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A character's age isn't always easily apparent. There's "youngin's" who are Older Than They Look or Really Seven Hundred Years Old, and "adults" who are Younger Than They Look. However, sometimes the characters age is obfuscated—not from the rest of the cast, but us viewers.
For whatever reason, the artist has taken Artistic License in how they depict the character's age. They might be drawn as younger or older than they really are, or in vague enough strokes that we superimpose whatever age we want on the characters.
This can serve a few different purposes:
- The character is younger than he or she looks. This is often done in order to depict Fan Service, violence and other mature behavior that would otherwise be very inappropriate if the characters actually looked as young as they are. Some viewers might still find it inappropriate upon learning the character's canonical ages. This is much like a drawn version of Dawson Casting. See also Really Seven Hundred Years Old.
- The character is older than he or she looks. Artists probably do this to have mature storylines without losing younger viewers. This is somewhat like casting Hollywood Homely and Generic Cuteness, in that everyone is drawn in such a way that they seem attractive, or in this case the same age.
- The character models are sufficiently undefined that the player/viewer can superimpose whatever age they want on the protagonist, thus effectively bridging most any age gap to draw in a wide spectrum of viewers. Older and younger viewers will feel surprised after they find out their real age and realizing it's not the same as theirs.
- The character's precise age never figures into the design and is meaningless except in very broad terms from a story standpoint; it's specified only because of the common insistence that audiences can only relate to characters their age.
See also Vague Age, Age Is Relative.
Examples of Artistic Age include:
Deliberately drawn to look older[]
Anime and Manga[]
- In Saint Seiya the protagonists are all depicted as young men in their late teens/early twenties, but are actually 13-15. Considering the violence in the series, this may be to avoid the connotations of violence against children. Considering they all underwent Training from Hell around when they were ten years old, there are fans who consider their adopted father to be an inordinately cruel man rather than a Well-Intentioned Extremist.
- Case in point, this is, at most, a 15 year old girl and that's assuming at least 1–2 years have passed since the beginning of the series to that point.
- The main human (or equivalent) cast of Bleach look at least nineteen but are actually in the 15-17 range. Ironically, Rukia looks the most like that age, but is Really Seven Hundred Years Old. What makes this even more bizarre is that Chad is explicitly Younger Than He Looks on top of that.
- According to Word of God, Yoko from Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann is around 14 years old. The same age as Kid Hero protagonist Simon, who is quite a tad shorter.
- It has been explained that living underground for so long (with no visible sun) has messed up the calendar, and Nia is the only human with an accurate age.
- Also, Simon himself falls more towards the opposite extreme (perhaps to emphasize his Kid Hero aspect) as he's pretty damn short for his age (he's 14, but most people estimate him to only be about four feet tall).
- Note that Yoko's appearance barely changes after the Time Skip when she's twenty-one.
- Almost everyone in Revolutionary Girl Utena. Do they look 13-14 to you? Considering all the f@#$%d up stuff that goes on late in the series this may actually be a good thing. Exception: Elementary schoolers look like elementary schoolers, which makes Nanami look like one hell of a Shotacon for liking Tsuwabuki, when they're only ONE year apart, but sure you can't tell by looking at them.
- Arguably in Azumanga Daioh - with the exception of Chiyo, all of the main six girls look just as old as, if not older than, their teachers.
- Except for Echizen Ryouma and a few other first-years, none of the players on The Prince of Tennis look like they're supposed to be in middle school.
- Lampshaded when Kawamura's father thinks team captain Tezuka Kunimitsu is the coach, and offers him booze.
- Konomi Takeshi originally intended for the characters to be in high school, but was asked to change the setting to middle school for whatever reason. He agreed, but didn't bother changing the character designs.
- Witch Hunter Robin. Robin is 15. She falls in love with Amon, who's 25. You wouldn't be able to tell they're supposed to be different ages without being told - they both look mid-twenties.
- Show of hands: who here thinks Masaru and Toma from Digimon Savers look fourteen (especially considering that nineteen-year-old Masaru looks exactly the same in the Distant Finale)?
