Follow TV Tropes

Following

History DavidVersusGoliath / AnimeAndManga

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

%%
%% Image selected per Image Pickin thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=17077015450.41662500
%% Please don't change or remove without starting a new thread.
%%
[[quoteright:350:[[Anime/TheUltraman https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/e3975e21_9de5_4a79_82e0_bb46a41ad6c4.jpeg]]]]

%%
Examples of DavidVersusGoliath in anime and manga.
----
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Touma in ''LightNovel/ACertainMagicalIndex''. Seriously, [[AntiMagic complete invulnerability to all supernatural powers]] ''sounds'' awesome, but let's think about this. A. [[WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer It's his only power]]. B. Against [[BadassNormal non-powered opponents]], if anything it works again him by influencing his [[BornUnlucky luck]]. C. It doesn't protect him from the effects of said powers such as shrapnel. D. Using this ability means he can't use any sort of weaponry and therefore has to get into punching range of his opponent. E. It's only a single limb, not his entire body. Opponents so far: An esper with extremely potent electric abilities. An essentially all-powered magician able to draw on what is apparently the entirety of magical knowledge. A RealityWarper who can literally kill with a thought or do anything he thinks of. [[SuperPowerLottery Accelerator, who can not only take a nuke head on but hit you back with it even harder.]] [[spoiler:Fiamma of the Right, a magician who has an undodgeable and always lethal attack and can level cities without effort. ''The ArchangelGabriel, second most powerful angel in existence who can end all life on Earth in minutes.'']] Basically, a partial immunity to their abilities on his side and ''street fighting skills.'' David Versus Goliath much? [[spoiler:And naturally, any opponents who don't rely entirely on these abilities tend to crush him. Kanzaki and Tsuchimikado, basically, who go for a wide range of abilities instead of relying on the raw power of whatever their ability is.]]

to:

* Touma in ''LightNovel/ACertainMagicalIndex''.''Literature/ACertainMagicalIndex''. Seriously, [[AntiMagic complete invulnerability to all supernatural powers]] ''sounds'' awesome, but let's think about this. A. [[WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer It's his only power]]. B. Against [[BadassNormal non-powered opponents]], if anything it works again him by influencing his [[BornUnlucky luck]]. C. It doesn't protect him from the effects of said powers such as shrapnel. D. Using this ability means he can't use any sort of weaponry and therefore has to get into punching range of his opponent. E. It's only a single limb, not his entire body. Opponents so far: An esper with extremely potent electric abilities. An essentially all-powered magician able to draw on what is apparently the entirety of magical knowledge. A RealityWarper who can literally kill with a thought or do anything he thinks of. [[SuperPowerLottery Accelerator, who can not only take a nuke head on but hit you back with it even harder.]] [[spoiler:Fiamma of the Right, a magician who has an undodgeable and always lethal attack and can level cities without effort. ''The ArchangelGabriel, second most powerful angel in existence who can end all life on Earth in minutes.'']] Basically, a partial immunity to their abilities on his side and ''street fighting skills.'' David Versus Goliath much? [[spoiler:And naturally, any opponents who don't rely entirely on these abilities tend to crush him. Kanzaki and Tsuchimikado, basically, who go for a wide range of abilities instead of relying on the raw power of whatever their ability is.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Franchise/YuGiOh'': Generally, this trope comes in whenever there is a duel between Yugi and his expies against Kaiba and his expies. Kaiba, [[Anime/YuGiOhGX Kaiser]], [[Anime/YuGiOh5Ds Jack]], [[Anime/YuGiOhZEXAL Kaito]], [[Anime/YuGiOhArcV Reiji]] and [[Anime/YuGiOhVrains Revolver]] usually use monsters with high ATK, but none of them is UnskilledButStrong -- they ''are'' highly skilled. Yugi and his expies usually use monsters that are weaker in battle, but they use more combos to overcome their powerful foes. In the end, the winner is who is more skilled or manages to exploit the weaknesses of the other.

to:

