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The act of jumping with impossible feats.
It's also apparently a power you can get through martial arts - see Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon for theatrical tree-hopping (not to mention balancing on the tips of branches that couldn't support a squirrel). This trope is based on an actual technique for jumping higher employed in some martial arts, although not to the extent usually shown in media. (Basically, you attach weights to your legs, get used to jumping to your current normal height with the weights, then take the weights off.)
This tends to appear less in modern; superpowered characters who want to, say, surmount Tall Buildings are more likely to be capable of true flight. However, in the earlier ages of Comic Books and even some new characters often feature high jumping as opposed to flight.
Usually a form of Art Major Physics, and one of many ways to achieve Not Quite Flight.
See also: Roof Hopping, Goomba Stomp, Jump Physics, and Spring Coil. Also related to, and may be used to attain the high ground. Contrast with Le Parkour, which relies on a combination of climbing and running to achieve the same results, and Stepping Stones in the Sky.
Anime and Manga[]
- Inuyasha and Ranma ½. In both shows, many characters hop onto a roof like it's no big deal. The title character of Inuyasha makes huge jumps that rise and fall so slowly he appears to be lifted by an updraft and gliding down (which would explain the gust of wind whenever he does this). Justified for Inuyasha in that he is a Half-Human Hybrid who's the son of a dog Youkai who was capable of flight. It's observed in-universe that he runs like he's flying. In other words, he's not so much jumping as gliding (because gliding is a way of being half-way between running or jumping and flying). Ranma is heavily implied to be amongst the best martial artists of his generation, perhaps even in the world, which justifies his efforts.
- In Naruto, this is especially noticeable when characters are leaping through the treetops. As this is usually a prime opportunity for exposition, a character can remain airbound in a mostly horizontal leap for upwards of ten seconds before touching down on another branch.
- Even Fullmetal Alchemist doesn't avert this trope. It's especially apparent with the Xingese characters.
- In Skyland, Seijins use their telekenetic powers in a similar fashion.
- In Samurai 7, the samurai express improbable leaping prowess necessary to enable them to take down Nobuserai the size of houses.
- In Cardcaptor Sakura, the titular heroine is able to do this thanks to the Jump Card. Li Xiaolang is also shown to do this often, albeit without much explanation other than vague martial arts skills.
- Rurouni Kenshin: Kenshin - and many other characters in the series - can jump so high in a single bound they leave the vision of mere mortals. At least once Kenshin saves a character from falling off a cliff by jumping down after them, overtaking them, grabbing them and leaping back up from the bottom of the cliff.
- To varying extents in Pretty Cure. Futari wa Pretty Cure Splash Star managed to justify it as a reasonable effect of the girls' powers. Yes! Precure 5 actually established that the Cures on that show, at least, have an upper limit, and need assistance to get any higher.
- The Tokyo Mew Mew anime takes it to ridiculous extents. Besides incredible jumping abilities, sometimes the girls are actually given hovering powers so they can keep up with their flight-capable enemies. This makes one wonder where this leaves Mew Mint, the only member of the team that is supposed to be able to fly.
- Fate of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha. As revealed in a dodgeball game in the second season's supplementary manga, her "normal", non-magical jump reaches many times her height and has excellent hang-time. Unfortunately, all of that made her an airborne sitting duck for Suzuka's return throw.
- Ellis from El Cazador de la Bruja does this a lot, usually leaving her bodygard, Nadie, in the dust.
- The girls from Gunslinger Girl can jump very high, as exemplified by both Henrietta and Triela. Henrietta actually performs this feat most impressively to chase someone on a scooter after he steals her purse.
- Actually, Henrietta jumps very low in that instance.
- Somewhat weird example... Pinoco from Black Jack has frequently demonstrated the ability to leap more than 3 times her own height - which is, of course, necessary for her to properly Glomp the titular character. It gets stranger when you remember that her body is mostly artificial, making her a good deal heavier than a normal person (to the point where she sinks like a rock in water), and while being partially cybernetic would generally be a justification, Black Jack generally treats replacement limbs with a decent degree of realism. Considering Pinoco's uber-squicky origin, however, nobody really wants to dig into her physical capabilities too much...