- Especially striking given that the previous seasons' kids all looked younger than their actual ages, and we are referring to their original Japanese ages - the American dub tended to add a year or so to the main character ages to account for the extreme independence compared with American kids of similar ages, giving them the impression of looking even younger than they should.
- In Gundam Wing everybody in the central cast looks older than they should. For reference, here are the protagonist Heero (age 15) and The Rival Zechs (age 19), except for Quatre (also 15) who looks younger.
- Until you see one of the Gundam pilots standing next to an adult.
- Of course this is just following a long Gundam tradition: some particularly weird ones are Judau Ashta [dead link] (age 14; looks at least 17), Bright Noa [dead link] (age 19; looks at least 22), and Kacylia Zabi (age 27; looks at least in her late 30s). Though Heero at least looks closer to his given age without the near- permanent scowl.
- The main characters in the Battle Royale manga are all supposed to be 9th graders, ages 14 to 15, (except Shogo, who got held back) but most of them look like they're in their twenties at least. Possibly to make all the extremely graphic violence a little easier to swallow.
- Shogo looks like a 40 to 50-year-old Shell-Shocked Veteran. He's... oh, sixteen?
- There are also some characters that are drawn younger; Yutaka, for example, appears to be about ten. This, however, is Truth in Television: there are quite a few people in early high school who look younger than they actually are.
- Umi and Fuu from Magic Knight Rayearth looked a bit like they should've 16 or 17, but they're really 14 years old. By contrast, pint-sized Hikaru, which is 14 years old too, is drawn to look around 12 or so — the two others first thought she was in grade school, and she admits she's a little small for her age...
- Show of hands: who here could tell Son Gohan was no older than eleven/twelve in the Cell Saga, just by looking at him? And who here thought he was at the very least sixteen? No wonder videogames call this form TEEN Gohan, instead of giving that monicker to...well, teenaged Gohan from the Buu saga (who is just "Gohan"). The manga makes this worse. While he looks relatively shorter, his well defined muscles still makes him look like a teenager, and he's nine!
- Also, Goku barely looks any different when he's 12 at the first world tournament he attends than he does at 15 when he's at the second. He only shows a significant change in appearance in the Time Skip where he went from 15 to 18. Same applies to Chichi, albeit she never appears as a 15-year old in the manga.
- Naruto does this a lot, mostly with antagonists. The Sound Five were fourteen years old and look 17/18, except Kimimaro who is 15 and almost looks like a 30-year-old (though that's at least partially because of his super-stern attitude/look on his face and illness). Hidan is 22, but looks about 30. Deidara is 19 and Jugo is 18, but they both look like they're in their mid-twenties (although when he stands next to someone else it becomes apparently that Deidara is relatively short). Itachi already looks significantly older than his official age of 17 when he's introduced, and a static character design leads him to look almost the exact same during flashbacks when Sasuke was 8 (which would make him only 13).
- A family photo [dead link] shows that he's always had those weird creases that make his face look a lot older than he is even as an adult since he was apparently born with them.
- Yumiko from Yoku Wakaru Gendai Mahou is 15 years old, but her body frame is closer to Misa, who's in her 20s.
- In the classic mecha series Invincible Steel Man Daitarn 3. Banjo, the main character, is 18 years old, but looks, acts, and is treated as a man at least in his late-20s, possibly even early 30s. More of one of the early-bloomer types.
- In Black Cat, Woodney, Train's imposter, is revealed to only be 20 years old. He doesn't look 20.
- Jin from Samurai Champloo has a face that looks more like someone in his early thirties, but he's actually only 20. Him complaining about his back hurting in one episode doesn't help either.
- Lucia, from Venus Versus Virus is only fifteen years old, though she looks like she is at best eighteen. The fact that she smokes doesn't make it any better.
- She looks more her age in the manga, beginning at volume 4.
