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"Now, as her big brother it's your job to keep your sister safe"
—Bulma, Dragon Ball
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One very common way to establish that a male character is a Nice Guy (even if the niceness is hidden under a gruff exterior) is to give him an instinctive desire to be a big brother to smaller, younger, weaker or female characters. These other characters may be truly younger siblings, or they may be completely unrelated, or even older, and the tendency for males to act as their protector is the Big Brother Instinct. Additionally, female examples not only exist, but as time passes they've been in a constant raise - especially if the girl is a tomboy or a substitute mom to her siblings.
The Big Brother Instinct serves to explain why fan attraction to Moe tropes and devices can be an emotional, rather than sexual, response. There seems to be something inherently comforting to an awkward male about being looked up to by a younger girl for support. Therefore Moe can be wish fulfillment about taking a "big brother role" instead of about being a Love Interest (although that version is common too).
If both characters are male, the older (or in the case of twins, the physically stronger) brother will usually act as the younger/smaller brother's protector, to the point of treating him like a child, even when the younger brother is fully capable of protecting himself. This behavior can come across as loving and nurturing or as condescending and smothering. If the older brother goes to extreme, morally questionable lengths for the sake of the younger sibling, then they are a Knight Templar Big Brother. And while Good Feels Good, it could feel too good.
This trope has some merit in real life as aside as the physical growth advantage over a younger sibling and parents usually putting pressure on first borns to perform the job first born children have been shown to usually get the most nutrients from a mother inside the womb when it is her first time giving birth. This tends to lead to first borns even as adults having more developed bodies with first born males having broader shoulders and be taller than younger male siblings (assuming every other factor is the same) while first born females having a bigger bust and wider hips than younger ones at the same age (though this can vary).
Compare Cool Big Sis, Mama Bear, Papa Wolf and Promotion to Parent. Contrast Big Brother Bully.
Has nothing to do with the TV show Big Brother. The 1984 meaning of "Big Brother" is covered under Big Brother Is Watching.
Anime and Manga[]
- Kenshiro is practically this trope incarnate. While usually brooding and serious, one of the few things that makes him genuinely crack a smile is being around Bat and Lin. Make the mistake of threatening and/or hurting them, and Kenshiro will end you. Painfully.
- Narumi of Karakuri Circus, in spades. Masaru begins to mimic him.
- Guy Shishioh in GaoGaiGar. Just hurt or threaten Mamoru in front of him and start counting how long it takes for him to wipe the floor with you. Mamoru even calls him "Big Bro".
- Code Geass has HUGE examples.
- Lelouch is the king of this trope. Has anyone else on this page started a war for their little sister? Then there's his reaction to her possibly falling in love with Rai, the main character in the Dating Sim Lost Colors, though that one is Played for Laughs.
- He also intended to set Nunnally up with his best friend Suzaku, who cares about her almost as much as Lelouch does. Things get slightly derailed when Suzaku is revealed as a Britannian mecha pilot, but by the end of the series, he's the one taking care of Nunnally after Lelouch dies — which is exactly what he planned from the start.
- Cornelia similarly has this going on for Euphemia. Prior to their exile, she also treated Lelouch and Nunnally this way, and she falls back into old rhythms when she reunites with Nunnally near the end.
- The Chinese officer Li Xingke has one of these for his lady of liege, the considerably younger Empress Tianzi. It's implied that his love for her (and vice versa) is the reason that she can't be "conveniently" married off to a Britannian prince by the Eunuchs.
- Lelouch is the king of this trope. Has anyone else on this page started a war for their little sister? Then there's his reaction to her possibly falling in love with Rai, the main character in the Dating Sim Lost Colors, though that one is Played for Laughs.
- Kyon from Suzumiya Haruhi. He set himself up as a Stoic in the novels for ages. Being the Unreliable Narrator that he is, we can all see that he's Not So Stoic. Still, he was just annoyed when Haruhi grabs him by the collar and slams the back of his head onto her table. Even then, it was mainly because she disrupted the class.
- During the filming of their amateur, plotless movie, Haruhi gets Mikuru to drink alcohol, trying to get a certain effect out of her. He almost attacks Haruhi. Let us repeat. He almost attacks a reality-warping goddess.
- In the 7th book, Mikuru is kidnapped. Kyon flies into a rage (for the second time in the novels), and immediately calls up Haruhi for help, forgetting she still doesn't know she's a Reality Warper. He claims it was a failed practical joke to cover up.
- In the 10th novel after Yuki is incapacitated by the Sky Canopy Domain Kyon completely loses it and runs out to track down Kuyou Suou and personally make her fix it. To reiterate, he actually went out of his way to get into a confrontation with an alien interface who he knows has god-like powers. Naturally, he's totally out-classed but it's the thought that counts.
- In the fanfic Kyon: Big Damn Hero, this gets turned up to eleven. Kyon will get violent if you threaten any
of the weakerbrigade members.
- Mai Tokiha from Mai-HiME has a Big Sister Instinct towards her kid brother Takumi.
- Shattered Angels: Kyoshiro and Kazuya. It's a bad one too; people die. Quite a few people, actually.
- A much straighter example would be Tsubasa and Souma in Kannazuki no Miko: the entire conflict between them stems from Tsubasa's desire to protect Souma as effectively as possible, which unfortunately involves pulling him to The Dark Side and killing his love interest. Towards the end, however, Tsubasa recognizes that Souma has wishes, too, and helps him to reach his goals. Also, Tsubasa killed their father who beaten up Souma when were very young and had to live on the run from then on, which is why they were separated.
- Kaon for Tarlotte.
- D.Gray-man:
- Mad Scientist Komui Lee is fiercely overprotective of his younger sister and only relative, Lenalee. The only way to wake the fiercely lazy Komui up is by saying "Your sister's getting married!". Since SHE is the one of the duo with the monster-killing super powers, he's got a lot to worry about. The reason he joined the Black Order was to be with Lenalee, who was basically kidnapped by them after she was found to be compatible with Innocence, and kept trying to escape to find her brother. Thus, the two keep each other in the Order. His obsession with his sister is mildly creepy.
- Link even weaponizes this at one point, threatening Allen with telling Komui that he's alone in a sealed room with Lenalee if he doesn't unlock a door that's shutting the good inspector out.
- Allen uses it to blackmail Branch Head Bak, saying he'll tell Komui about the pictures of Lenalee he has in his office.
- In Cardcaptor Sakura, Yukito jokes that, despite Touya's teasing of Sakura, he has a protective instinct when it counts, something he indeed acts out, secretly aware of her Magical Girl alter life. Heck, Syaoran got to witness it right in his first episode: he committed the mistake of trying to force Sakura hand him the Clow Cards she already had, and Touya got so furious that he jumped over the fence separating his school section from theirs while yelling at him to leave her alone. The trope is one of the two reasosn why Touya willingly gives up on his Psychic Powers to empower Yue, Yukito's magical being true personality, and let him stay with Sakura. (The other is that he's in love with Yukito himself.)
- Possibly played straight or inverted (depending on whether he is oldest or not) Syaoran acts as this towards his cousin Meiling in the anime adaption. His treatment of Sakura arguably evolves somewhat into this at first (even if it ultimately becomes a somewhat different relation by the end of the series).
- Subverted brutally in Saint Seiya, when Ikki beats the stuffing out of his younger brother. He eventually turns around, playing the trope straight just as brutally for the rest of the 100+ episodes, to the point where the Reluctant Warrior younger brother getting hurt in a fight became a sure-fire way to summon Ikki from his lone wolf brooding cave, screaming bloody murder and mind rape (in anything not drawn straight from the original manga).
- Haré+ Guu: Haré has a big brother instinct towards his frequently irresponsible mother. Guu teases him about his "Mazacon" (mother complex) from time to time.
- Averted and subverted (naturally) in Revolutionary Girl Utena with Nanami and her brother Touga. Whereas Nanami's big brother complex is extreme to the point that she is in love with him, Touga couldn't care less about her well being. Enter Mitsuru, a fourth grader, who she uses as a whipping boy after he saves her. She sees him as her servant, and he is fond of her-in fact, Utena and the others suspect that Mitsuru has a crush on Nanami, but he reveals that he wants to protect her like a brother would, unlike Touga. During his Black Rose duel episode, this is mentioned in the form of him being sexually and emotionally confused as the pre-teen verging on teenager thjat he is. It's shown that his interactions with the teenage Nanami piqued his curiosity about being grown-up, so he reads books about "adult"-related topics.
- Subverted again (and to a twisted level) with Akio and Anthy. The former needs the latter to be the Rose Bride and forces her to suffer emotional and physical hardships such as being impaled with a million swords every time Akio tries to open the Rose Gate, the end goal of the duels, and forcing her into sex on a weekly basis. By the end of the series, though, she decides to leave him at last after God knows how long, yet despite his protests, he doesn't pursue her. Plus it's all but stated that he used to be kind and protective of her, until he completely cracked.
- Subverted (again) and then played straight with Miki and Kozue. While he does protect his sister and genuinely care for her (unlike Touga), he projects the image of his sister when she was younger onto Anthy, whereas because of a childhood incident, Kozue becomes something of an Attention Whore to annoy Miki (and there is possibly another reason). Miki is oblivious of her reasoning until Kozue's Black Rose duel. Compared to the rest of the student council (and the other duelists for that matter), though, Miki is more level-headed, and he realizes his mistake early enough to both move on and become the resident Nice Guy among the cast.
- Played straight in Mawaru Penguindrum with the Takakura siblings. The whole plot is based on Shouma and Kanba trying to save Himari's life. Even if she is not related to them by blood and just got taken in by the family.
- Kanba deserves special mention since he not only has protective (and romantic) impulses towards Himari, but also sacrificed his position in the Natsume clan and later his life for his real sister, Masako (and Himari).
- Mahou Sensei Negima:
- Ayaka claims to have an overdone big sister instinct which her friends and the viewer apparently grossly misunderstand. Asuna has a more genuine version, that occasionally threatens to misunderstand itself.
- Kaede also feels this way towards both Negi and Kotaro: A Love Chart produced in-universe shows that her romantic feelings for Negi are fairly low, but her maternal score is off the scale, surpassing the quite motherly Chizuru (10), matching Evangeline (12),[1] and topped only by Asuna (15). This doesn't always show mostly because of her laid-back personality.
- Love Hina: Keitaro takes on a big brother role towards Shinobu early on, which does result in her developing a huge crush for him.
- Yu-Gi-Oh!:
- Seto Kaiba is a total jerk to the main characters but will go to outrageous lengths to save his brother Mokuba. Mokuba is kidnapped a lot, though. Probably because Kaiba is such a jerk.
- Jounouchi Katsuya is very protective of his little sister Shizuka. When she sends him a video message telling him about how she is slowly going blind, he sneaks into the Duelist Kingdom tournament that Yuugi was invited to so he could win the prize money and pay for an operation to save her eyesight. He also becomes extremely protective over her when Honda and Otogi begin flirting with her and competing openly for her attention.
- Ishizu is completely willing to die if it means saving her little brother, Malik, from his psychotic Split Personality. Same goes to their adoptive brother, Rishid/Odion.
- Ichigo Mashimaro: Nobue is a female version, serving the protective role towards her 12 year old sister and her friends. She also feels a near sensual pleasure watching them act cute, making her an easy victim of their manipulations.
- Inuyasha: For a short while, Kagura seemed to develop a big sister instinct toward Kohaku, until she died for him.
- Sesshoumaru has a complex, evolving relationship with his brother Inuyasha due to feeling like the victim of Parental Favouritism. Prior to the story's start, it appears Sesshomaru bullied and ignored Inuyasha for not being pure-blooded Youkai, and his first few story arcs revolve around Sesshomaru's efforts to obtain the Cool Sword that their father left for Inuyasha — by murdering Inuyasha if necessary. As the story progresses and Sesshomaru's character develops, however, Sesshomaru's motives become more ambiguous, taking on more of a flavor of "I Was Just Passing Through" and "Nobody kills my brother but me." The conflict between them is eventually resolved when Sesshomaru finally understands what their father was trying to teach him: no matter how strong Tessaiga makes Inuyasha, his half-human nature means he'll always need Sesshomaru's strength and support.
- Although the exact nature of Sesshomaru's protective instincts can be debated in one-or-two cases (notably Jaken and Kagura), his instinct to protect expands throughout the series more-or-less as follows: Jaken (who really doesn't feel the love most of the time), Rin, Inuyasha, Kagome, Kagura, Kohaku, until he's eventually openly protecting both his group and Inuyasha's group together. Sesshomaru's development is finally lampshaded in the final chapter when Kagome openly calls him onii-san (using the kanji for 'brother-in-law') and notices the disturbed expressions on both brothers' faces are identical.
- The Kohaku relationship appears to have turned into a relationship of equals of sorts with Kohaku being the only one Sesshomaru would appear to and directly answering his questions telling him about Root Head. Later in the time skip when Sesshomaru arrived for his daughter Setsuna who was helping Kohaku, Kohaku now an adult would greet Sesshomaru when he arrived and Sesshomaru would greet Kohaku warmly, a rarity for him. He did this just before starting to talk to his daughter Setsuna about serious business.
- Although the exact nature of Sesshomaru's protective instincts can be debated in one-or-two cases (notably Jaken and Kagura), his instinct to protect expands throughout the series more-or-less as follows: Jaken (who really doesn't feel the love most of the time), Rin, Inuyasha, Kagome, Kagura, Kohaku, until he's eventually openly protecting both his group and Inuyasha's group together. Sesshomaru's development is finally lampshaded in the final chapter when Kagome openly calls him onii-san (using the kanji for 'brother-in-law') and notices the disturbed expressions on both brothers' faces are identical.
- Kagome can develop this towards younger children who need help in the story, and not just towards her biological brother Shouta and adopted brother Shippou. Fairly early in the plot she finds out about a very angry and broken Cute Ghost Girl named Mayu Ikeda, tries to reason with her repeatedly to get her to lay down her ire, and when a youkai comes to drag Mayu to Hell — Kagome grabs on Mayu's hands even as they're about to be pulled into Hell itself, still talking kindly to her, buying time for Inuyasha to come save them and ultimately redeeming Mayu.