- When she was (spoilered for squick) a teratoma, she was telepathic. Maybe it just changed forms.
- Seen here in Mahou Sensei Negima combined with Roof Hopping. Setsuna taught Asuna how to do it sometime before the School Festival. It can apperently reach levels similar to Flight.
- Also seen here combined with a Flash Step and a Wall Jump to let Kaede travel 750 meters In a Single Bound, in less than the time it takes Mana to work the bolt.
- Fushigi Yuugi exhibits this trope, from Tamahome (who leaps up to the top of a very high palace wall and even leaps over cars in heavy traffic), to Tasuki (who chases the person they first believed to be Chiriko but is really the Seiryuu Seishi Amiboshi in disguise across the city from roof to roof with Tamahome), to Kutou spies.
- The titular warriors from Claymore can jump really, really high. Clare, who's supposedly the weakest of all, can do some serious Roof Hopping, whereas Teresa, supposedly the strongest, can jump several kilometers in one leap.
- Pokémon tends to leave implausible acrobatics to the non-human characters, but one episode in particular has Ash make what has to be a five-story jump into Team Rocket's balloon, which looked exactly as ridiculous as it sounds. The weird part is the character of the day had a Metagross that had to help him down with telekinesis. Why didn't they just have it toss him up there in the first place?
- DearS, justified in that the DearS have gravity-manipulation abilitys.
- Neon Genesis Evangelion, where the Eva units make some mighty impressive leaps. Example: Eva Unit 2 jumping from ship to ship.
- Just try the Evangelion mod for UT2004, I dare you. Specifically, the "Racing" power mode.
- Ninku, Aicho is the sky captain but often has to use his amazing leap talents for ferrying people on his back when they need to cover major ground.
- In the Darker Than Black manga adaptation, one contractor gets super strong legs. She immediately demonstrates this trope. She also can kick people apart.
- Like all good superheroes without flight but with super strength and speed, Kiddy Grade's Éclair can do this too.
- From Beyblade we have Mystel who appears to flow in the air when he jumps. Also Kai is called out by Kenny in the manga because of his crazy jumping ability.
- This sort of thing was commonplace in Dragon Ball before they introduced actual flying to the series. A particularly good example is during the 21st Tenkaichi Budokai where Goku and Namu attack each other while falling from the sky after jumping so high.
- In JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, Jotaro sometimes uses the leg power of his Stand to propel himself into the air, which works almost as well as flight.
- Both Wild Tiger and Barnaby of Tiger and Bunny have this as part of their Hundred Power repertoire.
- Yep, occasionally you can see the Sailor Senshi do this.
Comic Books[]
- Superman, the Ur Example, had "leaping tall buildings in a single bound" among his three original powers; it became straight-up Flight when the Fleischer's found it more impressive animated. Especially since it was basically treated as flight anyway.
- However, it's worth mentioning that the boy in blue still has this power separate from his flight ability.
- In the 2011 Action Comics relaunch by Grant Morrison, when Clark first started off as Superman, he had yet to learn how to fly, and is still simply leaping tall buildings In a Single Bound.
- Doomsday can do this, in a manner similar to the Hulk.
- Technically, any character with Super Strength should have this as a bonus, due to how hard they could push off the ground.
- However, it's worth mentioning that the boy in blue still has this power separate from his flight ability.
- Empowered lampshades this by having Ninjette, not Emp, being good at this. Its justified in that 'Jette is, as her name suggests, a ninja. When Emp flails wildly during a training period with 'Jette, demolishing a number of trees and branches, she is not amused.
Emp: You ninjas always make this treehooping crap look so easy in the damn anime...!" |
- The Incredible Hulk is a rare North American example, stated to be able to leap 3 miles. But then, the guy can also throw tanks.
- Hulk can also jump to the moon.
- Given that Hulk's super leaping is a simple application of his strength, and his strength is inherently variable based on how angry he is at the momenst, piss him off enough and he can jump as far as he feels like.
- Hulk can also jump to the moon.
- Spider-Man, Spider-Man leaps through the air like a spider can.