- Rei and Asuka from Neon Genesis Evangelion appear roughly seventeen despite being fourteen, presumably for the sake of The Merch. Contrast them with their alleged classmate, Hikari.
- Most of the main cast of One Piece is a lot younger than they look. None of the crew members that joined before Robin broke 20, but they look like they're at least in their early 20s. Except for Luffy, who might pass for his age in the most dramatic scenes, but usually doesn't look older than 12.
- Inuyasha is the same way. Sango and Miroku, in particular.
- Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch has this (especially with 13-year-old heroine Lucia), mainly because Hanamori Pink can't seem to draw any female character (besides Yuuri and Seira, both very young girls) flatter than a D-cup. And that's why changing Lady Bat to a girl instead of a Wholesome Crossdresser doesn't work.
- Zettai Karen Children. Before the Time Skip, the main heroines are 10 and look 10, but afterwards, they're 12 and look more 15-16.
- Wandering Son has a few characters, mostly Doi and Chiba (especially Chiba). The latter did look like a ten - eleven year old at first, but starting around volume 4 her appearance became more of a mid-aged teenager. It matches her mature, and angsty personality, too.
- The predecessor to the manga, Shikii no Junin, relied heavily on Artistic Age. The characters can't be older then 11, but they all look like they're at least 16. It doesn't help that with Art Evolution, whenever Shimura draws the protagonists in her Wandering Son styles, he looks like his actual age (and a lot like Nitori).
- Eyeshield 21's characters have appearances based on their personality, maturity, or whatever their shtick is, despite all of them being around the same age (15-18). The series is very self-aware, however, and never fails to lampshade how absurd some of the characters look.
- in Bludgeoning Angel Dokuro-chan, Zakuro is canonically 9, when physically she looks about 18, due to her... features.
Comic Books[]
- Pretty much all Western comics, especially Marvel and DC. Characters who are supposed to be in their early- or mid-teens are regularly drawn with the musculature and...endowments of someone much older. This is so pervasive that listing the exceptions would be easier.
Video Games[]
- Angela in Silent Hill 2 is actually nineteen, even though she looks to be mid-thirties or so. This was done to make her look more than a little off.
- Crisis Core has an odd example: when Cloud first shows up in the game he's only 14 years old... but, Cloud doesn't look any different than usual, and is voiced by Takahiro Sakurai and Steve Burton, like always. The only reason you buy that he's a kid is his attitude.
- Looking at Angeal, you'd think he's hitting his mid to late thirties, what with the muscles and the Perma-Stubble. Turns out he's actually 25 years old, born after Genesis.
- Ages are amazingly hard to judge in general in the Final Fantasy universe. For an excellent example, let's take Auron from Final Fantasy X: he's widely considered to be a great warrior from the past generation, has plenty of wrinkles and greying hair, and yet is only thirty-five. Then again, his life has sucked badly enough to make him prematurely decrepit. And being dead and still aging probably didn't help either.
- This causes a lot of problems in the spin-off Dissidia Final Fantasy - Bartz looks and acts closer to Zidane's age (16) and is practically babysat by the extremely mature and stoic Squall. This tends to shock people to learn that Squall is only 17 and Bartz is his senior (and in fact one of the oldest heroes) at 20.
- Final Fantasy XII's Balthier counts as well. In the English dub, he sounds and acts like he ought to be mid-thirties or so (the age of his voice actor, basically.) The manual puts him in his early twenties, which rather ruins things. Plenty of stuff that sounds pleasantly snarky from an older man just sound like a young punk talking when the character is so young...
- Many of the playable characters in Pokémon look at least three or four years older than their supposed age (usually given as eleven). This is especially noticeable when it comes to the female characters, who tend to be more... developed than an average 10-year-old (and sometimes more so than half the adult female cast).
- A common complaint with Red and Blue in the remakes is that they no longer look eleven. In the timeskip, where they're fourteen now, they look around sixteen or seventeen.
- The one time when the series stated the main characters to be older than before, in the Fifth generation, they were given an age of 14, but only the main ones of Black 2 and White 2 actually looked that age. The next installment went with vague age instead.
