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Cquote1

He drowns in his dreams, an exquisite extreme I know

He’s as damned as he seems, and more heaven than a heart could hold...

He's so beautiful

Such a beautiful disaster...
Kelly Clarkson, "Beautiful Disaster"
Cquote2


A hottie, usually in high school and usually male, whose first name is spelled t-r-o-u-b-l-e, often expressed through fondness for leather jackets and antisocial behavior. Has fangirls in both his own universe and the real one because All Girls Want Bad Boys. They may be revealed to have a heart of gold or a difficult home life. Ladettes and Femme Fatales also sometimes fit here.

See also: The Woobie, Broken Bird, Draco in Leather Pants, Evil Is Cool, Evil Is Sexy, Don't You Dare Pity Me!, Jerkass Woobie.

Examples of Troubled but Cute include:


Anime and Manga[]

  • Harima Kenji from the anime School Rumble takes a lot from this trope. Being rather antisocial and a juvenile delinquent, with a liking for leather jackets and bikes, he likes beating up Yakuza goons and is all around good-looking...except that, beneath all that, he's an oaf with a heart of gold who likes drawing manga and is too scared of confessing his love for a classmate. All while obliviously gaining the attention of several other girls.
  • Hayato Gokudera from Katekyo Hitman Reborn — a smoker, delinquent, and lover of high explosives. Naturally, the girls go wild for him. The only break in his Troubled but Cute personality is that he turns all mushy and affectionate for Tsuna.
  • Kouji Kabuto from Mazinger Z. High-school student, male, Jerk with a Heart of Gold with love for bikes and reputation for being a Delinquent. And he pilots a Humongous Mecha. Needless to say, girls gush over him (especially Sayaka Yumi, though she's pretty Tsundere to him too).
  • Sasuke of Naruto. Completely misses the look (or at least, the dress code), though — that turtleneck, shorts, and kneesocks combination fairly scream "scrawny kid". Then again, Ninja are supposed to cultivate an unassuming personal appearance, even if, in fiction, they usually don't.
    • He gets...better (?) when he gets an Akatsuki trench coat and a Kill'Em All attitude later on. And it's not until the end of the series that he actually gets more or less better.
    • One could also consider Gaara this, considering his err...antisocial attitude and his bad past.
  • Fakir from Princess Tutu. He even has a fanclub at his school, although it's likely none of his fangirls have ever talked to him, given his anti-social nature.
  • Ikuto from Shugo Chara. Though his only fangirl appears to be his sister.
  • Seto Kaiba from Yu-Gi-Oh!
  • Sachiko from Mariasama ga Miteru arguably counts.
  • Kyo Sohma from Fruits Basket, an antisocial martial artist who's obsessed with beating Yuki. Tohru seems to genuinely like him, though, and in his defense, he does have a good Freudian Excuse: his loving but VERY emotionally unstable mother was Driven to Suicide, his cruel father rejected him completely after that, and being the cat of the Sohma clan has brought him lots of unhappiness, Akito's scorn, and an uncertain future..
    • Not to mention that his reason for obsessively trying to beat Yuki doesn't make him a bad guy at all: Akito said that if he beat Yuki fairly (at anything), he won't be locked in isolation until he's dead. Not to mention, his general issues with Tohru are revealed at the very end of the manga and second series to be the result of how he could have stopped her mother Kyoko from being hit by the car, but grabbing her would have caused him to transform into a cat. He blamed himself for being a coward (a running theme in his Character Development) and thought her dying words were her blaming him, so he saw himself as unworthy of Tohru's love.
  • Joe "The Condor" Asakura in Science Ninja Team Gatchaman.
  • Both Ryoma Echizen and Akaya Kirihara from The Prince of Tennis.
  • Every last protagonist student character in the Live Action Adaptation of Gokusen.
  • Sagara Sousuke from Full Metal Panic. Although he's not "troubled" in the normal rebellious sense, and more just plain troubled. It's pretty obvious that the poor boy has Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and an automatically violent personality that he can't control. His extreme paranoia has him doing things like bombing his school, planting land mines everywhere, and pointing guns/shooting at people. Of course, all of this is played for laughs, and he tends not to angst (considering his past and current situation, he angsts remarkably little). And despite all this, any girl (or guy, even) who has watched him or gotten to know him well enough seems to fall for him — even the series' resident Tsundere.