* ''Franchise/YuGiOh'': Generally, this trope comes in whenever there is a duel between Yugi and his expies against Kaiba and his expies. Kaiba, [[Anime/YuGiOhGX Kaiser]], [[Anime/YuGiOh5Ds Jack]], [[Anime/YuGiOhZEXAL Kaito]], [[Anime/YuGiOhArcV Reiji]] and [[Anime/YuGiOhVrains Revolver]] usually use monsters with high ATK, but none of them is UnskilledButStrong -- they ''are'' [[StrongAndSkilled highly skilled.skilled]]. Yugi and his expies usually use monsters that are weaker in battle, but they use more combos to overcome their powerful foes. In the end, the winner is who is more skilled or manages to exploit the weaknesses of the other.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamIronBloodedOrphans'' has Tekkadan versus Gjallarhorn. Tekkadan are a rag-tag band of ChildSoldiers, while Gjallarhorn is the dominant military power in the solar system, yet in the first season Tekkadan is able to continually rack up victories against them. The Season 2 comes and this trope gets played ''very'' realistically. [[spoiler:Tekkadan joins forces with a group of revolutionaries within Gjallarhorn to take on Gjallarhorn's largest fleet, which is bigger and more powerful than both of them combined. They make a valiant effort but end up getting crushed and sent on the run for the remainder of the series.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** In ''Journeys'', any battle in Galar where one side doesn't Dynamax their Pokemon automatically has this result. Ash's Lucario faced this twice -- in the third match against Bea it Mega Evolves to stand a fair chance against Gigantamax Machamp, while some Aura training beforehand allows it to beat Raihan's Gigantamax Duraludon even when a change of tactics left it unable to go Mega.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Franchise/YuGiOh'': Generally, this trope comes in whenever there is a duel between Yugi and his expies against Kaiba and his expies. Kaiba, [[Anime/YuGiOhGX Kaiser]], [[Anime/YuGiOh5Ds Jack]], [[Anime/YuGiOhZEXAL Kaito]], [[Anime/YuGiOhArcV Reiji]] and [[Anime/YuGiOhVrains Revolver]] usually use monsters with high ATK, but none of them is UnskilledButStrong -- they ''are'' highly skilled. Yugi and his expies usually use monsters that are weaker in battle, but they use more combos to overcome their powerful foes. In the end, the winner is who is more skilled.

to:

* ''Franchise/YuGiOh'': Generally, this trope comes in whenever there is a duel between Yugi and his expies against Kaiba and his expies. Kaiba, [[Anime/YuGiOhGX Kaiser]], [[Anime/YuGiOh5Ds Jack]], [[Anime/YuGiOhZEXAL Kaito]], [[Anime/YuGiOhArcV Reiji]] and [[Anime/YuGiOhVrains Revolver]] usually use monsters with high ATK, but none of them is UnskilledButStrong -- they ''are'' highly skilled. Yugi and his expies usually use monsters that are weaker in battle, but they use more combos to overcome their powerful foes. In the end, the winner is who is more skilled.skilled or manages to exploit the weaknesses of the other.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Whenever Izuku "Deku" Midorya has to fight a supervillain in ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia''; while monstrously strong, Midorya [[HowDoIShotWeb doesn't have complete control over his Quirk]], and even if he did he's still a scrawny teenager going up against villains in their twenties and thirties who are a few heads taller than him. The most notable examples would be his fight against Muscular (who almost crushed him to death until a distraction gave Midorya a chance at a HeroicSecondWind) and Overhaul (who had used his Quirk to morph himself into a building-sized Kaiju; Midorya only won that fight because the little girl he was protecting had a Quirk that could heal the damage he causes to his limbs when using One For All at 100%, allowing him to cut loose without risk of crippling injury).

to:

* Whenever Izuku "Deku" Midorya Midoriya has to fight a supervillain in ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia''; while monstrously strong, Midorya Midoriya [[HowDoIShotWeb doesn't have complete control over his Quirk]], and even if he did he's still a scrawny teenager going up against villains in their twenties and thirties who are a few heads taller than him. The most notable examples would be his fight against Muscular (who almost crushed him to death until a distraction gave Midorya Midoriya a chance at a HeroicSecondWind) and Overhaul (who had used his Quirk to morph himself into a building-sized Kaiju; Midorya Midoriya only won that fight because the little girl he was protecting had a Quirk that could heal the damage he causes to his limbs when using One For All at 100%, allowing him to cut loose without risk of crippling injury).