- Inuyasha's sequel Yashahime has played this both ways, initially with Setsuna, the younger sister by minutes frequently saving Towa, her older sister to the point she was ashamed of it thinking it should be the other way around. Later as Towa got stronger it has become more trope forward though Setsuna still has her moments of saving Towa at this time. When Setsuna lost control of her demon powers, Towa also thought it was her job to control Setsuna solely because she was Setsuna's big sister.
- Sesshoumaru has a complex, evolving relationship with his brother Inuyasha due to feeling like the victim of Parental Favouritism. Prior to the story's start, it appears Sesshomaru bullied and ignored Inuyasha for not being pure-blooded Youkai, and his first few story arcs revolve around Sesshomaru's efforts to obtain the Cool Sword that their father left for Inuyasha — by murdering Inuyasha if necessary. As the story progresses and Sesshomaru's character develops, however, Sesshomaru's motives become more ambiguous, taking on more of a flavor of "I Was Just Passing Through" and "Nobody kills my brother but me." The conflict between them is eventually resolved when Sesshomaru finally understands what their father was trying to teach him: no matter how strong Tessaiga makes Inuyasha, his half-human nature means he'll always need Sesshomaru's strength and support.
- Digimon: This is a continuous theme throughout nearly every season. Some have this problem with actual siblings, and others tend to apply it to their Digimon.
- In the first season there was Yamato towards his brother and the youngest Digidestined Takeru. Hikari spends a good bit of Digimon Adventure 02 trying to live up to her big brother Taichi's reputation as a leader. And let's not even get started on Ken Ichijouji, who's desire to live up to his dead brother's memory in his parents eyes was the start of his whole descent into darkness.
- The episode Out on the Town shows Yamato's/Matt's heartwarming protectiveness towards Takeru/T.K. to the point where even though his house is closer in the route the train they were taking goes he still stayed with T.K. even though they passed his stop, though T.K. wasn't fond of Patamon pointing out their brotherly love. At the end of the episode despite what they went through Matt still insist on being with his little brother until he gets home before Matt goes home himself.
- Taichi is overly protective of Hikari before 02 though. The best example, episode 48, when Hikari falls ill and Taichi borders on hysterics the entire time. Then we find out why he's so over-protective (Taichi took Hikari outside to play while she had pneumonia, and she almost died.)
- The twist of the knife is that Hikari never blamed Taichi for it. Quite the opposite: Hikari apologized to Taichi for not being able to kick the ball straight, which only made him feel worse and want to protect her "kind heart" even more!
- Jyou/Joe shows a bit of this towards Iori/Cody in 02. Though he did have some inklings of this to Takeru/TK already in the first series.
- In Digimon Frontier, pretty much everyone was like this towards Tomoki/Tommy, but he seemed to especially look up to (and be stuck with) Takuya and Junpei/JP.
- Kouji and Kouichi, of course. It went both ways, but especially Kouji towards Kouichi.
- Daisuke/Davis seemed to behave like this towards his Digimon partner, Veemon.
- In Digimon Savers, Masaru/Marcus and his Agumon were like that (Masaru even admitted that he thought of Agumon like his brother). Masaru also was very protective of his little sister, Chika.
- Ikuto/Keenan and his Digimon partner, Falcomon, were raised to believe they were brothers, and treat each other accordingly.
- Then there's Touma/Thomas, who has an Ill Girl little half-sister named Relena whom he acts quite the same towards as Taichi. His apparent Face Heel Turn only happened because the Big Bad Kurata had kidnapped her, and he was trying to buy time to out-gambit her.
- Another example from Digimon Adventure—Sora acts extremely protective of her partner Biyomon, eventually spurring her Digivolution into Garudamon.
- In Digimon Tamers, Jenrya was rather overprotective of his youngest sister Shichon. This behavior turned out to be a bad influence on her when she got her own partner.
- In the first season there was Yamato towards his brother and the youngest Digidestined Takeru. Hikari spends a good bit of Digimon Adventure 02 trying to live up to her big brother Taichi's reputation as a leader. And let's not even get started on Ken Ichijouji, who's desire to live up to his dead brother's memory in his parents eyes was the start of his whole descent into darkness.
- Gunslinger Girl: Due to their conditioning, the titular girls are very focused on their grownup "handlers" — who all happen to be male. On occasion this even turns into a form of puppy love, with the difference that the "puppies" know how to handle dangerous weapons... And, in the case of Elsa, blow your brains out as well as theirs in a murder/suicide if you ignore them too much.
- In The Prince of Tennis, those who mistreat Yuuta Fuji in almost any way shall get ready to face his older brother Shuusuke's rage. One has to watch and compare Fuji's matches with Jiroh Akutagawa and Ryoma Echizen ( both of them defeated Yuuta but did so fairly, so Fuji holds no grudges and even considers Ryoma a friend) with the one against Hajime Mizuki ( who tricked Yuuta into using a very dangerous tennis move without telling him the consequences, so Fuji let Mizuki lead the game for a while and then absolutely trashed and traumatized him in-game). Also, lampshaded in the anime when Fuji aids a girl with similar problems towards her older sister.
- Sister Princess is basically nothing but this. To an unhealthy extreme, in fact.
- Kyo Kara Maoh: Shori has a certain obsession with protecting his younger brother at all costs.
- Gwendal is very protective of Wolfram, and at times Conrad, though it is hard to see at first due to his stern nature. Conrad is very protective of Wolfram and Yuuri. Though Yuuri is the king, so he should be protective, he is Yuuri's godfather, and thus often acts like an older brother/father figure.
- Conrad seems to have had a genuine 'Big Brother Complex' over Wolfram when he was small. The transformative episode when, at a guess, Conrad was about forty (looked twelve) and Wolfram was about fifteen (looked three) in which Gwendal sorted out his relationship with Dan Hiri, Conrad lost his father, and Wolfram found out his favorite awesome brother was half human appears to have started the trend that terminated in his behavior at the beginning of the show: calling Gwendal as 'Aniue' and Conrad as 'Weller,' his surname. And once Wolfram rejected him, Conrad eventually moved on to obsess over someone else. With a period of cynicism in the middle, out of which Gunter knocked him by kicking his ass.
- Will go even more on a tangent to say that Gunter and Conrad's abortive fight in the Dai Shimaron arc was awesome.
- Gwendal is very protective of Wolfram, and at times Conrad, though it is hard to see at first due to his stern nature. Conrad is very protective of Wolfram and Yuuri. Though Yuuri is the king, so he should be protective, he is Yuuri's godfather, and thus often acts like an older brother/father figure.
- Night Head Genesis: Naoto obsesses over Naoya, his kid brother who has empathic powers that render him mostly helpless
- In True Tears Jun displays this kind of attitude toward Noe, his younger sister. Hiromi even comments on it. In fact, he seems to be rooting for a romantic involvement with her, making it a case of Brother-Sister Incest even if it is one sided and never actually accomplished
- The Daughter of Twenty Faces: The relationship between Ken and Chiko becomes this very quickly. It's so blatant that several characters, including Ken himself, hang a lampshade on the fact.
- Fullmetal Alchemist: The main plot revolves around Ed scouring the earth for a way to restore his younger brother Al's body to normal. On the other hand, considering Al is inhabiting an animated suit of armor much larger than Ed, there's a quite unusual dynamic going on there. Especially considering how Ed reacts to anyone calling him short.
- Ed sacrificed his arm to keep his brothers soul in existence. and later his use of alchemy all together If that's not Big Brother Instinct, what is?
- The Elrics both have this dynamic towards each other. Edward was more than once willing to die for Al (until he realized that if he died no one else would be able to put Al back to normal) — and Al did NOT approve of Edward's plan to let himself killed by Scar so latter one would leave Al alone. Later in the first anime Al sacrifices his recently Philosopher's Stoned self to revive his brother. Edward answers this with sacrificing himself to bring Al back. And at the ultimate end of the first anime, in the movie, they spend much time, stress and tears to find each other again, succeed, Edward decides to leave his brother for good by sealing the Gate in order to protect him and Amestris — and Al replies with following him.—that's FMA for you...
- The first anime and one of the novels also feature the Tringham brothers Russell and Fletcher. Russell is very protective of his brother, though it takes him a while to realize that otherwise he's been neglecting him...
- Scar's older brother. In both continuities, when Kimblee attacked the two in the Ishbalan War, he knew he wouldn't stand a chance against him but still faced him to protect his younger brother. Afterwards, as Scar lay dying with one arm gone, his also near fatally wounded brother sacrifices his own arm and bleeds to death in his place, also giving him one of the biggest "keys" to influence the trope.
- In Bleach, one of Ichigo's biggest Berserk Buttons is an older brother harming his younger sister. He gave us the page quote.
- Though he's still nothing compared to Orihime's brother, Sora. He's really possessive of his sister, even after death. He is shown to have become extremely jealous that Orihime likes Ichigo, and to put it in his words, "I wanted you to pray for me, because only during the time you were praying for me your heart was mine." And in his back story, he ran away with a three year old Orihime from their abusive parents as soon as he turned eighteen, and proceeded to raise her on his own before being killed in an accident.
- Ichigo has no problem suggesting murder if you mess with his little sisters and his friends.
- In the Hell Verse movie, when Yuzu dies, Ichigo's Berserk Button is broken in the On position until Renji stops him.
- And in the Hueco Mundo arc, Ichigo comes across Nel, and they seem to form kind of a Badass and Child Duo.
- And although it took a while, previously very-Aloof Big Brother Byakuya Kuchiki has now demonstrated a willingness to kick huge amounts of ass in defense of his sister Rukia.
- Gundam 00: Mix this with Blood Knight and Ax Crazy, and you have Michael Trinity.
- Mix this with Subordinate Excuse and Extreme Doormat, and you have Hong Long.
- Clannad: A female-female example. Harass Ryou, and her sister Kyou will throw a huge book straight to your face and kick you while dazed.
- Youhei Sunohara is the series' Butt Monkey most of the time, but mess with his sister Mei and he'll do an Offscreen Teleportation to kick your ass.
- Tomoya also seems to have this going for him, despite not having any siblings. Whenever Mei calls him Onii-chan, he becomes overly excited and is willing to do whatever she wishes from him.
- Gundam X: Subverted with Shagia and Olba Frost. Not only the siblings in question are villains and brothers (instead of brother and sister), but the one who blindly adores and fiercely protects his sibling is Olba, the younger of the duo.
- Axis Powers Hetalia:
- Switzerland is like this with his Token Mini-Moe sister Liechtenstein.
- South Italy hates his younger brother North Italy's ally Germany because he thinks he's not good for his sibling (and since both Germany and Romano are male Tsunderes.)
- According to Word of God, Norway acts similarly towards Iceland. Confirmed in a strip, where Norway tries to make Iceland call him "Oniichan" (an honorific that usually little kids use towards their older brothers) and strangles Denmark with his own tie when he cracks jokes about it.
- In the Baltic area, the usually calm Estonia can be reduced into a nervous wreck in regards to his younger brother of sorts, Latvia, and with good reason. LATVIAAAAAA, indeed.
- England also acted as an older brother figure to America, in his own way. The Revolutionary War thus broke his heart, and he still seems to have a soft spot for him (not that he'd ever show it, of course).
- Challengers: Souichi is fiercely protective of his younger brother Tomoe (as well as homophobic) and will not hesitate to pummel Kurokawa when he shows an overt romantic interest in Tomoe.
- Narutaru: Female-female example: Action Girl Shiina has a Mysterious Protector in the form of one of the "Otohime" or "Virgin Princesses". It turns out that said protector is actually her dead older sister, Mishou, who was transformed and reincarnated into an Otohime after her death.
- Trigun: Knives is this way about Vash, but it's a really dark version, since Knives thinks that Vash's idealism and pacifism aren't doing him any good, and need to be beaten out of him.
- Incidentally, they're twins, and no one was there to see them born. When Vash explains who Knives is in the anime, at least, he uses the absolutely-ambiguous word 'kyoudai,' 'sibling,' which carries neither gender nor age, because Japanese doesn't have a birth-order-ambiguous version of 'brother.' (The same word is applied to all their 'sister' bulb-plants in the manga. Confusingly, it's supposed to be an English-speaking planet.) Knives basically appointed himself big brother after becoming evil and deciding Vash was a wimp.
- Anime Knives always had Big Brother tendencies, but in the manga back when they were still cute Knives was the sensitive one, and Vash actually looked after him slightly more than the reverse.
- I.e., pointing out that even if Knives is right and "there's no real difference between people's hearts and ours," it's going to take a lot of work, and comforting him when Knives starts crying after William Conrad, the first human they ever met besides Rem, accepted them.
- Anime Vash interpreted Rem's last words, "Knives o--" [mouth forming three inaudible syllables] as "Take care of Knives," though the meaning of this appears to have shifted in his head to mean 'beat the shit out of Knives' by the time they meet in July.
- Basilisk has Saemon Kisaragi and his younger sister, Okoi. Even when Okoi is quite able to defend herself, all of the Kouga Manjidani know that upsetting her is a bad idea not just because she'll punch them immediately, but because the ruthless Saemon will be NOT amused as well. When Okoi dies very messily, Saemon throws all his possible reservations about the Iga/Koga showdown away and fights furiously and without any mercy (except to Hotarubi, and that's ONLY after he's fatally injured her) to avenge his Dead Little Sister.
- Peacemaker Kurogane: Tatsunosuke is overly protective of his younger brother Tetsunosuke. The other characters tease them both about this.
- Fairy Tail: Mirajane and Elfman are a weird example of this: Elfman (technically the younger brother) is extremely protective of Mira, probably due to their Dead Little Sister, Lisanna, for whose death (actually, disappearance) he blames himself , flying into a rage when she's in danger and threatening anyone who flirts with her. However, Mira is also deeply protective of him, and rightly so, considering that she's about a million times more badass.
- In Fruits Basket, Momiji's little sister Momo, unaware of their relationship, solicits this, asking Momiji if he will be like a big brother to her.
- Haru acts this way towards Kisa, including running through the rain to find her after she runs away and giving her the strawberries from his cake.
- Once Tohru manages to reach for Isuzu/Rin, she becomes VERY protective of Tohru. She gets VERY angry at Kagura for being rude at her regarding Kyo (and in the manga, she absolutely terrifies her), and it's revealed that at some point she intended to grab Kureno by the collar and "give him a good trashing" because, in her view, he made Tohru cry.
