Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

The Fair Folk

 The Fair Folk
type
FeatureClass
 The Fair Folk
label
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk
page
TheFairFolk
 The Fair Folk
comment
Modern society has lived with the Disneyfied version of fairies for so long – the Fairy Godmothers of Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty, Tinker Bell in Peter Pan – that it seems hard to imagine that some would consider fairies evil. And yet, some of them were.
The fairies of old weren't cute little bewinged pixies who fluttered happily around humans. Elves didn't make children toys or live deep in forests with no interaction with mortals. Often, they would interact with humans with no thought to the consequences of their actions, or they would be tricksters that deliberately delighted in the utter mess they made of mortal lives (such as the classic character Puck from A Midsummer Night's Dream). At worst, they're like serial killers with magic: otherworldly horrors who kidnap humans for explicit use as playthings to torment, assault, rape, maim, or eat — or sometimes to find even worse, very abstract things to do to them (some stories in folklore get dark). The Fair Folk almost always live in the Land of Faerie, often have Faerie Courts and even full-scale Wainscot Societies, and may be depicted as an Inhumanly Beautiful Race. They are usually vulnerable to Cold Iron, though not always (the Irish "Dullahan" are weak to gold).
For more information, including much of what used to be this page's description, please see the Analysis tab.
In a manner of speaking, the old tales of fairies have been replaced with aliens. In both cases, you have creatures who are ineffable and don't understand humanity, who randomly abduct humans, play with them, and return them with Time Loss and occasionally strange powers/afflictions. Periodically, there are tales of those who have dealt with them and benefited, but for the most part, mundane people are merely their playthings. For more on this interpretation of this trope, see Alien Fair Folk.
Frequently found in concert with Grimmification, as the original folklore of the darker breeds of fairies needs little exaggeration. Compare and contrast Fairy Companion, Fairy Devilmother (essentially the Evil Counterpart to the Fairy Godmother), Mage Species, Our Elves Are Different, Our Fairies Are Different, Our Goblins Are Different, Our Pixies Are Different, Our Mermaids Are Different, Nature Spirit and All Trolls Are Different. See also Changeling Tale, a specific subtrope having to do with fairy abduction, doppelgangers, and the like. Not to be confused with Changeling Fantasy, which is a type of Cinderella Plot.
All of the above aside, it's entirely possible for the fairies to be as diverse in their beliefs and actions as humans. There actually were plenty of myths and folklore about fairies who helped humans, though they were still believed to be dangerous if angered— but then again, the belief that supernatural beings are helpful to humans that show them kindness and angry if neglected is ubiquitous in many traditional religions and folk beliefs, including Greek Mythology. Some fairies may be malevolent, but others may be friendly to humans, or at least willing to leave humans alone as long as the humans do the same for them. In some cases, the fairies may be more in conflict with each other than humans, and act accordingly. Indeed, the trope of entirely malevolent fairies can be just as divorced from traditional folklore as the bowdlerised 19th century fairies of Romantic literature, as both overlook the realities of a very complex series of beliefs and practices that ultimately date back before the arrival of Christianity in Britain and Ireland.
Whatever the case, no matter how aloof, curious, silly, chaotic, flippant, ignorant, and/or light-hearted any may appear, they'll switch to their Game Faces if fundamental rules are broken near them — or even by them. Which will not go well for somebody.
The Wild Hunt is an often-overlapping trope. Youkai are a rough Japanese equivalent while in the Middle East, the Djinn carry many of the qualities associated with the Fair Folk. The Greys is a more modern trope with many similarities. Demons — when not The Legions of Hell — are often also portrayed this way (and sometimes there is rather little distinction). Jerkass Gods tend to be very similar, if typically a few steps higher in terms of power and awe (although the more powerful depictions of fairies may border on outright Physical Gods). An extreme example may be a Humanoid Abomination.
 The Fair Folk
fetched
2024-02-01T12:45:53Z
 The Fair Folk
parsed
2024-02-01T12:45:53Z
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to AFateWorseThanDeath: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to AlienAbduction: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to AllInTheManual: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to AllTrollsAreDifferent: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to AlternateUniverse: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to AlwaysChaoticEvil: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to AnimalsHateHim: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to AvertedTrope: Not an Item - IGNORE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to AxCrazy: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to BeatStillMyHeart: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to BeingGoodSucks: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to BigBad: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to BloodMagic: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to BlueAndOrangeMorality: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to BodyHorror: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to CallARabbitASmeerp: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to CanNotTellALie: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to CardCarryingVillain: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ChangelingTale: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ChildEater: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ChivalricRomance: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to CompellingVoice: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to CondescendingCompassion: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to CorruptedCharacterCopy: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to CosmicHorrorStory: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to CourtlyLove: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to CreativeSterility: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to CrystalDragonJesus: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Current93: Not an Item - IGNORE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to DeathWorld: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to DisproportionateRetribution: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to DoNotTauntCthulhu: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to DownplayedTrope: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to EldritchAbomination: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to EmilieAutumn: Not an Item - IGNORE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to EmotionEater: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to EnchantedForest: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to EquivalentExchange: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to EvenEvilHasStandards: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to EvilKnockoff: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ExactWords: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ExtendedUniverse: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to FairyGodmother: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to FantasticRacism: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to FertileFeet: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to FolkHero: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ForTheEvulz: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to FounderOfTheKingdom: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to FullFrontalAssault: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to FunctionalMagic: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Geas: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to GenreBlind: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Glamour: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to GreatGazoo: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to HeatherAlexander: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to HellishHorse: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to IDidWhatIHadToDo: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ImAHumanitarian: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ImaginaryFriend: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to InkubusSukkubus: Not an Item - IGNORE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to InnerMonologue: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to IntoTheMidnightCity: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Jerkass: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to JerkassGods: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to JethroTull: Not an Item - IGNORE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to LadyAndKnight: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to LandOfFaerie: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to LighterAndSofter: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to LoopholeAbuse: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to LordOfTheRings: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to LoreenaMcKennitt: Not an Item - IGNORE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to LoveMakesYouEvil: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to LovePotion: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to MageSpecies: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to MagnificentBastard: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to MindRape: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to MonsterMash: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to MushroomMan: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Mythology: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to NatureSpirit: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to NinjaPirateZombieRobot: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to NobleWolf: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to OurElvesAreDifferent: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to OurFairiesAreDifferent: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to OurGeniesAreDifferent: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to OurGoblinsAreDifferent: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to OurGodsAreDifferent: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to OurMermaidsAreDifferent: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to OurNymphsAreDifferent: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to PhysicalGod: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to PlantPeople: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to PocketDimension: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Psychopomp: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to RavensAndCrows: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to RecursiveFanfiction: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to RedEyesTakeWarning: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Retcon: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to RiddleForTheAges: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Roguelike: Not an Item - IGNORE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to RoyalBlood: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ScrewTheRulesIMakeThem: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to SerialKiller: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ShownTheirWork: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to SideStoryBonusArt: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to SparkFairy: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to SpeaksFluentAnimal: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to SpeculativeFiction: Not an Item - IGNORE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to SpiritWorld: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to SteeleyeSpan: Not an Item - IGNORE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to SufficientlyAdvancedAlien: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to SwashbucklersOfTheSevenSkies: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TeenGenius: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TheCasanova: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TheDecemberists: Not an Item - IGNORE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TheGreys: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TheLarkAndTheWren: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TheMagocracy: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TheMarvelousDeer: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ThePhoenix: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TheStoic: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TheWeirdSisters: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TheWildHunt: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TimeAbyss: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TimeMaster: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TooDumbToLive: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to TooSpicyForYogSothoth: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Treants: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Trolling: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to UrbanLegends: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to ViolentGlaswegian: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to WhenTreesAttack: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to WickedWitch: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to WingedHumanoid: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to WordOfGod: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to YouCannotGraspTheTrueForm: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to Youkai: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to YourSoulIsMine: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to evilcounterpart: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to playercharacter: Not an Item - FEATURE
 The Fair Folk
processingComment
Dropped link to thebookoflosttales: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
LordOfTheRings
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
TheLarkAndTheWren
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
AFateWorseThanDeath
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
AllInTheManual
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
ExtendedUniverse
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
GenreBlind
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
PlantPeople
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
HeatherAlexander
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
SwashbucklersOfTheSevenSkies
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
Into the Midnight City (Webcomic)
 The Fair Folk
processingUnknown
thebookoflosttales
 The Fair Folk
isPartOf
DBTropes
 The Fair Folk / int_10f21772
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_10f21772
comment
Xenophilia:
Lero Michealides used to be a captive of the Fae before escaping to Equestria.
In the Recursive Fanfiction, Into the Hedge, the Fae and their world are further explored.
 The Fair Folk / int_10f21772
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_10f21772
featureConfidence
1.0
 Xenophilia (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_10f21772
 The Fair Folk / int_135f99bf
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_135f99bf
comment
The Ellehemaei (all the main characters) in Addergoole.
 The Fair Folk / int_135f99bf
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_135f99bf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Addergoole
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_135f99bf
 The Fair Folk / int_1364260e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1364260e
comment
Once by James Herbert depicts "the faerefolkis" as having left race memories which inspired human folklore. Elemental beings who exist on a higher dimension, their nurture of nature enables Earth to support life. While most are benevolent, the "weak and nasty" ones delight in tormenting humans. Why? "For fun."
 The Fair Folk / int_1364260e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1364260e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Once
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1364260e
 The Fair Folk / int_136469af
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_136469af
comment
In Pact, the faerie are very old supernatural creatures that thrive on complexity in order to stave off the boredom of immortality. Relying heavily upon Glamour, they play out elaborate tales over the course of centuries, deceiving themselves and others to give the stories that they tell weight, which is reinforced by the threat of death. They're vulnerable to bluntness and crudity-you can't kill them with a well-made cold-iron sword, but an iron pipe will probably do the trick, as bluntness offends them on a fundamental level and leaves them vulnerable, allowing you to penetrate their Glamour defenses. One theory is that they're actually old magicians who have gotten around the Cannot Tell a Lie restriction that applies to everything magical in the setting by practicing self-deceit and Glamour-use with such skill that they've convinced themselves that they're not human and never were.
 The Fair Folk / int_136469af
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_136469af
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pact
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_136469af
 The Fair Folk / int_14c39c76
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_14c39c76
comment
The Generous Ones from Alexandra Quick, and other inhabitants of the Lands Below such as Bewi. The Most Deathly Power also has a similar shtick.
 The Fair Folk / int_14c39c76
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_14c39c76
featureConfidence
1.0
 Alexandra Quick (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_14c39c76
 The Fair Folk / int_168c4727
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_168c4727
comment
Zigzagged in Guild Wars 2. The sylvari are largely idealistic, honorable, and romantic — except for the Nightmare Court, who believe that these values weaken them and seek to corrupt their brethren by torturing them into a Despair Event Horizon (which also pollutes their Hive Mind, the Pale Tree, and any future sylvari that might be born from it). Notably, the sylvari moral code actually comes from the writings of a pacifistic centaur and human; an optional plotline involves the player character discovering that there is more than one Pale Tree, and having to hide that fact from the Nightmare Court — while the sylvari from one of the other trees is still kind, if a bit standoffish, it's specifically brought up that other communities of sylvari might not be nearly as benevolent.
This is taken even further when it's revealed that sylvari are actually the spawn of the Elder Dragon of the jungle, and the playable sylvari are descended from a champion of his that had been cleansed of his will. Their original brethren tend to be more monstrous and, similar to the Nightmare Court, often kidnap those of the other races to corrupt into more minions.
 The Fair Folk / int_168c4727
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_168c4727
featureConfidence
1.0
 Guild Wars 2 (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_168c4727
 The Fair Folk / int_17479864
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_17479864
comment
In Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes the exact nature of the 'autumn people' is never confirmed but their connection with the seasons and their tendency to replenish their ranks with kidnapped humans strongly suggests the Fair Folk at work.
 The Fair Folk / int_17479864
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_17479864
featureConfidence
1.0
 Something Wicked This Way Comes
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_17479864
 The Fair Folk / int_178c5235
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_178c5235
comment
The trope was briefly discussed with the Fey in Recettear: An Item Shop's Tale. The original faeries were mischievous and conniving, until they found out the hard way that humans can be just as cruel. Current faeries have become subservient to the humans, if only to prevent their race from becoming extinct.
 The Fair Folk / int_178c5235
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_178c5235
featureConfidence
1.0
 Recettear: An Item Shop's Tale (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_178c5235
 The Fair Folk / int_17bb3a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_17bb3a
comment
Limbus Company introduces us to the Fairy Long-legs, which is indicated to be linked to the aforementioned Fairy Festival. It'll ask you to stand under its clover umbrella to protect you from the acid rain...only to reveal that that's a trick it uses to keep its prey safe and tasty.
 The Fair Folk / int_17bb3a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_17bb3a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Limbus Company (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_17bb3a
 The Fair Folk / int_19ac0ce4
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_19ac0ce4
comment
The Fair in DIE are a more science fantasy take on this trope, being robotical creatures that may offer great boons to those who find them, but each time someone requests a boon they flip a coin, with a 50/50 chance of them granting it.
 The Fair Folk / int_19ac0ce4
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_19ac0ce4
featureConfidence
1.0
 DIE (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_19ac0ce4
 The Fair Folk / int_19df8aa2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_19df8aa2
comment
The Fae in Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning. They are also divided into Summer and Winter; Summer representing growth and Winter representing decay, though neither is inherently good or evil. They have mixed feelings about mortals. Some of them dismiss them as short-lived "Dustlings", and others are fascinated by them because of their unique perspective on life and death. The Fae are so powerfully linked to Fate that they do not truly die — they merely repeat their lives in an endless Great Cycle. Fae also occasionally forget that when mortals die, it's for keeps. Fateweaver Argath claims that the Fae are actually easier to understand than mortals because they usually don't change with time. The Tuatha Deohn are a horrific exception to this rule. They are a cult of Winter Fae that have changed thanks to the power of Tirnoch. As a result, they are now brutal warmongers who wish to purge the world of all mortal life.
 The Fair Folk / int_19df8aa2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_19df8aa2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_19df8aa2
 The Fair Folk / int_1aacbbc9
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1aacbbc9
comment
Dragon Age:
The Dalish elves, according to the Chantry at least. How much do they deserve this reputation varies from clan to clan and from Dalish to Dalish. They are fiercely territorial and have a tendency to draw swords against any human who even accidentally wanders near their camp, they are known to dabble with demons and use Blood Magic which is considered highly dangerous. At least one clan leader used magic to curse a human settlement with lycanthropy as revenge for something that happened decades ago. Common myths include ravishing women to create more elves and practicing human sacrifice, with the latter being dubious at best and the former being factually untrue since any child they have with humans would be a human too.
Its revealed that ancient elves prior to humanity's rise were like this trope: they used to rule an empire just as tyrannical Tevinter Imperium with its leaders oppressing and slaving their lessers, while being revered as immortal god-kings. Their downfall was brought by a Civil War that erupted between them, with one of their members imprisoning his comrades in the Fade with the unexpected side-effect of depriving elves of their magic and immortality, leaving them vulnerable to humans when they arrived on Thedas.
The Horned Knight in the web game The Last Court holds his own court in the deep woods outside of Serault. His attendants are dryads and he thinks nothing of keeping humans who have offended him as slaves. If allowed to attend the feast of the Divine, the Horned Knight attempts to give her a gift in the form of a "living garden" — a Chantry sister with plants growing out of her head, and dandelions for eyes. Naturally, this makes the Divine a teeny bit upset.
 The Fair Folk / int_1aacbbc9
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1aacbbc9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dragon Age (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1aacbbc9
 The Fair Folk / int_1b575f28
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1b575f28
comment
In Digimon Ghost Game, Digimon classified as "Fairy-type" tend to fall under this trope.
Petermon was a Corrupted Character Copy of Peter Pan, and as such was a vehement Adult Hater (despite being Adult/Champion-level himself) and Psychopathic Manchild who abducted human children and Rookie-level Digimon to his Land of Faerie Pocket Dimension.
Piximon would randomly send unsuspecting humans back in time because he thought they'd "have fun", and tries to rob the protagonists of their Digivices as "payment".
Downplayed for Pucchiemon at first. She's just a fickle and slightly annoying fairy Digimon who fell in love with resident idiot from Osaka Fukatsu and forces him to act like her as payback, including Impossible Tasks like casting a Care-Bear Stare attack she did several times before. But then she evolves into the towering monster cat Meicrackmon: Vicious Mode, and that's a different story.
Cthyllamon is an Evil Knockoff of MarineAngemon who is classified as a Fairy Digimon. He's a vicious Mega-level Psychopathic Manchild who wants to flood the world in Digital Water and as a Mega, can easily overpower lower-level Digimon despite his rather ridiculous appearance.
 The Fair Folk / int_1b575f28
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1b575f28
featureConfidence
1.0
 Digimon Ghost Game
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1b575f28
 The Fair Folk / int_1beda93b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1beda93b
comment
Sluggy Freelance: Fae are divided into several different varieties. Cookie and Christmas Elves are cute, sociable, and relatively harmless, but far more dangerous kinds exist. The gang ends up needing to deal with a mushroom fairy. She is forbidden from harming adults, limited to messing with their minds and inflicting them with Laser-Guided Amnesia. Children however, she traps in her mists until their minds become weak enough for her to feed to her mushrooms.
 The Fair Folk / int_1beda93b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1beda93b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sluggy Freelance (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1beda93b
 The Fair Folk / int_1c4cd79d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1c4cd79d
comment
The 2013 47 Ronin have the Tengu, half-human/half-crow goblins from Japanese Mythology who had no problem rising Kai, a human boy and even teaching him some of their powers. Tengu-forged swords have magical qualities, becoming an Absurdly Sharp Blade in the hands of a fearless warrior and dull in the hands of a coward. They live in The Lost Woods in a Hidden Elf Village and rarely show themselves to outsiders, except to kill them horrifically of course.
 The Fair Folk / int_1c4cd79d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1c4cd79d
featureConfidence
1.0
 47 Ronin
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1c4cd79d
 The Fair Folk / int_1c9287c3
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1c9287c3
comment
"Graciosa And Percinet" contains mostly good fairies, including the titular Prince Percinet, but there is a wicked fairy who assists Wicked Stepmother Grognon in punishing Princess Graciosa — until the fairy realizes exactly who she has been punishing and snaps Grognon's neck for her trouble.
 The Fair Folk / int_1c9287c3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1c9287c3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Graciosa And Percinet
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1c9287c3
 The Fair Folk / int_1d2c4895
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1d2c4895
comment
In The Crystal Court, the Courts are portrayed as ambivalent to the matters and suffering of humans (which they are usually the cause of), kidnapping babies or forcing human musicians to play until their hands bled. They even seem to have a contempt for their own kind as well, leaving their own children with human families as changelings and desiring to execute Ruby and Sapphire for their inter-court romance (even though their respective courts were under a truce).
 The Fair Folk / int_1d2c4895
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1d2c4895
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Crystal Court (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1d2c4895
 The Fair Folk / int_1d42b351
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1d42b351
comment
The Leafmen from Epic (2013), while not malicious, are heavily influenced by them. Chris Wedge's motivation to make the film came from seeing a museum painting of tiny fairy folk in a forest.
 The Fair Folk / int_1d42b351
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1d42b351
featureConfidence
1.0
 Epic (2013)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1d42b351
 The Fair Folk / int_1da0a39b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1da0a39b
comment
Fairy Meat: In the past, humans at one point existed (and still may, but they aren't relevant any more) and were taunted by the Fae, but that time has long since passed. Now all fairies are more busy trying to rip each other apart so they can have some lunch.
 The Fair Folk / int_1da0a39b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1da0a39b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fairy Meat (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1da0a39b
 The Fair Folk / int_1e7ca85f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1e7ca85f
comment
Hercules: In the ancient world of Greek mythology the closest analogues to fairy and elves were lesser nature-spirits (nymphs, gorgons, sprites) that could somewhat be called gods in the most minor sense. Hades two stooges, Pain and Panic, seem to represent and even display some of their less pleasant behaviour like spiriting away babies from their cradles and transforming themselves into adorable children to lure unsuspecting men to their doom.
 The Fair Folk / int_1e7ca85f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1e7ca85f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hercules
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1e7ca85f
 The Fair Folk / int_1f0bc3d3
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1f0bc3d3
comment
Hellboy. "The Corpse" has Hellboy exposing a changeling and performing a number of difficult tasks for it so that The Fair Folk will return the baby he replaced. The story ends with the fairies discussing how few children have been born to them lately and how they may eventually fade away, which likely partly inspired the Hellboy movie The Golden Army. Said changeling, seeking vengeance against Hellboy, becomes the driving force behind an army of fae seeking to restore the glory days. Restoring the good old days, or going out with a bang, they don't seem to be picky. Resurrecting an ancient sorceress named the Queen of Blood (aka, Nimue) to lead the army adds destroying the world to the list.
 The Fair Folk / int_1f0bc3d3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1f0bc3d3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hellboy (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1f0bc3d3
 The Fair Folk / int_1fa34d2f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1fa34d2f
comment
Were the World Mine, a musical adaptation of 'A Midsummer Night's Dream', about an outcast gay kid cast as Puck in the school play who ends up making a magic flower and causing people to fall in love with people of their own gender, essentially becoming Puck, often in musical sequences that are vague about whether it's a fantasy or not. The English/drama teacher, as well, is implied to be a fairy, complete with magic that makes the townspeople bend to her will. Granted, this is to give Puck/Timothy a chance to fix everything, but it's still not quite right from a human perspective. Overall, the fairies depicted are very sympathetic, but there is definite selfishness and laughing at the trouble being caused to mundane people going on.
 The Fair Folk / int_1fa34d2f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1fa34d2f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Were the World Mine
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1fa34d2f
 The Fair Folk / int_1fc74f28
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_1fc74f28
comment
Unavowed plays it straight with the Fae, a race of haughty, pale humanoids with ice powers, a penchant for making magically binding deals (with included unfavorable consequences) with humans, and a love for giving people riddles to solve. It even turns out that one of the Arc Villains, "Roy Fellows" aka Robin Goodfellow, is one of them.
 The Fair Folk / int_1fc74f28
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_1fc74f28
featureConfidence
1.0
 Unavowed (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_1fc74f28
 The Fair Folk / int_201bbfb2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_201bbfb2
comment
The elves in The Invisible Library like people to have strong feelings for them — whether that's love or hate doesn't matter, they will take both. They are considered evil by the librarians, and while some people work together with them, most humans agree that they are dangerous — which doesn't stop them from going to the parties thrown by the elf ambassador of Liechtenstein. Of course, Lord Silver has no scruples about hypnotizing humans, so not everyone may be there out of their own free will...
 The Fair Folk / int_201bbfb2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_201bbfb2
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Invisible Library
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_201bbfb2
 The Fair Folk / int_2127e14c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2127e14c
comment
In The Once and Future King, the Faeries appear, led by Morgan Le Fay. While it was an Unbuilt Trope at the time the book was written, the Faeries are much more the alien and malicious type. Although Robin Hood and Maid Marian argue whether they are Faeries or not.
 The Fair Folk / int_2127e14c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2127e14c
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Once and Future King
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2127e14c
 The Fair Folk / int_2162a284
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2162a284
comment
Elves in MS Paint Adventures behave more in this manner than the usual elf characteristics. In Jailbreak, they're even willing to trade wishes for the right to a baby, much like the typical fae "give me your firstborn" type of wish exchange.
 The Fair Folk / int_2162a284
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2162a284
featureConfidence
1.0
 MS Paint Adventures / Web Comic
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2162a284
 The Fair Folk / int_21834e53
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_21834e53
comment
The Moorfolk in The Moorchild fit the description to a T. They've an aversion to holy water, Rowan wood, St. John's Wort and other yellow flowers, iron (in the setting, ALL iron is Cold Iron), and salt. They kidnap children and replace them with their injured, elderly, and misbegotten (the protagonist herself is a changeling left in place of a human child for being half-human), they play pranks and steal from mortals constantly, and while life in the Mound is happy and carefree, they have no concept of love, hate, or empathy.
 The Fair Folk / int_21834e53
featureApplicability
-1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_21834e53
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Moorchild
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_21834e53
 The Fair Folk / int_21d41a16
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_21d41a16
comment
Mentioned, but so far unseen, in The Saints.
 The Fair Folk / int_21d41a16
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_21d41a16
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Saints
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_21d41a16
 The Fair Folk / int_21e2f10d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_21e2f10d
comment
Dragon Quest III: Believing a human man has kidnapped her daughter and stolen her hidden village's treasure, the Queen of Faeries places an eternal slumber curse upon the village of Norvik, despite them having nothing to do with her daughter's disappearance. She lifts the curse when the heroes find proof that her daughter simply eloped, but she still wants humans out of her realm.
 The Fair Folk / int_21e2f10d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_21e2f10d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dragon Quest III (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_21e2f10d
 The Fair Folk / int_2247a14a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2247a14a
comment
A mostly benign version appears in Lloyd Alexander's The Chronicles of Prydain in the form of the Kingdom of Tylwyth Teg, a secret realm Beneath the Earth populated by strange and grouchy Fair Folk.
Orddu, Orwen, and Orgoch are a trio of hags who present a less benevolent - though still not wholly evil - instance of this trope, operating on Blue-and-Orange Morality and seeming deeply uninterested in whether Arawn, the series' Big Bad, takes over the world or not.
 The Fair Folk / int_2247a14a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2247a14a
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Chronicles of Prydain
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2247a14a
 The Fair Folk / int_2315e578
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2315e578
comment
The Hallow is an Irish folk horror movie about a family stalked by elves, who seem to be a kind of virulent parasitic fungus, and is looking for a new host.
 The Fair Folk / int_2315e578
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2315e578
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Hallow
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2315e578
 The Fair Folk / int_2330255c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2330255c
comment
Holly Black’s The Folk of the Air plays straight but then later deconstructs this trope. The Folk fit general myths about the fae and are depicted as chaotic, cruel, and willing to prey on the weak. The trope is later deconstructed as the book explores the backstories in faerieland for humans and faeries alike. The book implies that it is the faerie culture, rather than something unique to their species, that perpetuates typical fae behavior. For example, the main character, while human, grew up in faerieland and is indistinguishable from fae personality-wise; she’s ruthless, fickle, dishonest, and willing to trick to get ahead. The backstories of faerie teenagers like Cardan and Locke further deconstruct this trope. In the Queen Of Nothing prologue, it mentions there’s a cultural belief that faerie children don’t need to be loved and cared for. However, it is clear that the emotional and physical neglect was severely damaging to Cardan. He acted fickle and impulsive because no adult was around to reign in his behavior, and he acted out as a means to get the attention he was so severely lacking. The culture has a very Might Makes Right attitude, and as he aged he continued to act uncaring, because vulnerability is exploited in their culture. It’s easy to see from this micro-case that their culture produces emotionally unavailable adults who pass this culture on to their children.
The fae kidnap humans and use them as enchanted servants. This is because their culture requires human labor to function, but the humans are only kept for a very short time and are paid for their work.
 The Fair Folk / int_2330255c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2330255c
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Folk of the Air
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2330255c
 The Fair Folk / int_234b78e5
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_234b78e5
comment
Dark Ages: Fae, another White Wolf game which is "officially" considered to be a prequel to Changeling: The Dreaming, but is so radically different it can also be run as a full Alternate Universe. In it fairies are divided into the Firstborn, who are true fae without need for that pesky mortal shell; Inanimae, beings whose bodies are based on natural elements, as well as artificial constructs; and Changelings, who in this setting are different from both the above, being human children spirited away and raised as faeries, faerie children raised in the human world, or true Half-Human Hybrids. The fae are divided into 5 courts based around their preferred powers and attitude towards humans. All four of the primary courts, the fifth simply being the neutral group, quite easily come across as this trope. It's been remarked that the difference between good and evil faeries isn't over whether they should rule over humans, but rather how they should go about it. The Spring Court wants to learn about "modern" humanity and use that knowledge to revive the fear and reverence that they once received. The Summer are the harsh traditionalists, and intend to punish humans for breaking their ancient, and forgotten, oaths, and restore the old order. The Autumn Court, like the Spring, wish to learn more about humans and work with them; however rather then outright respect they wish to manipulate the course of history from behind the scenes. Finally is the Winter Court, which isn't actually Always Chaotic Evil, but they do their best to appear so to humanity. The fact that characters tend to have very alien and unique systems of morality is one of the game's major themes.
 The Fair Folk / int_234b78e5
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_234b78e5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Changeling: The Dreaming (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_234b78e5
 The Fair Folk / int_23945975
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_23945975
comment
Even though she's usually called a witch these days, Maleficent, of Disney's Sleeping Beauty, is actually a "wicked fairy". While the previous Kingdom Hearts games had gone with the sorceress description, Kingdom Hearts: Birth by Sleep rightfully lists her as a fairy.
Discworld: To quote Nanny Ogg's Cookbook: "How hard is it to invite her along, give her plenty of drink and a plate of ham rolls all to herself, and keep her out of the way of your posh auntie? Play your cards right and you could be ahead by an extra good wish."
 The Fair Folk / int_23945975
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_23945975
featureConfidence
1.0
 Disney Animated Canon (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_23945975
 The Fair Folk / int_23f82646
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_23f82646
comment
In Croatian tale "Reygoch", Curlylocks and her cloud-dwelling fairy kin seem more mischievous than evil, coming down to Earth every night to mess up with the men's livestock only for fun.
 The Fair Folk / int_23f82646
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_23f82646
featureConfidence
1.0
 Reygoch
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_23f82646
 The Fair Folk / int_2442edf2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2442edf2
comment
In Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn, you have the Sithi (benevolent, but still alien and unpredictable and with little love for humans) and the Norns (their arctic, Always Chaotic Evil cousins). Physically, they resemble eerily beautiful and graceful humans with Supernatural Gold Eyes and white hair, but Sithi have golden skin and dye their hair various bright colors, while the Norns have chalk white skin and leave their hair its natural color.
 The Fair Folk / int_2442edf2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2442edf2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2442edf2
 The Fair Folk / int_24b39653
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_24b39653
comment
Mostly subverted in Tears to Tiara, where The Fair Folk turn out to be pretty nice people indeed. The closest one to this trope is the item shop owner Epona, who at worst is an Honest John. Her shop is even called 'The Good Folk', though this is more of an allusion to mythology (it's set in Britain during the Roman invasion) than a lampshading.