* ''Franchise/YuGiOh'': Generally, this trope comes in whenever there is a duel between Yugi and his expies against Kaiba and his expies. Kaiba, [[Anime/YuGiOhGX Kaiser]], [[Anime/YuGiOh5Ds Jack]], [[Anime/YuGiOhZEXAL Kaito]] and [[Anime/YuGiOhArcV Reiji]] usually use monsters with high ATK, but none of them is UnskilledButStrong -- they ''are'' highly skilled. Yugi and his expies usually use monsters that are weaker in battle, but they use more combos to overcome their powerful foes. In the end, the winner is who is more skilled.

to:

* ''Franchise/YuGiOh'': Generally, this trope comes in whenever there is a duel between Yugi and his expies against Kaiba and his expies. Kaiba, [[Anime/YuGiOhGX Kaiser]], [[Anime/YuGiOh5Ds Jack]], [[Anime/YuGiOhZEXAL Kaito]] and Kaito]], [[Anime/YuGiOhArcV Reiji]] and [[Anime/YuGiOhVrains Revolver]] usually use monsters with high ATK, but none of them is UnskilledButStrong -- they ''are'' highly skilled. Yugi and his expies usually use monsters that are weaker in battle, but they use more combos to overcome their powerful foes. In the end, the winner is who is more skilled.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* The battle between Yellow and Lance in ''Manga/PokemonAdventures'' is this, her small, underleveled Pokémon against his powerful dragon Pokémon.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* The basic premise of ''Manga/AngelicLayer'' revolves around Misaki coming to terms with being small and choosing a small Angel. Hikaru, naturally, ''never'' fights anyone smaller than she is; they're all bigger, heavier, and initially have a strong upper hand.
* [[spoiler:Nagisa]] vs. [[spoiler:Takaoka]] in ''Manga/AssassinationClassroom''. The former is a teenage boy who's small even for his age and has just a few months of assassin training, while the latter is a muscular adult who's a veteran soldier. [[spoiler:Nagisa]] wins thanks to psychologically rattling his opponent.
* Deconstructed to absolutely ''horrifying'' degrees in ''Manga/AttackOnTitan''. Humanity are the underdogs in every way to the Titans, and this usually means a very gruesome death. On the other hand, the trope is played absolutely straight with Mikasa and Levi Ackermann, both coming from family line with SuperpowerfulGenetics. This allows them to devastate the ranks of normal Titans and even present a credible threat to the more dangerous [[spoiler: Human-controlled]] ones. [[spoiler:On the outside world, this is pretty much what non-Marley nations are when they're up against Marley, that is until technological improvements starts to level the playing field.]]
* ''Manga/BattleAngelAlita'':
** Alita is a female cyborg 5 foot tall and that doesn't appear to be more than 20. She routinely defeats foes many times her size (however, her battle style being designed to handle larger foes, said foes' overconfidence, and the fact that [[CuteBruiser her bodies]] [[PintSizedPowerhouse are most of the time advanced combat models]] are important factors). In almost every important battle she fought, she was stated as WeakButSkilled (and lost to more skilled and stronger opponents), and the 2 important battles she was stronger, one she only won because her flesh-and-blood opponent though it'd be appropriate, and the other she toyed with her opponent [[spoiler:until her body was hijacked by the superpower she was stealing her power source, and got punched to pieces. She survived and may get better..]].
** Sechs taking on the Jovian seeded team by him/herself and putting up a fight (the first form of said "team" was about 500 meters wide, and got larger), Zazie and her relatively weak body (and [[MoreDakka tons of guns]]) fighting in the ZOTT semifinals and finals (where 2 superpowers try their latest MDW, and those LOST before the finals), and Caerula Sanguis fighting a cyborg with Chinese Swords.
* Asta from ''Manga/BlackClover'' is very short, standing at 155 cm (5'1"), and fights against the tall and beastly Vetto, whose brute strength has to be sapped by Asta's anti-magic sword before he defeats him with Finral and Vanessa's help. This trope happens again when faces off against the tall, imposing Dante. Even moreso when Dante uses his Body Magic to turn gigantic and muscular when Asta fights him alongside Yami.
