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Red Shirt
- 1036 statements
- 197 feature instances
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This is the Good Counterpart of Evil Minions and Mooks — set filler for our heroes' side. Their purpose is almost exclusively to give the writers someone to kill who isn't a main character, although they can also serve as Spear Carriers. In a series where The Main Characters Do Everything, if you suddenly see someone else who you've never seen before involved in the main story, they are probably Redshirts. They are used to show how the monster works, and demonstrate that it is indeed a deadly menace, without having to lose anyone important. Expect someone to say "He's Dead, Jim", lament this "valued crew member's senseless death", and then promptly forget him. Security personnel in general fall victim to the worst shade of this trope, as most of the time their deaths aren't even acknowledged at all; according to Hollywood, you could walk into a bank and shoot a security guard right in the face without anyone making a fuss. If you shot anyone else afterward, the headline would just read "Bank Customers Killed", and rarely is their death even considered much of a karmic strike against their killers (i.e. if the protagonists of a story are bank robbers, they can often kill plenty of security guards in highly dubious "self-defense" and still be treated sympathetically by the plot). Please note: this Trope is actually very inaccurate when you compare it to Real Life. If you were to watch every episode of Star Trek: The Original Series, count the number of casualties that the Enterprise had, and then compare that to an actual military, you'd see that Kirk's record as a leader in this regard is excellent, far better than any general in U.S. history. Even war heroes like George Washington and Dwight D. Eisenhower had proportionately more casualties among their troops.note It has been suggested that it would be more appropriate to compare Kirk's casualty rate to units on exploratory, rather than combat, missions. It must be remembered that the Enterprise under Kirk's command participated in multiple combat missions against warships with superior weaponry (such as in the episodes "Balance of Terror" and "The Doomsday Machine" to name a few). In mass quantities, they make up the Red Shirt Army. Finally, the problem with the Red Shirts is that they can be far too obvious. The death of an extra is used for a particular reason (see the choices just below) so it is shown with some emphasis; but background characters surviving isn't interesting at all, so when they do, it happens almost unnoticed, e.g. Star Trek S1 E8 "Miri". Compare to The Worf Effect (a strong character is defeated to show the enemy's strength), Sacrificial Lion (a strong and important character is killed to show the enemy's strength or seriousness), The World's Expert (on Getting Killed), Retirony, Mauve Shirt, Sacrificial Lamb, Disposable Sex Worker, Anyone Can Die, Little Dead Riding Hood, C-List Fodder (who are pre-established named characters but are still much more disposable than main characters), A Million Is a Statistic, and Monster Munch. Contrast Plot Armor and Red Herring Shirt. See also Bring My Red Jacket, which is literal "wearing red is just asking to get hurt". For John Scalzi's novel Redshirts, which deconstructs this trope, go to Literature.Redshirts, and for the sci-fi social networking simulator, go to VideoGame.Redshirt. noreallife |
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Red Shirt / int_10bc0a19 | type |
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Played seriously in Night Watch with Nancyball. He's the first of the Night Watch killed, when he's suddenly hit with a grappling hook in the stomach and dies. Unlike near every other character in the setting, he doesn't even get a visit from Death to flesh him out. Afterwards, the other coppers try talking about him, and they can't even think of anything about him, noting he never said much to anyone. | |
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Adventure Time: The titular character of "James," who wears a red radiation suit, is sacrificed by Bubblegum to the zombies of the crater, and then subverts the trope because he's an Expendable Clone like most of the candy people. And then further subverts the trope when his original body becomes undead and leads the zombies out of the crater. | |
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There are pairs of minor backup agents in Thursday Next who tend to only show up to get killed and have punny names like Khanon and Fodder, or Deadman and Walken. | |
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We're Alive had The Tower with about 30 unvoiced survivors. They all got killed off in the Second Season finale "The Harder They Fall" | |
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Duncan Idaho from the Dune series is a strange example. He dies early on in the first book, but thanks to the magic of cloning, he keeps popping up again and again (and getting killed again and again,) and actually manages to be an important character regardless of his obvious red shirt status. | |
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Abraxas (Hrodvitnon): In this Godzilla MonsterVerse fanfiction; although he's one of the examples that has a name, Lieutenant Krupin is first introduced being part of the joint rescue mission between Team Mauzer and Monarch's G-Team into Artificial Zombie territory, and he dies in the same chapter that he's introduced. | |
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Played with in the Star Trek Online fic Bait and Switch. Four bit part crew members beam down with three members of the command crew. Two are low-ranking officers (an ensign and a lieutenant junior grade), another is a senior chief petty officer, and the third a crewman. The officers peel off early and act as a sniper and spotter, the senior chief gets shot in the chest but survives and is beamed out, and the crewman survives until near the end of the chapter when an Orion matron breaks his neck. In general the fic leans more on Mauve Shirts: Regardless of whether they die, almost any Bajor crewman Eleya interacts with is given at least a name, if not some minor characterization. | |
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In Captain Ufo, Ufo sometimes treats low-rank crewmembers in the military division as this. They do wear a red uniform too. | |
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Parodied in an episode of Bojack Horseman when they're planning to break into a museum and after Bojack says one of them might die, the camera pans to Alan the cable guy (who happened to be wearing a red shirt), who they then forced to come along. After being told repeatedly that he's definitely going to die, he's then shot by the police when Margo Martindale uses him as a human shield but his phone blocked the bullet. | |
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According to TFWiki.net, across all Transformers media, this happens with characters that don't have toys in the toyline, in order to keep selling toys of the characters that have. Though the Marvel series did subvert this once with the Seacons, the most recent combiner team, getting introduced and killed off in a span of four issues, even though they were still on the toy shelves. | |
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To celebrate Star Trek's 46th anniversary, Google converted the letters in its logo into Star Trek characters, with the "e" wearing a red shirt and looking nervous. If you click on the turbo-lift, he and an "o" (Kirk) beam down to a planet to fight Gorn, but the "e" keeps getting caught in the cross-fire. He doesn't die, but he goes back to the bridge unhappy. | |
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In the All Guardsmen Party, the guardsmen are typically grouped with several less combat-focused teammates. Most of them don't survive. | |
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Munchkin: In Star Munchkin, there is a hireling called a red shirt. Their only use is to die when you lose a battle, thus preventing the "Bad Stuff" from happening to you. However, they have, on a success, a one in six chance of getting overexcited and sacrificing themselves anyway. The Good, the Bad and the Munchkin has the greenhorn, whose only purpose is to be fed to a monster so you can steal its stuff and run away while it's busy chewing. |
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Sluggy Freelance has been around long enough to have hit this trope dozens of times. Without even bringing in the number of disposable elves who die in the formerly annual Christmas messes, there's: This and this strip from the "Stick Figures in Spaaaaace" series of stick-figure Filler Strips have characters with red shirts getting killed by random gunfire. Not an actual straight example but Parodied Trope. During "Oceans Unmoving", Quartermaster Flipp complains about not getting any characterization... and is knocked overboard to certain death in the very next strip. Of course, it's subverted when, after the whole plot and the deaths of many major and minor characters, it's revealed that he didn't die, but instead is sent through time. |
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Rocketship Voyager. The Space Marines assigned to Voyager used to have bright-red space armor "designed by the psychotechs to intimidate food rioters" which they've long since burnished down to bare metal and repainted in disruptive pattern camouflage. Also red coveralls are worn by Spacefleet crewmen who handle munitions or hazardous waste. In the final chapter a scratch team of UN space marines, Maquis rebels and Spacefleet ensigns are sent on a rescue mission that kills eight of them, most in a similar fashion to how their Mauve Shirt characters died in Star Trek: Voyager. | |
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In Bleach, when Ichigo and friends invade the Soul Society, anyone without a rank is pretty much dog food. | |
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The Dragon Business: Sir Tremayne's fellow knights in the first book, the mercenary fishermen after the lake monster in the second book, and the castle guards in the second book all end up slaughtered after a few chapters of page time. This gets lampshaded with the fishermen when, right before they introduce themselves, Reeger complains that this is a waste of time due to how those people are about to get eaten. | |
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In Survivor: Fan Characters, Orwell in Season 13 was a Star Trek fan character who wore a red shirt and barely avoided dying from freak accidents multiple times. Ironically, he actually ended up being one of the season's luckiest characters as not only did he never actually die, but the comic's creator changed his elimination to occur much later in the season than initially planned. | |
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What's New? with Phil and Dixie strip on "Weatherlight" Saga has "Snapper" McFipt: | |
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Captain Simian and the Space Monkeys: The holo-boons, Hard Light baboons in red jumpsuits. | |
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The most notable example in G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra is the guard at The Pit who first witnesses the mole tunnelers arrive. He is not only visibly surprised but doesn't sound the alarm, just nervously levels his gun at them. Yep, G.I. Joe, only recruiting the A-list commandos. | |
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Beth Emhoff in Contagion (2011) is both this and a dead Living MacGuffin at the same time, being killed off within the first few minutes. Her recent interactions are then investigated throughout the rest of the film, and then the cause is revealed to be an infected pig being touched by a chef who then held her hand for a photograph. | |
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Played straight in The Simpsons episode "Trouble with Trillions", where Homer is trying to get someone to confess to a crime and his rarely seen co-worker Charlie is arrested for admitting to being part of a militia which plans to beat up US government officials. Lampshaded in the DVD Commentary. | |
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Averted in The Name of the Wind, where the Adem, a warrior race whose mercenaries wear all red outfits, and are pretty unlikely to even be wounded. | |
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In The Land: Forging, a literal example is seen. A wood sprite joins Richter to fight at his side - with specific attention called to his red shirt - only to be killed moments later. | |
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I Am NOT Going Through Puberty Again!: Invoked by Ko Hyuuga word for word in describing himself after he's sent to retrieve Hinata shortly after "The Hinata Massacre". | |
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G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero: The Joes had "Greenshirts" as they would come to be called. Their look was based on Grunt who was the most generic looking character of all the Joes, probably hence the name "Grunt". They weren't used as cannon fodder per se in the cartoon, for obvious reasons. But they did make animating large battle scenes easier because all the main characters had unique appearances and animating a large number of them onscreen at the same time often proved laborious. Typically, one or two main characters would be fully animated in the foreground while several Greenshirts served as background employing more limited animation. Also, the addition of generic soldiers solved the problem of Cobra troops outnumbering the Joes. They're all males throughout the series. But a few female Greenshirts are seen, especially in "Spell of the Siren". | |
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The Mummy (1999). In the end, the only people who make it out are the four protagonists. Jonathan even lampshades this when recruiting an admittedly death-seeking Winston: "Well, everyone else we've bumped into has died, why not you?" | |
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The Mummy (1999) | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt | |
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The captain and pilot of the Republic cruiser in The Phantom Menace. They're the first characters to appear in the movie, and also the first to die. | |
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The X-Wing Rogue Squadron comics started to display this later on. There were complaints after the first several arcs that, while people quit or transferred out, no-one ever died. Promptly someone who'd been there since the beginning and one who'd been around for an arc got killed in Requiem for a Rogue, and in the arc after that four new pilots were introduced. One instantly immersed himself in a subplot, another took equally little time to establish her status as part of a rather pragmatic Proud Warrior Race. The other two failed to do anything but sort of hang around in the background, and by the end of the book those two had been shot down and killed within two pages of each other. | |
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Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_2d316bc0 | comment |
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012) mocked this in an episode of its first Show Within a Show, Space Heroes. The captain specifically brings two crewman along when he beams down to a dangerous planet so they'll get shot instead of him. | |
Red Shirt / int_2d316bc0 | featureApplicability |
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Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_2d316bc0 | |
Red Shirt / int_2ef7cb74 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_2ef7cb74 | comment |
Lyrical Nanoha: The Soldiers of the Time-Space Administration Bureau are, on the surface, highly trained individuals capable of solving most inter-dimensional threats... it's a shame, then, that the show mostly shoves them in situations only girls half their age can properly handle. | |
Red Shirt / int_2ef7cb74 | featureApplicability |
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Lyrical Nanoha (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_2ef7cb74 | |
Red Shirt / int_30a5ebfd | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_30a5ebfd | comment |
In Naruto: In several scenes in Naruto, including Kabuto's attempted assassination of Sasuke, several ANBU Black Ops are easily killed. This is to show how powerful the invaders from the Sound and Sand villages actually were. There's also the samurai of the Land of Iron. The movies have many cases of Mooks being killed en masse, often by the heroes or the main villains. It's basically a rule that if you're a Konoha ninja who isn't named and you're shown on screen, you're probably going to die very soon. And even if they're not killed right away, they never get to kill any enemies besides mooks. Their jutsu almost always fail to damage any major villains. |
