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  • Gwen Tennyson and Grandpa Max Tennyson in Ben 10 Alien Force, besides the obvious fact that Grandpa Max is a Badass Normal, he's super, super nice to everyone, but when you push his buttons it's not pretty. Same with Gwen, she's the nicest of the Power Trio, but when she blows up, THINGS BLOW UP WITH HER. (Obvious example: "Max Out")
  • The primal example: Mickey Mouse, though the classic nice guy and often rather hapless in gag situations, is nevertheless a force to be reckoned with when pushed too far. Even today in Kingdom Hearts he's a dynamic fighter in dramatic situations. Originally, the entire point was that you didn't expect to see a lovable guy like Mickey in a battle royale, so the sight on its own was funny.
  • Mitsuki from Kappa Mikey is generally good-natured and level-headed to the point of ridiculousness, given what goes on around her every episode. But she can be shockingly devious when the situation warrants it, and she knows her castmates frighteningly well. So far, only Lily and Gonard have been unfortunate enough to provoke her ire. Unusually for this trope, she got her revenge without resorting to violence... in one episode, Lily's computerized vanity put a pretty big bull's-eye on her head, and in another, Gonard's faked-injury ploy was easily turned against him.
    • It should be noted that Mitsuki is a retired spy and knows such things as how to kill a person with one touch. She shows off her bad side more effectively in the episode where the guy in the mailbox suit tries to get her to re-join the agency.
  • Posey in Mission Hill may be the resident pacifist and airy Granola Girl, but she can be made rather sadistic when insulted and her friends threatened. Read the exchange quote in this articles' Quotes page.
  • When the usually sweet Bubbles of The Powerpuff Girls is sufficiently provoked, she's been shown to eclipse both of her sisters Blossom and Buttercup in terms of raw anger and violence. Every single one of her emotions is taken to the extreme: When she's happy, she's bursting with euphoria, when she's sad, she loses all will to live, when she's afraid, she's paralyzed by fear. So, naturally, when she's angry, she is rage incarnate.
  • The title character of SpongeBob SquarePants is extremely tolerant and obnoxiously optimistic. Though, in one episode Squidward resigns from his job and stays at Spongebob's house until he can find a new job. He takes it too far and stays a lot longer than necessary, and while Spongebob doesn't completely lose his temper, he snaps a bit and drops some very obvious hints that Squidward should already look for a job. The latter still doesn't get it, though, so Spongebob finally breaks and takes Squidward all the way to the Krusty Krab. He tries to convince Mr. Krabs to hire Squidward back, and when that didn't work, the sponge finally snaps, outright strangles his boss, calls him a cheapskate, and finally yells at him on how stupid the situation is. It shows that even Spongebob has his limits...
    • In "Krusty Love", after Mr. Krabs has alternated between demanding very expensive gifts for Mrs. Puff and berating him for spending so much money, Spongebob snaps and rants at Krabs for a bit using some colourful language. Mrs. Puff acts shocked and has to look up a word, and when he finally storms off Krabs is left with jaw inches from the ground.
    • Just about every major character has had at least one moment like this. Patrick Star, for example, went on a rampage over not receiving a proper valentine gift when SpongeBob gifted everyone else, with him able to rip a costume in half, and came this close to cornering everyone at the fair on a dock. He's also tried to keep SpongeBob in a jar when he ran away to live in the wild, chasing him down and even pulling a sneak attack. Don't take the name of Texas in vain around Sandy or else she will chase you down with lasso skills so good they can induce explosions when the hapless victim is yanked down to the ground. When she's hibernating, her rampage is practically Unstoppable Rage if you dare rouse her from hibernation.
  • At first glance, The Incredibles' Bob Parr is your everyday sitcom family man - kind, helpful, loves his kids, sucks at his job. Threaten his wife and kids, however, and he will ANNIHILATE YOU, as an unfortunate Syndrome finds out...
    • EVERY SINGLE ONE of the Parr family members, and yes, that includes the baby as well. Action Mom Helen takes out four of Syndrome's mooks despite being caught in two closing doors, aptly named Violet later manages to beat another one down with a stick, and Dash runs circles around a gaggle of them due to Deadly Dodging skills coupled with his ability to run on water. And let's not forget that Punctuated Pounding in his sister's defense just a few scenes later.
