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"All of our young lives we search for someone to love. Someone that makes us complete. We choose partners and change partners. We dance to a song of heartbreak and hope. All the while wondering if somewhere, somehow, there's someone perfect who might be searching for us."
—Kevin Arnold, The Wonder Years
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The most indomitable of story telling romantics is the idea of one utter perfect specimen who is your ultimate match. Perhaps they will have everything in common with you and share your dreams. Often Love At First Sight comes into play when the person is beautiful. Destiny or The Power of Love are often invoked to explain why that person is the way they are or how you met them.
Not to be confused with One True Pairing which is what the fans want to happen. This only applies to examples where it's made clear and deliberate in the work, regardless of what the editor happens to ship and regardless of how convinced you are.
It should also NOT be confused with Eternal Love, which happens when two immortals or very long-lived people get hitched.
Anime and Manga[]
- Naruto has been searching for the one person who would love him unconditionally. However, he was unable to reconcile this with the romantic implications of such a relationship, thanks to his emotionally-stunted childhood, which was deprived of such affection due to his status as the village pariah. He wanted it to be Sakura, because he saw her love for Sasuke, and being Sasuke's rival, sought that love for himself. The Last, makes it clear that the person he's really been searching for is Hinata, who has loved him from afar since childhood, but was always too shy to get close to him. Naruto was never able to notice her unsubtle feelings because he has never been able to understand romantic love. As the events of the movie progress and he finally begins to understand, he gradually comes to realize who the person he's meant to be with is, as he begins to fall in love with her.
- Yu-Gi-Oh! GX: Jaden and Yubel. In a past life as children, he promised to love her and only her forever. His feelings for her were so strong, they carried over through his reincarnation and memory loss: it only takes him a few minutes after remembering to reaffirm the vow and fuse their souls together for eternity. On Yubel's end, she loved him so much she voluntarily underwent a Painful Transformation into a monster just so she could protect him, and apparently waited thousands of years for him to be reincarnated. Her love was so strong it drove her to insanity, damned and redeemed her in succession.
Film - Live Action[]
- Enchanted: Prince Edward and Giselle believe they are each other's. But it's Robert who awakens Giselle with love, and later Edward marries Robert's fiancé Nancy.
- The Princess Bride: Buttercup and Westley. Prince Humperdinck, who wants Buttercup to marry him instead, knows he is doomed to failure as long as Westley is alive because of this trope.
- Sleepless in Seattle: Lampshaded by Annie in one scene who says it is usually invoked as means of explaining all the romantic accidents. Played straight when she later goes along with the idea that Sam is the one anyway.
- When Harry Met Sally...: Mentioned when Sally is heartbroken that her ex-boyfriend found his perfect match. "He just met her... She's supposed to be his transitional person, she's not supposed to be the ONE."
Live Action TV[]
- Arrow: Nyssa feels this way about Sara.
- Babylon 5 has John Sheridan and Delenn, despite the fact that she was his Second Love. The Power of Love between them has been enough for Sheridan to defy both death and torture and may in fact be responsible for winning two separate wars.
- From the same show: Jeffrey Sinclair and Catherine Sakai.
- Boy Meets World: Cory Matthews and Topanga Lawerence, especially after they were retconned to be lifelong soul mates who knew they loved each other since they were toddlers. Even three breakup arcs can't keep them apart, and they're married by the final season.
- Possibly their son, Auggie, in the sequel series Girl Meets World. He has a little girlfriend Ava, whom he "marries" at the end of season one and continually calls his wife, and they're still together by the end of the series.
- The Flash: The whole series, Barry constantly talks of Iris as 'the one' and they end up married
- Friends: Parodied in an episode where Phoebe asks Chandler if he believes in soul mates. He doesn't, he believes in falling in love, but not that there's one person who's perfect for you. She says "Good, because I just met Monica's!" The rest of the episode is him feeling increasingly threatened by this guy, until Monica explains she doesn't believe in One True Love either.