 The Fair Folk / int_24b39653
featureApplicability
-0.3
 The Fair Folk / int_24b39653
featureConfidence
1.0
 Tears to Tiara (Visual Novel)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_24b39653
 The Fair Folk / int_2536f651
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2536f651
comment
The Pogues Sit Down by The Fire
 The Fair Folk / int_2536f651
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2536f651
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Pogues (Music)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2536f651
 The Fair Folk / int_254496b2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_254496b2
comment
Three Hearts and Three Lions has this in the guise of local elves — inhumanly beautiful, callous, afraid of sun, iron and holy names, manipulative, and in league with demonic powers against the world of humans.
 The Fair Folk / int_254496b2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_254496b2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Three Hearts and Three Lions
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_254496b2
 The Fair Folk / int_26012a0a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_26012a0a
comment
Karlsson on the Roof is theorized by many readers to be a modernized urban Faerie — which would go a long way to explain his mischievous Jerkass nature, his Vague Age and his self-centered tendencies towards Blue-and-Orange Morality. By human standards he's an undeniable jerk, but by Fae standards he's actually a pretty decent guy.
 The Fair Folk / int_26012a0a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_26012a0a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Karlsson on the Roof
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_26012a0a
 The Fair Folk / int_266bbb13
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_266bbb13
comment
The Name of the Wind features one of these as a boon companion for Kvothe in his "present-day" years. However, at the end of the book, he confronts the Chronicler and tells him they both know the truth about the demons roaming the countryside. There are no such things as demons; just very nasty fae, although the existence of The Chandrian, who are neither human nor faen and perfectly fit the description of demons within the mythology of the universe shows that Bast is wrong. Despite the ominous hints, Bast still clearly cares greatly for Kvothe and seems to have a somewhat compatible sense of right and wrong... his perspective on the world is just very different, and he can be exceedingly selfish. That Bast looks fairly moral to the reader is largely because Bast's selfishness covers his love for Kvothe, so his actions are usually in Kvothe's best interests as well as his own. He shows something of a nastier side in The Wise Man's Fear.
Felurian in The Wise Man's Fear is closer to the Fair Folk classic trope. Essentially a leanansidhe or succubus figure, she's a creature of desire, almost like an Anthropomorphic Personification of seduction. She is described as innocent but caring little for right and wrong; she seduces men who pursue her into Faerie, takes them as lovers, and when she eventually tires of them they die or go insane for wanting to be with her. While sympathetic, something of a mentor figure, and certainly a strange and wondrous being, she is very dangerous, not out of malice but simply out of being so different.
And then there's the Cthaeh, which is omniscient and always tells the truth. Problem is it enjoys telling the truth that will hurt the listener the most (it's omniscient so it already knows all of the listener's reactions to anything it says), and that will cause grand-scale disasters. It's regarded with fear even by other fae — they sealed it into a tree in Faerie that's guarded night and day by archers who will shoot anybody who gets close enough to talk to it, and even Felurian, in a rare break from her usual childlike demeanor, reacts with genuine sorrow and concern when she hears that Kvothe encountered it.
 The Fair Folk / int_266bbb13
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_266bbb13
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Name of the Wind
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_266bbb13
 The Fair Folk / int_28508de
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_28508de
comment
Winx Club, of all cartoons:
For the greater part of the show, fairies are presented as kind and compassionate. Then, in season 4, we meet Earth fairies. Who, as soon as they're freed from their prison, they embark in a genocidal quest to exterminate mankind. The Winx eventually manage to get them to stand down, but only after they had decimated Gardenia with plants and threatened to freeze the world.
Also, witches are basically the same thing, only wingless and with dark alignment. And the difference between the Three Ancient Witches, the Trix and the rest of the witches is the standards: witches will try and ruin your festival out of spite if you don't invite them and are prone to form lynching mobs in response to one of them getting slapped as she deserved, the Trix started out as particularly sadistic witches with an agenda before succeeding and becoming outright psychos upon getting the immense power of the Dragon's Flame, and the Three Ancient Witches were worse.
 The Fair Folk / int_28508de
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_28508de
featureConfidence
1.0
 Winx Club
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_28508de
 The Fair Folk / int_2a4c791e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2a4c791e
comment
In Ah! My Goddess The Movie, the local Dark Magical Girl Morgan Le-Fay is explicitly mentioned to be a fairy. She is also The Dragon to Celestine, the anti villainous Big Bad. Though she's more lonely and broken than properly evil.
 The Fair Folk / int_2a4c791e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2a4c791e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ah! My Goddess (Manga)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2a4c791e
 The Fair Folk / int_2ade1ae9
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2ade1ae9
comment
Nobilis: Nobles deliberately evoke this trope. The Big Bads seek to unmake reality by twisting seemingly mundane events, so Noble behavior will seem bizarre to ordinary people. Nobles may spend months convincing a random mortal they own a cat, or kill someone because they bought a yellow SUV, and reality itself may very well hinge upon their success. Some Nobles actually are fae in origin — the third edition Power of Silver, for example, is of Daoine Sidhe extraction.
 The Fair Folk / int_2ade1ae9
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2ade1ae9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Nobilis (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2ade1ae9
 The Fair Folk / int_2b755acf
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2b755acf
comment
In the fairy tale "Childe Rowland", Burd Ellen is kidnapped by elves when she inadvertently runs around a church "widershins" (counter-clockwise), and two of her brothers attempting to rescue her are trapped and enchanted by the King of Elfland, until Childe Rowland saves them.
 The Fair Folk / int_2b755acf
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2b755acf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Childe Rowland
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2b755acf
 The Fair Folk / int_2b7f8a64
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2b7f8a64
comment
Queen of the Wave by Pepe Deluxé. In "A Night and a Day", describing the villain Mainin's Start of Darkness, the fair folk are mentioned off-hand as one of the sources of forbidden knowledge who corrupted him.
 The Fair Folk / int_2b7f8a64
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2b7f8a64
featureConfidence
1.0
 Queen of the Wave (Music)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2b7f8a64
 The Fair Folk / int_2c651d33
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2c651d33
comment
In "The Elf Maiden", elves have mysterious magical powers, weird customs and a strong dislike towards humans, whom they tend to avoid.
 The Fair Folk / int_2c651d33
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2c651d33
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Elf Maiden
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2c651d33
 The Fair Folk / int_2e1a541c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2e1a541c
comment
The Glomdoring commune of Lusternia traffick with fae including redcaps, barghests and slaugh. Also, their native race, Shadow Faelings, are a cross between The Fair Folk and Drow.
 The Fair Folk / int_2e1a541c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2e1a541c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Lusternia (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2e1a541c
 The Fair Folk / int_2e974412
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2e974412
comment
Zigzagged in the Scandinavian folklore-inspired Fe, where the eponymous fox-like protagonist (who derives their name from the Swedish word for fairy) is a benevolent steward of the forest, while the game's antagonists, the alien-like Silent Ones, who are revealed to be Fe's corrupted brethren near the end, are closer to traditional fair folk, kidnapping animals and otherwise inflicting malicious mischief upon the forest.
 The Fair Folk / int_2e974412
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2e974412
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fe (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2e974412
 The Fair Folk / int_2efa5091
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2efa5091
comment
An Encounter and an Offer has the fae banishing a young boy and stripping him of his name, leaving him to the mercies of the humans. It also appears, in implications, that the fae are duplicitous, arrogant, cunning and dangerous.
 The Fair Folk / int_2efa5091
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2efa5091
featureConfidence
1.0
 AnEncounterAndAnOffer
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2efa5091
 The Fair Folk / int_2f203125
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_2f203125
comment
In the Shin Megami Tensei games, where All Myths Are True, there are Fairies and Elves around too. And while they're certainly both cute and pretty, that doesn't mean they won't kill you just for being there.
Or if you're a pretty Japanese boy, they may just simply kidnap you to be their pet, regardless that you're trying to save the world — which happens to Raidou in Raidou Kuzunoha vs. King Abaddon in a side quest.
Or Puck could side with your rival who tries to Love Potion you to abandon the quest, but accidentally get your female party member (the funniest scenes ensue in Shin Megami Tensei II because of this).
Or if they're brainwashed by a power hungry Serial Killer, then Oberon and Titania will order the other fairies to make you wander around aimlessly in their domain. Guess what happens in Nocturne.
In Apocalypse, they are a Dying Race barely surviving the setting thanks to the Holy Grail (Dagda's Cauldron) they recovered from the Angels. They summoned Lady Danu to help restore everyone. However, she has become Black Maria in order to protect them, and can no longer reclaim her old position. It fell to recurring ally Nozomi to accept the fate of becoming the new Lady Danu in order to save them from extinction. Easier said than done, as one of the first crises they faced was the attack of the forces from the Divine Powers led by Titan who set the Fairy Forest ablaze simply because "it was on his way".
 The Fair Folk / int_2f203125
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_2f203125
featureConfidence
1.0
 Shin Megami Tensei (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_2f203125
 The Fair Folk / int_33681782
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_33681782
comment
Les Voyageurs Sans Souci: Although she is not explicitly identified as one, Séraphine Alavolette de Plumauvent ticks most of the boxes. Although she may look human, she is a magical creature who is bonded to elemental and nature forces and has rule over birds. She lives in a distant realm which cannot be reached by mortal means such like flying machines. And she despises humans and steals their kids when angered. Speaking of which, tasting her food is a real bad idea.
 The Fair Folk / int_33681782
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_33681782
featureConfidence
1.0
 Les Voyageurs Sans Souci
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_33681782
 The Fair Folk / int_3651bc0c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_3651bc0c
comment
The Princess and the Frog somewhat treats Facilier's Friends on the Other Side like this. They're beyond the ability of humans to stop but can be warded off with the proper precautions. They grant wishes which give people exactly what they asked for without giving them what they wanted and have high prices—effectively, they're supernatural Loan Sharks. Even Facilier's tendency to call them his "friends" when they're anything but friendly fits this. It's a polite name which avoids angering them in the way that a more accurate name might.
 The Fair Folk / int_3651bc0c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_3651bc0c
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Princess and the Frog
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_3651bc0c
 The Fair Folk / int_3720f65d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_3720f65d
comment
Pilgrim is about a human (or "hotblood") who has been cursed into becoming The Ageless by the King of the Grey Folk or Fairie for vocally denying their existence. Many episodes involve Pilgrim helping humans who have been dragged willingly or unwillingly into a Fair Folk squabble.
 The Fair Folk / int_3720f65d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_3720f65d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pilgrim (Radio)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_3720f65d
 The Fair Folk / int_37433bb9
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_37433bb9
comment
Arena of Valor plays around with this trope. The Afata faction has several faerie-based heroes, the most prominent of them being Krixi (the Pixie). Originally, she was just a typical playful but dangerous faerie who played pranks on others and preferred to just relax. However, her home ended up being under attack by the Lokheim forces. After succeeding in repelling them (by calling for help from other forest creatures), Krixi had a change of heart; she started to take greater responsibilities to protect her forest rather than staying a typical 'lazy, playful faerie' (answering to the resident elven queen Tel'Annas). She still shows no mercy to anyone who dares attack the forest, including humans.
 The Fair Folk / int_37433bb9
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_37433bb9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Arena of Valor (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_37433bb9
 The Fair Folk / int_3ac755dd
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_3ac755dd
comment
In Beauty and the Beast, the prince is turned into the Beast and his household servants into animated objects because he wouldn't let a disguised enchantress stay the night and scoffed at her payment of a rose. Though referred to as an "enchantress", she otherwise fits most traditional examples of fairies and their behavior toward humans when they feel insulted. Especially since her punishment, designed to correct his character flaws, included his staff, who didn't deserve it.
 The Fair Folk / int_3ac755dd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_3ac755dd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Beauty and the Beast
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_3ac755dd
 The Fair Folk / int_3bc1143d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_3bc1143d
comment
Home Safety Hotline is about working at a call center as a dispatcher dealing with both mundane crises and pests, as well as faeries and other mythological creatures such as goblins and trolls. Getting a call wrong tends to lead to a Sound-Only Death. Eventually, it's revealed that the Home Safety Hotline corporation is also run by them, and the player character turns into one should they be promoted.
 The Fair Folk / int_3bc1143d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_3bc1143d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Home Safety Hotline (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_3bc1143d
 The Fair Folk / int_3c10f1d3
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_3c10f1d3
comment
"Rumpelstiltskin": Rumpelstiltskin helps a young woman spin straw into gold, but then demands her first-born child as payment.
 The Fair Folk / int_3c10f1d3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_3c10f1d3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Rumpelstiltskin
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_3c10f1d3
 The Fair Folk / int_3f000be7
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_3f000be7
comment
King Arthur The Roleplaying Wargame features both Sidhe courts (Seelie/summer court and Unseelie/winter court) as prominent factions you can ally yourself with if you follow the Old Faith. The Seelie mainly operate on Blue-and-Orange Morality and are described as honourable and honest 'in their own way' (being Old Faith and Righteous), while the Unseelie are fairy, err, fairly malicious (Old Faith/Tyrant) and and bargains with them usually involve giving them your subjects' children. Allying with either court allows you to hire children the sidhe have "whisked away" as soldiers for your army.
 The Fair Folk / int_3f000be7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_3f000be7
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Arthur: The Role-Playing Wargame (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_3f000be7
 The Fair Folk / int_3f2325d3
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_3f2325d3
comment
In the webcomic Chasing the Sunset, Pixies are not evil per se but are chaos incarnated. The kind of things you do not want in a fireworks shop.
 The Fair Folk / int_3f2325d3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_3f2325d3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Chasing the Sunset (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_3f2325d3
 The Fair Folk / int_3f35c69c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_3f35c69c
comment
Katharine Kerr's Deverry series has both the Tolkienesque style Westfolk, and the Guardians, who are typical Fair Folk.
 The Fair Folk / int_3f35c69c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_3f35c69c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Deverry
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_3f35c69c
 The Fair Folk / int_42ffb88e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_42ffb88e
comment
SCP Foundation
Bright's proposal for SCP-001 mentions faeries as a race of beings that attacked the Foundation's predecessor. They looked identical to humans and were allergic to iron. The Foundation's predecessor was nearly destroyed by them, but thanks to a Deal with the Devil was able to fight back and kill all of the fairies.
SCP-562 ("Revel Rousers"). It's rather strongly implied that this is a modern version of the Fair Folk bringing people to a party in Faerie, including the Year Inside, Hour Outside effect on its victims and the way they are lured into agreeing to go to it.
SCP-1323 ("A County Fair"). This is in another dimension which can only be accessed at certain points and times in our universe. Customers have to buy tickets by paying things like "a joyful laugh and a sorrowful tear" or "a lost love". Anyone who eats food there has a chance of staying there permanently, the same way that people who ate food while in Faerie would be trapped there. The livestock pavilion contains (among other creatures) unicorns.
The nameless SCP in slot 4000 is a forest inhabited by faeries (though the document doesn't call them that) with the unique property of having no names. Giving them (or the forest or the landmarks within) a name, or being named by a faery, is a very bad idea, with consequences up to and including having one's name stolen (hence why it's not called "SCP-4000"). Foundation members who interact with the faeries must follow a lengthy list of rules to avoid angering them, and even then some of the faeries seem to be innately hostile to humans. One of the faeries claims that they are the survivors of the attempted genocide mentioned in Bright's Proposal. In their account, the faeries used to be allies and helped the Foundation fight the Factory, but the Foundation's predecessor betrayed them, killing many and somehow stealing their very names. This is why some faeries hate humans in general.
SCP-6800 ("The White Ashes"): Pygnite is a metallic substance made up of the ground-up corpses of faeries.
 The Fair Folk / int_42ffb88e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_42ffb88e
featureConfidence
1.0
 SCP Foundation (Website)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_42ffb88e
 The Fair Folk / int_43549103
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_43549103
comment
Some short stories and The King of Elfland's Daughter by Lord Dunsany (Anglo-Irish, with a heavy emphasis on the Anglo portion) have elves and similar creatures to whom human life is an incomprehensible mystery. Even after living among humans for many years, they never quite get the hang of it.
 The Fair Folk / int_43549103
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_43549103
featureConfidence
1.0
 The King of Elfland's Daughter
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_43549103
 The Fair Folk / int_43576f5
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_43576f5
comment
Supernatural:
In the episode "Clap Your Hands If You Believe...", fairies are initially mistaken for aliens due to their penchant for abducting people using bright lights and leaving behind Crop Circles. Some of them actually encourage this.
There's also the Changelings from the episode "The Kids Are Alright". They kidnap children and take their form so they can drain the life from the mother.
 The Fair Folk / int_43576f5
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_43576f5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Supernatural
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_43576f5
 The Fair Folk / int_444a3666
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_444a3666
comment
A Curse Dark as Gold, a retelling of the Rumpelstiltskin tale, features "Jack Spinner" — who can spin straw into gold, re-weave ruined wool into perfect cloth, knew some of the mill's historical owners personally, and always bargains for payment in the form of items with high sentimental (not monetary) value.
 The Fair Folk / int_444a3666
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_444a3666
featureConfidence
1.0
 A Curse Dark as Gold
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_444a3666
 The Fair Folk / int_444f7f18
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_444f7f18
comment
The second Kushiel's Legacy trilogy introduces a human tribe of the Fantasy Counterpart Cultures Alba and Eire, who are described very like the Fair Folk: an old people who live in the wild, untamed areas, powerfully magical, and not malicious but adhering to a different moral standard. Some characters fear them and refuse to speak of them, while others welcome bargaining with them. Their Voluntary Shapeshifting and sympathetic magic play a vital role in the plot.
 The Fair Folk / int_444f7f18
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_444f7f18
featureConfidence
1.0
 Kushiel's Legacy
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_444f7f18
 The Fair Folk / int_4464eb9c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_4464eb9c
comment
The Forest Queen in Ash & Cinders is literally bolted to her own throne by its branches weaving through her body, forcing her to move the branches of her throne with her mind if she wants to move at all. Cinder notes that she can't really tell if the Forest Queen is doing anything of her own accord, or whether her actions are manipulated by something more Fae.
 The Fair Folk / int_4464eb9c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_4464eb9c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ash & Cinders
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_4464eb9c
 The Fair Folk / int_4522fd1
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_4522fd1
comment
In the Whateley Universe, the Faerie are an ancient race who think of humans as pets raised (originally) in a garden world. They apparently feel the same way about werewolves. Fey, one of the protagonists, was changed into her current appearance by an ancient Faerie spirit who now resides in Fey's head. While Fey is inhumanly beautiful, in "Ill Winds" her true form is a luminescent energy form that isn't remotely human.
 The Fair Folk / int_4522fd1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_4522fd1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Whateley Universe
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_4522fd1
 The Fair Folk / int_45599333
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_45599333
comment
The Guardians of the Tower are known in the legends as Fae. Not only are they all sorts of weird looking (Headon is a bipedal bunny with eyes in his Slasher Smile), they can be rather manipulative and are implied to plot the destruction of the current ruling system.
 The Fair Folk / int_45599333
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_45599333
featureConfidence
1.0
 Tower of God (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_45599333
 The Fair Folk / int_468bebb0
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_468bebb0
comment
Discworld: To quote Nanny Ogg's Cookbook: "How hard is it to invite her along, give her plenty of drink and a plate of ham rolls all to herself, and keep her out of the way of your posh auntie? Play your cards right and you could be ahead by an extra good wish."
 The Fair Folk / int_468bebb0
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_468bebb0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Discworld
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_468bebb0
 The Fair Folk / int_469d66bd
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_469d66bd
comment
In "The Jezinkas", the Jezinkas have the charming habit of gouging out men's eyes.
 The Fair Folk / int_469d66bd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_469d66bd
featureConfidence
1.0
 TheJezinkas
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_469d66bd
 The Fair Folk / int_46a575bf
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_46a575bf
comment
To add to their alien-ness, the City Face interlude shows that they don't distinguish between lengths of distance and lengths of time.
 The Fair Folk / int_46a575bf
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_46a575bf
featureConfidence
1.0
 CityFace
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_46a575bf
 The Fair Folk / int_4766cb26
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_4766cb26
comment
In brilliant lights will cease to burn, the fae are somewhere in between their modern and folkloric portrayals. Appearance-wise, they are cute and/or beautiful pixie-like creatures, but they act much more like their traditional counterparts, temporarily granting people powers through contracts and generally causing mischief. They outright said that they would have whisked Izuku away and made him their pet if it weren't for the fact that he's the only living magician on Earth.
 The Fair Folk / int_4766cb26
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_4766cb26
featureConfidence
1.0
 Brilliant Lights Will Cease To Burn (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_4766cb26
 The Fair Folk / int_4991931c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_4991931c
comment
Coraline (again by Neil Gaiman) strongly hints that the Other Mother is one of the Fair Folk, with one of her victims referring to her as "the beldam", an archaic term for a fairy or witch.
One of said victims appears to be a nicer sort of fairy — this is only revealed toward the end in the original novel, but due to the necessity of actually portraying them visually, shows up sooner in the graphic novel, and was dropped for the film version.
 The Fair Folk / int_4991931c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_4991931c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Coraline
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_4991931c
 The Fair Folk / int_49a88442
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_49a88442
comment
Final Fantasy XIV:
The sylph manage to fulfill both ends of the spectrum. Friendly Sylph are relatively harmless and enjoy the company of mortals who can comprehend their rather odd traditions, and also enjoy playing harmless pranks like leaving gifts of fruit in weird places to people they like. Tempered Sylph are much worse, very territorial, they usually don't leave Larkscall, but when they do it's usually to play very cruel, spiteful pranks that could harm or even kill mortals. They also constantly encroach the untempered Sylphs of Little Solace to try to bring them under Ramuh's thrall.
Shadowbringers introduces the fuath, a race of short, anthropomorphic frog people with the power to control water. They’re the most capricious and malicious of the fae tribes in Il Mheg, drowning people and attacking other fae for their own amusement. When the player needs to borrow an important relic from them, the Fuath won’t give it up unless the player entertains them by fighting through their illusory, monster-infested domain to reach the relic. When the player succeeds, the Fuath give up the relic as promised but try to drown them anyway.
Shadowbringers also introduces the pixies, who are stated to be the reincarnation of children that had died. While the pixies aren't cruel, their pranks and their interpetation of playing with mortals can cause great harm and even kill people. The shrubs in the vague shape of people dotted around the landscape were people that were transformed by the pixies that wanted to play or were just bored. The pixies also attempt to mess with the Warrior of Light until Feo Ul, a pixie that the Warrior had formed a contract with earlier, tells them to back off. And when Feo Ul becomes the new king, that contract leaves the Warrior of Light well protected within the Fae realm.
 The Fair Folk / int_49a88442
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_49a88442
featureConfidence
1.0
 Final Fantasy XIV (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_49a88442
 The Fair Folk / int_49ad83ee
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_49ad83ee
comment
World of Warcraft has two races of elves: Night Elves and Blood Elves. Night Elves, members of The Alliance, tend to be more benevolent as they're mostly nature lovers, but they are also very fierce warriors who aren't fond of outsiders. The Blood Elves, members of the Horde, are downright evil for the most part as they're very vain and derive their magical power from an imprisoned alien. There are also High Elves, who were the closest to Tolkien's elves, but there are very few left as most of them became Blood Elves. Also, Sylvanas Windrunner, a former High Elf, became a banshee after she died and founded the undead Forsaken, another Horde race (who are arguably also evil by nature since they are undead).
For the most part, the Blood Elves that are with the Horde aren't evil. They imprisoned a Naaru out of desperation more than anything else, because they could potentially die without a new source of magic after the destruction of the Sunwell. They haven't been so bad since the Sunwell was restored and they were given the power of the Light. Now they tend to arrogant pricks at worst, and not too much worse than the Night Elves were.
The Blood Elves who followed Kael'Thas into Outland, however, are evil and are aligned with a faction of demons that is bent on destroying all life in the universe.
The Night Elves made their first appearance attacking the Orcs for cutting down trees. They were also incredibly haughty and xenophobic, ignoring a war going on right in front of them and often attacking both sides with little provocation. It wasn't until the Burning Legion showed up and they had no choice but to team up with both of their enemies that they were finally willing to work with any of the other races. They were also humbled quite a bit after the destruction of the World Tree (which gave them their immortality), and ended up joining the Alliance.
Properly speaking, there's a fourth faction of Elves as well, the Naga, former High Elves (from the time when this meant the ruling class of the Night Elves, including their ancient queen, Azshara) twisted by the magical backlash of the destruction of the original Well of Eternity (which ripped the continent apart, leaving the four main continents of Azeroth today) into serpentine forms. They appear bent on retaking their old place as lords of Azeroth. There's quite a waiting line for that spot.
 The Fair Folk / int_49ad83ee
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_49ad83ee
featureConfidence
1.0
 World of Warcraft (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_49ad83ee
 The Fair Folk / int_49ff762
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_49ff762
comment
The Fairies from the Torchwood episode "Small Worlds", who would think nothing of drowning the world beneath a flood to get their hands on one little girl. Similar to Yeats' fairies, they are Ambiguously Evil; in this case, due to Blue-and-Orange Morality. They seem to think they are doing Jasmine a favour (since it's implied she's unhappy in her present life).
 The Fair Folk / int_49ff762
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_49ff762
featureConfidence
1.0
 Torchwood
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_49ff762
 The Fair Folk / int_4b225
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_4b225
comment
In Celestia's Rocket Adventures, this is how the Pokémon universe seems to translate 'alicorn', as Celestia, Luna, and Twilight all end up as Fairy-types. They may look pretty and generally friendly (and in Luna's case boisterous), but as Team Flare and Ash can both testify to, they are not to be trifled with.
 The Fair Folk / int_4b225
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_4b225
featureConfidence
1.0
 Celestia's Rocket Adventures (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_4b225
 The Fair Folk / int_4b434423
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_4b434423
comment
Pokémon Sword and Shield introduces two lines of dangerous and malevolent fairies. On one hand, we have the Dark/Fairy Impidimp line. The first stage, Impidimp, is a little imp/goblin that feeds on negative emotions. Its second stage, Morgrem, fights dirty and likes to lure people to get lost in the forest. The final stage, Grimmsnarl, is a brutal, hairy troll.note  Wrong Troll. On the other hand, there is also the Hattena line. It starts out just Psychic, but gains the Fairy type in the final evolution. Hatenna is harmless and will run away from people with strong emotions. Hattrem, the second stage, will beat them up mercilessly instead and Hatterene will tear people apart if they are too loud around it, and anyone who enters the forests where they live is in danger.
 The Fair Folk / int_4b434423
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_4b434423
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pokémon Sword and Shield (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_4b434423
 The Fair Folk / int_4b6f8e36
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_4b6f8e36
comment
Thunderbolts: The Thunderbolts fight an army of fairies. At first they're tiny winged women but then what looks like winged actual-size cthulhumanoids show up. Their names are largely consonants, and, according to Elsa Bloodstone, those are the same kind of true fae that Lovecraft wrote about.
 The Fair Folk / int_4b6f8e36
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_4b6f8e36
featureConfidence
1.0
 Thunderbolts (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_4b6f8e36
 The Fair Folk / int_4f3a33a4
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_4f3a33a4
comment
"The Nix in the Mill-Pond": The titular nixie promises the poor miller she will make him a rich man if he will give him "that which has just been born in your house." The miller naively assumes the nixie is referring to some puppy or kitten, and he promises what she demands. Then he goes back home and finds out his wife has just given birth.
 The Fair Folk / int_4f3a33a4
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_4f3a33a4
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Nix in the Mill-Pond
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_4f3a33a4
 The Fair Folk / int_4fabe78a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_4fabe78a
comment
In his On Fairy-Stories essay, Tolkien pointed out that the first use of "faerie" in English was to refer to The Casanova, a human being dressed up to seduce and looking "as [if] he were of Faerie" when he attended church. The Professor goes into considerable detail about the modern view of fluttery little creatures vs. depictions of magical and often impressive, intimidating creatures in ancient folk legends.
 The Fair Folk / int_4fabe78a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_4fabe78a
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Fairy-Stories
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_4fabe78a
 The Fair Folk / int_501b2ca1
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_501b2ca1
comment
Brackenwood:
The YuYu are tiny, goblin-like beings who come out at night to steal people away to a dark netherworld, and can fuse with each other into a cloud of black smoke.
The early short "Bingbong of Brackenwood" features another group of similar beings, perhaps an early "draft" of the YuYu or perhaps something different. They resemble tiny featureless humanoids that glow a soft yellow like a candle, and with flames for hair. Bingbong finds them in a clearing, dancing in a circle while others play pipes and drums. He runs in to join them, at which point the humanoids look at each other, nod, and begin to dance faster and faster around Bingbong as their yellow glow turns orange, then red... until Bingbong looks down to find them all lying dazed on the ground, at which point he loses interest and wanders away. This is a reference to Fairy Rings, which were believed to be where fairies would force the mortal entering it to dance to death.
 The Fair Folk / int_501b2ca1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_501b2ca1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Brackenwood (Web Animation)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_501b2ca1
 The Fair Folk / int_50a4bc11
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_50a4bc11
comment
The Folks in Folklore want you dead with a few small exceptions. The "Faeries" are simply the denizens of a realm of the Netherworld created when people dreamed of an afterlife of paradise... but that still doesn't stop the "paradise" from being filled with dozens and dozens of deceased souls that turned into angry Folks that want to kill you.
 The Fair Folk / int_50a4bc11
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_50a4bc11
featureConfidence
1.0
 Folklore (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_50a4bc11
 The Fair Folk / int_52e8fba
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_52e8fba
comment
The Phanfasms in the Land of Oz book The Emerald City of Oz: Sadistic, creepy, illusion-slinging shapeshifters who have every intention of turning on their allies as soon as their mutual enemy is dealt with. Thank Lurline for the Fountain of Oblivion.
 The Fair Folk / int_52e8fba
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_52e8fba
featureConfidence
1.0
 Land of Oz
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_52e8fba
 The Fair Folk / int_546769dd
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_546769dd
comment
There are theories that the Slender Man may or may not be an example; one of the earliest tales is that he dwells in a forest and does something with naughty children. A Lack of Lexicon is less ambiguous about this.
 The Fair Folk / int_546769dd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_546769dd
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Slender Man Mythos (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_546769dd
 The Fair Folk / int_547279cf
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_547279cf
comment
Fey in Code Name: Hunter seem to be mostly a combination of the Scottish and Irish traditional fair folk. Including kidnapping of mere mortals in order to pay tithe to Hell.