  • Rhinox, from Transformers: Beast Wars is of the standard Gentle Giant variety. Once something does get through his skin, he's a raging mass of strength and firepower that even Proud Warrior Race Guy Dinobot has learned to tread lightly around.
    • That chapter where the Predacons capture him and make him evil. Destrucity ensues.
    • Primus help you if you even think of hurting Blackarachnia. Even if you can lay a hand on her, she's got Silverbolt, her Knight in Shining Armor who breathes this trope, and will make you regret touching the "dark poison of his heart."
    • Optimus. He'd rather not fight, even trying to reason with Megatron ("Why start this up again?"). Sufficiently pushed, he becomes a Determinator who will forcefully remind you that he is a Prime. (well, Primal. Same thing)
    • Tigatron, the resident Friend to All Living Things... who will make you regret it if you threaten to harm nature, like Inferno learned.
  • In Transformers Animated, we've got Bulkhead. Usually a Gentle Giant, though very good in battle, but if he even thinks you hurt his human friend Sari, prepare for a beatdown.
    • Sari, especially after she upgrades in season 3. Even before that she managed to scare off the Constructicons with nothing more than herself and a pair of roller skates.
  • Bulkhead's Transformers Prime counterpart is just as nice off-duty. But when he goes to war..., well,there's a reason he was part of the Wreckers, one of the most Badass Autobot combat units in multiple continuities. This is exemplified in one episode where he tries to tell his Human friend Miko to look away, right before he proceeds to tear out a Vehicon's spark.
  • GIR of Invader Zim, though more selfish and self-centred than most examples, is a sweet Genki Guy of a robot with an obsession for fast food and small animals, but when in "duty mode", he becomes a frighteningly efficient minion of The Empire. Mercifully, it usually only lasts for a few seconds, but on the one occasion he was locked in this mode not only did GIR accomplish more in ten minutes than Zim had over the entire series, it almost killed him.
  • In the Tale Spin episode "In Search of Ancient Blunders", Adventurer Archaeologist Myra is as friendly and polite as you could hope—but she has her limits. After she, Baloo and Wildcat spend a day being chased around a pyramid by the Air Pirates (who want to loot it) and a Mummy (who wants to protect it), Myra finally loses her temper and yells at the mummy: "We're trying to help you! You can stomp around all day growling like an idiot, or you can give us a hand!" The mummy takes Myra's advice and gets rid of the Air Pirates.
    • Then, there's Molly's shin attacks on Covington and his goons in "Molly Coddled".
  • In the Droopy Dog cartoons, the title character is a stoic and monotone character unfazed by any problem. However, if you do something truly petty in cruelty (especially to "The Dame"), he will walk up to you and note in the same monotone, "You know what? That makes me mad." Then he proceeds to demolish you with the same dispassion as before.
  • Shirley the Loon of Tiny Toon Adventures is the very model of serenity and inner peace, but when a plan for her and the other girls to abscond to the prom of a rival school ends with Miss Loon doused in punch, she snaps, in an obvious nod to Carrie.
    • In another episode, Shirley is driven to distraction by Plucky when he wants her to channel a genius into him to help him ace a math test he didn't study for. She ends up finally snapping and killing him with kindness by channelling Albert Einstein. It seems that Einstein wasn't that good at math...
  • Gadget from Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers snaps twice: in "The Case of the Cola Cult" when her friends are endangered and her inventions are sabotaged and, in "Dirty Rotten Diapers", when her repeated attempts to solve the situation peacefully are met with nothing but extreme hostility and violence from the subject in question.
    • Even more to the point is nice guy and all around fun loving Dale, who upon losing his memory becomes for all intents and purposes the Chipmunk equivalent of Rambo.
  • Marge, the endless suffering matriarch of The Simpsons family, has snapped on a few occasions when Homer screwed up once too many (especially in The Movie).