Monica: I don't think that you and I were destined to end up together. I think that we fell in love and work hard at our relationship. Some days we work really hard. |
- This is rather odd as in their wedding vows Monica explicitly called Chandler 'my prince and my soulmate' and a previous episode had Chandler declaring they were "meant for each other". Many fans were irritated by the Continuity Snarl.
- Lampshaded by Word Of God in this quote:
Kevin Bright: What it says is that these two were destined to be together. That it doesn’t matter if they were skinny or large, or successful or not, that these two had something in fate that was meant to be. |
- How I Met Your Mother: The entire premise of the series is based around Ted's search for his future wife, who has been shown to have the exact characteristics that Ted is looking for.
- Peep Show: Played for Laughs for an entire season where Once an Episode Mark has decided that each and every girl he meets is the perfect woman for him.
- Raising Hope: Virginia and Burt have remained married for over 20 years, despite Maw Maw continually trying to break them up, because she wanted to boot out her freeloading family. Jimmy later narrates that "if two people are meant to be together, they will stay together no matter what tries to get in their way" - while deleting a text message on Sabrina's phone from her boyfriend, asking her to go to a restaurant, so he could take her out to eat instead.
- The Wonder Years: Subverted by Kevin Arnold and Winnie Cooper (the source of the page quote). They've known each other since childhood, get together in junior high, break up only to come back together again, and are implied to lose their virginity to each other in the final episode. They share an insanely strong connection and no one Kevin dates can compare to the feelings he has for her no matter how much he likes the girl. But in the epilogue, narrator!Kevin reveals that he married another woman and stayed Just Friends with Winnie.
Literature[]
- Bella and Edward in Twilight giving or attempting to sacrifice everything for the sake of each other. In their universe, it is deliberately invoked by the werewolves, who bond to a single soulmate for whom they always love.
- "Lifemates" in the Liaden Universe are rare but when they do happen, that 'verse's science of psionics can objectively verify it. (It is eventually revealed that this is due to genetic spiritual meddling by Sufficiently Advanced Aliens in the past, and there's a damn good reason why it always seems to happen to the "dramliz" and not anyone else.)
- In The Dilbert Future, Scott Adams Deconstructs the trope, pointing out that the One True Love is always within driving distance, and of the preferred gender, age, and species. And if the relationship doesn't work, the person usually will find their "True" One True Love under the same circumstances.
Video Games[]
- In the infamous Sonic '06, the "Test of Love" states Sonic's soulmate choices, in which are narrowed down to Amy Rose and Princess Elise.
Webcomics[]
- In Homestuck, this is apparently one of the cornerstones of the troll concept of romance. While trolls change lovers around much like humans do, trolls all believe that they have one perfect person (or in one case, two perfect people) for each of the four quadrants of their romance (romantic love, romantic hate, romantic guardianship and romantic mediation). This is called Troll Serendipity (in reference to that specific movie).
Western Animation[]
- The Beatles episode "I Want To Hold Your Hand" has a scientist aboard a cruise ship, having captured an octopus whose unhappiness stems from being lovesick. The scientist lowers a diving bell into the ocean to gather some input on finding the octopus' true love. The Beatles have hidden inside the diving bell from their wild female fans, and under the sea they discover a similarly lovesick female octopus. Once back on ship, the boys buy the male octopus and throw him back into the ocean to be with the female octopus to live happily ever after.
- It's all but stated that Kuki/Numbuh 3 and Wally/Numbuh 4 are each other's True Love. Despite (or perhaps because of) their opposite personalities they complement each other very well. She's his Morality Pet and Living Emotional Crutch, doing unthinkable things for her sake and flipping out when something happens to her. She in turn brings happiness in him and only shows interest in him despite having many suitors behind her. Everyone Can See It In-Universe and out, and both Cannot Spit It Out until the finale, when it's revealed they got married.
- At the very end of Voltron: Legendary Defender, the Star-Crossed Lovers Lance and Allura promise to remain in love forever before she goes through an Heroic Sacrifice.