can be used for worldbuilding: using palette-swapped monsters can hint at connections between otherwise disparate locations. In the case of bosses it can be used to hint at relationships between creatures that might not otherwise be apparent to the player. One of the best ways developers found to make this trope smarter and loved by the audience, is use it as references, usually to other aspects of a franchise, when videogames have sequels, characters can have their original clothes from previous games back, superheroes in videogames can have multiple uniforms from their history in comics, TV shows and movies, characters who were completely redesigned over the years or with reboots can get reverted to their original designs, characters who appeared or debuted in the early days of 3D graphics like the PlayStation 1 or the Nintendo 64 can get turned into their low-poly models from those times, and even pallete swaps that are just alternate colors can work as references, this trope can also be used to reference other unrelated works. Palette Swaps are also used in Sprite Comics, where they're known as recolors. They are frequently looked down upon. Outside of videogames, nearly all toylines will reuse parts with some colors changed, as much of the cost of a new toy comes from making the steel injection mold used to create parts. This can sometimes result in most of the line effectively being the same character with a different head and accessories, and is a major reason for the prevalence of the Environment-Specific Action Figure. For a similar time-saving technique, see Ambidextrous Sprite. See also Colour-Coded for Your Convenience. Often associated with Moveset Clone in fighting games. Separate, but Identical is this trope for strategy games, which can also be Palette Swaps. For the level/world equivalent, see Remixed Level and Hard Mode Filler. Palette swaps can be used to make Underground Monkeys, different colors to show different elemental affinities with Color-Coded Elements, Palette-Swapped Alien Food, or just a different variant. |
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Palette Swap / int_1246a926 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_1246a926 | comment |
Noonbory and the Super 7: All of the Dotoris look identical, with only their hats being different colours. The Builder Borys all have the same character model, just with different skin and clothing colours (one is pink-skinned wearing red, one is yellow-skinned wearing orange, and one is cream-skinned wearing pink). |
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Palette Swap / int_1246a926 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_1246a926 | featureConfidence |
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Noonbory and the Super 7 (Animation) | hasFeature |
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Palette Swap / int_162fcaab | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_162fcaab | comment |
In Dinosaur Train, similarly to Walking with Dinosaurs, prehistoric creatures that are related or look similar have the same generic body shape and only differ through their colour schemes and diverse display structures (horns for the ceratopsians, crests for the hadrosaurs, plates for the stegosaurs etc). The large theropods always have the same shape of the body and skull, no matter how closely related they are. For instance, aside from their colours, the Allosaurus and Giganotosaurus can only be told apart from a T. rex by their different number of fingers, the former's brow horns and the latter's osteoderms running down its spine. The Daspletosaurus looks exactly like T. rex (since they are related), but coloured differently. | |
Palette Swap / int_162fcaab | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_162fcaab | featureConfidence |
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Dinosaur Train | hasFeature |
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Palette Swap / int_1a4b3ea2 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_1a4b3ea2 | comment |
Common throughout the Digimon franchise; though it has well over one thousand mons, it is slightly padded with palette swaps: Perhaps the most understandable examples are the Evil Counterpart palette swaps, darker versions of certain heroic Digimon. The most prominent example, both in the anime and otherwise, is Digimon Adventure 02's BlackWarGreymon, whose contrast with the actual WarGreymon was played up for all it was worth. Sometimes, the difference in color is used to denote a variant of a different level, attribute type, or associated with different elements/powers. For example, Otamamon's has water powers and is of the Virus attribute, while Otamamon Red is associated with fire and is of the Data attribute. Both are of the Child level. On the other hand, sometimes there are less reasonable instances: there's Monochromon, an Adult, and Vermillimon, a red Monochromon of the Perfect level. There are many more examples. Digimon World is horrible about doing this to differentiate random enemy Digimon from recruitable ones. You can recruit Betamon and Drimogemon (frog and drill-nosed mole, basically). You fight ModokiBetamon and NiseDrimogemon. (Modoki means 'seems like' or 'looks like;' Nise means 'false.') The only difference at all between them is that ModokiBetamon is a slightly different shade of green and NiseDrimogemon has a mustache instead of whiskers. If they're bad, Soulmon is worse. The only difference between him and Bakemon would be a pointy sorcerer's hat. Not as bad as Gottsumon, a Child-level golem Digimon who has two palette swaps, Icemon and Insekimon. At least Icemon (Adult-level) is clearly white as opposed to Gottsumon's grey so you can easily tell them apart, but Insekimon is distinguished from Gottsumon and Icemon solely by being a slightly lighter shade of grey with a green tinge, and what really takes the cake is that he is a Perfect. You heard correctly, a Perfect is a palette swap of a Child. This was lampshaded neatly in Digimon Data Squad - when Gottsumon evolves to Insekimon, Yoshino comments that all that seems to have changed is his colour. Gururumon has to be Bandai poking fun at themselves over this practice. The difference between Garurumon and Gururumon is that Gururumon's blue stripes are slightly more purplish in hue; I dare you to tell them apart if you don't have their pictures/trading cards side by side. Many are the fans who thought that "Gururumon" was just a typo. There's also ClearAgumon, which is basically a transparent ToyAgumon! Incidentally, they also have an Evil Counterpart palette swap. Vegimon has two palette swaps: Zassoumon and RedVegimon. RedVegimon, at least, has the decency to differ in design somewhat insofar as having large clubs at the end of its tentacles instead, but otherwise it just looks like a Vegimon that is blue. Digimon Xros Wars: The Young Hunters Who Leapt Through Time marks the debut of such a palette swap as a main character in the anime - Ryouma Mogami's partner is Psychemon, a rather garish palette swap of a particularly famous former main character, Gabumon. Digimon Adventure tri. has a mysterious villain who drives much of the series' plot and normally looks like an evil version of Gennai wearing a black version of his outfit. While disguised as the Digimon Kaiser, he summons a purple version of Imperialdramon to cover his escape while kidnapping Meicoomon. The third kind is random recolourings which serve no purpose at all, are given little to no context, are not differentiated from the main Digimon at all, and seem to be there for the hell of it. Like in Digimon World 3. The entire Amaterasu Server (before you free it) is a Dark World-themed palette swap of the Asuka Server, and most of the Digimon in it are palette swaps of the ones from Asuka. |
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Palette Swap / int_1a4b3ea2 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_1a4b3ea2 | featureConfidence |
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Digimon (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_1a4b3ea2 | |
Palette Swap / int_1ae51709 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_1ae51709 | comment |
In The Mr. Men Show, Mr. Bounce looks like a yellow Mr. Tickle with a pink hat instead of a blue one. | |
Palette Swap / int_1ae51709 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_1ae51709 | featureConfidence |
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The Mr. Men Show | hasFeature |
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Palette Swap / int_1bdeba5a | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_1bdeba5a | comment |
Toy Biz did the same thing with their X-Men: Mutant Armor and Spider-Man: Techno Wars lines. If you're wondering why Spider-Man and the X-Men would need to wear suits of Powered Armor despite already having superpowers, it's because the toys were actually unreleased Iron Man figures from his cancelled TV show. So for instance, with only a new head sculpt and paint job, the Magnetic Iron Man figure became a "Battle Armor Wolverine" figure, Radiation Iron Man became "Radioactive Spider Armor Spider-Man," Living Laser (who was itself a retooled version of an unreleased U.S. Agent figure) became "Astral Plane Professor X," and so on. | |
Palette Swap / int_1bdeba5a | featureApplicability |
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X-Men (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_1bdeba5a | |
Palette Swap / int_1c73626 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_1c73626 | comment |
PAW Patrol: One episode features a one-off pup named Sylvia, who is a palette swap of Chase with blue fur and purple eyes rather than brown fur and orange eyes. | |
Palette Swap / int_1c73626 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_1c73626 | featureConfidence |
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PAW Patrol | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_1c73626 | |
Palette Swap / int_21e83484 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_21e83484 | comment |
The Non-Adventures of Wonderella: The mirror-universe versions of Wonderella and Wonderita wear costumes with the colors reversed. | |
Palette Swap / int_21e83484 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_21e83484 | featureConfidence |
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The Non-Adventures of Wonderella (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_21e83484 | |
Palette Swap / int_227742e2 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_227742e2 | comment |
Kaze no Stigma: Ryuuya Kazamaki is this for main protagonist Kazuma Yagami. | |
Palette Swap / int_227742e2 | featureApplicability |
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Kaze no Stigma | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_227742e2 | |
Palette Swap / int_22e860f4 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_22e860f4 | comment |
In the Psych episode "We'd like to thank the academy", Shawn shoots two civilian cardboard cutouts in a training exercise. His justifications: | |
Palette Swap / int_22e860f4 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_22e860f4 | featureConfidence |
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Psych | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_22e860f4 | |
Palette Swap / int_23d2ea71 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_23d2ea71 | comment |
In the Donkey Kong Country CGI cartoon, the character model for Eddie the Mean Old Yeti is the same as Donkey Kong's, but with white fur and a cap instead of a necktie. | |
Palette Swap / int_23d2ea71 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_23d2ea71 | featureConfidence |
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Donkey Kong Country | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_23d2ea71 | |
Palette Swap / int_25bfbf9e | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_25bfbf9e | comment |
My Brave Pony: Starfleet Magic: According to the author's vids and artwork, many of the characters greatly look like each other with the only differences being colour and hairstyles. In the stories themselves, characters are often described by their similarities to others, such as Cerise Wonder being someone "whom greatly resembled princess Cadance— same color, same mane style, even same voice— but Cerise had a golden horn like Lightning had." | |
Palette Swap / int_25bfbf9e | featureApplicability |
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My Brave Pony: Starfleet Magic / Fan Fic | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_25bfbf9e | |
Palette Swap / int_261c8d3f | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_261c8d3f | comment |
Homer and Krusty the Clown in The Simpsons have the exact body shape and face with the obvious difference being Krusty is in clown shoes and makeup. Originally, Homer was supposed to have been a clown as a hidden job that Bart wouldn't know about, but the idea got scrapped and Homer's clown design was made into a separate character. | |