Max once lampshaded the "Disney" idea most Americans have of fairies. "Trust me, a person would have to be desperate to go through a fey gate"
 The Fair Folk / int_547279cf
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_547279cf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Code Name: Hunter (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_547279cf
 The Fair Folk / int_559f101f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_559f101f
comment
The fey of Perpetua in Tales from Netheredge are pale, slender, sweet-voiced humanoid beings who have immense capacity for magic (which is powered by sex and/or cruelty), scorn humans (who in turn are afraid of the fey), and are vulnerable to iron.
 The Fair Folk / int_559f101f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_559f101f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Tales from Netheredge
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_559f101f
 The Fair Folk / int_5690420f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5690420f
comment
In DuckTales (1987), the leprechauns that Scrooge McDuck and his nephews meet aren't evil per se, but they are willing to kill anyone who trespasses on their property, even by dumping them into a snake pit in their castle. (This almost happens to the protagonists, but when the Leprechaun King finds out that they were invited by the leprechaun who brought them there — despite the fact that the leprechaun in question is a Snake Oil Salesman — he decides they can't do that.)
The 2017 remake includes Kelpies (styled like My Little Pony characters, no less), which as to be expected want to drown the main characters.
 The Fair Folk / int_5690420f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5690420f
featureConfidence
1.0
 DuckTales (1987)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5690420f
 The Fair Folk / int_569093cc
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_569093cc
comment
The 2017 remake includes Kelpies (styled like My Little Pony characters, no less), which as to be expected want to drown the main characters.
 The Fair Folk / int_569093cc
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_569093cc
featureConfidence
1.0
 DuckTales (2017)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_569093cc
 The Fair Folk / int_56e10d85
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_56e10d85
comment
Tolkien's Legendarium:
The Lord of the Rings:
The Hebrew translation turned Elves into the Fair Folk without actually changing anything in the story. Lacking a real translation for "elf", the older Hebrew versions called them "Shedim" (demons), "Shedonim" (imps or goblins) and "Bene Lilith" (Children of Lilith/Children of The Night Lady). Nothing about their actions or descriptions was really changed, but somehow simply being called "demons" turned all of their beauty, grace, and niceness sinister and creepy. Realizing this, a neologism alph (from English "elf") was invented to describe Tolkien's elves in Hebrew.
Even if the elves aren't hostile to humans by the time of the Third Age, the opposite belief seems to be pervasive in the human lands, even in Gondor.
Elves tend to draw from other stories, making them broadly morally aligned with humanity (you get fewer properly bad ones, but when they do end up Jumping Off the Slippery Slope, it is spectacular), and not particularly alien... and yet, they have their moments. For one thing, pretty much all of them live either literally under the earth or in magically concealed kingdoms where time passes somewhat strangely (and in the case of Gondolin, they're not about to let you leave). Mostly, their age and differing perception of the world means that they just come off as a bit weird.
The Hobbit hints that the woodland elves are somewhat dangerous but they are mostly whimsical and unreliable.
In general, Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion paint the Woodland Elves in particular as "less wise, more fierce." And those are the relatively domesticated elves of the late 3rd Age - the further back you go, the more mysterious and dangerous the elves are.
The Book of Lost Tales has a closer connection to the fair folk, as the first presentation of Melian describes her as a "fay", and the link between Lúthien and hemlocks (a rather poisonous plant associated with witchcraft, for instance in Macbeth) persists all the way to The Lord of the Rings. In Beren and Lúthien, the area between Sauron's fortress and Thingol's realm is the battleground for a gigantic Wizard Duel between Melian (Thingol's wife) and Sauron. In that place Sauron's evil spells cause part of the nastiness but Melian's spells tend to keep anyone out Thingol doesn't want in his realm, even allies. They appear like Fair Folk because of Unfriendly Fire rather than from pleasure for tormenting mortals.
Even the Noldor, the faction most closely connected to Men and, in some cases, Dwarves, can be decidedly dangerous - the key example being Feanor, an elf whose spirit was so powerful that his mother died after childbirth, was ridiculously brilliant, took minor linguistic shifts as personal attacks, was covetous and jealous in a way that elves usually weren't, creating the Silmarils, being entirely willing to commit genocide to get them back and bind his sons to an oath to do the same (one that is implied to compel them against their own will), and defying the Valar themselves out of pride. His various sons and their allies continue to come off as this to Men, who many of them treat with contempt (though some change their minds at seeing how resilient and brave Men are capable of being).
It's also worth noting that a lot of elves, particularly the Noldor, distinctly resented having their dominion usurped by the Second-Born, the Men. Most of them got over it.
Even during the events of The Hobbit, the part of Mirkwood under the rule of the Elvenking (Thranduil, father of Legolas) is decidedly eerie, and the dwarves keep stumbling into a blurry elven party. The same applies at the start of Lord of the Rings, with Sam explicitly noting that he - and the other Hobbits - has difficulty remembering the fine details of the faerie feast, even though it's one they were invited to.
In Beren and Lúthien, Thingol comes off like a dangerous Elf, as he tries to wrangle around the oath of neither caging nor killing Beren:
The "Lingerers" as described in Morgoth's Ring, elven spirits are so powerful that their body can't quit hold it and it burns their body away leaving them in a shadowy form. The "Unbodied" are elves that actually died and refused to obey Mandos's summons. Some of these had actually worked for Morgoth. These are the ones to fear while Lingerers are generally nice if strange and unpredictable. These perhaps correspond to the Seelie and the Unseelie.
 The Fair Folk / int_56e10d85
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_56e10d85
featureConfidence
1.0
 Tolkien's Legendarium (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_56e10d85
 The Fair Folk / int_57f80079
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_57f80079
comment
In The Mortal Instruments, fairies are rarely trustworthy. Although they cannot lie, they are masters of evasion. They also have a definite sadistic streak and will ally with good or evil depending on where they think their interests are best served.
 The Fair Folk / int_57f80079
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_57f80079
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mortal Instruments
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_57f80079
 The Fair Folk / int_5936f6eb
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5936f6eb
comment
Coffee Talk: In the late 50's, "fairies" were an umbrella term for any beings that didn't fit any of the racial categories at the time, meaning that any sentient being that was "incomprehensible", such as ghosts, was lumped with them. As the anti-racism movement progressed, the list of beings classified as "fairies" became shorter as more of them became legally recognized, until only the "true" fairies are left. It's revealed that the Gnomes of Gnome Noms were behind the car vandalism in Episode 2. They vandalized cars over a broken promise to keep the dead hawthorn tree because that was the "body" of their friend, the fairy vendor who was killed by a drunk driver in 1959.
 The Fair Folk / int_5936f6eb
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5936f6eb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Coffee Talk (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5936f6eb
 The Fair Folk / int_5a0daa35
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5a0daa35
comment
Iron Kingdoms: The Elves of Ios are xenophobic isolationists who have closed off their nation's borders to outsiders. Of the few Elves that do leave their homeland, a fair proportion are assassins who have dedicated their lives to hunting down and killing human wizards and mechanika-users. They do this because they believe that human arcane magic and mechanika are draining the life from their last remaining Physical God, thereby dooming the Elven race to extinction; whether or not this is actually the case has never been conclusively addressed. To say nothing of the Nyssian Elves, who are enslaved body and mind to a monster.
 The Fair Folk / int_5a0daa35
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5a0daa35
featureConfidence
1.0
 Iron Kingdoms (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5a0daa35
 The Fair Folk / int_5afbc0cb
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5afbc0cb
comment
Undertale: The monsters' overall relationship with humanity is ultimately a reference to this trope in everything but the use of the words "Mortal" and "Faerie". The Monsters you meet throughout your venture into the depths of Mt. Ebott are characterized as bizarre, random, and deceptively logic-defying near-immortal creatures. Their relationship with humans is revealed to be the same as commonly seen between the Faerie and Mortals, as they were banished for their chaotic, whimsical nature, along with the recently discovered fact that they could strengthen themselves even further than their already inhuman levels through consumption of human souls, which tend to linger after death, and are obviously plentiful in supply. It doesn't help that you, the player, can slay most, but not all, of these mythical beings which you encounter with but a Cold Iron knife and nothing more, if you please. The trope is ultimately proven to be justified, as the "Monsters" fear humans just as much as humanity fears the "Monsters". Some of them are merely ignorant to the current happenings, while some are even benevolent towards the player.
 The Fair Folk / int_5afbc0cb
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5afbc0cb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Undertale (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5afbc0cb
 The Fair Folk / int_5bd6bb99
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5bd6bb99
comment
In Apocalypse, they are a Dying Race barely surviving the setting thanks to the Holy Grail (Dagda's Cauldron) they recovered from the Angels. They summoned Lady Danu to help restore everyone. However, she has become Black Maria in order to protect them, and can no longer reclaim her old position. It fell to recurring ally Nozomi to accept the fate of becoming the new Lady Danu in order to save them from extinction. Easier said than done, as one of the first crises they faced was the attack of the forces from the Divine Powers led by Titan who set the Fairy Forest ablaze simply because "it was on his way".
 The Fair Folk / int_5bd6bb99
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5bd6bb99
featureConfidence
1.0
 Shin Megami Tensei IV: Apocalypse (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5bd6bb99
 The Fair Folk / int_5ca2f3f9
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5ca2f3f9
comment
Some of the wizards in Wizards of Waverly Place come off this way.
 The Fair Folk / int_5ca2f3f9
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5ca2f3f9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Wizards of Waverly Place
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5ca2f3f9
 The Fair Folk / int_5ce8480e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5ce8480e
comment
Evolution: The pithecines, who took to living as scavengers in the forest fringe and occasionally hunted humans, their savannah-dwelling cousins, are depicted as the basis in reality of these myths.
 The Fair Folk / int_5ce8480e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5ce8480e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Evolution
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5ce8480e
 The Fair Folk / int_5d3177c2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5d3177c2
comment
Birthright had the splitting of Shadow World and the "normal" world, which also ripped all but one original Sie in two — a Sidhe (elf) attuned to (and immortal in) the normal world, able to use wizardry and a Seelie attuned to (and immortal in) the Shadow World, able to use natural magic (druidism) and Seeming. Now when an elf is born on Cerilia, a faerie just "appears" on the other side. So far no one has managed to find two counterparts and bring the pair together to see what happens. Though glamour isn't exclusive, they are much better at it than most other Shadow critters. It should also be noted that Birthright elves, unlike most D&D settings, are usually Chaotic Neutral rather than Chaotic Good, often have major beef against humans over having been expelled by them from many of their forests, and have several Fair Folk tropes associated with them (such as elven revels being Year Outside, Hour Inside for mortals, half-elves often being treated as akin to Changelings, and some more bigoted factions upholding the Geallie Sidhe or Hunt of the Elves, aimed at driving off or killing off humans living on ancient elven lands (e.g. the entire continent of Cerillia, where most of the known world is).
 The Fair Folk / int_5d3177c2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5d3177c2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Birthright (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5d3177c2
 The Fair Folk / int_5d88e44e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5d88e44e
comment
The Haunting Hour featured the Fair Folk in some of their episodes. Specific examples include:
"Intruders": A fairy named Lyria explains to a girl named Eve that Eve is a changeling and invites her to rejoin their world. Eve enjoys her new friend and powers at first, until Lyria demands Eve let her kidnap Eve's little brother...
It's also heavily implied that, while the fairies may look like beautiful winged humanoids, they can assume a more monstrous form. All we see of this, however, are red eyes glaring at Eve from the forest.
"Red Eye": A girl named Georgia discovers that the Alp, a creature that can inhabit small objects, has been following her dad around on his business trip through Europe, appearing in all the photos he's sent her. "Alp" is actually a variation of "elf," and the creature takes the form of a red-eyed, shadowy demon.
"Lotsa Luck": Greg, an Irish-American teen, makes a deal with Seamus the leprechaun in order to end his string of bad luck. Greg soon learns that, after exhausting all three of his wishes, the leprechaun will take his soul, and has to find a way to break their contract.
 The Fair Folk / int_5d88e44e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5d88e44e
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Haunting Hour
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5d88e44e
 The Fair Folk / int_5e150650
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5e150650
comment
Exalted: The Fair Folk are shapeless chaotic beings who feed off of the emotions of mortals, often leaving them zombified husks. They don't typically have driving motivations so much as drives they adopt because they seem dramatically appropriate, and most would like to see Creation as a whole dissolve into the Wyld because the very concept of something operating by logic and physical laws disgusts them, since their own world operates purely on narratives and tropes instead. Some of them have moved into Creation, losing the "shapeless" part, perceiving themselves as magnificent nobility stranded on the edges of an alien world who cannot return home (since scarier things await them...), and a few go native and decide that Creation and its inhabitants are simply too much fun to do away with. Their stories and struggles are enticing, and it turns out that when you're stronger then the average mortal by far, it's pretty easy to live your chosen Narrative (unless you piss off the Wyld Hunt, a returned Solar, or a Lunar, who will kill, destroy, or eat you respectively).
 The Fair Folk / int_5e150650
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5e150650
featureConfidence
1.0
 Exalted (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5e150650
 The Fair Folk / int_5f29da1d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5f29da1d
comment
Holly Black's Modern Faerie Tales trilogy fits this trope, but sort of inverts the Seelie/Unseelie dynamic. The fairies are as nasty as any monster, but the higher-ups have slightly reversed roles: the Seelie Queen is a master of political games, while the Unseelie Queen is straight with her court. That said, the Seelie fairies won't kill you on sight. These books also use the Tam Lin plotline of a sacrifice every seven years — the Seelie fairies will just spirit away a talented human, while the Unseelie fairies will murder the first person they can find. Interestingly, the Unseelie court is shown to work to the benefit of humanity: as the sacrifice every seven years binds all unaffiliated fairies in Unseelie territory to the Unseelie Queen's rule, it means she can control the Free fae and stop Kelpies and Redcaps and the like from murdering people on a daily basis just because they feel like it. One Kelpie specifically says "We, who are not the rulers, we must obey those that are. Mortals are a treat for the Gentry, and not for the likes of you and me. Unless, of course, they are willing."
 The Fair Folk / int_5f29da1d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5f29da1d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Modern Faerie Tales
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5f29da1d
 The Fair Folk / int_5f98cca8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5f98cca8
comment
Proof: The female fairies look like cute little green people, but act like ferocious predators with huge appetites (e.g. after mating, the butterfly-sized female eats the male, who's about as tall as a house). Fortunately, these fairies are non-magical and an endangered species.
 The Fair Folk / int_5f98cca8
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5f98cca8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Proof (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5f98cca8
 The Fair Folk / int_5fa33285
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5fa33285
comment
Labyrinth:
When Sarah reaches the outer wall of the Labyrinth, she finds a gardener killing Fairies with a bug sprayer. She calls him a brute, and picks up one of the not-quite-dead Fairies, who rewards her actions by attempting to bite off her finger. When she expresses her amazement and that she thought Fairies did "nice things, like granting wishes", the gardener simply scoffs and says "Shows what you know."
Jareth himself and his Goblins; the film is essentially a changeling tale.
And the Fieries. They're playful rather than evil, but they have unfortunate gaps in their understanding of human physiology...
Also the brownie that screws up the marks Sarah's using to get through the maze. From his perspective, she's defacing his flagstones.
 The Fair Folk / int_5fa33285
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5fa33285
featureConfidence
1.0
 Labyrinth
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5fa33285
 The Fair Folk / int_5fe90971
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_5fe90971
comment
The Laundry brings faeries (separate from the ones shown in The Laundry Files, who are Alternate Universe version of humans, in the Homo genus but of a different species) into the setting as cthulhoid "information entities". Like the series' demons, they're made up of information strung together through an electromagnetic field, explaining why iron messes them up so badly; similarly, it's said they appear rarely in modern Britain, given how the nation is wired to the gills. They do take children, however, and changelings are explained away as a class four Glamour placed over a poppet made of twigs and string to make it look like it's a real child. And the kids? They're turned into biological computation matrices in order to sustain a field that will keep the faerie in our world.
 The Fair Folk / int_5fe90971
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_5fe90971
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Laundry (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_5fe90971
 The Fair Folk / int_60a7a86d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_60a7a86d
comment
Shade, the Changing Man: A late issue focuses on a group of actors filming the type of Disneyfied, Bowdlerized fairy tale made for children, shot on location in Ireland. They get together at a pub to express contempt for the film and the irresistible amounts of money that compelled them to take part in it, and the older Irish natives talk about the terror and brutality of the real fairy tales they grew up with. When Shade arrives and enters a Fairy Ring, his madness amplifies the effect across the entire country, with results deadly and deranging. The madstorm also wipes out the entire film production, to the relief of the surviving actors.
 The Fair Folk / int_60a7a86d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_60a7a86d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Shade, the Changing Man (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_60a7a86d
 The Fair Folk / int_610a28dd
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_610a28dd
comment
Tinker Bell from Disney's Peter Pan - despite being the poster child for the less threatening modern "disneyfied" type of fairy, she's still spiteful and ruthless enough to arrange for the murder of her perceived romantic rival (a teenage girl no less) and is completely unapologetic afterwards.
 The Fair Folk / int_610a28dd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_610a28dd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Peter Pan
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_610a28dd
 The Fair Folk / int_615c5032
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_615c5032
comment
In Maleficent, the Perspective Flip of Sleeping Beauty, Maleficent is explicitly a fairy in the more traditional sense alongside the more typically modern Flittle, Knotgrass, and Thistlewit, (the new versions of Flora, Fauna, and Merryweather) rather than a human witch. In fact, there's a whole land of Fair Folk in various forms, called the Moors, where they mostly mind their own business. Like in traditional folklore, they're weak to iron and the main antagonist King Stefan uses this to his advantage when fighting Maleficent.
 The Fair Folk / int_615c5032
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_615c5032
featureConfidence
1.0
 Maleficent
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_615c5032
 The Fair Folk / int_62044071
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_62044071
comment
In "The Gold Mountain", the dwarf is a wicked, magical creature who tricks humans into giving him their children.
 The Fair Folk / int_62044071
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_62044071
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Gold Mountain
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_62044071
 The Fair Folk / int_62570927
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_62570927
comment
Marvel Universe:
Iron Man: In Kieron Gillen's run, Malekith the Accursed calls The Wild Hunt on Tony Stark entirely because he calls himself "Iron Man" and elves hate anything associated with iron since it's one of their few weaknesses. It should be noted one of the Mandarin's Rings wanted him to go after Tony as part of the rings' scheme and was set to mentally manipulate him into doing so, as the other rings had been doing to other wielders (It backfired horribly), but Malekith went along with it anyway, apparently for the hell of it. Gillen has stated that he wants the elves to come across as alien in mindset as anything Tony has encountered in outer space. Malekith also unwisely provokes Tony with a changeling crack or two (Tony has recently discovered that he was adopted at this point), and gloats about the sort of things the Elves did with the stolen infants. He wants to make Tony angry. It works, and Tony singlehandedly carves a bloody trail through Svartalfheim without once raising his voice, using a suit armed with Cold Iron weapons, hunting down Malekith personally. Malekith, who it should be noted is someone who enjoys pissing off Thor (as in, he once cut off his arm and burned it to ash in front of him, and at the end of War of the Realms told him to Bring It while holding his parents hostage), admits that Tony on the rampage genuinely frightened him, and even years later, during War of the Realms, he takes the trouble to manipulate someone else (a dragon) into going after Tony rather than facing him himself.
Paul Cornell's Wisdom and Captain Britain and MI13 feature Oberon's daughter Tinkabelinos (yes...), who resembles a foul-mouthed cross between Boudicea and a punk rocker.
 The Fair Folk / int_62570927
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_62570927
featureConfidence
1.0
 Marvel Universe (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_62570927
 The Fair Folk / int_63409895
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_63409895
comment
Sofia the First : in the episode "The fliegel has landed" a mischievous and troublesome fairy named Grotta causes distress in the cave of the trolls, and even ends bewitching Cedric.
 The Fair Folk / int_63409895
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_63409895
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sofia the First
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_63409895
 The Fair Folk / int_634820a7
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_634820a7
comment
The Guardian (1990), a horror movie about a dryad who poses as a babysitter, abduct babies, and feeds them to her tree.
 The Fair Folk / int_634820a7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_634820a7
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Guardian (1990)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_634820a7
 The Fair Folk / int_6365ff3a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6365ff3a
comment
In Dragon Quest V, faeries are tiny, wingless pixies who do not like humans. Children may have a pass, but grownups entering their woods to find the path to their country Faerie Lea will find themselves utterly lost because of their magic.
 The Fair Folk / int_6365ff3a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6365ff3a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dragon Quest V (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6365ff3a
 The Fair Folk / int_6572f71e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6572f71e
comment
The Fairy Servants in Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, particularly "The Gentleman With Thistledown Hair." A footnote in the book explains that there are two faculties in both men and fairies: a faculty of reason and a faculty of magic. Men possess a greater share of reason than magic, and the fairies are the exact opposite. Though the term "fairy" is used as a convenient catch-all term, the in-universe appendix states that it is an umbrella term that covers many subspecies; by the same token, fairies refer to all humans as "Christians". The book also describes the three classes of supernatural beings — angels, demons and fairies — as being "eternally good", "infernally wicked" and "morally suspect" in that order.
 The Fair Folk / int_6572f71e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6572f71e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6572f71e
 The Fair Folk / int_6610332a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6610332a
comment
Moonflowers is set in Ireland, where The Wild Hunt are the antagonists. They've abducted the American Alima's parents, turned her father into a dog, and are hunting Alima herself while she's grieving for her missing family. It turns out that the Wild Hunt cursed her family to be three of the victims in the Fairy Raid. However, the Wild Hunt is unusually extreme: Maidin the river-spirit is quite nice (even if he's not all there), has been friends with a supporting character for decades, and is attempting to renew a Reincarnation Romance with said character's grandson.
Ramped up further when their leader the Horned Hunter, constantly stated as "almost a god," is revealed as a straight-up force of nature representing predators. Which is why the Irish gods have so much trouble helping the Song family—because very technically, obstructing him too much would "go against the natural order"--plus, telling a predator to just stop hunting has a real danger of making him kill EVEN MORE PEOPLE in retaliation. While they can make him stop targeting the Song family, they'd need to replace them with other victims. Both humans and gods are frantically playing Xanatos Speed Chess with the Hunter, resulting in one Gambit Pileup and the Filipino goddess Mayari's unexpected arrival.
 The Fair Folk / int_6610332a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6610332a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Moonflowers
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6610332a
 The Fair Folk / int_667daa0b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_667daa0b
comment
The deranged, fickle and bizarre inhabitants of The Sixth Dimension from the movie Forbidden Zone share lots of traits with the Fair Folk. Of Course, everyone's deranged in this movie, but the inhabitants of The Sixth Dimension layer on top a slice of Fleischer-style surrealism to make them look even crazier.
 The Fair Folk / int_667daa0b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_667daa0b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Forbidden Zone
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_667daa0b
 The Fair Folk / int_668b3b7b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_668b3b7b
comment
Juliet Marillier's The Sevenwaters Trilogy features Fair Folk based on the ancient legends, and far from cuddly.
 The Fair Folk / int_668b3b7b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_668b3b7b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Sevenwaters Trilogy
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_668b3b7b
 The Fair Folk / int_6744d821
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6744d821
comment
The Owl House: The fact that a little pixie tried to flay Luz with its huge teeth doesn't speak too well of the Boiling Isles. Overall, since it has been stated that many of our mythical beings are the result of beings from the Isles leaking into our world, is easy to guess that myths abouts fae and witches were inspired by encounters with people from the Boiling Isles. Their pointy ears, ability to use magic (thanks to an organ attached to their hearts) and condescending (and sometimes mischievous) attitude towards humans like Luz seems to reinforce this idea.
 The Fair Folk / int_6744d821
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6744d821
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Owl House
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6744d821
 The Fair Folk / int_68237790
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_68237790
comment
Pathfinder:
Unlike the elves in D&D, the game Pathfinder is based on, it is is the gnomes who are the Fey-connected people with a more alien perspective on things. They originate from the spirit world, being in essence fairies who were exiled to the material world after a disaster and "went native". They're constantly seeking new experiences to avoid the Bleaching, a process where they're literally bored to death and turn to dust and bones. It's hinted that the story of the disaster may be a fabrication, and gnomes are really humanoid interface devices through which vastly more powerful beings can study the material world.
Glaistigs, based on a type of Scottish fuath resembling women with goat legs, particularly hearken back to Celtic fairy lore. They are immensely powerful but very fickle, and their presence is a double-edged blessing for those living in their lands. Glaistigs take under their protection vast territories of wilderness and rural land, and the people living in their territories enjoy their protection from outside threats and natural calamites such as droughts and blights in exchange for gifts of food, drink and craft. If a glaistig is offended, however — and they are easily offended, by anything from lack of proper appeasement to being told any sort of lie — she can and will scourge the land with hexes, curses and blights, and her presence alone is enough to incite people into frenzied, uncontrollable dancing.
 The Fair Folk / int_68237790
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_68237790
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pathfinder (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_68237790
 The Fair Folk / int_69b0b659
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_69b0b659
comment
Sabrina: The Animated Series has two Faeries visit the mortal realm on vacation, posing as Canadian exchange students. They're immediately established as mischievous by playing pranks on Gem and friends. They like the mortal realm so much they lure two of Sabrina's friends to the Faerie Realm intending to make them eat some Faerie food — so they can take their place in the mortal realm. Oh and they're racist against mortals too.
 The Fair Folk / int_69b0b659
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_69b0b659
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sabrina: The Animated Series
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_69b0b659
 The Fair Folk / int_6a38df48
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6a38df48
comment
Hexenringe shows the faerie-like Xili viewing activity in the human world.
 The Fair Folk / int_6a38df48
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6a38df48
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hexenringe (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6a38df48
 The Fair Folk / int_6a4bddd6
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6a4bddd6
comment
Iron Man: In Kieron Gillen's run, Malekith the Accursed calls The Wild Hunt on Tony Stark entirely because he calls himself "Iron Man" and elves hate anything associated with iron since it's one of their few weaknesses. It should be noted one of the Mandarin's Rings wanted him to go after Tony as part of the rings' scheme and was set to mentally manipulate him into doing so, as the other rings had been doing to other wielders (It backfired horribly), but Malekith went along with it anyway, apparently for the hell of it. Gillen has stated that he wants the elves to come across as alien in mindset as anything Tony has encountered in outer space. Malekith also unwisely provokes Tony with a changeling crack or two (Tony has recently discovered that he was adopted at this point), and gloats about the sort of things the Elves did with the stolen infants. He wants to make Tony angry. It works, and Tony singlehandedly carves a bloody trail through Svartalfheim without once raising his voice, using a suit armed with Cold Iron weapons, hunting down Malekith personally. Malekith, who it should be noted is someone who enjoys pissing off Thor (as in, he once cut off his arm and burned it to ash in front of him, and at the end of War of the Realms told him to Bring It while holding his parents hostage), admits that Tony on the rampage genuinely frightened him, and even years later, during War of the Realms, he takes the trouble to manipulate someone else (a dragon) into going after Tony rather than facing him himself.
 The Fair Folk / int_6a4bddd6
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6a4bddd6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Iron Man (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6a4bddd6
 The Fair Folk / int_6abf16c2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6abf16c2
comment
In one Big Finish Doctor Who audio drama, Jamie has been giving it some thought, and has decided that the Doctor must be one of the Fair Folk. (Ironic, as he's actually an alien.)
 The Fair Folk / int_6abf16c2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6abf16c2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Big Finish Doctor Who (Audio Play)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6abf16c2
 The Fair Folk / int_6ac55ec7
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6ac55ec7
comment
Dungeons & Dragons: Given many different depictions, Depending on the Writer, the edition, and sometimes even the specific faction of Fey:
In earlier editions, some fairy folk are friendly and good-natured towards humans (brownies, sprites, and kilmoulis), some will only harass humans who trespass in their territory, or enjoy playing non-fatal pranks on hapless humans, (korred, pixies, atomies) and some are actively evil and seek to torment and murder humans (quicklings, boggles, boggarts).
In more recent cosmology (2e AD&D onwards), the Seelie Court, ruled by Queen Titania, are often shown arrogant elitists who refuse to consider non-Fey people. The Unseelie Court, ruled by the Queen of Air and Darkness, are simply monstrous.
While elves are often described as being close to nature and the fey, they are still typed as humanoids; fey has its own type, and includes a very wide array of very strange creatures. In 4E, you may notice that there's not a single good-aligned fey among them...
4e's default setting, the Nentir Vale, consolidates previous editions' elves into three main groups: the Eladrin (4e's High/Sun/Moon/Star elves), Elves (4e's vanilla/Wood/Wild elves), and Drow (the same ol' dark elves). The Eladrin were given the fey-subtype and elevated to the position of masters of the Feywild (4e's Faerie). The Seelie and Unseelie courts can be found in The Manual of the Planes supplement as the Summer and Winter courts respectively, as well as several other courts.
In 4E, you can play a warlock who's sworn fealty to The Fair Folk (or at least got them bent over a log). A lot of your powers rely on deception and flat-out Mind Rape. To give some idea of the kind of company the Fae are keeping here, the other four things a Warlock can pact with are Demon Lords and Archdevils (Infernal Pact), the things that hide behind the stars (Star Pact), the unknown aspects of capricious darkness (Dark Pact), and the remnants of dead heroes, dead gods and Sealed Evil in a Can (Vestige Pact).
4E has the Primordials, who combine this trope with Cosmic Horror Story, especially Eldritch Abomination. Besides being responsible for the creation of the world, they would like nothing more than to return it to chaotic mush. Why? No reason, other than being the various embodiments of Elemental Powers who can't fathom why the Physical Gods wish a constant in the universe.
Birthright had the splitting of Shadow World and the "normal" world, which also ripped all but one original Sie in two — a Sidhe (elf) attuned to (and immortal in) the normal world, able to use wizardry and a Seelie attuned to (and immortal in) the Shadow World, able to use natural magic (druidism) and Seeming. Now when an elf is born on Cerilia, a faerie just "appears" on the other side. So far no one has managed to find two counterparts and bring the pair together to see what happens. Though glamour isn't exclusive, they are much better at it than most other Shadow critters. It should also be noted that Birthright elves, unlike most D&D settings, are usually Chaotic Neutral rather than Chaotic Good, often have major beef against humans over having been expelled by them from many of their forests, and have several Fair Folk tropes associated with them (such as elven revels being Year Outside, Hour Inside for mortals, half-elves often being treated as akin to Changelings, and some more bigoted factions upholding the Geallie Sidhe or Hunt of the Elves, aimed at driving off or killing off humans living on ancient elven lands (e.g. the entire continent of Cerillia, where most of the known world is).