* [[EvilDiva Diva's]] [[NighInvulnerability Chevaliers]] in ''Anime/BloodPlus'' are more powerful than [[WeakButSkilled Saya's]] as the former receive much more [[BloodyMurder blood]].
* Touma in ''LightNovel/ACertainMagicalIndex''. Seriously, [[AntiMagic complete invulnerability to all supernatural powers]] ''sounds'' awesome, but let's think about this. A. [[WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer It's his only power]]. B. Against [[BadassNormal non-powered opponents]], if anything it works again him by influencing his [[BornUnlucky luck]]. C. It doesn't protect him from the effects of said powers such as shrapnel. D. Using this ability means he can't use any sort of weaponry and therefore has to get into punching range of his opponent. E. It's only a single limb, not his entire body. Opponents so far: An esper with extremely potent electric abilities. An essentially all-powered magician able to draw on what is apparently the entirety of magical knowledge. A RealityWarper who can literally kill with a thought or do anything he thinks of. [[SuperPowerLottery Accelerator, who can not only take a nuke head on but hit you back with it even harder.]] [[spoiler:Fiamma of the Right, a magician who has an undodgeable and always lethal attack and can level cities without effort. ''The ArchangelGabriel, second most powerful angel in existence who can end all life on Earth in minutes.'']] Basically, a partial immunity to their abilities on his side and ''street fighting skills.'' David Versus Goliath much? [[spoiler:And naturally, any opponents who don't rely entirely on these abilities tend to crush him. Kanzaki and Tsuchimikado, basically, who go for a wide range of abilities instead of relying on the raw power of whatever their ability is.]]
** Shiage is an even bigger underdog in his fights against superpowered enemies, he doesn't have any superpower at all. He becomes very interested in magic when he learns of it, but is quickly told that he can't use magic: while he's a Level 0, he's still an esper, and therefore incompatible with magic. Sucks to be him.
* While most fights with the outclassed characters in ''Manga/DragonBall'' results in a straight up CurbStompBattle, the exception occurs at the end of the Saiyan Saga. [[KidHero Son Gohan]] and [[CantCatchUp Krillin]] end up having to stop Vegeta when [[TheHero Goku]] wasn't able to. Krillin and Gohan were no match for Vegeta's flunky Nappa (who Goku flattened), and even though Vegeta is [[WorfHadTheFlu injured out from his fight with Goku]], he still has enough fight the two of them can't even scratch him. However, despite the odds, they manage to narrowly win after hitting him with leftover energy from Goku's Genkidama and Gohan using the artificial moon Vegeta created to [[OneWingedAngel turn into an Oozaru]] and injures him enough to force him to (barely) retreat.
** In fact, ''Dragon Ball'' is one of the ultimate subverters of the trope. Vegeta, Freeza, Majin Buu and Beerus were either small characters or their final forms were not their largest. Not to mention Goku as a kid, who for most of his childhood looked like an eight year old, took down characters much bigger than him, especially Great Demon King Piccolo.
* ''Manga/Eyeshield21'':
** The titular Eyeshield 21 vs. just about anyone he goes head to head with, especially Shin and Agon. In reality, however, neither Agon or Shin are especially tall, Sena's just ''that'' short.
** A better example would be the lanky Mizumachi vs the stout Komosubi. Their entire challenge is about who is more stronger between a tall end a short guy.
* ''Manga/FistOfTheNorthStar'': Kenshiro isn't exactly a small guy, but he usually takes on huge people, sometimes ''twice'' his size, and wins handily most of the time (keeping in mind that Raoh is also bigger than him).
* Soccer manga and anime ''Manga/GiantKilling'' is basically about this: the protagonist is a coach whose mission is to bring a bottom-feeder Japanese team (for which he played in his professional career and was an idol before moving to an English team in the same situation) up to top contender level. The term "Giant Killing" redirects here because it is a common saying for this trope as applied to association football.