Palette Swap / int_261c8d3f | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_261c8d3f | featureConfidence |
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The Simpsons | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_261c8d3f | |
Palette Swap / int_2a8943c0 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_2a8943c0 | comment |
Miraculous Ladybug tends to re-use characters with different colors during crowd shots to save budget. This◊ class photo is one of the more obvious examples; pretty much all of the students are recolors of each other except for Aurore and Mireille (the blonde girl with pigtails and the dark-haired girl with the aqua sweater, respectively). | |
Palette Swap / int_2a8943c0 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_2a8943c0 | featureConfidence |
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Miraculous Ladybug | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_2a8943c0 | |
Palette Swap / int_2c1809f5 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_2c1809f5 | comment |
Totally Spies! has a Shout-Out example with the girls' predecessors, Pam, Alice, and Crimson. The women look almost exactly like Hitomi, Ai, and Rui from Cat's Eye, just with different hair and eye colors. | |
Palette Swap / int_2c1809f5 | featureApplicability |
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Totally Spies! | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_2c1809f5 | |
Palette Swap / int_2e1df124 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_2e1df124 | comment |
Wreck-It Ralph used this for several of the background Sugar Rush racers. Both meta and in-game. Of course, when you have a racing game featuring tons of characters, and especially one from 1997, this is to be expected. | |
Palette Swap / int_2e1df124 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_2e1df124 | featureConfidence |
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Wreck-It Ralph | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_2e1df124 | |
Palette Swap / int_34d22793 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_34d22793 | comment |
The third kind is random recolourings which serve no purpose at all, are given little to no context, are not differentiated from the main Digimon at all, and seem to be there for the hell of it. Like in Digimon World 3. The entire Amaterasu Server (before you free it) is a Dark World-themed palette swap of the Asuka Server, and most of the Digimon in it are palette swaps of the ones from Asuka. | |
Palette Swap / int_34d22793 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_34d22793 | featureConfidence |
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Digimon World 3 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_34d22793 | |
Palette Swap / int_3558eaa2 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_3558eaa2 | comment |
This is the difference in the Community episode "Physical Education" between Abed and his Identical Stranger, Joey. Or, in other words, Brown Joey and White Abed. | |
Palette Swap / int_3558eaa2 | featureApplicability |
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Community | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_3558eaa2 | |
Palette Swap / int_35f1d3fb | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_35f1d3fb | comment |
G.I. Joe has several 'covered head to toe' enemy characters. Each meant to be a different mook an identical uniform. Swaps come as ideas do. The 'Python Patrol' was, storywise, a way to make characters invisible to sensor equipment. The heroes had, for example, 'Tiger Force', which swapped the usual uniform colors with yellow, brown and red. Nameless Joe Greenshirts (think 'redshirts') got this, though their heads were clearly seen. Some were logical (light skin and a tanned one could mean a sibling was in the sun) but others were different races, same facial features. Palette swaps and parts sharing created the original wave of twelve male Joes in 1982. Grunt (who, although established as a unique character, served as the basis for the Greenshirts) has the most common components of the wave, save for his head (which is only shared with Grand Slam and Zap; the most common head is shared between Flash, Hawk, Short-Fuze, and Steeler), and all of the shared pieces are recolored in one way or another on at least one of the figures - with the exception of Flash and Grand Slam, who aside from their heads are identical. Grand Slam did get his own palette swap when he was reissued with a different vehicle in 1983, though, and a few other 1982 figures received palette swaps when reissued with new vehicles. |
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Palette Swap / int_35f1d3fb | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_35f1d3fb | featureConfidence |
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G.I. Joe (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_35f1d3fb | |
Palette Swap / int_38fa34eb | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_38fa34eb | comment |
Wonder Woman: In the short-lived Continuity Reboot Wonder Woman: Odyssey Artemis's costume and build are identical to Diana's in all but coloration, to reflect her former status as Diana's rival. | |
Palette Swap / int_38fa34eb | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_38fa34eb | featureConfidence |
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Wonder Woman (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_38fa34eb | |
Palette Swap / int_3e5f3f53 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_3e5f3f53 | comment |
SMG4: Most characters in his early videos were just Mario recolors, including SMG4 itself and his old friends. | |
Palette Swap / int_3e5f3f53 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_3e5f3f53 | featureConfidence |
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Supermarioglitchy4's Super Mario 64 Bloopers (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_3e5f3f53 | |
Palette Swap / int_4be3aedd | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_4be3aedd | comment |
The Dark Rangers in Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers were simply repainted Putty costumes. They were unimpressive at best. | |
Palette Swap / int_4be3aedd | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_4be3aedd | featureConfidence |
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Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_4be3aedd | |
Palette Swap / int_4c095a1f | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_4c095a1f | comment |
In the original series, Optimus Prime received one as a side effect of being coated with Dr. Morgan's impervious alloy in "The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 2". He's back to his original colors by the end of the episode, but it's never mentioned if it's because the alloy coating was removed, or if his colors were repainted over the alloy, and neither the American nor Japanese continuations make further mention of the alloy. Amusingly, the "impervious" Optimus Prime ends up looking like Ultra Magnus' cab robot mode (albeit the toy variant without the blue paint highlights on his head), which is likely why they put him back in his normal colors as soon as the story no longer had the need for the alloy. | |
Palette Swap / int_4c095a1f | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_4c095a1f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Transformers | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_4c095a1f | |
Palette Swap / int_4dd54482 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_4dd54482 | comment |
Invoked in Ben 10: Alien Force with Albedo, the Insufferable Genius and former apprentice of Azmuth made an improved version of the omnitrix and began to masquerade as Ben to trash his reputation. At the end of the episode, Azmuth appears and breaks his version, getting him stuck in a Shape Shifter Mode Lock of Ben, except with white hair, a red jacket, and red eyes. | |
Palette Swap / int_4dd54482 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_4dd54482 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ben 10: Alien Force | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_4dd54482 | |
Palette Swap / int_4dd947ba | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_4dd947ba | comment |
Digimon Xros Wars: The Young Hunters Who Leapt Through Time marks the debut of such a palette swap as a main character in the anime - Ryouma Mogami's partner is Psychemon, a rather garish palette swap of a particularly famous former main character, Gabumon. | |
Palette Swap / int_4dd947ba | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_4dd947ba | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Digimon Xros Wars: The Young Hunters Who Leapt Through Time | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_4dd947ba | |
Palette Swap / int_4efed37e | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_4efed37e | comment |
Little John from Robin Hood (1973) is basically Baloo from The Jungle Book (1967) but with brown fur (instead of gray) and wearing clothing. Not only that, but they also share the same voice actor. | |
Palette Swap / int_4efed37e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_4efed37e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Robin Hood (1973) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_4efed37e | |
Palette Swap / int_503d3d54 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_503d3d54 | comment |
Brad and Janet's guest rooms in The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Lampshaded by an audience callback ("same room, different lighting, cheap movie!") | |
Palette Swap / int_503d3d54 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_503d3d54 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Rocky Horror Picture Show | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_503d3d54 | |
Palette Swap / int_50b9086a | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_50b9086a | comment |
Ready Jet Go!: Moonbeam is a light blue version of Sunspot. Carrot and Celery's boss from "Back to Bortron 7" is just a huge green Sunspot, but with a mustache obscuring his mouth. Face 9001 is an orange recolor of Face 9000. |
|
Palette Swap / int_50b9086a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_50b9086a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ready Jet Go! | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_50b9086a | |
Palette Swap / int_50bcf7a6 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_50bcf7a6 | comment |
Homestuck: The Underlings of Sburb are all the same basic few monster species given countless different colours themed after grist types, and all bearing some combination of the attributes of the players' prototypings. Given that it's an ersatz RPG in webcomic form, it's probably a homage to the palette-swapping practice in general. The frogs used only three distinct models — the basic one, a modified version that leans forward more, and a larger one that croaks with its mouth open and without inflating its throat — which are recolored in every shade of the rainbow when large shots need to be populated. This also happens when you make SBURB Unwinnable by trying to play it with only one person. The Prospit carapaces will wear black and the Derse carapaces will wear white. But if that happens, you've got bigger problems. |
|
Palette Swap / int_50bcf7a6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_50bcf7a6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Homestuck (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_50bcf7a6 | |
Palette Swap / int_52837809 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_52837809 | comment |
Gold Drive from Kamen Rider Drive is a very literal Evil Knockoff of the title hero created by the Big Bad stealing Belt-san's tech (a recurring theme with him). | |
Palette Swap / int_52837809 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_52837809 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Kamen Rider Drive | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_52837809 | |
Palette Swap / int_5293b208 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_5293b208 | comment |
Kamen Rider Ex-Aid has Kamen Rider Genm, a palette-swapped Super Prototype of the title character, as part of its videogame theme. Multiple crossovers feature Genm being mistaken for Ex-Aid or vice-versa. | |
Palette Swap / int_5293b208 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_5293b208 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Kamen Rider Ex-Aid | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_5293b208 | |
Palette Swap / int_52dd4a4c | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_52dd4a4c | comment |