Grain nymphs (first appearing in the Dragonlance setting) can go either way. Usually benevolent to humans (and looked down upon by their kin as city-slicker snobs) their presence can double a farm's harvest, giving plentiful bounty to whatever community it feeds, but woe betide a farmer who tries to exploit or hurt a grain nymph; not only will it drive her away, she "marks" the transgressor so that farm animals (including horses) regard him as an enemy, forever.
The Shadow World makes use of the Seelie and Unseelie Court concepts. The Unseelie are as vile and bloodthirsty as you'd expect, but the Seelie can also be very dangerous due to how alien their mindset is. They don't think twice about kidnapping human children like puppies who caught their eye — they tend not to see humans as people. Changeling "pets" see good care, though, and can fend for themselves (even in the Shadow World) by the time they aren't that cute and the Seelie sends them away.
In Ravenloft, the Arak or "shadow fey" range from meddlesome to Always Chaotic Evil in temperament, and don't limit themselves to stealing infants: if you have a talent or skill that appeals to them, they can sever your shadow, reducing you to a soulless automaton going through the motions. Your shadow becomes a construct that'll compliantly work for them forever. Even Good-aligned Arak insist they're doing them a favor when they practice this technique on mortals. There are also a disturbing number of other (non-Arak) evil fae, such as Boowray, Baobhan Sith, the Green Maiden and the Lady of the Lake.
Even the conventional "sylvan fey" of the Land of Mists can be nastier than elsewhere, due to the ambient influence of the Dark Powers throughout the setting.
Forgotten Realms used to have few true fairies, but in Counselors and Kings Unseelie are presented as one of the very few things that can truly scare Drow, as opposed to irritate them or cause to back off for now.
Some fairies get along with others well, but still are fairly weird. The trio of Glouras (cute singing Underdark sprites with mothlike wings) runs a festhall in Sshamath, a de-facto dancing club and concert hall known even to many human bards on the surface. In spin-a-yarn, the Bloody Fist tavern (Waterdeep) has as barmaids and sort of Fanservice "the Laughing Sisters", named so because they always giggle, who like to bite people's ears just for the sweet taste of blood. They help to deal with "problem customers" too.
Fourth Edition also has Heroes Of The Feywild which goes in-depth into the home dimension of the fae, from the perspective of both mortal visitors and locals. It also details the various courts, all of which often fit this trope, but especially the Winter Court, which follows a fae prince who is the living embodiment of Love Makes You Evil. It also introduces Pixies as a PC race.
An older oft-remembered Fey that looks like a tree, the Murderjack. They're a case of fluff matching crunch really well, in that they're fully capable of (literally) ripping apart an unprepared party. Murderjacks hunt in packs, strip the skin from your flesh, and heal you when you stop moving (to prolong your agony). They're also described by many players as "essentially Tree-Slenderman".
It's also worth noting that most hags are classified as Fey.
In 5e, Warlocks can make pacts with Archfeys. This pact allows Warlocks access to some whimsical and mind effecting spells like Sleep, Calm Emotions, Phantasmal Force, Blink, and Dominate Person.
 The Fair Folk / int_6ac55ec7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6ac55ec7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dungeons & Dragons (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6ac55ec7
 The Fair Folk / int_6bf150d5
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6bf150d5
comment
Vow of Nudity: Spectra, like all changelings, is statistically a fey rather than a humanoid. This means she speaks sylvan and the list of spells/effects that affect her are completely different to most player characters.
 The Fair Folk / int_6bf150d5
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6bf150d5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Vow of Nudity (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6bf150d5
 The Fair Folk / int_6c1234ed
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6c1234ed
comment
Dwarf Fortress:
The Elves of have a bit of this trope, seeing how they eat people and don't consider this to be in any way reprehensible, while considering lying as bad as murder and having an active cultural dislike for self-control. It doesn't help that they will besiege you if you cut down too many trees and then proceed to devour your flesh. Since the game perspective in Fortress Mode is from the dwarves, though, and elven soldiers only carry wooden weapons and armor, they tend to be seen more as annoying than terrifying.
A more fitting example are the Night Trolls, who resemble the more ogrish and monstrous kinds of Unseelie fairies. Occasional marauders who live in caves, they kidnap mortal spouses and corrupt them into similar beings, when they aren't simply eating their flesh. Their grotesque features are even procedurally generated, so that no two Night Trolls are alike.
 The Fair Folk / int_6c1234ed
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6c1234ed
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dwarf Fortress (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6c1234ed
 The Fair Folk / int_6e939b21
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6e939b21
comment
Chuubo's Marvelous Wish-Granting Engine has the Creature of Fable path, which turns the PC into something like this.
 The Fair Folk / int_6e939b21
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6e939b21
featureConfidence
1.0
 Chuubo's Marvelous Wish-Granting Engine (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6e939b21
 The Fair Folk / int_6edd201
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_6edd201
comment
One of the more modern and well known examples is actually Dr. Suess's The Cat in the Hat. He is not actively malevolent, but is clearly an otherworldly being of significant power operating on a Blue-and-Orange Morality.
 The Fair Folk / int_6edd201
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_6edd201
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Cat in the Hat
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_6edd201
 The Fair Folk / int_701f0ece
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_701f0ece
comment
Berserk plays this trope dead straight with Rosine, a fairy-like Apostle who likes to carry kids off in order to turn them into her creepy little pseudo-elves in a rather twisted version of the Changeling Fantasy. The real Elves of the series, such as Puck, are more the benevolent version. Oddly, while the real Elves are indeed harmless, they have a very serious case of Blue-and-Orange Morality. Puck, for instance, seems to forget that he's living in a Crapsack World, finds being a Jerkass a more repellent trait than carving one's way through walls of enemies and civilians alike, and follows Guts primarily to partake in the adventure. Not unlike the reader...
 The Fair Folk / int_701f0ece
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_701f0ece
featureConfidence
1.0
 Berserk (Manga)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_701f0ece
 The Fair Folk / int_708ae58b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_708ae58b
comment
Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures may or may not invoke this trope; while the fae seem mostly good on the surface, at worst being strange and random, it has been shown that Mab, one of the title characters, has secretly been manipulating her friends for her own (unknown) ends for an indefinite length of time. What she has been doing so far seems to be to their benefit, but only as far as we know...
They are creepy enough already. More on them here.
 The Fair Folk / int_708ae58b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_708ae58b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_708ae58b
 The Fair Folk / int_72262aee
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_72262aee
comment
A lot of the spirits from Avatar: The Last Airbender. Especially Koh, a giant centipede spirit who delights in stealing people's faces...
 The Fair Folk / int_72262aee
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_72262aee
featureConfidence
1.0
 Avatar: The Last Airbender
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_72262aee
 The Fair Folk / int_7244e221
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7244e221
comment
The Wild, from The Traitor Son Cycle. They live in the woods, wield pretty powerful magic, and have among them everything from talking animals and demons to trolls and faries. Their morality is also very different from that of humans.
 The Fair Folk / int_7244e221
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7244e221
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Traitor Son Cycle
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7244e221
 The Fair Folk / int_731bb948
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_731bb948
comment
The single Gnome we've seen in Hundred Companions thus far seems to have these tendencies, apparently unable to distinguish between a hilarious prank and an assassination attempt.
 The Fair Folk / int_731bb948
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_731bb948
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hundred Companions
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_731bb948
 The Fair Folk / int_76b266d1
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_76b266d1
comment
The Warlock of Gramarye series by Christopher Stasheff has Fairies who are shaped from Gramarye's native fungus by the unconscious telepathy of the human inhabitants, more-or-less based directly on Medieval English fairly tales and Shakespeare, and Puck and the Half-Human Hybrid Brom, allies of the protagonist, can show a very dark side at times. The first meetings each had with Rod nearly cost him his life. The other Wee Folk only help out on occasion because Gwen and her kids have Fairy blood. They also have an inconsistent relationship with iron.
The Wee Folk of Gramarye also have to be placated; everyone who leaves out milk at night and avoids putting Cold Iron outside their house will be left alone. Those who don't... well, they go through a lot of milk on Gramarye.
 The Fair Folk / int_76b266d1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_76b266d1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Warlock of Gramarye
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_76b266d1
 The Fair Folk / int_76e7de99
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_76e7de99
comment
Forgotten Realms used to have few true fairies, but in Counselors and Kings Unseelie are presented as one of the very few things that can truly scare Drow, as opposed to irritate them or cause to back off for now.
 The Fair Folk / int_76e7de99
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_76e7de99
featureConfidence
1.0
 Forgotten Realms (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_76e7de99
 The Fair Folk / int_77bd8b89
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_77bd8b89
comment
The fair folk from A Tale of Two Kingdoms are not downright malicious, but tend towards nasty pranks against humans (particularly but not limited to the player character). The powerful and beautiful fairy queen turns out to be not so benevolent as she tries to permanently entrap you in the fairy world.
 The Fair Folk / int_77bd8b89
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_77bd8b89
featureConfidence
1.0
 A Tale of Two Kingdoms (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_77bd8b89
 The Fair Folk / int_77f41d89
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_77f41d89
comment
In Julian May's Saga of the Exiles novels, mavericks who don't fit into the galactic utopia of the future are quietly allowed to use a one-way time gate to the Pliocene if they want to opt out. Unfortunately Pliocene Earth is already occupied by the psychic Duat aliens, whose Tanu and Firvulag subraces bear a startling resemblance to the Seelie and Unseelie Courts, and who fled from a utopia of their own so that they could continue their traditions of chivalry and romantic honour by waging an insanely bloodthirsty religious war against each other. The Tanu (seelie) accept psychic humans with the right attitude as their social equals and use mind control to enslave the rest as labourers, breeding stock, or expendable soldiers, while the Firvulag (unseelie) see the Tanu-human partnership as an almost blasphemous break with tradition and want to slaughter all the exiled humans so that their endless war with the Tanu can be fought "cleanly" and with honour. Not exactly nice fairies — and despite appearances, it's by no means clear that the Tanu are any better than the Firvulag.
What makes it even worse is that they're at least partially the direct ancestors of humanity. And the ostensibly "human" Mercy-Rosmar, due to the high quota of Tanu genes, is a thorough ball-busting bitch.
 The Fair Folk / int_77f41d89
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_77f41d89
featureConfidence
1.0
 Saga of the Exiles
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_77f41d89
 The Fair Folk / int_7884c10d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7884c10d
comment
Tarot: Witch of the Black Rose: The Fair Folk pop up from time to time, although the miniature pixies/goblins are more common. Notably, they don't seem to have any of the weaknesses listed at the beginning of this article.
 The Fair Folk / int_7884c10d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7884c10d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Tarot: Witch of the Black Rose (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7884c10d
 The Fair Folk / int_79900c20
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_79900c20
comment
The viewpoint character in Déraciné is a Faerie, invisible beings that can somewhat interact with the world around them (but not be seen, talk or pass through doors). They are also implied to once have been human. They have two rings, one blue and one red. With a golden staff, they can use these rings to drain the "time" (aka lifeforce) from humans and use it to travel in time. Unfortunately, this causes most of them to kill senselessly, out of a desire to undo their mistakes.
 The Fair Folk / int_79900c20
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_79900c20
featureConfidence
1.0
 Déraciné (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_79900c20
 The Fair Folk / int_79d9b538
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_79d9b538
comment
The Palaververse: This is what the Mage-Lords were perceived as by the ancient inhabitants of the Equestria Girls universe when they crossed worlds — otherworldly beings who seemed to wear human appearance like ill-fitting clothing, striking from deep forests to steal people away, never to be seen again.
 The Fair Folk / int_79d9b538
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_79d9b538
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Palaververse / Fan Fic
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_79d9b538
 The Fair Folk / int_7c0f1317
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7c0f1317
comment
Diogenes Club
The antagonists in "The Gypsies in the Wood", wherein a little boy goes missing on his birthday... only for a seemingly schizophrenic middle-aged man to appear days later claiming to be that little boy. And he then makes a living drawing pictures for subtly wrong children's stories, complete with a faintly creepy amusement park. All the more disturbing because the main characters never quite understand what's at work.
The evolution of Fair Folk stories to modern alien abduction stories (by way of other crackpot stories like Elijah's Chariot and predatory succubi) is the premise of "Angel Down, Sussex".
 The Fair Folk / int_7c0f1317
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7c0f1317
featureConfidence
1.0
 Diogenes Club
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7c0f1317
 The Fair Folk / int_7c150fc2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7c150fc2
comment
Songs of Conquest: While certainly not evil, the Faey can be vicious to any who they perceive as trespassing on their lands or despoiling nature.
 The Fair Folk / int_7c150fc2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7c150fc2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Songs of Conquest (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7c150fc2
 The Fair Folk / int_7c42d374
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7c42d374
comment
The Feyn in City of Somnus have insect wings and look like overgrown Tinkerbell. Do not be fooled by appearances. That's true, they Cannot Tell a Lie (it's their magical nature), but feed on human creative energy and take this "for the world's more full of weeping than you can understand" as an invitation to "rescue" lots of cute, creative kids. They also act like spoiled children themselves, fight each other a lot (to pools of technicolor blood) and tend to be very in-your-face. And if you happen to be a grown-up, they turn outright cruel.
 The Fair Folk / int_7c42d374
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7c42d374
featureConfidence
1.0
 City of Somnus (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7c42d374
 The Fair Folk / int_7c48915b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7c48915b
comment
Gunnerkrigg Court Fairies are about halfway between the cute Pixie and the chaotic trickster types. They're capricious and largely lacking in tact and empathy, but the only harm they've done is emotional rather than physical, and mostly directed at other Fairies rather than humans. Still, this behavior provoked stunned silence (and breaking the Gosh Dangit To Heck rule) from the protagonists.
To add to their alien-ness, the City Face interlude shows that they don't distinguish between lengths of distance and lengths of time.
Penchant for mischief belongs to the cute part.
Chapter 36 revisits Foley House, where former fairies and other Gillitie Wood creatures go, specifically the class of those four ex-fairies we have seen in Chapter 15. Etheric side of the classroom is effectively one crazy playground, and inhabitants generally are childish, but so adorable and hilarious that Annie puts up with their manners (or rather lack thereof) and joins the fun... not that everything was so simple.
 The Fair Folk / int_7c48915b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7c48915b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gunnerkrigg Court (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7c48915b
 The Fair Folk / int_7c8386f4
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7c8386f4
comment
The main villains in Bright are a terrorist group of elves trying to recover their leader's Magic Wand and they commit several horrific crimes like murdering a innocent Mexican family including their baby merely For the Evulz. It's also noted that the Dark Lord was a renegade elf that tried to Take Over the World over 2,000 years ago and is pretty much treated as the setting's Greater-Scope Villain.
 The Fair Folk / int_7c8386f4
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7c8386f4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Bright
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7c8386f4
 The Fair Folk / int_7df9324b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7df9324b
comment
Zebra Girl: Some inhabitants of the Subfusc, as well as some of the things leaving it for the mortal realm (or waking up in it) seem to be this, most notably the Goblins and the Vorpal Pook.
 The Fair Folk / int_7df9324b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7df9324b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Zebra Girl (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7df9324b
 The Fair Folk / int_7e850e47
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7e850e47
comment
In Bravely Default and its sequel Bravely Second, the cryst-fairies are manipulating everyone towards their malevolent (and occasionally conflicting) agendas. Tiz, Agnès, Ringabel, Edea, and Kaiser Oblivion all discover this the hard way.
 The Fair Folk / int_7e850e47
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7e850e47
featureConfidence
1.0
 Bravely Default (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7e850e47
 The Fair Folk / int_7f77d5ee
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7f77d5ee
comment
In the Fever Series by Karen Marie Moning the Fae are definitely not cute or charming. At all.
 The Fair Folk / int_7f77d5ee
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7f77d5ee
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fever Series
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7f77d5ee
 The Fair Folk / int_7fc78282
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_7fc78282
comment
The Lord of the Rings:
 The Fair Folk / int_7fc78282
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_7fc78282
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Lord of the Rings
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_7fc78282
 The Fair Folk / int_80534a27
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_80534a27
comment
MsChif is sometimes described as "demonic", the inferno listed among her places of residence, but as she has a banshee gimmick, she's really this trope.
 The Fair Folk / int_80534a27
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_80534a27
featureConfidence
1.0
 MsChif (Wrestling)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_80534a27
 The Fair Folk / int_80d8f911
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_80d8f911
comment
The snow spirits of Penny Blackfeather have this vibe, although the one we have the most experience with is small and in distress.
 The Fair Folk / int_80d8f911
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_80d8f911
featureConfidence
1.0
 Penny Blackfeather (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_80d8f911
 The Fair Folk / int_82246781
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_82246781
comment
It's never explained in-story who or what The Pied Piper of Hamelin was, but some theorize he may have been one of the Fair Folk.
 The Fair Folk / int_82246781
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_82246781
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Pied Piper of Hamelin
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_82246781
 The Fair Folk / int_82a6f3fe
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_82a6f3fe
comment
Peter Pan:
Tinker Bell is mischievous and rather possessive of Peter, to the point that she is perfectly willing to casually engineer the death of a perceived rival. Fairies are too small to contain more than one emotion at a time, so when Tinker Bell gets jealous of Wendy, it utterly consumes her being.
Peter Pan himself comes off as a sociopath due to being raised by Fairies. He can't remember who Wendy and the boys are from day to day, he'll betray and kill his allies to make battles more entertaining, and he's pretty unsympathetic and selfish.
 The Fair Folk / int_82a6f3fe
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_82a6f3fe
featureConfidence
1.0
 Peter Pan
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_82a6f3fe
 The Fair Folk / int_83d41855
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_83d41855
comment
The "Third Race" from Gargoyles. They are said to be creatures of pure magic, and they are vulnerable to Cold Iron, with varying possibilities; ranging from forcing them into servitude (as was done with Puck and the Weird Sisters), to outright harming and potentially killing them. Also, the general nature, their immense magical prowess and doing as they please is very true. Especially the episode when Oberon and Titania were out to capture Xanatos's son Alexander for the Gathering. Goliath thought it was so vile that he actually sides with Xanatos to prevent Alexander's capture.
Oberon is consistently depicted in the series as capricious, vain and arrogant, making and breaking edicts on a whim. He is, surprisingly enough, a Graceful Loser, and capable of being reasonable (though, fittingly, his reason is his own), until he feels he's being disrespected.
Aside from their morally questionable leaders, the other "Children of Oberon" in the series vary greatly in personality, disposition, and form. Though they all tend to be pretty mischievous, even the ones that like humans and Gargoyles.
Interestingly, Word of God has said they used to be a whole lot worse. After being banished from Avalon, most changed considerably; besides Oberon who, at the time, was mature and compassionate in comparison, and didn't feel like he had anything to learn. And don't even get started on his mother, Mab. In fact, Mab allegedly was so terrible that Oberon is generally seen as an improvement by his people.
Titania, his wife, seems to be of the other type thankfully, and is more than capable of controlling her husband (granted, she was actually much worse and the only reason she changed was because Oberon cursed her to learn humility). Unfortunately, she's the instigator for the incident with Alexander. And then also the instigator for the interference of the Gargoyles.
On the other hand, Puck, another prominent member of the Third Race, is a classical trickster with a great aptness for Loophole Abuse. While more benevolent than fellow tricksters Raven or Anansi, he's a great schemer when he needs to be and not above playing Goliath and Co. for his own benefit.
 The Fair Folk / int_83d41855
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_83d41855
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gargoyles
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_83d41855
 The Fair Folk / int_85eecea0
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_85eecea0
comment
They show up in Kara no Kyoukai, specifically in 6th book/movie, Oblivion Record. There, they were responsible for kidnapping Satsuki Kurogiri when he was a child, resulting in him swearing vengeance upon them. They didn’t really, though. What really happened was that he killed a few, so they messed with his mind as a dying act of revenge.
 The Fair Folk / int_85eecea0
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_85eecea0
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Garden of Sinners
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_85eecea0
 The Fair Folk / int_8637da0a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_8637da0a
comment
Kiersten White's Paranormalcy plays this trope pretty straight. The Seelie Courts are the 'good' ones and the Unseelie are the 'bad' ones and they are all weak to iron and some extent silver... and get drunk on soft drinks. Neither side can resist a 'Named Command' but both twist the words of the command into something they like and don't obey the same laws as humans ("physical, social, emotional, traffic") and only work towards their own designs. The only difference between the two appears to be that the Unseelie will kill people for no reason, while the Seelie have some sort of justification: however neither side appears to have any problem with creating prophecies that predict the death of tens of paranormals (possible all of them) and creatures (Evie and Vivian) to carry out these prophecies and steal souls JUST TO SEE WHO WINS! Don't worry if you have trouble telling the difference between them, Evie thought her ex-boyfriend Reth was Unseelie. It's a very understandable given that he manipulated her, stalked her, kidnapped her, burnt her arm, stalked her some more, let a serial killer into the IPCA where it killed her best friend, held her new boyfriend hostage so he could get a new name, kidnapped her again, and then explained, vaguely, what was going on. He thinks the Unseelie are horrible.
 The Fair Folk / int_8637da0a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_8637da0a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Paranormalcy
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_8637da0a
 The Fair Folk / int_866e4512
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_866e4512
comment
Among Others: The elves aren't malicious, but they don't see the world the way humans do (either literally, or in the sense of having the same value system).
 The Fair Folk / int_866e4512
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_866e4512
featureConfidence
1.0
 Among Others
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_866e4512
 The Fair Folk / int_86c3beca
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_86c3beca
comment
The Dreen in Girl Genius are (probably) not literally fairies, but they are extra-dimensional beings of great power whose timestream runs "tangental" to humanity and who insert themselves (both for good and ill) into the latter's lives for utterly alien reasons.
 The Fair Folk / int_86c3beca
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_86c3beca
featureConfidence
1.0
 Girl Genius (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_86c3beca
 The Fair Folk / int_86e4732f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_86e4732f
comment
Carrie Vaughn's Kitty Norville series has a brief appearance by a sidhe. Most of the time he looks like an evangelist, but when the main characters work out some kind of "true seeing" charm, he looks more like The Greys. He had apparently been imprisoning and feeding on the psychic energy of vampires and werewolves, and one reasonably knowledgeable character seemed to think of him as an Eldritch Abomination.
 The Fair Folk / int_86e4732f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_86e4732f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Kitty Norville
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_86e4732f
 The Fair Folk / int_879f0a34
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_879f0a34
comment
Machen's The White People is the transcription of a young girl's diary mentioning the strange advices of her nurse, encounters with "nymphs", mysterious ceremonies and ancient Roman ruins. Machen was a huge influence on H. P. Lovecraft, and books like The White People can be seen as the bridge between the Fair Folk of old and the Eldritch Abominations of the more modern Cosmic Horror Story (which Machen himself more or less originated, with The Great God Pan).
 The Fair Folk / int_879f0a34
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_879f0a34
featureConfidence
1.0
 The White People
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_879f0a34
 The Fair Folk / int_88a765a2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_88a765a2
comment
In Romancing Saga 3, the fairies love to play tricks on humans by spiking their tea, if the are silly enough to agree to drink with them, and intentionally give wrong information on how to reach the Fire Palace located in their jungle. The only fairy that doesn't act like this is Peony, who foregoes lying to the player and tells them the real path, out of gratitude for saving them previously.
 The Fair Folk / int_88a765a2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_88a765a2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Romancing SaGa 3 (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_88a765a2
 The Fair Folk / int_88e1d10a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_88e1d10a
comment
In IronGate the Fey enchanted Embers with her fire powers as a child, which resulted in her accidentally killing her parents. In the story called Whiteout, one of the Fey appears as a huge dangerous ice based monster with many ice minions at its command.
 The Fair Folk / int_88e1d10a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_88e1d10a
featureConfidence
1.0
 IronGate (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_88e1d10a
 The Fair Folk / int_89e6e387
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_89e6e387
comment
Fairy lore plays a part in Tana French's novel In the Woods. The mystery of what happened to Rob and his friends in 1984 is deliberately left ambiguous, but one valid interpretation is that the Pooka took the kids. In the sequel, The Likeness, it's hinted that Whitethorn House may have been a fairy stronghold and that the family at some point coupled or intermarried with the Fair Folk. (It's also possible that this is just nasty local rumor, in part meant to justify the village's ongoing dislike of the family.) Cassie is also spooked by unseen things scuttling around in the fields at night.
 The Fair Folk / int_89e6e387
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_89e6e387
featureConfidence
1.0
 In The Woods
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_89e6e387
 The Fair Folk / int_8a27d31c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_8a27d31c
comment
In the October Daye series, the fair folk vary in how close they are to classic descriptions of the fair folk (some of them able to pass for average humans in most situations). The closer a fairy's heritage is to Oberon, Maeve, and Titania (the progenitors of faerie), or the stronger the differences between strains of mixed magical heritage, the more likely they are to resemble the classical fair folk, as well as certain races such as the Cait Sidhe (which seem like Fair Folk even to the more human-like fair folk). Blind Michael (one of the Firstborn, a son of Oberon) in particular reads like he was lifted straight out of a blender full of three-hundred-year-old fairy legends, and was said to be the inspiration for a number of child-stealing and Wild Hunt legends.
 The Fair Folk / int_8a27d31c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_8a27d31c
featureConfidence
1.0
 October Daye
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_8a27d31c
 The Fair Folk / int_8cbfd10
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_8cbfd10
comment
In Smith of Wootton Major, they are hinted at. Smith is protected from them, but aware of their existence in Faerie.
 The Fair Folk / int_8cbfd10
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_8cbfd10
featureConfidence
1.0
 Smith of Wootton Major
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_8cbfd10
 The Fair Folk / int_8dd4e77e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_8dd4e77e
comment
In The Folk Keeper, they are known simply as the Folk. They live underground and can cause crops to wither and animals to fall ill if not placated with offerings of food. They are repelled by cold iron, sea salt, and holy symbols.
 The Fair Folk / int_8dd4e77e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_8dd4e77e
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Folk Keeper
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_8dd4e77e
 The Fair Folk / int_8e7ffb04
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_8e7ffb04
comment
While the Kristin Lavransdatter trilogy is mostly straight historical fiction, it has a notable episode of Magical Realism in the first chapter where seven-year-old Kristin encounters the "elf-maiden" — a beautiful and terrifying being dressed all in green vines who tempts her with a flower crown.
 The Fair Folk / int_8e7ffb04
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_8e7ffb04
featureConfidence
1.0
 Kristin Lavransdatter
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_8e7ffb04
 The Fair Folk / int_8eaf8f7f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_8eaf8f7f
comment
Dread Companion. It's a Science Fiction novel with interstellar travel and settlements. Nevertheless, the beings who try to lure away the children are clearly The Fair Folk.
 The Fair Folk / int_8eaf8f7f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_8eaf8f7f
featureConfidence
1.0
 DreadCompanion
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_8eaf8f7f
 The Fair Folk / int_8fcbbf4e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_8fcbbf4e
comment
Frozen (2018) adapts the Fair Folk as a substitution for the Rock Trolls of the original film.
 The Fair Folk / int_8fcbbf4e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_8fcbbf4e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Frozen (2018) (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_8fcbbf4e
 The Fair Folk / int_9073a9f7
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_9073a9f7
comment
In Twice Charmed, Franco DiFortunato wagers the Tremaines' livelihood on their deal.
 The Fair Folk / int_9073a9f7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_9073a9f7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Twice Charmed (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_9073a9f7
 The Fair Folk / int_90f42a9b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_90f42a9b
comment
The Aelfinn & Eelfinn (Snakes & Foxes) of The Wheel of Time are very much the (unnamed as such) Fair Folk, complete with otherworldliness and Seelie & Unseelie division. They are also weak to iron.
 The Fair Folk / int_90f42a9b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_90f42a9b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Wheel of Time
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_90f42a9b
 The Fair Folk / int_91ebba8e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_91ebba8e
comment
The "Lingerers" as described in Morgoth's Ring, elven spirits are so powerful that their body can't quit hold it and it burns their body away leaving them in a shadowy form. The "Unbodied" are elves that actually died and refused to obey Mandos's summons. Some of these had actually worked for Morgoth. These are the ones to fear while Lingerers are generally nice if strange and unpredictable. These perhaps correspond to the Seelie and the Unseelie.
 The Fair Folk / int_91ebba8e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_91ebba8e
featureConfidence
1.0
 The History of Middle-earth
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_91ebba8e
 The Fair Folk / int_927f559c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_927f559c
comment
In Roommates (and in its Spin-Off s Girls Next Door and Down the Street) The Fair Folk is the (magical) third option between Heaven and Hell and one ''happy'' family so all related to the token fair teammate Jareth. They seem to actually invoke Interspecies Romance to increase their numbers and make the magic family tree *somewhat* healthier and accidentally created the Mage Species (those hybrids who aren't strong or fair enough) in the process so any magical talent implies Fair(y) Relatives. They also do everything any self-respecting fae of this trope does, the child stealing included and... let's just say that almost all things Nightmare Fuel and Fridge Horror in the series have something to do with them.
Let's look at the Erlkönig: He thought that stealing the little brother of his son's love interest is a good idea, that locking the cast in a Lotus-Eater Machine is a gift not to mention the time he pressured the token fair teammate (his son) into hosting The Wild Hunt. And he is one of the nice ones.
As far as their society goes, they have themed courts all ruled by Kings, Queens, Royal Couples or a couple of royals all exalted by blood inherited or spilled. Over this is the Conclave to minimize infighting and bloodshed. Which generally means that they punish losers and accept winners, so people can go against them, just need to win or else.
 The Fair Folk / int_927f559c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_927f559c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Roommates (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_927f559c
 The Fair Folk / int_92916f5b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_92916f5b
comment
The Fairy Godmother in Shrek 2. She has the image of a sweet fairy godmother but is, in fact, a sociopath who intended to use a promise made by the king to have Fiona marry her son in order to rule the kingdom as queen mother. When that plan failed, she proved willing to stoop to unimaginable lows, causing the king's Heel–Face Turn.
 The Fair Folk / int_92916f5b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_92916f5b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Shrek 2
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_92916f5b
 The Fair Folk / int_932995dd
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_932995dd
comment
Emma Bull's War for the Oaks has the Seelie Court and the Unseelie Court. The Seelies are, at the least, tolerant of humans, and usually kind and friendly — as the Fae would define it (The Pouka, who is more familiar with humans than most, does say they have been "unkind" to mortals in the past). They're even capable of falling in love with humans as humans would recognize love. The Unseelies are malicious and nasty, and think nothing of twisting a mere mortal to their ends.