- Higurashi no Naku Koro ni: It is implied that Satoshi was like this toward Satoko before his disappearance. A year later, Keiichi and Shion take up the position with Keiichi taking it in the completely wrong direction while Shion plays it straight after screwing up. Big Time. Satoko actually starts calling them "Nii-Nii" and "Nee-Nee".
- In one of the Play Station 2 arcs, implied to be the way that Minagoroshi-hen could have gone, Shion goes exactly the same way as Keiichi.
- In Umineko no Naku Koro ni, Battler behaves this way both towards his actual younger sister, Ange, and to his little cousin Maria. He bonds with Maria early on in most of the arcs despite not having seen her in six years, and is very protective of Ange. After Ange reveals her identity to him and performs a Heroic Sacrifice to save him, Battler snaps out of a gigantic Heroic BSOD he had fallen in and goes up several levels in badass and sets his mind back on track to defeating Beatrice and making it back home to Ange's side.
- In Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl, Tomari's crush on her formerly male best friend, Hazumu, comes out of her sisterly instinct to protect her. In the anime that protective side gets a bit less attention, though, and her feelings for Hazumu are presented more as a straightforward crush.
- Vocaloid- although technically all the canon Vocaloids are supposed to be siblings- has Len Kagamine, who in vids is protective or over-protective of his sister, Rin, although Rin is supposed to be the older one.
- In Getter Robo: Armageddon, Go immediately adopts this attitude towards Kei upon encountering her. It's eventually revealed that the reason for this is that he is her older brother — or rather a (male) memory-retaining clone of her older sister, Michiru, who died when Kei was a little girl... known as Genki Saotome. Sort of. It's complicated.
- Subverted in Death Note where Villain Protagonist Light Yagami in an early Motive Rant claims that part of the reason he wants to make a better world is to protect innocents like his little sister, Sayu, and he has a Pet the Dog moment early on helping her with her homework, but later in the series considers killing her when she becomes a hostage so that the source of his power doesn't fall into the hands of criminals (Though ultimately he doesn't).
- Early on, he suggests that he'd have to kill her if she found out about him being Kira.
- In Naruto, Itachi Uchiha wanted his little brother Sasuke to be strong enough to be safe from Madara. Shame he went about it in the most fucked up, traumatizing, and ultimately futile way possible.
- Actually, according to the story we're told, his goal was to make Sasuke a hero of Konoha. The only way he'd be allowed to continue to live there after the entire Uchiha Clan planned a rebellion. Itachi was supposed to kill all of them, but he couldn't make himself kill Sasuke. That's one for the "Nice Job Breaking Your Little Brother, Hero" category.
- Kankuro is a more positive example. Although he and Gaara have a poor relationship at first, the brothers become much closer after Gaara's Heel Face Turn, and Kankuro willingly risks his life to go after Gaara when the latter is kidnapped by Sasori and Deidara — although it doesn't end well for either of them — and stands up for Gaara when an elder badmouths him. Considering how terrified he was of Gaara in Part 1 (and with good reason!) this is quite a change and shows just how much Gaara's change in circumstances has affected the family dynamic.
- Hinata eventually develops this for her younger sister, Hanabi. In fact, as the The Last movie shows, Hanabi is THE one person that Hinata will put above Naruto. In return, Hanabi comes to invert this and be protective of her big sister — in one of the videogames, her interactions with Naruto were mostly destined to see if he was good enough for Hinata.
- In the sequel, Boruto, the unruly main character who is Naruto and Hinata's eldest son has a huge soft spot for his own little sister, Himawari. No one should EVER upset the girl, for he will be ANGRY at them.
- Darker Than Black: There is a reason Hei goes completely nuts when his
DeadDisappeared Little Sister is brought up. Namely, the reason he came to be a Badass martial artist in the first place was to protect his Contractor sister. That's right, the normal sibling wanted to protect the one with superpowers. And did a pretty good job up until Heaven's Gate somehow fused them. In the second season, he starts treating Suou as a substitute little sister. - Of the few redeeming traits of Ryo Narushima in Shamo is his protectiveness towards his younger sister.
- Fushigi Yuugi has Tamahome (towards his siblings, and initially, Miaka, after she told him she missed her actual brother Keisuke) and Tasuki (towards Chiriko).
- Hayate the Combat Butler has a semi-standard version of this, and a strange pseudo-subverted version.
- Hayate sees himself as Nagi's protector/big brother and it's possible that he tries to exemplify it for all of the girls around him, possibly because of his own big brother's influence.
- It even extends to Wataru and possibly Kazuki. There's only one other character he won't protect, even going so far as to try and kill. Continually.
- The Katsura sisters have a warped version. Yukiji protected her sister when their parents left them with a large debt, taking care of it herself and shielding Hinagiku from the 'evil' side of society. Now she looks up to Hinagiku as the more capable one, having dealt with their abandonment and still having a loving outlook on life, while Hinagiku herself protects Yukiji and is hinted to help her with funding issues from time-to-time, while still punishing her for 'get-rich-quick' schemes she attempts.
- Hayate sees himself as Nagi's protector/big brother and it's possible that he tries to exemplify it for all of the girls around him, possibly because of his own big brother's influence.
- Game X Rush has this for his younger brother Memori, particularly when Memori was a younger crybaby.
- In Akira, Kaneda feels this way towards Tetsuo, because they were friends since childhood. Even though he teases him, he still feels the need to protect him and shows affection for him as a younger brother.
- Seto from Heavens Will has one of the weirdest Big Brother Complexes ever. Basically, his younger twin sister died protecting him from a malicious spirit and her soul was sealed in a fan which Seto now uses to perform exorcisms himself. He then grew out his hair, began wearing woman's clothing, and is saving his money to get a sex change operation. After he gets it, he plans to kill himself so his sister's soul to inhabit his body and live again, and he does it all because he believes that he should have died instead of her. 'Seto' isn't even his real name, it's his sister's.
- Baccano has two examples: Maiza, who serves as a sort of Big Brother Mentor to the young gangster Firo (who is supposedly somewhat similar to his biological younger brother, who was murdered in a conflict over the Elixir of Life), and Dallas, an unrepentant Jerkass whose one redeeming trait is his kindness towards his little sister. The three Gandor brothers are also very protective of one another.
- Baskerville has this towards Mingchao in Et Cetera. Partially because he's dealing with his own little sister's death.
- In One Piece, Portgas D. Ace is very protective of his adoptive little brother Luffy. This goes from taking on Blackbeard to sacrificing his life against Akainu.
- Also Zoro to Chopper, who keep an eye out for the little guy and becomes upset when anyone hurts Chopper.
- Lady Vinsmoke Reiju has four younger brothers, and she's very protective of one of them: Sanji.
- Among Charlotte "Big Mom" Linlin's children and crewmates, Charlotte Katakuri and Charlotte Chiffon show shades of this. Katakuri is protective of all his siblings but has a favorite younger sister named Brulée, whom he failed to protect when they were younger and thus is quite his motivation; Chiffon, on the other hand, has this for her younger twin sister Lola and she's motivated to be in the plan to kill her terrible mother partially due to her mistreatment, partially to protect Lola.
- Kaiser Ryo for his younger brother Sho in Yu-Gi-Oh! GX, at least at first.
- Saiou for his sister Mizuchi in Season 4.
- A strange case is Fubuki for Asuka, in that he both attempts to get her to date other guys and manages to convey Brother-Sister Incest undertones simultaneously. Regardless, he does care for her as a sister, but usually it's her that ends up saving him.
- In Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha, Cinque of the Numbers is quite protective of her younger sisters, staying behind to fight Subaru and getting badly injured in the process to allow Nove and Wendi to escape. Even though her crimes are more severe than the other Numbers and she does not expect to ever be completely free, she decides to atone for them and cooperate with the investigation so she can help her younger sisters.
- In Yakitate!! Japan Kawachi does this to Azuma, due to Azuma having to worry about Kawachi. When Kawachi lost the battle with Kanmuri in the Pantasia Newcomer's Battle
- Katekyo Hitman Reborn. Any person willing to injure Kyoko or Tsuna, answers to Ryohei's fists and Tsuna's family.
- Durarara's Shizuo Heiwajima is rather protective of his little brother Kasuka (aka Teen Idol Yuuhei Hanejima). The mere act of name-dropping Kasuka is enough to make him suspicious of your intentions, while insulting him or attempting to poke into his personal life results in an instant Unstoppable Rage. In the Light Novels, he eventually goes on to develop another Big Brother Instinct towards a young runaway Yakuza Princess.
- In Binbou Shimai Monogatari, Kyou has this toward her younger sister Asu, which is justified since they live by themselves and she has taken on a parental role. Since Kyou is still very much a child herself this doesn't always come easy for her, but luckily Asu compensates by often acting very mature for her age.
- Ran Fujimiya in Weiss Kreuz goes so far as to take his little sister Aya's name after she's rendered comatose; he becomes an assassin primarily to pay her hospital bills, and not only is he fiercely devoted to her welfare, he displays knee-jerk protectiveness toward anyone who reminds him of her. This is most evident in his interaction with Aya's Identical Stranger Sakura Tomoe, but it also flavors his behavior toward several other young women and makes him a Big Brother Mentor toward Sena in Gluhen and Yuki in Side B.
- Toki from Code Breaker is part of the Code Breaker group in order to keep his sister Nenene safe (though she's apparently older than him, and doesn't remember who he is).
- Ozma Lee from Macross Frontier is extremely protective of his little sister Ranka, even though she's adopted. He even manages to break the pineapple cake curse because he promised not to die so long as Ranka still needed him.
- Also played straight with Brera Stern, Ranka's real brother.
- Scrapped Princess has both Raquel and Shannon Casull, who are completely devoted to protecting their younger sister Pacifica even when she's supposed to be an Apocalypse Maiden destined to destroy the world. And even when, technically speaking, she is NOT their sister. And her actual brother, Prince Forsyth, is... conflicted..
- Grumpy, cynical Sanzo in Saiyuki is this towards Goku, despite voicing his annoyance about Goku constantly. Hurting Goku is a whole different matter.
- Demon prince Kougaiji cares deeply about his half-sister Lirin and would do anything for her.
- Gojyo's half-brother is this, despite being on opposite sides with Gojyo and feels tremendous guilt for not being able to protect him from the abuse of his mother. His extreme protectiveness over Kougaiji is motivated by how he couldn't keep his biological half-brother safe and a way to gain redemption for not being able to. His complete psychological breakdown when he thinks he couldn't keep Kougaiji safe reflects this.
- In Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, Kamina may not be Simon's birth brother but has a strong case of this to him anyway. Expressed elegantly with this line:
Kamina: Don't call me Kamina, call me bro! |
- Inverted in Rave Master where younger brother Haru is fiercely protective of his older sister Cattleya. He had once beaten up a guy who broke her heart and would have done it again when he ran into the guy later on in the series.
- Soukou no Strain. After Ralph Werec has his Freak-Out in the backstory (brought about by unknowingly brutally killing a bunch of aliens who look and act like little girls) he views the only survivor of the aliens as a substitute little sister, and is more than willing to do anything to avenge her race, and I mean anything, to the point of wanting to kill his actual younger sister when she stands in his way.
- In the Wild Series, Kiri has a strong caring instinct for his little brother, Mao. Granted, it doesn't stop him from immediately trying to kill Mao when Mao loses control of his beast side, but he probably considered that a favour.
- In Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's Crow shows this attitude towards; Leo, Luna, Yusei, Akiza, Jack and even his younger siblings. To the point where he'd become the Idiot Hero
- Guache of Tegami Bachi has this for his little sister, Sylvette. Until he looses all of his memories, anyway.
- Maho from Wandering Son may be a bully to her trans little sister Shuu, but it's best not to let ANYONE mess with her. Maho will WREAK anyone who hurts her.
- Kanba Takakura from Mawaru Penguindrum has such a strong one towards his and Shoma's little sister Himari—that it borders on and later straight up goes into Brother-Sister Incest. He also has it to his actual sister, Masako Natsume.
- Masako Natsume has a Creepy Child younger brother named Mario, and when faced with a Sadistic Choice regarding him... she risked her life to Take a Third Option and barely survived.
- Ouran High School Host Club plays with this with a few of its members, most notably in the episode where Nekozawa's little sister Kirimi wanders up to the high school, putting both Nekozawa and Tamaki in the big-brother spotlight in turn.
- In addition, Hunny and Mori have this relationship with their brothers Yasuchika and Satoshi (manga-only), though Hunny's way of showing it is admittedly...weird, to the point that the anime completely overlooked it.
- And Hikaru and Kaoru, being twins with a lot of identity issues to work out, go back and forth on treating each other this way. Usually Kaoru takes up this role while guiding Hikaru to maturity, but when he gets too self-sacrificing for his own good Hikaru will press his big-brother advantage to set him straight.
- Lin from Spirited Away becomes quite protective over protagonist Chihiro over the course of the film.
Lin: Don't worry... stay right where you are, I'm coming to get you! You're gonna be fine, I won't let him hurt you. |
- In Saint Beast, Kira attacks anyone who so much as talks to his brother Maya initially. Considering the Fantastic Racism they are usually subject to, this is somewhat justified, but it also scares off potential friends.
- Natsuki from Tsuritama over his little sister Sakura, to the degree that she's one of the very few things that can crack through his grumpy demeanor and get him to smile. Haru saying to Sakura that Natsuki will be teaching him and Yuki how to fish is the only reason Natsuki agrees to do it, just to keep her from feeling let down.
- In Persona Trinity Soul, Ryou used to be like this 10 years ago. After their family reunited he turned out to be Aloof Big Brother. His younger brother Shin also has this toward their youngest brother Jun; Shin is really worried about Jun, he really worried when Jun came back home 30 minutes late than usual, including peeking him on his date. But it turns out that it was not really a date.
- A Certain Magical Index: Mikoto Misaka comes to see her 20.000 clones as her younger sisters. She was VERY upset when Accelerator brutally killed one of them (Misaka 9982) in front of her, and later destroyed thirty clone-creating facilities in a desperate attempt to stop the experiments. When asked why she'd do that, she simply replies: "These little girls are my sisters."
- Ironically, some of the biggest steps that Accelerator takes towards Anti-Heroism are motivated by him acquiring this towards the youngest of these clones, Last Order. WOE BETIDE ANYONE WHO HARMS HER.