    • That barely scrapes the surface of how whacked he is. On one occasion, Kaname was kidnapped by a group of thugs who planned to back him into a corner. He retaliated in a way so nightmarish that, that particular episode wasn't aired for a while because of a similar incident in real life. Then, when she got kidnapped AGAIN by the Yakuza, Sousuke went after her with a rival gang clad in theme park mascot suits converted into powered armors. Seriously, who the hell would convert theme park mascots into powered armor and try to sell it to the military and law enforcement sector, then wonder why didn't it sell?!
      • He first stole the suit while trying to keep an eye on Kaname while she was at an amusement park and decided to make it more useful in the future by upgrading it. He's dumbfounded by it not selling because his raised-by-wolves attitude left him without a sense of aesthetics, so he didn't realize just how silly it looked.
  • Ciel Phantomhive from Black Butler is a Hollywood Atheist in Victorian England. Check that page for his Freudian Excuse, if you don't know his backstory already. The result is a stubborn, bitter teenager who honestly believes that once something is lost, you can't get it back (a plot point in the anime) and has a serious issue with showing his real emotions unless it's anger. Despite this, or most likely BECAUSE of this, there are still girls (and two or three men) in universe who like to fawn over him, and aside from Sebastian, he has an extremely large fanbase out of universe.
  • Code Geass, oh dear God, Code Geass! Many of the show's famous male characters are: 1) insanely and inhumanly good-looking, 2) less-than-rosy in their moral leanings, and 3) suffering horribly (one way or another).
  • Most prominently with main character Edward Elric of Fullmetal Alchemist
    • Also shown pretty well with his superior Colonel Roy Mustang.
  • Game X Rush has Yuuki, who also has shades of Broken Bird from time to time.
  • Inuyasha is fairly handsome, being a White-Haired Pretty Boy and all that, but damn did he have a rough life. To recap: father died before he was born and his mother died when he was only a few years old, making him an orphan at a young age; he is a half-demon, which has caused him to be ostracized by both human and demonic society, including his older full-demon brother, the only remaining family he has left; the first girl he fell in love with was brutally murdered and he was framed for the crime, with the girlfriend binding him to a tree, declaring her hatred of him in her last moments alive. Small surprise he has an abrasive personality.
  • Ryoki from Hot Gimmick.
  • Asuka Langley Sohryu from Neon Genesis Evangelion is the perfect female example of this trope.
    • Most major characters from Evangelion qualify as Troubled But Cute to some extent.
  • Bishop Frau in 07-Ghost. Badass badboy who disregards convention and does as he pleases. Still, he has a difficult backstory and is a genuinely caring person. Teito also qualifies.
  • Mikael from Tenshi ni Narumon is a very, VERY troubled and unstable pretty boy. You wouldn't guess that because for the first 13 episodes, he acts very little, and even when he does, he's usually calm, polite, always smiling gently — an epitomy of sanity in a crapsack world. Then, in the second season, we get to see the real him under that mask — a very stubborn, obsessive, and insecure boy. And at the end, he goes all evil and insane and has an epic breakdown — and then he returns back to his former self. Still stubborn as hell, unfortunately.
  • Akemi Homura from Puella Magi Madoka Magica has the same vibe as most characters on this page, with a few exceptions: she's a girl, she's in junior high, and she doesn't use leather. But boy, ain't she makes up for this with an extremely troubled past. Originally, though, she was Adorkable.
  • Gilbert of Kaze to Ki no Uta, who doubles as a rare male Broken Bird, with the whole Dark and Troubled Past, antisocial nature, and whatnot.
  • Chapter 36.5 of Natsume Yuujinchou shows that Natsume, of all people, had a reputation as the pretty-but-seriously-disturbed boy back in middle school. That sort of thing happens when you're regularly attacked by things almost no one else can see.
  • Natsume, of Gakuen Alice.
  • Much like Gilbert of Kaze to Ki no Uta above, former Badass Biker Riki in Ai no Kusabi is also a rare male example of this and Broken Bird.
  • Bridget L. Satellizer in Freezing is known as "The Untouchable Queen" because of her skill and tendency to beat the crap out of anyone who touches her. Because There Are No Therapists, everybody avoids and ostracizes her without realizing her problems are the result of being abused both emotionally and sexually by a family member. It's only after Kazuya becomes her partner that she manages to come out of her shell.
  • Vegeta in Dragonball Z. Antisocial, violent, overly angsty, but Bulma eventually comes to note that he seems to just be very lonely.