- Toad in X-Men possesses superhuman leg strength. Once, that was the only power he had, and it was about as useful against Eye Beams, Psychic Powers, Super Strength and the like as you'd expect - not very much. He's since gotten a major beef-up.
- Wolverine also displays this power in the 2008 video game.
- Check out the GLX (Great Lakes X-Men) Christmas Special to see what happens when you have this power and don't really pay attention to maximum height, especially when you don't have protection againt re-entry.
- The original version of Paperinik, Donald Duck's superhero alias in European Disney comics, uses special boots with springs in them to jump tall buildings etc. It is basically his "signature gadget".
- The Red Bat too.
- In Alan Moore's Supreme, one of the older versions of Supreme can't fly, but "has these incredible leaps", since they're all just expies of different versions of Superman.
- Slingers member Prodigy had this as one of his powers, using his cape to help his glide...somehow. It was mentioned at least once that people weren't sure whether he was flying or leaping.
Fan Fic[]
- The Sailor Moon fanfic Tacky Yellow No-Name includes a showdown between Tuxedo Mask and Kunzite, the latter wanting to become a Mysterious Protector now too. They try to best each other at the ability to jump onto increasingly high and difficult locations while spouting odd and mysterious bits of wisdom. About the time that it devolves to "Never run with scissors!" Kunzite makes the unfortunate decision about where to jump:
Tuxedo Mask: Impaled your foot on the weathervane, eh? Amateur. |
- In Kyon: Big Damn Hero, Kyon gains this power as part of a set of upgrades.
- Paul in With Strings Attached can jump like a champ. At low power, putting some effort into it, he can jump at least 50 feet straight up. At high power, without putting much effort into it, he can jump at least a quarter of a mile.
- Commenting on Paul, Jeft notes that he had to work out how to scale down Paul's strength lest he be completely incapable of moving without causing massive chaos. Hence, he cannot leap nearly as far as his level of strength would indicate. Otherwise, a simple step that might have taken him, say, two feet as a normal person would take him over 4,000 feet at full power.
- Unlike most fictional big jumpers, Paul also (more or less) obeys the laws of physics, in that he makes a mess when he jumps as well as when he lands. In a Crowning Moment of Funny, he and John scream at each other about Paul's reluctance to power-jump off a ledge where a bridge had been, on the grounds that the inhabitants might want to rebuild the bridge someday and will need that ledge.
Film — Animated[]
- The Land Before Time: Sharptooth jumps on top of a large cliff in attempt to kill the kids, who are trying to push a boulder on him. They still kill him anyways with the boulder.
- Before that, he was able to leap on top of Littlefoot's mother and kill her.
Film — Live Action[]
- In Star Wars, Jedi and Sith use the Force to augment their natural leaping ability. Shown to be one of the most basic Force abilities.
- Jedi do this semi-regularly in the Star Wars movies. It's much, much more common in the animated series and video games, for obvious reasons.
- In the original series this quickly became one of Luke's signature moves, using it at least three times to dodge traps or elude Vader.
- Standard in the Wuxia genre, such as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
- Turkish Star Wars. By the third act, the protagonist seems to spend entire fight scenes jumping over his enemies.
- Anyone in The Matrix can jump like this, while Neo later flies. However, when he first tried to jump between two skyscrapers as part of his training, he failed miserably...just like everyone else on their first time.
- The youngest brother in Shaolin Soccer is capable of jumping at high altitudes despite being overweight.
- Francoeur in A Monster in Paris. Justified though, since he's a giant flea.
Literature[]
- Sun Wukong, the Monkey King, was known to travel 108,000 li (approximately 54,000 kilometers) in a single somersault.
- This may sound like just another random huge number, and it is, but worth noting that the Equator is a little over 40,000 km long.
- Random? I don't think so.
- In Dale Brown books, Tin Men need compressed-air jumpjets to do this, while CIDs are apparently just that good that they can do so without external assistance.
- Done on occasion by Earthcrafters and incompetent windcrafters in Codex Alera, the former by massively boosting their strength and the later by attempting to fly and not quite manage it.
Live Action TV[]
- Angel' does this occasionally in the later seasons.
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer did this on occasion. In an early episode she jumped over a gate twice her height without a running start.