- In Kyojin no Hoshi Hyuuma Hoshi's older sister/mother figure Akiko is normally quiet, gentle and sometimes a bit of a crybaby, but she shows shades of this trope more than once when Hyuuma needs her. i.e. she does her best to mediate between him and their Stage Dad, halfway through the series she leaves the Hoshi household over Ittetsu interferring with Hyuuma's social life too much, in some flashbacks from Shin she was also angry at their dad when Hyuuma's left arm is pretty much wrecked and bitterly called him out on it, and in Shin proper she personally pleads with the very Hot-Blooded coach Bill Thunder to convince him to train Hyuuma in his My Greatest Second Chance and gets it from him, also letting the gumpy guy show his Hidden Depths in the process.
- Kashiwa Manabe from Kyou Kara Yonshimai is the second of four sisters and she's always been protective of the third sister in the family, Sakura. From willingly taking "penalty game"'s kale juice so she wouldn't have to, to telling off her potential boyfriend Uozumi when she believes he's broken her heart. . .
- The Dragon Ball series oddly averts this, though not for lack of sibling affection. The only time it was played straight was when Bulma asked Trunks to help keep safe his "new baby sister" Bulla when she was born in Dragon Ball Super.
- Gohan and Trunks never fully got the chance to display this towards Goten and Bulla respectively. The only time Gohan "saved" Goten was when he happened to arrive anyways and Gohan stood by when Gotenks (a fusion of his younger brother Goten and Trunks) was being absorbed by Buu not even attempting to stop the action.
- This is made worse in the Heroes movie where Gohan seemingly was more upset that Piccolo rather than Gotenks, the combination fusion of his younger brother Goten and Trunks, got attacked by Cell Max.
- It is Android 17 who shows this towards 18, despite her being older. Notably in the Tournament of Power, 17 saves 18 a fair amount of times while 18, instead of being able to properly display this, got handed the Distress Ball, receiving Bridal Carries from both Krillin and Goku at different points and even being saved by 17 after she suffers a Twisted Ankle. The closest time she was able to display this was when she saved 17 from being eliminated by sacrificing herself, but even then the reason could more be because at that point 17 was both stronger and more battle experienced than her.
- The closest time to being played straight was with Future Gohan and Future Trunks, with Future Gohan being more of a big brother figure to Future Trunks than an actual sibling.
- An odd time this wasn't played straight was when Super Buu absorbed Gotenks (and, by extension, Gohan's younger brother Goten) in front of Gohan, and Gohan didn't do anything to help him. Though this is more taken as a convenience for the writers, as it was at this point when the idea of Gohan becoming the main hero was given up on. Gohan also proceeded to be portrayed rather badly in general from this point on, as he ends up getting himself killed after completely underestimating Super Buu.
- Gohan and Trunks never fully got the chance to display this towards Goten and Bulla respectively. The only time Gohan "saved" Goten was when he happened to arrive anyways and Gohan stood by when Gotenks (a fusion of his younger brother Goten and Trunks) was being absorbed by Buu not even attempting to stop the action.
- Sorcerer Hunters:
- Carrot Glacé was always protecting Marron from bullies when they were little, leading to Marron developing major Big Brother Worship towards him and showing instances of little brother instinct.
- For all their squabbles, Chocola Misu definitely has this for her little sister Tira.
- This is Gateau's motivation in the manga. His sister Eclair was captured by Zaha Torte, who also murdered their parents. When he discovers she's become his willing minion, he's so determined to get her back that he lets her kill him in the process. This makes Eclair realize how wrong she's been, and leads to her Heel Face Turn later on.
- In Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba, the sole survivors of the Kamado family are the two eldest kids, Tanjiro and Nezuko. Since Nezuko has been turned into a demon and her mentality has become that of a child, Tanjiro has taken up this trope with gusto and has become extremely protective of Nezuko, fighting all kinds of demons to search for a way to get her back to humanity.
- Despite being a child-like demon girl, Nezuko not only can still recognize Tanjiro as her older brother but she also inverts the trope when he needs it. What convinced they young Slayer Giyu to send the Kamados to his master so he can train Tanjiro is not solely seeing how strong Tanjiro's protective instincts towards the just demonized Nezuko are, but seeing Nezuko pull a Go Through Me for a knocked-out Tanjiro rather than devouring him.
- Giyu himself develops this for the Kamados, especially Tanjiro. In fact, at some point both he and his master promise to go through Seppuku with Tanjiro if Nezuko ever eats a single human - basically, both bet their own lives to protect the two. And much later, during Giyu and Tanjiro's fight with Akaza aka the Upper Third Moon, Giyu himself says "if you want to kill Tanjiro, you will have to kill me first!"
- Gyutaro is the definition of this trope towards his younger sister Ume, aka Daki. When they were tiny kids, their abusive mother tried to forcibly cut the girl's hair and that caused the boy to go berserk.
Comic Books[]
- Quicksilver is protective to the point of jealousy when it comes to his sister the Scarlet Witch. This is taken further in Ultimate Marvel.
- The Mighty Thor: Thor treated Loki this way in early flashbacks to their childhood; however, it only aggravated Loki's already raging inferiority complex, putting him on the path to villainy.
- However, after Loki accidentally (YMMV) brought about the near-total destruction of Asgard, was killed in a last-ditch heroic sacrifice to save what was left(that may have been part Xanatos Gambit) and reincarnated as a kid with only his childhood memories, he appreciates this protection a lot, since the only reason most people in Asgard haven't killed him yet is because they know Thor would go on a Roaring Rampage of Revenge on them and the city if Loki is harmed.
- Kid Loki seems to be similarly protective of Thor. During the "Fear Itself" event, he engages in dark dealings and agrees to restore the Ragnarok Cycle all to save Thor from being killed by The Serpent.
- However, after Loki accidentally (YMMV) brought about the near-total destruction of Asgard, was killed in a last-ditch heroic sacrifice to save what was left(that may have been part Xanatos Gambit) and reincarnated as a kid with only his childhood memories, he appreciates this protection a lot, since the only reason most people in Asgard haven't killed him yet is because they know Thor would go on a Roaring Rampage of Revenge on them and the city if Loki is harmed.
- X-Men has this with Wolverine being a Big Brother Mentor to the younger heroines, including Kitty Pryde, Jubilee and his Opposite Sex Clone Laura/X-23.
- Though they can find it hard to get along, Scott/Cyclops still tends to treat Alex/Havok this way, insisting on personally carrying his coma-ridden brother into the X-Mansion despite the presence of a wheelchair and being so protective and interfering that they're mistaken for a couple in an issue of X-Factor.
- Batman: Between Nightwing and (adopted) little brother Tim Drake — one issue had Tim believed to have been murdered by the Joker when a mass Arkham escape was in progress. Nightwing takes it hard.
- Occurs with (intentionally invoked) Unfortunate Implications in American Born Chinese: When the Chinese boy Jin starts to date his classmate Amelia Harris, an Anglo friend strongly urges Jin to stop, saying he wants her to "make good choices."
- In a Star Wars: Tales series, mercenary Darca Nyl comes across a mentally handicapped GIANT of a man and his petite sister fleeing from pursuers. One night, while camping, the girl is set upon by a huge and vicious predator. Darca knows that he can't reach them in time to save her... when the man leaps at the beast with a large rock in his hands. Several minutes later, the creature has long since stopped moving and he keeps smashing at it with the rock.
Fanfiction[]
- The Firefly fanfic Forward has a very plausible version of this develop between Jayne and River, after they end up relying on one another to survive and escape being tortured by Niska.
- Uriel Dolheb Soryu in the Neon Genesis Evangelion fanfic Nobody Dies has this towards Asuka Langley Soryu, given that she's his adopted sister and he feels compelled to protect her and make her happy, even if he has absolutely no idea how to do it beyond giving Shinji the If You Ever Do Anything to Hurt Her... speech. His Big Brother Instinct also extends to Asuka's half-sister Mari Illustrious Makinami, to the point where her attempts to flirt with him fly completely over his head.
- Do not threaten Kanae in front of Kyon in Kyon: Big Damn Hero. Do not try and kill Kyon once he's done teaching you why you shouldn't attack Kanae. She may not be his little sister, but he treats her like one.
- In Axis Powers Hetalia's Fanon, it's a known fact that America is protective of his twin brother Canada. Sometimes, he's portrayed as an overprotective brother whenever another nation is interested in Canada.
- There was this one story (based on Vocaloid's "Servant of Evil" series), where Russia had killed Canada, mistaking him for America. Bad move, as America promptly declares war on Russia.
- It goes the same way with Russia and his two sisters Ukraine and Belarus. There was this one story where Ukraine had mysteriously vanished, Russia believing that America was the one doing it He didn't grabbed him by the throat and for all measures, was perfectly willing to rip America's head if it would bring his sister back. In a well-known doujinshi, his first Sanity Slippage and the Roaring Rampage of Revenge that followed too place when his sisters' lands were invaded by bandits and he found Ukraine when she had been cornered and about to be murdered.
- In the Batman fic The Choice of Family, it was inverted when Tim and Damian angrily called out Jason for putting Dick in danger and having him end up at the hospital. But it was played straight in the sequel Antidote for the Poison where Jason was furious when he found out Tim was injected with a dangerous amount of heroin by some drug dealers. When he cornered said drug dealer, who knows what he might have done if Damian wasn't there.
"You took my little brother, tied him up, pumped him full of heroin, and left him to die in this shit hole. Now I ask you: do you think I have the slightest bit of remorse about cutting you open and letting your guts decorate the floor?" |
- Jason also openly acknowledges Tim and Damian as his younger brothers and brings Damian safely home after he and Damian go out to get the drug dealers.
- An odd goblin example of this trope (though with the sister being the protective one) can be found in Travels through Azeroth and Outland.
- Raonar, the Guile Hero dwarven prince in Dragon Age: The Crown of Thorns develops some advanced protective tendencies towards the dwarven commoner, Faren, as evident when the former finds the latter trapped in his worst nightmare during the Broken Circle questline in the Fade. The resolution with the sloth demon can be seen as a partial subversion, however, because it's Faren himself who, ultimately, curbstomps the demon before the protagonist sends him over to Justice to be dealt with properly.
- A female example in The Legend of Spyro a New Dawn is Cynder towards Ember. Ember is slightly younger than her, but is very childish and naive. Despite the fact Ember has her characteristic crush on Spyro (though in this case, it's due to being to socially naive to realize Cynder and Spyro are mates), Cynder ends up having this mentality towards her, even describing her as being like "an annoying little sister" at one point. This makes hurting Ember in front of Cynder one of her Berserk Buttons, which Cyros finds out the hard way when she performs a Break the Cutie on Ember and gets her kidnapped. Cynder reacts violently.
- Fanon often have Gaara and Kankuro of Naruto threatening Shikamaru in Shika/Tema Fanfics or any other Fics that involve Temari getting hooked up with someone. They're technically little brothers as Temari is the Eldest Sibling.
- It also doesn't help that Gaara is in fact the Kazekage, which means he has some authority over Temari. To which he abuses or at least attempts to abuse said authority.
- In the Death Note fanfic Xanatos, Matt shows this toward Linda, most notably in chapter 3.
- In Harry's New Home, the normally law-abiding Percy snapped when he found out someone tried to Crucio Ron.
- In For Good, Buzz has a very serious Berserk Button in his adopted little sis.
Animated Film[]
- An American Tail: Fievel tries to ward off the Cossacks' cats for that reason.
- Brother Bear: Kenai hates bears, and finds Koda REALLY annoying, but would still go through anything to protect him.
- Fly in Help! I'm a Fish, who's pretty caring when it comes to Stella, his little sister. Case in point: When it seems like searching for her in starfish-form in the ocean via boat is hopeless, he doesn't hesitate to drink a potentially dangerous potion and dive in, in order to continue searching.
- In The Incredibles franchise, Dash and Violet are fiercely protective of each other and baby brother Jack-Jack.
- In the 1997 animated feature of Babes in Toyland, even though Jack is younger, he acts this way towards his older and sweeter sister, Jill. Despite his negative attitude, throughout the movie he has done the following for his sister: Retrieved his sister's toy from their evil uncle Barnaby, escaped with her out of Barnaby's house twice, attacked the much larger Gonzargo down a well for stealing Jill's toy, and tried to comfort Jill when they saw the Goblin King.
- Ducky from The Land Before Time movies has this towards her "big" brother Spike, the Spiketail.[2] A particularly notable example of this trait of hers was in the climax to the second film, where a pair of Sharpteeth[3] had cornered Spike and were clearly about to bite into him, only for her to start throwing rocks at them and demanding they leave Spike alone.
- In The Prince of Egypt, Ramesses' first reaction to his little brother killing a man in front of multiple witnesses is to declare him innocent. When Moses returns after years of being gone he is ready to give his brother a high position and wipe away the crime. That didn't turn out.
- From the same movie Arron tries to protect Miriam when she approaches Moses before Moses' knows of their relationship.
- Disney's Robin Hood has the titular character acting this towards Skippy and the other children. After the Sheriff takes Skippy's birthday present (a gold coin his family managed to save for him), Robin Hood comes in to cheer Skippy up and gives him a bow and arrow and his hat. Later on, when one of Skippy's sisters struggles to catch up with the escaping villagers from Prince John's castle, Robin Hood doubles back to get her.
- In Toy Story 3, Andy is this to his sister, Molly, despite their light bickerings. When she had trouble lifting a box, he immediately went to help her. And at the end, with Bonnie, who is a Shrinking Violet. He kneels down at eye-level to her and introduces all his toys to her and even played with all his toys one last time with Bonnie before he left.
Live-Action Film[]
- The Blind Side: With only a split second to act, Michael instinctively saved adoptive little brother SJ from being seriously injured or killed during their car accident. He also will not tolerate anyone saying something derogatory about his adoptive little sister, Collins.
- X-Men: For all Wolverine's (many many) flaws, Victor "Sabertooth" Creed really does love his little brother Jimmy, very very much.
- Also, from the same movie, Kayla appears to be willing to do just about anything to keep her sister safe.
- X Men First Class: Darwin develops this for the younger mutant recruits, especially when Shaw attacked the CIA base. Unfortunately, this only gets him killed by Shaw when he tries to protect Angel from him.