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Naruto (Manga) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_30a5ebfd | |
Red Shirt / int_332a877b | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_332a877b | comment |
Wonderlab: The character of Parker only exists to spout exposition about the branch of Lobotomy Corporation the story takes place in. After that, they are killed to demonstrate Dingle Dangle's powers and Catt's badassery. Narae is pretty much Cannon Fodder in the form of a character. They exist to demonstrate that Abnormalities are capable of killing employees even if they do the right thing. While Attachment work was the right thing to use on My Sweet Home, they spent an unnecessarily long amount of time in the Containment Unit. As a result, they gave into My Sweet Home's temptations and fused with it, resulting in Narae's death. |
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Wonderlab (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_332a877b | |
Red Shirt / int_35ada324 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_35ada324 | comment |
Alien: A film that seriously plays with the concept is Aliens. Who can forget Hudson's "Four more weeks and out" tirade? The movie does kinda play it straight with Crowe and Wierzbowski; one line from Crowe (said when he's offscreen), and no lines from poor Ski except a scream. Alien vs. Predator: Several notable members of the expedition into the ancient pyramid become this once they get locked inside the sacrificial chamber with Facehugger eggs and are impregnated with Chest Bursters, dying to remind the audience of how the Xenomorphs reproduce and the threat they pose. It's even somewhat lampshaded by Adele, one of the named Red Shirts, having a red shirt which the Chestburster explodes out of. |
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Alien (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_35ada324 | |
Red Shirt / int_35f1d3fb | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_35f1d3fb | comment |
G.I. Joe: The most notable example in G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra is the guard at The Pit who first witnesses the mole tunnelers arrive. He is not only visibly surprised but doesn't sound the alarm, just nervously levels his gun at them. Yep, G.I. Joe, only recruiting the A-list commandos. In G.I. Joe: Retaliation the ninja troops Snake Eyes and Jinx fight on the mountain cliffs are wearing red uniforms. True to this trope, many of them die by falling (having their grapple ropes cut, being pushed off by a small avalanche). |
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Red Shirt / int_3646495b | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_3646495b | comment |
The Boys who wait on Dalton Castle in Ring of Honor. However, the main two who serve as his personal mooks got upgraded to just that, serving as Tag Team Twins who eventually helped him win the World Six Man belts from The Briscoes and Bully Ray. Yes, the latter team imploded on their route to winning the belts from them, but Castle and The Boys retained. That said, the large majority of Boys remained what amounted to red shirts. | |
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Red Shirt / int_36ee2abe | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_36ee2abe | comment |
Paranoia has the players taking the roles of Troubleshooters tasked with the job of shooting trouble wherever it should arise in Alpha Complex. The starting rank is "Red". As each character is part of a six-pack of clones, the body count can rack up astronomically quickly.... | |
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Paranoia (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_36ee2abe | |
Red Shirt / int_371fd25c | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_371fd25c | comment |
Early on in Bearmageddon, Ethan sold cameo appearances in the comic to interested readers, for crowd shots of people getting mauled by bears. More expensive cameos involved appearing in the foreground and saying one or two lines before they went out. | |
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Red Shirt / int_371fd25c | |
Red Shirt / int_3a10cbfe | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_3a10cbfe | comment |
Commando: When John Matrix is informed of the deaths of his former teammates, his former superior officer General Kirby leaves two soldiers with him to guard Matrix and his daughter. Within minutes of Kirby leaving, both soldiers are killed in a raid on Matrix's house. | |
Red Shirt / int_3a10cbfe | featureApplicability |
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Commando | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_3a10cbfe | |
Red Shirt / int_3a73275a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_3a73275a | comment |
In Planet of the Dinosaurs, the cast wears various colored uniforms, but those killed die in no particular order. | |
Red Shirt / int_3a73275a | featureApplicability |
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Planet of the Dinosaurs | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_3a73275a | |
Red Shirt / int_3b700cad | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_3b700cad | comment |
Poked fun of in RWBY Thoughts. When the aircraft Weiss gets attacked, the pilot worries that they'll crash. Weiss knows she can't die as a main character, but the unnamed pilot isn't so lucky: | |
Red Shirt / int_3b700cad | featureApplicability |
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RWBY Thoughts (Web Video) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_3b700cad | |
Red Shirt / int_3c18c35f | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_3c18c35f | comment |
Things I Am Not Allowed to Do at the PPC: Attempting to invoke the phenomenon of expendable extras by having people go to the Star Trek continuum while wearing red shirts is banned, even as an April Fools' Day prank. | |
Red Shirt / int_3c18c35f | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_3c18c35f | |
Red Shirt / int_3e8c09b9 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_3e8c09b9 | comment |
Attack on Titan utilizes this trope with many of the unnamed members of the military. However, that's not to say that named characters are exempt from death, either. | |
Red Shirt / int_3e8c09b9 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_3e8c09b9 | |
Red Shirt / int_3f231b84 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_3f231b84 | comment |
Jurassic World has perhaps one of the most badass ones in film history. ACU Trooper Miller essentially flips off the Indominus rex by standing his ground and firing his shotgun repeatedly at it. He gets eaten, but by doing so, the last three soldiers — one of them severely injured — survive the attack and escape I. rex pursuit, thanks to his badassery. If you look closely, he's not just holding his ground; he's calmly striding toward the damn thing as it's charging right at him. | |
Red Shirt / int_3f231b84 | featureApplicability |
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Jurassic World | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_3f231b84 | |
Red Shirt / int_3fbd173e | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_3fbd173e | comment |
Freefall: Sam invokes it with his deployment orders during a pie fight◊: "Red shirt guy, intercept incoming pies". | |
Red Shirt / int_3fbd173e | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_3fbd173e | featureConfidence |
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Freefall (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_3fbd173e | |
Red Shirt / int_41b0198a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_41b0198a | comment |
Parodied in The Dresden Files, when Molly is fighting a psychic battle. Her Headquarters for the fight is a copy of the classic Enterprise, complete with Kirk!Molly, Spock!Molly, Scotty!Molly, and a (construct) Redshirt!Molly who dies at the first real trouble. Harry is just miffed that she didn't use Star Wars. | |
Red Shirt / int_41b0198a | featureApplicability |
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The Dresden Files | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_41b0198a | |
Red Shirt / int_42ffb88e | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_42ffb88e | comment |
SCP Foundation: All D-class personnel of the Foundation are this. Class D is the designation given to those who handle the more dangerous SCP items, and they tend to be brutally killed en masse. And if they survive to the end of the month, they're supposedly executed anywaynote Though since this is unusually wasteful for the Foundation, it's possible researchers are just told this so that they treat them as expendable. Some of the potential guilt over sacrificing so many people is mitigated by the fact that D-class personnel are either death-row convicts (meaning they are marked for death anyway and probably deserve it) or personnel who screwed up so badly that they got demoted to Class D (meaning a massive breach of ethics and/or causing a containment breach). Needless to say, it gets lampshaded a lot. One of the things that Dr. Bright is no longer allowed to do at the Foundation is swap out D-Class uniforms with red leotards. One of the SCPs is a Portal Pool that cycles through its destinations whenever someone goes through it. Unfortunately, several of those destinations are near-instantly fatal (several of them are in space), so several D-Class personnel are deliberately sacrificed to send people where they need to go (although they do give the D-Class poison so they won't have to wait too long). The original Star Trek red shirts (and the main character's Plot Armor) was briefly parodied in SCP-674, a Nintendo Entertainment System Zapper that can shoot fictional characters on screen. It's all but stated that the tester tried shooting at the bridge crew of the Original Series, but only was able to hit the Red Shirts. |
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SCP Foundation (Website) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_42ffb88e | |
Red Shirt / int_44fe781e | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_44fe781e | comment |
Absolutely any military vehicle that is not an Evangelion in Neon Genesis Evangelion. Their job is shoot ineffectually at the Angels so we can see just how invincible they are as they lazily annihilate the forces in their path. | |
Red Shirt / int_44fe781e | featureApplicability |
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Neon Genesis Evangelion | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_44fe781e | |
Red Shirt / int_45599333 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_45599333 | comment |
Subverted in Tower of God: You'd think the bunch of Regulars that got killed off or beaten up in some way would be nameless extras, but as their unique character designs might hint, a lot of the get names. Weird names, but still. | |
Red Shirt / int_45599333 | featureApplicability |
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Tower of God (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_45599333 | |
Red Shirt / int_467773a6 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_467773a6 | comment |
Rogue One is basically told from the perspective of the Red Shirts who, in any other movie, would've been dead in the first ten minutes, if they appeared at all. Perhaps fittingly, it ends with the whole team dying. It's driven home that the protagonists were, ultimately, nothing more than glorified couriers whose narrative purpose was providing the MacGuffin for more important characters. All of this is very much Played for Drama. | |
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Rogue One | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_467773a6 | |
Red Shirt / int_467c89f7 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_467c89f7 | comment |
This happens often in Super Dimension Fortress Macross and its adaptation Robotech. Destroids are common victims of battle for dramatic tension, but the series likes to kill off unnamed rookie pilots in brown-colored VF-1A's, known commonly among fans as 'Brownies' and playing much the same role as Gundam's aforementioned GM. In-universe, it's been noted that Zentraedi aces bully and target the tan fighters because the know that color indicates a new, unskilled, or weak pilot. Somewhat Truth in Television: If a pilot has managed to survive 10 missions, their chances of survival in combat to the end of the war skyrocket. This is the reason why the United States Air Force invented the Red Flag exercises: To get its young pilots through those first 10 combat missions. | |
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Super Dimension Fortress Macross | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_467c89f7 | |
Red Shirt / int_468bebb0 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_468bebb0 | comment |
Discworld: Spoofed in The Light Fantastic with the barbarian heroine's gang of mercenary minions. The narration says they're all probably going to die so it won't bother naming them, but most of them actually live, despite some spirited attempts from the Luggage. Played seriously in Night Watch with Nancyball. He's the first of the Night Watch killed, when he's suddenly hit with a grappling hook in the stomach and dies. Unlike near every other character in the setting, he doesn't even get a visit from Death to flesh him out. Afterwards, the other coppers try talking about him, and they can't even think of anything about him, noting he never said much to anyone. Pratchett in the introduction of Guards! Guards! invokes the trope by saying that the guards' ungrateful role in fantasy stories is to always get slaughtered to show how dire the threat is, and he wrote Guards! Guards! as an homage to those fine men. |
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Red Shirt / int_468bebb0 | featureApplicability |
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Discworld | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_468bebb0 | |
Red Shirt / int_47dc9ef0 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_47dc9ef0 | comment |
Spirit of the Century has minions. In a bit of a switch these are mostly for the villains, but they go down right quick, and, if they are attached to a character, must quite literally die before the character can even be hurt. | |
Red Shirt / int_47dc9ef0 | featureApplicability |
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Spirit of the Century (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_47dc9ef0 | |
Red Shirt / int_47dfc6f | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_47dfc6f | comment |
The interns in Total Drama and its Spin-Off Total Drama Presents: The Ridonculous Race are most definitely this as they're used to set up and test the extremely dangerous challenges before the contestants get to them. Many don't make it out alive or are horribly injured at the very least. | |
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Total Drama | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_47dfc6f | |
Red Shirt / int_47f0eac3 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_47f0eac3 | comment |
The Klokateers in Metalocalypse | |
Red Shirt / int_47f0eac3 | featureApplicability |
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Metalocalypse | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_47f0eac3 | |
Red Shirt / int_4ab9d024 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_4ab9d024 | comment |
Armageddon 2000, Hell in a Cell. The Undertaker vs. The Rock vs. Kurt Angle vs. "Stone Cold" Steve Austin vs. Triple H vs… Rikishi. Guess who gets chucked off the cell into a flatbed truck? | |
Red Shirt / int_4ab9d024 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_4ab9d024 | featureConfidence |
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Armageddon (WWE) (Wrestling) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_4ab9d024 | |
Red Shirt / int_4b790c7a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_4b790c7a | comment |
Played with in Iron Man 2: Right after Justin Hammer leaves Ivan Vanko alone with the two burly security guards, it becomes immediately obvious that they're not going to last very long. It's such a foregone conclusion that the film doesn't even bother showing their deaths—the next time we see Vanko, he's alone at his hacking workstation and the officers are nowhere to be seen. It's only when Natasha and the chauffeur arrive at the Hammer headquarters and enter the room itself that we see the two guards hung from the ceiling, just to confirm what happened to them. | |
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Iron Man 2 | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_4b790c7a | |
Red Shirt / int_4bfae3e9 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_4bfae3e9 | comment |