Ultimate Marvel: In Ultimate Comics: Avengers, Gregory Stark is introduced as Tony's twin brother. He has blond hair and wears white suits. | |
Palette Swap / int_52dd4a4c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_52dd4a4c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ultimate Marvel (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_52dd4a4c | |
Palette Swap / int_53f3150 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_53f3150 | comment |
Dinosaur Planet: The show heavily reused the CG models of the animals for different species in each episode to cut down on cost, and only with slight colour changes. Allodaposuchus and Notosuchus, Aucasaurus and Tarascosaurus, Saltasaurus and the unnamed titanosaurs in "Pod's Travels", Alvarezsaurus and Shuvuuia, Troodon and the unnamed troodontids in "Pod's Travels'' to name some. | |
Palette Swap / int_53f3150 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_53f3150 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dinosaur Planet | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_53f3150 | |
Palette Swap / int_5538496c | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_5538496c | comment |
Walking with Beasts does this less, but there are still some glaring examples. The Chalicotherium and Ancylotherium have the same model, just with different color schemes and modified feet for the latter (who didn't walk on its knuckles), despite Ancylotherium belonging to a different subfamily of chalicotheriids and being anatomically very different from Chalicotherium. The Dinofelis and cave lion are also slightly tweaked versions of the Smilodon model but with longer tails and smaller sabers (meaning the save lion still has saber-teeth). Then there is the small carnivore who gets eaten by the Ambulocetus in "New Dawn", which is the same model as the bear dog from "Land of Giants" (not even being recolored). | |
Palette Swap / int_5538496c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_5538496c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Walking with Beasts | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_5538496c | |
Palette Swap / int_5690420f | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_5690420f | comment |
Huey, Dewey, and Louie tend to dress identically but for color in DuckTales (1987) and various Donald Duck shorts. They vary it up a bit more in Quack Pack, though their preferred colors stay. | |
Palette Swap / int_5690420f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_5690420f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
DuckTales (1987) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_5690420f | |
Palette Swap / int_579340f4 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_579340f4 | comment |
In Barbie in A Christmas Carol, the time and space vortexes the Ghosts of Christmas use are identical effects, just yellow for past, green for present, and red for future. Also, the twins wears identical Pimped Out Dresses, save for different colors, such as having feather headdresses, one pink and the other blue. | |
Palette Swap / int_579340f4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_579340f4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Barbie in A Christmas Carol | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_579340f4 | |
Palette Swap / int_5ae0bec6 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_5ae0bec6 | comment |
WWE started doing this big time with their belts since 2016. With the exception of Raw's Womens title (which was originally intended to make the Women's division more on par with the men), these new designs were brought out during the revival of the brand extension and made to be Colour-Coded for Your Convenience (Raw's belts being red-based and SmackDown being blue-based). Three of their new belts are palette swaps of the WWE World Title which has black leather and a black background behind the front plate. The Raw Women's title is on white leather with a red background, the Universal title is on red leather with a red background (the WWE logo on the front plate also features a unique black underline) and the SmackDown Women's title is on white leather with a blue background. SmackDown's Tag Team titles are also a palette swap of Raw's Tag Team Titles, replacing the black leather and bronze plates with blue leather and silver plates. And then an updated design of the Raw Tag Team Titles became a palette swap of SmackDown's, with a red leather and silver plates. |
|
Palette Swap / int_5ae0bec6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_5ae0bec6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
WWE (Wrestling) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_5ae0bec6 | |
Palette Swap / int_5b3356f8 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_5b3356f8 | comment |
In Turning Red, each of the members of 4*Town wear white versions of their usual clothes when performing at the SkyDome. | |
Palette Swap / int_5b3356f8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_5b3356f8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Turning Red | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_5b3356f8 | |
Palette Swap / int_5d2be66d | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_5d2be66d | comment |
The Barrier: In a presentation including photos of children who were taken away from their parents by the government under false pretenses, some photos are altered to change the color of the subject's eyes and/or hair. One boy has very light blond hair in the presentation despite his real hair being significantly darker, while a girl with relatively light hair has it much darker on her presentation photo. | |
Palette Swap / int_5d2be66d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_5d2be66d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Barrier | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_5d2be66d | |
Palette Swap / int_60c58290 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_60c58290 | comment |
The Tendou sisters in Day Break Illusion are triplets, which sort of justifies them often being literally copy-pasted and colour-tweaked. Also, Etia and Ariel's outfits are identical except for colour and the pattern on their circle-things. | |
Palette Swap / int_60c58290 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_60c58290 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Day Break Illusion | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_60c58290 | |
Palette Swap / int_60e46926 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_60e46926 | comment |
The MAD Magazine comic Spy vs. Spy features the titular black and white spies, palette swaps of one another. | |
Palette Swap / int_60e46926 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_60e46926 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
MAD (Magazine) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_60e46926 | |
Palette Swap / int_61c6b600 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_61c6b600 | comment |
The Starfleet uniforms seen in Star Trek: First Contact are an inversion of the uniforms worn on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Star Trek: Voyager, being predominantly black with gray shoulders and colored shirts, unlike DS9/Voyager's uniforms which had gray shirts and colored shoulders. The DS9 crew would shortly switch to these uniforms for the rest of the series, whereas Voyager's crew, stuck in the Delta Quadrant, stuck with their uniforms till the end, though subsequent episodes involving the Federation at home featured these uniforms. | |
Palette Swap / int_61c6b600 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_61c6b600 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Trek: First Contact | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_61c6b600 | |
Palette Swap / int_62570927 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_62570927 | comment |
The Marvel Legends and DC Universe lines and their permutations tend to have a number of "generic" bodies (slim but muscular man, fairly muscular man, beefcake man) that they reuse for any character whose design can be boiled down to "buff guy in spandex." Swap out the head, add some accessories, change the paint and plastic colors, and suddenly a lot of characters look the same. | |
Palette Swap / int_62570927 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_62570927 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Marvel Universe (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_62570927 | |
Palette Swap / int_633f1982 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_633f1982 | comment |
The Triplets: While it's justified due to them being identical triplets, Anna, Helena, and Teresa look exactly the same other than different-colored shirts and hair bows. | |
Palette Swap / int_633f1982 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_633f1982 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Triplets | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_633f1982 | |
Palette Swap / int_6369b8a8 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_6369b8a8 | comment |
The toyline for Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves reused parts from both an Ewok playset and the Super Powers line. This resulted in Robin Hood himself having a conspicuous G-shaped belt buckle. | |
Palette Swap / int_6369b8a8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_6369b8a8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_6369b8a8 | |
Palette Swap / int_65d9acd2 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_65d9acd2 | comment |
The Trickster in The Sarah Jane Adventures actually invokes this in ''The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith,'' appearing in white instead of his usual black to Peter Dalton as an angel. Lampshaded by the Doctor. | |
Palette Swap / int_65d9acd2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_65d9acd2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Sarah Jane Adventures | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_65d9acd2 | |
Palette Swap / int_694ab80 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_694ab80 | comment |
In the Batman Beyond episode "Heroes," the character of Magma is a simple recoloring of Clayface from the previous series. | |
Palette Swap / int_694ab80 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_694ab80 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Batman Beyond | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_694ab80 | |
Palette Swap / int_69ceb72e | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_69ceb72e | comment |
Devilman has Akira Fudo, and Ryo Asuka, when they both appear, Ryo is literally a blond Akira, luckily, other adaptations give them different haircuts... Most of the time. | |
Palette Swap / int_69ceb72e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_69ceb72e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Devilman | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_69ceb72e | |
Palette Swap / int_6ac55ec7 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_6ac55ec7 | comment |
Dungeons & Dragons: The game's fourth edition and its player base have been noted for actively embracing the concept of "reskinning" powers, monsters, and potentially even entire character classes to allow for more variety in play — that is, basically taking one mechanic, stat block or the like and simply reusing it as-is (with perhaps some minor tweaks along the way) to represent something potentially described entirely differently from the original. Averted with the game's color-coded dragons, the chromatic and metallic dragon families. While red dragons are considered stronger than white dragons, and gold dragons stronger than bronze dragons, all true dragons come with stats for their various age categories, allowing them to challenge parties of any level — a dragon wyrmling is a tough fight for a low-level party, mid-level adventurers might contend with juvenile or adult dragons, while only max-level heroes stand a chance of defeating a great wyrm of any dragon type. One dragon breed being considered stronger than another relates to how their age categories are quantified by the game's Challenge Rating system, so that an adult white dragon will be stronger than a juvenile red dragon, but a red dragon great wyrm will be noticeably stronger than a white dragon great wyrm. It should also be noted that the various color-coded dragon breeds are more than simple recolors of each other, each has a unique body type and features that allow them to be identiable even in monochrome — blue dragons, for instance, have low, stocky bodies and blunt heads with a prominent craggy horn on their foreheads, while green dragons have long legs and necks, and a curved frill atop their heads that runs down their necks. |
|
Palette Swap / int_6ac55ec7 | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_6ac55ec7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeons & Dragons (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_6ac55ec7 | |