- Also Charles had this for Raven, being very concerned for hiding her appearance in public and telling her to her face that he didn't want anything to happen to her. However, his relationship to her Deconstructs this phenomenon as it caused him to become overprotective to the point where he denied her the chance to embrace her true appearance and be proud of what she was, as well as caused him ignore her very obvious crush on him. This in turn made Raven turn to Erik Lehnsherr as a mentor/love interest and eventually join him in his cause against humanity.
- Arguably, Erik developed this for Charles. He went out of his way to protect Charles during the Cuban Missile Crisis, even stopping his attack on the American and Russian naval forces when Charles was shot.
- Push: Nick and Cassie.
- House of Wax: Nick possesses the instinct quite strongly, which makes his behavior towards his younger sister, Carly, look filled with Incest Subtext.
- The City of Lost Children: One for Denree and Miette.
- Star Wars: He's only the big brother by about six or seven minutes, tops, but Luke Skywalker definitely qualifies. He's all redeeming and peaceful and unflappable in the face of evil despite a million reasons not to be, but all bets are off when the Big Bad makes a totally impotent, hinted threat towards his sister. Suffice to say, he doesn't react well.
- The Godfather's Sonny Corleone, in spades. He launches into one of the most epic No Holds Barred Beatdowns in film history against his brother-in-law after he finds his sister with a black eye. The enemy family Barzini later uses this instinct against Sonny by paying Carlo to deliver a savage beating to his wife in order to easily set up an ambush for Sonny.
- Seen in West Side Story when Bernardo interferes in his sister Maria's budding romance with Tony. Double Subverted in that Tony is the only decent member of the Jets, genuinely in love with Maria and with good intentions... but then he ends up killing Bernardo in a fit of rage over the death of his friend.
- Eomer to Eowyn in The Lord of the Rings. He was furious that Wormtongue was following his sister. For that matter, Eowyn didn't want Wormtongue anywhere near her either.
- And let's not forget Tony Montana. Just a tad bit too protective of his little sister Gina, even going as far as murdering her husband the day after they were married.
- Peter Garrett in Vertical Limit climbs up K2 to rescue his sister Annie
- The titular character of Ginger Snaps is an interesting example — her protectiveness towards her younger sister is essentially, a snarky sense of humour aside, her only redeeming quality, and even that's pretty messed up. They have a suicide pact ("Out by sixteen or dead on the scene,") and her gradual case of lycanthropy worsens, she starts killing people if she thinks they even looked at Brigitte the wrong way. She's enjoying killing more and more, so this trope becomes more of an excuse in the end. However, Sam could be seen to have a genuinely altruistic Big Brother Instinct towards Brigitte, as he gives her an awful lot of help, carrying a fair amount of risk, with no benefit whatsoever to himself. Although some people interpret it as him having a romantic interest in her.
- Becca from The Descent is very caring and protective towards her sweet little sister Sam, and to a lesser extent, the rest of the less-experienced caving group. Also, it's fairly subtle, but Beth displays Big Sister Instincts towards anyone in the group who needs it — she's constantly looking after the emotionally fragile (due to the death of her husband and child) Sarah, she gives her jacket to Holly after she breaks her leg and helps her stand and walk (along with Sam, The Medic) and she goes back to help Juno in the crawler fight, even though she doesn't like Juno much.
- Aussie horror flick Black Water is actually rather sweet in spots due to it's use of this trope. Initially, we have both Grace and her boyfriend Adam towards Grace's shyer, more panicked sister Lee. However, Lee turns out to have one hell of a Little Sister Instinct herself. You see it emerging slowly throughout the film, but once Grace is injured, Lee is literally willing to face down crocodiles if it means she can get her sister out of there and to a hospital. Turns out she's just much braver for her sister's sake than she is for her own.
- Oldboy: At a first glance, we're led to believe that this is what he feels towards Soo-ah when Joo-hwan calls her a whore. It's much worse.
Literature[]
- John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men has a western example of this trope in which George Milton, a Jerk with a Heart of Gold, cares for Lennie Small, a mentally retarded Gentle Giant.
- In The Dresden Files:
- Harry becomes this to Molly when her magical talents manifest.
- He does it to his half-brother Thomas despite the fact that Thomas is the older brother.
- Thomas also has a brother instinct. He has followed Harry around town without Harry's knowledge, and in the past few books the only time Thomas hasn't come to Harry's aid was when the White Council was directly involved. And he is very protective of his little sister, Inari.
- Kincaid and The Archive have a similar relationship. He knew her grandmother, which explain his more-than-professional devotion to Ivy.
- Chronicles of Narnia: Peter, especially if it's about Edmund.
- The movie version of Prince Caspian gives Susan and Caspian some Ship Tease. Peter does NOT react well.
- Edmund develops this for Lucy, after his Heel Face Turn.
- Peter has this pretty strongly toward Lucy as well. He vehemently rebukes Edmund for humiliating her in the beginning of the series, up to the point that he looks like he's about to deck his younger brother in the movie.
- Dragonlance Chronicles: Critical to Raistlin Majere's backstory. He spent his youth under the overprotective influence of his twin brother, Caramon. While Caramon grew up tall, handsome, muscular, and a bit dense, Raistlin was intelligent, but sickly and alienated, with no friends but his brother. Seeking to prove his worth to his smothering "big brother" and the world at large, Raistlin seeks the power to topple Gods, and gets it. Deprived of a little brother to protect, Caramon falls into alcoholic depression.
- Ron Weasley reveals this in Harry Potter while nearly cursing Malfoy (with a broken wand that has already backfired once on him) for being mean to Ginny. Basically, the two best ways to get Ron angry are to insult either Harry, Ginny or Hermione.
- Ron gets a bit of this from Percy after the Second Task in Goblet of Fire. Percy, who's supposed to be acting as an impartial judge give Harry full marks for rescuing Ron and hovers over Ron until Madam Pomfrey drags Ron off for treatment.
- Eclipse Hunter: Devon falls under this trope very easily, and fills many different archetypes. He's willing to shoot his own father if it means protecting Daren.
- In The Thief Lord, Prosper's protectiveness of Bo is the main motivation behind his character. He runs away from his aunt with Bo to prevent their separation, joins a gang of urchins and even steals to make sure his brother is well fed and sheltered, and goes into a major Heroic BSOD when Bo is finally taken away.
- The Darkest Powers series gives us Derek. He has a Big Brother Instinct that's Up to Eleven when it comes to his foster brother, Simon. Derek is also a werewolf. So on top of the fact that he is, personality-wise, very protective of Simon (and anyone else he cares about), he also has the wolf's "protect my pack" instinct to deal with. Assaulting one of his "pack" is his Berserk Button. Unfortunately for Derek, since he can't usually control his reaction when his brother is in danger no matter how much he's tried to coach himself, his supercharged Big Brother Instinct has led to at least one My God, What Have I Done? moment.
- Len Maynard. Oh, Len Maynard. Practically ever since she is a baby, she is pigeonholed as the 'responsible one' and as the oldest Maynard child, she is often put in charge of the other Maynard children. She has a major one where Margot is concerned, protecting her from Jack's wrath and even lying to cover up for her in Triplets of the Chalet School after the bookend incident. Miss Annesley even calls her out on it.
- In Watership Down, Hazel is usually calm and collected, but god help you if you mistreat Fiver or Pipkin.
- Kaladin from The Stormlight Archive develops one of these for every relatively (around 14) young male he comes across in the course of the story. This stems from his feelings of guilt over failing to protect his actual younger brother in the course of a minor border dispute between rival lords of his nation. Every one of these individuals ends up dead.
- The Cal Leandros series gives us Niko, who loses his characteristic cool when someone so much as implies that his brother is a monster, and literally goes berserk with rage when he thinks Cal is dead. Cal is no better, going to extreme lengths to protect his brother.
- Although Damon Salvatore of The Vampire Diaries likes to make his brother's life hell, he does go out of his way to save or protect Stefan.
- Katniss Everdeen of The Hunger Games will go to any lengths to protect her younger sister Primrose, including volunteering for the titular Deadly Game in her sister's place, a seemingly suicidal gesture. When Primrose is killed later, Katniss all but collapses
- Prince Jonathan and his group of friends in Song of the Lioness developed this for the new page Alan. Even before Ralon started bullying Alanna, they regularly helped and kept an eye out for her. And when Ralon first beat up Alanna, Raoul pulled him aside and roughed him up as a warning. When Ralon later broke Alanna's arm in retaliation, they all thrashed him thoroughly. Despite continuing to harrass Alanna, Ralon didn't lay a hand on her again.
- Alan and Nick Ryves in The Demon's Lexicon.
- Lynn Flewelling is fond of this:
- Before their Relationship Upgrade to the Official Couple level Seregil had this to Alec, though there had been subtones early on.
- And both Alec and Seregil are always and at any time rather protective towards Beka (in Seregil's case it is also a rather paternal feeling; he states himself she's as close for a daughter to him as it will ever get.) — including being suspicious about her lover, checking him up, threatening him not to harm her... Beka is not impressed.
- Tamir Triad: You better not insult Tobin when his squire/best friend Ki is around. (and in fact thanks to plot this brother-friendship later gets rather difficult)
- An even creepier example might be the ghost Brother. Tobin's older twin who died after birth and turned into an angry spirit. After Tobin learned how to keep him in check Brother actually got extremely protective — despite the claims of some characters this troper never could shake the feeling that Brother DOES feel affection and brotherly love towards his sibling. Albeit in a twisted way.
- In The Outsiders, everyone was this towards Johnny since his abusive parents could care less about him. Also, Ponyboy's two older brothers Sodapop and Darry, especially after their parents' death.
- Brandon Stark was this for his sister Lyanna in the backstory to A Song of Ice and Fire. When Crown Prince Rhaegar Targaryen abducted and raped her, Brandon rode off to King's Landing with a few companions to kill Rhaegar and rescue his sister. It didn't go well....
- In Ender's Game, the reason that Ender was willing to go to Battle School and join the International Fleet was to protect his sister Valentine, although he was actually her little brother.
- In the In Death series, Roarke tends to harbor protective instincts toward Eve's female colleagues, though they're not particularly weak. This is probably due to his Dead Little Sister.
- In The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara, Quentin Leah already has a pretty serious big brother complex towards his cousin Bek. Following his failure to save a girl he liked, this is magnified a thousand fold, and helps to fuel his change into a badass.
- Bertie of Jeeves and Wooster tends to develop this easily. In one story he suddenly decided that he wanted a daughter for precisely this reason: "Something to look after, if you know what I mean."
- Mr Darcy towards his younger sister Georgiana in Pride and Prejudice.
- In Memories of Summer, Summer had this for Lyric in their childhood when she defended her from bullies. Later, the instinct is reserved when Lyric defends a mentally declining Summer from a heckler at school.
Live Action TV[]
- Simon and Simon: Brothers Rick and A.J. both exhibit this trope. Although Rick is older, he and A.J. are both protective of each other, as shown in almost any episode.
- ICarly Spencer in regards to Carly and Gibby to his little brother Guppy.
- The Colbert Report: Stephen Colbert has admitted he sees Jon Stewart as something of an older brother figure in Real Life. It's one of the few Real Life traits that bleed through into the characters' lives, most recently in the Melee a Trois crossover with Conan O'Brien, which Stewart only got involved in because he was protecting Colbert.
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Spike takes pains to keep Dawn from harm in a few episodes, when Buffy or the Scoobies are unavailable to do so.
- Face and Murdock show this for each other quite a bit. Murdock is older than Face, but they both have their share of 'big brother' moments when it comes to looking out for each other.
- Also, B.A., towards both of them. He's allowed to verbally abuse them and threaten them with physical violence on a regular basis, but if anyone else tries it...
- A little odd in his case, seeing as, when you do some figuring, B.A. may actually be younger than Murdock, and possibly younger than/the same age as Face. He's still protective of them. But he'll never admit that he likes either of them, especially not Murdock.
- Also, B.A., towards both of them. He's allowed to verbally abuse them and threaten them with physical violence on a regular basis, but if anyone else tries it...
- Angel: Played for laughs in an episode, when Angel and Doyle deliberately act in an over-protective fashion towards a prospective boyfriend of Cordelia's in order to mess with her.
- Firefly is a show that brothers and sisters over the world can watch together and feel happy, warm feelings for each other.
- Simon rescued his little sister River from a bad place, and is very protective of her. Very much so. The Tams have an Undying Loyalty to each other, they provide a lot of the best Crowning Moment of Heartwarming scenes and a number of Crowning Moments of Awesome.
- Captain Mal Reynolds extends something like this to his entire crew, but particularly Kaylee, whom he even refers to as mei-mei or "little sister" a couple of times.
- Inara is also very willing to play the Big Sister role. "Mei-mei" is most commonly used by her towards other (usually younger) female characters.
- Everwood has a lot of that: Bright starts off being a bully in the pilot, but later on in the same episode it's revealed he cares a lot about his younger sister and her comatose boyfriend. That's also expanded throughout the first season, to the point that his friendship with Ephram stems from his desire to keep her sister happy (in real life, Bright's and Amy's actors actually dated). It could also be mentioned that Ephram was protective of Delia, and Dr Abbott also became sort of a father figure to his sister after their father died (even though they were both already adults).
- Gossip Girl: Chuck and Serena with Eric (or is it Erick?), Dan with Jenny (especially on the pilot). Lily's sister also counts.
- Jane Lynch's character in Glee: pure evil, except for her ill sister.
- Finn has developed this for Kurt, especially since their parents got married. The exchange between him and Burt when Kurt decides to come back to McKinley says it all:
Burt: Keep an eye on your brother. |
- Justin, from Wizards of Waverly Place, always fixes Alex's mistakes and saves her from impending doom. She even admits that she always expects him to do so.
- Hence the complexity of their relationship. Complexity as in Cain and Abel, Slap Slap Kiss, some Foe Yay, Double Entendres, More Than Brotherly Love Signs and You Know Where I'm Going With This.
- Or perhaps just a case of Relationship Writing Fumble and Getting Crap Past the Radar.
- Brutally subverted in the Cold Case episode "Shuffle, Ball Change". The victim's brother was simultaneously protective and fond of his younger brother, yet he derided his ambitions to be a dancer and ultimately murdered him in a fit of jealous rage over his impending success (along with grief over his own failure as a wrestler).
- Dean and Sam Winchester, of Supernatural. This is a show that's actually about being brothers. (The bromance being fashionable this decade.)