Spoofed in The Light Fantastic with the barbarian heroine's gang of mercenary minions. The narration says they're all probably going to die so it won't bother naming them, but most of them actually live, despite some spirited attempts from the Luggage. | |
Red Shirt / int_4bfae3e9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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The Light Fantastic | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_4bfae3e9 | |
Red Shirt / int_4e433e78 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_4e433e78 | comment |
In Monty Python and the Holy Grail, this trope comes into play when King Arthur and his Knights fight the Killer Rabbit. Three Knights, who had only one appearance prior to this scene are killed. Arthur even sends one to originally kill the rabbit, despite the arguable fact that Sir Lancelot is the most aggressive knight Arthur has. | |
Red Shirt / int_4e433e78 | featureApplicability |
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Monty Python and the Holy Grail | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_4e433e78 | |
Red Shirt / int_4f4b6bb6 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_4f4b6bb6 | comment |
In Risk It All, one of Ren's prestige ranks invokes this trope, being the next step up from Minor Character and just below Named Character, indicating that Ren's super identity is starting to become well-known in Gotham after his viral video of him fighting a mobster who gets shot dead. | |
Red Shirt / int_4f4b6bb6 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_50e2e357 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_50e2e357 | comment |
In Star Trek (2009), Kirk (in blue) and Sulu (in gold) are accompanied on a drop mission to take out a planetary drill by gung-ho Olson (in red). Guess which one of the trio dies? At first it seems to be a subversion, as he survives what seems to be the obvious fate of missing the platform and falling to his death from the upper atmosphere of a planet. Unfortunately for the poor guy, it's a Double Subversion; his final fate actually manages to be fairly spectacular. His parachute catches on the platform, swinging him right into the drill's beam, where he's immediately vaporized. Of course, it was his own fault. Plus as he was the Chief engineer, he had to die so Scotty could become the Chief Engineer. This was completely intentional, according to the commentary — Abrams and the writers called this their "red shirt moment". | |
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Star Trek (2009) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_50e2e357 | |
Red Shirt / int_53a73ca0 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_53a73ca0 | comment |
Star Wars: The Clone Wars: The episode "Lair of Grievous" makes use of this trope; Jedi Master Kit Fisto is accompanied on his mission by his never-before-mentioned Padawan Nahdar Vebb and a group of clone troopers. Predictably enough, each of them had died a horrible death by the end of the episode. The writers were aware of this convention and gave the clones red-striped body armour. Any clone that bears completely white armor would be dead by the end of the episode. Any clone that doesn't have a name in any episode. Many clones who DO have names also die. Their death is just more noticeable and sudden, and gives a name for the main characters to scream out in sorrow. Matchstiiiiiiick!!! |
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Star Wars: The Clone Wars | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_53a73ca0 | |
Red Shirt / int_553051f | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_553051f | comment |
The sad fate of the 90's-DC-space-police-Green-Lantern-wannabes the Darkstars. During the time when DC decided to get rid of the whole Green Lantern Corps and just have one guy being the Lantern, they introduced the Darkstars who would try to take the then-extinct Corps' place. But with the comic not catching on, despite having characters like Donna Troy and John Stewart drafted into it, the group slowly dwindled; each time they showed up in a comic, at least one of them dies for the sake of showing how dangerous the threat is. Finally in the Adam Strange Planet Heist miniseries, the remaining few Darkstars show up ONLY in the climactic battle… just to die to the last man. And yes, they wore red jumpsuits. The Rocket Red Brigade flip back and forth between this and Mooks, depending on the story. Generally, there's one Rocket Red at a given time who has a name and a personality, and all the others get wiped out en masse. Even the named one has a good chance of biting it. And yes, the name's indicative; they wear red and white Powered Armor. |
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Red Shirt / int_553051f | featureApplicability |
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Green Lantern (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_553051f | |
Red Shirt / int_559abb36 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_559abb36 | comment |
Caballistics, Inc.: During the group's first mission to stop a zombie incursion in the London Underground, they're accompanied by a group of special forces who are clearly there to serve as cannon fodder. | |
Red Shirt / int_559abb36 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_559abb36 | |
Red Shirt / int_55c5a085 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_55c5a085 | comment |
Mazinger Z: In the last Go Nagai manga arc, the Japanese army created the Mazinger army — a squad of mass-production Mazingers — to try and defeat Big Bad Dr. Hell once and for all. Since the robots needed trained pilots, several new characters were introduced, like the blonde twins Lori and Loru. However, as Kouji was performing test flights with the Jet Scrander, Dr. Hell threw a massive attack involving several mobile fortresses and several dozens of Mechanical Beasts. Main character, Love Interest and Battle Couple Sayaka Yumi and the Mazinger army flew to meet the Hell's army. Only one of them survived, and you will never guess who. Sayaka. Loru and Lori also showed up in Mazinkaiser, repeating their roles. They died in the first battle that they took active part in. | |
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Mazinger Z | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_55c5a085 | |
Red Shirt / int_5822abdd | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_5822abdd | comment |
Parodied in Legostar Galactica where one of the main characters is Ensign Redshirt and is continually being killed yet is always brought back to life. It's to the point that a laser shot in the opposite direction will actually bend just to hit him. It is subverted later, however, when a series of accidents fall on another character while sparing Ensign Redshirt, who's the first surprised. | |
Red Shirt / int_5822abdd | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_5822abdd | featureConfidence |
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Legostar Galactica (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_5822abdd | |
Red Shirt / int_585e7ffc | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_585e7ffc | comment |
Utu: The enlisted British soldiers from Lt. Scott's unit are little more than cannon fodder for the rebel villain protagonist to kill. Although historically the British army wore red coats as full dress, in this film they wear the blue overseas campaign uniform. | |
Red Shirt / int_585e7ffc | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_585e7ffc | featureConfidence |
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Utu | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_585e7ffc | |
Red Shirt / int_5ada53ed | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_5ada53ed | comment |
Aside From Bond Himself, if you're a 00-agent early in a James Bond film, kiss your ass goodbye. Subverted in GoldenEye, when Alec Trevelyan, 006, seems to die early in the movie, but is revealed to have faked his death. Also, if you're a Bond girl, billed after the main one, your days are numbered... |
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Red Shirt / int_5ada53ed | featureApplicability |
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James Bond | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_5ada53ed | |
Red Shirt / int_5b55de7e | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_5b55de7e | comment |
Star Wars: Invasion: Jedi Master Lar Le'Ung is killed a few issues after his introduction to establish the threat posed by the Vong. | |
Red Shirt / int_5b55de7e | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_5b55de7e | featureConfidence |
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Star Wars: Invasion (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_5b55de7e | |
Red Shirt / int_5c897f4a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_5c897f4a | comment |
Schlock Mercenary: Subverted in that most characters who die are both well-established and wearing aquamarine uniforms rather than red ones. Officers wear red uniforms, but they seem to survive very well. Lieutenant (later Lieutenant-Commander) Der Trihs (Red Shirt spelled backwards) is one of these officers. He is repeatedly injured in various grievous ways, including being reduced to a head-in-a-jar several times, but never actually dies. Instead, he eventually retires from the mercenary business to live with a pretty girl on a paradisaical vacation-planet. It is revealed at one point that his skull is quite nearly impervious to harm. |
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Red Shirt / int_5c897f4a | featureApplicability |
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Schlock Mercenary (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_5c897f4a | |
Red Shirt / int_5e150650 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_5e150650 | comment |
Which it inherited in their entirety from its papa-game, Exalted. The Exalted community has long referenced Extras as 'Mooks', and the game encourages them to be considered little more than ambulatory scenery for the awesome epic melodrama that is the Player Characters' lives. | |
Red Shirt / int_5e150650 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_5e150650 | featureConfidence |
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Exalted (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_5e150650 | |
Red Shirt / int_5ea35eb7 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_5ea35eb7 | comment |
In the Only War RPG each player character has an NPC comrade accompanying them. While comrades can help out with basic actions, their primary purpose is to flesh out the squad and die horribly. | |
Red Shirt / int_5ea35eb7 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_5ea35eb7 | featureConfidence |
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Only War (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_5ea35eb7 | |
Red Shirt / int_60e46d26 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_60e46d26 | comment |
MAD was one of the first to parody this. Though they did not use the term 'red shirts' they mocked this trope in their Star Trek: The Musical where Kirk, on the tune of Age of Aquarius, sings: | |
Red Shirt / int_60e46d26 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_60e46d26 | featureConfidence |
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MAD (Magazine) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_60e46d26 | |
Red Shirt / int_6196490 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_6196490 | comment |
Yano in Ghost in the Shell. In the manga, one chapter starts off with Batou and Motoko sending their regards to his family since he was already killed in a training exercise. At least in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, he's given a minuscule amount of screentime as one of two new recruits, but ultimately gets killed in battle later on. | |
Red Shirt / int_6196490 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_6196490 | featureConfidence |
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Ghost in the Shell (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_6196490 | |
Red Shirt / int_61c6b600 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_61c6b600 | comment |
Star Trek: First Contact Ensign Lynch at least gets a name. He was assimilated by the Borg and ends up being one of the drones Picard guns down on the holodeck. Apparently, Picard attended his wedding. Something of a subversion, in that Captain Picard actually gets called out for how callously he dismisses Ensign Lynch's murder. The other Borg drone Picard kills along with Lynch isn't mentioned at all. There's also another guy named Hawke, who goes outside the Enterprise in a space suit along with Picard and Worf. Hawke gets more play in the Expanded Universe. In fact, there's a novel dedicated mostly to him and an attempt by a Section 31 operative to recruit him. The novel also reveals that he's gay, not that it makes a difference to any other character. Hawke's partner calls Picard out on letting Hawke die. When Picard points out that Hawke was already assimilated, the guy points out that so was Picard. Assimilated people can be restored. Hawke didn't even get a chance to do that. |
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Red Shirt / int_61c6b600 | featureApplicability |
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Star Trek: First Contact | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_61c6b600 | |
Red Shirt / int_61f1473 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_61f1473 | comment |
On Smosh, in this video. | |
Red Shirt / int_61f1473 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_61f1473 | featureConfidence |
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Smosh (Web Video) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_61f1473 | |
Red Shirt / int_62570927 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_62570927 | comment |
Marvel Universe: In a Taskmaster mini-series, the main villain is a former mook turned leader who actually calls himself Red Shirt. He's the only one that doesn't get the joke. He also doesn't get why it's funny that he calls his organization the Minions International Liberation Front. Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. who are not major characters could just as easily be called Blue Shirts with the number of times SHIELD agents are killed en masse. The same goes for former Marvel supervillain prison, The Vault which was not only a Cardboard Prison but was staffed by an army of men wearing armor based on Iron Man suits called The Guardsmen. Every time there was a breakout, several of them would be killed. In fact, Venom once killed a group of Guardsmen during one of his many escapes and the guards' friends and family became an armored Super Team intent on killing him. |
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Red Shirt / int_62570927 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_62570927 | featureConfidence |
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Marvel Universe (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_62570927 | |
Red Shirt / int_67f5ac91 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_67f5ac91 | comment |
Hunter's Hellcats would occasionally feature additional, previously unseen, members of the squad who would die during the opening scenes to show how dangerous the current mission was. | |
Red Shirt / int_67f5ac91 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_67f5ac91 | featureConfidence |
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Hunter's Hellcats (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_67f5ac91 | |
Red Shirt / int_68ea0c85 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_68ea0c85 | comment |
In Bakuman。, a non-fatal variant happens to certain manga series whose cancellation is announced whenever named characters get serialized, often with titles that would make one wonder whether anyone would want to read them. Arai, a minor character, is a recurring producer of "Red Shirt" series, although the fact that his series "Cheese Crackers" got canceled fairly soon after serialization in spite of Miura's confidence in it makes the main characters wonder if they're really safe. | |
Red Shirt / int_68ea0c85 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_68ea0c85 | featureConfidence |
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Bakuman。 (Manga) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_68ea0c85 | |
Red Shirt / int_69d15cc0 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_69d15cc0 | comment |