- She once jumped onto a frickin' clock tower.
- Birds of Prey often has Huntress display this power, but there is a particularly egregious example in the final episode, where two other characters jump to the second story, one of whom is paraplegic.
- Power Rangers have been leaping hundreds of feet into the air since the very beginning. (And, by extension, the Super Sentai series)
- Kamen Rider has featured it more sporadically, yet one prominent example is Kamen Rider Kuuga's Dragon Form. He typically uses it to get to the tops of buildings and switches to a more appropriate form upon arrival. Kamen Rider OOO's Batta/Grasshopper Medal allows him to do this.
- The father in No Ordinary Family has this. It's even lampshaded.
George (to Jim, after he tries to fly and falls off a building): "YOU CAN'T FLY! ... But you can jump!" |
- The Most Extreme had an episode called "Jumpers", which featured the top 10 jumpers of the animal kingdom.
- In Smallville, Clark can't fly until the finale episode, but can jump high and far, starting with his first real super-leap in the episode Insurgence, leaping from the Daily Planet building to Luthor Corp Tower. His super-leaps become more powerful as the series progresses.
- Although it's hinted at during the run of the series that he possesses the ability to fly before the last episode, but just can't for some reason. (In reality, it was the "No Tights, No Flights" rule.)
- All vampires can do this in Moonlight, although their leaps are weak by comparison to someone like Superman. Mick's limit appear to be 5 stories. An old vampire is shown to be able to easily jump down from a high-rise without problems (also, without ruining his shoes). It's also implied that he got that to the balcony by jumping.
Newspaper Comics[]
- The Anti Gravity "jumping belts" in Buck Rogers.
Tabletop Games[]
- In Exalted, everyone can do this trope according the tables. Then you can get an even more super version of the power for really high jumps.
- Specifically, distances are measured in yards. You can jump your Strength + Athletics in yards vertically, and twice that horizontally. Even the least combat-oriented, freshly-Exalted (since up until the point of Exaltation you are a mere mortal) scholars and diplomats can jump abnormal distances. A yard is 3 feet and roughly 0.9 meters, for those unfamiliar with it. The other more combat-oriented Exalts truly can leap considerable distances in a single bound.
- The Athletics Charm Mountain-Crossing Leap allows one to jump (Essence x 5) miles in a matter of minutes. The minimum Essence for this skill is 4, so 20 mile jumps are the standard for this specific Charm.
- Specifically, distances are measured in yards. You can jump your Strength + Athletics in yards vertically, and twice that horizontally. Even the least combat-oriented, freshly-Exalted (since up until the point of Exaltation you are a mere mortal) scholars and diplomats can jump abnormal distances. A yard is 3 feet and roughly 0.9 meters, for those unfamiliar with it. The other more combat-oriented Exalts truly can leap considerable distances in a single bound.
- "Boots of jumping" are magical artifacts which turn up in many computer and role-playing games, and let characters demonstrate this trope. The idea probably started with Dungeons and Dragons, although D&D called them "boots of striding and springing".
- Dungeons and Dragons' Third Edition also gave the monk the ability Leap of the Clouds, making your jump distance dependent only on the Jump check, not any other factors. 3.5 removed it, but then also removed all restrictions on how far you could jump based on anything other than the jump check. Since Jump was dependent on your Strength, it was presumably reasoned that if you had superhuman strength you deserved to jump really high.
- The Jump check is also dependent on how many skill points are invested in the skill, which is limited by character level. The skill also receives bonuses based on the character's running speed. If a player really wants to, it's not terribly difficult to get a thirty-foot vertical standing jump at mid-to-high levels.
- The Pathfinder RPG (based on D&D3.5) has monks that gain a bonus equal to their level to their jump checks. Plus the bonus they get for having a high speed. Plus their ranks in the Acrobatics skill (based on DEX rather than STR). Plus the bonus for it being a class skill. Plus they don't take a penalty for not having a running start. Oh, and they can spend a Ki Point to get an instant +20 to the check. This boils down to a 5th level Monk being able to make a 10' vertical leap, from a standstill, when they roll a 1 on the die. That's not jumping up to grab the ledge 10' above you either, that's landing on it with your feet. Bigger leaps get easier as they get more skilled and faster, and gain magical equipment.