 The Fair Folk / int_932995dd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_932995dd
featureConfidence
1.0
 War for the Oaks
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_932995dd
 The Fair Folk / int_935f154
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_935f154
comment
"Sleeping Beauty" is gifted by six fairy godmothers with beauty, grace, wit, and great skill in music, singing and dancing, then cursed out of spite to prick her hand on a spindle on her sixteenth year and die by a seventh fairy. The curse is softened, but cannot be completely removed, by the final fairy.
 The Fair Folk / int_935f154
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_935f154
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sleeping Beauty
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_935f154
 The Fair Folk / int_959e314b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_959e314b
comment
Book IV of Fire Emblem Heroes revolves around fairies that have the power of dreams. The menacing versions, the Dökkálfar, bring forth nightmares and lock people into a neverending sleep. Triandra, Plumeria, and their queen Freyja all invade the mortal realm with their nightmares. Their Good Counterpart, the Ljósálfar, bring pleasant dreams to people and enjoy playing alongside children. Peony, Mirabilis, and their king Freyr side with the Order of Heroes to fend off the dökkálfar.
 The Fair Folk / int_959e314b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_959e314b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fire Emblem Heroes (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_959e314b
 The Fair Folk / int_971b0368
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_971b0368
comment
The Mystics of SaGa Frontier used to be this way, and the nobles who dwell in their hidden region still are. Though they have gotten a bit better, and for example hunting humans for sport has fallen out of fashion. Lower caste mystics show the trope best, ranging in appearance from mermaids to large troll-like creatures. The higher level nobles tend to appear as beautiful humans, with the highest level, according to All There in the Manual being the True Vampires.
 The Fair Folk / int_971b0368
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_971b0368
featureConfidence
1.0
 SaGa Frontier (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_971b0368
 The Fair Folk / int_974ad78f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_974ad78f
comment
GURPS Technomancer, a modern-day fantasy setting, has fairies taking the place of The Greys — Seelie and Unseelie encounters involving abductions, lights in the sky, traumatic repressed memories, and rumors of two Seelie being captured near Roswell...
 The Fair Folk / int_974ad78f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_974ad78f
featureConfidence
1.0
 GURPS Technomancer (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_974ad78f
 The Fair Folk / int_9772b238
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_9772b238
comment
The fey of Greystone Valley seem to be comprised of just about every fair folk from real-world mythology.
 The Fair Folk / int_9772b238
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_9772b238
featureConfidence
1.0
 Greystone Valley
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_9772b238
 The Fair Folk / int_98288223
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_98288223
comment
In The Magicians (2016), the fairies live in another dimension of Fillory, and can only be seen by those who have made a deal with them. Fairies are all very pale, fair haired and eyebrowless with Black Eyes of Evil, although they tend to operate more on Blue-and-Orange Morality.
 The Fair Folk / int_98288223
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_98288223
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Magicians (2016)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_98288223
 The Fair Folk / int_98744614
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_98744614
comment
Brave: The Wisps are supernatural folk. They're said to have the power to change fate. They're frequently shown leading Merida away from danger. Twice they lead her away from Mor'du and towards help before she even knows he's there. They also lead her to the ruined castle so she can learn the truth about the legend of the princes, and the true danger of the spell, and in the end, they lead her back to the stone circle so she can save her mother. If not benign, they are at least fairly neutral.
 The Fair Folk / int_98744614
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_98744614
featureConfidence
1.0
 Brave
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_98744614
 The Fair Folk / int_9b3d8f5b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_9b3d8f5b
comment
Troll 2: The Goblins would count, given their enchanted food with nasty side effects, their posing as humans through glamour to lure humans to their doom, and their love for all things plant and hatred of man.
 The Fair Folk / int_9b3d8f5b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_9b3d8f5b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Troll 2
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_9b3d8f5b
 The Fair Folk / int_9d34190a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_9d34190a
comment
The Elder Scrolls
Every race of Mer (Elves) that is or ever has been is at least a Downplayed version of the trope. All exhibit some qualities as a race that are bizarre or plain alien to human sensibilities, and frequently clash with the races of men (and perhaps just as frequently, with each other). The extinct Dwemer are probably the straightest example, with contemporary sources and modern researchers alike painting them as mysterious with abilities well beyond what any other race on Tamriel could compare with. It is Downplayed in part because many of the differences come down more to culture and there are plenty of instances of My Species Doth Protest Too Much.
Played Straight by the Daedra, both the Daedric Princes and the lesser Daedra. All are pre-creation spirits ("et'Ada") who made no sacrifices during the creation of Mundus, the mortal plane, and thus retain their Complete Immortality. The 17 most powerful and prominent Daedric spirits are the Daedric Princes, each of whom has a particular sphere, which the are said to embody and govern from their planes of Oblivion which they inhabit and rule. While the vast majority of the Daedra are seen as wholly evil by most mortals, they are technically beings Above Good and Evil who operate on their own Blue-and-Orange Morality aligned with the spheres over which they govern. How they feel about the mortal races varies from Prince to Prince; many enjoy being worshiped, some just enjoy toying with mortals' lives for their own amusement, but all of them have demonstrated a willingness to reward mortals they find particularly helpful, loyal, or amusing.
A number of other species exist in Nirn who qualify. To note:
Spriggans are a race of tree spirits who typically take the basic form of tall, humanoid females made of wood. They are revered as "Nature's Guardians" and are associated with Kynareth, one of the Nine Divines and goddess of the heavens, winds, and elements. Despite this reverence, Spriggans are usually hostile toward any trespassers in their domain.
Nymphs are a type of nature spirit most commonly found in the Iliac Bay region. They take the form of beautiful, naked, long-haired women and attack using mystical fire spells. Though rumored to be highly sexual beings, most are rather shy and rarely approach mortals on their own.
The Hist are a race of ancient, sentient, giant spore-trees native to Black Marsh. They are worshiped by the Argonians who drink the sap of the Hist to grow, and can communicate with the Hist via visions transmitted in the sap. It is said that the Hist were the original inhabitants of Tamriel, and that they were originally from one of the 12 "worlds of Creation" that were shattered by Padomay and then coalesced by Anu to create Nirn.
Will-o-the-Wisps are globs of light that drain the life out of their victims that get close to them. They can't be hit with normal weapons, but are venerable to magic attacks or silver or daedric weapons.
 The Fair Folk / int_9d34190a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_9d34190a
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Elder Scrolls (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_9d34190a
 The Fair Folk / int_9d47a2a2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_9d47a2a2
comment
The Others in A Song of Ice and Fire are a cross between elves, vampires and ice elementals who do far more than merely dabble in snow-sculpture and necromancy; occasionally at the same time (artistically and strategically posed, popsicled and probably still fairly active victims counts). Their very first appearance in the story itself has them toying with, then killing a guy who really can't harm them and laughing at it, then raising him as a wight. The story of the Night's King furthers this. He allegedly chased a woman "with skin as white as the moon and eyes like blue stars" and when he gave her his seed he gave her his soul as well. After this he performed human sacrifice while ruling the Nightfort. It took an alliance between the Starks in Winterfell and the King-Beyond-the-Wall to bring them down.
The Children of the Forest are a diminutive, woodland folk with great power over animals, plants (especially weirwood trees), water, stone and memory — at a cost, Blood Magic-style. Although they actively warred with mankind over a long period of history, they eventually made peace before they gradually dwindled away as human civilization swept through the continent in waves, but, their dwindling is also said to be directly linked to the literally earth-shattering feats they pulled using sacrifices, before having to stop to make the almost-forgotten pacts with the First Men. They certainly aren't the Others' brand of bad to know, but they aren't necessarily nice, either.
 The Fair Folk / int_9d47a2a2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_9d47a2a2
featureConfidence
1.0
 A Song of Ice and Fire
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_9d47a2a2
 The Fair Folk / int_9d80bbcf
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_9d80bbcf
comment
Pathfinder: Kingmaker, being based on the Tabletop game of the same name, features quite a few of these. Some live peacefully alongside humans, while others are villainous, including the Big Bad of the game.
 The Fair Folk / int_9d80bbcf
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_9d80bbcf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pathfinder: Kingmaker (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_9d80bbcf
 The Fair Folk / int_9e2f90f4
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_9e2f90f4
comment
One Piece: The so-called "fairies" of Dressrosa who go around stealing people's valuables are actually a race of small dwarves called the Tontatta, who are unimaginably strong for their size and are so fast they are effectively invisible to most people. The reason they are called fairies dates back to ancient times when the original Royal Family of Dressrossa, the Donquixote Family, enslaved the entire Tontatta tribe. When the Donquixote family left Dressrosa to become World Nobles, they were replaced by a new royal family the Riku Family. The original King Riku felt pity and guilt for the enslavement of the Tontatta and immediately freed them, telling them that they can take whatever they want from the kingdom as compensation for their treatment while he took responsibility. Thus, beginning their habit of stealing from the people which the Riku family attributed to the work of magical fairies in order to hide the existence of the Tontatta, thereby keeping them safe from others who might want to enslave them again.
 The Fair Folk / int_9e2f90f4
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_9e2f90f4
featureConfidence
1.0
 One Piece (Manga)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_9e2f90f4
 The Fair Folk / int_9f5a225e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_9f5a225e
comment
Subverted partially with King Brian and the other leprechauns in Darby O'Gill and the Little People, since Brian himself is a good friend, albeit mischievous, to the titular character, the Banshee and the Dullahan however...
 The Fair Folk / int_9f5a225e
featureApplicability
-0.3
 The Fair Folk / int_9f5a225e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Darby O'Gill and the Little People
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_9f5a225e
 The Fair Folk / int_9f6626f6
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_9f6626f6
comment
In Whuppity Stoorie, the "green gentlewoman" saves a woman's pig but demands her son in payment.
 The Fair Folk / int_9f6626f6
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_9f6626f6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Whuppity Stoorie
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_9f6626f6
 The Fair Folk / int_9f833a1e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_9f833a1e
comment
Lobotomy Corporation has the Fairy Festival, a seemingly friendly chubby group of small, teal glowing fairies that can buff and heal an employee...to eat them if they work on anything else while they are following them. In the sequel, they and their queen are left in the forest to starve, dropping their friendly pretense.
Limbus Company introduces us to the Fairy Long-legs, which is indicated to be linked to the aforementioned Fairy Festival. It'll ask you to stand under its clover umbrella to protect you from the acid rain...only to reveal that that's a trick it uses to keep its prey safe and tasty.
 The Fair Folk / int_9f833a1e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_9f833a1e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Lobotomy Corporation (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_9f833a1e
 The Fair Folk / int_a025caf5
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a025caf5
comment
Justice Society of Japan features these as a major antagonist, inspired by the type from Changeling: The Lost. Milly Ashford, for instance, is implied to be a Fetch.
 The Fair Folk / int_a025caf5
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a025caf5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Justice Society of Japan (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a025caf5
 The Fair Folk / int_a40db6ea
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a40db6ea
comment
"The Yellow Dwarf": The Fairy of the Desert is a wise but malevolent being who looks more like a witch than a stereotypical fairy. She is allied with the Yellow Dwarf, and when Princess Toutebelle breaks her promise to marry the dwarf, the Fairy of the Desert and the Yellow Dwarf show up at her wedding to wreak havoc at the celebration.
 The Fair Folk / int_a40db6ea
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a40db6ea
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Yellow Dwarf
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a40db6ea
 The Fair Folk / int_a4602af6
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a4602af6
comment
The Daoine Sidhe in Song of the Sea, right down to suggesting other names when the protagonist calls them "fairies". Downplayed since most of the Daoine Sidhe Ben and Saoirse encounter are reclusive but still friendly; even Macha, the dreaded Owl Witch who turns people to stone by stealing their emotions, is more of a Well-Intentioned Extremist who's under the misguided belief that she's helping them.
 The Fair Folk / int_a4602af6
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a4602af6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Song of the Sea
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a4602af6
 The Fair Folk / int_a4ff8e01
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a4ff8e01
comment
Fate/Grand Order showcases this spectacularly with the "Lostbelt No. 6: Faerie Round Table Domain, Avalon Le Fae", and Alternate Universe with faeries and other Phantasmals replacing humans as the dominant species in a Mystery-dominated Britain, to the point that the entire place is a Crapsaccharine World of Jerkass. The faeries come in almost any shape, from Elves to Goblins to more stereotypical pixies. In theory, they're described as being "Pure and Innocent" and most of them appear civilized, but in practice this makes them extremely dangerous because conventional morality is something beyond their understanding, while their innocence and impulsive nature makes them The Unfettered when it comes to getting what they want. It doesn't matter what you've done for them in the past or how friendly you've been, if they want to hurt you, they will, without understanding why they might be wrong.
For example, the faeries keep humans around because the faeries' own Creative Sterility means that humans are the only ones that can produce culture, while also treating them as livestock for the faeries who are not above eating them. This is best evident in the first Section of the Chapter alone, where the faeries of Cornwall wanted to eat the main protagonist and their party of Tristan and Altria Caster, and even killed one of their own when he wanted to befriend them instead of eating them.
Additionally, the entire state of the Lostbelt is their fault. The original Six Faeries of Lostbelt Britain were once tasked to forge a superweapon that could protect the Earth from potential spacebound threats. In Proper Human History, they were diligent enough to forge the blade that became known as Excalibur, allowing a human to use it to destroy the rampaging Sefar when she invaded in 14,000 BC. In the Lostbelt, these faeries neglected to forge Excalibur in favour of taking a nap, allowing Sefar to rampage unimpeded until the entire Earth was wiped clean, leaving nothing behind but endless ocean. When Cernunnos, the Sole Survivor of Sefar's rampage, took pity on them and provided them a safe haven despite being tasked by Avalon with punishing them for their dereliction of duty, they repaid him by poisoning him to death, using his body to build the southern half of Faerie Britain, while cursing his priestess with immortality and tearing her apart to clone a new humanity from as a fresh food source. All this while having the sheer nerve to instead blame Cernunnos and the priestess for not forcing them to do the job they'd slacked off on in the first place.
The faeries in the Lostbelt are under the iron-heeled dictatorship of the High Queen Morgan, who actually started out as a hero of the faeries, going under the name of Tonelico/Aesc the Savior in her youth, but grew disillusioned after the faeries' own Chronic Backstabbing Disorder, The Unfettered, Ungrateful Bastard and Chaotic Stupid tendencies caused them to betray and kill her time and again because they despise the idea of being ruled over, even if the lack of leadership would lead them to drive themselves to extinction, with them only surviving for any length of time thanks to their Bizarre Alien Reproduction. All in all, a vast majority of the faeries in the British Lostbelt are not good creatures at all, and the ones who are have a habit of getting used, betrayed, and killed by their fellows in some form.
 The Fair Folk / int_a4ff8e01
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a4ff8e01
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fate/Grand Order (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a4ff8e01
 The Fair Folk / int_a52d5113
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a52d5113
comment
In "The Three Little Men in the Wood", the titular characters seem to be some kind of leprechauns or dwarves: they are magical, tiny humanoid creatures who live in the woods and are willing to reward or punish humans who stumble upon their home.
 The Fair Folk / int_a52d5113
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a52d5113
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Three Little Men in the Wood
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a52d5113
 The Fair Folk / int_a54789bc
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a54789bc
comment
The Besiders in Cuckoo Song are a classic example, and can only live in unmapped/undiscovered parts of the world, which are getting fewer and smaller every day.
 The Fair Folk / int_a54789bc
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a54789bc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cuckoo Song
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a54789bc
 The Fair Folk / int_a599305d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a599305d
comment
Invoked with the Cyber-Elves in the Mega Man Zero series, man-made Cyberspace beings capable of manifesting in the real world. While most of them are helpful Fairy Companions, there's also the Dark Elf, who's been corrupted into destructive insanity and sparked the catastrophic Elf Wars, and Crea and Prea, who have childlike mentalities but will happily try to kill Zero without even realizing that they're doing anything wrong.
 The Fair Folk / int_a599305d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a599305d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mega Man Zero (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a599305d
 The Fair Folk / int_a5c1dffa
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a5c1dffa
comment
In GURPS Thaumatology: Alchemical Baroque, fairies can easily fall into this pattern, if the whim takes them. The typical Fairy Queen detailed in the book certainly does, being Callous, Jealous, and Selfish.
 The Fair Folk / int_a5c1dffa
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a5c1dffa
featureConfidence
1.0
 GURPS Thaumatology: Alchemical Baroque (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a5c1dffa
 The Fair Folk / int_a611a1a2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a611a1a2
comment
Realta: The fae were the antagonists in the prologue and still haunt the four kingdoms today. They appear as silvery spirits who attack travelers. They can normally be warded off by Cold Iron, but characters note that it is becoming less and less effective.
 The Fair Folk / int_a611a1a2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a611a1a2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Realta (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a611a1a2
 The Fair Folk / int_a6543322
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a6543322
comment
Touhou Project's actual fairies don't really fit the trope beyond being mischevious; they're universally stupid and weak. On the other hand, some of the youkai come pretty close, most obviously Yukari, who is beautiful, mysterious, and the one behind the spiritings away.
The fairies aren't completely removed from this, however. They are known for having a twisted sense of morality due to being immortal, and many of them are too stupid to consider the consequences of their actions. Because of this, they are prone to inflicting deadly pranks on unfortunate people. Luckily, most fairies are extremely weak and pose little threat, and are rarely intentionally malicious.
 The Fair Folk / int_a6543322
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a6543322
featureConfidence
1.0
 Touhou Project (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a6543322
 The Fair Folk / int_a7604d3c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a7604d3c
comment
Nine Days Down: The Fey, capricious and dangerous beings who range from bestial hunters such as bewilderbeasts and changelings to intelligent and deeply malicious beings like Nuckelavee. A few remain free in the upper world, but the worst of them were all banished to Tartarus long ago.
 The Fair Folk / int_a7604d3c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a7604d3c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Nine Days Down (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a7604d3c
 The Fair Folk / int_a7eedc
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a7eedc
comment
The Ancient Magus' Bride is another example of classical ideas of fairies. They prefer being known as 'good neighbors' in this manga, hearkening back to more Gaelic mythology. The rest of the series so far has kept up with this trend, using terminology and creatures from British mythology as well as others. However, some fairies from the series do eat humans including the titular ancient magus, at least in the past, and in the very first episode, a group of fairies attempts to spirit Chise away into the fairy world (while she technically isn't in any danger of death, the fairy world does twist humans who stay in it, turning them into fairies themselves over time.) And then there's Ashen Eye, a rather malevolent and cruel trickster who is pretty much the single darkest take on the Fair Folk this series gets.
It is also implied that most fairies by nature have a skewed understanding of morality compared to human norms and don't feel emotions the way humans do. Elias Ainsworth, who is at least part-Fair Folk, starts with a bit of a Lack of Empathy and when he does develop emotions, he is clearly puzzled by what he's experiencing and unaware of how to deal with it. When he attempts to save Chise's life by sacrificing one of her friends (purposely choosing this friend because he's jealous of the relationship she and Chise have), the Fairy Queen Titania chalks it up to him still "loving the way 'they' do", implying this kind of behavior is common for the faerie.
 The Fair Folk / int_a7eedc
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a7eedc
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Ancient Magus' Bride (Manga)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a7eedc
 The Fair Folk / int_a821288d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a821288d
comment
Mermaid is about a rusalka, a Russian water spirit. She's rather more like a siren, having a fully human body, and using her beauty and singing to lure young men into the water, where she drowns them.
 The Fair Folk / int_a821288d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a821288d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mermaid (Animation)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a821288d
 The Fair Folk / int_a825da3e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a825da3e
comment
Magic: The Gathering:
Elves often fit this role in those worlds where they're portrayed less as another mortal race and more as amoral, reclusive wardens of the forests.
The elves of Lorwyn set are horned and hooved, supposedly to remind you of deer and satyrs, but... they are also aristocratic, ruthless, and predatory, and have built a society with castes based on cunning and physical attractiveness. The Castes range from Faultless, Immaculate, Exquisite, to Perfect, the top of the pack. Eyeblights, which includes non-Elves as well as ugly or disfigured Elves, are scum and can (or must) be killed.
In most Magic sets, Elf creatures are very Tolkienian. A bit more xenophobic, but Tolkien's elves could be pretty xenophobic, too. They're still creatures of order and "live and let live", as shown by the fact that (until the Lorwyn block) the color of mana they are most likely to use, after green, is white. Lorwyn, though, is consciously based on faerie tales, so the predatory, capricious and aristocratic aspects of the Fair Folk get emphasized, and for the duration of the block elves were black secondarily to green instead of white. A tribe switching colors is rare, and switching to a rival color like that is almost unheard of.
The flavor text for the Llanowar Elves from Fifth Edition: "One bone broken for every twig snapped under foot." Pretty brutal for 1/1 druids that give you green mana.
The expansion Throne of Eldraine is based off the original Grimm tales, so this is inevitable. The elves and goblins live in the vast woods outside of the civilized kingdoms, and travelers in said woods need to be wary, as the bridges might not lead to the other side of the same river — or even the same time. The local goblins are called redcaps, and they have their namesakes' method of dying them. Morality-wise, they practice their own versions of the color-related values the kingdoms hold. For example, the Green-aligned Garenbrig seeks to use their strength to protect the weak, but the Green giants wish to be strong for the sake of strength and do not understand why anyone wouldn't. Even the relatively-benign White-aligned faeries are prone to meddling.
Naturally enough, fairies have also been portrayed as this in various sets.
The Faeries of Lorwyn are very mischievous and disrupting, if not outright evil. In Lorwyn/Morningtide they were simply mischievous troublemakers, but became outright evil in Shadowmoor/Eventide. In truth, the faeries are not truly different in the two sets: while the rest of Lorwyn-Shadowmoor cycles from a light, pleasant world to a dark and evil one every few centuries, Oona's magic protects her faeries from the cycling's effects. They really are little evil bastards, but while the rest of the plane is in its Lorwyn phase, they tone it down. In fact, the Big Bad for that block was Oona, Queen of the Fae. And exceptionally overpowered.
This isn't altogether limited to Lorwyn, although the "fairy tale" nature of the setting certainly emphasizes the various creatures' relevant traits. While Magic's faeries may be the small winged pixie type in general, well, see the flavor text on Scryb Sprites if you think they're in any way, shape, or form harmless.
 The Fair Folk / int_a825da3e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a825da3e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Magic: The Gathering (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a825da3e
 The Fair Folk / int_a8639b13
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a8639b13
comment
Fablehaven: Most of the mystical beings are like this. The fairies themselves obviously fit, but nearly all magical creatures in the series have Blue-and-Orange Morality, and are fairly dangerous to humans. The one exception is satyrs, who, like their mythical counterparts, are lazy and fun-loving party animals. And Bracken, partially due to being a freakin' unicorn.
 The Fair Folk / int_a8639b13
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a8639b13
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fablehaven
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a8639b13
 The Fair Folk / int_a8729c90
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a8729c90
comment
The Fairly OddParents! — the magical creatures, even those not from Western mythology, all seem to have a bit of this. Jorgen Von Strangle is an absolute sadist and Da Rules seem to mostly be made to frustrate everyone and do not help much. Norm the Genie (aside from being a general Jackass Genie who delights in causing mayhem) has no clue that inflating a balloon that looks like a child's head and causing it to explode when you say that you want to "give each and every child a great big smile" is not a good idea if you want votes (and the fairies don't have too much of a clue about that, either). Cosmo has no clue that falling for various beautiful women would upset anyone (including his wife). Pixies don't know fun is fun and boring is not (or they don't care) and desire the entire world to be boring. Santa Claus is a two-timer that flirts with female genies after Norm explodes from magic back-up. Santa also acts quite selfish and gluttonous in "Have A Merry Wishmas". Cupid is greedy and can be bribed to do stuff for money, as well as being Prideful. The series does all this even though they are Fairy Companions. Finally we have Anti-Fairies, who kill time by giving humanity bad luck, cheat at the Fairy Olympics and have gotten to the point of destroying the world... and they're the only ones who are honest about it.
Also, the April Fool in "Fools Day Out" called causing the Earth to go into an Ice Age by hitting several planets and stuff a "prank" or "joke".
One episode also has "Scary Fairies". A state brought on by a fairy being stuck in pitch black for too long, who compulsively desire to eat their Godkid. Fortunately it's all just a practical joke on Timmy, due to him having played scary tricks on Poof earlier.
In "Crocker of Gold" there are a bunch of leprechauns called the McPunchies. Compared to previous leprechauns, they're a muscular mob-like clan who want their pot of gold back from Crocker. However, in a surprising turn, they want the pot itself, not the gold (apparently, it's an heirloom for cooking competitions.)
 The Fair Folk / int_a8729c90
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a8729c90
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Fairly OddParents!
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a8729c90
 The Fair Folk / int_a9b0b815
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a9b0b815
comment
Fairest of All: Siofra and Mahon were both kidnapped by fairies. They're held as captives and also made their concubines, in both cases unable to leave while treated cruelly. Here fairies are human sized but visibly inhuman, and have birdlike attributes such as talons or wings.
 The Fair Folk / int_a9b0b815
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a9b0b815
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fairest of All
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a9b0b815
 The Fair Folk / int_a9cb14fc
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a9cb14fc
comment
In Ravenloft, the Arak or "shadow fey" range from meddlesome to Always Chaotic Evil in temperament, and don't limit themselves to stealing infants: if you have a talent or skill that appeals to them, they can sever your shadow, reducing you to a soulless automaton going through the motions. Your shadow becomes a construct that'll compliantly work for them forever. Even Good-aligned Arak insist they're doing them a favor when they practice this technique on mortals. There are also a disturbing number of other (non-Arak) evil fae, such as Boowray, Baobhan Sith, the Green Maiden and the Lady of the Lake.
 The Fair Folk / int_a9cb14fc
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a9cb14fc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ravenloft (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a9cb14fc
 The Fair Folk / int_a9df2243
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_a9df2243
comment
Nothing Special: Quite a fair bit of creatures in the Spirit World. Some are friendly and social but then of course you have a few snobs who don't bother with socializing outside their own kind (such as some faeries whom Callie was trying to get information from) and then there's the ones who think so highly of themselves to the point they think can decide if a person lives or dies i.e Callie's Dryad mother, Lyla.
 The Fair Folk / int_a9df2243
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_a9df2243
featureConfidence
1.0
 Nothing Special (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_a9df2243
 The Fair Folk / int_aa08b12e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_aa08b12e
comment
Lady Death: The Eldritch in Medieval Lady Death are heavily inspired by the Melniboneans in The Elric Saga: a brutally and immoral race of fae humanoids that despises humanity and regularly goes on killing sprees against them known as "the wild hunts".
 The Fair Folk / int_aa08b12e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_aa08b12e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Lady Death (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_aa08b12e
 The Fair Folk / int_aa5b7cc2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_aa5b7cc2
comment
Sandoval, the Xoan Ambassador from Oglaf.
 The Fair Folk / int_aa5b7cc2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_aa5b7cc2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oglaf (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_aa5b7cc2
 The Fair Folk / int_aae9b70b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_aae9b70b
comment
In Rhapsodies Peaseblossom, the pixie featured in many of the strip's dream sequences, is at best capricious with a very mercurial temperament. At worst some of her "bright ideas" are kind of... fatal.
 The Fair Folk / int_aae9b70b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_aae9b70b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Rhapsodies (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_aae9b70b
 The Fair Folk / int_ab0ad056
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_ab0ad056
comment
In The Chronicles of Ancient Darkness, the Hidden People are based on huldra and Skogsrå, appearing like humans but with hollow backs.
 The Fair Folk / int_ab0ad056
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_ab0ad056
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Chronicles of Ancient Darkness
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_ab0ad056
 The Fair Folk / int_ab72eabb
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_ab72eabb
comment
There are several types of mythical beings in Ronja the Robber's Daughter, ranging from "mildly annoying with Blue-and-Orange Morality" to "Eldritch Abomination", but the Subterranean Ones who lure people to their underground dwellings with beautiful song are most likely related to the Fair Folk.
 The Fair Folk / int_ab72eabb
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_ab72eabb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ronja the Robber's Daughter
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_ab72eabb
 The Fair Folk / int_afc5be45
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_afc5be45
comment
The third book in Kate Thompson's Switchers series, Wild Blood, features fairies like these. As the series was intended for children, the fairies aren't too malicious, but there are threats of violence towards the main characters (also children).
 The Fair Folk / int_afc5be45
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_afc5be45
featureConfidence
1.0
 Switchers
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_afc5be45
 The Fair Folk / int_afcf7822
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_afcf7822
comment
In The War of the Flowers, "fairy" can be used to describe any intelligent inhabitant of the Magical Land the protagonist gets stuck in, but specifically refers to the humanoid aristocracy, who are (almost) always evil.
 The Fair Folk / int_afcf7822
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_afcf7822
featureConfidence
1.0
 The War of the Flowers
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_afcf7822
 The Fair Folk / int_b0160545
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_b0160545
comment
In the Wicked Lovely series, the main plot of the first book has the main character dealing with being caught in between two faeries and in the other books almost all of the main characters are Fey. They fit very much within this trope. Even the ones that are rather nice don't tend to understand human emotions, some of them are downright cruel, and many have a Blue-and-Orange Morality going.
 The Fair Folk / int_b0160545
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_b0160545
featureConfidence
1.0
 Wicked Lovely
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_b0160545
 The Fair Folk / int_b067b820
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_b067b820
comment
Heather Dale:
Heather Dale's song "Changeling Child" is all about this. The song tells the story of a woman who yearned to be a mother, and to that end spent a whole night bartering with the local faerie queen, who eventually relented and gave her a child. However, the woman failed to realize that the faeries are very fond of Exact Words: the mother-to-be didn't specify that she wanted a child who was alive, and when she realizes her mistake, she is unable to reach out to the fae, as the latter kept their end of the deal. The story ends saying she kept the child (whether it was a corpse or a piece of wood is never elaborated upon), holding it until she died.
"The Fair Folk" is about fairies and how you shouldn't get them because they'll steal your soul.