  • Aang, from Avatar: The Last Airbender, is this goofy little teenager, okay? He's a monk, he loves riding animals and dropping pudding cakes on fuddy-duddy heads, and playing with kids and generally being the most sickeningly sweet person he possibly can. He can fight pretty darn well, but always goes for disarms or knockdowns... until you cross the Moral Event Horizon in his presence. Then his eyes start glowing and he becomes a demigod capable of throwing hurricanes, tidal waves and mountain ranges around like softballs. He is so terrifyingly powerful and destructive he scares the crap out his enemies, innocent bystanders, his friends and even himself. At this point, just stop moving and silently await your doom. There's not much else you can do. Apart from crap your pants, but you've probably done that already.
  • In the series finale of both Superman the Animated Series and Justice League Unlimited, Superman (see the comics section) encounters situations that stretch even his patience. In TAS, after taking some of it out on a few humans (some more deserving of it than others), he goes into Unstoppable Rage mode on the cause of it all. In Justice League, he finds it an excuse to cut loose on an extremely powerful foe - the same one who pushed him over the edge last time, in fact - all the while ranting about how nice it is to let go of his inhibitions when he normally has to be so careful, because as far he's concerned the world might as well be cardboard.
    • The episodes featuring the Justice Lords provide a pretty terrifying example of what happens when Luthor pushes Superman too far.
    • Superman turns into this in Superman/Batman: Public Enemies when Batman sacrifices himself to manually steer a rocket into a kryptonite asteroid (but not really). Superman utters the line "That's my best friend, and you just killed him." before tearing into Lex. Judging by the look on Luthor's face after the monologue, it's reasonable to believe that he just planted the last of his bravery in his underwear.
    • The Flash gets his own shot at this too. The next time you start thinking that he doesn't extend much beyond being the goofy, flirtatious, practical joker of the League, just remember that this is the man who can make you explode with his bare hands or rip you to pieces by circumnavigating the globe and coming back to smack you one. On one occasion when Lex Luthor and Flash had their brains swapped Luthor had absolutely no reservations about using Flash's powers to their full extent - and runs highly destructive circles around the entire League as they're trying to capture him. Flash doesn't use a couple of his abilities for a good reason.
      • And even earlier than that, in the episode "Secret Society", shortly after the League temporarily disbands on bad terms, Flash is trying unsuccessfully to find the location of his personal villain, The Shade. He tries to interrogate several of Shade's known henchmen, with no luck. It culminates in him attempting to intimidate one thug by dangling him over the edge of a rooftop by his legs. Of course, the thug isn't intimidated and even mocks Flash's attempt at a Batman-style interrogation... but by this point Flash is utterly fed up (though his face doesn't show it).
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 Thug: Look, I know Batman. I once ratted out a counterfeiter to Batman. And believe me, you are no Batm-- (Flash drops him) aaaAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHH!!!

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  • The Spectacular Spider Man: Just like the comics, Spider-Man is an example.
  • Arguably, Jack Fenton from Danny Phantom. Often the Bumbling Dad, he retains an optimistic, jolly attitude. But when his loved ones are threatened, he turns into a straightforward Badass Normal and then his victims are in for a world of hurt.
    • Jack? JACK? No no no no no. MADDIE.
    • Danny himself applies; he's normally a laid-back, friendly kid... when he's human. It's when he's not that you really have to watch out for, as numerous lesser foes found out... as did Vlad, if in another future.
  • Gi from Captain Planet and the Planeteers is usually the Team Mom and peacemaker who tries to see the good in all humans. She also tried to drown someone when she found out he shot her good friend. You won't like her when she's angry.
    • Ma-Ti is the trope namer for What Kind of Lame Power Is Heart, Anyway?, but that's only because he's so kind he never had the heart (hah) to use it to its full potential. Gaia said Heart was the most powerful of the five for a reason, which is displayed in detail anytime Ma-Ti decides to get serious.
  • The Venture Brothers: Do not be rude to Triana Orpheus in the presence of Dean Venture. He may throw sissy punches, but he'll throw a lot of them, and he won't give you any warning first.