- Dean Winchester is absolutely insane on this point. 'Take care of Sammy' has been his entire life motto. He dies for him, he sells his soul to Hell for him, he keeps going back for him no matter how screwed up things get between them and what Sam gets dragged into, he takes him back no matter what...and honestly the way the show is written, the latter two there seem to cost him more than the first. Especially seasons four and six, when Sam was slipping darkside and walking around without his soul, respectively.
- Sam turns it back on Dean pretty hard, himself. Even in Season One he completely flew off the handle when Dean looked to die, and season three was all about saving Dean to him, and he pretty much lost his shit once Dean went to Hell.
- And he overpowered Satan for Dean in the Season 5 finale. Sure it saved the world, but it wasn't the world he thought about. But he's actually four years younger, and Dean practically raised him.
- The angel Castiel gets adopted as an unofficial third Winchester brother some time in Season 5.[4] Because he is young to the world and they are young to being and lack power, the 'big brother' role swaps back and forth a lot, and sometimes Dean and Cas are both big-brothering one another in the same scene. Though Dean never turns the Sam-level obsessiveness on Cas.
- The evil thing doing an overwrite of Dean's mind and body in 7.06 complained that he "doesn't have relationships, no, he has applications for sainthood," which is pretty much just that raging protectiveness and self-sacrifice is pretty much the only setting he has for people he cares about. Which isn't to say he can't be a raging dick to these same people, because he can, but Big Brother's Privilege.
- Numb3rs: Don Eppes was always Charlie's protector and on the few occasions when criminals come after Charlie, Don becomes a Papa Wolf and decides that It's Personal . Don also shows concern that Charlie will be affected by the grim aspects of law enforcement and feels a little awkward accepting help that might conflict with Charlie's career as a professor.
- Burn Notice: Michael Weston has this towards his little brother.
- Bill Scully Jr. of The X-Files has a Big Brother Instinct for his youngest sister Dana, though he can be a jerk about it and doesn't always bother to get all the facts before lashing out at people he sees have "wronged" her...like Mulder. Poor Mulder.
- In Criminal Minds Derek Morgan definitely acts like this towards Spencer Reid, especially if he's in danger/threatened with his life. "I'm gonna get this guy's head on a pike" says it all.
- Derek's just the most obvious. All of the characters have this towards Reid. Emily in particular joins Morgan in this, with her Older Sister-like relationship with Reid. For evidence, just look at her taking a beating in "Minimal Loss" to save Reid from getting shot, and this line from "Amplification":
- Heroes: Nathan Petrelli to his little (26-year-old) brother, Peter. Sometimes... When it comes down to it, it's clear that he loves his brother. (Of course: after Peter saved him from dying, Nathan tells him flat-out he wouldn't have done the same.)
- Peter towards Claire. Usually
- Some fans see the relationship between Jack O'Neill and Daniel Jackson this way. Others have a slightly different opinion.
- In Can You Hear My Heart, Joon Ha goes so far as to abandon his biological family to take care of a boy with a hearing disability.
- We could be sure that Hassan from Over There was like this when Colonel Roye threatened him about his sister so he could tell him where the stingers are.
- One from Power Rangers. Vida, the Pink Mystic Force Ranger, is already a pretty aggressive character. But threaten (or otherwise belittle) her sister Madison, and it doesn't matter whether you're an enemy or a colleague. Vida will tear you in half.
- Barbara Havers is a cranky, foul-mouthed junk food addict who can't seem to work well with anyone in the police force except her partner Thomas Lynley. On the other hand, she is incredibly good with children and will go to any lengths to protect them.
- Bones: Booth and Brennan toward their psychologist, Sweets. His old mentor flat-out states in one episode that Sweets — raised in an abusive home, adopted by a loving older couple who then died when Sweets was in his late teens or early 20s — is subconsciously seeking to build a surrogate family with the pair.
- There's also Booth and his younger brother Jared. Booth was willing to give up a massive RICO case which would have given him a promotion, a raise and a trip to Hawaii just to get Jared off on a drunk driving charge. He was also very dubious of Jared's love interest and actually did a background check on her.
- Lois and Clark: The titular couple to Jimmy Olsen.
- ER: Many of the older staff toward Carter, but particularly Greene and Benton — the latter to the point of being a Papa Wolf.
- The Vampire Diaries: When the tomb vampires kidnap and torture Stefan, his brother Damon literally massacres every vampire in the house.
- Prison Break: Linc toward Michael, and Michael — though the younger brother — to Linc.
- In Wonderfalls, much though Jaye finds her family irritating, she has a very strong Little Sister Instinct. In one episode, after a guy punches her brother (played by the rather tall Lee Pace), Jaye (played by the decidedly smaller Caroline Dhavernas) manages to lay out the guy with a single punch.
Jaye: You don't screw with my family. |
- Warehouse 13: Both Pete and Myka, towards Claudia. Just try watching "Breakdown," and not awwing a little. For her part, in Claudia's introductory episode, she breaks right into the freaking Warehouse and kidnaps one of the main characters in order to force him to help her rescue her brother Joshua, who was zapped into an interdimensional space (and not, as initially thought, killed) twelve years prior.
- Farscape: Crichton towards Chiana.
- Leverage: Eliot is clearly starting to feel this way about Parker, although he doesn't like it and would never admit it. When a fake psychic caused her to break down in tears and run away, Elliot had to be restrained from killing the man. He also is this with Hardison, though they are quite hostile to each other
- Mycroft to Sherlock.
Mycroft: Because I worry about him. Constantly. |
- On Boy Meets World Eric shows this toward Cory intermittently, such as when he protects Cory from a bully.
- Damon has this for Stefan on The Vampire Diaries, in a way.
- In Merlin, Arthur and the rest of the knights seem to be developing this for Merlin during Season 4. All of them were horrified when Merlin nearly died saving Arthur from the Dorocha and then warmly welcomed him back when he recovered. Of course, this protectiveness is a little misplaced since he could easily take on all of them with his powers!
- In Blue Bloods, Danny is this with both Erin and Jamie, but especially with Jamie, since his gut instinct in crisis situations seems to be making sure his "kid" is safe.
- In Wishbone Sam see a team mate being picked on so she takes him under her wing and teaches him to play better.
- In The Big Valley, Nick, Heath, and especially Jarrod are very protective towards Audra. There are good examples of this in first season episodes "The Midas Man" and "Last Train to the Fair".
- Makito in Mahou Sentai Magiranger combines this with Team Dad, sometimes to the chagrin of his siblings.
- Tsubasa has this towards Kai in Stage 7, when he goes into Kai's dream to rescue him.
- Tsubasa has this towards Kai in Stage 7, when he goes into Kai's dream to rescue him.
Mythology and Religion[]
- Apollo from Classical Mythology tricked his twin sister Artemis into killing Orion because he feared this was one guy she could give up her vow of chastity for.
- To the great surprise of those who watched the movie Troy, Agamemnon in the original Classical Mythology has this in spades. Paris fucked with Menelaus, Agamemnon will make Troy burn
- An Italian young woman named Angela Merici was very sad and distressed when her older sister Gianna Maria died without rites. Then she received a vision telling her that her sister was in Heaven. In gratitude she devoted the rest of her life to religion and service to the poor, founding the Ursulines order. Ah....
Professional Wrestling[]
- The Hardy Boyz, Matt and Jeff. Matt as the older brother, both in storylines and Real Life, often plays this role (when he's not this, he's a Big Brother Bully instead).
- Matt claimed the "Brother Nero" storyline in TNA was Matt trying to prevent Jeff from having to do his usual high-risk style and instead focus on his character work, since both brothers are advancing in age.
- A group of GLOW villains kidnapped Little Fiji to lure her older sister Mount Fiji out of the arena to ensure Mount Fiji wouldn't get another victory.
- When The Dudley Boyz were drafted to SmackDown!, a short angle was played where D-Von and Bubba Ray would be overprotective of Spike to the point they attacked the cruiserweight opponents of Spike, much to Spike's disapproval. This was notable as the other two Dudley brothers were heels attacking heels since Spike was a face. This was shown to be a ruse once Spike won the Cruiserweight Championship this way, however.
- Long after Bret and Owen Hart's feud and when Owen and "The British Bulldog" Davey Boy Smith were feuding, Bret interrupted a match between the two and appealed to both Owen and Bulldog to stop fighting and they should stand united (as part of a heel faction against Stone Cold Steve Austin). When Bret was addressing Owen, he told Owen about how he knew Owen since he was a baby (Bret is older) and Bret dressed Owen for school and made sure Owen was always on time for the bus. Bret also stated that, despite Bret being 13 at the time, when a teacher was "bullying" Owen and Bret found out, he went to Owen's school and "set the teacher straight". He ended by asking Owen who had been there more for Owen in his life than Bret himself had.
- Konnan, despite being in the New World Order, once attempted to protect Rey Mysterio, Jr. from the group, stating that Rey was like his little brother. This led to the group turning on him.
- Charlotte Flair didn't take too lightly to Paige mocking her younger brother Reid's death and saying that he "deserved to die"…
- The Undertaker (older) and Kane (younger) in kayfabe.
- During his tenure in ECW, Kane was suffering from The Worf Effect for main-roster standards, but was still the top wrestler on the ECW brand. However, the combination of The Miz and John Morrison alongside the constant threat of Chavo Guerrero, Jr. led to a tag team match and, during a promo, Kane randomly said "Brothers" and the camera panned right to reveal the then-World Heavyweight Champion The Undertaker as his tag partner for the night.
- In a sort of "Little Brother Instinct" moment during a casket match Undertaker was having against Jon Heidenreich, RAW superstar Gene Snitsky came out to attack Undertaker. Cue Kane coming out of the casket, putting both Heidenreich and Snitsky in their place and even getting Snitsky out of the arena.
- A short lived version happened with Roman Reigns and Jimmy Uso over Jey Uso, who is legit Jimmy's younger brother by 6 minutes and Roman being their cousin and older than both of them. Jimmy saw Jey's association with Roman as a sham for Roman to stay on top and attempted to have Jey return to teaming with himself. In one promo Jimmy even refered to himself as "my brother's keeper" in reference to Jey. This was all dropped however when Jimmy was arrested in real life and returned with Roman being accepting of Jimmy despite his real life mistake.
- This was later revived, after months of tension within The Bloodline it took Jimmy Uso seeing Roman Reigns being abusive to Jey for Jimmy to kick Roman in the face which started the process of the Usos leaving the Bloodline. Jimmy Uso later would state he will always protect Jey and Solo Sikoa who is the younger brother of both Jimmy and Jey.
- The Jey and Jimmy dynamic has since been averted as Jimmy has cost Jey multiple matches and in promos Jimmy now claims to be superior to Jey due to being the older brother with one segment Jey saying "no matter how big you get, I am still your big brother". Strange how Solo Sikoa hasn't reacted to any of this.
- The trope has been rather inconsistently applied with Solo Sikoa and the Usos. Solo is legit the younger brother of the Usos and this is fully cannon on WWE TV, the Usos during their time in the bloodline would often come out and help Solo or be in his corner for matches. When the Usos left the Bloodline they had no problem superkicking their younger brother Solo after doing the same to Roman. In defense of the Usos however Solo has shown he will take Roman's side over theirs previously.
- This was later revived, after months of tension within The Bloodline it took Jimmy Uso seeing Roman Reigns being abusive to Jey for Jimmy to kick Roman in the face which started the process of the Usos leaving the Bloodline. Jimmy Uso later would state he will always protect Jey and Solo Sikoa who is the younger brother of both Jimmy and Jey.
- Otis has become this to the other members of Alpha Academy Maxinee Dupree and Akira Tozawa. Often protecting Tozawa from danger, such as during a segment against Big Bronson Reed or even during a multi man battle royal that involved other big men such as the fore mentioned Bronson Reed and Ivar Otis would protect Tozawa and Tozawa would make it pretty far in the match only getting eliminated not long after Otis was eliminated. Later he would carry Maxine Dupree in a Bridal Carry and Akira in a fireman's carry at the same time when he felt Chad Gable has gone too far. His snapping point with Chad was when he bullied Maxine by taking her crutch and slapping Akira where he attacked Chad Gable and helped both his aforementioned mates to the back.
Video Games[]
- The Big Daddies and Little Sisters in Bioshock are based directly on this trope. The Big Daddies are massive cyborgs that have been programmed to always watch over the Little Sisters and protect them at all costs, while the Little Sisters are conditioned to always stay close to a Big Daddy and rely on them for protection. Neither Big Daddies nor Little Sisters are aggressive and attack on their own, but unfortunately you need the ADAM the Little Sisters extract from corpses with huge syringes, which they don't give up willingly. And when somebody touches a Little Sister her Big Daddy will fight to the death.
- Bio Shock 2 goes even further and puts you in the role of a Big Daddy whose Little Sister was taken away and who had been dead for 10 years. When he is revived, the Little Sister Eleanor calls for his help to rescue her from her mother's imprisonment. For most of the game you put half of Rapture upside down and tear through hordes of splicers to get back to her and save her.
- As a Big Daddy you also have the ability to adopt other Little Sisters and have them harvest ADAM for you. This leaves them vulnerable to attacks from splicers for about a minute during which you crush the skull of anyone who is trying to attack her.
- Cyberswine: Zak is very protective of his little sister Sam. To be fair, Farmtech killed their parents and their little brother and it is targeting them next.
- The main character (whether male or female), Akihiko and Junpei serve as adopted big bros (and sis) to Ken in Persona 3. Akihiko's issues related to his Dead Little Sister mean that he also has some protective big brother impulses towards Fuuka and the female protagonist. Shinjiro is similarly protective towards Fuuka and constantly laments what happened in Ken's past.
- In Persona 4, the main character acts this way towards Nanako, which leads to many moments that make you go awwww. In short, Persona loves this trope.
- Galaxy Angel gameverse: Noa, although she's got some plans of her own.
- Kana: Little Sister: This trope is played to the max. The player assumes the role of a boy who cares for his terminally ill younger sister.
- Prototype: Mess with Dana Mercer, and your best bet is most likely being eaten alive by big brother Alex. Ironically, the character you play, Virus!Mercer, is a lot more caring about Dana than the real Alex Mercer, who was responsible for the virus to start with and is just a Complete Monster in general.