- There are people who put out horribly broken character builds using the rules. Someone who can jump 11 miles straight up? No problem.
- The above has a really fun glitch where making that Jump check can also serve as a wide-area Charm Person on crack. When CO says "Jump Good", they mean it!
- Dungeons and Dragons' Third Edition also gave the monk the ability Leap of the Clouds, making your jump distance dependent only on the Jump check, not any other factors. 3.5 removed it, but then also removed all restrictions on how far you could jump based on anything other than the jump check. Since Jump was dependent on your Strength, it was presumably reasoned that if you had superhuman strength you deserved to jump really high.
- GURPS has the Super Jump advantage, which doubles jump distance with each level.
- For skill based jumps, you can choose the jumping skill, the half of which can replace the usual number used for jumping distance. And there is also flying leap, which triples both the distance of the jump and the damage you deal if you use it as part of an attack. This is balanced by only allowing it to those with the Trained By A Master or Weapon Master advantage.
- Champions has always had a characters' base jumping distance based on strength. But to really invoke this trope, add extra leaping distance and a non-combat multiplier. And you can take an accuracy advantage, so so the character never misses their chosen landing spot.
- Feng Shui's Path of the Leaping Storm fu path is all about emulating the classic Wuxia swordsman, and the first two powers of the path are Prodigious Leap and Abundant Leap, both of which allow a character to do crazy flying wuxia leaps.
- Mutants and Masterminds offers the Leaping power which multiplies your leaping distance by rank. You start at 2 times your normal jumping distance. Rank 10 is 2000 times your normal jumping distance... and there's no upper limit, although longer distances mean you may take a while to get to your destination. Flight is faster, but not always as cool as being able to jump to the moon.
- A clarification from the game creator indicated that the bonus to jumping given by the Acrobatics skill applies before the multiplier, so with a few fancy flips, you may be able to travel a few miles further...
Video Games[]
- Essentially any side-scrolling video game, going back to Donkey Kong and probably earlier (excepting games where the player controls a flying vehicle).
- Super Mario Bros. has many examples. Mario frequently gets asked to demonstrate his jumping skills, but Luigi is better. In Mario Strikers Charged, everyone except Yoshi and Petey Pirhana jump many times their own height. A sonic boom sound effect is even played when Luigi jumps. At this point, it has already been defined that no perch is too high for him.
- Lara Croft in the early Tomb Raider games, though more recent installments have toned down her jumping ability to a more realistic level.
- Actually averted in Mass Effect, the only time anyone ever makes any kind of implausible jump, even in cutscenes, is while escaping a spacecraft in a high parking orbit where the gravity is pretty darned weak.
- The Super Jumping powerset in City of Heroes gives you this.
- Even City of Heroes characters without jump-related super powers can leap over chain-link fences as tall as themselves.
- Most fighting games involve implausible jumping skills involving characters who can, from a standing position, reach vertical displacements of several times their height and great distances forward.
- Bushido Blade notably averted this, allowing the players to barely manage to jump their height, and that only with the lighter characters wielding smaller weapons.
- Probably the most extreme are some of Capcom's Versus games where you could literally jump to heights around 50 times the height of your standard character. Even more impressive for the miniscule Servbot, who is jumping at least 200 times his height.
- Various Metroid games have the Space Jump Boots and/or the Screw Attack, which allow you to jump off of thin air once and/or many times. Combined with Samus' ability to jump several yards already, this makes for some impressive heights.
- Many Final Fantasy games have a Jump command, traditionally having you jump high enough to avoid any friendly or hostile attacks or spells, then landing pointy-end-down on a foe; typically, the Jump attack does double damage, but only if you're using a spear. If the game in question has job classes, like Final Fantasy XI, the Dragoon/Lancer/Dragon Knight class will always have this ability. If the game doesn't have specified job classes, such as Final Fantasy X, then the ability will belong only to characters who wield a spear of some sort, which is the weapon of choice for, yep, Dragoons and their kin. It's never really explained as to how these characters can survive such leaps and falls, however. It is Final Fantasy, though...