    • Dr. Orpheus, for all his melodramatic flair, is generally a decent guy. Loving father, good friend to the Venture Family and, of all the people seen in the show, the most genuinely heroic. HOWEVER: Push him too far and you'll pay for it. As "TWO FOUL-MOUTHED REDNECKS!" learned to their regret.
  • In a recent episode of Metalocalypse, Toki Wartooth had been pestered by a fan who kept shouting in his face during a show. He grew infuriated and pummeled (possibly even killed) the guy to no end. Even Murderface, who was going to kill him for taking his domain page name, quickly changed his mind.
    • This was foreshadowed in Dethdad. Senator Stampington explains Toki's pent-up aggression and flat out says "Toki Wartooth will kill us all."
  • Tintin's Professor Calculus is normally a soft-spoken, mildly eccentric, rather charming old man, who, by virtue of his poor hearing and generally good demeanor, does not notice most of the jokes at his expense, and doesn't care about those he does hear. But then Captain Haddock accused him of "acting the goat"...
    • In the comic at least, his rant at Captain Haddock lasts for several pages, and includes shouting that he is not the Cloudcuckoolander that everyone believed him to be. It ends when he shows Captain Haddock the nuclear powered rocket as big as a skyscraper which he designed and built.
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  Calculus: See what "the goat" CREATED!

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  • The strong but good-natured Ed in Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy is normally a Gentle Giant who doesn't even get mad when his bossy kid sister Sarah (AKA the "rotten-to-the-core cherished one") abuses his trust. But when he's in a bad mood in the episode "Little Ed Blue", even Sarah is intimidated by him:
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 Sarah: You can't kick me out, I live here too!

Ed: So move!

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    • This applies to Jimmy in a few episodes. The first one it appears in has him pulling off an extremely complex (and cruel) scheme as revenge against the Eds, all because Eddy gave him a wedgie.
    • In the Picture Show, Edd finally snaps. Ed is terrified, while Eddy goes from nonplussed to breaking down in tears.
    • In one episode, Edd manages to do this completely by accident, due to a series of accidents and misunderstanding that kept resulting in someone getting hurt. It took a Beware the Nice Ones moment on Jimmy's part to put an end to it.
  • Ron Stoppable in Kim Possible. He's a generic goofy sidekick that mostly gladly acts as a distraction, but if you get him pissed of by either hurting Kim or boasting about destroying Bueno Nacho he gets in such a Mystical Monkey Rage that he will kick your ass. On the occasions that he goes evil even Shego is afraid, and the only major villains on the show to have been Killed Off for Real are Warhok and Warmonga. Why? They threatened to kill Kim, and keep her corpse as a trophy in front of Ron.
    • Kim herself is usually pretty pleasant even to her villains, joking good-naturedly as she rounds them up again. But push her too far and... well, it's not pretty, as Bonnie, Drakken, and Shego have all found out.
  • Looney Tunes: "Of course you realize, this means war!". Practically it was the case with the whole cast, but Bugs Bunny made it his catch phrase.
  • Seemingly invoked on Casper in one of the older cartoons, Fright from Wrong, when his nasty uncles force-feed him a huge jar of "Mean Pills" that practically warp him into a red devil creature. Naturally, this backfires when Casper spends the rest of the short putting them through the wringer (both literally and figuratively). It would appear that this example wouldn't count since Casper was drugged to act like that, right? Ehhh, not so much... he reveals at the very end that he never took the pills; all the cartoonish brutality he'd unleashed on his uncles was all him just trying to teach them a lesson! The little Friendly Ghost really can be scarier than given credit for.
  • In Teen Titans, lovable and quirky Beast Boy, who usually runs away from anyone powerful and evil, when sufficiently provoked is quick to bring the pain. All of which are surpassed by the penultimate episode of Season 5 (which starts off with his growling "NOW try and follow me!" and blowing up some fallen robots, right after the Brain is done gloating over his victory over all the other Titans), in which Beast Boy assembles a rag-tag team, leads it properly, and takes on all of the show's villains at the same time. He closes it by quipping "Brain Freeze", after freezing the Brain.