 The Fair Folk / int_b067b820
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_b067b820
featureConfidence
1.0
 Heather Dale (Music)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_b067b820
 The Fair Folk / int_b1b15d51
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_b1b15d51
comment
Felurian in The Wise Man's Fear is closer to the Fair Folk classic trope. Essentially a leanansidhe or succubus figure, she's a creature of desire, almost like an Anthropomorphic Personification of seduction. She is described as innocent but caring little for right and wrong; she seduces men who pursue her into Faerie, takes them as lovers, and when she eventually tires of them they die or go insane for wanting to be with her. While sympathetic, something of a mentor figure, and certainly a strange and wondrous being, she is very dangerous, not out of malice but simply out of being so different.
 The Fair Folk / int_b1b15d51
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_b1b15d51
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Wise Man's Fear
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_b1b15d51
 The Fair Folk / int_b30ae4db
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_b30ae4db
comment
Game of Thrones: Both the Children of the Forest and the White Walkers live beyond the Wall and have been there since the Long Night, though no one is really aware of this below the Wall. The White Walkers are malevolent magical creatures who take human children offered to them, reminiscent of changelings. As far as the Walkers are concerned, they weren't always like this. The first White Walker was a human that the Children performed some sort of ritual on to turn him into the Night's King, making them Was Once a Man humanoid abominations in addition to this. The Children of the Forest are mysterious, magical, forest-dwelling creatures who have long contested with humans and have been fading as The Magic Goes Away.
 The Fair Folk / int_b30ae4db
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_b30ae4db
featureConfidence
1.0
 Game of Thrones
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_b30ae4db
 The Fair Folk / int_b3e81703
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_b3e81703
comment
In Arthur, King of Time and Space, the Fey have agreed to help Morgan become queen, for impenetrable reasons of their own (hence "Morgan le Fey"). However, they don't actually seem to be all that bright...
 The Fair Folk / int_b3e81703
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_b3e81703
featureConfidence
1.0
 Arthur, King of Time and Space (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_b3e81703
 The Fair Folk / int_b5322e5
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_b5322e5
comment
The eponymous creature from the Leprechaun slasher film series is one of these. He's actually more in line with earlier folklore than modern interpretations.
 The Fair Folk / int_b5322e5
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_b5322e5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Leprechaun
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_b5322e5
 The Fair Folk / int_b5ea9a5f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_b5ea9a5f
comment
The Seelie and Unseelie appear in Terra Mirum Chronicles. Dreams have traits similar to this, but Fae are a separate race from Dreams, and the political situation between them is volatile.
 The Fair Folk / int_b5ea9a5f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_b5ea9a5f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Terra Mirum Chronicles
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_b5ea9a5f
 The Fair Folk / int_b5f7e809
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_b5f7e809
comment
In Beren and Lúthien, Thingol comes off like a dangerous Elf, as he tries to wrangle around the oath of neither caging nor killing Beren:
 The Fair Folk / int_b5f7e809
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_b5f7e809
featureConfidence
1.0
 Beren and Lúthien
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_b5f7e809
 The Fair Folk / int_b74a898d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_b74a898d
comment
Mendacity: The Fae are alien, cruel, and wicked beings, who delight in tormenting ponies and each other and seek to one day rule the world as they did in days long gone.
 The Fair Folk / int_b74a898d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_b74a898d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mendacity (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_b74a898d
 The Fair Folk / int_b9bfd8b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_b9bfd8b
comment
His later song, He of the Sidhe uses the same melody and similar fiddle solos, but the plot has been changed to a changeling boy earning his freedom from the Faerie Queen via another fiddle contest, and the Queen subsequently giving up on those kinds of challenges, seeing as she's lost twice, now.
 The Fair Folk / int_b9bfd8b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_b9bfd8b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Alexander James Adams (Music)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_b9bfd8b
 The Fair Folk / int_baf88dc9
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_baf88dc9
comment
Seven Favours For Harry Potter heavily features Fae characters, presenting a world where the wizarding world and the Fae have a sort of uneasy truce between them. At the beginning of the fic, Hagrid bargains with Lady Vidia of the Spring Court for seven favours to be granted to Harry. Not surprisingly, this has a lot of unexpected consequences.
 The Fair Folk / int_baf88dc9
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_baf88dc9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Seven Favours For Harry Potter (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_baf88dc9
 The Fair Folk / int_bb444181
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bb444181
comment
A major arc of Tales of the Questor pits the Kid Hero against some of the nastiest members of The Fair Folk. In this case, fae are split up into Seleighe and Unseleighe, both of which were originally a home-built immortal Servant Race, supernaturally compelled to follow obscure and poorly known rules in addition to any promises they make. The former are suggested to be a healthy lawful neutral with a minor fondness for some mortal species, but the Unseleighe are lawful only to the letter of the law, willing to rip a pet bird apart or steal human children for their own entertainment, and in the words of Quentyn's narration live to "see how evil they can be without breaking the rules". The Wild Hunt ensues, showing how dangerous they are.
The setting also contains fairies closer to the cute and friendly version, who only interact with the material plane to drop glowing rocks in small circles, inside which living creatures occasionally hear the sounds from another dimension trickle over.
 The Fair Folk / int_bb444181
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bb444181
featureConfidence
1.0
 Tales of the Questor (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bb444181
 The Fair Folk / int_bbf552e8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bbf552e8
comment
Blindsprings has the masked spirits to whom Tamaura is contracted. At time of writing their benevolence has yet to be established.
 The Fair Folk / int_bbf552e8
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bbf552e8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Blindsprings (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bbf552e8
 The Fair Folk / int_bcadd7cb
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bcadd7cb
comment
Warhammer 40,000:
The Dark Eldar, in spades. According to 5th Edition Dark Eldar codex writer Phil Kelly, the Dark Eldar were designed with a "faerie-tale elves" look and feel, and it shows; wild hunts on defenceless human cities and worlds to snatch captives, mirrors that shatter and kill the people they're reflecting, witch-like Haemonculi covens that make deals in abstract payments such as your ability to laugh. The fourth Chaos god of excess, Slaanesh (a god that rewards and delights in endless rape and torture)? It was birthed by the Eldar's distant ancestors' incessant hedonism... and the Dark Eldar exceed them. The Dark Eldar are beautiful, soulless horrors, exactly like the fey folk of old. One character in a Dark Eldar codex passage explicitly refers to them as such.
Their "good" cousins, the Craftworld Eldar, are little better. Fulfilling the classic stereotype of fairies and elves manipulating humans with little regard for their well-being, the Eldar once diverted an Ork invasion towards the human Hive world of Armageddon and instigated a war which left millions dead and most of the planet in ruins, to save a Craftworld with only 10,000 Eldar living on it. That said, the Eldar can possibly justify this atrocity by the fact that A) they're a Dying Race, and B) the Imperium would certainly do the same to an Eldar Craftworld if the situation were reversed.
The Harlequins are a sub-faction of Eldar who are basically psychic ninja space elf acrobat jesters, and while they'll travel to human worlds to put on a show and maybe even jump in and help humans fight the forces of Chaos, they're creepy as hell, employ horrific weapons including a Razor Floss punch dagger, and they worship a god dedicated to Magnificent Bastardry.
The Exodite Eldar are slightly better, but only because there's little background on them. They're basically hippies living the way they did before Slaanesh came along (see Dark Eldar). This being 40K, "hippies" means that they ride giant psychically-attuned dinosaurs into battle.
And the scary thing is that the Craftworld Eldar and Harlequins are considered to be the closest thing the setting has to a "good guy", besides maybe the Tau Empire, depending on your interpretation of them. This speaks volumes about the rest of the galaxy's inhabitants.
The Dark Angels chapter has the Watchers in the Dark, diminuitive creatures who are always obscured by their robes. Though some of them serve the Dark Angels in some minor capacity, what little is revealed about them in the backstory (most notably the Horus Heresy novels Fallen Angels and Descent of Angels makes it clear they hold a lot more cards regarding the fate of the sons of Caliban than they let on.
 The Fair Folk / int_bcadd7cb
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bcadd7cb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Warhammer 40,000 (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bcadd7cb
 The Fair Folk / int_bcfa43ed
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bcfa43ed
comment
Aisling from The Secret of Kells is a fairy (though it's implied she doesn't like to be called that) and Word of God and a tie-in comic state that she's one of the Tuatha Dé Danann. Though she turns out to be much nicer than how the Fair Folk are usually portrayed, she still doesn't take kindly to those who intrude in her forest and initially even threatens to set her wolves on Brendan if he doesn't leave.
 The Fair Folk / int_bcfa43ed
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bcfa43ed
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Secret of Kells
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bcfa43ed
 The Fair Folk / int_bd310eaa
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bd310eaa
comment
Immortals in El Goonish Shive apparently used to call themselves fairies, and they certainly live up to the old stories. The ones the audience has seen have done things like arranging an attack on a school, or trying to have an innocent killed, and even some of the nicer ones have manipulated children into killing a monster when there were better options available. They are voluntarily held in check by rules allowing them to "only guide and empower mortals," which mostly just means that they have to be subtle about their mischief.
 The Fair Folk / int_bd310eaa
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bd310eaa
featureConfidence
1.0
 El Goonish Shive (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bd310eaa
 The Fair Folk / int_bd50a7b3
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bd50a7b3
comment
Del Toro does it again with Don't Be Afraid of the Dark. No wings or sparkles here, the creatures (officially known as Homonculi) look more like evil hunchbacked lemurs.
 The Fair Folk / int_bd50a7b3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bd50a7b3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Don't Be Afraid of the Dark
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bd50a7b3
 The Fair Folk / int_bdc49dbe
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bdc49dbe
comment
The Laundry Files brings its own take on the subject in The Nightmare Stacks. Elves are a Human Subspecies (that is, of the genus homo; further from sapiens than neanderthalensis) that diverged half a million years ago in an Alternate Universe. The most notable divergence, aside from the pointy ears, is the way they discovered magic long before they developed speech. They've since developed into a species of sociopathic Planet Looters of alternate Earths, because while humans are adapted for speech, tool usage, and teamwork, elves are adapted for magic and predation.
Traditional elf folklore has a grain of truth to it, but it's been badly misinterpreted, filtered through medieval monks recording word-of-mouth from terrified peasants who barely got a glimpse of their captors. Don't bother with cold iron; it's resistant to a few of their weapons, but nothing else — they wear full plate armor without problems. They can lie to you just fine, they're only forbidden to lie to superiors by their geas-controlled society.
 The Fair Folk / int_bdc49dbe
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bdc49dbe
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Laundry Files
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bdc49dbe
 The Fair Folk / int_bdfd01de
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bdfd01de
comment
In Boldores And Boomsticks, Ruby brings up the trope in regards to Fairy Types in Chapter 32.3. Weiss, not familiar with the older, scarier stories, is dismissive of the idea until they talk to Olivia, who tells them about Tapu Lele, who she describes as the most Fae of all the Guardian Deities despite them all being part Fairy-type, being completely unrestrained in battle because her ability to heal means that she feels no need to hold herself back, and her mood can apparently change from kind and generous to self-centered and uncaring fairly easily. Olivia then confirms that the Fairy type was named after mythological beings from old tales, especially from the Galar region, the Pokémon world's version of the UK, where many stories of The Fair Folk originate in our world, and that she feels that the name is accurate and that Fairy-Types are as vengeful as they are adorable.
 The Fair Folk / int_bdfd01de
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bdfd01de
featureConfidence
1.0
 Boldores and Boomsticks (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bdfd01de
 The Fair Folk / int_beac6ffb
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_beac6ffb
comment
Subverted in the opening of The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask: Tatl and her brother help Skull Kid steal Link's horse, and then she attacks and taunts Link after Skull Kid turns him into a Deku Scrub. She then takes the role of Exposition Fairy after Skull Kid leaves her behind and stays with Link when she sees Skull Kid try to destroy the world.
Possibly played straight with the Skull Kids themselves, which are referred to along with the Kokiri and Spark Fairies in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time as forest fairies or fairy folk.
 The Fair Folk / int_beac6ffb
featureApplicability
-0.3
 The Fair Folk / int_beac6ffb
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_beac6ffb
 The Fair Folk / int_bee7440
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bee7440
comment
Every encounter with fairy folk in Drakengard is laden with contempt for humans. This trope is most exemplified in the case of Leonard though, as his pact-partner is a malicious fairy who bonded with him seemingly only for the purpose of torturing him over his inability to kill himself. Which backfired magnificently when Leonard found the inner strength to perform a Heroic Sacrifice to slow down the Grotesqueries and as a bonus dragged the insufferable thing with him as it desperately tried to escape its impending doom.
 The Fair Folk / int_bee7440
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bee7440
featureConfidence
1.0
 Drakengard (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bee7440
 The Fair Folk / int_bf4acb21
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bf4acb21
comment
The Age of Misrule: Above Good and Evil, Black-and-Gray Morality, Blue-and-Orange Morality, The Unfettered, Pay Evil unto Evil abound in a Crapsack World, and that's just the Tuatha Dé Danann. Their "evil" counterparts, the Fomorii... are worse.
 The Fair Folk / int_bf4acb21
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bf4acb21
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Age of Misrule
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bf4acb21
 The Fair Folk / int_bff01809
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_bff01809
comment
Warhammer:
The Elves; you get either arrogant bastards (High Elves), xenophobic bastards (Wood Elves) or murderous bastards (Dark Elves).
The Wood Elves are extremely xenophobic and generally act more like a force of nature than a civilized people. This is especially true with their king, Orion the Hunter, who every spring goes on a rampage around the woods and nearby area with a host of spirits and wild hunters. The Wood Elves also have a habit of capturing any human children with an affinity for magic from the nearby land of Bretonnia, who become their ageless servants. It is entirely possible that they are running Bretonnia's religion as well.
Dark Elves are slightly less torture-happy than their 40K equivalents (though they're opposite to the High Elves: Khaine, the High Elf god of War, is their god of murder) who were exiled to what is basically the geographic equivalent of Canada, living as raiders, capturing wild animals to use them in battle, and blood rituals.
High Elves are perhaps an aversion. True, a good number of them are majorly stuck-up assholes, but some of them are decent enough people. In fact, the High Elf Everqueen, Alarielle, is one of the kindest and most noble beings in the setting (there aren't many of them, that's for sure). And overall, they can be somewhat reasoned with and they have the world's safety in mind. Basically a whole species of Jerk with a Heart of Gold... except when they're not.
The Wood Elves also share Athel Loren with a host of even more capricious and supernatural forest spirits:
The Dryads normally look like beautiful human or elven women... up until someone threatens the forest, or unknowingly breaks some obscure rule, or even just catches them in a bad mood, at which point they transform in monstrous humanoids made of wood and bring remorseless, violent retribution on whoever was unlucky enough to find them. And sometimes they deliberately use their beautiful forms to lure people into the forest to hunt them for sport.
The Treemen, at least, are direct in their motivations: leave the forest be, and they'll happily ignore you. Break off so much as a single branch, and you die.
Athel Loren is also home to hosts of tiny malicious creatures called Spites — or, as humans frequently mispronounce their name, Sprites. They are mercurial shapeshifters known for their emotional natures and cruel sense of humor — sometimes they'll simply be mischievous or even helpful, sometimes they'll fly into rages due to some obscure or unintentional insult, sometimes they'll play cruel, spiteful tricks on or just abandon their own allies for no discernible reason.
 The Fair Folk / int_bff01809
featureApplicability
-1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_bff01809
featureConfidence
1.0
 Warhammer (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_bff01809
 The Fair Folk / int_c08cda65
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_c08cda65
comment
The Alarmaverse: The fia sídhe, heavily based of fairies from Celtic lore, are deer who live in the sídhe, a realm normally inaccessible from Equestria that can only be entered and exited where it intersects with normal reality — other forms of interdimensional travel do not work within it — and operate by a very different sort of morality than mortals do. One of them, Abhean, thinks he’s required by honor to behead Bon Bon for insulting Derpy, and the three Derpy meets in the sídhe were quite happy to hunt and eat her, given the chance.
 The Fair Folk / int_c08cda65
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_c08cda65
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Alarmaverse (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_c08cda65
 The Fair Folk / int_c19c6efa
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_c19c6efa
comment
Vexes in Minecraft are evil fairy-like beings that are summoned by Evokers, able to phase through walls and deal a sizeable amount of damage when they charge at players. Version 1.19 introduced their Good Counterpart, the Allay, which implies that Vexes are corrupted Allays.
 The Fair Folk / int_c19c6efa
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_c19c6efa
featureConfidence
1.0
 Minecraft (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_c19c6efa
 The Fair Folk / int_c3b1fe07
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_c3b1fe07
comment
Lost Girl: Every supernatural creature is effectively fae. This includes vampires, kappa, succubi, and lots of other nasty things (thought Dark Is Not Evil is in effect for some of the characters). The ruling bodies of the Fae are effectively the Seelie and Unseelie Courts (here referred to as "Light" and "Dark"), and both courts view humans as a handy tool for their plans and ascribe to rather dated notions of justice (such as Combat by Champion).
 The Fair Folk / int_c3b1fe07
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_c3b1fe07
featureConfidence
1.0
 Lost Girl
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_c3b1fe07
 The Fair Folk / int_c407a3ac
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_c407a3ac
comment
In Ridley Scott's Legend (1985), the Gump and Oona are essentially friendly to Jack, but are still quite pre-Victorian in behavior. Mercurial, occasionally vindictive, and more than willing to bring punishment down on a foolish mortal like Jack (who's only spared because his misdeed was done out of love, possibly also because he's a "Faerie Friend").When they're stuck in a cell in Darkness' stronghold, Gump is unable to pick the lock because it's made of iron. "Iron is trouble for fairies."
On the other side, Meg Mucklebones the hag and the goblins led by Blix are purely, gleefully villainous to the point of Card Carrying Villainy.
 The Fair Folk / int_c407a3ac
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_c407a3ac
featureConfidence
1.0
 Legend (1985)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_c407a3ac
 The Fair Folk / int_c46fc78b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_c46fc78b
comment
The trolls in Absentia are unseen entities who make their home in an extradimensional space between walls, but possess unmistakable shades of this. They enjoy making deals and are insistent on paying what they owe, even if the other party doesn't want it. They seem reluctant to attack anyone who makes a deal with them, but they also attract attention to others around you.
 The Fair Folk / int_c46fc78b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_c46fc78b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Absentia
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_c46fc78b
 The Fair Folk / int_c51cb60a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_c51cb60a
comment
Changeling: The Lost paints Fairies as powerful incomprehensible alien entities that regularly abduct humans and take them off to their homeland, where they are warped to fit their masters' perceptions of them. The Changelings of the title are humans who've managed to escape back to Earth, but who've been changed by their time in the world of Faerie and are trying to avoid their former captors at all costs. Notably, Changeling also directly correlates the modern concept of Alien Abduction with the Fae, explicitly invoking such standbys as lights in the sky, strange experiments, and Keepers taking the form of Little Green Men or The Greys in a number of places. It is later explained that the True Fae need conflict to prevent themselves fading away into the random background chaos of Arcadia. As a result, the closest thing they have to friends among other Fae are their sworn enemies, as by fighting they're keeping each other alive. They can also be inanimate objects (Props), legions of lesser beings (Wisp), and entire self-enclosed universes (Realms) in addition to their normal forms (Actors). With enough Titles, they can do the aforementioned simultaneously!
 The Fair Folk / int_c51cb60a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_c51cb60a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Changeling: The Lost (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_c51cb60a
 The Fair Folk / int_c5dd7418
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_c5dd7418
comment
County Durham and Tyne-and-Wear boast the tale of the Lambton Worm (think "serpentine river dragon stuck in a well — carved into Lambton Hill"). No, the massive worm with great googly eyes probably isn't fey (maybe; it could be — or some other polymorphed, bound and geased innocent guarding the water, well and/or hill), but the mysterious, exposition-rich old man/ men and/or woman (it varies according to the version) by the river who (repeatedly) sets the plot rolling along rails by prodding Sir John into foolhardy acts of certain, very blood-drenched (and eventually, but inevitably, cursed) doom under the banner of heroic, dragon-slaying derring-do that will be immortalised in song? Could very well be a single, somewhat cleaned-up powrie (or some cousin, a witch/warlock or a devil) taking advantage of the sinning, unsanctified, thus unprotected and headstrong John... and his entire line of male descendants. At least until either they or the curse finally stutter out. All this is presumably done for the giggles as much as the guaranteed sustenance for decades after indirectly offing a possible rival. Moral of the story? Go to church, triple-check your information sources, and ask yourself if you're really hero material rather than, say, a patsy.
 The Fair Folk / int_c5dd7418
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_c5dd7418
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Lambton Worm
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_c5dd7418
 The Fair Folk / int_c62995ba
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_c62995ba
comment
Child of the Storm features the Winter and Summer Courts, mostly based on The Dresden Files. As in their native canon, they're very prone to using Exact Words, each and every one of them is a Rules Lawyer and they love making deals. They are also incredibly dangerous. The sequel reveals that as a species, they're descended from humans/an offshoot of humanity that entered the realm of Faerie in the Nevernever several hundred thousand years ago, and evolved to not only be able to use magic, like humans, but to be magic (which contributes to their Blue-and-Orange Morality).
Lily and Fix, the Summer Lady and Summer Knight, appear at an Asgardian function and are quite helpful to Harry, offering the benefit of their own experiences of change, though Loki remarks that he paid them in information — however, he also adds that they did want to help, but the Fae being the Fae (or, in Fix's case, a human who's bound to the Fae), it has to be Equivalent Exchange. During the same chapter Mar-Vell mentions that he barely got away from Maeve, the Winter Lady, with his virtue intact. In the sequel, Queen Mab, mother of Maeve and Queen of Winter, gets involved, and demonstrates why even Thor and Loki — who she's as powerful as at her weakest — treat her with respect (though as Doctor Strange casually mentions, she knows much better than to get in his way).
Harry doesn't have any explicit connection to the Fae, but his somewhat uncanny mannerisms and fondness for fire lead to speculation that Lily was connected to the Summer Court. While there are other reasons for this, Word of God noted somewhat cryptically that Lily did meet some of the Summer Court and they rather liked her. Considering her temperament and her connection to the Phoenix, this is perhaps not surprising.
The Alfar of the Nine Realms generally don't follow this. However, Gravemoss is an exiled Light Elf and, intentionally, reminiscent of the darkest and most horrifying tales of the Fair Folk with all the knobs turned up. Thanks to him, in chapters 58, 59 and 60, we see an army of Winter Fae mercenaries known as the Slendermen. They are every bit as creepy as you would expect and play this trope as straight as an arrow.
In chapter 68 Professor Lupin notes that the Courts rarely bother wanded practitioners for whatever reason, leading to a number of wanded scholars to assert that they don't exist, before making it clear that they are very real and extremely dangerous. He also goes on to note the existence of The Wild Hunt, led by Oberon and the Erlking, who are both invoked by those who wish to channel the powers of hunting spirits. The Erlking will help someone he deems worthy (though if he does not deem them worthy, things can get messy). Oberon, on the other other hand, is a great deal more capricious.
Likewise, Malekith the Accursed is mentioned, and shown to have been one of the most terrifying foes Asgard's faced, being forced to resort to orbital bombardment of Svartalfheim, a.k.a. 'the Dark World', which is now a Death World more or less devoid of life. Or at least, as Thor discovers in chapter 50 of the sequel, it used to be.
 The Fair Folk / int_c62995ba
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_c62995ba
featureConfidence
1.0
 Child of the Storm (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_c62995ba
 The Fair Folk / int_c7a52ee3
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_c7a52ee3
comment
One of the monsters in Extreme Ghostbusters is an evil leprechaun who quotes a famous poem about fearing the Fair Folk.
 The Fair Folk / int_c7a52ee3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_c7a52ee3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Extreme Ghostbusters
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_c7a52ee3
 The Fair Folk / int_ca171a7e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_ca171a7e
comment
Played straight with both Peter and the inhabitants of Avalon in Brom's adaptation of Peter Pan, The Child Thief. Only Tanngnost the troll comes off at all sympathetically.
 The Fair Folk / int_ca171a7e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_ca171a7e
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Child Thief
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_ca171a7e
 The Fair Folk / int_ca72528b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_ca72528b
comment
Terri Windling's Bordertown anthologies have a mashup of various fae types. There are elven street gangs, half-elves, fae wannabes, fae-touched, and so on, and their behaviour toward humans varies accordingly. The Bordertown actually exists on the border of genuine, under-the-hill Faerie, and the river running through it is called the Mad River, because to humans one sip is instantaneously addictive and insanity-generating though it is possible to recover from Mad River addiction — Tick-Tick helped Orient get off the water.
 The Fair Folk / int_ca72528b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_ca72528b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Bordertown
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_ca72528b
 The Fair Folk / int_cb09ad9
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_cb09ad9
comment
Averted in the King's Quest games. There are wicked ones (Lolotte, Malicia), inscrutable ones (Mab, the Fate Sisters), and benevolent ones (Genesta, Oberon, Titania, and Edgar). Certainly, they can wield magic and have a strange logic on how things should run (The Fan Sequel The Silver Lining also depicts that they prefer to be outside, no matter the weather), but they aren't much different than humans otherwise.
Played straight in the Extended Universe, however, where a number of more traditional fairies show up in the first and second Tie In Novels.
 The Fair Folk / int_cb09ad9
featureApplicability
-1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_cb09ad9
featureConfidence
1.0
 King's Quest (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_cb09ad9
 The Fair Folk / int_cb45dbdc
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_cb45dbdc
comment
Ortega in Pokémon Scarlet and Violet, one of the leaders of Team Star, specializes in Fairy-types and is quite the spoiled Bratty Half-Pint.
There are also a few Pokémon that fit the bill as well. The Fairy/Steel-type Tinkatink line all utilize metal hammers that they make themselves, with Tinkaton using metal it harvests from Pawniard and Bisharp. There's also three of the Paradox Pokémon you'll find in Area Zero, the Fairy/Psychic-type Scream Tailnote  Primal Jigglypuff and the Ghost/Fairy-type Flutter Manenote  Primal Misdreavus in Scarlet alongside the Fairy/Fighting-type Iron Valiantnote  Robotic Gardevoir/Gallade hybrid in Violet. A Scream Tail even attacks Penny directly.
 The Fair Folk / int_cb45dbdc
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_cb45dbdc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pokémon Scarlet and Violet (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_cb45dbdc
 The Fair Folk / int_cb7392b7
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_cb7392b7
comment
A Court of Thorns and Roses: Faeries in this series are clearly inspired by or based upon fairies and equivalent creatures from Celtic mythology and the like. The High Fae in particular seems greatly inspired by the Sidhe of Irish mythology. While they're not all inherently evil and some can be highly benevolent, they all tend to be powerful, ruthless and dangerous, tend to treat humans like pets at best, and humans themselves are fearful of them.
 The Fair Folk / int_cb7392b7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_cb7392b7
featureConfidence
1.0
 A Court of Thorns and Roses
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_cb7392b7
 The Fair Folk / int_cc1e6dbd
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_cc1e6dbd
comment
The Stanford Adventure Club: Zantabraxus is identified as a Hmong variant of this. When Klaus Wulfenbach is wounded while he was fighting in the Vietnam war, she expresses her gratitude for defending her country by abducting him from his bed to make him her consort. Klaus didn't mind really much being married after meeting her.
Her twin children have quite interesting abilities, even if Gil's are more developed: he Speaks Fluent Animal , has Healing Hands and can fly and use pyrokinesis.
Equivalent Exchange seems to be a thing with fae folk: since Gil often helped Ardsley and gave him gifts, Ardsley finds himself in his debt and could be forced to do Gil's bidding. Gil is genuinely horrified to learn this detail.
 The Fair Folk / int_cc1e6dbd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_cc1e6dbd
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Stanford Adventure Club (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_cc1e6dbd
 The Fair Folk / int_cc664622
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_cc664622
comment
Their Midnight Revels: They are present in this story in all of their mischievous, conniving, but surprisingly charming and romantic glory. Two of the lovers are Miranda and Ariel from The Tempest. The fairies are portrayed as magical and amoral in creating illusions to fool mortals, have oracular foresight (though they say things do change), but have limitations. The fairies are still vulnerable to iron, because Ariel burns himself on a pot. They cannot enter Downton unless they are invited by Robert Crawley, the master of the house. Edith is not able to follow the fairies on her own, she must be led by someone she knows and trusts so Ariel enchants Thomas first. The World of Faerie is shown by magical creatures living in rocks, trees, and are in tune with nature such as their homes are built with outdoor views. It is based on various sources particularly Shakespeare’s and the world of artist, Brian Froud.
 The Fair Folk / int_cc664622
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_cc664622
featureConfidence
1.0
 Their Midnight Revels (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_cc664622
 The Fair Folk / int_cd38e8dc
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_cd38e8dc
comment
Seven Soldiers of Victory (2005): The Sheeda are fairies who live at the ass-end of time and who Time Travel back to raze human civilization and plunder its profits whenever humanity reaches a certain tech level.
 The Fair Folk / int_cd38e8dc
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_cd38e8dc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Seven Soldiers of Victory (2005) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_cd38e8dc
 The Fair Folk / int_cef345b8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_cef345b8
comment
Critical Role: Being a Dungeons and Dragons Actual Play, Fae creatures appear from time to time. They typically are not evil as much as they are amoral. Completely untrustworthy and unlikely to consider the effects his actions have on others. For htis reason, Allura warns Vox Mchina not to trust anyone they meet in the Fewild and be very careful what they say or agree to. One such creature, Garmelie satyr, draws caricatures of people and will offer assistance in exchange for some odd request.
 The Fair Folk / int_cef345b8
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_cef345b8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Critical Role (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_cef345b8
 The Fair Folk / int_cfd860dd
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_cfd860dd
comment
Nasuverse:
In the backstory and side-materials, the Fae are established as being Nature Spirits that are a reflection of the Planet’s consciousness, specifically described as it’s “sense of touch� and live on the Reverse Side of the World. Considering the general Nature Is Not Nice attitude the planet has in the series, the Fae are naturally pretty twisted.
They show up in Kara no Kyoukai, specifically in 6th book/movie, Oblivion Record. There, they were responsible for kidnapping Satsuki Kurogiri when he was a child, resulting in him swearing vengeance upon them. They didn’t really, though. What really happened was that he killed a few, so they messed with his mind as a dying act of revenge.
 The Fair Folk / int_cfd860dd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_cfd860dd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Nasuverse (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_cfd860dd
 The Fair Folk / int_d04ab162
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d04ab162
comment
Figment has the Sound Sprites, who create objects from sound. Because of this, they prize aural perfection and speak entirely in alliteration to reflect this. Anything and anyone that doesn't communicate in this manner is considered imperfect and a source of bad audio and must be imprisoned.
