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Saints Row is a Wide Open Sandbox series of games by Volition. In the tradition of Grand Theft Auto, you portray a criminal, and proceed to commit countless acts of murder, grand theft auto, reckless driving, vandalism, assault, fraud, theft, possessing restricted firearms, and yes, even jaywalking and public drunkenness.

Games in the series so far:

Tropes used in Saints Row (series) include:
  • 100% Completion: Missions, strongholds, activities and collectibles, and in IV and Gat out of Hell, challenges contribute to this.
  • Action Girl: Lin in the first game has her moments, and if your character in SR2 is female, then especially her.
  • AKA-47: A couple are shout-outs, the others are clearly certain weapons with a different name.
  • Anyone Can Die:
    • Dabbled with in the first game with the death of Lin and when Playa is apparently killed in the secret, true ending.
    • Brought out in full force in the second. Sometimes by your hand, regarding Julius.
    • The Third smacks you in the face with this trope, courtesy of losing Johnny Gat.
  • Arc Number: 31 is featured prominently in each game.
  • Arc Words: The Pyramid is referenced multiple times throughout both games. You and Gat break into and destroy it during SR2's finale.
    • It can be heard during radio advertisements, and often mumbled about by the bums and homeless people in their mad ranting.
  • Arms Dealer: The Friendly Fire store chain, featured in every game apart from the Gat spinoff.
  • Artifact Title: From the third game onwards, Stilwater is left behind, so the Saints Row district is never seen again, apart from Ben King's rescue mission in the fourth game. Even in the second game, the district is not featured much, and cannot be taken over by the Saints.
  • Authority Equals Asskicking: Zig-Zagged. Some gang-bosses turn out to be powerful boss-characters, while others are just weak administrators dispatched with ease, or even executed in a cutscene. The player character himself can be said to be an embodiment of the trope from the second game onwards, but notably, he was kicking ass BEFORE he became the leader of the Saints, too. Meanwhile, Jules - the original leader - is killed in a cutscene, and rarely ever kicks any real ass, much as he talks the talk.
    • A one-person example of the zig-zag would have to be Phillipe Loren from the third game. Leader of a huge criminal syndicate called The Syndicate, he's able to kill Johnny Gat offscreen, and subsequently acquires an Eyepatch of Power... but then the tables gets turned, and you kill him fairly easily in a cutscene.
  • Back Seats Are Just for Show: Hardtop cars with two doors but four seats can't be used to carry more than two people, but convertibles can be used since gang members hop over sides.
  • Badass Crew: You don't fuck with the Saints. By the third game, they've amassed enough power that, depending on player actions, they can openly challenge the United States military in a second Civil War.
  • Badass Spaniard: The first game has Los Carnales, a Hispanic gang. Of course, there's nothing stopping you from being a Badass Spaniard: the second game provides Hispanic voice options for both sexes.
  • Bare Your Midriff: Lin and Tanya in the first game, and Shaundi and Jessica in the second. You can also dress the Boss like this, if you wish.
  • Bash Brothers: Johnny Gat is probably the only person in the world capable of keeping up with the Boss in terms of combat pragmatism and sheer kill totals. At the beginning of Saints Row 2, Gat is on trial for three hundred eighty seven murders. "But with the statute of limitations it really ought to be closer to two-fiddy." In cutscenes, the Boss and Gat can clear a room of mooks as fast as a bomb strike.
    • A fake interview with him (is there any other kind when it comes to fictional characters?) reveals his kill tally is actually around 16,000, at least according to him. But would you call him a liar?
  • Bilingual Bonus: Mainly in the first game, in which Los Carnales usually say phrases only in Spanish, without subtitles. Of course, Dex's annoyance with people saying "the Los Carnales". Some of the pedestrians' random lines in both games are in Spanish and they are generally funny, too.
    • Also fitting, the Ronin in the second game, some of who speak unsubtitled Japanese a lot during their cutscenes, if you have the subtitles on all you get is *Speaks Japanese*. Mr. Wong's Mandarin gets similar treatment although he has a translator most of the time.