In the Marvel Cinematic Universe, we have S.H.I.E.L.D. agents. Pretty much anytime you see one that's not a named character from the comics (Nick Fury, Black Widow, Hawkeye, etc.), there's a good chance they're about to go bye-bye. Even as far back as Iron Man, we had S.H.I.E.L.D. agents getting squished and battered to death by Stane. This is actually a plot point. In The Avengers, Fury specifically says he created the team because S.H.I.E.L.D. was "Hopeless, hilariously" outgunned by the new wave of superhuman threats. Played with in Iron Man 2: Right after Justin Hammer leaves Ivan Vanko alone with the two burly security guards, it becomes immediately obvious that they're not going to last very long. It's such a foregone conclusion that the film doesn't even bother showing their deaths—the next time we see Vanko, he's alone at his hacking workstation and the officers are nowhere to be seen. It's only when Natasha and the chauffeur arrive at the Hammer headquarters and enter the room itself that we see the two guards hung from the ceiling, just to confirm what happened to them. |
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Red Shirt / int_69d15cc0 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_69d15cc0 | featureConfidence |
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Marvel Cinematic Universe (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_69d15cc0 | |
Red Shirt / int_6ac55ec7 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_6ac55ec7 | comment |
Dungeons & Dragons, Dungeon magazine #49 adventure "The Dark Place". The adventure recommends that the Dungeon Master have the gacholoth fiend kill off one of the NPC crewmen to demonstrate to the PCs how dangerous it is. | |
Red Shirt / int_6ac55ec7 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_6ac55ec7 | featureConfidence |
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Dungeons & Dragons (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_6ac55ec7 | |
Red Shirt / int_6ae1d164 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_6ae1d164 | comment |
Their outfits never get described, but in Galaxy of Fear: Army of Terror the Millennium Falcon lands on Kiva carrying its usual famous crew and a number of Rebel grunts. They join the Arrandas and company, who have found a baby, and decide to help them evacuate. Guess what happens. The baby is actually a monster; he doesn't strike when either of the Arrandas or Luke Skywalker are holding him, but when a random Rebel has him and is out of view for even a moment... Not all of them die, but all the ones whose names are mentioned. | |
Red Shirt / int_6ae1d164 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_6ae1d164 | featureConfidence |
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Galaxy of Fear | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_6ae1d164 | |
Red Shirt / int_6c2c4bf3 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_6c2c4bf3 | comment |
X-Men Film Series: X-Men: The Last Stand: Most of the mutants in Magneto's army and the human soldiers deployed to Alcatraz Island were quickly obliterated by the Phoenix. X-Men: Days of Future Past: Warpath, Blink, Bishop, Sunspot and Colossus are glorified extras whose main purpose in the story is to serve as cannon fodder for the 2023-era Sentinels. |
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Red Shirt / int_6c2c4bf3 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_6c2c4bf3 | featureConfidence |
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X-Men Film Series | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_6c2c4bf3 | |
Red Shirt / int_6d15fa61 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_6d15fa61 | comment |
A Nodwick parody of the classic Dungeons & Dragons module "Queen of the Demonweb Pits" has Lloth's giant spider-ship done as a parody of the Enterprise, complete with the demon crewmembers wearing Starfleet uniforms. Once the heroes get on board, they tell the demons who come to attack them to go ahead and surrender because "you've made the tactical error of wearing red shirts!" Cue the demons face palming and lamenting their decision to not go into medical or engineering. | |
Red Shirt / int_6d15fa61 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_6d15fa61 | featureConfidence |
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Nodwick (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_6d15fa61 | |
Red Shirt / int_71e91388 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_71e91388 | comment |
Utterly spindled, folded and mutilated by Night of the Living Trekkies, where the hero encounters a terrified man in a red shirt at a Star Trek convention attacked by the living dead. Turns out that "Ensign Willy Makit" has lost the rest of his group, several trekkies who claim to be from the U.S.S. Expendible... who died in ways completely unrelated to the zombies. (Willy didn't even know about them until the hero showed up.) It gets better: Willy's real name is Kenny Dyes, and he ultimately dies... in a way completely unrelated to the zombie attacks. | |
Red Shirt / int_71e91388 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_71e91388 | featureConfidence |
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Night of the Living Trekkies | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_71e91388 | |
Red Shirt / int_75149ccd | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_75149ccd | comment |
Stackpole's X-Wing Series novels tend to use this rather heavily. Any number of members of Rogue Squadron have few lines and no impact on the plot, and quickly get themselves killed in dogfights. Some of them stick around for a surprisingly long time, but they always get killed sooner or later; the characters will mourn and forget about it in about four pages. Notably in Isard's Revenge the only pilots who actually got killed were the ones who had been introduced specifically for that book. Novels by Aaron Allston in that same series avert this by use of Cast of Snowflakes and Mauve Shirt. Interestingly, the leader of Rogue Squadron, Wedge Antilles, is sometimes cited as an Anti Red Shirt — a minor supporting character with little backstory who survives multiple dangers. In the Star Wars Expanded Universe, where he's not minor, it doesn't apply, but in the movies, it does. The Rebel/Republic pilots all wear orange flight suits, not quite playing it straight, but not quite not. |
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Red Shirt / int_75149ccd | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_75149ccd | featureConfidence |
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X-Wing Series | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_75149ccd | |
Red Shirt / int_77582c7b | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_77582c7b | comment |
X-Men: Days of Future Past: Warpath, Blink, Bishop, Sunspot and Colossus are glorified extras whose main purpose in the story is to serve as cannon fodder for the 2023-era Sentinels. | |
Red Shirt / int_77582c7b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_77582c7b | featureConfidence |
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X-Men: Days of Future Past | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_77582c7b | |
Red Shirt / int_7832b74c | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_7832b74c | comment |
Steven Universe: Rubies are part of the Hive Caste System that the Gem Homeworld has for every type of Gem, and their role is common, disposable soldiers that can be shattered and replaced on a whim. They're even literally red (as are their shirts). | |
Red Shirt / int_7832b74c | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_7832b74c | featureConfidence |
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Steven Universe | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_7832b74c | |
Red Shirt / int_78d41a8b | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_78d41a8b | comment |
In Tress of the Emerald Sea, Hoid announces that he's going to call all the crew of the Crow's Song except the half-dozen or so with plot-relevant roles "Doug", to avoid the reader having to keep track of all their names. Surprisingly, only one Doug gets killed over the course of the story. | |
Red Shirt / int_78d41a8b | featureApplicability |
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Tress of the Emerald Sea | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_78d41a8b | |
Red Shirt / int_7a7a1a86 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_7a7a1a86 | comment |
A film that seriously plays with the concept is Aliens. Who can forget Hudson's "Four more weeks and out" tirade? The movie does kinda play it straight with Crowe and Wierzbowski; one line from Crowe (said when he's offscreen), and no lines from poor Ski except a scream. | |
Red Shirt / int_7a7a1a86 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_7a7a1a86 | featureConfidence |
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Aliens | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_7a7a1a86 | |
Red Shirt / int_7ab10627 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_7ab10627 | comment |
Star Trek: The Motion Picture: Two crew members die in a transporter accident, although they aren't wearing red shirts (in fact, no-one is - Starfleet's uniform designers were apparently going through a pastel phase). One of them is Commander Sonak, the successor to the then-retired Cdr. Spock as science officer, who had just been introduced moments earlier at Starfleet Command. His death cleared the way for Spock's return in the second act. The other transporter victim wasn't identified in the film, but the novelization identifies her as Vice Admiral Lori Ciana, Kirk's current girlfriend, who'd come to see Kirk off. Commander Branch and the crew of station Epsilon IX fell victim to V'Ger, after having earlier observed the Klingon encounter with the cloud. Branch was played by David Gautreaux, who was originally signed on to play the Vulcan Lt. Xon in the aborted Star Trek: Phase II series. Sonak was created to die in Xon's place as the concept of Xon (an emotionless alien looking to understand human feelings) seemed too good to waste (the concept was eventually evolved into Data). |
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Red Shirt / int_7ab10627 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_7ab10627 | featureConfidence |
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Star Trek: The Motion Picture | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_7ab10627 | |
Red Shirt / int_7c6649d2 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_7c6649d2 | comment |
Walter from The Host (2008). Up until his death throes, the only real characterization he has is "Supports Wanderer." When his death scene rolls around, it just serves to illustrate how caring and sensitive Wanderer is. | |
Red Shirt / int_7c6649d2 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_7c6649d2 | featureConfidence |
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The Host (2008) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_7c6649d2 | |
Red Shirt / int_7cea4fb2 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_7cea4fb2 | comment |
Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019): In the movie, backgrounded G-Team member Master Sergeant Hendricks is there solely to establish the mentality of Ghidorah when Hendricks and several soldiers hail Ghidorah with gunfire to no effect, which prompts the three-headed monster to use his Breath Weapon to gleefully blast Hendricks and his compatriots into oblivion with a slasher smile; and also to establish that people are gonna die to Ghidorah and his Titan army, in what has remained the MonsterVerse's most apocalyptic and high-stakes movie so far as of 2023. | |
Red Shirt / int_7cea4fb2 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_7cea4fb2 | featureConfidence |
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Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_7cea4fb2 | |
Red Shirt / int_7f87dafc | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_7f87dafc | comment |
In Mobile Suit Gundam SEED, Athrun Zala's buddy Rusty Mackenzie (who never shows his face or has any dialogue) is killed in the first episode trying to steal the Strike Gundam. He's wearing red, which ironically is supposed to be the uniform of ZAFT's elite. Nicol Amalfi gets the same treatment. So does Heine Westenfluss from SEED Destiny. The Orb Union has the MBF-M1 Astray, a Mobile Suit notable for its Gundam-like appearance as they carry the same robotic eyes and V-Crest. It is also noted for its white and red coloration, and the fact that they are in no way as powerful as the GAT-X or ZGMF-X series Gundams that can easily take them out. They are later succeeded in Destiny by the MVF-M11C Murasame, which can transform into a fighter mode. Better specs, but still easily destroyed by the dozens. Subverted with the Alliance side; the GAT-01 Strike Dagger serves much the same purpose as the RGM-79 GM in the original (and also closely resembles the older mobile suit), but as the main cast goes against the Alliance as well as ZAFT, the Strike Daggers are better classified as Mooks. |
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Red Shirt / int_7f87dafc | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_7f87dafc | featureConfidence |
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Mobile Suit Gundam SEED | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_7f87dafc | |
Red Shirt / int_7fc78282 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_7fc78282 | comment |
The French Web writer ASP Explorer, in the 9th story in his work Les Fantastiques Aventures de Morgoth l'Empaleur (not related to this Morgoth), plays with this hilariously: the adventuring party meet in jail a young and idealistic 1st-level mage called Tiberius K. Redshirt. He wishes to accompany them when they escape, and shortly later we learn that his middle name is Kenny. One of the main characters explains stealthily to the hero that nobody else expect him to last alive very long, because he doesn't have the thing, whatever it is, that make an adventurer. He open doors, he pull levers, he press switches and not only lives through the dungeon, which ironically is not the case of the character who distrusted him, though it is unrelated, but gains enough XP to become 8th-level innkeeper when he quits adventuring. He then lives a long and peaceful life until the age of ninety-three years, when he dies by falling from a staircase. And his death is later retconned away when he gains another bunch of levels and more-or-less ascends to godhood. The Double Subversion comes a few in-story years later with Morgoth's space program: The ship gets a lot of soldiers "named in homage to a friend of the Emperor's", and those die in troves without anybody caring. |
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Red Shirt / int_7fc78282 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_7fc78282 | featureConfidence |
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The Lord of the Rings | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_7fc78282 | |
Red Shirt / int_7fd403f8 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_7fd403f8 | comment |
This trope was parodied very effectively in Galaxy Quest in the character of Guy Fleegman, "Crewman Number Six" — who is the only cast member NOT shot or killed during the climactic final battle! (Although a bit of time travel makes everyone else better). Lampshade Hanging at its finest (also see Plucky Comic Relief). In the end, he gets a major role in the new Galaxy Quest series, in a reference to the fact that Star Trek: The Next Generation featured a Security officer as a main character throughout its entire run and in general saw far fewer redshirt deaths. Just to ensure his survival however, Guy's new character has an awesomely non-generic name. | |
Red Shirt / int_7fd403f8 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_7fd403f8 | featureConfidence |
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Galaxy Quest | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_7fd403f8 | |
Red Shirt / int_81692f99 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_81692f99 | comment |
The Redshirt gets his revenge in a Star Trek sketch. When the crew teleported down to a planet to survive the Enterprise exploding, the crew reasons that to survive one of them must be sacrificed as food. Obviously they choose the Red Shirt first, but the Redshirt tells them off by saying "On behalf of all the redshirts that fell before me, it makes me very very proud to speak the following sentence... I'm the only one who brought a gun." He proceeds to kill and eat them all. | |
Red Shirt / int_81692f99 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_81692f99 | featureConfidence |
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Star Trek (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_81692f99 | |
Red Shirt / int_81706932 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_81706932 | comment |
A discreet spoof in The Running Man: Two contestants wore yellow jumpsuits while two wore red. Guess who died? | |
Red Shirt / int_81706932 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_81706932 | featureConfidence |
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The Running Man | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_81706932 | |
Red Shirt / int_82ff90e9 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_82ff90e9 | comment |