Comic Books[]

  • ThugBoy from Empowered, period. The trouble's in the name, and the leather jacket is also included.
  • Jason Todd, all over. For that matter, arguably Batman too.

Film[]

  • Billy Costigan in The Departed, to Madolyn.
  • Roger Davis from Rent. The guy has HIV and is really, really cranky, but is still beloved by any straight girl.
  • John Bender in the mid-1980s Brat Pack film, The Breakfast Club
  • Jason Dean from the film Heathers fits this trope, though he eventually reveals himself to be a psychopath.
  • The Spider-Man movies' James Dean-esque version of Harry Osborn. At least, before he was scarred in Spider-Man 3. Your Mileage May Vary, though. Some people thought he was still cute with the scars.
  • Danny Zuko (The Other Zuko) from the film/musical Grease.
  • Warren Peace of Sky High, proving you can never go wrong with a Firebender with father issues.
  • This trope is mocked through Zeke in Disney Channel's movie Minute Men, when girls come up to him and ask, "You know, you're kind of scary and unapproachable... can we sit with you?"
  • Fans of Repo! The Genetic Opera are divided over whether or not Grave-Robber is actually troubled or just a sociopath with a sense of humour, but there's no denying he's incredibly foxy. The fact that he canonically lives out of dumpsters seems like it would be enough to make him the former.
  • Patrick Verona from Ten Things I Hate About You.
    • However, as we learn later, he is more in the line of "he doesn't deny any of this, so it must be true". He does stay away from most of his peers, but that's mostly because he just does have different tastes. Kate is the real Troubled but Cute, with her open disgust of the people around her and even with her "the reason I am so angry at everyone" backstory.
  • Billy Tallent and Joe Dick of Hard Core Logo are what happens when examples of this trope hit their thirties, with emphasis on the "troubled" part (especially in Joe's case).
  • Kovu from the second Lion King movie definitely fits this trope — if he wasn't, you know, a lion, he would definitely wear leather jackets and ride a motorcycle.
  • The titular character from Donnie Darko.
  • Mathilda (as played by a young Natalie Portman) in Léon: The Professional.
  • Luke from Cherrybomb. One the one hand, he's a violent, arrogant drug-dealer who treats his best friend like crap. On the other, he's a lonely, angel-faced sixteen-year-old boy whose father abused and abandoned him.
  • In X Men First Class, pre-supervillainy Erik Lehnsherr is a Badass Nazi-hunting Byronic Hero with an intensely Dark and Troubled Past (involving the Holocaust, loss of his parents, and being a victim of human experimentation) and bucketloads of trauma and cynicism. He also wears a leather jacket on a few occasions.

Literature[]

  • Most of the main cast of The Outsiders.
  • Edward Cullen, in Twilight. Robert Pattinson himself certainly believes this, describing him as "self-loathing" and a "108-year-old virgin".
  • Sirius Black in Harry Potter, though, rather than being antisocial, he is represented as popular, despite various acts of callous teen cruelty. At least, as an adult, he is a good person at heart.
    • And judging from his possessions, before the Potters got slaughtered by Voldemort, he was a biker.
    • Harry and Ron both qualify as this in The Order of the Phoenix and Deathly Hallows, respectively. Both also have reasons: Harry's parents, godfather, and closest teacher were all murdered, one after the other. He even saw one classmate, his pet, and an elf he set free murdered right in front of his face. In at least half of these examples, Harry himself was the original target. Ron is the youngest of five boys, which, as Dumbledore points out in The Philosopher's Stone, is a lot to live up to. Not to mention the fact that he's best friends with Harry, who, from Ron's point of view, has got everything. It is even implied (if not outright stated) in Deathly Hallows that he is afraid Hermione is really in love with Harry, not him, and that his own mother would prefer to have Harry as a son.
  • Edmund Pevensie from the Chronicles of Narnia is this.
  • Roiben from Tithe and Ironside. A knight of the Seelie Court, he was traded to the Queen of the Unseelie Court to seal a peace treaty.
  • Irial and Niall from Wicked Lovely are this trope incarnate.
  • Nico Di Angelo. Emphasis on the "cute", since he's only twelve years old, but he's got plenty of issues.
  • Yozo Oba of No Longer Human, who is always depressed and fears other people, cannot help but attract women throughout his life due to his apparent good looks.
  • In Death: Roarke qualifies as this. He is sexy, with a Dark and Troubled Past to match.