    • When Starfire drops her usual sweet, gentle, Friend to All Living Things persona and goes into full on Tamaranian battle mode, ass-kicking will ensue. In her chronological first appearance she is captured by the Gordanians as a slave/trophy, and breaks out so fiercely she leaves her captors terrified, going on a rampage in Jump City where she fights evenly with the other Titans. All while being shackled and prevented from using her full powers. Heck, the main reason the Teen Titans formed in the first place was to get her to calm down!
    • Raven, who while more cynical, is generally a fairly reserved person. God help you if you piss her off, though, because this is a demi-goddess girl whose powers are regulated by her emotions, and as both Slade and Dr. Light can attest, an angry Raven is terrifying, not to mention deadly. Season 4 shows that Raven is more powerful than all four of her teammates combined under the right circumstances.
    • Terra is a cute, big-eyed teenager who likes joking and goofing around. She can also be extremely violent and a Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds when provoked.
  • Dukey from Johnny Test can kick serious butt if pushed too far. After all, he destroyed a FRIDGE with a flying kick in one episode.
  • Sweet, innocent, adorable little Ding-A-Ling Wolf from the Hanna-Barbera Hokey Wolf cartoons. One time he beat the living crap out of a Killer Robot with a HUGE CLUB because the robot was strangling Hokey.
  • In Family Guy, Meg Griffin has been described by Brian as "far sweeter and kinder than the typical American girl" and has put up with a LOT of abuse these past couple of years. However under the right circumstances, Meg could unleash her repressed rage on anyone that pisses her off enough or have prison life turn her into hardened badass that her whole family is DEATHLY afraid of.
  • Most of the time Kuki/Numbuh 3 from Codename: Kids Next Door is the team's sweet ditzy Genki Girl, but when she does get angry, epic asskicking usually ensues.
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 Mr. Boss: Quick! RUN LIKE LITTLE GIRLS!

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  • The quiet, and usually introverted Fern from Arthur has shown a willingness to take (non-violent) revenge on those who mock her, as the episodes "Draw!" and "War of the Worms" can attest.
  • Nabu from Winx Club is usually a nice person, but during S4 episode 24, after the evil shapeshifter Duman turns into a monster and reveals that the Black Circle lied about their apparent Heel Face Turn and that they are really planning to seal the Earth fairies away for good, Nabu proceeds to single-handedly defeat Duman, by trapping him inside a magical sphere which then explodes. Brandon even comments on this afterwards:
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 Brandon: Hey, remind me never to make you angry!

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    • This seems typical of all fairies. Sure, they're nice most of the time, with them being all about love. The first time Bloom got angry, she chased away the Trix and a couple dozens witches. At times Tecna is positively murderous, and (in the original version) can't understand the concept of fighting another day. And while the Earth Fairies are very nice when calm, when furious they become The Fair Folk, genocidal tendencies included.
    • Regarding the Winx, this especially goes for Flora, who dislikes fighting of any kind, has few offensive attacks and literally feels pain when nature is destroyed. Don't call her pathetic and do not hurt her little sister!
  • The Galaxy Rangers? Lawful Good (Zach), Neutral Good (Niko), Chaotic Good (Doc), and Depending on the Writer (but never lower than Lawful Neutral) (Shane). However, Lawful Good has taken starships out of orbit with his Arm Cannon. Neutral Good? Plays like a cross of a Jedi and a Biotic, carries a BFG, and is also very good with unarmed combat. Chaotic Good is a Badass Normal in a fight, and manged to take down one of the nastiest villains the show whipped up singlehandedly. Either that or he'll just make every computer in the room riot. Depending on the Writer was designed as a living weapon. Just get out of the guy's way...Worse is Zozo, who is a short, unassuming alien from an agricultural world and the friendliest, most cheerful guy ever. Piss him off or threaten the folks he's with? Well, he's got an entry under Ambadassador for a reason.
  • On Total Drama Island, Beth and Lindsay spend a good deal of the season under Heather's heel, which makes these instances all the more satisfying. First, Beth finally realizes that she's serving someone she hates, and as a result drops the challenge and begins shooting her with her paintball gun. Then, much later, after Heather pretty much tosses Lindsay aside despite total loyalty, she responds by cussing her out, much to Heather's shock (and everyone else's approval).
