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What is trope Namer syndrome?
Are trope namers a badge of Honor?
What is a Trope Namer?
Is Mary Sue a literary trope?
Trope Namer Syndrome has a wide range of symptoms. All of them are minor faux-pas by themselves, but if several appear in the same draft, it becomes a real problem: A general insistence that some work of fiction " deserves to be " a Trope Namer .
- Up for Grabs
In general, Trope Launch Pad (TLP) items that are still...
- Clear, Concise, Witty
The official TV Tropes trope-naming mantra, signature line...
- Three Examples
As such, a trope must be left on the Trope Launch Pad for...
- Needs a Better Name
Never attempt to rename an existing trope without bringing...
- Thread Mode
When a wiki page meant to be informative becomes dominated...
- Trope Namers
Using trope namers lightly or as a badge of honor is Trope...
- Up for Grabs
Using trope namers lightly or as a badge of honor is Trope Namer Syndrome and leads to confusion, renaming, and possible deletion of tropes. A series usually gets to name a trope if it's so widely known for the trope (even outside the circle of nerds ) it's basically an icon of it, or if it has a term for the situation that is simply Made of Win .
Trope Namer Syndrome primarily manifests itself in the YKTTW, the workshop where we pound out names and descriptions for new trope articles. It's easy to spot the occasional trope (er, proto-trope) where the editor is trying a little too hard to create a Trope Namer , at the expense of developing a good name and definition that everyone will "get".
Using trope namers lightly or as a badge of honor is Trope Namer Syndrome and leads to confusion... Various shows are popular or influential when it comes to tropes. One measure is how readily we name tropes from shows or other works.
Using trope namers lightly or as a badge of honor is Trope Namer Syndrome and leads to confusion, renames, and — as shown in the redlink in this page's quote — possible deletion of tropes. A series usually gets to name a trope if it's so widely known for the trope (even outside the circle of nerds) it's basically an icon of it, or if it has ...
Feb 6, 2024 · In this game, we're going to rectify these silly rules about "comprehensibility" and "fan myopia" and come up with characters who our favorite tropes should be named for. I mean, those knuckleheads in the TRS would never allow us, but we can at least pretend, amirite?
A Mary Sue is a type of fictional character, usually a young woman, who is portrayed as unrealistically free of weaknesses or character flaws. [1] The term "Mary Sue" is often applied pejoratively to strong female heroines considered to be unrealistically capable, both in fan fiction and in commercially published fiction.