All Quiet on the Western Front spends some time justifying this. The training received by German soldiers at the time didn't even remotely prepare them for combat, and a hefty percentage of the New Meat died horribly through not knowing something a veteran would know. A few survived by blind luck, learned what would kill them through seeing what killed everyone else, and became the Fire-Forged Friends the story centers around. They're not very effective at communicating their newfound survival strategies, so the waves of New Meat that supplement their ranks continue to get mowed down (and continue to get replaced.) | |
Red Shirt / int_82ff90e9 | featureApplicability |
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All Quiet on the Western Front | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_82ff90e9 | |
Red Shirt / int_83c239c | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_83c239c | comment |
Pretty much any GL Corps member seen in Green Lantern: The Animated Series that doesn't come from the comics. For instance, the pilot introduces us to a GL named M'ten, just to have him violently killed off in order to establish the Red Lanterns as a threat. | |
Red Shirt / int_83c239c | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_83c239c | featureConfidence |
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Green Lantern: The Animated Series | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_83c239c | |
Red Shirt / int_84823809 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_84823809 | comment |
Kaeloo: If you're one of the talking flowers, there's a ninety-nine percent chance you won't survive till the end of the episode. | |
Red Shirt / int_84823809 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_84823809 | featureConfidence |
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Kaeloo | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_84823809 | |
Red Shirt / int_85776bf3 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_85776bf3 | comment |
The Pony POV Series parodies this trope in the Shining Armor Arc, with the Hooviet Commisars, none of whom go past a single scene without dying. It's suggested in-universe that Makarov, Genre Savvy Large Ham that he is, is using his abilities to deliberately invoke this trope for the sake of telling a better story. | |
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Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_86312631 | comment |
The Tough Guide to Fantasyland: Type 1 Caravan Guards, who exist to get killed by bandits. Though they do have names and even personalities, it's said the protagonists shouldn't bother to learn them because of this. The Serious Soldier, who lacks personality and whose role in the story consists mainly of helping out in the fight scenes and inevitably dying at a dramatically appropriate moment. |
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Red Shirt | |
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Champions. In the "Legions of Hell" adventure from one of the old Adventurers' Club newsletters, the heroes are tasked by a witch to journey to Hell itself and rescue her daughter, and are accompanied by some NPC villains to help out. In reality, the villains are there to be periodically picked off to remind the players they're in a very unfriendly place. | |
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Red Shirt / int_87cf8985 | |
Red Shirt / int_88a89745 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_88a89745 | comment |
Subverted in Smokin' Aces. Though many nameless cops bite it in the various shootouts, our hero is so distressed by the mass carnage that it sends him into a Heroic BSoD. He laments "So many people are dead!" even as his superiors try to get him to callously brush it off and do his job. | |
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Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_8ac4e993 | comment |
Gundam: In Mobile Suit Gundam, the mass-produced federation mooks were called RGM-79 GMs, which exploded by the dozens any time they were shown in a fight. Their standard armor was colored like a red T-shirt◊. Joining them was the Type 61 Main Battle Tank, which existed a rung lower to be roughed up by the opposing side's own mooks, but also got their own share of victories to keep Zion's Zaku IIs from seeming too threatening. In Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket, this extends to the GM Command Spacetype, which has a red torso and a tendency to die a lot. Similarly, Scarlet Team is described as a rapid response team and consists of a pair each of GM Command, GM Sniper II, and Guncannon-MP mobile suits, the latter of which are predominantly red; they are all unceremoniously killed off in their only scene by the lone MS-18E Kampfer. In Mobile Suit Gundam SEED, Athrun Zala's buddy Rusty Mackenzie (who never shows his face or has any dialogue) is killed in the first episode trying to steal the Strike Gundam. He's wearing red, which ironically is supposed to be the uniform of ZAFT's elite. Nicol Amalfi gets the same treatment. So does Heine Westenfluss from SEED Destiny. The Orb Union has the MBF-M1 Astray, a Mobile Suit notable for its Gundam-like appearance as they carry the same robotic eyes and V-Crest. It is also noted for its white and red coloration, and the fact that they are in no way as powerful as the GAT-X or ZGMF-X series Gundams that can easily take them out. They are later succeeded in Destiny by the MVF-M11C Murasame, which can transform into a fighter mode. Better specs, but still easily destroyed by the dozens. Subverted with the Alliance side; the GAT-01 Strike Dagger serves much the same purpose as the RGM-79 GM in the original (and also closely resembles the older mobile suit), but as the main cast goes against the Alliance as well as ZAFT, the Strike Daggers are better classified as Mooks. |
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Red Shirt / int_8ba4613a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_8ba4613a | comment |
Oh, Matt of Death Note. 10 panels. He gets gunned down. Notable in a manga where Anyone Can Die because he wears a red striped shirt in the anime, and often gets fan-colored with red hair. | |
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Red Shirt / int_8fd3db0b | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_8fd3db0b | comment |
Surprisingly enough, this is one aspect of the franchise that does not get played straight and is barely parodied by Star Trek: Lower Decks. The only member of Cerritos crew who is killed during the first season is Lieutenant Shaxs, Cerritos security chief and a fairly significant character.note Excluding everyone killed during Mariner's holodeck fantasy. And this despite the show not wasting time in having a transporter or holodeck malfunction episode. And he comes Back from the Dead in season 2, although we're never told how — with good reason, apparently. Hilariously, Boimler does die three times and is revived in the series', as of this writing, four seasons — he drowns at the end of Season 2, suffers from heat stroke and dehydration in Season 3, and is blown up in Season 4. He comes back after each incident, his status as a Butt-Monkey being the only reason. | |
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Red Shirt / int_90a3a7f4 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_90a3a7f4 | comment |
Kim Possible: Parodied in the Trapped in TV Land episode called "Dimension Twist", when Kim is temporarily sent to a Star Trek-esque TV show and appears in a red uniform: And parodied again in another episode with a cheese tour guide wearing a red dress and a logo that resembles Starfleet's. She is last seen swept away in molten cheddar, no sign of Kim rescuing her or anything. Also, Drakken's rank-and-file henchmen wear red uniforms. They don't get killed because it's not that kind of show, but they are generally easily defeated by Kim. |
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Kim Possible | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_90b9ae74 | comment |
Foot soldiers in Farce of the Three Kingdoms are usually referred to as "redshirts." Their survival rate is... poor. | |
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Red Shirt / int_90e2f673 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_90e2f673 | comment |
For a long time in the BattleTech universe, anyone who was in the military but wasn't a Mechwarrior or Aerospace pilot was regarded as this trope, with the exception of a few factions that were noted for having high regard for ground armor or infantry. This has become less prevalent in later time settings as combined arms has become more and more popular (in universe) though there are still a few factions that are noted as considering infantry units as little more than cannon fodder. | |
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Red Shirt / int_916f4758 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_916f4758 | comment |
Yeoman, a short story by Charles Yu, parodies/deconstructs the trope. Everyone on the ship knows that the Yeoman is going to die, because they do every week. It's literally in the job description: "Yeoman, Second class: be prepared to die for no good reason". So the ship gives our protagonist a mental health counselor (if not a very good one), and he has a candid talk with his pregnant wife about what to do with the life insurance money. At the same time, the poor doomed soul can't help but feel excited he's finally going down with a landing crew. In the end, he survives, but only because his wife was not going to stand by and let it happen like everybody else (including the Yeoman). | |
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How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt / int_91ba5165 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_91ba5165 | comment |
Late in The Fold our heroes call for military backup. They get sixteen Marines, all of whom are dead after the next fight. | |
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The Fold | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt / int_93489ff | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_93489ff | comment |
Dungeon Crawler Carl: Lampshaded by Tran, when he's being recruited for a highly dangerous trip into the ocean full of monsters. Tran actually survives, while Vadim doesn't. | |
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Dungeon Crawler Carl | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt / int_959dd815 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_959dd815 | comment |
A related concept in Professional Wrestling is the Jobber, who exists as a disposable wrestler that a promotion can use to help establish a new wrestler. These are often used when creating an indestructible Wrestling Monster, who proceeds to beat up the Jobber very badly. A promotion will often hire a local independent wrestler for a one-time appearance to fill this role, so they are often never seen again in the promotion afterwards. | |
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Professional Wrestling | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt / int_9614fa1e | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_9614fa1e | comment |
During the opening of Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indy is accompanied by two random native guides. They don't make it. | |
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Raiders of the Lost Ark | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt / int_963d9065 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_963d9065 | comment |
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. who are not major characters could just as easily be called Blue Shirts with the number of times SHIELD agents are killed en masse. | |
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Red Shirt / int_971e8e24 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_971e8e24 | comment |
In RedLetterMedia's review of First Contract, one of the goldshirts (an anonymous extra in the background) pipes up and protests the suicidal nature of his mission. SFDebris theorizes the goldshirts are so incompetent because they're all algae scientists or astronomers, unwittingly enlisted into combat once Starfleet re-militarizes during TNG. They're trained to measure soil toxicity, not kick-box with Borg. |
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Red Shirt / int_988629da | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_988629da | comment |
Starting in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, for the rest of the original cast movies every Starfleet officer wears completely or predominantly red uniforms (with trainees and cadets wearing red turtlenecks), so maybe it wasn't surprising that Spock would die in the end. | |
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Red Shirt / int_9a7088bc | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_9a7088bc | comment |
Parodied in "Where No Fan Has Gone Before", in which the entire Star Trek: The Original Series cast is threatened by a jealous energy being, but only Welshy (a parody of a Suspiciously Similar Substitute for Scotty), who's dressed in the classic red shirt, gets killed. Three times over. | |
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Star Trek: The Original Series | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt / int_9bb5aad4 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_9bb5aad4 | comment |
All of Duel Academia in Yu-Gi-Oh! GX, save the main characters, especially in Season 3. | |
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Yu-Gi-Oh! GX | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_9bb5aad4 | |
Red Shirt / int_9c652ce5 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_9c652ce5 | comment |
Dragon Ball Multiverse: The poor vargas who woke up Broly. And things don't seem to be going any better for the ones who tried to send Buu back to Universe 4. | |
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Red Shirt / int_9cc59f9c | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_9cc59f9c | comment |
Phil Foglio's Buck Godot: Zap Gun for Hire series has the evil "X-Tel" corporation, whose security forces' uniform consists of grey shirts... and red PANTS. | |
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Red Shirt / int_9dd6b935 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_9dd6b935 | comment |
Played deliberately straight by the crew of the Enterprise in the Star Trek DeviantArt web comic, Ensign Sue Must Die. The crew quickly find out that Ensign Mary Sue is EXTREMELY annoying. Virtually all attempts to get rid of her fail. Including shooting her! She's spent the past few years building up an immunity to phaser blasts. So the crew turn to the one guaranteed way of killing off a crew member. They give her a promotion which changes her shirt colour from blue to red. They waste no time and go on an away mission, where she is killed almost immediately. | |
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DeviantArt (Website) | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt / int_9f0dae2a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_9f0dae2a | comment |
In The Cold Moons, named badgers are unlikely to be randomly killed off. Most badgers either die nameless or are only first mentioned after their death. | |
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The Cold Moons | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt / int_9f567c12 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_9f567c12 | comment |
Most of the guards in COPS: Skyrim. Especially when facing things like dragons, trolls, or giants. | |
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Red Shirt / int_9f833a1e | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_9f833a1e | comment |
The character of Parker only exists to spout exposition about the branch of Lobotomy Corporation the story takes place in. After that, they are killed to demonstrate Dingle Dangle's powers and Catt's badassery. | |
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Red Shirt / int_9f833a1e | |
Red Shirt / int_a183d57f | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_a183d57f | comment |
Futurama: Parodied in "Where No Fan Has Gone Before", in which the entire Star Trek: The Original Series cast is threatened by a jealous energy being, but only Welshy (a parody of a Suspiciously Similar Substitute for Scotty), who's dressed in the classic red shirt, gets killed. Three times over. In the same episode, a flashback of the so-called Star Trek Wars is shown where some officials are throwing redshirted Star Trek devotees into a volcano while chanting "He's dead Jim." Additionally, Zapp Brannigan's entire brigade all wear red which accurately shows how he often sacrifices them freely and considers all missions suicide missions. Parodied again in "Murder on the Planet Express," where the regular crew and Scruffy the Janitor's heretofore-unseen apprentice, Jackie Jr., go on a team-building retreat that turns deadly. Subverted in that the entire situation was staged and everyone "eaten" by the monster is alive and well. |