    • One of the Ronin missions takes place in a restaurant named Kanto which is the Japanese Dialect spoken in the Tokyo region. It also seems to be the dialect that the Ronin speak.
    • Taken beyond the ridiculous in the third game with the "Zombie" voice option. Anything absolutely 100% plot-relevant gets subtitles. Everything else is labeled "roars", "sneers", "groans", etc.
      • The hilarious irony of this is that sometimes the "Zombie" voice will say "Fluent in six languages!" seemingly apropos of nothing.
  • Black and Grey Morality: It's a game about street gangs. What did you expect?
    • One of the Developer's given reasons for the Saints' huge popularity at the start of the third game is Stilwater is much better off (from a certain point of view) without three warring gangs and a corrupt corporation scheming to screw everyone for profit. In fact, the population expects a little hijinks from the Saints now, with SWAT officers asking Saints undertaking criminal activities to please put down their guns... after autographing them.
    • Black and Black Morality in the second game. At least the Saints in the first game were explicitly there to stop the other gangs from causing too much of a ruckus. The Boss is explicitly out for himself, especially when s/he kills Julius.
    • Back to Black and Grey Morality in the third game; the Saints can even be outright heroic at times, if the player so chooses.
  • Black Best Friend: The first game has Dex, who is the most level-headed of the Saints' inner circle. In the second and third games, there's Pierce, who gets no respect.
  • Bling Bling Bang: In the original game, the special weapons, unlocked by completing the Hitman assignments, are a gold-plated large handgun, and a platinum plated shotgun, RPG-1, and riot shotgun. You only get one in the second game - a shotgun disguised as a pimp cane.
    • All of the special weapons in the second game, however, are distinctly better looking and very different from the average/normal guns. Not exactly bling, but some of them are pretty shiny.
  • Breaking the Fourth Wall/Leaning on the Fourth Wall: Julius refers to the main character as "Playa".
    • Player him/herself does this over now being able to talk, as do others such as Lampshading his/her different looks by asking "Did you do something to your hair?"
  • Broken Bridge: Averted in every instance that "wide open" sandboxes have come to conventionally rely on them. The game illustrates how unnecessary cramping player freedom is to maintaining narrative flow. Each story arc still unfolds chronologically, at the player's own pace. And if you don't want to be driven by the story, you can go everywhere, and you'll find a Minigame Zone when you get there.
    • The third game averts it entirely for most of the game, then looks like it's going to play it straight when the city is put under martial law, then subverts the hell out of it - several bridges are raised and blocked off to seal off Downtown, but there's nothing at all to stop the player from swimming across the river, or flying over, or boating over, or just ramping a car across, so in practice, it's little more than a minor inconvenience.
    • Through played straight when Killbane goes and blows up the bridge that leads back to Stilwater after Johnny Gat's burial. Its just seems like the Saints just can't roll on 3rd Street or Stilwater anymore.
  • Bullying a Dragon: Anytime people start talking shit to the Boss or try to confront the Saints, the end results are truly horrifying.
  • Butt Monkey: Donnie, from both games. Whenever he shows up, you can bet your bottom dollar that something bad will happen to him. The second game also has Pierce. He has ideas ripped off him mid-sentence and is never listened to.
    • At one point he calls you up to tell you that the Brotherhood are bringing in a bigass pile of guns on a boat. Shaundi calls up mid-way through that call to tell you the exact same thing before he does, and he told her in the first place!
      • The first Ronin mission has him trying to plan an elaborate Ocean's Eleven style robbery, only to have The Boss and Johnny tell him it's much more fun to bust in with guns.
      • Even funnier considering it's the exact same plan used in San Andreas' over-elaborate casino heist.
  • Car Fu: Aside from the obvious usage of this trope, the series also has an "evil cars" cheat which makes pedestrians in cars and motorcycles chase you down in an attempt to run you over.
  • Cardboard Prison: When you get busted, you respawn at the nearest police precinct, less a chunk of your cash.