Palette Swap / int_6af88ae9 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_6af88ae9 | comment |
The Future Card Buddyfight anime does this whenever more than one of the same monster appears in a single match. With Drum, at least, it's at least explained as him being part of an entire clan of dragons that all look the same aside from differently-colored hair and armor. Gemclone also generally appears as a blue, crystalline copy of the monster whose Super Mode they are copying at the time. | |
Palette Swap / int_6af88ae9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_6af88ae9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Future Card Buddyfight | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_6af88ae9 | |
Palette Swap / int_6b3cfe38 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_6b3cfe38 | comment |
In Bob and George, many of the characters were recolors. Indeed, this might be the first recolor ever. And this the first intentional one. Lampshaded on a regular basis, such as when half the cast and most authors ended up stuck in "devious recolour traps". | |
Palette Swap / int_6b3cfe38 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_6b3cfe38 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Bob and George (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_6b3cfe38 | |
Palette Swap / int_755c9804 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_755c9804 | comment |
Nearly every LEGO minifigure ever, if for fairly understandable reasons. It's only within the past few years that they've started implementing unique body, limb and head designs for non-human characters. In BIONICLE, the act of palette swapping represented a very disliked trend throughout the line's early run. The most infamous case is that of the Bohrok and Bohrok-Kal lines: 12 sets that, beyond their weapons (and usually their collectibles), are exactly the same model, just in different colors. The same could be said for most of the Matoran sets, which only differed in their colors and/or mask designs. Yet narrowly avoided by most of the original Rahi two-packs which had two almost identical models, but each had at least one tiny detail that differentiated it from its partner (the exception being the Nui-Jaga scorpions). Outside of the toys, story material also had its share of these, but not many were truly canon. The green Vortixx from the comic Shadow Play was colored that way so that the readers could tell him apart from the black Roodaka. On the other hand, Tuma's green colored Rock Steed from Rise and Fall of the Skrall is canon. As a result, most background extras in the animated films were just recolors of the same handful of models. Even the Vahki soldiers used the same model, despite that their toys at least came with unique weapons. And in the third movie, the Muaka tiger was a mere palette swap of the ash bear from the first, with a slightly retooled head — it looked nothing like the actual Muaka toy, so they explained that it was really a mutant. At the beginning, Hero Factory somewhat dipped back into the practice for its Heroes (the villains still avoided it). They were built in a factory as variations of the same basic design rather than individual and unique life-forms. The first wave Heroes were recognizable solely by their different helmets, weapons torso armour designs (the three rookies had the same one, however). The 2.0 and 3.0 waves, thanks to the new building style, added subtle differences that made each Hero unique: limbs length, shoulder width, armour size and orientation, colour schemes. By the Breakout arc, though Heroes are still all built off the largely same basic frame, Hero designs are even more varied in height, designs, colour schemes, armour and other elements. LEGO Trains did this several times: Passenger coach 7818 is the same design as the two coaches in 7710, but coloured blue and red rather than yellow and blue. The 1996 train station 2150 is a reissue of the 1991 design 4554, in red rather than yellow. The "My Own Train" range sold locomotives of the same design in a choice of five different colours. |
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Palette Swap / int_755c9804 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_755c9804 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
LEGO (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_755c9804 | |
Palette Swap / int_774abf9 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_774abf9 | comment |
Several of the princesses in Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses are palette swaps of each other, most noticeably twins Hadley and Isla, and triplets Janessa, Kathleen, and Lacey. | |
Palette Swap / int_774abf9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_774abf9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_774abf9 | |
Palette Swap / int_77582c7b | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_77582c7b | comment |
X-Men: Days of Future Past: Magneto always had some red and/or purple colour on his outfit, but in 2023 his uniform is completely black and grey, signifying that he's now part of the X-Men. Costume designer Louise Mingenbach described Past Xavier's switch from his brown-and-pink casual wear to his more formal blues and greys that is typically associated with the character in the other movies. |
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Palette Swap / int_77582c7b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_77582c7b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
X-Men: Days of Future Past | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_77582c7b | |
Palette Swap / int_79f5b663 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_79f5b663 | comment |
Akuma's Comics: Original characters introduced early on used to be recolors of other sprites, with Akuma himself starting as a Super Sonic colorized like the Street Fighter character of the same name. Over time they became distinct from their base sprites and no longer fit this trope. | |
Palette Swap / int_79f5b663 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_79f5b663 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Akuma's Comics (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_79f5b663 | |
Palette Swap / int_7bab45f | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_7bab45f | comment |
Philler Space: Ephil looks just like Philler except for their palettes. | |
Palette Swap / int_7bab45f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_7bab45f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Philler Space (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_7bab45f | |
Palette Swap / int_7e9d1a6c | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_7e9d1a6c | comment |
The character model for Queen Iduna from Frozen bears a striking resemblance to Elsa, such as her wearing her hair in a crown-twist bun (only with brunette hair instead of platinum blonde). | |
Palette Swap / int_7e9d1a6c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_7e9d1a6c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Frozen (2013) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_7e9d1a6c | |
Palette Swap / int_8124a34e | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_8124a34e | comment |
Barbie movies: Several of the princesses in Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses are palette swaps of each other, most noticeably twins Hadley and Isla, and triplets Janessa, Kathleen, and Lacey. In Barbie in A Christmas Carol, the time and space vortexes the Ghosts of Christmas use are identical effects, just yellow for past, green for present, and red for future. Also, the twins wears identical Pimped Out Dresses, save for different colors, such as having feather headdresses, one pink and the other blue. |
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Palette Swap / int_8124a34e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_8124a34e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Barbie (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_8124a34e | |
Palette Swap / int_81f5d35d | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_81f5d35d | comment |
Kamen Rider frequently recycles its rubber suits, since these costumes are expensive and repainting them is cheap. At times this is the suits used for each Monster of the Week, but more commonly the components of a Rider suit that has become obsoleted by the story, such as a Mid-Season Upgrade form, will be recycled for a new form. With the advent of direct-to-DVD movies giving secondary Riders a day in the limelight, this trend became much more prominent, as each movie often only has the budget for a single brand-new costume per film while everyone else who gets a new outfit will use repainted or slightly retooled parts of old costumes. Gold Drive from Kamen Rider Drive is a very literal Evil Knockoff of the title hero created by the Big Bad stealing Belt-san's tech (a recurring theme with him). Kamen Rider Ex-Aid has Kamen Rider Genm, a palette-swapped Super Prototype of the title character, as part of its videogame theme. Multiple crossovers feature Genm being mistaken for Ex-Aid or vice-versa. |
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Palette Swap / int_81f5d35d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_81f5d35d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Kamen Rider (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_81f5d35d | |
Palette Swap / int_83d41855 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_83d41855 | comment |
In Gargoyles, Owen and Vogel. They say nobody's ever said they look alike. Turns out it's because Puck based his Owen identity on Vogel, the trickster enjoying the irony of playing The Comically Serious. Further, one of the consequences of rapid growing a Gargoyle clone is a change in coloration, which was probably done to avoid the usual narrative consequences thereof. | |
Palette Swap / int_83d41855 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_83d41855 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Gargoyles | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_83d41855 | |
Palette Swap / int_85a5a3b9 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_85a5a3b9 | comment |
Transformers: Prime: Skyquake and Dreadwing are twins with two halves of the same spark, explaining why they look essentially the same, just with different colors. Fowler even lampshades, multiple times, how he essentially gave the same alt-mode to two different robots (he was piloting the same jet when facing each of the brothers). The Jet Vehicon mooks and the more elite Seekers, who are basically silver and grey versions of the regular Jet Vehicons (in-universe, their colouring is in homage to their commander Starscream). |
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Palette Swap / int_85a5a3b9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_85a5a3b9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Transformers: Prime | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_85a5a3b9 | |
Palette Swap / int_869ee727 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_869ee727 | comment |
Leareth in the Last Herald-Mage Trilogy magically models his face and body and picks a wardrobe meant to closely resemble those of his great enemy, Herald-Mage Vanyel. But where Van has silver eyes, Mystical White Hair, and wears Herald's Whites Leareth's eyes, hair, and clothes are all black. This is done as a show of how much power he has, that he can spend some on taunting a foe by becoming his dark reflection. | |
Palette Swap / int_869ee727 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_869ee727 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Last Herald-Mage Trilogy | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_869ee727 | |
Palette Swap / int_88652dbc | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_88652dbc | comment |
Mixels has various background filler Mixels that share the same character models, with the only difference being swapped colors to represent the elements of the tribe they're from. | |
Palette Swap / int_88652dbc | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_88652dbc | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Mixels | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_88652dbc | |
Palette Swap / int_8885aa10 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_8885aa10 | comment |
Planet Dinosaur is a rather heavy offender in this category: Rugops and Skorpiovenator; Saurornithoides, Troodon, and Bradycneme; Sinornithosaurus and Rahonavis; Jeholosaurus and the small ornithopods in "The New Giants" (likely Gasparinisaura); all of the generic pterosaurs, with the exception of Hatzegopteryx; Allosaurus and Saurophaganax (this one is at least justified, as Saurophaganax might just be a giant Allosaurus species). | |