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Futurama | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_a3362850 | comment |
In one issue of Toyfare's Twisted Toyfare Theatre, Kirk returns from a mission in which "only a dozen redshirts died," to find himself in the Mirror Universe, where the meek and pragmatic Mirror Kirk is protected by the immortal Redshirts. TTT loves playing with these. There are usually Redshirts around to die in stories featuring Captain Kirk, and the title page of one of the trade paperbacks shows Kirk and Spock standing amidst a sea of Redshirts while Spock looks around uneasily. | |
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Red Shirt / int_a3362850 | |
Red Shirt / int_a4420d22 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_a4420d22 | comment |
Lampshaded endlessly in an episode of The Venture Bros., where Mauve Shirt Henchmen #21 and #24 repeatedly taunt the previously unseen Henchman #1 for his red shirt status. By the end of the episode, #1 is seemingly beaten to death by Brock Samson, as the Genre Savvy #21 and #24 miraculously escape harm. He's shown to have survived, and tries to make it as a villain on his own under the name Zero, but fails to escape his red shirt status as his neck is snapped by Brock on Gargantua-2 three seasons after their previous encounter. | |
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The Venture Bros. | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_a4420d22 | |
Red Shirt / int_a465e6bd | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_a465e6bd | comment |
Jujutsu Kaisen: Junpei Yoshino only appears during a single story arc, and dies after being transformed by Mahito. | |
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Red Shirt / int_a465e6bd | |
Red Shirt / int_a4a6b86a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_a4a6b86a | comment |
Code Geass: The Burai Knightmare Frames are Japanese custom versions of the old 4th Generation Glasgow models that originally served the Holy Britannian Empire before being decommissioned. Through much of Season 1, the Burai are the standard troop Knightmare of the Order of the Black Knights, being incredibly expendable in combat. Many scenes depict them either getting skewered by the pike of Princess Cornelia li Britannia and her modified Gloucester, or being completely annihilated by Suzaku Kururugi and his Lancelot. Early on, Lelouch vi Britannia pilots a Burai of his own with a distinctive headpiece to show that he is fighting on the battlefield with his troops, as per his philosophy... Interestingly, one of the Britannian Red Shirts (or should that be Mooks?) served as a Plot Point. One of them happened to be Shirley's father, who was killed by Lelouch, Shirley's crush, in a landslide in the battle of Narita. It starts Shirley's cutie-breaking which progresses throughout the series. As the series goes on, the Burai are more or less replaced by the faster, more powerful Gekka Knightmares that are modeled after Kallen Kozuki's Guren. In R2, the mass-produced 7th Generation Akatsuki later serves as the main rank-and-file for the Black Knights, being the next-generation version of the Gekka that can equip Air Glide Systems and fly. |
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Code Geass | hasFeature |
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Red Shirt / int_a57cf54d | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_a57cf54d | comment |
The clone troopers in Darths & Droids. Amusingly, in some cases they're eager to die. | |
Red Shirt / int_a57cf54d | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_a57cf54d | featureConfidence |
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Darths & Droids (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_a57cf54d | |
Red Shirt / int_a80d5041 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_a80d5041 | comment |
Alien vs. Predator: Several notable members of the expedition into the ancient pyramid become this once they get locked inside the sacrificial chamber with Facehugger eggs and are impregnated with Chest Bursters, dying to remind the audience of how the Xenomorphs reproduce and the threat they pose. It's even somewhat lampshaded by Adele, one of the named Red Shirts, having a red shirt which the Chestburster explodes out of. | |
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Alien vs. Predator | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_a80d5041 | |
Red Shirt / int_a81bac45 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_a81bac45 | comment |
On the way to a battle with the forces of Marmo in Record of Lodoss War, protagonist Parn chats up a fellow soldier who is very optimistic about the whole thing. Naturally, as soon as the battle is over and the heroes lament the losses, they find the soldier's body. It was his fault — he really shouldn't have shown Parn that good-luck charm his child made for him. | |
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Record of Lodoss War | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_a81bac45 | |
Red Shirt / int_a9ebc166 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_a9ebc166 | comment |
Officers Gets killed and Oneshot in Girly. Amusingly, neither of them die, and Getskilled goes on to become a minor part of the ensemble until at last he meets his eventual fate. It's pretty cool. Oneshot, on the other hand, just never shows up again after not dying. | |
Red Shirt / int_a9ebc166 | featureApplicability |
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Girly (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_a9ebc166 | |
Red Shirt / int_ac259af8 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_ac259af8 | comment |
In Saki, there are often many opponents who are shown just after being defeated by the main characters or their rivals. Interestingly enough, Kyoutaro, when entering the males' individual tournament, goes up against some characters who would seem to be this type, and loses. | |
Red Shirt / int_ac259af8 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_ac259af8 | featureConfidence |
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Saki (Manga) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_ac259af8 | |
Red Shirt / int_b0b9e343 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_b0b9e343 | comment |
In a Taskmaster mini-series, the main villain is a former mook turned leader who actually calls himself Red Shirt. He's the only one that doesn't get the joke. He also doesn't get why it's funny that he calls his organization the Minions International Liberation Front. | |
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Taskmaster | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_b0b9e343 | |
Red Shirt / int_b0e228be | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_b0e228be | comment |
Providence soldiers in Generator Rex. Not only are they merely cannon fodder, they're also completely useless when battling against actual EVOs, presumably so Rex can come and save the day. It gets horribly ironic in the episode "Basic", when Rex and Noah take up Providence's basic training - the trainees are expected to take down one of the strongest EVOs in the series (one that not even Rex was able to defeat, even with his powers). Each of them, alone. With just a gun. It's not so much Training from Hell as it is a ridiculous joke. Naturally this rule doesn't apply to any Providence Soldier who's seen Without A Helmet, they're all Mauve Shirts and generally fair pretty well, though the rules of Family-Friendly Firearms seem to dictate that they can never accomplish anything meaningful with their rifle-err, "Blasters". "Basic" did provide some justification, however. The purpose of the grunts being more to distract the EVOs and keep them away from civilians while stalling them long enough for Rex or another main character to actually take said EVOs down. Granted they tend to take insane casualties, with a few exceptions, such as "Leader of the Pack" (where the redshirts respond to an ineffective Five Rounds Rapid against a giant worm by calling in a gunship and ripping the EVO apart) and most notably "The Forgotten" in which a team of redshirts (and a Mauve Shirt) survive being trapped inside a city of hostile EVOS. |
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Red Shirt / int_b0e228be | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_b0e228be | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Generator Rex | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_b0e228be | |
Red Shirt / int_b3690647 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_b3690647 | comment |
X-Men: The Last Stand: Most of the mutants in Magneto's army and the human soldiers deployed to Alcatraz Island were quickly obliterated by the Phoenix. | |
Red Shirt / int_b3690647 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_b3690647 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
X-Men: The Last Stand | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_b3690647 | |
Red Shirt / int_b3f687d1 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_b3f687d1 | comment |
Parodied in a FoxTrot strip: | |
Red Shirt / int_b3f687d1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_b3f687d1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
FoxTrot (Comic Strip) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_b3f687d1 | |
Red Shirt / int_b4878401 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_b4878401 | comment |
TNA used the fire dancers who performed in Samoa Joe's entrances whenever they were unfortunate enough to or brave enough to try and help him during wrestling matches or when fights broke out. None of them died, though, just got anticlimactically beaten up and thrown aside. | |
Red Shirt / int_b4878401 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_b4878401 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (Wrestling) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_b4878401 | |
Red Shirt / int_b5436177 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_b5436177 | comment |
The Codeless Code has the abbots. If they mismanage a project, they probably won't survive to the end of the story. Lampshaded in Case 125, where the head abbot is looking for replacements. A footnote notes that "abbots of the Spider Clan have life expectancy of a dolphin in the Gobi desert." | |
Red Shirt / int_b5436177 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_b5436177 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Codeless Code | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_b5436177 | |
Red Shirt / int_b5a087d7 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_b5a087d7 | comment |
Robot Chicken: The Redshirt gets his revenge in a Star Trek sketch. When the crew teleported down to a planet to survive the Enterprise exploding, the crew reasons that to survive one of them must be sacrificed as food. Obviously they choose the Red Shirt first, but the Redshirt tells them off by saying "On behalf of all the redshirts that fell before me, it makes me very very proud to speak the following sentence... I'm the only one who brought a gun." He proceeds to kill and eat them all. Of course, they also played it straight in another sketch. |
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Red Shirt / int_b5a087d7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_b5a087d7 | featureConfidence |
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Robot Chicken | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_b5a087d7 | |
Red Shirt / int_b6886bfd | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_b6886bfd | comment |
The sequel, Star Trek Into Darkness has Chekov moved to the position of chief engineer of the Enterprise due to Scotty's resignation prior to their mission. The look on his face and dramatic music when Kirk tells him to put on a red shirt is a priceless example of Leaning on the Fourth Wall. He doesn't die, but still. In fact, this trope was defied in this film, when Kirk ordered two nameless crewmen to take off their red shirts and change into casual gear for their mission to apprehend John Harrison on Qo'noS. Both survived an ensuing firefight with Klingons and successfully apprehended Harrison. Sadly, Anton Yelchin, the actor who played Chekov in the reboot films, died in a car crash a month before the release of Star Trek Beyond. | |
Red Shirt / int_b6886bfd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_b6886bfd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Trek Into Darkness | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_b6886bfd | |
Red Shirt / int_b9be76b0 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_b9be76b0 | comment |
In Congo, all of the African porters fit this trope. Also Richard. He wasn't even in the novel. | |
Red Shirt / int_b9be76b0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_b9be76b0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Congo | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_b9be76b0 | |
Red Shirt / int_baa0410d | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_baa0410d | comment |
The security guard that Payne stabs in the ear at the beginning of Speed exists only to show that Payne is a bad guy —as though bombing a packed elevator isn't enough— and he completely vanishes from the movie once he's killed. Fan Wank claims that Payne used the man's body to fake his own death, but this theory still requires that law enforcement and the poor guy's employers never even notice he went missing, making it as straight an example as can possibly be. | |
Red Shirt / int_baa0410d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_baa0410d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Speed | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_baa0410d | |
Red Shirt / int_bb7d6a95 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_bb7d6a95 | comment |
Duckman did a full-blown parody of Star Trek: The Original Series ("Where No Duckman Has Gone Before"), with the various characters playing Kirk's crew. Fittingly, the red shirts were Fluffy and Uranus. | |
Red Shirt / int_bb7d6a95 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_bb7d6a95 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Duckman | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_bb7d6a95 | |
Red Shirt / int_bc1dc95a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_bc1dc95a | comment |
There are literal redshirts in Pirates of the Caribbean. Except Those Two Guys, although by the sequel they're wearing Company uniforms, which are a different color. They actually survive to the end of the original trilogy and join the crew of the Black Pearl. It's not clear what happens to them after that, especially given the fate of the Pearl in On Stranger Tides. | |
Red Shirt / int_bc1dc95a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_bc1dc95a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Pirates of the Caribbean (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_bc1dc95a | |
Red Shirt / int_bc758ea9 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_bc758ea9 | comment |
Lampshaded in the Tiny Toon Adventures episode "Duck Trek". Plucky (as Captain Quirk), Hamton (as Mr. Spork), Furrball (as Dr. Furr), and three Red Shirts (Shirley the Loon, Sweetie Pie, and Saul Sheepdog) are on a planet covered in hair. | |
Red Shirt / int_bc758ea9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_bc758ea9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Tiny Toon Adventures | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_bc758ea9 | |
Red Shirt / int_bcadd7cb | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_bcadd7cb | comment |
Warhammer 40,000: Acolytes in the 3rd edition Inquisition codexes were essentially extra Wounds for your Inquisitor. Similarly Shield Drones for the Tau Commander exist purely to give him an extra body to take excessive wounds (a Shield Drone only has 1 wound, but it can have any number allocated to it, and any extras that it suffer will simply be discarded). You can tell that the Tau are an unusually nice faction because they use nonsapient robots as shields rather than living underlings like everyone else. Most Space Marine Devastator squads can only carry 4 heavy weapons, and come as a base squad of 5 with an upgrade that can boost their squad numbers to 10. While some have special rules attached to the extra members (and even if they don't, they have the same stats and loadout as a Tactical Marine, so they're hardly negligible), they are largely seen as padded wounds to protect the actual weapon gunners. This also applies to many of the other choices, such as taking a command squad/retinue for your commander, or the Scout Neophytes for the Space Marine Initiates, for Black Templars, or the three Guardsmen in the Imperial Guard six-man special weapon squad who aren't carrying special weapons. A in the Spin-Off Kill Team, where a squad of highly trained specialists go up against countless enemies, and they can purchase upgrades. The most useful: Red Shirt, a minor character who, according to the other Kill Team members, is probably going to get killed in a variety of gory ways. Can be averted in that if the Red Shirt survives, he becomes a member of the Team, and upgraded accordingly. In the Only War RPG each player character has an NPC comrade accompanying them. While comrades can help out with basic actions, their primary purpose is to flesh out the squad and die horribly. The Commissar's memetic execution ability (shooting a Guardsman for showing cowardice in front of the enemy, refusing to carry out a suicidal order, or commenting that their battle plan suck grox bal-*BLAM*) is used on any member of the squad, targeting Guardsmen without special weapons first, officers and specialists second, and himself never despite the undeniable boost in morale this would cause. |