* ''Manga/KurokosBasketball'': Kuroko versus Murasakibara. To put this into perspective, Kuroko is 168 cm (5'6") and 57 kg (~126 pounds). Murasakibara is ''208 cm'' and '''99 kg''' (6'10" and 218 lbs). It's like pitting an adult against a child. If that wasn't bad enough, Murasakibara is physically the most gifted player in the league by an ''enormous'' margin, while Kuroko is unarguably the weakest starter Serin has, possibly the weakest player, physically, in the series. In real life, a mismatch of that degree wouldn't just be sad, it'd be outright ''dangerous'' for the smaller player. Nonetheless, [[spoiler:Kuroko wins their one-on-one by using their disproportionate strengths and his lack of presence to make Murasakibara forget that he's being marked, and then ducks into the path of his movement to draw a foul as Murasakibara turns around carelessly]].
* Repeatedly for the eponymous character of ''Franchise/LyricalNanoha''. [[Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanoha Fate]]: More experienced. [[Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaAs Reinforce]]: More powerful. [[Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaStrikerS Vivio]]: More powerful. [[Manga/MagicalRecordLyricalNanohaForce Thoma]]: ...Yeah. Bonus points for all of them being taller than her (in Fate's case, a little bit).
** Nanoha's {{Expy}} [[Manga/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaViVid Miura]] also tends to face Goliaths, all of them (Micaiah, Vivio and Erie) happen to be much taller than her. Both, Micaiah and Erie are much older and more experienced than her and they are also Inter-Middle favorites with a pretty good Inter-Middle record history. Micaiah is a OneHitKill expert, while Erie is a BeamSpam specialist, but Miura manages to defeat both of them with a very strong FinishingMove while she's on the edge of defeat. And her other opponent, Vivio, is only a little more experienced than her, but Vivio is also the ''main character'' of ''[=ViVid=]'', who should be protected from PlotArmor. Even that isn't enough to make Miura fall. It does help that Miura is a LightningBruiser, while her opponents are either a GlassCannon, a FragileSpeedster or a SquishyWizard; with her being tough, fast and strong, she can endure most of their attacks until she retaliates with fast and powerful moves.
** ''[=ViVid=]'' tends to avert this trope in general. Characters who are weaker or less experienced than their opponents cannot win against them.
* Whenever Izuku "Deku" Midorya has to fight a supervillain in ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia''; while monstrously strong, Midorya [[HowDoIShotWeb doesn't have complete control over his Quirk]], and even if he did he's still a scrawny teenager going up against villains in their twenties and thirties who are a few heads taller than him. The most notable examples would be his fight against Muscular (who almost crushed him to death until a distraction gave Midorya a chance at a HeroicSecondWind) and Overhaul (who had used his Quirk to morph himself into a building-sized Kaiju; Midorya only won that fight because the little girl he was protecting had a Quirk that could heal the damage he causes to his limbs when using One For All at 100%, allowing him to cut loose without risk of crippling injury).
* ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'', Negi's fight with Jack Rakan. Negi was training most of the series to defeat a KnightOfCerebus named Fate Averruncus, and through some circumstances, he's fighting Jack, a character so overpowered that not only does Fate actively avoid fighting him, but considerable humor is made from how invincible he is. For the most, Negi is losing, Jack [[NoSell No Selling]] everything he does, Negi only surviving because Jack only wants to test him, not kill him, but he does manage to fight to a draw by prodding Jack's ego and causing him to use an attack that Negi uses his new EnergyAbsorption trick that he came up with to take the power from and injure him enough that with the power he has left after putting everything into his Titan Slayer Spear move, he and Jack end up [=KO'ing=] each other.