Palette Swap / int_8885aa10 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_8885aa10 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Planet Dinosaur | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_8885aa10 | |
Palette Swap / int_8be8295a | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_8be8295a | comment |
Toy Biz once released an Elektra figure that was just a repaint of an old Psylocke figure. They even gave her Psylocke's trademark psi-blade, even though Elektra doesn't have any superpowers in the comics. | |
Palette Swap / int_8be8295a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_8be8295a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Elektra (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_8be8295a | |
Palette Swap / int_9068877a | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_9068877a | comment |
The characters in Red vs. Blue look identical except for their unique colors. This is due more to the nature of the work (Machinima using the Halo Color-Coded Multiplayer mode) than a stylistic choice. In later seasons, when the current game in the series allowed for customized pieces of armor, this cleared up a bit. |
|
Palette Swap / int_9068877a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_9068877a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Red vs. Blue (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_9068877a | |
Palette Swap / int_90f18253 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_90f18253 | comment |
Battletech: Classic Battletech (3025-3049) and post-ilClan (3150 onwards) is this. According to the lore and encounter tables all factions prefer different 'Mechs and variants of those 'Mechs, but their statistics remain the same if they are deployed by a different faction: A Phoenix Hawk is a Phoenix Hawk no matter the faction it belongs to and an AC/20 is an AC/20 no matter if, lorewise, it is a Defiance Industries model mounted on an Atlas or a Kali Yama model mounted on a Hunchback. The only exception to this is that the Inner Sphere and the Clans operate on different tech levels: Both field unique 'Mech chassis and have some unique equipment, so an Inner Sphere vs. Clan battle (at least one set between 3050 and 3149) averts the trope. On the other hand, all factions are big fans of capturing or salvaging and re-using equipment, so it is still at least theoretically possible in-universe for any 'Mech or vehicle to appear in any force. Though the amount of Contrived Coincidence required to get certain machines in some forces can make an epic tale in and of itself. | |
Palette Swap / int_90f18253 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_90f18253 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
BattleTech (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_90f18253 | |
Palette Swap / int_914198cb | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_914198cb | comment |
Dino-Riders features this in both the cartoon and toy line. In the cartoon, most of the Mooks are Palette Swaps of the main "Generals", and go unnamed. For the toys, numerous mini-figures of the humanoid characters were created, with the same molds being used frequently (there are seven "Ant-Men" based off of the base Antor figure, for example; others simple use the same name but a different color scheme). Many dinosaurs share molds- the Torosaurus/Triceratops, numerous small Ceratopsians (the three toys all have different heads), and both sides have a Deinonychus, with only their stripes being different colors. Only the armor is different on most of them. Both sides also had a Quetzalcoatlus, though the second was only released in a limited area, making it quite valuable now. | |
Palette Swap / int_914198cb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_914198cb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dino-Riders | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_914198cb | |
Palette Swap / int_919cd120 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_919cd120 | comment |
In The Crumpets, the recurring Weather Girl is usually blonde and wears a pinkish dress. In "Pity The Prize", the Weather Girl in that episode is colored like Cassandra (black/bluish hair, cyan shirt, dark blue skirt, brown belt), not to mention a different voice. This Palette Swap lets Cassandra disguise as the Weather Girl with few changes (as well as imitating her voice) so she can try preventing her love interest Pfff from attaching to the real Weather Girl. | |
Palette Swap / int_919cd120 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_919cd120 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Crumpets | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_919cd120 | |
Palette Swap / int_91ba5165 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_91ba5165 | comment |
The Fold explores the possibility of duplicates from an alternate dimension, several of which are palette swapped for clarity and convenience. | |
Palette Swap / int_91ba5165 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_91ba5165 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Fold | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_91ba5165 | |
Palette Swap / int_91fedfaa | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_91fedfaa | comment |
Walking with Dinosaurs was guilty of this, with about half the animals being copies of each other. Similar looking animals were just these, while certain animals only got new heads. You can tell, because many creatures have the exact same folds and blood vessels on their skin. All the large theropods, Allosaurus, Eustreptospondylus, and the dwarf polar allosaur, are recycled, having only modified heads and different colours, with the exception of the Tyrannosaurus. The polar allosaur is at least somewhat justified, as it was thought to be a close relative of Allosaurus (at the time). The spinoff, The Ballad of Big Al, gave Allosaurus a new model, however. All the small ornithopods, Dryosaurus, Othnielia, Leaellynasaura, and the unnamed Hell Creek ornithopods (possibly Thescelosaurus) use the same model, only with different colours (this makes the narration saying Leaellynasaura has especially large eyes an Informed Attribute, since all of them have the same eyes). Well, except the Hell Creek ornithopods, which are literally just the Othnielia, even with the same colours. All the small pterosaurs, Peteinosaurus, Anurognathus, and Rhamphorhynchus, use the same body, only with swapped heads, tails, and colours. Same goes for all the large pterosaurs, Ornithocheirus, Tapejara, Quetzalcoatlus, and unnamed Pteranodon-like pterosaurs. This is in spite of the fact none of these are closely related to one another, which hits Quetzalcoatlus especially bad, since the fact it's a hastily-made copy of Ornithocheirus is extremely obvious, as the animators didn't even have time to edit out the teeth! Iguanodon, Muttaburrasaurus, and Anatotitan use the same model, but with changed heads and colours (and for the Muttaburrasaurus, changed forelimbs), which results in Anatotitan having way too bulky arms with thumb spikes. The Anatotitan model was further recycled for Saurolophus in the spinoff, Chased by Dinosaurs, where they didn't even bother to change the colours or fix the mistake with the forelimbs, just adding a small crest to the head. There are two Iguanodon species shown, which differ only by colouration (although the North American Iguanodon species is known as Dakotadon nowadays). The Utahraptor and the Hell Creek dromaeosaurs (identified in supplementary material as Dromaeosaurus) use the same model, but with different colouration (the model being based on Deinonychus, since the two dromaeosaur species in the series were not known from good remains, at the time). The Diplodocus was recycled for the Apatosaurus in the spinoff, The Ballad of Big Al, giving it a shorter neck, a darker colouration, and removing the spines along the back, but leaving the head and movements unchanged. Then, there is Plesiopleurodon, which is just Stock Footage of Liopleurodon from the previous episode, only tinted lighter. This is at least partly justified by the fact Plesiopleurodon was thought to be a close relative of Liopleurodon (at the time). Strangely, this is inverted with Polacanthus. A North American and a European Polacanthus species are shown (although the North American Polacanthus is now known as Hoplitosaurus), but they look exactly the same, with not even the minimal effort exerted to give them different colours. Walking with Beasts does this less, but there are still some glaring examples. The Chalicotherium and Ancylotherium have the same model, just with different color schemes and modified feet for the latter (who didn't walk on its knuckles), despite Ancylotherium belonging to a different subfamily of chalicotheriids and being anatomically very different from Chalicotherium. The Dinofelis and cave lion are also slightly tweaked versions of the Smilodon model but with longer tails and smaller sabers (meaning the save lion still has saber-teeth). Then there is the small carnivore who gets eaten by the Ambulocetus in "New Dawn", which is the same model as the bear dog from "Land of Giants" (not even being recolored). |
|
Palette Swap / int_91fedfaa | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_91fedfaa | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Walking with Dinosaurs | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_91fedfaa | |
Palette Swap / int_92844ddb | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_92844ddb | comment |
The same thing happens quite frequently in Dinosaurs. Every single puppet not used for a protagonist was used as countless different characters, made male or female simply by changing the clothes. | |
Palette Swap / int_92844ddb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_92844ddb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dinosaurs | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_92844ddb | |
Palette Swap / int_952d2e68 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_952d2e68 | comment |
The Jack Russell terriers Bennett and Yank, who are pet dogs of Molly McIntire and Emily Bennett of the American Girls Collection respectively, are palette swaps of each other, bearing the same coat pattern with the colors inverted. | |
Palette Swap / int_952d2e68 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_952d2e68 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
American Girls Collection | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_952d2e68 | |
Palette Swap / int_967347ea | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_967347ea | comment |
The "Rose Bride dress" of Revolutionary Girl Utena: The original dress is red and worn by Anthy during the duels. In the first ending sequence and in episode 38, Utena wears a light pink version of the dress, and in the third story arc, Kozue and Shiori gain dresses that match their hair colors (indigo and purple, respectively). | |
Palette Swap / int_967347ea | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_967347ea | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Revolutionary Girl Utena | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_967347ea | |
Palette Swap / int_9a9b24fa | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_9a9b24fa | comment |
The Mamenchisaurus that briefly appear during the stampede scene were made by stretching out the Brachiosaurus model from the first movie. | |
Palette Swap / int_9a9b24fa | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_9a9b24fa | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Jurassic Park (1993) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_9a9b24fa | |
Palette Swap / int_9dfd8786 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_9dfd8786 | comment |
[C] – Control has several facets of one◊ basic◊ design.◊ | |
Palette Swap / int_9dfd8786 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_9dfd8786 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
[C] – Control | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_9dfd8786 | |
Palette Swap / int_9e9b6ca0 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_9e9b6ca0 | comment |
Digimon World is horrible about doing this to differentiate random enemy Digimon from recruitable ones. You can recruit Betamon and Drimogemon (frog and drill-nosed mole, basically). You fight ModokiBetamon and NiseDrimogemon. (Modoki means 'seems like' or 'looks like;' Nise means 'false.') The only difference at all between them is that ModokiBetamon is a slightly different shade of green and NiseDrimogemon has a mustache instead of whiskers. | |
Palette Swap / int_9e9b6ca0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_9e9b6ca0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Digimon World (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_9e9b6ca0 | |
Palette Swap / int_a0262740 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_a0262740 | comment |