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Red Shirt / int_bcadd7cb | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_bcadd7cb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Warhammer 40,000 (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_bcadd7cb | |
Red Shirt / int_bfef9cdb | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_bfef9cdb | comment |
Welcome to Night Vale has the constant deaths of the community station's lowly interns/staffers. Cecil will mention their "sacrifice" to the station's cause. There are also Intern t-shirts in the TopatoCo store. Guess what color they are. |
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Red Shirt / int_bfef9cdb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_bfef9cdb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Welcome to Night Vale (Podcast) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_bfef9cdb | |
Red Shirt / int_bff01809 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_bff01809 | comment |
Warhammer makes the trope a game mechanic: in any unit with a Hero or Lord-level character, when the unit takes wounds, the "Look Out, Sir!" rule allows you to sacrifice rank-and-file members of the unit if the named character would take a hit. This doesn't always apply; for example, Thorgrim Grudgebearer, king of the Dwarfs, is carried into battle on a Cool Chair (the Throne of Power, which the king is required by dwarfen law to protect at all times), but because he's so high above his men they can't get in the way of oncoming attacks, so he can't benefit from "Look Out, Sir!". | |
Red Shirt / int_bff01809 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_bff01809 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Warhammer (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_bff01809 | |
Red Shirt / int_c1c642f7 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_c1c642f7 | comment |
In the Guillermo del Toro Hellboy movies the random B.P.R.D. agents who accompany the big red guy on his missions all but define redshirt. | |
Red Shirt / int_c1c642f7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_c1c642f7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Hellboy (2004) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_c1c642f7 | |
Red Shirt / int_c211d8bf | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_c211d8bf | comment |
Star Trek Beyond goes above and beyond in its crew killing, due to only around forty crew members of the Enterprise survive the movie. The rest are either shot, electrocuted, blown up, drained of their life energy, disintegrated or simply jettisoned into space. Special mention goes to Ensign Syl, who gets maybe three lines of dialogue before handing over the MacGuffin to Krall to save Sulu, then is killed in her very next scene to establish what it does (disintegrate people). Crewman Herndoff (aka "Cupcake") has survived all three movies thus far by virtue of his filmed death scenes being removed from the movie for pacing. The immortal Redshirt? |
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Red Shirt / int_c211d8bf | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_c211d8bf | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Trek Beyond | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_c211d8bf | |
Red Shirt / int_c4282b71 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_c4282b71 | comment |
My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: The Princesses' Royal Guard has, to put it nicely, a disastrous track record in about anything. They never actually get killed (this is My Little Pony we're talking about, after all), but anything they can recover from is fair game. Arrest someone? They get zapped. Find a stolen bird? They get bluffed by the culprits. National Emergency? They're not even there. Guard the Archives? They unlock the doors for the intruders (though in this case, the intruder, being Celestia's personal student, had every right to be in there anyway). Monitor wedding preparations? They get infiltrated. Capital under attack? They get overrun without effort. Neighbouring state in peril? They play messenger. Seeing how they're Bodyguarding a Badass, one has to wonder what their purpose is beyond projecting authority. | |
Red Shirt / int_c4282b71 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_c4282b71 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_c4282b71 | |
Red Shirt / int_c72c2d06 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_c72c2d06 | comment |
It's also not hard to tell who is disposable in any given episode of Star Wars Rebels, if you pay attention to the character's headgear. Specifically, if you can see their eyes, they're safe for at least one episode, though the series does have a number of Mauve Shirt characters too. Obviously, there are Imperial Stormtroopers, TIE Pilots, and weapons technicians, who have always had full helmets anyway, but Imperial Officers who fall under this trope will have their hat pulled down far enough that it obscures their eyes. Even on the side of the Rebellion we see this, with Troopers in this series wearing a helmet that features orange-tinted goggles. Rebel pilots who aren't important also wear helmets similar to the ones used by A-Wing pilots in Return of the Jedi, but with an opaque orange visor. Interestingly, the season finale of Season 2 introduced a new Inquisitor, the Jedi Hunters that served as main antagonists for the first two seasons, called the Eighth Brother who wears a full-faced helmet. Guess who dies in his first appearance. This is also somewhat true of Mandalorian characters. If a Mandalorian is shown without their helmet at any point, they’re safe for at least one episode. Anyone else might as well be wearing wet tissue paper instead of Beskar. |
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Red Shirt / int_c72c2d06 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_c72c2d06 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Wars Rebels | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_c72c2d06 | |
Red Shirt / int_c8436b4a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_c8436b4a | comment |
Cheat Commandos parodies this with its Green Helmets. "We've got, like, fifty of them!" Taken further as Green Helmet action figures come in packs of three, and are advertised as being "extra melty". | |
Red Shirt / int_c8436b4a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_c8436b4a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Cheat Commandos (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_c8436b4a | |
Red Shirt / int_c9c6ddfe | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_c9c6ddfe | comment |
The Grave Robbers from Outer Space series of B-movie games has a character in at least two who is meant to represent some minor character who's killed early on in the movie to make the danger seem real. They're accordingly weak but their special ability is any attacks against your characters have to be directed at them before anyone else, acting as a kind of meat shield. | |
Red Shirt / int_c9c6ddfe | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_c9c6ddfe | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Grave Robbers from Outer Space (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_c9c6ddfe | |
Red Shirt / int_ca4949d1 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_ca4949d1 | comment |
Villains by Necessity: Kimi is introduced shortly before the first Test and dies attempting it, in order to hammer home to the party that the Tests are potentially lethal. | |
Red Shirt / int_ca4949d1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_ca4949d1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Villains by Necessity | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_ca4949d1 | |
Red Shirt / int_ca540ab0 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_ca540ab0 | comment |
Great Lakes Avengers: Mr. Immortal got a red shirt for his X-Mas present since he's a redshirt army all by himself. | |
Red Shirt / int_ca540ab0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_ca540ab0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Great Lakes Avengers (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_ca540ab0 | |
Red Shirt / int_caf4d4b4 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_caf4d4b4 | comment |
In G.I. Joe: Retaliation the ninja troops Snake Eyes and Jinx fight on the mountain cliffs are wearing red uniforms. True to this trope, many of them die by falling (having their grapple ropes cut, being pushed off by a small avalanche). | |
Red Shirt / int_caf4d4b4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_caf4d4b4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
G.I. Joe: Retaliation | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_caf4d4b4 | |
Red Shirt / int_cf7a39d0 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_cf7a39d0 | comment |
All Hands! is a major subversion, as every named character dies, while a large number of unnamed crewmen survive. | |
Red Shirt / int_cf7a39d0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_cf7a39d0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
All Hands | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_cf7a39d0 | |
Red Shirt / int_d00adba4 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_d00adba4 | comment |
In Super Minion, defied with Hellion's minions, especially unpowered ones. Everyone who goes on missions gets bulletproof clothing, and regular minions are generally expected to just surrender if confronted by a hero without boneheads or villains to protect them. Because of Fortress City's weird laws, it's almost impossible to make any charges stick against regular minions, and HH has very good lawyers who represent even regular minions. | |
Red Shirt / int_d00adba4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_d00adba4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Super Minion | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_d00adba4 | |
Red Shirt / int_d0dce607 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_d0dce607 | comment |
Cliffjumper in Bumblebee is a literal example, due to his red color. His only notable scene in the film is being killed at the hands of the movie's main villains, Shatter and Dropkick. | |
Red Shirt / int_d0dce607 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_d0dce607 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Bumblebee | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_d0dce607 | |
Red Shirt / int_d131c1e9 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_d131c1e9 | comment |
Averted in Star Trek: The Animated Series; where nobody on the Enterprise died in two seasons. In fact, nobody at all died (except in backstories of abandoned civilizations and such) except in "The Slaver Weapon", where three Kzinti are exploded onscreen by Self-Destructing Security. | |
Red Shirt / int_d131c1e9 | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_d131c1e9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Trek: The Animated Series | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_d131c1e9 | |
Red Shirt / int_d5f03f8d | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_d5f03f8d | comment |
Lampshaded in Worms Trek Rhapsody. One gets hit by a Klingon missile (Scotty's line "Hit by Klingon missiles, no!"), another gets fired out of a torpedo bay ("Photon torpedooooooos!"). | |
Red Shirt / int_d5f03f8d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_d5f03f8d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Worms (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_d5f03f8d | |
Red Shirt / int_d796465d | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_d796465d | comment |
The Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers: The whole mini-series is basically a Transformers story told from the viewpoint of a bunch of Red Shirt second stringers. In fact a large part of the characters' portrayals are built around the fact that this trope applies. Pyro fears that he'll die a meaningless death so he's spent most of his life trying to plan the perfect death. Ironfist is basically in complete denial about his role as a Red Shirt until later in the story where he seems to almost quietly accept his perceived unavoidable death. It helps to mention the writers openly referenced the story as "Last Stand of the Wreckers is a story about redshirts." on one of the opening pages of the Hardback copy. | |
Red Shirt / int_d796465d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_d796465d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_d796465d | |
Red Shirt / int_d7e4b70e | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_d7e4b70e | comment |
Gantz: Every single time the group is sent on a mission, at least 75% of them are Red Shirts. | |
Red Shirt / int_d7e4b70e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_d7e4b70e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Gantz (Manga) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_d7e4b70e | |
Red Shirt / int_d908efc | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_d908efc | comment |
In Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba, the lower ranked Slayers are easily disposable and they die frequently, the setting doesn’t even bother stating an exact count of how many active Demon Slayers exists within the Corps, only the elite, the Hashira, are accounted for to be nine members at most when the roster is complete, because even the elite aren’t immune to dying, they just don’t die frequently. One notable example of this is a random, cocky demon slayer boasting that he can kill Rui, a Twelve Kizuki demon, without breaking a sweat due to his size. He is instantly proven wrong when Rui slices him up with his signature move. |
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Red Shirt / int_d908efc | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_d908efc | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba (Manga) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_d908efc | |
Red Shirt / int_d9c602eb | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_d9c602eb | comment |
Perfectly parodied in the South Park episode "City on the Edge of Forever". The school bus is trapped teetering on the edge of a cliff and the bus driver leaves to find help, ordering the kids to remain on the bus or else a big black monster will eat them. After a long time of waiting, the children grow nervous and antsy. One of the kids — a child wearing an actual Star Trek Redshirt outfit — can't take the waiting and leaves the bus to find help. No black monster appears and the kid even waves back to the other kids, causing remarks from the main characters about how the bus driver must have lied... only for the big black monster to immediately appear and eat the red-shirted kid. | |
Red Shirt / int_d9c602eb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_d9c602eb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
South Park | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_d9c602eb | |
Red Shirt / int_db30cf92 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_db30cf92 | comment |
Even though the Warrior Cats series has a strict Anyone Can Die policy (and how), the seldom seen Tribe of Rushing Water is made up of about 75% Red Shirts, who get killed off in bunches pretty much anytime the Tribe is featured in a book. | |
Red Shirt / int_db30cf92 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_db30cf92 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Warrior Cats | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_db30cf92 | |
Red Shirt / int_de528f6e | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_de528f6e | comment |
Finding creative ways to kill off redshirts was part of the fun for some of the writers of the League of Intergalactic Cosmic Champions (other writers thought they were sick). | |
Red Shirt / int_de528f6e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_de528f6e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
League of Intergalactic Cosmic Champions (Roleplay) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_de528f6e | |
Red Shirt / int_dfc07782 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_dfc07782 | comment |