 The Fair Folk / int_d04ab162
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d04ab162
featureConfidence
1.0
 Figment (Disney Kingdoms) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d04ab162
 The Fair Folk / int_d0885948
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d0885948
comment
Into the Heartless Wood: The Gwydden and her daughters are forest witches who murder humans and harvest their souls. The Gwydden herself used to be a forest nymph before having her soul taken by Elynion.
 The Fair Folk / int_d0885948
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d0885948
featureConfidence
1.0
 Into the Heartless Wood
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d0885948
 The Fair Folk / int_d1702e57
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d1702e57
comment
Volo in Pokémon Legends: Arceus has a Togekiss as his ace, which illustrates his Omnicidal Maniac nature and shaping up as the true antagonist of the game.
 The Fair Folk / int_d1702e57
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d1702e57
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pokémon Legends: Arceus (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d1702e57
 The Fair Folk / int_d2c81f1e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d2c81f1e
comment
In "Tam Lin", Tam Lin is spirited away by the Queen of Elphame [Elfhome]. He enjoys his stay there, but learns that every seventh year, the elves have to pay a "tithe [tax] to Hell". Fearing he himself will be the tithe, he flees. The Queen denies that she would have offered Tam Lin, but that still seems to imply the elves regularly sacrifice one of their own to the Devil.
 The Fair Folk / int_d2c81f1e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d2c81f1e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Tam Lin
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d2c81f1e
 The Fair Folk / int_d2cd3b5e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d2cd3b5e
comment
In Nomine: The fae of the Marches are often capricious and dangerous beings, but this trope is truly embodied in the unfortunates chosen for the tribute that Arcadia must pay to Beleth, the Demon Princess of Nightmares, in exchange for protection. The tributes who aren't simply consumed for their Forces are given a sliver of Beleth's own power, which corrupts them body, mind and soul; the resulting fae become cruel, hard and bitter beings, whose only joy comes from the suffering of others. They lurk in the dark corners of the Country of the Teind, a dreamscape in the shadow of Beleth's tower, and periodically sally out to hunt the dreams of mortals. Besides their use in tormenting dreamers and disposing of disappointing minions, Beleth keeps them in large part because of the impact they have on mortal culture — their influence on their victims is a large part of the reason why the modern concept of fae as evil, monstrous beings, as opposed to just wild and capricious, has developed; since the Marches resonate strongly to human beliefs, this serves to weaken the true fae of Arcadia by drawing essence and belief away from it and into Beleth's own domain.
 The Fair Folk / int_d2cd3b5e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d2cd3b5e
featureConfidence
1.0
 In Nomine (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d2cd3b5e
 The Fair Folk / int_d30d27d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d30d27d
comment
In the Rune Factory games, the faeries are small women with wings who shoot sets of fairly powerful, guided magic wind scythes. At mid-level, these are some of the most dangerous normal opponents.
 The Fair Folk / int_d30d27d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d30d27d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Rune Factory (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d30d27d
 The Fair Folk / int_d4fa168d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d4fa168d
comment
The nymphs in Fable are malicious childlike buggers with raspy voices and a penchant for human sacrifice.
 The Fair Folk / int_d4fa168d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d4fa168d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fable (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d4fa168d
 The Fair Folk / int_d55ffc53
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d55ffc53
comment
In 7th Sea, the Sidhe have an uneasy alliance with the humans of Avalon, based on mutual dependence. The Unseelie are treated as horrifying monsters, but even the Seelie (sometimes called "The Goodly Folk") are regarded with fear and suspicion. The Seelie do not have normal emotions, and because of this, some of them take pleasure in emotionally manipulating humans. They will often torment humans for their own purposes or entertainment, and the Queen of the Sky is known to participate in The Wild Hunt. The GM's Section in the Avalon book encourages GMs to use the Sidhe as antagonists or foils.
 The Fair Folk / int_d55ffc53
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d55ffc53
featureConfidence
1.0
 7th Sea (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d55ffc53
 The Fair Folk / int_d6f754eb
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d6f754eb
comment
The evolution of Fair Folk stories to modern alien abduction stories (by way of other crackpot stories like Elijah's Chariot and predatory succubi) is the premise of "Angel Down, Sussex".
 The Fair Folk / int_d6f754eb
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d6f754eb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Angel Down, Sussex
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d6f754eb
 The Fair Folk / int_d7c4626a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d7c4626a
comment
The Sandman (1989) reinvigorated this trope for the modern era. The Sandman directly crosses over with a number of other DC comics, meaning that nasty elves also play a part in The Books of Magic, Hellblazer, and several other Vertigo Comics series.
 The Fair Folk / int_d7c4626a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d7c4626a
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Sandman (1989) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d7c4626a
 The Fair Folk / int_d9db5c77
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_d9db5c77
comment
The Mercy Thompson novels make this very clear in the third book, which features a kelpie that tries to eat Mercy. Plus the Grey Lords who consider killing Mercy for poking into their affairs, and only back off when they learn that killing Mercy would anger the Marrok and start a war with the werewolves.
 The Fair Folk / int_d9db5c77
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_d9db5c77
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mercy Thompson
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_d9db5c77
 The Fair Folk / int_da73d677
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_da73d677
comment
Whilst Erana from Quest for Glory fame is the embodiment of all that's pure and good in the world, and like, fabulous as a person to boot, her fair folk friends and family are power-hungry rogues who are not above stepping on a mere mortal to get their hands on Erana's magical staff to gain more power. Doesn't help they're all high-powered mages like their cousin twice removed.
Also played with in the first game, where the hero can be forced to dance with fairies to the point of death.
 The Fair Folk / int_da73d677
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_da73d677
featureConfidence
1.0
 Quest for Glory (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_da73d677
 The Fair Folk / int_dad73e07
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_dad73e07
comment
In the beginning of Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, Charlie meets a superstitious old peddler who recites a line from the poem by William Allingham posted as the Trope Quote, clearly believing that the "mysterious workers" who work in the factory have something to do with the Fair Folk. Of course, this is a subversion; the Oompa Loompas are friendly, harmless creatures, and are not fairies (but still rather unsettling, what with their bright orange skin and eerie morality ballads). If anything, Wonka himself behaves more like the traditional Fair Folk archetype.
 The Fair Folk / int_dad73e07
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_dad73e07
featureConfidence
1.0
 Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_dad73e07
 The Fair Folk / int_db04452e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_db04452e
comment
The titular magical beings from The Hidden People are this, vicious and cruel and taking pleasure in kidnapping and exploiting human children.
 The Fair Folk / int_db04452e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_db04452e
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Hidden People (Podcast)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_db04452e
 The Fair Folk / int_db5628d7
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_db5628d7
comment
The Spiderwick Chronicles (by Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi) feature a number of fae creatures, along with the ways to deal with them and/or protect oneself from them. Spiderwick's daughter, in her unknowing youth, accepted food from the fae and as a result has no desire to eat human food... she would starve to death if the tiny faeries didn't bring her food regularly.
 The Fair Folk / int_db5628d7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_db5628d7
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Spiderwick Chronicles
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_db5628d7
 The Fair Folk / int_dbb68ab6
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_dbb68ab6
comment
In The Chronicles of Narnia book The Magician's Nephew, the villainous Uncle Andrew mentions that his godmother, Mrs. Lefay, had fairy blood, likely making him the last person to have a Fairy Godmother. She wound up in prison for a few years, was allowed home to die, and on her deathbed instructed Andrew to destroy a magical box that she had hidden. He instead used it to make the magic rings that kick off the book's plot.
 The Fair Folk / int_dbb68ab6
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_dbb68ab6
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Chronicles of Narnia
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_dbb68ab6
 The Fair Folk / int_dc497ea8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_dc497ea8
comment
In The Weave, the fairies are organized in a complex society structure under the rule of the Court of Queens. Most of them are self-serving, manipulative, and cruel to humans and their own folks alike. Besides that, they also deal in magic, can be murdered with Cold Iron, and are an Inhumanly Beautiful Race.
 The Fair Folk / int_dc497ea8
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_dc497ea8
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Weave (Webcomic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_dc497ea8
 The Fair Folk / int_dc500fbe
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_dc500fbe
comment
The pixie Hellions in Tales of Zestiria. In Edna's words "Earth-dwellers seem to think they're benevolent. That's cute."
 The Fair Folk / int_dc500fbe
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_dc500fbe
featureConfidence
1.0
 Tales of Zestiria (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_dc500fbe
 The Fair Folk / int_dca06c7f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_dca06c7f
comment
In Tales of MU, elves historically fell into this trope and some wild adolescent elves still live there. Faeries exist, too, and are the only thing that badass elven hunter is afraid of (apart from bears).
 The Fair Folk / int_dca06c7f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_dca06c7f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Tales of MU
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_dca06c7f
 The Fair Folk / int_dca06c9f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_dca06c9f
comment
In Tales of MU, Elves fall somewhere between this and a deconstruction of Can't Argue with Elves.
 The Fair Folk / int_dca06c9f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_dca06c9f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Tales of MU
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_dca06c9f
 The Fair Folk / int_de19ff1a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_de19ff1a
comment
Spellbound (Lilafly) reinterprets many of the Miraculous Ladybug characters and events in terms of fae magic. Adrien and Felix are half-fae, cat shapeshifters, and their mother disappeared into Tír na nÓg, which is a big part of their father's motivation to isolate them from the world. Chloe is another half-fae, explaining a great deal of her cruelty, while Sabrina is a selkie whose coat was stolen, enslaving her to Chloe's family. When the kwamis show up, they aren't happy about one of the fair folk holding a Miraculous, but Plagg gives Adrien a chance because the situation is urgent. Adrien's innate magic has side effects on Miraculous usage, though, and Adrien has even more secrets to keep than in canon, because if Marinette learns too much about the fae, she's likely to be Killed to Uphold the Masquerade.
 The Fair Folk / int_de19ff1a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_de19ff1a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Spellbound (Lilafly) (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_de19ff1a
 The Fair Folk / int_de6659ec
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_de6659ec
comment
Plenty of Fairies exist in Once Upon a Time. They use Fairy Dust as a catalyst for 'good magic' and seem to be incapable of doing anything remotely negative, though there are variations of Fairy Dust. Pixie Dust, described as a nuclear form of the regular stuff, and Dark Fairy Dust, which seems to just turn the target into an insect. After the Dark Curse is cast, the Order of Fairies are now a nunnery in Storybrooke. In the mid-season finale of the third season, we hear of a character known as The Black Fairy, a fairy who was banished years ago for practicing dark magic. When she finally appears in Season Six, she manages to abandon her own child, steal her own infant grandson to raise him away from his parents in a dark dimension where time works differently, turn him into an evil sorcerer, and hospitalize The Blue Fairy, leader of Storybrooke's good fairies. And all of that within two episodes, with only three characters knowing she's even around. Uh oh.
 The Fair Folk / int_de6659ec
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_de6659ec
featureConfidence
1.0
 Once Upon a Time
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_de6659ec
 The Fair Folk / int_ded8fb1b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_ded8fb1b
comment
The antagonists in "The Gypsies in the Wood", wherein a little boy goes missing on his birthday... only for a seemingly schizophrenic middle-aged man to appear days later claiming to be that little boy. And he then makes a living drawing pictures for subtly wrong children's stories, complete with a faintly creepy amusement park. All the more disturbing because the main characters never quite understand what's at work.
 The Fair Folk / int_ded8fb1b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_ded8fb1b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Gypsies in the Wood
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_ded8fb1b
 The Fair Folk / int_e096101e
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e096101e
comment
The Faustian Queen who appears in Sixes and Sevens, inspired by the same character from Marvel 1602, is also hypothesized by Emily to be the Faerie Queen of British folklore. The Queen's court includes a Mari Lwyd and little men who look like they stepped out of a Hieronymus Bosch painting. She also mentions her relationship to other Christmas figures like Krampus and Perchta, pre-Christian Germanic and Alpine folklore creatures associated with mid-winter.
 The Fair Folk / int_e096101e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e096101e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sixes and Sevens (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e096101e
 The Fair Folk / int_e0a22d44
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e0a22d44
comment
The Broken Sword is a fantasy novel about Dark Age Europe coexisting (unknowingly) with amoral elves, trolls, etc. Poul includes a squicky passage wherein an elf lord creates a changeling using an enslaved she-troll. The changeling gets even, kind of. Several of Poul Anderson's other novels and at least one short story also deal with the Fair Folk.
 The Fair Folk / int_e0a22d44
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e0a22d44
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Broken Sword
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e0a22d44
 The Fair Folk / int_e1b8752f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e1b8752f
comment
4e's default setting, the Nentir Vale, consolidates previous editions' elves into three main groups: the Eladrin (4e's High/Sun/Moon/Star elves), Elves (4e's vanilla/Wood/Wild elves), and Drow (the same ol' dark elves). The Eladrin were given the fey-subtype and elevated to the position of masters of the Feywild (4e's Faerie). The Seelie and Unseelie courts can be found in The Manual of the Planes supplement as the Summer and Winter courts respectively, as well as several other courts.
 The Fair Folk / int_e1b8752f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e1b8752f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Nentir Vale (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e1b8752f
 The Fair Folk / int_e1c2dccd
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e1c2dccd
comment
Baba Yaga displays many qualities of Fair Folk in Russian storytelling, though is often referred to as the "Witch of the Iron Forest".
A lot of the less human friendly Russian nezhit and nechist such as the leshay, the vodyanoy, the kikimora and the like are quite similar to the less fair kinds of the Fair Folk.
 The Fair Folk / int_e1c2dccd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e1c2dccd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Baba Yaga
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e1c2dccd
 The Fair Folk / int_e1c58c00
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e1c58c00
comment
Remnant II: The Fey of Losomn fit all of the check marks, being mystical beings with bizarre morals and a taste for human (well, Dran) flesh, but until recently were kept in check by the One True King, who was a harsh but well intentioned tyrant. Unfortunately, he was poisoned by an usurper and rendered comatose, which not only caused his subjects to run while, but also caused the Fey half of Losomn to merge with the Dran half, allowing the former to start hunting the latter. The usurper is split into two seperate fey that share a consciousness, with one possible branch of the Losomn story seeing you kill one half of the imposter so that the other can finally be freed of the madness of their shared existence and become the new king. The One True King eventually awakens after the main story ends but is rendered completely insane, becoming the Arc Villain and Final Boss of The Awakened King DLC. His son, the Red Prince, can also be found in Losomn and will instigate a boss battle if you don't pay him a toll and might fight you anyway if you underpay him. He still kills you if you do give him adequate tribute, but you get a nice weapon mod if he does, and if you paid his toll and speak to him after killing his father, he gives you a nice set of armor before ascending to become the Red King.
 The Fair Folk / int_e1c58c00
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e1c58c00
featureConfidence
1.0
 Remnant II (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e1c58c00
 The Fair Folk / int_e22c949c
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e22c949c
comment
Dragon Quest:
Dragon Quest III: Believing a human man has kidnapped her daughter and stolen her hidden village's treasure, the Queen of Faeries places an eternal slumber curse upon the village of Norvik, despite them having nothing to do with her daughter's disappearance. She lifts the curse when the heroes find proof that her daughter simply eloped, but she still wants humans out of her realm.
In Dragon Quest V, faeries are tiny, wingless pixies who do not like humans. Children may have a pass, but grownups entering their woods to find the path to their country Faerie Lea will find themselves utterly lost because of their magic.
 The Fair Folk / int_e22c949c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e22c949c
featureConfidence
1.0
 DragonQuest
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e22c949c
 The Fair Folk / int_e2f054b9
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e2f054b9
comment
Year Walk, being based on ancient Swedish folklore and tradition, has five fair folks referred to as "The Watchers" who are all very alien in approach and demeanor.
The first one is the Huldra, who looks like a beautiful woman clad in white with sticks protruding out of her. She either lives in or is the biggest, oldest tree in the forest. She leads men astray with her ethereal voice and, like a succubus, kills them by having sex with them. However, she's the friend of colliers, can bless hunters' hunts and if blood is offered willingly to her she might lend her assistance... provided she doesn't drain you dry.
The second one is the Brook Horse, a Sharp-Dressed Horse who drowns children that play in its waters, but it may also take in Mylings to care about and carry the spirits of the dead into the afterlife. In the game it wants the protagonist to fetch it the souls of four murdered children in exchange for a key.
The third are the Mylings, the ghosts of children murdered by their mothers or caretakers. If one hears the cries of a Myling but chooses to ignore it, the Myling will exact its revenge... all it really wants is to be reunited with its mother, though. That said, it's not unheard of for them to murder their mothers once reunited with them.
The fourth is the Night Raven, a small corvid that swoops in and steals the key the Brook Horse gave you. However, the corvid isn't really the Night Raven. You have to pull the real Night Raven out of the corvid's mouth. Its true form is a ghastly Feathered Fiend. According to folklore, merely seeing the holes in a Night Raven's wings can strike a person with horrible pain, terrible disease and/or immediate death.
The fifth and final fair being is the Church Grim, a guardian spirit of a sacrifical animal (or executed criminal) with a human's body and a ram's head... actually, it might be more accurate to say that it's a ram's head wearing a coat... and under said coat is nothing, except the Heart of the Universe.
 The Fair Folk / int_e2f054b9
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e2f054b9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Year Walk (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e2f054b9
 The Fair Folk / int_e3ec6dd6
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e3ec6dd6
comment
In L. Jagi Lamplighter's Prospero's Daughter trilogy, the elves are Fallen Angels who didn't fall all the way to Hell. Don't eat their food, don't offer them boons, don't accept gifts, etc. — though you can cope if you are careful enough.
 The Fair Folk / int_e3ec6dd6
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e3ec6dd6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Prospero's Daughter
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e3ec6dd6
 The Fair Folk / int_e4e6153f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e4e6153f
comment
The Merry Gentry books by Laurel K. Hamilton is one of the most comprehensive list of faerie mythologies, in between the sex scenes. Both modernizing and explaining in detail a version of the Seelie and Unseelie courts of the sidhe, which are essentially depicted as elemental beings given flesh, or elves (though the idea of their pointed ears is supposedly only true of mixed breeds). Though in Hamilton's world the Sidhe are the ruling race of faerie, there are plenty of brownies, goblins, pixies, and so on. Despite their names, both courts of faerie are shown as having their good sides and bad... namely that while the Seelie sidhe are much more civilized and friendly, they're completely preoccupied with appearances and willingly embracing pretty lies to cover ugly truths, and while the Unseelie sidhe are more comfortable with flagrant sex and torture, they're also more accepting of people or creatures regardless of looks or species, having an official open-door policy for all of Faerie kind. Overall the world of Faerie is expressed as one that's neither good nor bad, but simply primal, from the slaugh ("The nightmares of Faerie kind") to the sidhe.
 The Fair Folk / int_e4e6153f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e4e6153f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Merry Gentry
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e4e6153f
 The Fair Folk / int_e59216c7
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e59216c7
comment
In The Gamer's Alliance, the Faerfolc are mysterious and powerful beings who can turn out to be friendly (provide a blessing) or hostile (kill or torture anyone who trespasses on their lands) depending on the circumstances... and what mood they happen to be in when you meet them. When they were released from captivity, they offered cryptic advice to the heroes but later on rampaged in Libaterra, killing hundreds of people in their lust for revenge before retreating back to the forests to live their life in peace. Currently the fey have two factions: the neutral, tradition-bound ones led by Morrigan who wish to live away from the corruption of mortal civilizations, and the fanatic destroyers led by Curdardh who wish to purge the world from "impure" races.
 The Fair Folk / int_e59216c7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e59216c7
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Gamer's Alliance (Roleplay)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e59216c7
 The Fair Folk / int_e5c5bc22
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e5c5bc22
comment
GURPS has various setting featuring this sort of fairy:
GURPS Technomancer, a modern-day fantasy setting, has fairies taking the place of The Greys — Seelie and Unseelie encounters involving abductions, lights in the sky, traumatic repressed memories, and rumors of two Seelie being captured near Roswell...
GURPS Faerie mostly models its depictions of fairies on actual folklore, darkness and all.
In GURPS Thaumatology: Alchemical Baroque, fairies can easily fall into this pattern, if the whim takes them. The typical Fairy Queen detailed in the book certainly does, being Callous, Jealous, and Selfish.
 The Fair Folk / int_e5c5bc22
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e5c5bc22
featureConfidence
1.0
 GURPS (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e5c5bc22
 The Fair Folk / int_e5db9bb8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e5db9bb8
comment
RIFT includes faerie as a major faction of bad guy (excepting the rare ones befriended by druids), aligned with Greenscale, the Dragon of Life. Many of them look like typical post-Elizabethan sprites, until you notice one glaring problem with their looks...
The playable elf races in Rift have their Fair Folk traits. The high elves spawned House Aelfwar (a bunch of Greenscale cultists), and the Kelari have a cultural divinity complex.
 The Fair Folk / int_e5db9bb8
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e5db9bb8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Rift (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e5db9bb8
 The Fair Folk / int_e5fb535b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e5fb535b
comment
The Life and Times of a Winning Pony: The fey are a group of pony-shaped magical creatures known for their love of contracts (and... interesting and creative ways of interpreting them), their unique takes on morality, their inability to lie and their aversion to Cold Iron.
The rusalka in The Incredibly Thrilling Investigation of Storm Kicker. It looks like an earth pony, but just slightly... wrong, and it's described as a trickster spirit that uses what appears to be a form of vocal glamour/mind control to turn ponies into thralls and force them to dance with it, and it's perfectly happy to kill them if they, say, miss a dance step, or if it gets bored. It apparently considers this a justifiable way to alleviate its loneliness.
Muses are fey that feed off of the psychic energy associated with artistic creation. As such, they often associate with artists, inspiring them to create more and greater works in exchange for, essentially, sustenance, although they lack the ability to create truly original works in their own right.
There is speculation, in-universe, that unicorns share a closer relationship with they fey than other pony tribes do, due to the fact that cold iron, which hurts and repels fey creatures, also disrupts and impedes unicorn magic. Theories presented in-universe include unicorns being descended from pony/fey hybrids, or from ponies who managed to steal the fey's magic.
 The Fair Folk / int_e5fb535b
featureApplicability
-1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e5fb535b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Life and Times of a Winning Pony (Fanfic)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e5fb535b
 The Fair Folk / int_e6405649
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e6405649
comment
In The Dinosaur Lords, the fae are felt rather than seen. They're often mentioned as the evil spirits of the land, some people believe in them while others don't, and then there's the strange Fantastic Anthropologist Karyl meets after he dies for the first time...
 The Fair Folk / int_e6405649
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e6405649
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Dinosaur Lords
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e6405649
 The Fair Folk / int_e66220af
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e66220af
comment
Guillermo del Toro's Pan's Labyrinth features a fairy world alongside the real world. The main character is brought into the world by a fawn and occasionally guided by benevolent sprytes. There are malicious denizens of the world, however, such as the Pale Man. It's left ambiguous whether the world is real or just the girl's imagination.
 The Fair Folk / int_e66220af
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e66220af
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pan's Labyrinth
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e66220af
 The Fair Folk / int_e66a25a9
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e66a25a9
comment
Rifts and other Palladium Books games have a wide range of fairies and nature spirits, some of whom are Scrupulous or Principled and positively nice (such as brownies) while others are nasty, brutish and puckish. Even nice fairies, though, are apt to feed you enchanted food with unpleasant(and punny) results. The continuity also has the Splugorth, low level cosmic entities who employ magic-resistant species to rob the fae and put them into mystical weaponry.
 The Fair Folk / int_e66a25a9
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e66a25a9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Rifts (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e66a25a9
 The Fair Folk / int_e6758d93
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e6758d93
comment
The Fae are... generally decent in Scion (at least the Irish ones), but they have their rules, and if you break them, it's your ass. The Erl-king (mentioned above) shows up as well, and is a fairly powerful, nasty sort.
 The Fair Folk / int_e6758d93
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e6758d93
featureConfidence
1.0
 Scion (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e6758d93
 The Fair Folk / int_e68decb8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e68decb8
comment
Star Control II: The Ur-Quan Masters portrays the Arilou Lalee'lay as patronizing Little Green Men who were behind the myths of The Fair Folk and fit the trope as enigmatic allies with "plans" for humanity.
 The Fair Folk / int_e68decb8
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e68decb8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Star Control (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e68decb8
 The Fair Folk / int_e7a27429
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e7a27429
comment
The Bridge establishes that fae folk did once exist in droves on Terra in the Pleistocene, often existing by themselves or with ancient humanity in advanced civilizations that inspired the likes of Shambhala and Atlantis. They originated because massive amounts of mana made some populations of humans evolve into naturally magical species, explaining why so many fae folk and yokai look humanoid. When mana levels plummeted after the Toba catastrophe 70,000 years ago, and the sacrifice of what remained to create the guardian beasts like Gamera, most of the fae folk turned back into humans over the generations, but on rare occassions a new fae might be born to keep legends alive and some survivors like the three Shobijin sisters persisted.
 The Fair Folk / int_e7a27429
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e7a27429
featureConfidence
1.0
 TheBridge
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e7a27429
 The Fair Folk / int_e8797ee6
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e8797ee6
comment
Courtney Crumrin and the Night Things: the eponymous girl lives in a strange neighborhood, where abducted children are sold by goblins to the rulers of the Twilight Kingdom.
 The Fair Folk / int_e8797ee6
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e8797ee6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Courtney Crumrin and the Night Things (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e8797ee6
 The Fair Folk / int_e87e2ef8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e87e2ef8
comment
The Wandering Inn: The annoying little vicious faeries hate Cold Iron and go as far as calling an avalanche to punish whoever dares to show them disrespect.
 The Fair Folk / int_e87e2ef8
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e87e2ef8
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Wandering Inn
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e87e2ef8
 The Fair Folk / int_e8f32da4
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_e8f32da4
comment
The fairies of Hy Brasil in "The Stones Are Hatching". they use their moving island to observe humans, preparing to invade England and steal all the human women for wives, kill Uncle Murdo with arrows, and are eventually killed by being immersed in seawater, which dissolves them.
 The Fair Folk / int_e8f32da4
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_e8f32da4
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Stones Are Hatching
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_e8f32da4
 The Fair Folk / int_ea1e0ad2
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_ea1e0ad2
comment
Bleak World: The Elves (who might just be Venusians or the Court of Roses) kicked the Jotun off of their homeworld and killed a good majority of them in the process. They come down to Earth occasionally to wipe out the last of the Jotun as well as casually torture humans.
 The Fair Folk / int_ea1e0ad2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_ea1e0ad2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Bleak World (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_ea1e0ad2
 The Fair Folk / int_eda6d96a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_eda6d96a
comment
Spirited Away is a Japanese Youkai Fairy Tale that portrays them as acting very similar to The Fair Folk.
 The Fair Folk / int_eda6d96a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_eda6d96a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Spirited Away
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_eda6d96a
 The Fair Folk / int_edf1b7e4
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_edf1b7e4
comment
The Land of the Silver Apples by Nancy Farmer. The elves kidnap toddlers, put them on leashes, and when they get tired of them, leave them for the wolves to eat.
 The Fair Folk / int_edf1b7e4
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_edf1b7e4
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Sea of Trolls
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_edf1b7e4
 The Fair Folk / int_eed321b1
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_eed321b1
comment
Ars Magica: The Oath of Hermes, the pledge all mages must take if they wish to join the Order of Hermes (and not get hunted down by said order for practicing unapproved magic), contains a specific phrase: "I shall not molest the Fae." Understand, this is in Ars Magica, which isn't exactly lacking in all sorts of nifty demons, monsters, and crazy magic-users to make life more exciting. No, it's the Fair Folk that get singled out: all those other monsters will kill you, or even torment you, but the Fae like to get creative and play with you first.
Although the Code does specifically prohibit dealings with the Infernal, it's usually because there's just no way to win against Demons and that kind of thing breeds diabolism (and ends up being what got House Tytalus in trouble), but they tell you do not molest the Fae because although they can be dealt with fairly and can even have good relationships with other denizens of Mythic Europe (as House Merinita can attest), they do not forget being slighted, ever, and they will carry grudges, and they have very creative ways of expressing them. The (usually high-point-value) Flaw "Faerie Enmity" can be taken without actually providing a specific reason: your great-great-grandfather you never even met might've offended some faerie at some point and that's the only reason they need.
It's specifically noted that the Fae are incapable of true evil, being soulless and untouched by original sin; they find the thought of genuine malice alien and horrible. Rather, their caprices are the result of Blue-and-Orange Morality, since their culture is a badly warped imitation of humanity at best and completely alien at worst. One gamebook has a villager mention killing a hideous changeling that had been left in place of one of the women's babies, at which time an old crone lurking in the shadows mutters in disgust that they would have traded the brat back if they'd known the mother was unhappy with the bargain.
 The Fair Folk / int_eed321b1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_eed321b1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ars Magica (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_eed321b1
 The Fair Folk / int_eedac02b
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_eedac02b
comment
Durarara!! subverts this trope with Celty Sturluson, an Irish Dullahan desperately searching for her missing head. At first, she may look intimidating and a little bit sinister, but soon we discover that she is genuinely a very kind, gentle, and caring person. For an Unseelie Fae, she is actually one of the most friendly and affable characters in the series. She is also afraid of space aliens. As Shinra points out, part of this may have to do with the fact that Celty's an amnesiac Dullahan. She might not have been so nice if circumstances were different (quarter-Dullahan Ruri Hijiribe, for example, is a serial killer with a monster fetish).
 The Fair Folk / int_eedac02b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_eedac02b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Durarara!!
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_eedac02b
 The Fair Folk / int_eee7448f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_eee7448f
comment
Dora Wilk Series calls them Elves, but they fit this trope more. Any promise made to them, even without the intention to make it, has to be fulfilled, they play with words, offer bargains which always have a hook, and compel people to come to them with Magic Music. They're actually the only creatures with whom Dora is careful of what she's saying.
 The Fair Folk / int_eee7448f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_eee7448f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dora Wilk Series
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_eee7448f
 The Fair Folk / int_ef1c3b43
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_ef1c3b43
comment
The Horslips were an Irish rock-folk band who also used traditional themes concerning the Sidhe. The penultimate track on their Book of Invasions album, called Sideways to the Sun, deals with the older people sadly withdrawing themselves from Ireland as they cannot compete with the changing ways of Men and the advent of hostile Christianity.