Live-Action TV[]

  • Being Human: Mitchell. Now he's The Atoner. Now he's the Big Bad. Things get pretty messy.
  • Beverly Hills, 90210: One of the OG tropists (?), the infamous Dylan McKay.
  • Boy Meets World: Shawn Hunter. The rampart trailer park trash jokes started as innocent and one dimensional character traits. Then, for a good while from season two onward, it seemed like every other episode was a Shawn pity-party fest. And he got girls to boot.
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer and later spinoff Angel: Angel. Bad boy. Leather coat. Troubled by his love for a pretty slayer. Heart (well, soul) of gold.
  • Charmed: Cole Turner.
  • Degrassi gives us a few. Sean, Craig, K.C., and Eli start off as this. Spinner, Jay, Alex, and Johnny grow into this (either drama happening to them or growing nicer to people). Ellie, Alex, and Bianca are female examples, showing more textbook traits of this compared to the female counterpart trope.
  • Doctor Who: The Fifth Doctor could be considered this.
    • And the Ninth, and almost certainly Jack Harkness.
  • The Facts of Life: Jo is a Rare Female Example.
  • Felicity: Ben Covington.
  • The Finder: Willa is often in trouble with the law but is shown to have a softer side.
  • Freaks and Geeks: Daniel Desario is a James Dean-looking, scholastically-challenged heart breaker from the wrong side of the tracks.
  • Friday Night Lights: Tim Riggins, drunkard and resident Mr. Fanservice.
  • Gilmore Girls: Jess Mariano. Broken home, check. Absentee parents, check. No self-esteem or self-care. Check (*sobs*).
  • Happy Days: Some early episodes show Fonzie coaching the boys on how to act this way in order to arouse female interest.
  • House: The titular character, both in-universe women and fangirls seem to adore him.
  • M.I. High: Resident Mr. Fanservice Oscar Cole is this, although his dad eventually came back and his mum was put into prison for good, so life got better from there.
  • My So-Called Life: Jordan Catalano.
  • 90210: Liam is another textbook example, especially as they're now setting him up for a fling with good-girl protagonist Annie.
    • I believe Liam is supposed to be a cross of Dylan McKay and Ryan Atwood.
  • Nip Tuck: Christian Troy. He's shallow, sex-obsessed, and in the habit of treating his sex partners like dirt — but he's also handsome, successful, and really good in bed, not to mention the unexpected vulnerable streak.
  • The OC: Ryan Atwood. A bit of a subversion, as he was both the main character and, occasionally, the Only Sane Man.
  • Parenthood: Rare female version, Amber Braverman.
  • Riverdale: Sweet Pea, though a minor character, fits this trope.
  • Roseanne: Mark. His brother David was more on The Woobie side of things.
  • Roswell: Michael Guerin.
  • Scrubs: Some might argue that Dr. Cox is an example of this. Troubled? He perpetually sees a shrink, regularly abuses the people he cares about, and is in love with a woman that he hates. Cute? He appears to be the only doctor in the place that regularly exercises. Plus, he's very proud of being forty and retaining all of his hair.
    • Both The Todd and Turk have been shown as regularly working out at the hospital. That said, Cox is rather studly.
    • Adding to both the troubled and cute (or at least honorable) is Cox's violent temper over being a perfectionist. The cute/honorable part is that his perfectionism is over saving his patients' lives.
  • The Secret Life of the American Teenager: Ricky, who has one of the biggest Freudian Excuses ever seen.
  • Six Feet Under: Gabriel (and, arguably, most of Claire's love interests).
  • Stargirl: Rick Tyler
  • Supernatural: Dean, and it didn't take long for his brother Sam to catch up. Castiel also fell into this before too long, further proving that improbably good-looking men angsting a lot is kind of the show's main draw.
  • The Vampire Diaries: Both Stefan and Damon, but particularly Damon.
    • Jeremy also applies.
  • Veronica Mars: Logan.
    • Not to mention Weevil, a gangster who loves his grandma and falls for a certain blonde.
    • And Duncan, who had to go through being told his girlfriend was probably his sister and a mental disorder, and, at least for a while, thinking he had killed his sister. Then, in Season Two...
    • Given that Veronica herself falls into the female version of this trope, as well as most of the cast, let's just agree that the show RUNS on this trope, plus a good helping of Break the Cutie.
  • White Collar: Neal Caffrey. Troubled is a given, considering he's a con artist and everything, and cute... well, just look at those eyes.
  • Wizards of Waverly Place: Dean is painted with this trope in mind, but Alex Russo pulls it off much better. Alex manages this without being a Broken Bird, as a part of her Cool Loser goal and charm.