    • Also happens at the start of Saints Row 2, the Boss escapes prison pretty easily, and s/he breaks back into prison pretty easily later on too. Mostly for the illegal wrestling matches there.
  • Character Customization: You can customize nearly every aspect of your character. The system is so good (especially in the second game) that a lot of people have made celebrities and posted the formulas on message boards and YouTube.
  • Color Coded for Your Convenience: Gang colors. To elaborate, the Saints use purple; the Vice Kings and Ronin use yellow; the Rollerz and the Deckers have blue; Los Carnales, the Brotherhood, and Morning Star all use red; and the Sons of Samedi and the Luchadores use green. This is also reflected in the color schemes of their vehicles.
    • Ironically, "Karma Chameleon" uses those colors, and sure enough, when you listen to the song on The Mix 107.77, as the song is ending the DJ will sometimes lampshade the colors mentioned in the song to the three gangs that took over Stilwater in absence of the Boss.
    • Ultor have a thing for black and orange in the second game. See the Masako "special-ops" teams in particular.
    • STAG in the third is primarily white with some splashes of orange here and there.
    • Even neutral NPC gangs, such as bikers.
    • Though the Pimps avert this, they instead follow Dress-Coded for Your Convenience, sharing a broad, feathered pimp hat and a half-buttoned shirt.
  • The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard: Inverted. Military vehicles controlled by the player are noticeably more durable than those controlled by NPCs, to the point that the Boss can use one tank to take out three other tanks without much trouble.
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive: Benjamin King is a little like one in the first one, but Ultor Corp. is this full stop in the second game, especially Dane Vogel.
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Dane Vogel: "Like my father always said - if you want to build an ivory tower, you're going to have to kill some elephants."

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    • Not to mention you can sometimes hear him calling The Mix and requesting Tears for Fears' "Everybody Wants to Rule the World", calling it his theme song.[1]
  • Coup De Grace Cutscene: The defeat of every rival gang boss (in both games) gets one of these.
  • Crapsack World: Stilwater: Pretty on the outside, really fucking nasty on the inside. It Got Worse in Saints Row 2, what with the Saints no longer being a vigilante gang.
  • Darker and Edgier: While the first game had its moments, particularly the death of Lin, the second game goes further despite arguably being funnier. In particular, the Ronin missions "Bleeding Out" and "Rest in Peace" and the Brotherhood Missions "Red Asphalt" and "Bank Error In Your Favor" feature some dark themes.
  • Deadpan Snarker: A bunch, mostly from the Boss.
  • Death Is a Slap on The Wrist: See Cardboard Prison; replace "busted" with "smoked" and "police precinct" with "hospital".
  • Denser and Wackier: The first game was more or less straight-up; the second game started introducing all sorts of strange, funny elements. The third game goes completely off the rails.
    • This is even lampshaded in the mission A Remote Chance:
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The Boss: He's more afraid of Angel than me?
Shaundi: You're kind of ridiculous.

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  • Department of Redundancy Department: Stefan does this in the radio ads for Impressions, the clothing shop where you shop for clothing, and Foreign Power (FOREIGN POWER!).
  • Depraved Bisexual: The Female Boss is heavily implied to be one.
  • Devil in Plain Sight: Most people on the street seem to know your character is the leader of the Saints (and many of your actions), yet no-one seems to care much (including rival gangs) unless you start stirring up trouble. In fact, some pedestrians on the street compliment the Boss on their psychoticness.
    • Justified by your character's reputation. I mean, a full police corps, with FBI aid, armored personnel carriers, shotguns, and helicopter air support couldn't take your character down. You'll fight one of those at least once, usually in the early stages. So long as they don't start anything, they're praying that you don't either. Plus, the game's a Crapsack World.