- One skit in Tales of Symphonia Dawn of the New World has Emil acting this way towards Cute Bruiser Presea, much to the consternation of Clingy Jealous Girl Marta.
- Resident Evil : Leon sure does go to a lot of trouble for Ashley and seems genuinely compassionate towards her, even if it IS part of his job.
- Oh, he's a very straight example of Big Brother Instinct. Note that Leon is only The Stoic when he's the one in danger, but he'll risk himself without hesitation to protect anyone who needs his help.
- Chris Redfield is another example. Not only does he go to Antarctica to rescue his sister in Resident Evil: Code Veronica, but in Resident Evil he watches out for the youngest STARS member Rebecca and saves her from a Hunter.
- Claire seems to have become somewhat dependent on Chris's protection as she threatens a corrupt officer when her arms are ziptied behind her back that her brother is part of S.T.A.R.S.
- Phantom Brave: Ash is very protective of Marona, as she is young girl, hated by pretty much everyone for her ability to summon ghosts.
- Mega Man: Blues (Proto Man) can be very protective of Rock (Mega Man). He's gone out of his way many times to save his life instead, meaning he keeps an eye on him. Not to mention that he gives a lot of advice to him.
- Rock himself is the same way. When Wily reprogrammed his brothers, he became Mega Man, took them down, sent them back to the lab to be reprogramed back to normal, and then defeated Wily with a BIG LOUD CRUNCH!
- And now with Mega Man 10 on it's way, it seems that Mega Man and Protoman have teamed up to get the vaccine to cure Roll of Roboenza. Whoever created the virus needs to run away now.
- The most straightforward is Megaman towards Roll, in some FMV's he is shown being very protective of her.
- Final Fantasy Tactics Advance: At least after Marche said he will take care of his brother Doned at the real world after they beat his group up at some cave.
- Axel of Kingdom Hearts, towards Roxas, after he started essentially raising the amnesiac Nobody. Sort of a knight templar big brother, given how much of a Poisonous Friend he is. Often misinterpreted as Ho Yay since the whole "raising Roxas" wasn't shown until a sequel released several years after the game where the Big Brother Instinct was initially shown.
- In the prequel game Birth by Sleep, Terra has this towards Ventus. Threaten a hair on that kid's head and it doesn't matter if you're Master Eraqus, he'll still beat you into the ground.
- Link acts like this towards the children of Ordon and his friend Ilia in The Legend of Zelda Twilight Princess. He does have an actual little sister in The Wind Waker, who causes him to take this trope to the next level.
- Also in Twilight Princess, he receives the same sort of treatment from Rusl, one of the villagers, who Word of God specifically states considers Link to be his younger brother.
- Sonic the Hedgehog treats Tails like a little brother. He will also protect him just like a big brother would, as Dr. Robotnik/Eggman learned the hard way in the 8-bit version of Sonic the Hedgehog 2.
- Sonic sometimes take this role for Cream The Rabbit in several official media's and fanfiction's.
- Less prominently, Big the Cat of all people seems to act this way to his Team Rose comrades in Sonic Heroes. He is shown comforting and defending Cream on several occasions in the story, Team Chaotix intimidating her marks one of the very few occasions he is genuinely pissed.
- Infinite Space has Yuri towards his little sister Kira (perhaps a bit too much). There is also Teodoro, who is very protective to his brother, Adolfo.
- Luke, in the Professor Layton games, has a bit of a big brother complex toward Flora, despite being very obviously younger. It Makes Sense in Context—Luke's known the Professor for a long time and has assisted in a number of investigations, while Flora is a Fish Out of Water in pretty much every situation due to her VERY sheltered background, so both Luke and the Professor are protective of her.
- Crash Bandicoot for the most part is a mellow Cloudcuckoolander with a pitiful attention span. However he will go through Cortex and every single one of his mooks should they mess with his little sister, Coco. Uka Uka boasting his intention to destroy her once she has outlived her usefulness for his current scheme is about the one point Crash takes the fearsome ancient god mask seriously.
- Bartz in Final Fantasy V shows this towards Krile, when she joins the party after her grandfather's death. He doesn't treat her as weaker or in need of protection, but he does keep an eye on her to make sure she's okay emotionally.
- Merrill, the ridiculously cute and adorably awkward Blood Magic mage of Dragon Age II seems to have the power to instill this in those around her. Half the party actively looks out for her, especially the amoral pirate captain and the dwarven spymaster, and even Anders starts to look out for her, in his own extremist blood magic-hating way. The only one who truly dislikes her is Fenris, and even then, he tries to get her to change her ways, albeit in the only way he knows how. Even Hawke can easily turn into this if s/he doesn't romance her.
- Bethany Hawke as well. The first thing Hawke does when they meet Wesley is give the Templar a Death Glare, before he makes clear his intentions. This is the reason her relationship meter is heavily tilted toward "friend." That, and her bad case of Big Brother Worship (not that the two are unconnected).
- In Baldur's Gate II, the Player Character gets to be this for Imoen who has been an actual half-sister of yours all along, as you discover. Granted, you can choose dialogue options that indicate you don't really care, but you still have to rescue her from Spellhold. If you play the game as a good character, though, you are this trope in spades.
- Corpse Party has Satoshi Mochida, who has this for his younger sister Yuka. Yuuya Kizami, who Yuka meets after she and Satoshi are separated, is also looking for his younger sister. Except he doesn't have a younger sister and is, in fact, a brutal subversion.
- Luigi might have a bit of a "Little Brother Instinct" when it comes to Mario. By that, he plowed through a planet-scale army by himself, with his bare hands, and didn't get hit once because Bowser kidnapped Mario.
- Later, he overcomes his fear of ghosts to save Mario after he got kidnapped by King Boo.
- Definitely Ezio Auditore da Firenze. In II, the first few missions you get involve helping his infirm little brother Petruchio, and beating the crap out of his sister Claudia's Jerkass boyfriend Ducio. Petruchio's wrongful murder (along with that of his father and older brother) is actually what starts Ezio down the path of the Assassin.
- For added humor, Duccio turns up years later in Brotherhood, still talking trash about Claudia, and Ezio gets to beat him up again.
- King from Cave Story has is this towards Toroko. He gets angry when she refuses to give him the key to Arthur's house, but will also fly into rage when she gets kidnapped (and that's without touching red flowers, either).
- Final Fantasy XIII: Lightning Farron — soldier, all around badass and (most importantly) big sister. Her protective relationship with Hope also serves as the plot device that sets up her defrosting process.
- Arguably Fang's overwhelming desire to save Vanille from turning into a Cie'th can be interpreted this way; bonus points for Vanille being visibly much younger and weaker in addition to being the cheeriest, cutest, and most tragic character of the cast.
"I'll tear down the sky if it'll save her." |
- Final Fantasy XIII-2 has a very dark take on this. The main antagonist of the game is an immortal guardian, imbued with the Heart of Chaos. He is sworn to protect the Farseers' Seeress, Yeul — who is reincarnated in every generation after the previous one dies (which happens at a very young age due to the damaging nature of having visions). After several centuries of seeing her die and be reborn, Caius snaps, and hatches a plan to destroy the timeline — all so Yeul can live without worry or pain.
- Many characters of either gender swear by this trope in Fire Emblem:
- In the Akaneia games and especially Fire Emblem Gaiden (and its remake), the two eldest Whitewing sisters (Palla and Catria) are super protective of their youngest sister Est, to the point of crossing from one continent to another to save her when she's abducted by pirates. Pictured above is a Palla variation from Fire Emblem: Heroes that openly relies on this concept, showing a teenage Palla shielding a pre-teen Catria and a tiny Est.
- In Blazing Blade, Nils inverts this via being super protective of his older sister and mother figure Ninian, even screaming at Eliwood when he's a bit Innocently Insensitive to her after a very harsh ordeal. She returns the favor via offering herself as hostage to Nergal to keep Nils from being used as a male Barrier Maiden.
- Fire Emblem Awakening has two of the youngest members of the Shepherds, Lissa and Ricken, inspiring such feelings on many of their companions and especially on Lissa's older brother Chrom.
- Fire Emblem Fates has both Prince Siegbert and Prince Takumi being like this to Forrest (even when he is Sieg's cousin) and Sakura.
- Siegbert's aunt / Takumi's potential Love Interest Princess Camilla is extremely protective of her siblings (to the point of being My Beloved Smother), and especially to the Avatar and Elise. In the case of the Avatar she crosses the Despair Event Horizon if they leave to Hoshido and constantly promises to kill anyone who threatens them if she's an ally; in the case of Elise she cracks even more in Birthright when she mistakenly believes she's deserted from Nohr, and in Fire Emblem: Warriors she opposes Rowan and Lianna when she thinks the twins and their allies have kidnapped her.
- The eldest Hoshidan Princess, Hinoka, also has this going on. Her main motivation to become an Action Girl was the kidnapping of the Avatar, and while at times she was very aloof to Takumi and Sakura (plus Azura), when a very young Sakura got lost in the middle of a huge storm where Pegasi couldn't fly, Hinoka went out anyway to find her.
- Fire Emblem: Three Houses has Hilda Valentine Goneril's older brother Holst being said to be this to her, to the point of coddling the Hell out of her (and accidentally making her insecure of her own worth). While this happens offscreen, in the game itself Holst's best friend Balthus von Albrecht plays this completely straight to Hilda herself. And later Holst is Promoted to Playable in Fire Emblem Warriors: Three Hopes and he can play it just as completely straight to her.
- In Shantae: And The Pirate's Curse, the titular heroine calls out Abner for seemingly lacking this when she carried Rottie Tops to their house when Rottie was "injured". When Abner was told this he initially acted surprised then deduced Rottie was fine with Rottie revealed she just had Shantae carry her home for fun. Abner later revealed he still cares for Rottie's feelings and also showed concern when his younger brother Poe has been gone for a while.
- In Street Fighter Elena's older brother appears to have this for her being the most concerned about her being alone in the world travels she is sent to, but this isn't very developed.
- Sakura has an actual younger brother but most the cast of the Alpha and II variety treated her like a little sister
- Karin appears to have developed this to an extent for Ibuki in the story mode of the fifth game, even allowing her to get inside safety before anyone else.
- Gill is strange on this one, in the Udon comics he seems to be in sort of denial of Urien's hatred against him and still seemingly cares about him until it is revealed he was behind Alex defeating him, this ended with Gill even trying to kill Urien himself. In the games Gill seems to have no care for Urien at all.
- Uninvited Macventure game either plays this streight or inverts this depending on what version you play.
- The Macintosh version gives the protagonist (you) a little brother who is the reason the protagonist goes in the evil mansion for. His desire to find his younger brother even helps him ward off the spiritual possession of the mansion longer.
- The NES version censors certain aspects but strangely replaces the protagonist's sibling from a younger brother to an older sister giving him "little brother instinct" of sorts. She is functionally equal to the original's younger brother. Worth noting that you had to hit your younger brother to get the demons out of him in the Macintosh version... the only thing that changes in this version is she is your older sister.
- In The Walking Dead, Clementine has this for AJ from season 2 episode 4 onwards. Inverted with Sarah (she is about 5 years older than Clem in season 2).
- Sweet from Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas plays this oddly. Carl who is the 2nd oldest just being younger than Sweet appears to play this more straightforward than Sweet with Brian and Kendl.
- He appears to play this straightforward with his younger siblings Brian and Kendl, even blaming his brother Carl for Brian's death who Carl was older than. Worth noting he had a Promotion to Parent and specifically mentions having to be the one to ensure Kendl had shoes when she needed them. He also prevented Kendl from seeing their mother after she was killed in a drive by.
- Later on his sibling relationship gets a little odd. As an adult he appears to believe Kendl has to listen to him without question, though he is worried about her seeing someone from a rival gang. An oddity occurs later after Carl kills Ryder where Cesar and Kendl reveal that Ryder attempted to force his way with Kendl sometime while Carl was away. It is never revealed if Sweet knew about this but he was ok with Ryder being in the Grove either way.
- He also appears to not have this for Carl for different reasons varying through differing points in the game. Initially it is shown he doesn't care for his younger brother CJ as he blamed CJ for the death of Brian and CJ subsequently abandoning Grove Street for a life in Liberty City. Later on it is more implied he wants to be with CJ as an equal in terms of working for Grove Street.
- Carl plays this more straight than Sweet despite being second in line. It was said he was very close to Brian and CJ blames himself for the death of Brian. Throughout the game he ensures the safety and security of Kendl despite of the increased dangers he is going through. He doesn't take kindly to officer Polaski's comments about his younger sister.
- Carl also shows a degree of "little brother instinct" doing highly dangerous jobs for Mike Toreno, someone who easily outranks and could overdo any malicious acts Frank Tenpenny attempts on Sweet while Sweet is in jail. All this culminates with Carl having to break into a military base to steal a fighter jet, shooting down other fighter jets and destroying satellites for Toreno to ensure Sweet's release from jail.
- He appears to play this straightforward with his younger siblings Brian and Kendl, even blaming his brother Carl for Brian's death who Carl was older than. Worth noting he had a Promotion to Parent and specifically mentions having to be the one to ensure Kendl had shoes when she needed them. He also prevented Kendl from seeing their mother after she was killed in a drive by.
- Rumble Roses: The most forward is Evil Rose/Noble Rose with Reiko, though this does come with Noble Rose thinking Reiko has to obey her without question. Miss Spencer treats Candy Cane/Becky more of a daughter due to the age difference. XX also teases the idea of Yasha having this for Becky though this isn't developed upon due to the rushed status of the game.
- Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin: Every man/woman team has this with the man treating the woman as a younger sister, Johnathan even says "she's like my kid sister" referring to Charlotte which is a recurring joke that Charlotte hates being treated like a child. Richter and Maria, while not really shown here is still carried over from previous games. Stella and Loretta play this straight with Stella being older than Loretta and even Stella taking all responsibility for the misfortune the sisters caused through Johnathan/Charlotte's quest solely because she is older.
Visual Novels[]
- In Fate Stay Night, Heaven's Feel route, Shirou states that he wants to save Ilya just because "older brother protects his younger sister". In the route's end, Ilya herself does a Heroic Sacrifice to save Shirou, who actually is her younger brother.