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory - The machine guns (which are black) in the Exploding Candy scene in the elevator show up in the very next sequence in white as the cameras in the Television Chocolate room. | |
Palette Swap / int_a0262740 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_a0262740 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_a0262740 | |
Palette Swap / int_a0ae46e | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_a0ae46e | comment |
Andy's birthday guests in Toy Story are recolors of his model with the occasional baseball cap. Given how Pixar was struggling with humanoid models at the time, this was to be expected. | |
Palette Swap / int_a0ae46e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_a0ae46e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Toy Story | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_a0ae46e | |
Palette Swap / int_a183d57f | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_a183d57f | comment |
In the Futurama episode "The Farnsworth Parabox", the crew of Planet Express goes to a Parallel Universe where coin flips and other random events having the opposite outcomes from their own and where they meet palette-swapped versions of themselves (Fry has black hair and a green jacket, Bender is gold-plated instead of gray, etc.), otherwise nearly identical in personality. This is a literal example in Bender's case, as when Bender originally came off the assembly line he flipped a coin to decide if he was going to have himself painted with a gunmetal gray finish or a golden one, making the two Benders ones that chose different palettes for the same physical model. | |
Palette Swap / int_a183d57f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_a183d57f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Futurama | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_a183d57f | |
Palette Swap / int_a3eda7b2 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_a3eda7b2 | comment |
Sheldon The Tiny Dinosaur: The titular character is a green dino. A "bootleg" version of him exists, but it's coloured blue, and wears a peanut shell instead of an acorn cap. | |
Palette Swap / int_a3eda7b2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_a3eda7b2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Sheldon The Tiny Dinosaur (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_a3eda7b2 | |
Palette Swap / int_b0f71f03 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_b0f71f03 | comment |
Parodied by Pikasprey with "Donny Rage", an Original Character who is nothing more than an all-red Johnny Cage sprite. | |
Palette Swap / int_b0f71f03 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_b0f71f03 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Pikasprey (Web Video) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_b0f71f03 | |
Palette Swap / int_b1e46e9a | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_b1e46e9a | comment |
The world of Adventurers! apparently suffers from a severe case of this. The characters get to fight monsters like dark blue spectres and navy blue spectres, each requiring different tactics to defeat.It was also lampshaded in a discussion between the Big Bad and his minion, where the Big Bad complains he has no time because he has to create new monsters to send after the protagonists, and the minion points out he usually just takes an existing monster and puts 'Ice' in front of it's name. | |
Palette Swap / int_b1e46e9a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_b1e46e9a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Adventurers! (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_b1e46e9a | |
Palette Swap / int_b4996199 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_b4996199 | comment |
Spider-Man: The Hobgoblin is effectively a palette swap of the Green Goblin, albeit with a hooded cape. There is an in-story reason, as the person behind the Hobgoblin mask intentionally dyed it a different color. | |
Palette Swap / int_b4996199 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_b4996199 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Spider-Man (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_b4996199 | |
Palette Swap / int_b9e6e305 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_b9e6e305 | comment |
The New Scooby-Doo Movies: One episode reuses a character model of a villain from the original series, and just recolors him white to make a 'new' villain. | |
Palette Swap / int_b9e6e305 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_b9e6e305 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The New Scooby-Doo Movies | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_b9e6e305 | |
Palette Swap / int_baeea256 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_baeea256 | comment |
By the time of Kikai Sentai Zenkaiger, it's has become quite obvious that Super Sentai not longer has the budget to create unique monster suits so all we've got are the same body suits with a different head and/or weapon. Even so, there's still plenty of palette swaps like Milk World being a dairy themed repaint of Bullfighting World or Carrot World being an orange version of Daikon World. | |
Palette Swap / int_baeea256 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_baeea256 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Kikai Sentai Zenkaiger | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_baeea256 | |
Palette Swap / int_bbbccf7 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_bbbccf7 | comment |
The villain in Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo summoned several Palette Swapped copies of previously created villains for the final battle. | |
Palette Swap / int_bbbccf7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_bbbccf7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_bbbccf7 | |
Palette Swap / int_bc848d30 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_bc848d30 | comment |
Many extras on SpongeBob SquarePants are Palette Swaps of each other. For example, the "My Leg!" and "Deaugh!" fishes. | |
Palette Swap / int_bc848d30 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_bc848d30 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
SpongeBob SquarePants | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_bc848d30 | |
Palette Swap / int_bcdcf629 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_bcdcf629 | comment |
In Transformers: Animated, Bumblebee, Wasp, and Longarm Prime/Shockwave demonstrate palette-swapping abilities via "electronic paint job". | |
Palette Swap / int_bcdcf629 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_bcdcf629 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Transformers: Animated | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_bcdcf629 | |
Palette Swap / int_bd310eaa | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_bd310eaa | comment |
El Goonish Shive: When Elliot needs to become female (to burn off magic energy), the easiest way not to look just like his Opposite-Sex Clone Ellen is to change hair and eye color. | |
Palette Swap / int_bd310eaa | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_bd310eaa | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
El Goonish Shive (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_bd310eaa | |
Palette Swap / int_bd9edbdd | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_bd9edbdd | comment |
Ghostbusters II: The Ghostbusters have dark gray coveralls which go along with their standard khaki coveralls. | |
Palette Swap / int_bd9edbdd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_bd9edbdd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ghostbusters II | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_bd9edbdd | |
Palette Swap / int_bff01809 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_bff01809 | comment |
In Warhammer and Warhammer 40,000, a number of factions started out life as simple palette swaps, but have developed over the years to get their own models and/or rules. The Space Marine chapters are a good example - originally Blood Angels, Dark Angels, Ultramarines and Space Wolves were just red, dark green, blue and grey paintjobs of the same Space Marine model, but now they have their own distinct stylings and rules. Other factions, such as Eldar Craftworlds and Ork Clans, are still just different colour schemes, though each can be characterised somewhat by choice of units taken as well as the livery. | |
Palette Swap / int_bff01809 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_bff01809 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Warhammer (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_bff01809 | |
Palette Swap / int_c0bdc16a | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_c0bdc16a | comment |
Ojamajo Doremi: Rise of the Shadows: The Shadows all look exactly like their Light Halves, except for color; most of them just have darker colors than their Light Halves. Black Queen and Evil Rin take this a step further; the former replaces all the white on the Queen's garb with black while the latter is black, gray, and silver. | |
Palette Swap / int_c0bdc16a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_c0bdc16a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ojamajo Doremi: Rise of the Shadows (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_c0bdc16a | |
Palette Swap / int_c31c1f05 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_c31c1f05 | comment |
Prehistoric Park did this with the same species; the adult Tyrannosaurus uses the same body of the juveniles, only with a different head, because they did not have the budget to make two Tyrannosaurus models. This results in the adults looking too slim and lanky compared to the real animal. They also recoloured the T. rex orange to make the Albertosaurus in the later episode. Baby and juvenile Triceratops are also depicted as being identical to adults, but fossils of baby and juvenile Triceratops show they were very different looking (for one, the horns started as nubs, grew curving upwards initially, before curving back down close to adulthood, and the bony frill is initially much shorter and downturned). | |
Palette Swap / int_c31c1f05 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_c31c1f05 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Prehistoric Park | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_c31c1f05 | |
Palette Swap / int_c353ea41 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_c353ea41 | comment |
Jurassic Park has this in spades. Almost every line has at least one or two toys that are repaints of sculpts from previous lines, and the Jurassic World era toys get repeated repaints of the same sculpt. The worst is probably the Velociraptor molds, but almost every figure released gets a repaint release at some point. Sometimes it's seen as okay, if it's a nicely made model, but when the sculpt wasn't that great to begin with, or when there’s already a bunch out, it can irritate fans. You can see the list of older ones here. | |
Palette Swap / int_c353ea41 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_c353ea41 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Jurassic Park (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_c353ea41 | |
Palette Swap / int_c35ec21c | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_c35ec21c | comment |
Nintendo is very fond of making their consoles and accessories in different colors. The Nintendo 64 had controllers of various colors, ranging from red, blue, green, purple, etc. The console itself would also be produced in colors beyond black late in its life. When the Gamecube was launched, it came in either black or purple, along with its controllers. Later on, there would be a silver/platinum version and for a short time, there was orange, but that color was used only for the controller. The Wii initially released only in white, but it was also produced in black years later and there were controllers in black as well, along with pink, blue, and a limited edition of gold. The Wii-U and its controllers only ever came in either black or white. The Switch console is only produced in black, although the attachable Joy-Con come in gray, as well as several neon colors such as blue, red, yellow, green and pink. A set of limited edition Super Mario Odyssey red Joy-Con also exist. The standard wireless Pro Controller is black, although a Splatoon 2 Pro Controller with green and pink grips came out to coincide with the release of the game. There are several other cheaper Pro Controller variants, but they lack several features found only in their more expensive brethren. | |
Palette Swap / int_c35ec21c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_c35ec21c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Super Mario Odyssey (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_c35ec21c | |