Parodied and averted with Red Five in Transformers: Cyberverse. He has the same design as the generic Autobot soldier, but with a bright red paint job. He's introduced suddenly in "Escape From Earth" with no build up and his starfighter is destroyed shortly after the mission begins. As the mission continues, named character's fighters are destroyed and it's revealed that the starships were unmanned. The whole operation being a distraction and everyone is fine. | |
Red Shirt / int_dfc07782 | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_dfc07782 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Transformers: Cyberverse | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_dfc07782 | |
Red Shirt / int_dfc9fe1d | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_dfc9fe1d | comment |
In Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket, this extends to the GM Command Spacetype, which has a red torso and a tendency to die a lot. Similarly, Scarlet Team is described as a rapid response team and consists of a pair each of GM Command, GM Sniper II, and Guncannon-MP mobile suits, the latter of which are predominantly red; they are all unceremoniously killed off in their only scene by the lone MS-18E Kampfer. | |
Red Shirt / int_dfc9fe1d | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_dfc9fe1d | featureConfidence |
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Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_dfc9fe1d | |
Red Shirt / int_e199d649 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_e199d649 | comment |
In the prologue of Eragon, Arya is accompanied by two guards who are killed in the ambush quite easily. It's eventually deconstructed (albeit a few books too late), as she was great friends with one and in love (as much as elves can be anyway) with the other. Their deaths, along with, y'know, being tortured, are the reason she became The Stoic. | |
Red Shirt / int_e199d649 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_e199d649 | featureConfidence |
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Inheritance Cycle | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_e199d649 | |
Red Shirt / int_e2b3cc8a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_e2b3cc8a | comment |
Phelous in To Boldly Flee is one of these. Strangely, this gives him functional immortality, as on the one hand, there are always more redshirts just like the killed ones still on the ship, and on the other hands, he's the only one they have. So, whenever he's killed, another Phelous is suddenly alive on the ship. Or to explain it in another way, he's simultaneously running on the Original Series rules (this trope) and Next Generation rules (he's important to the plot). Which was also lampshaded. It gets lampshaded/parodied like crazy later on, with the methods of killing Phelous getting more and more ridiculous. And then he just dodges everything trying to kill him. |
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Red Shirt / int_e2b3cc8a | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_e2b3cc8a | featureConfidence |
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To Boldly Flee (Web Video) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_e2b3cc8a | |
Red Shirt / int_e5c2a18a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_e5c2a18a | comment |
Star Fluxx includes an Expendable Crewman card, and its artwork features a crewman wearing a red uniform. When a player is required to discard another card, he or she can discard the Expendable Crewman instead. | |
Red Shirt / int_e5c2a18a | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_e5c2a18a | featureConfidence |
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Fluxx (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_e5c2a18a | |
Red Shirt / int_e6758d93 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_e6758d93 | comment |
Scion hangs a big lampshade on this with the rules for extras. Extras are red shirts in all but name. Which it inherited in their entirety from its papa-game, Exalted. The Exalted community has long referenced Extras as 'Mooks', and the game encourages them to be considered little more than ambulatory scenery for the awesome epic melodrama that is the Player Characters' lives. |
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Red Shirt / int_e6758d93 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_e6758d93 | featureConfidence |
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Scion (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_e6758d93 | |
Red Shirt / int_e694aadb | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_e694aadb | comment |
Lampshaded by one Ciaphas Cain short story, where Adeptus Mechanus soldiers wear red uniforms. Ciaphas's narration even refers to them specifically as "redshirts" at one point, and predictably they're all slaughtered when the Necrons wake up. | |
Red Shirt / int_e694aadb | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_e694aadb | featureConfidence |
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Ciaphas Cain | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_e694aadb | |
Red Shirt / int_e7410020 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_e7410020 | comment |
Empowered, being a superhero comic (albeit a parody) also has Mooks, but one supervillain ThugBoy worked for really took the cake when he made his Witless Minions wear shirts with an emblem looking like a bullseye. Wow. Now that is... | |
Red Shirt / int_e7410020 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_e7410020 | featureConfidence |
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Empowered (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_e7410020 | |
Red Shirt / int_e89f120b | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_e89f120b | comment |
In Mobile Suit Gundam, the mass-produced federation mooks were called RGM-79 GMs, which exploded by the dozens any time they were shown in a fight. Their standard armor was colored like a red T-shirt◊. Joining them was the Type 61 Main Battle Tank, which existed a rung lower to be roughed up by the opposing side's own mooks, but also got their own share of victories to keep Zion's Zaku IIs from seeming too threatening. | |
Red Shirt / int_e89f120b | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_e89f120b | featureConfidence |
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Mobile Suit Gundam | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_e89f120b | |
Red Shirt / int_e9d7acf9 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_e9d7acf9 | comment |
Played straight in the Lone Wolf series where the title character has the Aura of Death about him. Any companion or ally Lone Wolf picks up along his travels is extremely likely to die in horrible circumstances before the end of the current book. Any boat Lone Wolf is on will be attacked by pirates, sink, or both. And for Kai's sake, man, don't try to rescue a person in distress, of course it's a Helghast who murdered some random person and took their place just to have a shot at killing Lone Wolf. | |
Red Shirt / int_e9d7acf9 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_e9d7acf9 | featureConfidence |
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Lone Wolf | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_e9d7acf9 | |
Red Shirt / int_e9e2b5e9 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_e9e2b5e9 | comment |
Completely subverted in Starslip Crisis with the introduction of Quine, a "Protocol Officer" who's in charge of building relationships with new species. While he has a tendency to die on every "away mission", upon death, a clone is awakened on ship with all of his memories up to the time of death intact. The trope is outright inverted by the fact that he's the only member on the ship with this privilege (due to the rarity and importance of the protocol officer). | |
Red Shirt / int_e9e2b5e9 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_e9e2b5e9 | featureConfidence |
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Starslip (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_e9e2b5e9 | |
Red Shirt / int_ea4f62db | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_ea4f62db | comment |
Family Guy: Parodied in the same episode that the quote at the top of this article comes from: when Peter is running in the road with William Shatner, the latter gets hit and killed by a car. The camera then pans to Ensign Ricky, who declares: "I did not see that coming." | |
Red Shirt / int_ea4f62db | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_ea4f62db | featureConfidence |
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Family Guy | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_ea4f62db | |
Red Shirt / int_ec28245c | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_ec28245c | comment |
In Dragon Ball Z, Nappa blows up a "news helicopter" which, upon closer inspection by a keen-eyed viewer, is actually a shuttlecraft from the Enterprise-A, identical to the ones from the films and even including the registry number (NCC-1701-A) — making this a possible instance of actual red shirts being killed. | |
Red Shirt / int_ec28245c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Red Shirt / int_ec28245c | featureConfidence |
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Dragon Ball Z | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_ec28245c | |
Red Shirt / int_f205332b | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_f205332b | comment |
Background ponies in Twillight Sparkle's awesome adventure are treated as this by everyone in the story. This includes the good guys sending them on missions which are too dangerous to risk someone important on. | |
Red Shirt / int_f205332b | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_f205332b | featureConfidence |
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Twillight Sparkle's awesome adventure (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_f205332b | |
Red Shirt / int_f2b51294 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_f2b51294 | comment |
The soldiers of Archbishop Olav Engelbrektsson in Opera Olav Engelbrektsson are all dressed in red uniforms, and dead by the end of the play. | |
Red Shirt / int_f2b51294 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_f2b51294 | featureConfidence |
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Opera Olav Engelbrektsson (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_f2b51294 | |
Red Shirt / int_f301fd1a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_f301fd1a | comment |
In Sekirei, there are 108 alien beings forced to take part in a game of There Can Be Only One. The vast majority are there simply to be terminated, and never had a chance to begin with. Many are aware of this fact, and desperately attempt to flee the capital — the Discipline Squad hunts them down. | |
Red Shirt / int_f301fd1a | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_f301fd1a | featureConfidence |
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Sekirei (Manga) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_f301fd1a | |
Red Shirt / int_f5e30a17 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_f5e30a17 | comment |
Stand Still, Stay Silent: The main characters are viewed as this by their employers. After all, the employers in question are not going on that expedition into the Forbidden Zone themselves because they don't want to die. This makes the fact that Emil is said employer's own nephew an element of the story's Fridge Horror. And let's not get started on the two other members of Mission Control who roped in two of their distant cousins and a woman to whom they're a Honorary Uncle respectively. The recruitment poster for the Cleansers has fine print mentioning that joining them voids all life insurance. |
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Red Shirt / int_f5e30a17 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_f5e30a17 | featureConfidence |
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Stand Still, Stay Silent (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_f5e30a17 | |
Red Shirt / int_fb9c177d | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_fb9c177d | comment |
Transformers: According to TFWiki.net, across all Transformers media, this happens with characters that don't have toys in the toyline, in order to keep selling toys of the characters that have. Though the Marvel series did subvert this once with the Seacons, the most recent combiner team, getting introduced and killed off in a span of four issues, even though they were still on the toy shelves. The Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers: The whole mini-series is basically a Transformers story told from the viewpoint of a bunch of Red Shirt second stringers. In fact a large part of the characters' portrayals are built around the fact that this trope applies. Pyro fears that he'll die a meaningless death so he's spent most of his life trying to plan the perfect death. Ironfist is basically in complete denial about his role as a Red Shirt until later in the story where he seems to almost quietly accept his perceived unavoidable death. It helps to mention the writers openly referenced the story as "Last Stand of the Wreckers is a story about redshirts." on one of the opening pages of the Hardback copy. |
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Red Shirt / int_fb9c177d | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_fb9c177d | featureConfidence |
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Transformers (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_fb9c177d | |
Red Shirt / int_fcf43f47 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_fcf43f47 | comment |
Averted in the Fighting Fantasy book Starship Traveller. Your security personnel are much more competent in both phaser and close combat; this is reflected by having all non-security characters take a -3 Skill penalty in combat — presumably showing that a character's Skill stat is for their particular job, not their ability in general note Backed up by the explanation for why your character, the ship's captain, is the exception to this rule: "Your combat skills are the equal of your professional skills, as befits a true hero." . But then played almost straight in the fact that it is indicated that there are a great number of faceless nameless redshirts available in your crew for horrible things to happen to (if you play well — in a way that won't get your identified personnel killed) and that you and your crew repeatedly, if such things happen, suffer a critical giving-a-shit failure. | |
Red Shirt / int_fcf43f47 | featureApplicability |
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Fighting Fantasy | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_fcf43f47 | |
Red Shirt / int_fd0e4b62 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_fd0e4b62 | comment |
Brik Wars gives Hero units the explicit ability to make other units Redshirt. | |
Red Shirt / int_fd0e4b62 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_fd0e4b62 | featureConfidence |
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Brikwars (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_fd0e4b62 | |
Red Shirt / int_fdab144a | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_fdab144a | comment |
Barkwire junior editor Ron Christianson never returned after being sent to review an unusually large and unfriendly dog named Scar. | |
Red Shirt / int_fdab144a | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_fdab144a | featureConfidence |
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Barkwire | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_fdab144a | |
Red Shirt / int_fe5f7909 | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_fe5f7909 | comment |
Pratchett in the introduction of Guards! Guards! invokes the trope by saying that the guards' ungrateful role in fantasy stories is to always get slaughtered to show how dire the threat is, and he wrote Guards! Guards! as an homage to those fine men. | |
Red Shirt / int_fe5f7909 | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_fe5f7909 | featureConfidence |
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Guards! Guards! | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_fe5f7909 | |
Red Shirt / int_ff9ab17f | type |
Red Shirt | |
Red Shirt / int_ff9ab17f | comment |
Commander Branch and the crew of station Epsilon IX fell victim to V'Ger, after having earlier observed the Klingon encounter with the cloud. Branch was played by David Gautreaux, who was originally signed on to play the Vulcan Lt. Xon in the aborted Star Trek: Phase II series. Sonak was created to die in Xon's place as the concept of Xon (an emotionless alien looking to understand human feelings) seemed too good to waste (the concept was eventually evolved into Data). | |
Red Shirt / int_ff9ab17f | featureApplicability |
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Red Shirt / int_ff9ab17f | featureConfidence |
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Star Trek: The Next Generation | hasFeature |
Red Shirt / int_ff9ab17f |
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