Tabletop Games[]


Video Games[]

Cquote1

 Renee: Ugh, you're so stubborn... I kinda like that.

Tony: Now's not the time for that!

Cquote2
  • The protagonist from Jak and Daxter becomes this as of the second game. You know, after all the Dark Eco experimentation.
  • Mass Effect presents FemShep's potential male love interests, in order of least-to-most emotional baggage: Jacob (refuses to be thought of as a "baggage guy") -> Kaidan (Training From Hell, Blessed with Suck) -> Garrus (Cowboy Cop with a lot of survivor guilt come the second game) -> Thane (former assassin who made his first kill when he was twelve). Now, where Liara would fit on this scale is another question...
  • Both non-DLC male Love Interests in Dragon Age II, lampshaded on occasion by Varric.
  • Zelos Wilder from Tales of Symphonia: he's a young, playful womanizer with long, red hair, flirting with every woman and having a bunch of Fangirls (his "Hunnies"). But later in the game, it is revealed that he never had any real parents, his father was absent due to his forced marriage to Zelos' mother, who died protecting him — yet in her last words states that he "should never have been born". This made him develop a great self-loathing and the feeling of worthlessness. In the superficial society of Meltokio, he was forced to lock his emotions away, therefore adapting to their expectations. This made him becoming the playful, careless guy he pretends to be.
  • All three Metal Gear protagonists so far:
    • Solid Snake is considered by the women and men of his universe to be extremely attractive and glamorous (at least, before he gets old), but has a history involving drinking problems, mental illness, emotional isolation, and murder, as well as being difficult to handle and having a moody personality. However, another character tells him, "That's what I like about you. That's what makes you human."
    • Big Boss is an Even the Guys Want Him character, known for his charisma, presence, and magnanimity, who has had romantic and pseudo-romantic relationships with both women and men. He killed his mentor, and spends the rest of his life attempting to come to terms with it to the point of trying to start nuclear wars. Still hot, though.
      • He wasn't trying to start nuclear wars. He was trying to stick it to The Man...who turns out to be an actual character (his former best friend!) in the story.
    • Raiden at first comes across as well-adjusted, but turns out to have been a recovering ex-child soldier with messed-up standards of intimacy. But...so bishie!
  • Kōya Aotsuki from the gay Dating Sim Morenatsu.
  • Touhou doesn't have highschools in it[1], but Fujiwara-no-Mokou definitely screams this trope. She's a Bifauxnen, she's cursed with Immortality, she has a Dark and Troubled Past (and it's an arguably-masculine, daddy-why-wont-you-acknowledge-me Freudian Excuse), she distances herself from others, yet will help when help is needed...HighschoolAU doujins where she appears typically cast her as a Japanese Delinquent who mellows out to Keine (and such doujins typically also casts Keine as some kind of Mary Sue who wins over people easily).
  • Norman Jayden from Heavy Rain is quite handsome, but spends most of the game struggling with a debilitating addiction to triptocaine and his overuse of the ARI. Things get even less pretty when he starts having withdrawal symptoms from trying to break himself out of the habit.
  • Lightning in Final Fantasy XIII is a female example.
  • Miguel Caballero Rojo in Tekken 6 is the black sheep of his family who keeps on picking fights, arguing mostly with his parents, and running away from home at an early age. But in all this, he has a soft spot for his younger sister, who's THE one treated him kindly no mattee what. And then, his sister is killed in her wedding day when the neighborhood the church is ends up bombed. Miguel, understandably, is extremely angry for it and is determined to find the culprit.
    • Said culprit turns out to be Jin Kazama, who also fits the trope. . . at first sight. The truth is far, FAR uglier and more tragic.
    • Hwoarang is an ex gang leader turned Taekwondo disciple and Badass Biker, who sees Jin as the opponent of his LIFE and will not stop trying to get a 100% fair, no-holds-barred fight from him. He fits in here perfectly.