* ''Manga/OnePiece'' has the protagonist Monkey D. Luffy do this constantly when he takes on foes [[TheDreaded who are renowned for their might]].
* ''Webcomic/OnePunchMan'':
** Parodied constantly when the main character Saitama goes up against creatures many times his own size, quite often reaching {{Kaiju}} proportions, nevertheless keeping him the overdog of every fight he's in because he defeats ''every'' opponent with no real effort. Some fights involving the stronger S-class heroes are portrayed like this as well.
** Played straight with Saitama's fight against Crablante, as it was before he had his powers. Same goes for Mumen Rider vs. The Deep Sea King.
* In many ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' battles, Ash's Pikachu is the David to Goliaths that include Dragonite, Tyranitar, Metagross, Regice, etc. Either Pikachu will pull off an underdog victory, or he'll go down after a grueling fight.
* Referenced by name in ''{{Anime/Robotech}}'' where it compares the battle between the SDF-1 and the Zentraedi fleet to this.
* In ''Anime/TurnAGundam,'' this sums up the tense stand-off between Earth-bound humanity and the Moonrace. Which wouldn't be so bad except that the Moonrace is a technologically advanced society while the people on Earth have ''at best'' little more than UsefulNotes/WorldWarI technology. Even though biplanes, artillery and concentrated attacks do ''some'' damage, it's not until the Turn A steps into the picture and the discovery of mobile suit caches from the Dark History that they actually stand a chance. [[spoiler:We later find out that every single fight in the series is a David to the Turn A's Goliath since it's essentially the most powerful mobile suit ever built.]]
* Thorfinn versus Thorkell in ''Manga/VinlandSaga'', with no clear-cut victor in either of their two fights, though Thorkell concedes the second fight after Thorfinn tears out his eye.
* ''Franchise/YuGiOh'': Generally, this trope comes in whenever there is a duel between Yugi and his expies against Kaiba and his expies. Kaiba, [[Anime/YuGiOhGX Kaiser]], [[Anime/YuGiOh5Ds Jack]], [[Anime/YuGiOhZEXAL Kaito]] and [[Anime/YuGiOhArcV Reiji]] usually use monsters with high ATK, but none of them is UnskilledButStrong -- they ''are'' highly skilled. Yugi and his expies usually use monsters that are weaker in battle, but they use more combos to overcome their powerful foes. In the end, the winner is who is more skilled.
** And speaking of Yugi, there's his duel against his own SuperPoweredAlterEgo, Atem. At this point, Atem has the power to top-deck whatever card he needs, and he possesses the three [[PhysicalGod Egyptian God Cards]], even having all of them on the field at once. Yugi destroys all three in one turn by [[HoistByHisOwnPetard turning their powers against themselves]].
* In ''Anime/YuGiOhGX'', Manjoume's duel against his CorruptPolitician (and [[{{Jerkass}} complete jerk]]) of a brother Chosaku clearly fit the Trope, but whether it was a straight example or an inversion is hard to determine, because it's hard to say who was David and who was Goliath. Chosaku was using a deck full of powerful Dragon beatsticks, while Manjoume had a deck full of monsters will only 0 Attack Points, and seeing as Manjoume won, the obvious answer is, the Trope was played straight. On the other hand... Seeing as Manjoume had built his deck using a careful and clever strategy, while Chosaku was sloppy and used almost ''no'' strategy other than [[AttackAttackAttack "hit him with everything you have"]], you might argue that the opposite was true, and that Manjoume was more of a Goliath here than his SmallNameBigEgo brother ever could be.
* ''Anime/YuGiOhArcV'' gives the straightest example the franchise can give with [[spoiler:the BigBad Zarc not only being the World Duel Champion but also has the power of a god due to fusing with his dragons vs Rei, a pro duelist armed with four cards meant to counter Zarc's power. Despite all odds, she was able to defeat Zarc, kick starting the series]].
----

Top