  • Double Entendre: Friendly Fire (weapons), On the Rag (natural clothing store), Peep This (theater), Phuc Mi Phuc Yu (faux Asian food store, which sells Sum Yung Guy and Sum Old Guy), Sloppy Seconds (second-hand clothing), Rim Jobs (car mechanics), Mourning Wood Cemetery, and Freckle Bitch's menu and radio ad. There's also TNA Taxis' (and Big Willy's Cabs') phone response. Not to mention the phone numbers for the aforementioned taxi services, which are 555-455-8008 and 555-819-8415 respectively.
  • Enemy Chatter: Gang members will often talk amongst each other when not in combat.
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Ronin Mook: Why are we called the Ronin? We 'have' a leader.

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  • Equal Opportunity Evil : The Saints, especially in the second one.
  • Escort Mission: Drug Trafficking, Escort, Snatch, and Heli Assault (in the second game). Along with a bunch of story missions.
  • Every Car Is a Pinto: And dammit, it's awesome. This is actually lampshaded in the second game. Sometimes pedestrians, when having their car stolen, yell, "I left my hydrogen tank in there!"
  • Everything's Deader with Zombies: Zombie Lin in Saints Row, Zombie Carlos in Saints Row 2 and Zombie Gat in Saints Row: The Third}}. And in Saints 2, you can go to any of your cribs and play a fun little minigame called Zombie Uprising, which is pretty much the Saints Row world's answer to Dead Rising. The Third also has a zombie voice option, as well as a story mission named "Zombie Attack".
  • Evil Is Cool: The back of the original Saints Row case says "Saints Row - Sinners Welcome". That should tell you all you need to know about this series, even though Saints 2 has a couple "You Bastard!" scenes, culminating when the player kills Julius, who calls out the player on their new evil murdering ways.
  • Evil vs. Evil: To paraphrase from Snatch, "Do you know what "nemesis" means? A righteous infliction of retribution manifested by an appropriate agent. Personified in this case by an horrible cunt... the Boss."
  • Exploding Barrels: Too many to count. Crucial to one minigame in Saints Row 2, where hitting them will cause huge explosions with your flaming ATV.
  • Face Heel Turn: The second game shows you that Julius is responsible for the explosion that nearly killed you at the end of Saints Row, believing that the player wouldn't give up the life. He was right — and he gets murdered by the player. It can be argued that this is the point where the player character does a Face Heel Turn and crosses the Moral Event Horizon. Dex also attempts to set the two of you up for execution by the Masako squad in the game's secret mission.
    • Troy is an interesting case. At first, he is one of the Saints, then it turns out that he is the reluctant undercover cop who doesn't want to sell out the gangs. The second game reveals him trying to do good, but is frustrated with the gangs and Ultor leaning on him, and trying to make amends with Julius. Gat mentions after Troy became Chief everyone who targeted him in prison left him alone, Troy keeps the Boss on life support after the bombing and can even be called out to help the reformed Saints, despite being more psychopathic and evil than the original Saints were.
  • False-Flag Operation: One Vice Kings mission in the first game involves you and Johnny dressing up in yellow (Vice Kings colors) and causing mayhem.
    • In the second game, the Boss and Shaundi disguise themselves as electrical repair technicians in order to sneak into the monitoring room in the Police HQ so they can tap into the CCTV network and track down The General's limo. Amusingly, the uniforms are purple so they can still represent the Row, even while undercover.
      • And, of course, Troy, who was trying to bring down the gangs from the inside.
  • Five-Man Band:

In Saints Row

In Saints Row 2.

  • Four-Temperament Ensemble
    • After Carlos' death, the four main Saints. The Boss is VERY choleric, being a vicious psychopath. Johnny is sanguine, being the most cheerful of the four. Pierce is melancholic, being the smartest and a complainer. And Shaundi is phlegmatic, being the most agreeable of the four.
  • Foreshadowing: Those who learn about the history of the Vice Kings will notice that it practically reads like a Recycled Script for the history of the Saints - complete with equivalent characters - across both games: from their origin as a Well-Intentioned Extremist vigilante group by Benjamin King to clean up his section of the city from the onslaught of Los Carnales, down to their descent into corruption and Motive Decay until they became as bad as Los Carnales and the others. And just like the Kings, the Saints have their leader usurped by a depraved, power-hungry villain.