- Borderline example, in the Final Fantasy VII compilation, particularly, Advent Children and Crisis Core, nearly every notable character can do this to a degree. The most egregious example is in AC, where the entire party (Except for Barret) leaps into the sky to be used as stepping stones for Cloud to go after Bahamaut SIN.
- This is displayed even out of battle in Final Fantasy IX wherein the game's two dragon knights, Freya Crescent and Fratley Irontail, easily leap from rooftop to rooftop and leap four to five times their body height from a complete standstill. Even the most athletic members of the party can't keep up. (Although this could be somewhat explained by the fact that the dragon knights are a non-human race of rat people with supposedly much greater leg strength than humans.)
- 8-Bit Theater has a Dragoon with the ability to make insanely high jumps... so long as there is someone to land on. It is a jump attack, after all. In keeping with the series, Black Mage is the usual landing spot.
- It also seems that he needs his spear, as after it accidentally got teleported away (it was stuck through Black Mage at the time), he hasn't jumped even once. He also commented "I needed that spear".
- Both played straight and subverted in Final Fantasy X-2, where the three protagonists have no qualms about jumping hundreds of feet into and out of huge gaping holes down to the core of the Fayth, yet in one cutscene, as Yuna prepares to jump off a cliff in the Mi'ihen Highroad to save some civilians, Payne stops her and forces you to take a long windy path down to the bottom of said cliff.
- Spoofed in Morrowind: if you head north along the swamp road, you'll hear a noise behind you, and when you turn around, you come across the body of a magician. If you check his possessions, you'll find three scrolls of Icarian Flight, which let you jump great distances. Landing safely is another matter...
- However, it IS possible to save him if you go out of your way to avoid that area, create a Slowfall spell, and cast it on him once you see him flying to his doom. He'll only say "I don't want to talk about it." after he lands and the only way to retrieve the scrolls then is to either kill him or steal them.
- Spoofed but not completely averted; it's possible to reach absurd jump heights. A master acrobat with a strong jumping enchantment can obviate Levitation spells and bound across the land, avoiding any random encounters (and it's a hell of a rush.) This was toned down in Oblivion to prevent players from vaulting the city walls that the jumping ability from Morrowind made possible (no more roof-hopping across town, which was also a thrill.)
- Amusingly, it's possible in the early game to gain items that will allow you to survive the fall from using the scrolls of Icarian Flight. This then allows you to Speed Run the game in about 8 minutes instead of the usual 40 hours.
- ... Assuming, of course, that you also know where a bunch of people to kill for plot-relevant teleport scrolls live, and are able to exploit a glitch that boosts your stats enough to fight the endboss at level one. It's still an awesome achievement of gameplay, though.
- In Killer 7, this is a supernatural ability of Coyote Smith, one of the Killer7 assassins.
- Unreal, Unreal Tournament and Unreal Tournament III have AntiGrav Boots which will enhance your next three jumps, allowing you to catapult yourself to the top of a level. While walking, you won't boot-jump, just regular-jump.
- Banjo-Tooie has the Springy Step Shoes, and also the Leg Spring ability learned by Kazooie solo.
- Implemented poorly like everything else in Red Ninja: End of Honor. You have a high jump scroll that makes you do...high jumps. It however does not specify that you can actually jump anywhere except straight up, and they mean "high" as in "comparatively higher than your normal jump". Considering the titular character can simply use her Grappling Hook to launch her onto rooftops, one wonders why this thing is even in the game at all...
- The Pokedex entry for Blaziken in Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire says that it can "easily clear a thirty-story building in one leap". Wow. Unfortunately, in the actual games (with the exception of Sky Uppercut, which can hit Pokémon whilst they're using Fly), the ability is never actually used.
- Doduo and its evolution Dodrio are flightless birds, but can learn Fly. One of the only possible explanations is that it can jump really well.
- The Gen IV Pokedex notes that a sufficiently powerful Magikarp can Splash over a mountain...and that it's still worthless.
- Superman can jump really, really high in the NES Superman game. The perfectly ordinary Clark Kent can jump just as high.