- One Super Robot Wars 4Koma pointed this out by comparing Sanger Zonvolt and Tetsuya Onodera. Sanger is 29 but was designed to look like he's in his mid to late thirties, whereas Tetsuya is the same age but instead looks like he's in his early to mid twenties.
Deliberately drawn to look younger[]
Anime and Manga[]
- Manabi Straight! is all over this. All of the (18-year-old or so) students are cute and rounded, looking about 10.
- Same goes for Lucky Star, where the girls end the series as 18-year-olds that look like middle-school children or younger. Fans of the series have to constantly fend off lolicon jokes. Doubly so for Konata, who even by the standards of the show looks young. And then there's Ms. Kuroi, who is canonically in her late twenties, but could pass for a teenager.
- All those classmates of Nagi in Hayate the Combat Butler? Yeah, they're 13-14. They look about 10-11. The 16-17-year-olds look like 14-year-olds. Except Maria, who looks her age (17) despite Hayate claiming she looks older. (Note that in the manga, it was the READERS who asked that...go figure)
- Transformers Kiss Players. So very much. For reference, the titular Kiss Players are all in their twenties. They are all drawn to look somewhere around 8 at the oldest, and very disturbingly sexual things happen to them. Artist Yūki Ōshima says he did it "to make jaws drop". It worked.
- Most of the main cast of Eden of the East doesn't quite look their listed ages of 22 or 21, but rather more like 15-17 year old teenagers (or, in Micchon's case, like a preteen).
- The manga and first anime series of Yu-Gi-Oh! lampshade this; little Yugi is so short that he has a hard time convincing people that he's a high schooler.
- Kosuna from Desert Punk looks about 10-12, but is supposed to be 14.
- In the splatter-horror manga Bio-Meat Nectar, Kiryuu Shinpachi is the new character added in the final act. He appears to be six and a half feet tall, looks like any beefy hair metal guy from the late 80's and is 13 years old. He also has a job as a fisherman and can operate a boat expansive enough to house almost 4000 people.
- While many characters from Naruto fall towards the other side of this, Haku looks almost the same age as the rookie from Naruto's class, but Word of God states his age to be 15.
- The fact that Haku's first appearance prompted Kakashi to state there are people stronger than himself but younger than Naruto (12 at the time) probably adds to the confusion.
Comic Books[]
- Scott Pilgrim is a major offender. Thanks to O'Malley's art style, all the characters that are in their 20's look like teens. This includes Scott himself, who looks a lot teen-ish for a 23~24 years old.
Video Games[]
- Iji is supposed to be twenty but she looks like she's about high school age. Despite canonically being a decent height for a woman, the size of her gun gives her the appearance of Small Girl, Big Gun and the lack of assets to what could make her look older.
- Everyone in the Harvest Moon series. The main characters (in particular, your own character and potential spouses) look to be about 10-12 despite getting married and drunk. Your potential spouses' parents tend to look maybe in their 30s or 40s, but anyone younger almost always looks like they haven't even hit puberty yet. Bonus points if the game is in Chibi style.
- Rather squicky in the PlayStation 2 version of Harvest Moon: A Wonderful Life, where the 12 year old girl (Lumina) in the Gamecube version is now apparently 18 and available to marry... without changing her appearance at all. In the JPN version she was sixteen in SE.
- Does Ness seriously look 13?
- Note that those in charge of localizing the American version clearly didn't think so, and made a new clay model that makes him look considerably older, to the point that he could almost pass for 13. Compare the two models for yourself.
- Nearly the entire cast in Touhou to greater or lesser extents.
Western Animation[]
- In Danny Phantom there's Danielle who (at least her human half) looks like an eight-year-old... despite being twelve (sorta).
- The Gorillaz cast age in real time, but 2D still looks barely out of his teenage years despite currently being thirty-three.