Ilya: "You said an older brother protects his younger sister, right?... Yeah. I'm the older sister. So I have to protect my younger brother." |
- In the School Days sequel of sorts Summer Days, Kotonoha's reaction to seeing her younger sister Kokoro in very... compromising situation with her prospect boyfriend Makoto is grabbing a golf club and hitting the culprit upside the head. Too bad Kokoro intercedes in Makoto's favor.. She gets to play it MUCH straighter in a Summer Days ending: when she finds out that Makoto AND a boy named Kyouichi (Nanami's boyfriend) are molesting Kokoro... she kills them with a katana, then sets the building on fire, and ultimately takes Kokoro to safety.
- Yuuya towards Sakuya in Hatoful Boyfriend. Sakuya claims that Yuuya has never once acted like a brother to him, but this couldn't be further from the truth as not only does Yuuya sacrifice his life to save Sakuya's in the Bad Boys Love route, but he reveals that he kept Sakuya's egg from being thrown away on his cruel stepfather's orders and even killed his stepfather's own offspring so that Sakuya could take its place and live a life of luxury.
- Lana Skye from Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney comes across as an Aloof Big Sister to Ema, but as it turns out, she's been acting as a reluctant accomplice to Gant for years, all to protect Ema from the Awful Truth: that she accidentally killed Neil Marshall during the SL-9 Incident. However, Gant actually staged the scene to frame Ema and killed Neil himself, all so he could manipulate Lana's protective instincts and blackmail her into forging evidence for him whenever he saw fit.
- In Shall We Date?: Ninja Shadow, the Nagasaki Vigilantes that are not romanced will all take this attitude towards the Player Character. Woe betide anyone who looks at their new "little sister" in a way they don't like...
Web Comics[]
- El Goonish Shive: Elliot's Chronic Hero Syndrome appears to have given him a Big Brother Instinct with respect to Ellen despite the fact that his "little sister" is actually his Half Identical Twin / Opposite Sex Clone.
- Occasionally Elliot has this towards Tedd, like here and here.
- Ellen has shown she's just as willing to stand up for Elliot when he's threatened/hurt as viceversa. In other life, this is more or less how she befriended Tedd. She got more of this than Elliot with his Chronic Hero Syndrome. She's very uninhibited and shows extreme protectiveness toward everyone close to her.
- Grace's brothers also have some of this in them, though they don't show it nearly as much as Elliot does towards Ellen. Even though Damien scared them shitless, Hedge tried to subvert the orders concerning her as much as he could without being killed.
- Dominic Deegan tends to act this way toward his cheerful, overly optimistic little brother Gregory. Was kind of justified when the comic started because Gregory was infected with a necromantic taint that was slowly killing him, but it was removed early on and now he's perfectly healthy while Dominic is missing a leg.
- Arthur from Wiglaf and Mordred has got a bad case of this for his little brother Mordred — so much so it tends to get in the way of his evil villainy. His staff often enjoy pointing out the brother complex he claims doesn't exist.
- Most of the cast, but particularly Jason, behaves this way toward their younger friend Anna in Something Positive.
- It would be unwise of you to mess with Bear's younger sister Patches.
- Clark from Gold Coin Comics really shows this side when Tonya, his sister, runs into trouble...
- Homestuck: Equius is extremely protective of his moirail, Nepeta. In fact, this is the first thing that shows us that maybe he's not that bad a guy.
- Also, the thought of his twin sister dying is one of the few things that manages to unnerve Dave.
- In Sakana, it's Taros personal Berserk Button whenever someone threatens or talks bad about his little brother Jiro, and is always there to care for him and cheer him up when he has a problem.
- Roy in The Order of the Stick develops this for Elan, though it (understandably) takes a while, and he still denies it.
- Worth noting is that Roy actually did have a little brother, (key word here being did), and Elan has a living twin brother but has been shown explicitly thinking of Roy as his brother instead.
- And, of course, Roy has a literal little sister, for whom he feels the same protective need (despite crazy morality differences.) Proof? He went to rescue her from villains, knowing fully well that it was a trap all along].
- In Lackadaisy, Viktor is violently protective of Ivy. To the extent that pretty much every boyfriend she wrangles is pounded to the point of a full body cast. This is particularly noticeable when you contrast it with how he reacts to others, which usually tops off at Vague Irritation at best.
- Aiden in Winters in Lavelle has this towards his little sister, Kari. It's even been said by Keshii that the main reason why he dislikes Ashton is because he can tell that Ashton has a thing for his sister.
- Kat in Gunnerkrigg Court once punched a Psychopomp just because these guys made Annie very sad. Later she hates Annie's Disappeared Dad, for the same reason.
- We're introduced to Elon of Ears for Elves when he's searching for his younger sister Myari after she's run off into the dangerous forest. He gives her a severe talking-to, but has her best interests at heart.
- Layla in Eerie Cuties mostly considers Nina embarrassing. But also... "YOU. MADE. MY. LITTLE. SISTER. CRY!!!"
Web Original[]
- Broken Saints: Heartwarming Orphan Shandala, the heroine, is looked after by her adopted parents' son as if she were his own flesh and blood.
- Dimension Heroes: Rob displays this trope towards his fellow Dimensional Guardians, reasoning that as leader, he's responsible for their safety.
- Inverted in SMG4. It’s the younger sibling (JubJub) who comes to the rescue of the older sibling (Boopkins) when he’s in danger of falling off a building. Fishy Boopkins does look after JubJub though, as he states in Meggy the Babysitter.
- Decembersville: Nutty Jimmy is like this to his sister, Sarah. As illustrated here.
- Rob Walker will be the first to admit anything that didn't work out in a Critic-episode, but if you go too far and insult Doug instead, he will make you sorry.
- Quite a few ponies in Equestria Chronicles
Western Animation[]
- Mako from The Legend of Korra spent his childhood raising himself and his brother Bolin. And he still totally is in his adulthood. When Bolin was kidnapped by the Equalists, he threw one of his captors across the screen Hulk-style, or in this universe, Korra-style.
- Bolin himself counts, too. When Korra receives gifts from Tarrlok in front of him, Bolin offers to "have a word with the guy," as he thinks she's being harassed by a Stalker with a Crush.
- The X-Men character Wolverine often acts as a mentor to one of the younger heroines on the team: Kitty Pryde (comics), Jubilee (comics/animated series), or Rogue (film/second animated series).
- Danny Phantom: Danny does this with his Opposite Sex Clone. Interestingly, he develops this instinct even with his older sister, becoming overprotective when she's in trouble or in the rare moments when she does something irrational.
- The Simpsons: Bart Simpson usually couldn't give a damn what happens to Lisa on a mundane basis, and the two have an intense sibling rivalry, but his instinct does kick in every time something serious happens.
- Loopy's older brother Larry on Ka Blam!'s Life with Loopy shorts is like that towards her.
- Avatar: The Last Airbender: Sokka and Katara switch off in who's taking care of who when it comes to the group.
- Perry the platypus from Phineas and Ferb seems to be like this to the title characters, judging by how much more viciously he attacks his nemesis Doofenshmirtz when his current scheme would put Phineas and Ferb into danger. Possibly to Candace as well, but it's hard to tell.
- In the movie Across the Second Dimension, Candace-2 from the alternate dimension is fiercely protective of her brothers Phineas and Ferb. To the point she is willing to abandon the alternate Phineas and Ferb to protect her own. Though she eventually came back for them.
Candace-2: I'll do anything to protect the ones I love. |
- In Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy, Ed is this to Sarah.
- Sarah herself is this to Jimmy, she maybe is a Spoiled Brat but this is arguably one of her redeeming qualities.
- BRUTALLY subverted with Eddy and his brother.
- Skipper and Kowalski of The Penguins of Madagascar display this toward Private occasionally, covering his eyes or ears to protect him from "inappropriate" content.
- Ben 10: Alien Force and Ben 10: Ultimate Alien: Despite their differences Kevin acts this way towards Ben.
- Franklin Turtle, without a doubt, seen in the third season in "Big Brother Franklin" when Franklin took to looking after a little kid named Squirrel. He also became a "best friend big brother" to Bear's little sister, Beatrice. Eventually, Paulette Bourgeois finally made him a big brother for real in the book "Franklin's Baby Sister" and the film Franklin and the Green Knight soon followed.
- Wild Kratts has the Kratt Brothers, who both play it straight and invert it. Most obvious in episode 20 when, even though Martin's been turned into a tree, he's still worried for little bro Chris and how his current small size makes him a target for many, many predators.
- In Generator Rex, Rex's older brother Cesar instantly goes into protective mode after their reunion and tries to 'rescue' Rex, even though Rex isn't in any danger. He later knocks out a bunch of Providence agents and jumps down from a ship to help Rex fight an Evo.
- Winnie the Pooh isn't particularly smart to say the least, though he will constantly aid and comfort Piglet as much as his hapless self allows. Similarly Tigger is something of a Keet, though cares a lot about Roo. With a fair helping of Big Brother Worship in there from the latter, both even refer to each other as brothers. Both of these are seen in the original novels, though it is the Disney incarnations where this trope is most evident.
Tigger: Only the best...for my bestest little brother... |
- Kenny McCormick from South Park cares a great deal about his younger sister, Karen. So much so that he dresses up as his superhero persona, Mysterion, and acts as her Guardian Angel. Awww.
- Alternatively and less immediate, Kyle and Ike's relationship has varied throughout the course of the show; originally, Ike was more of an Annoying Younger Sibling who idolized Kyle, following him to school and copying his mannerisms, while Kyle held a more superficial malice towards his brother (when he learned Ike was adopted, he completely shunned him for a while). Nowadays, Kyle goes to great lengths to keep his little brother safe, from stopping him from running off to Somalia, to dragging his friends to Canada on Christmas Eve to get Ike back from his biological parents. Ike has now become one of Kyle's greatest drives (seconded only to Kyle's antagonism towards Cartman.)
- In ThunderCats (2011) Tygra often struggles with his deep resentment of his younger brother Lion-O, but when Lion-O is protecting some stockaded prisoners from an Angry Mob and has challenged them to Go Through Me, Tygra immediately comes to his aid informing the crowd "You better be sure you want to do this because I've got his back."
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars: Obi-Wan to Anakin, who in turn is this to Ahsoka.
- Recess: TJ is this to Gus and to his other friends. A notable example of this was in the episode Pharaoh Bob. After King Bob, due to insecurities over potentially having his reign be completely forgotten thanks to learning his predecessor King Morty and prior kings before them suffered such a fate, promoted himself to Pharaoh and attempted to have the children build a pyramid to ensure he is remembered (due to learning this in his history class) and resorting to mud as a substitute, ends up going to extremes to ensure it is completed, Gus ends up staining his shirt due to mud splashing over it and distracting him due to horror at this, only for one of Bob's guards to shove him in the mud and order him to get back to work, clearly unsympathetic to the fact that Gus is likely to end up punished severely by his mom for his shirt getting muddy. TJ, witnessing this, ends up pushed to his limit seeing Gus being bullied like that and demands for the guard to quit picking on his friend, and when the guard arrogantly asks who can stop him, TJ declares he will before shoving the guard in the mud in turn. The guard is clearly about to retaliate until he realizes the other kids are about to revolt and flees, although not before warning them that he's going to report them to Pharaoh Bob (although he erroneously refers to him by his former title as he does so).
- Speaking of Gus, Gus himself also acted as such to a kindergartner named Hector. An especially notable example is in the episode Dodgeball City. The episode revealed that in one of Gus's prior schools, he was famous, or rather, infamous for being a particularly ruthless dodgeball thrower who was unbeatable at the sport until he retired after accidentally hitting a kid who wasn't even playing the sport. He refused to participate in the sport since, not even to aid his friends. However, Lawson and his ilk eventually targeted a random kid deliberately. Said kid happened to be Hector, the kindergartner Gus mentored as Safety Man. Afterwards... let's just say that there's a VERY good reason why he shouldn't even temporarily readopt his moniker of El Diablo.
- Kim Possible: Ron Stoppable is initially unhappy to have a baby adoptive sister, but he grows attached to her very quickly. As such, he refuses to allow Monkey Fist to hurt her. Likewise, Hana ends up coming to his aid more than once.
Real Life[]
- Bobby Kennedy had a raging overprotective little brother instinct towards his big brother. Apparently, his fury could scare the shit out of anybody if they tangled with John. Especially if it was LBJ (Lyndon B. Johnson).
- LBJ was no slouch either. He was a master at cajoling Congress into doing whatever he wanted because, damn it, he was LBJ. The fact that Bobby could match him and actually make him back down is pretty amazing.
- James McNeill, aged 17, saw his autistic ten year old brother climbing to the top of an 120 foot electrical tower. Though fearful of heights, he climbed after him and held him in place until a rescue crew arrived. The story is described in the November 1997 Reader's Digest.
- 9 year old Malik Medford rescued his brothers from a car thief.
- Another inversion, an 8 year old boy was killed after wounding a burglar who was attempting to rape his older sister.
- A real-life inversion: in 2002 Christopher Vince, aged 12, died after pushing his 16-year-old brother Ben out of the way of a falling branch.
- In a real-life example of big sister instinct a nine-year-old girl risked her life to push her five-year-old sister out of the way of an oncoming truck.
- This 11-year-old, who protected his younger sister from a carjacker.
- Members of a fraternity are supposed to develop this, as the house is set up for a big brother to look after a little brother (pledge).
- A 12 year old Florida boys saved his four siblings from a fire.
- A 10 year old boy using methods he learned from the movie "San Andreas" performed CPR on his 2 year old brother to save him from drowning.
- The years-long partnership between Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis began when the latter was barely out of his teens and had already led a harsh life due to Parental Neglect and antisemitism. So in their early times, the older and more experienced Martin was very protective of his partner; ie., he beat up a mobster's mook who used antisemitic slurs to refer to Lewis.
- ↑ May be due to being still in love with Negi's "late" father, wishing she was the one who bore the man's child(ren), et cetera et cetera.
- ↑ "Big" in this case referring to their obvious size differences due to Ducky being a baby Swimmer who's obviously dwarfed by him and not age differentials, as technically, Ducky's older than him.
- ↑ Later revealed to be the actual parents of the newly-debuted/hatched character Chomper, who invaded the Great Valley in search of their missing child, or rather, their missing egg.
- ↑ This is codified in dialogue late in Season 6, when he's going darkside on them with the best intentions, like Sam did two seasons previous.