- Jumping as Superman in that particular NES game, if you were right next to a building, would trigger a "Leap tall buildings in a single bound" cutscene and put you on a different part of the city
- Alex Mercer from Prototype can jump incredibly well, especially with the ability maxed out and fully charged. It naturally leads to Roof Hopping given the city environs.
- If trailers are any indication, James Heller will be able to jump even higher.
- Canabalt is all about jumping higher then physically possible.
- Both averted and played straight in Deus Ex. By default J.C. can't even jump as high as a normal human being could, but with the right nanotech implant and upgrades he can jump absurdly high.
- Sonic '06 though a very bad game, and it's never used in a real game unless its done using springs, in one cutscene, Sonic leaps from a ship crashing and leaps clear across an entire ocean! He almost misses his mark had it not been for the explosion, he'd be dead
- In Blaz Blue, this is surprisingly performed by resident Mighty Glacier Iron Tager. In his Genesic Emerald Tager Buster Distortion Drive, he throws the victim into the air at least five times his considerable height, then jumps after him/her/it without apparent assistance and catches the victim for a Meteor Move. It hurts as much as you'd think it does.
- Tager's Astral Heat, which involves him jumping into SPESS and pile-driving them.
- Zangief from Street Fighter games can jump several times his height during a Final Atomic Buster, with the crowning moment of glory/nonsense being when he jumps into friggin' orbit in EX 2.
- In his ending in SNK vs. Capcom SVC Chaos, Akuma leaves the tournament unsatisfied by his weak mortal opponents. So what does he do? Simple. He jumps into heaven to challenge Kami-sama.
- The heroes of Legend of Kage and its Spiritual Successor, Demon Sword can jump nearly the height of the screen.
- Ditto for Low G Man who, when fully powered-up, can jump up to 20 times his own height.
- In the first Dark Cloud, every single human in Matataki Village and Seda have this ability, though it's usually just vertical. Goro is the best at it until he suffers from the Law of NPC Relativity upon joining your party. Monica Raybrandt in the second combines the horizontal and vertical aspects. Gaspard isn't quite as impressive, but flipping over Monica could qualify.
- This trope is why Crackdown became a surprise hit rather than a forgettable Grand Theft Auto clone. Sure, you can drive... but why would you want to, when your character can eventually develop the ability to leap fifty feet in the air?
- Blood Rayne can jump insanely high (maybe ten stories or so) and land lightly on her feet, probably because she's a half-vampire. Oddly, most of the first game is set indoors, so the crazy jumping powers aren't usually necessary. They do make it convenient to get around, though.
- In Legend of Success Joe, the ruffian and Harimao can jump high enough to clear the screen. Yet the player has no jumping ability, which is odd for a video game.
- Tales of Symphonia gives all characters a jump in battle mode that easily lets them leap over grown men's heads. This makes a certain amount of sense for the athletic fighters among the cast; not so much for purportedly frail magicians like Genis. Even the anime adaptation, not bound by the game engine, has Genis avoid a monster's attack with a skillful backflip.
- Most people in Tales of Symphonia can't do this, but the protagonists wear Ex Spheres, which are explicitly made to enhance one's physical capabilities beyond normal limits... although Genis can do it before he actually starts wearing his. Maybe because he's a wizard?
- Judith from Tales of Vesperia also invokes this trope. Her entire battle style is aerial, she can easily jump as high as the battlefield reaches as well as can stay in midair for ridiculous amounts of time.
- This is Asura's usual method of jumping to really high distances.
Webcomics[]
- All three outsiders in Project 0 have had at least one. Owen is the only one without a cool landing to go with it.
- James Eglamore from Gunnerkrigg Court.
- In The Adventures of Dr. McNinja, Bruce Lee leaps to the Moon from the Earth and becomes a permanent guest at Dracula's moon base. After meeting with him to learn the technique, Doc manages a similar feat.
- Sailor Ranko, which actually shows Ranma jumping over a tall building when he tests out his new Senshi abilitys.
- Wonderella can totally jump hella high.
- Sweet Bro and Hella Jeff shows The Big Man in a dream sequence.