    • Harold took a lot of torment from Duncan over the course of the first season. When Duncan's love interest is suddenly an inexplicably voted off, the end of the episode reveals it was because Harold cheated to switch the votes.
    • In "Greece's Pieces": Dogged Nice Guy Cody has been trying to get Gwen's attention for about three seasons. Instead, Gwen wound up kissing Duncan, even though he was still dating Gwen's friend(ish) Courtney. Cody had a slight Heroic BSOD after finding out, during which Duncan showed up, unaware what was going on. Then he insulted Cody's outfit. Then Cody knocked him out in one punch. Can be found here.
    • In Revenge of the Island, Zoey is this trope personified, undergoing a Madness Makeover and a drastic change in personality in "Eat, Puke, and Be Wary" after being pushed too far. Fortunately, the personality change does not last long.
  • In DC Showcase: Superman/Shazam!: The Return of Black Adam, Black Adam learned that even though Captain Marvel is the ultimate nice guy boyscout (even compared to Superman), presenting him a sadistic choice and then trying to kill the hostage anyway is a BAD IDEA. It doesn't matter how experienced or powerful you are, you WILL get your butt kicked. SOUNDLY.
  • My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic has Fluttershy, the kindest, shyest, most gentle pony in all Equestria... and also the scariest pony in all Equestria. Her Friend to All Living Things ability allows her to pacify everything from an enraged manticore to a gigantic adult dragon with as much ease as she soothes a frightened rabbit (the latter of which she subdued by lecturing it into submission). Her Stare is so powerful it allows her to stare down a cockatrice as it's turning her to stone. Some assertiveness training results in her taking 5000 levels in jerkass, enough to drive Rarity and Pinkie Pie to tears. And when the animals near the Grand Galloping Gala don't return her affections, well...
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    • Normally, Princess Celestia is very calm and collected, and seems to enjoy having a little fun with her subjects now and then. Then we have the first part of "The Return of Harmony", where she smacks the villain with a Shut UP, Hannibal TWICE, and then tells him point-blank to quit screwing around and answer her questions. He begrudgingly tosses out a riddle and leaves before she can grill him any further.
      • In the season two finale we finally see Celestia fight, complete with Pre-Ass-Kicking One-Liner. True, she loses, but that surprised EVERYONE, including the villian.
    • Twilight Sparkle is the poster mare for Adorkable and No Social Skills, whose passion for knowledge is only challenged by her desire to be a good friend. She's also the most powerful unicorn in Equestria with an incredible well of magic at her disposal, and is entirely capable of unleashing the hurt on anypony she desires. "Lesson Zero" even shows that she's just as capable of sowing chaos and disharmony as Discord.
    • You'd think that the perpetually cheerful Genki Girl with borderline Reality Warper powers would be an excellent candidate for this trope, but Pinkie Pie repeatedly subverts it. In "Griffon the Brush Off", her reaction to proof that Gilda is a grade-A jerkface is to throw her a party, because she thinks Gilda is just stressed and needs to unwind. In "Party of One", when she thinks her friends have abandoned her she avoids them altogether and throws her own party with various Companion Cubes, in stark contrast to the far more destructive Sanity Slippages of Fluttershy and Twilight. And when Applejack breaks a Pinkie Promise in "The Last Roundup" she breaks out the scary voice, leads a pursuit across the desert, and when she finally catches her she... demands Applejack apologise.
    • Rarity is obsessed with style, grace and glamour, and as the Element of Generosity she is usually willing to help in any way she can. She also doesn't hesitate to kick a manticore in the face or fight a gang of (adolescent) dragons to defend her friends.
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 Rarity: Fighting's not really my thing, I'm more into fashion, but I'll rip you to pieces if you touch one scale on his cute little head!

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    • Princess Cadance (the real one) is a kind and sweet Love Goddess and used to work as a babysitter. However, when she is kidnapped and her husband-to-be is about to marry her evil double, she shows nothing but determination, repeatedly defies the changeling queen (even after said queen defeats Princess Celestia), and then helps deliver the Heart Beat-Down that blows the changelings across the continent!