  • Fleur-de-Lis: The symbol of the Saints.
  • Freudian Trio: The three main Saints after Gat's death.
    • Id: The Boss
    • Superego: Pierce
    • Ego: Shaundi
  • From Nobody to Nightmare: The player character. The main character at the start of the first game is just some random pedestrian who gets caught in gangland crossfire and is adopted by the Saints. By the end of the second game, s/he's a full blown psychopath who's just taken over Stilwater, with eyes on the rest of the world. Goes a step further in Saints Row 3, in one ending the protagonist takes Steelport and secedes from the US.
    • Ultor too, since they were just a clothing store in the first game.
  • Free Rotating Camera
  • Full-Frontal Assault: The Boss is terrifying enough, however watching him shoot, maim or roast his enemies is only made worse when he does it totally naked. In the later two games, there's even a diversion and a corresponding challenge based on streaking.
  • Fun T-Shirt: The games offer these among the clothing options.
  • Gameplay and Story Segregation: In the in-engine cinematics, your character appears as dressed and customized, but can wield any weapon the scene calls for, even dual-wielding sword and gun, which can't be equipped together in gameplay.
  • Gender Is No Object: Men outnumber the women in the gangs, but otherwise nobody really cares one way or another. In Saints 2 this even applies to security guards and police officers. In the third, police and The Luchador gang are all-male while The Saints can be customized to have any proportion you choose.
  • Hammerspace Police Force
  • Heroic Comedic Sociopath: Johnny Gat. When gangsters call you a gun-toting maniac, you may have to calm down a little. The man's favorite pastime is violence. Preferably against police. His solution to any problem is walk in the front door and start killing people... and somehow, he comes off as a complete and total Badass instead of a bloodthirsty psychotic. Your main character also fits this trope to a T, for Saints 1 at least. In Saints 2, you drop the "heroic" bit and eventually this becomes your hat again in 3.
  • Hide Your Children: While children's voices can be heard in some of the radio commercials, they're nowhere to be found in the city.
    • Promotional info for The Third reveals that a Stilwater City Ordnance prevents the public display of children and animals.
    • Averted in the third, since many of The Deckers are teens and Matt Miller himself is only 16. Still no one clearly before puberty though.
  • HUD: Shows you a route you can take to your next waypoint, said waypoint, mission-critical targets, and the car or hit you need to complete for the Chop Shop or Hitman activities. If you discover a short cut, e.g. go through someone's back garden, the Sat-Nav will remember it and send you down there next time you're going that way. In The Third, when you've set a waypoint and are driving to it, green arrows pointing in its direction are overlaid over roads that don't lead to it.
  • Hyperactive Metabolism
  • Hyperspace Arsenal: I'm sure he was carrying a machine gun and not an RPG-7 just a few seconds ago.
  • Idle Animation: You twirl your handgun or submachine gun if you're brandishing one.
    • Your character will also pull out a cigarette and smoke if left to their own devices, other areas (such as the prison yard) also have their own specific animations.
    • In the second game, left to their own devices, the Boss will make a number of comments, from musing that her father used to say you could never have enough guns to pondering why they can't write a book if King did.
  • Inescapable Ambush: Subverted a couple of times - you generally can or are expected to lose them, but also played straight in a couple of missions.
  • Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain: Donnie, especially in Saints Row 2. He's a nice fellow who never really got over losing a girl he cared about to the gang wars.
    • After being indirectly responsible for an important gang member's death? One cannot blame Donnie, but the man's a jinx.
    • Matt Miller to some degree too. In the real world, he is extremely shy and careful; only in cyberspace is he powerful and even that gets destroyed by the Boss and Kinzie.
  • Jiggle Physics: The Penetrator in Saints Row: The Third is essentially a large rubber dildo, that "has a mind of its own, wobbling around in a disturbing display of physics." Saints Row has it all, doesn't it?