"but it turns out to be CRAZY what kind of dunks this guy has. Im teling you... air like that is UNREAL, it doens't even HAPPEN." |
- Sluggy Freelance: Lord Horribus can do this due to Super Strength; he's used it for Roof Hopping.
Web Original[]
- Chaka and Bladedancer of the Whateley Universe can both do this through manipulation of Ki, doing all the light-foot Kung Fu tricks, like leaping up walls and balancing on tiny branches up in trees.
Western Animation[]
- Samurai Jack devoted an entire episode to justifying this.
- He-man. One such scene in one of the animated series has him and Battle Cat leaping over a lake of lava and landing in the coolest way possible. If you were to have seen it, you'd probably wonder why he even keeps Battle Cat around.
- Kim Possible: Kim, apparently thanks to cheerleading.
- Monkey Fiste and the members of Team Go can pull this off as well.
- The titular bears from the Gummi Bears use their gummi berry juice to attain this power.
- And, of course, the inevitable Avatar: The Last Airbender example: Justified for the protagonist, as airbenders are able to leap high and far distances by conjuring gusts of wind and cushions of air. Earthbenders are similarly able to catapult themselves into the air and soften the earth for safe landings.
- As noticed by many fans, the justification is pretty much out the window for Fire Nation characters, who are portrayed to have the second biggest leaps in the series for no apparent reason. In "The Boiling Rock", Azula demonstrates a technique that can best be described as the firebending equivalent of a rocket jump. The funny thing is that this is still shorter than how high non-bender Ty Lee can jump normally.
- Under the influence of Sozin's comet, skilled firebenders can use rocket-feet to fly. This was alluded to as early as "The Southern Air Temple": Aang reasons that the air temples could not have been violated because they're completely inaccessible from the ground...
- As noticed by many fans, the justification is pretty much out the window for Fire Nation characters, who are portrayed to have the second biggest leaps in the series for no apparent reason. In "The Boiling Rock", Azula demonstrates a technique that can best be described as the firebending equivalent of a rocket jump. The funny thing is that this is still shorter than how high non-bender Ty Lee can jump normally.
- In Young Justice, Superboy can't fly like Superman, but he can jump at impressive distances. Kid Flash even uses the "Leap tall buildings in a single bound" line.
- Teen Titans' Red Star is shown doing this.
- In Superfriends, the "Junior Superfriends" Wendy, Marvin, and Wonderdog don't really have any superpowers as we know them. However, Marvin has an ambiguous ability to do "super leaps".
Real Life[]
- Cats jump several times their height/length routinely. A mountain lion can jump up to 25 feet. Your average housecat can jump probably 6 or 7 feet high.
- Then there's fleas, which can jump many times their height, and grasshoppers and crickets, which have specialized back legs specifically for jumping. And frogs. And kangaroo rats. And real kangaroos. And ...
- This is an application of the Square-Cube Law, since the relative jumping strength goes as the square of the size and relative weight goes as the cube; in fact, all else being equal, the actual (not relative) jump height is constant with regard to the scale. In other words, if you made a human (who could jump maybe 2 feet) 5 times bigger, it would only be able to jump 2 feet still, despite being 30 feet tall. Consider that a cat, 1/10 the size of a human, can jump heights/lengths comparable (within a factor of 2) of a human's. Consider that one of those crazy tropical jumping spiders (~1 inch) and your common everyday flea (~1/50? inch) can jump about the same height, which isn't even all that different from the jumping height of a human despite the thousand-fold difference in size. Of course, if all else ISN'T equal (say, the animal is particularly good at jumping due to evolution: kangaroo, cat, etc, or particularly bad: elephant, rhino, hippo), the jump can be several times bigger or smaller.
- It also helps that most jumping insects don't use muscle contractions themselves to jump. They compress or extend and elastic material in the legs over several seconds. This potential energy is then released all at once and they go flying off like an arrow from a bow.
- Powerisers can't quite give you this ability, but they come close, with a maximum jump height of around seven feet for those sufficiently good at using them.
- Kien Lieu. In particular, 1:17.
- Wuxia films were inspired by real life monks who wear weights all the time while training, making them capable of things that look impossible, but are really just at the high end of normal. See also: professional basketball players and olympic jumpers.