 The Fair Folk / int_ef1c3b43
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_ef1c3b43
featureConfidence
1.0
 Horslips (Music)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_ef1c3b43
 The Fair Folk / int_ef9789a1
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_ef9789a1
comment
The Elves in Krampus are incredibly scary and very similar to the traditional despiction of fairies. Naturally as the film itself is an inversion of the Christmas lore.
 The Fair Folk / int_ef9789a1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_ef9789a1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Krampus
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_ef9789a1
 The Fair Folk / int_f1ecfde8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f1ecfde8
comment
Played straight and subverted in the Gretel and Hansel series. While most of the creatures and spirits in the games try to kill Gretel and Hansel, the actual fairies they meet in the second game become their allies.
 The Fair Folk / int_f1ecfde8
featureApplicability
-0.3
 The Fair Folk / int_f1ecfde8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gretel and Hansel (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f1ecfde8
 The Fair Folk / int_f230075f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f230075f
comment
Dragon Dice: The Scalders are the remnants of the fae people, stranded after the bulk of their species shut themselves off from the world to avoid the horrors of the Forever War that the setting is engaged in. Instead of giving up, the Scalders found that there was a whole lot of fun to be had in a warring world — there were plenty of things (and people) to burn or drown, as the race is comprised of elemental fire and water.
 The Fair Folk / int_f230075f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_f230075f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dragon Dice (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f230075f
 The Fair Folk / int_f31ebb02
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f31ebb02
comment
Hellboy II: The Golden Army, also directed by del Toro, establishes that the magical world is at odds with humanity. The magical world is ruled by the royal line of Elves. There are also tooth fairies, which are ravenous six-limbed insectoids who move in swarms can devour a person whole (and since they crave calcium, they always start with the teeth), as well as trolls and goblins.
 The Fair Folk / int_f31ebb02
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_f31ebb02
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hellboy II: The Golden Army
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f31ebb02
 The Fair Folk / int_f3c07f91
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f3c07f91
comment
The Mask, possibly as a nod to the considerably more violent and murderous character in the original comic, once met a fairy who'd been an ally to the Mask for the past 4000 years, and considers things like melting the skin off bones to be all in good fun. He soon realises that this Mask is different, and the Mask ends up dragging him off... to school.
 The Fair Folk / int_f3c07f91
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_f3c07f91
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mask
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f3c07f91
 The Fair Folk / int_f3e1a2a5
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f3e1a2a5
comment
Queen Mab, the Lady of the Lake and Frik in Merlin (1998). Mab is the Big Bad of the story, and is depicted as a sociopath who means well, but cannot comprehend the consequences of her actions. The Lady is on Merlin's side, but she is fickle and unpredictable, and on a whim gives Merlin an impression that Mab killed his mother (she only arrived just after she had died of childbirth). Frik simply does whatever he finds most amusing, when he isn't bossed around by Mab — until he gets turned into a mortal, anyway.
 The Fair Folk / int_f3e1a2a5
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_f3e1a2a5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Merlin (1998)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f3e1a2a5
 The Fair Folk / int_f3e1f424
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f3e1f424
comment
The Sidhe in Merlin (2008) transformed two of their own into mortals as a punishment. They require the death of a mortal prince before they'll change one of them back... and that was the one who hadn't technically done anything. She seems to have only been transformed because of her father's crime. The Sidhe reappear in Series 3: They possess a baby princess then wait around till she grows up and they can manipulate things so she'll marry Arthur. The implication is that at some point Princess Elena will be completely consumed by the Sidhe.
 The Fair Folk / int_f3e1f424
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_f3e1f424
featureConfidence
1.0
 Merlin (2008)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f3e1f424
 The Fair Folk / int_f4d9a9ae
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f4d9a9ae
comment
This trope is all over the place in Dark Age of Camelot. There are tons of Fairies and fey related creatures (mostly from Welsh, Irish, and Celtic mythology), most of which are anything but benevolent. Theres only a few fairies who fit the "little winged humanoid" theme, and most of them are aggressive and dangerous as well.
 The Fair Folk / int_f4d9a9ae
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_f4d9a9ae
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dark Age of Camelot (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f4d9a9ae
 The Fair Folk / int_f858847a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f858847a
comment
Some Pokémon of the Fairy-type, introduced in Pokémon X and Y, appear to be this, though most of them are closer to modern depictions. It's worth noting that despite their appearances, Fairy-types are super effective against Dragon-type Pokémon, which previously only had the weakness of ice or other dragons. They're also weak against the Steel-type, taking extra damage from it.
Gardevoir (retconned from pure Psychic to Psychic/Fairy along with its pre-evolutions) easily fits the description of "inhumanly beautiful", and is in fact unrelated to humanoid Pokémon (until Generation VIII) — its closest biological relatives include sundry Ghost-type Pokémon and walking sludge. It's nowhere near as malevolent as this trope usually is though, and in fact wants to protect its trainer at all costs.
Mawile (based loosely on the Futakuchi-onna Youkai) was also retconned as Steel/Fairy from pure Steel. It's not necessarily evil, but it has a huge jaw-like horn in the back of its head (two when it Mega Evolves) and uses it to chomp its opponents after luring them with its cute appearance and gestures.
Mr. Mime, Whimsicott, and Klefki fit the mischievous type of fairy to a T. Mr. Mime is highly adept at tricking people and stealing from them, Whimsicott slips through people's houses and makes a mess of them for fun, and Klefki has a habit of stealing people's keys. Fittingly, Whimsicott and Klefki both have the Prankster ability.
Ribombee, a humanoid bee about eight inches tall, is the closest Fairy-type to the modern view of fairies as diminutive, benevolent winged humanoids.
Xerneas, being a legendary, also fits the classic fairy definition to a T; while not malevolent (it actually serves as something akin to a god of renewal), it is majestic, otherworldly, difficult for humans to comprehend, and extremely powerful.
Shiinotic, a Grass/Fairy Mushroom Man is one of the more malevolent Fairy types. It has a rather unnerving look, and it uses its bioluminescence to make people get lost in the woods, or to make people drowsy so that it can feed on them by draining their strength.
Mimikyu, the first ever Ghost/Fairy-type, is a double subversion. It's a creature that hides its unspeakably horrifying appearance underneath a Pikachu disguise due to a desperate desire to be loved. However, several scenes, both in the games and the anime adaptation, seem to allude to Mimikyu having a bit of a dark side, including an NPC one implicitly threatening to curse you (and it's no empty threat either), Totem Mimikyu having a creepy Stalker Shrine dedicated to Pikachu and one which vanishes from existence the minute you defeat it, and its new Z-Move, known as "Let's Snuggle Forever".
The island guardians of Alola, despite being very powerful protectors revered by the populace, aren't entirely benevolent or kind. While Tapu Bulu is the nicest of the four (if you don't tick it off) and Tapu Fini is indifferent to human affairs, Tapu Koko is fickle and doesn't always come to save someone from danger, and Tapu Lele can use its scales to energise people into fighting one another to the death for its own amusement. Even in-universe, it's hinted that a legend regarding Tapu Lele ending a war by healing warriors with its scales is a sweetened version of a disturbing truth.
While many Fairy type Pokemon are very cutesy, look at their moves. A given Fairy types approach to battle involves seduction, manipulation, vampirism, mysterious fogs, lunamancy, and plain old beating the crap out of the opponent. Much more like the Fair Folk than modern fairies.
Pokémon Sword and Shield introduces two lines of dangerous and malevolent fairies. On one hand, we have the Dark/Fairy Impidimp line. The first stage, Impidimp, is a little imp/goblin that feeds on negative emotions. Its second stage, Morgrem, fights dirty and likes to lure people to get lost in the forest. The final stage, Grimmsnarl, is a brutal, hairy troll.note  Wrong Troll. On the other hand, there is also the Hattena line. It starts out just Psychic, but gains the Fairy type in the final evolution. Hatenna is harmless and will run away from people with strong emotions. Hattrem, the second stage, will beat them up mercilessly instead and Hatterene will tear people apart if they are too loud around it, and anyone who enters the forests where they live is in danger.
Also from Pokémon Sword and Shield, Zacian is a Fairy-type Noble Wolf Legendary who subverts this trope. It's one of the two graceful guardians of Galar and is the more offensive-oriented of the two, but that doesn't make it a Jerkass.
We now have this trope when speaking about human Trainers. Bede, one of the rival characters you encounter in Sword and Shield, is a Jerkass who, while he starts off as a Psychic-type trainer, eventually specializes in Fairy-types, and is an arrogant dude who constantly brags about himself to the point he looks down on everyone who battles him. Opal, the Fairy-type Gym Leader, also has shades of this as her battle invokes the "mischievous" aspects of fairies, where she gives you a series of questions that try to trick you into picking the obvious answer instead of the "right" ones. It's no coincidence she ends up picking Bede as her successor.
Volo in Pokémon Legends: Arceus has a Togekiss as his ace, which illustrates his Omnicidal Maniac nature and shaping up as the true antagonist of the game.
Ortega in Pokémon Scarlet and Violet, one of the leaders of Team Star, specializes in Fairy-types and is quite the spoiled Bratty Half-Pint.
There are also a few Pokémon that fit the bill as well. The Fairy/Steel-type Tinkatink line all utilize metal hammers that they make themselves, with Tinkaton using metal it harvests from Pawniard and Bisharp. There's also three of the Paradox Pokémon you'll find in Area Zero, the Fairy/Psychic-type Scream Tailnote  Primal Jigglypuff and the Ghost/Fairy-type Flutter Manenote  Primal Misdreavus in Scarlet alongside the Fairy/Fighting-type Iron Valiantnote  Robotic Gardevoir/Gallade hybrid in Violet. A Scream Tail even attacks Penny directly.
 The Fair Folk / int_f858847a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_f858847a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pokémon X and Y (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f858847a
 The Fair Folk / int_f891a20d
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f891a20d
comment
In Terraria, while there are benevolent fae who can help you by leading you to the valuable treasure or, if summoned by the Fairy Bell, illuminating the dark places, pixies residing in the Hallow are aggressive and malevolent, trying to kill you on sight, just like the rest of the Hallow. Special mention goes to the Empress of Light, who was described as a vengeful fae goddess desiring to purge the land of any and all impurity.
 The Fair Folk / int_f891a20d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_f891a20d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Terraria (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f891a20d
 The Fair Folk / int_f8de828f
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f8de828f
comment
A Poison Dark and Drowning: On the way back to London from Ralph Strangewayes' house, Henrietta and her friends decide to take a shortcut through fairy territory. A fairy that Henrietta refers to as "Goodfellow" leads her through, and tells the group not to accept any offerings from the faeries they come across, or say "thank you" to them, since they take it as a sign you HAVE accepted. When Queen Mab identifies them as humans, she isn't pleased, especially since she had to send so many of her kind to aid humanity in their war against the Ancients. She demands they give up something deeply personal to be allowed passage. Magnus makes the sacrifice of a memory for them to go through.
 The Fair Folk / int_f8de828f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_f8de828f
featureConfidence
1.0
 A Poison Dark And Drowning
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f8de828f
 The Fair Folk / int_f997dcf6
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_f997dcf6
comment
Largely subverted in Shadowmarch; the Qar (fairy) races are alien and hostile to humans, but on the whole are no more or less prone to evil than mortals, and the real villains are the mortal Evil Overlord and the trickster god who's manipulating him. Lady Yasammez, the most overtly menacing and hostile of the Qar, actually ends up making a Heroic Sacrifice.
 The Fair Folk / int_f997dcf6
featureApplicability
-0.3
 The Fair Folk / int_f997dcf6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Shadowmarch
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_f997dcf6
 The Fair Folk / int_fa5e90fd
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_fa5e90fd
comment
The Red Caps of City of Heroes recalls one of the truly nasty varieties of the original Faeries. Their entire reason for being is to torture and torment others in creative ways — their caps were red because they had been dipped in human blood. True to form, they're also extremely dangerous for their level (despite being really, really short).
The zone of Croatoa, where the Red Caps run fierce, also has the Fir Bolg, weird pumpkin-headed scarecrows, and the Tuatha de Danaan, who aren't so much the Celtic gods as, well, "wookie moose." And then there are the black sprites that hover around Eochai (the Giant Monster of the Fir Bolg) during the Halloween event, which are called The Unseelie.
It is revealed that the Fir Bolg and Tuatha de Danaan are ancient enemies of the Red Caps, who transformed them into those odd forms to torment them even more.
This trope is referenced by Justin Augustine at the beginning of his Task Force: "Far out in the center of this region is a place called the Chantry. It's supposed to hold all kinds of vast and ancient secrets, including a powerful being the natives only refer to as 'The Kind One'. Now, a title like that can mean a lot of things in folklore, like trying to placate something monstrous." (Though Faathim the Kind does actually live up to his name, and has a Task Force of his own.)
 The Fair Folk / int_fa5e90fd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_fa5e90fd
featureConfidence
1.0
 City of Heroes (Video Game)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_fa5e90fd
 The Fair Folk / int_faea160a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_faea160a
comment
The Changeling deals with a modern version of such beings.
 The Fair Folk / int_faea160a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_faea160a
featureConfidence
1.0
 TheChangeling
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_faea160a
 The Fair Folk / int_fcf43f47
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_fcf43f47
comment
Fighting Fantasy: Zigzagged. Some Fae creatures are friendly, if shy and reclusive (sprites, woodlings, and pixies), while others are malicious pranksters who enjoy stealing from humans (leprechauns), and still others are actively evil and try to kill any humans they meet (spriggans).
 The Fair Folk / int_fcf43f47
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_fcf43f47
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fighting Fantasy
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_fcf43f47
 The Fair Folk / int_fd0b756
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_fd0b756
comment
The Hobbit hints that the woodland elves are somewhat dangerous but they are mostly whimsical and unreliable.
 The Fair Folk / int_fd0b756
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_fd0b756
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Hobbit
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_fd0b756
 The Fair Folk / int_fdbace96
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_fdbace96
comment
Gravity Falls: Dipper and Mabel discover the legendary creatures that exist in Gravity Falls. The Big Bad merges his dimension with the earth and inviting his otherworldly friends, causing The End of the World as We Know It.
 The Fair Folk / int_fdbace96
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_fdbace96
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gravity Falls
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_fdbace96
 The Fair Folk / int_fe83990a
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fair Folk / int_fe83990a
comment
In Saint Seiya, Fairies are malevolent butterfly-like creatures who dwell in the Underworld and work alongside Hades and his army.
 The Fair Folk / int_fe83990a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Fair Folk / int_fe83990a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Saint Seiya (Manga)
hasFeature
The Fair Folk / int_fe83990a

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Archetypal Character
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Characters as Device
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Cosmic Entity
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Fairy Tale Tropes
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Index of Fictional Creatures
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Index of Gothic Horror Tropes
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Older Than Print
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Romanticism Versus Enlightenment
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Seers
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Speculative Fiction Tropes
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Urban Fantasy Tropes
 The Fair Folk
processingCategory2
Villains
 Mermaid (Animation) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Heros Legacy
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Aura Battler Dunbine / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Floral Magician Mary Bell / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Grimm's Fairy Tale Classics / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Spirited Away / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Cat Returns / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Amulet (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Beautiful Darkness (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 DIE (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Figment (Disney Kingdoms) (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Gold Digger (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Hellboy (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Holy Avenger (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Lady Mechanika (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Les Légendaires (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 My Boyfriend Is a Monster (Comic Book)
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 My Boyfriend Is a Monster (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Once & Future (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Seven Soldiers of Victory (2005) (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shade, the Changing Man (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sláine (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Smax (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Tarot: Witch of the Black Rose (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Books of Magic (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Mighty Thor (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Sandman (1989) (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Sandman Universe (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Vögelein (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Wonder Woman (Infinite Frontier) (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Trese (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sleeping Beauty / Disney / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 DeepAsTheSea
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Gather
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Gather / Fan Fic
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Harmony's Warriors (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Into the Hedge (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Kith And Kin Series (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Palaververse / Fan Fic / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Sailor Rainbow Series / Fan Fic / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Soul Cage / Fan Fic / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Ballad of the Dragon and She-Wolf (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Kernel Of Truth (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 As Fate Would Have It (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Avenger Goddess (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Big Human on Campus (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Bloody Rose Series (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Bravely Tangled Up with Dragons (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Digital Storage Solutions (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Fluttershy Is Free (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Guardians, Wizards, and Kung-Fu Fighters (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Harry Potter and the Guardian's Light (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Kaleidoscope (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Luz Clawthorne (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Luz Clawthorne: Two Worlds, One Family (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Mendacity (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Nine Days Down (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Nobledark Imperium (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Once Upon A Dream (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 One Card Short of a Full Deck (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Partially Kissed Hero (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Plus Five to Charisma (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Servant Shenanigans (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Son of the Western Sea (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Spellbound (Lilafly) (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Boy Without a Fairy (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Bridge (MLP) (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Crystal Court (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Dragon and the Bow (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Elements of Harmony and the Savior of Worlds (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fansus (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Idea Of Consequences (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Life and Times of a Winning Pony (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Rise of Darth Vulcan (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Wizard And The Lonely Princess (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Wolves in the Woods (Miraculous Ladybug) (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Touhou Ibunshu (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Xenophilia (Fanfic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Absentia / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Beauty and the Beast (2017) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Bird Box / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Bright / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Darby O'Gill and the Little People / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Don't Be Afraid of the Dark / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Gremlins / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Krampus / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Labyrinth / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Legend (1985) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Little Monsters / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Maleficent / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Mary Poppins / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pan's Labyrinth / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 7 Zwerge / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Snow White & the Huntsman / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Dig (2018) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Green Knight / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Hallow / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 TheSecretOfKells
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 The Village / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Village (2004) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Thor: The Dark World / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Troll (1986) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Were the World Mine / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Willow / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Gremlins (Franchise) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Leprechaun (Franchise) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Masters of the Universe (Franchise) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shadowchasers (Franchise)
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Stargate-verse (Franchise) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Slender Man Mythos (Franchise) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Tolkien's Legendarium (Franchise) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Touhou Project (Franchise) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shin Megami Tensei (Franchise) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Bakemonogatari / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Durarara!! / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Lord El-Melloi II Case Files / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Nidome no Yuusha / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 When Supernatural Battles Became Commonplace / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Curse Dark as Gold / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Fairy Story (1934) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Net of Dawn and Bones / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Practical Guide to Evil / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Strange and Ancient Name / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Tale of... / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Age of Steam / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Alice's Adventures in Wonderland / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Alterien / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Among Others / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Anita Blake / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Baba Yaga / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Bakemonogatari / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Bardic Voices / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Beansidhe's Wail / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Beauty and the Beast / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Beren and Lúthien / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Blood Sword / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Book of the Stars / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Border, KS / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Celia and the Fairies / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Child Ballads / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Childe Rowland / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Chrestomanci / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Chronicles of Prydain
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Coraline / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dark Swan / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Deverry / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Discworld / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dracula / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dragon Rider / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dragons / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Durarara!! / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 DystopicReturnOfMagic
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Eldraeverse / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Elemental Masters / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Elfstruck / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Evolution / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Fablehaven / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Factory of the Gods / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Fairy Tales Of Mourania / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Fantasy Encyclopedia / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Father Brown / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Fire and Hemlock / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Flight to the Lonesome Place / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Forgotten Gods / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Fred, The Vampire Accountant / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Ghost Story / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Graciosa And Percinet / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Greystone Valley / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Grimm Tales / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Gwenhwyfar / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Haugtussa / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Heart of Ice (Andrew Lang) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 How to Survive Camping / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Howl of the Werewolf / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Humanity Has Declined / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Illuminated / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Impossible / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 InCryptid / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Instead of Three Wishes / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Iron Druid Chronicles / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Isaac Asimov Presents: Great Science Fiction Stories of 1939 / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Isekai Omotenashi Gohan / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Jane Eyre / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Karlsson on the Roof / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Kate Crackernuts / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Kitty Norville / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Knights of Doom / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Kushiel's Legacy / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Legend of the Shadow Warriors / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Les Voyageurs Sans Souci / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Literature Promise Of A Future
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Little, Big: or, The Fairies' Parliament / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Lord Demon / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Lord El-Melloi II Case Files / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Lords and Ladies / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Lyonesse / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Magic Kingdom of Landover / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Mercy Thompson / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Merry Gentry / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Modern Faerie Tales / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 My Lady Just Wants to Relax / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Nightmare Beings / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Nightside / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 NoFairytale
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 October Daye / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 On Fairy-Stories / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Once / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 100 Cupboards / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pact / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Palimpsest / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Paraiso Street / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Paranoid Mage / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Peter Pan / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Puddocky / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Rapunzel / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Rental Magica / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Reygoch / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Rivers of London / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Ronja the Robber's Daughter / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Rose Madder / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Saga of the Exiles / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shadowmarch / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shannara / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sleeping Beauty / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Smith of Wootton Major / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Something Wicked This Way Comes / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Soon I Will Be Invincible / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sorcery! / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Space Beasts / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Spinning Silver / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Stardust / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Summers at Castle Auburn / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sword of Shadows / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Tale Of The Weary / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Tales of MU / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Tales of the Five Hundred Kingdoms / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Tales of the Frog Princess / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Tam Lin / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Angel of the Crows / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Baker's Daughter / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Blue Girl / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Box of Delights / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Broken Sword / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Brown Man / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Child Thief / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Chronicles of Ancient Darkness / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Court Of Tales / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Cycle of Fire / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Dark Artifices / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Day of the Locust / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Dinosaur Lords / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Doubtful Guest / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Dragon Knight / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Elf Maiden / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Elric Saga / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Erl-King / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Fabled Lands / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Faerie Queene
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 The Falconer
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 The Folk of the Air / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Garden of Sinners / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Generalist / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Ghoul (1873) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Goblin Emperor / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Gods Are Bastards / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Gold Mountain / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Great Gatsby / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Harpers / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Hero Laughs While Walking the Path of Vengeance a Second Time / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The History of Middle-earth / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Hobbit / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Iron King / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Keep of the Lich-Lord / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The King of Elfland's Daughter / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Lambton Worm / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Last Dragon Chronicles / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Last Light of the Sun / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Life & Adventures of Santa Claus / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Long Earth / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Lords of Satyr / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Mists of Avalon / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Moorchild / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Mortal Instruments / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 TheMythicalMid-SiberianWar
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 The Mythical Mid-Siberian War / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Nix in the Mill-Pond / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Once and Future King / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Pendragon Cycle / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Perilous Gard / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Pied Piper of Hamelin / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Saga of Hrolf Kraki / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Saga of the Noble Dead / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Science of Discworld / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Section 13 Case Files / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Sisters Grimm / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Snow Queen / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Sookie Stackhouse Mysteries / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Spiderwick Chronicles / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Squire's Tales / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Thirteenth Child / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Three Little Men in the Wood / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Toymaker's Workshop / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 TheToymakersWorskhop
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 The Traitor Son Cycle / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Twisted Ones / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Velveteen Rabbit / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Wandering Inn / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The War of the Flowers / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Wee Free Men / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Weirdstone of Brisingamen / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The White People / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Wide-Awake Princess / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Wise Man's Fear / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Yellow Dwarf / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Touch (2017) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Under the Pendulum Sun / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Vainqueur the Dragon / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 We Walk the Night / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 When Supernatural Battles Became Commonplace / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Where the Sidewalk Ends / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Wiz Biz / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Wizarding School Mysteries / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 BenWhishaw
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 BrianFroud
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Duncan
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 FairyTaleMotifs
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 FantasyEncyclopedia
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Hazgarn
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 HollyBlack
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Impossible
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 LadyDeath
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Least Rhymable Word / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 MagicalGirlRune
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Paranormalcy
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Poisoned Weapons / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 RealSlimShadowen
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Someone Has to Do It / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 TheBlackSandBar
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 TheBookOfStoriesOCT
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 TheDarkonWargamingClub
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 TheFairfolk
sameAs
The Fair Folk
 The Plague / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 TheSpiderwickChronicles
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 TweetsieRailroad
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Wild Hunt
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Yandere / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 AR∀GO: City of London Police's Special Crimes Investigator (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Ah! My Goddess (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Elfen Lied (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Fairy Navigator Runa (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Flying Witch (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Inuyasha (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Kekkaishi (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Mushishi (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Puella Magi Kazumi Magica (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shadows House (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Ancient Magus' Bride (Manga) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Alexander James Adams (Music) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Heather Dale (Music) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Saw Doctors (Music) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Ain't Slayed Nobody (Podcast) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Critical Hit (Podcast) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Mabel (Podcast) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pretend Friends (Podcast) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pseudopod (Podcast) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Kingmaker Histories (Podcast) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Within the Wires (Podcast) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Worlds Beyond Number (Podcast) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 CDT Frontier (Roleplay) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 MetroCityRP
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 The Black Sand Bar (Roleplay) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Gamer's Alliance (Roleplay) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Xander Quest: Reborn on the Hellmouth (Roleplay) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Are You Afraid of the Dark? / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Defiance / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 From / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 HEX / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Katla / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 LazyTown / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Level Up / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Lost Girl / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Merlin-1998
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Merlin (1998)
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Merlin (1998) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Psi Factor / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sabrina the Teenage Witch / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shadowhunters / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 So Weird / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Star Trek: Voyager / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Tensou Sentai Goseiger / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Colbert Report / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Haunting Hour / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Tale of the Ring / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 True Blood
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 True Blood / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Twin Peaks / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 GURPS (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Ars Magica (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Battlefleet Gothic (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Blue Rose (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Castle Falkenstein (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Changeling: The Lost (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Chuubo's Marvelous Wish-Granting Engine (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Disney Villains Victorious (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dragon Dice (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dungeons & Dragons 4th Edition (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Flying Circus (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Forgotten Realms (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 GURPS High-Tech (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Godbound (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Grim Hollow (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Halt Evil Doer! (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 In Nomine (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Lace & Steel (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Little Fears (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Malifaux (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Monsterhearts (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Mystara (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Nentir Vale (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Old World of Darkness (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pathfinder (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pendragon (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Prose Descriptive Qualities (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Ravenloft (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Rifts (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 SenZar (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 7th Sea (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shadow of the Demon Lord (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Smash Up (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Talisman (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Laundry (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Wild Beyond the Witchlight (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Trail of Cthulhu (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Warhammer (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Midsummer Night's Dream (Theatre) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Harvey (Theatre) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 ISP Presents A Midsummer Night's Dream (Theatre) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Iolanthe (Theatre) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Jerusalem (Theatre) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Peer Gynt (Theatre) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Peony Pavilion (Theatre) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 A Tale of Two Kingdoms (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Asheron's Call (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Baldur's Gate III (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Bayonetta 3 (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Bayonetta Origins: Cereza and the Lost Demon (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Bramble: The Mountain King (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Coffee Talk (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Creatures (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dark Souls III (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Darkstone (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Disgaea 5: Alliance of Vengeance (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dominions (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dragon Quest III (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dragon Quest V (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Drakengard (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dungeon Crawl (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Eat Me (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Elsword (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Evolve Idle (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Fable (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Feral (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Final Fantasy Tactics A2 (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Folklore (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Gemfire (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Get Amped (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 God of War Ragnarök (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Guild Wars 2 (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Gungnir (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Home Safety Hotline (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Hyrule Conquest (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Incursion (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 King Arthur: Knight's Tale (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 King's Quest VII: The Princeless Bride (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Kuon (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Legends of Runeterra (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Little Alchemy 2 (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Lobotomy Corporation (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Majesty (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Might and Magic (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Nelson Tethers: Puzzle Agent (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Neverend (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Open Sorcery (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Other Friendship Is Magic Fan Games (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pathfinder (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pathfinder: Kingmaker (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pathfinder (Video Game) (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pokémon Sword and Shield (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Pokémon X and Y (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Professor Layton and the Last Specter (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Quest for Glory (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Quest for Glory I (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Romancing SaGa 3 (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 SaGa Scarlet Grace (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 SaGa Frontier (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shadows Over Loathing (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shaiya (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shin Megami Tensei III: Nocturne (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shin Megami Tensei: Strange Journey (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Songs of Conquest (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Star Control (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Super Princess Peach (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Elder Scrolls Online (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Path (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Wayhaven Chronicles (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Twisted Wonderland (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Unavowed (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Valenth (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Wildermyth (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Wind Child Black (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dark Parables / Videogame / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Hand of Fate (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Rogue Legacy (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Sims 3 / Videogame / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dear Devere (Visual Novel) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Reigning Passions (Visual Novel) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Seers Isle (Visual Novel) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Tears to Tiara (Visual Novel) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Umineko: When They Cry (Visual Novel) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Brackenwood (Web Animation) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Diamond in the Rough (Touhou) (Web Animation) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Overly Sarcastic Productions (Web Animation) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 An Ordeal In Osondu (Web Video) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Cafae Latte (Web Video) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Mind My Gap (Web Video) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 All Roses Have Thorns (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Almighty Protectors (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Arthur, King of Time and Space (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Buildingverse (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 City of Somnus (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Finder's Keepers (2008) (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Fox Fires (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Gemini Journey (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Hooves of Death (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Into the Midnight City (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Kagerou (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Las Lindas (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Missing Monday (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Negative One (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Oglaf (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Otherworldly (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Realta (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 RedRightHand
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Roommates (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Shinshaku Hokuo Shinwa (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Skadi (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Slightly Damned (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sluggy Freelance (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Suitor Armor (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Weave (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Zebra Girl (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 SporeWiki Fantasy Universe (Website) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Barbie: Mariposa / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Beowulf (2007) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Brave / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Coraline / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Epic (2013) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Gargoyles / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Hilda / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Jumanji: The Animated Series / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Moville Mysteries / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 MyLittlePonyandFriends
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 Onward / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Peter Pan & the Pirates / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Princess Gwenevere and the Jewel Riders / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Russian Rhapsody / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sabrina: Secrets of a Teenage Witch / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sleeping Beauty / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Song of the Sea / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Sprite Fright / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Strange Magic / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Flight of Dragons / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Last Unicorn / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Leprechauns' Christmas Gold / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Mask / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Princess and the Frog / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Secret of Kells
seeAlso
The Fair Folk
 The Secret of Kells / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Wizards / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Courtney Crumrin and the Night Things (Comic Book) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Burning Black / Fan Fic / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Rumpelstiltskin / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 The Chronicles of Prydain / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Torchwood / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Wizards of Waverly Place / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Changeling: The Dreaming (Tabletop Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Lusternia (Video Game) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk
 Charby the Vampirate (Webcomic) / int_859ec5d8
type
The Fair Folk