    • All of the Mane 6 qualify for this if they are forced to fight.
  • Phineas and Ferb: "GET ON THE TRIKE!" Note: Phineas does this after trying to reason with Candace.
  • Ant-Man is The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes' team pacifist, and will continue trying to negotiate a peaceful end to a confrontation well past the end of his teammates' patience. Unless the bad guys he's trying to talk down hurt The Wasp. Then they will get owned.
  • Princess Katherine, from Disney's Gargoyles series, started out as a brat but ended up essentially giving up her whole world to protect the orphaned gargoyle eggs. Then, when Demona and Macbeth end up attacking the young gargoyles, Katherine grabs Demona's laser-rifle and knocks her out. To repeat, she beat Demona in a fight, with a weapon she'd never seen before that night, when she's never been seen fighting on-screen before. Everyone is very impressed.
  • Megas XLR. Coop is a nice, easygoing guy who enjoys all things food. Threaten his friends, insult his robot, or deny him a Megaslush, and he becomes an outright berserker. Pretty much every villan was stupid enough to hit at least one.
  • Gentle Giant Modo from Biker Mice From Mars. He's basically one of the nicest characters on Biker Mice, but it's a very bad idea to provoke him by calling him a rat or threatening his bike.
  • The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh: "Trespasers Will Be Shot!!!"
  • Doug, the adorable and pitiful Koala-Man from Ugly Americans who cries Once an Episode, was recently revealed to be a former international assassin.
  • "Pepper" Potts from Iron Man: Armored Adventures. That's probably one of her trademark aspects of her personality (aside from her Motor Mouth that is.) Nomrally, this girl is goofy, bubbly, and talkative, but if the situation calls for it, she shows a somewhat violent side of her. An example of this is when she mentions offhand to Gene that she got a guy deported for espionage. When the armor designs are stolen and sold to Stane and Hammer, Pepper suggests Tony steal them back or trash their companies trying amidst various angry growls.
  • Francine Smith from American Dad. She can snap in a rather disturbing manner.
  • Anet from ThunderCats (2011) is a Forgetful Jones Elephant monk, kind natured and peacable, who, like the rest of his Village, is more prone to meditating on a problem than taking direct action. When their village is invaded by Lizard Folk, the dire straights prompt a collective Awakening the Sleeping Giant, and Anet in particular leads the charge. He tosses one of the invading force's Walking Tanks into its neighbor, and makes short work of the Lizard general's bayonetted rifle, wrenching it out of his hands and bending it in half. In response, the general flees in terror.
  • Camp Lazlo: Be very afraid if you ever manage to push Extreme Doormat Slinkman to his breaking point, as happened in "Squirrel Scout Slinkman".
  • It's very, very hard to make Optimus in Transformers Prime legitimately angry at you. This is a good thing for everyone involved.
    • Bumblebee is usually a very friendly and sweet character. However, when Megatron nearly killed Raf, Bumblebee's Berserk Button was pressed and he would have shot and attacked the former if Arcee and Bulkhead didn't hold him back.
  • Miss Martian from Young Justice is a sweet bubbly girl most of the time. She's also a White Martian whose Psychic Powers dwarf those of the Martian Manhunter. She's also deeply ashamed of her natural form (which looks like something straight out of a sci-fi horror film) and will do just about anything to keep it a secret. "Anything" includes psychically rendering her own teammates unconscious. Which is tame compared to what she did to the villain who threatened to expose her secret — she erased his mind, leaving him a drooling vegetable.
  • Porky Pig, in The Looney Tunes Show is an Extreme Doormat, letting most people, especially Daffy, take advantage of his nice-guy persona. Even going so far as to give Daffy all of his money so Daffy could have a kidney transplant. But when Bugs revealed to Porky that Daffy lied and used all the money to buy a yacht, an enraged Porky beat the ever-living crap out of him.
  • Strawberry Shortcake: You know if the titular heroine got her Berserk Button pressed when she has the Jerkass Ball. This occured in the third special where she got driven off by a scandal and came back for revenge after being re-motivated by a skunk called Soufflé who had a similar problem.