Deliberately drawn to make their actual age ambiguous[]
Anime and Manga[]
- The anime Osamu Tezukas Metropolis has some artistic fudging of age running on. The protagonists range in age from "children", teenagers, middle aged and 50-something, yet they're all drawn with the same simple and aesthetically pleasing lines and generally short/young-looking bodies. Though the adults are clearly adults, their age seems to hover anywhere from 30 to 60, and the younger protagonists can be misidentified as having any age from 12 to 20. This seeming of childlike innocence is contrasted with the very dark and grim setting and plot.
Video Games[]
- In Final Fantasy IX all the characters are Chibi, so their real age is hard to pin down by just looking at them. Their ages ranged from a 6 year old white mage to a 33 year old knight and Quina, who's an nonhuman gag character with little in the way of biographical information like age or gender.
- Most characters in Disgaea may be Really Seven Hundred Years Old, but that doesn't mean that characters don't find themselves subject to this by merit of just comparing age. We seriously doubt that you would have guessed that Mao and Raspberyl are about the same age (1578), that Yukimaru is 20, or that Adell (17) is younger than Almaz (18), without looking at their listed ages.
- In the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise, while Sonic's age is stated to be 15, his actions, size, design, and manner of speech make it just as easy for him to be whatever age the player is, though it has been noted that he was once much younger than he is in the current game series.
Western Animation[]
- Two words: Mickey Mouse. And any other Classic Disney Shorts characters, really.
- The Zeta Project makes it hard to tell who's what age. Agent Lee and Agent Bennett are particularly ambiguous, while fandom assumes West is younger than the other characters due to his personality. But everyone else is arguable.
Other Examples[]
Anime and Manga[]
- Class 3-A in Negima is all around 14–15 years old. Their actual character designs run from being made to look older than their stated age to looking way younger than their alleged age, and even some who actually look like teenagers in the middle. This has gotten numerous lampshade hangings.
- Katekyo Hitman Reborn have largely avoided this with the main cast (especially the girls) actually looking relatively like 14/15-year olds. Bianchi (18) and Adult Lambo (15) who are drawn to look like adults and the two 5-year olds who are drawn as very younger toddlers are some of the more noticeable exceptions.
- Really jarring when, in a flashback, Gokudera is of a normal height at three years old.
- Baccano! has a case where three major characters (Firo, Luck, and Claire) were all roughly the same age (19, give or take a year), but don't look like they could be. Firo's status as being Older Than He Looks has been pointed out in the books, but few would ever pick up on the fact that Luck is physically (and chronologically) younger than Claire unless they looked at their family photos.
- Kamichama Karin runs the full spectrum: the younger characters (around 12-13) look more like elementary schoolers than middle schoolers, where as the older characters (14-15) look more like highschoolers. Fudged even more when it's taken in account that, save in dramatic scenes, everyone except the older characters is drawn as a chibi, which makes accurately ageing them just by looking very hard to do.
Video Games[]
- Infinite Space has many characters who fit in either of the first two categories. For an example of a character drawn older, there is Terzi, who is 33 yet appears to be somewhere around 50s. As for a character drawn to look younger, there is Hierarch Myagmar, who is 37 but looks like a man in his late twenties.
Webcomics[]
- Homestuck, amusingly enough, plays this trope both ways with the same characters. In the standard art style, the thirteen-year-old cast looks much younger (somewhat justifiable in that everyone was almost set to be ten years old), but in most of the alternate Art Shift styles which regularly crop up, everyone looks between sixteen and eighteen. Admittedly, no-one actually acts like they're thirteen; it's pretty clear that age is meaningless beyond protagonist John Egbert's birthdate being an Arc Number.
- Aggravated even further with the post-Scratch universe. The new set of protagonists are explicitly stated to be fifteen years old, but they look identical in age to the original four heroes.
Western Animation[]
- Phineas and Ferb are somehow a strange inversion of the trope: the title characters were originally supposed to be nine (and accounting for art style they look that age, given or take a year), but test audiences of various ages related to them, so the creators have declared them to just be "less than fifteen."