Palette Swap / int_c4282b71 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_c4282b71 | comment |
My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: Due to the show's use of Flash animation, the easiest way to fill out crowd scenes is to reuse the same Flash models multiple times, in addition to mixing and matching mane, tail and cutie mark designs and adding or removing wings or a horn, to make new background ponies. The result is that most background characters tend to be recolored versions of a relatively small handful of basic models, and sometimes even major characters are palette-swapped to make background ponies. The white nurse pony from "Applebuck Season" has a palette swap background pony from the same scene. The two spa owners from "Green Isn't Your Color" have the same character design but with inverted color schemes. "Over a Barrel" has an Applejack palette swap◊ with Cherry Berry's colors and cutie mark. Sabrina Alberghetti's OC, Wild Fire, has two palette swaps. Blossomforth and Helia, both of whom debuted in "Hurricane Fluttershy". In the latter pony's first speaking episode, "Rainbow Falls", her voice actress was mistakenly credited for the former. Daring Do◊ has the same appearance as Rainbow Dash, just with a monochrome mane and a tan rather than blue coat. Her explorer clothes help differentiate her. In her original appearance it was because Dash was imagining what she read in a book... and then when she appeared in person she still looked like that. Photo Finish is a recolor of Twilight Sparkle, only with a shorter mane to make her look a little more like Anna Wintour. There are a few frames that lampshade this with her cutie mark, which is the same as Twilight's but with a camera added. While most of the Woodland Creatures associated with Fluttershy only appear in one palette and the songbirds have different models for each color scheme, some are given extra variety by means of recolors of the same base model. The most extreme case are the rabbits, which have white, light or dark gray, tan, brown, and black recolors, with the addition of a pair of antlers making jackalopes. "Swarm of the Century": The individual bugs in the multicolored parasprite swarm all share the same character design. "Owl's Well That Ends Well": The green dragon is a palette swap of the red dragon in "Dragonshy" earlier in the season. This dragon's character design is used once again multiple times in "Dragon Quest", colored red, green, light blue or black. In addition, the dragons flying in the actual migration all use one of two character models, identical save that one has a slender snout and a long spike on its head and the other has a heavy jaw, an underbite and two short horns, both recolored in a rainbow of hues. "Over a Barrel": The buffalo (besides Chief Thunderhooves and Little Strongheart, who have important enough roles to get their own models) all use the same Flash model as each other, recolored to have either brown, russet or tan fur to make scenes with their tribe less visually monotonous. "The Return of Harmony, Part 1": The Keepers of the Grove of Truth are physically perfect copies of each other, their only differences being that one is dark red, one is orange-red, and one is green. "Luna Eclipsed": The band that performs on stage are actually palette swaps of the band from "The Best Night Ever" but are wearing scarecrow costumes. Fiddly Faddle, the Octavia palette swap, also appears in "Apple Family Reunion". "Magic Duel": The various versions of Applejack and Rarity that Twilight makes during the titular duel look like palette swaps of their younger sisters and various other members of the apple family. This is because they really are palette swaps, as Twilight is not strong enough to actually cast those spells, so the Apple Family and Sweetie Belle disguised themselves with paint and hair dyes instead. Likewise, Fluttershy is painted in Rainbow Dash's colors for the duplication illusion. "Apple Family Reunion": The fruit bats are a particularly extreme example of this. Only the red ones are given detailed models, while all other bats are just outlines filled in with all the colors of the rainbow. "Bats!": The same Flash model is used for all the vampire fruit bats, recolored brown, gray or slate blue to give them some variety. "Amending Fences": Moondancer, a friend first mentioned in the first episode of the series but who does not appear properly until here in season 5, is partly a recolor of Twilight, emphasizing her role as a foil. When they're young, they're complete palette swaps aside from their Cutie Marks (and both are antisocial bookworms). At the time of the episode, Moondancer has acquired Big Ol' Eyebrows, Nerd Glasses, a sweater and a messier "I don't care what I look like" version of the hairstyle, though it's still a modification of the same one with a hair bobble. (And she's become even more antisocial whereas Twilight has learnt to appreciate friendship.) We also see that before Twilight's rejection traumatised her and she decided to isolate herself, she had the eyebrows and glasses but was still otherwise a palette swap. (This doesn't so much seem to have symbolic significance as to be a needed halfway point between the two other looks.) |
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Palette Swap / int_c4282b71 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_c4282b71 | featureConfidence |
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My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_c4282b71 | |
Palette Swap / int_c58f0f65 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_c58f0f65 | comment |
Rapunzel's wedding dress in Tangled Ever After is actually her homecoming celebration dress colored white instead of pink. | |
Palette Swap / int_c58f0f65 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_c58f0f65 | featureConfidence |
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Tangled Ever After | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_c58f0f65 | |
Palette Swap / int_c72c2d06 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_c72c2d06 | comment |
Star Wars Rebels: Minister Maketh Tua is a palette-swapped generic citizen. Which led to confusion after her death in "The Siege of Lothal", because on at least two occasions afterward ("The Future of the Force", "Legacy") extras with that character model have been seen. Especially notable in "Legacy", where the extra in question gets a distinctive reaction shot. | |
Palette Swap / int_c72c2d06 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_c72c2d06 | featureConfidence |
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Star Wars Rebels | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_c72c2d06 | |
Palette Swap / int_c86d70b5 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_c86d70b5 | comment |
The Lost World: Jurassic Park: The Mamenchisaurus that briefly appear during the stampede scene were made by stretching out the Brachiosaurus model from the first movie. The male and female Tyrannosaurus are slightly recoloured versions of the same animatronics and CG models, which is a notable change from the novel, which states how the male is smaller and scrawnier. |
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Palette Swap / int_c86d70b5 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_c86d70b5 | featureConfidence |
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The Lost World: Jurassic Park | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_c86d70b5 | |
Palette Swap / int_cabb7dd6 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_cabb7dd6 | comment |
In Yokoka's Quest, Mao and Yokoka are basically palette-swaps of each other in cat form, and would be this normally if not for hair length and clothing differences. A Q&A strip explains the colour differences as Yokoka having a type of albinism. | |
Palette Swap / int_cabb7dd6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_cabb7dd6 | featureConfidence |
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Yokoka's Quest (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_cabb7dd6 | |
Palette Swap / int_cb03430c | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_cb03430c | comment |
In Denji Sentai Megaranger, the suits, which often have some sort of variety per season, are rather homogenous this time around save color. Perhaps a moment of Fridge Brilliance, since this season was about video games, particularly ones made in the mid-90s. | |
Palette Swap / int_cb03430c | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_cb03430c | featureConfidence |
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Denji Sentai Megaranger | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_cb03430c | |
Palette Swap / int_cb6abea3 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_cb6abea3 | comment |
During Yu-Gi-Oh!'s DOMA Arc, Jonouchi/Joey adds the Blue Flame Swordsman to his arsenal. This is, unsurprisingly, Exactly What It Says on the Tin—a blue Palette Swap of his already existing card, Flame Swordsman, with the exact same stat (ATK: 1800, DEF: 1600, Level: 5). On the plus side it does have a useful ability that the original card does not possess—when it's sent to the Graveyard it allows Jonouchi to summon a regular Flame Swordsman to take its place. | |
Palette Swap / int_cb6abea3 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_cb6abea3 | featureConfidence |
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Yu-Gi-Oh! | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_cb6abea3 | |
Palette Swap / int_ccabd314 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_ccabd314 | comment |
Digimon Adventure tri. has a mysterious villain who drives much of the series' plot and normally looks like an evil version of Gennai wearing a black version of his outfit. While disguised as the Digimon Kaiser, he summons a purple version of Imperialdramon to cover his escape while kidnapping Meicoomon. | |
Palette Swap / int_ccabd314 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_ccabd314 | featureConfidence |
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Digimon Adventure tri. | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_ccabd314 | |
Palette Swap / int_d22a9a66 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_d22a9a66 | comment |
Pleasant Goat and Big Big Wolf: Wolffy's grandfather Yellow Wolf looks exactly like Wolffy, but colored yellow. Identical Grandson indeed. The Rainbow Beans from the season Flying Island: The Sky Adventure are all literally the same character, right down to their cephalothorax-like designs. The only thing that distinguishes them is their color schemes, with each one made to match the colors of the rainbow. |
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Palette Swap / int_d22a9a66 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_d22a9a66 | featureConfidence |
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Palette Swap / int_d22a9a66 | |
Palette Swap / int_d9c602eb | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_d9c602eb | comment |
Fairly common in South Park for background classmates at the boys' school, or for adults in other crowd scenes. Although the animators have put together more distinct character models for extras in later seasons, palette swaps can still occur when they don't feel up to making even more new ones. | |
Palette Swap / int_d9c602eb | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_d9c602eb | featureConfidence |
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South Park | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_d9c602eb | |
Palette Swap / int_daff6a21 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_daff6a21 | comment |
Yu-Gi-Oh! 5Ds: Fake Jack Atlas's three fake copies of Red Daemon's Dragon have color palettes that are anything but red despite still carrying the same name. They're purple, blue and yellow. Fake Jack himself has darker colors than the original Jack Atlas. | |
Palette Swap / int_daff6a21 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_daff6a21 | featureConfidence |
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Yu-Gi-Oh! 5Ds | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_daff6a21 | |
Palette Swap / int_ddad77ae | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_ddad77ae | comment |
Astro City: The Evil Sorcerer Infidel once did something that gave Samaritan a blue costume and red hair (instead of his normal red-costume-and-blue-hair ensemble). | |
Palette Swap / int_ddad77ae | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_ddad77ae | featureConfidence |
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Astro City (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_ddad77ae | |
Palette Swap / int_df7e11cd | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_df7e11cd | comment |