Visual Novels[]

  • Inui Arihiko in Tsukihime, until Shiki stole all his luck with girls away, which made him a little bitter. In-story, Shiki himself might actually count, despite practically being a paragon of virtue. However, he actually tends to scare people due to familiarity and closeness to death. Yet the same people find themselves falling in love with him (Satsuki, Arcueid, Akiha, etc.) regardless.

Web Comics[]


Web Original[]


Western Animation[]

  • Subverted in Kim Possible: Ron tries to become this character to get a date. It doesn't work, and through a little accidental A.P., he becomes a full-on supervillain.
  • Zuko of Avatar: The Last Airbender. A leather jacket wouldn't fit the medieval Asian "look" of the show, so he makes up for it with a facial scar linked to his tragic Backstory.
  • Mako from The Legend of Korra. Growing up on the streets while simultaneously raising your little brother will make even the hottest firebender stoic and brooding.
  • Roger Klotz in Doug. He and Doug even get along once in a while, to show that he's not just a horrible jerk.
    • He's also somewhat of a woobie. Sometimes, his mom doesn't spend a lot of time with him, and his dad lives in the next town over (his parents are divorced), AND lives in a trailer park (in the Nickelodeon version). Kinda makes you wonder why he started bullying in the first place.
  • In one episode of Birdz, we meet Riley Raven, a good-looking bad boy who does pretty much whatever he wants, and is considered a "bad egg" for it. We later learn that he acts this way because of his workaholic parents never having time for him.
  • Batman, as epitomized here in Justice League, where he's trying to convince Wonder Woman why they they wouldn't be good together:
Cquote1

 Batman: "You're a princess from a society of immortal warriors. I'm a rich kid with issues. Lots of issues."

Cquote2
  • In one episode of The Simpsons, Millhouse temporarily became one of these, complete with anti-socialness, a leather jacket, and fangirls.
Cquote1

 Nelson: "He's troubled, but I can save him!"

Cquote2
  • Batman's protegé and succesor Terry McGinnis in Batman Beyond seems to be this in the first couple of episodes before he opens up and reveals that he's actually a responsible, altruistic young man. He was a straighter example in his Backstory, which included a stint in juvie.
  • Lance Alvers, aka Avalanche, in X-Men: Evolution. Essentially a cartoon version of John Bender from The Breakfast Club, who starts as a gigantic Jerkass but later shows that he's not completely heartless.
  • Johnny 13 of Danny Phantom, complete with rebel bike and all. He already has a girlfriend whom he loves despite his flirtatious nature and her constant nagging to keep his eyes focused on her at all times.
  • The characterisation of Jim Hawkins in the original Treasure Island mostly revolved around his maturation to a man who knows the meaning of honour and duty and can be held responsible for his actions. The Disney adaptation of Treasure Planet Woobiefied him by making him more of a troubled troublemaker trying to find his place in the world, with low self-worth and paternal abandonment issues.
  • Keith and Prince Lotor from Voltron: Legendary Defender approach the trope from different angles.
    • Keith's mother was forced to leave him when he was still a baby, then his father died when he was just a child. He basically had no real friends growing up, his school teachers wrote him off as a troublemaker not worth giving a chance, and he knows it's his own responsibility because he cultivated that persona to avoid being hurt again. Then when he finally did make a friend in Takashi "Shiro" Shirogane, he was declared dead after a disastrous space mission. His past, plus the events of the series, led to him breaking from stress and having to leave the team for a while to find himself. He gets better when he finds his Missing Mom and has the chance to properly bond with her and work through his issues.
    • Lotor is more or less an unwanted child. His mother almost died giving birth to him, was stricken with amnesia from the trauma, and refused to raise him. His father, who already had serious problems from before that, was horribly abusive and tried to raise him as a battle-hardened Galra, ignoring his Altean heritage, and finally had him exiled when Lotor failed to meet his expectations. Unlike Keith, though, he does not get better — even when he does gets a chance. He comes close when he forms a bond and a genuine romance with Allura, but all that time he was farming Alteans for quintessence, and Allura violently calls him out on it when she finds out from a girl whose brother was one of Lotor's victims, causing him to snap and attack Team Voltron because he simply cannot accept being called out on his mistakes. He ends up lost in the quintessence field and dying from overexposure.


Real Life[]

  1. IOSYS remixes notwithstanding
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