Manly Guys Doing Manly Things: As noted early on, pallet swapping Commander Badass ends up making him resemble the artist's father. She promptly turned him into recurring character, Canadian Guy. The in-universe explanation is that Canadian Guy is an unsanctioned regional bootleg of the Commander. | |
Palette Swap / int_df7e11cd | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_df7e11cd | featureConfidence |
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Manly Guys Doing Manly Things (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_df7e11cd | |
Palette Swap / int_e179ec3a | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_e179ec3a | comment |
Calvin & Hobbes: The Series has Thunderstorm, who is described as his brother Brainstorm with a black lab coat and jet-black hair. | |
Palette Swap / int_e179ec3a | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_e179ec3a | featureConfidence |
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Calvin & Hobbes: The Series (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_e179ec3a | |
Palette Swap / int_e23ff2b1 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_e23ff2b1 | comment |
About two-thirds of the original Masters of the Universe toyline reused parts from the original He-Man and Skeletor toys. This is a big reason for the World of Muscle Men look of the franchise; just about every male character has the exact same bulging biceps. | |
Palette Swap / int_e23ff2b1 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_e23ff2b1 | featureConfidence |
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Masters of the Universe (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_e23ff2b1 | |
Palette Swap / int_e388fcf7 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_e388fcf7 | comment |
DSBT InsaniT: This is what Bill's second and third forms are. His second form turns his hair a lighter shade of blue, and his third form turns his hair and clothes black with a yellow shirt. | |
Palette Swap / int_e388fcf7 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_e388fcf7 | featureConfidence |
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DSBT InsaniT (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_e388fcf7 | |
Palette Swap / int_e71c679 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_e71c679 | comment |
In Tokusou Sentai Dekaranger and Power Rangers S.P.D., Make My Monster Grow mostly took the year off, in favor of each alien criminal of the week having his or her own Humongous Mecha. While the monster suits each looked original, the mecha started to repeat themselves, with minor details, and yes, colors, changed. (A few times, there wasn't even a repaint!)) Two once-used monster suits per week was just not gonna happen. The Dark Rangers in Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers were simply repainted Putty costumes. They were unimpressive at best. |
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Palette Swap / int_e71c679 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_e71c679 | featureConfidence |
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Tokusou Sentai Dekaranger | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_e71c679 | |
Palette Swap / int_ea4f62db | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_ea4f62db | comment |
Family Guy: Lois' sister, Carol, is basically another Lois with different hair and clothes. They sport the same exact face and body shape. Stewie's evil clone from "The Hand That Rocks the Wheelchair" has the colors of Stewie's yellow shirt and red overalls switched. Retep is Peter with a green shirt and white pants. And he is evil. |
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Palette Swap / int_ea4f62db | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_ea4f62db | featureConfidence |
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Family Guy | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_ea4f62db | |
Palette Swap / int_ef0dea89 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_ef0dea89 | comment |
Shimmer and Shine: Dottie, the polka-dotted elephant from "My Secret Genies", is practically the elephant from "Abraca-Genie" with polka dots and a different color pattern. | |
Palette Swap / int_ef0dea89 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_ef0dea89 | featureConfidence |
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Shimmer and Shine | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_ef0dea89 | |
Palette Swap / int_ef258983 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_ef258983 | comment |
Grandma's Boy (2006), which is about video game designers, references this tendency when one tester recommends differentiating between two types of enemies by changing the colors of one of them. | |
Palette Swap / int_ef258983 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Palette Swap / int_ef258983 | featureConfidence |
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Grandma's Boy (2006) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_ef258983 | |
Palette Swap / int_efcb2e99 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_efcb2e99 | comment |
Books of Adam: Parodied in "Palette Swapping". The protagonist complains that this practice is a symptom of Lazy Artist, before being confronted by a tanner and blonder version of him. | |
Palette Swap / int_efcb2e99 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_efcb2e99 | featureConfidence |
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Books of Adam (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_efcb2e99 | |
Palette Swap / int_f05bb05a | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_f05bb05a | comment |
Children's Party at the Palace has Mary Poppins, who first appears wearing a black coat when she chastises the Baddies for their attempted sabotage. Later during the "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" performance, her coat is blue instead. | |
Palette Swap / int_f05bb05a | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_f05bb05a | featureConfidence |
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Children's Party at the Palace | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_f05bb05a | |
Palette Swap / int_f18b2e2e | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_f18b2e2e | comment |
Iguanodon, Muttaburrasaurus, and Anatotitan use the same model, but with changed heads and colours (and for the Muttaburrasaurus, changed forelimbs), which results in Anatotitan having way too bulky arms with thumb spikes. The Anatotitan model was further recycled for Saurolophus in the spinoff, Chased by Dinosaurs, where they didn't even bother to change the colours or fix the mistake with the forelimbs, just adding a small crest to the head. There are two Iguanodon species shown, which differ only by colouration (although the North American Iguanodon species is known as Dakotadon nowadays). | |
Palette Swap / int_f18b2e2e | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_f18b2e2e | featureConfidence |
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Chased by Dinosaurs | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_f18b2e2e | |
Palette Swap / int_f367511c | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_f367511c | comment |
The early days of Yu-Gi-Oh! was very fond of recycling monster designs, with a lot of random monsters having at least one counterpart. The localization had a habit of changing their names to be variants of "[monster name] #1" and "[same name] #2." Curiously, while the designs were identical bar colors, the artwork was always completely redrawn, depicting them in different poses or from different angles, and barring that artwork, the monsters usually had nothing in common. (Videogame adaptations that used 3D models tended to use them as more conventional palette swaps.) | |
Palette Swap / int_f367511c | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_f367511c | featureConfidence |
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Yu-Gi-Oh! (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_f367511c | |
Palette Swap / int_f5d2ead0 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_f5d2ead0 | comment |
Transformers: Cybertron interestingly avoids this, for the most part (okay, not in the toyline), with Thundercracker having a standard Seeker body... but Starscream himself is a completely different design, with only the head looking particularly Starscreamy. (It's actually based on Screamer's pre-Earth design from the Dreamwave War Within comics.) The exception is Galvatron. After upgrading to Galvatron, visually, Megatron is Palette Swapped to G1 Megatron's colors. Major Homage, bordering on non-sexual fanservice. | |
Palette Swap / int_f5d2ead0 | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_f5d2ead0 | featureConfidence |
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Transformers: Cybertron | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_f5d2ead0 | |
Palette Swap / int_f6da9a18 | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_f6da9a18 | comment |
Sgt. Frog: It's used a lot in the anime for background Keronians, which generally share a few sets of generic designs (eyes with small irises, star emblems, hats similar to Keroro's or Kururu's, headphones included. Later episodes also use it for random background aliens. |
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Sgt. Frog (Manga) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_f6da9a18 | |
Palette Swap / int_f99c3ee | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_f99c3ee | comment |
In the sixth, final episode of Don't Hug Me I'm Scared, we get a blue Red Guy, a green Yellow Guy, and a red Duck; which also happen to be their favourite colours, as described in episode one. | |
Palette Swap / int_f99c3ee | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_f99c3ee | featureConfidence |
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Don't Hug Me I'm Scared (Web Video) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_f99c3ee | |
Palette Swap / int_fb9c177d | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_fb9c177d | comment |
Transformers has some In-Universe examples of characters performing Palette Swaps on themselves, though: In the original series, Optimus Prime received one as a side effect of being coated with Dr. Morgan's impervious alloy in "The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 2". He's back to his original colors by the end of the episode, but it's never mentioned if it's because the alloy coating was removed, or if his colors were repainted over the alloy, and neither the American nor Japanese continuations make further mention of the alloy. Amusingly, the "impervious" Optimus Prime ends up looking like Ultra Magnus' cab robot mode (albeit the toy variant without the blue paint highlights on his head), which is likely why they put him back in his normal colors as soon as the story no longer had the need for the alloy. In Transformers: Animated, Bumblebee, Wasp, and Longarm Prime/Shockwave demonstrate palette-swapping abilities via "electronic paint job". Lampshaded in the third season of Transformers: Prime. When the Autobots went underground, Bumblebee reversed his colors, from being a yellow car with black stripes to a black car with yellow stripes. Arcee (who is blue with a few pink accents) notes that if she were to do that, she'd end up mostly pink. |
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Palette Swap / int_fb9c177d | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_fb9c177d | featureConfidence |
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Transformers (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_fb9c177d | |
Palette Swap / int_ff9ab17f | type |
Palette Swap | |
Palette Swap / int_ff9ab17f | comment |
Star Trek: The Next Generation introduced Starfleet Academy cadet uniforms that were largely a partial palette swap of the standard Starfleet uniform, moving the department color from the upper body and sleeves to the shoulder yoke and leaving the rest of the uniform black, while adding large pockets on the pant legs. When it came time for Star Trek: Deep Space Nine to send Nog off to the Academy, the cadet uniform's primary color was swapped from black to gray, in order to contrast against DS9's black jumpsuits. Following the introduction of the First Contact uniforms on DS9, new cadet uniforms were introduced; the outer uniform was a gray version on the movie version, with quilted shoulders and divisional stripes on the sleeve cuffs, but with the department colors on the shoulders and the gray undershirts of the original DS9 uniform. | |
Palette Swap / int_ff9ab17f | featureApplicability |
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Palette Swap / int_ff9ab17f | featureConfidence |
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Star Trek: The Next Generation | hasFeature |
Palette Swap / int_ff9ab17f |
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