    • In Saints Row, boobies jiggle on most of the women.
    • And in Saints Row 2 and The Third, The Boss' booty (if you're playing as a female) can bounce when you walk.
  • Life Meter: Run out, and you're "Smoked."
  • Lured into a Trap: A mission in the first game's West Side Rollerz chain features you being lured to a pool hall only to be attacked by Rollerz.
  • Model Planning: Used to plan a casino heist in 2. Then Gat decides to ignore the carefully-crafted plan and just "shoot the motherfuckers that are between [them] and the money", a Take That to Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, where a long series of quests are taken to plan and prepare a casino heist.
  • Mega Corp: The Ultor Corporation. Word of God and the Ultor Exposed DLC confirms this is the same Ultor Corporation from Red Faction.
  • Meaningful Name: Ultor=Ulterior Motives
  • Mugging the Monster: At the beginning of Saints Row 2, right after the Boss breaks out of prison after being in a five-year coma, s/he goes to a bar and watches the news. A member of the Brotherhood has the TV turned off and when the boss tells him that s/he was watching the TV he responds, "I guess you're not watching now, are you bitch! He promptly gets his own beer bottle smashed into his face.
  • Neck Snap: While not present in the first game, the second one allows you to execute human shields like this (provided you're unarmed or holding a thrown weapon), and, in the Fight Club activity, this is the only way you can defeat your enemies (and vice-versa).
    • In The Third, after the end of the mission "Trojan Whores," Kiki commits one act of insubordination too many, leading to Killbane grabbing her by the neck, and, with a twist of his hand, breaks it. This plays a role in Viola's later Heel Face Turn.
  • News Travels Fast: After completing a mission or activity, Jack Armstrong or, in the second and third games, Jane Valderrama might be commenting on your recent exploits.
  • Nitro Boost: You can purchase it for almost any car at the garage.
  • No Name Given: The Player Character is addressed as Playa by his homies, and pretty much nothing else - his name is never brought up, despite his eventual fame. Even in the newspaper clippings in the second game, he only shows up as "The leader of the Third Street Saints". His Fan Nickname is "Boss". Carlos tends to call him that as well.
    • Almost gets averted in the third game. In one of the Heli Assault missions, Kinzie mentions that she knows the Boss's real name, but (s)he will tell her to shut up before she says anything.
    • The boss asks Zimos for his real name, only to shut up when Zimos asks the Boss the same question.
  • No Communities Were Harmed: Stilwater is based off both Chicago and Detroit.
    • In Saints Row 2, it bears some resemblance to Manhattan and a few "modernized" cities.
    • The third game's Steelport is a pastiche of New York City and Pittsburgh.
  • No-Gear Level: Getting "Canonized" in the first game (which is just the rest of the Saints trying to whup your ass), and the "Fight Club" activity in the second one.
    • Truth in Television on the first one. Gang initiations frequently consist of getting the crap beat out of you by the other gang members until the leader calls for it to stop.
    • In the third game, you can complete a challenge by beating 25 enemies to death bare-handed.
  • Optional Traffic Laws: It's hard to actually follow traffic laws when you're listening to Wolfmother.
  • Pimp Duds: A clothing option is the classic fur-trimmed pimp coat from The Seventies. In the original game, you have to earn it by completing Snatch missions, but in the second game, it's available for sale at Impressions right from the get-go. Zimos wears these in the third game.
  • Pretty in Mink: In addition to the Pimp Duds, females (or males) can go for a regular fur coat.
  • Protagonist Without a Past: Your history before the crossfire is never brought up. However, in the first game, your character goes through quite a lot, which is referenced all over the shop in the second game, from him/her introducing Mr. Wong as the guy who had him/her kill guys in hot dog suits, to Monica Hughes commenting on being thankful they're not meeting on a boat.
    • Well, it's revealed in SR2 that the Boss frequented an Asian massage parlor during high school.
    • And that their family was into guns, so that could explain why the Boss is so good with guns.
    • And, at least for Saints Row: The Third's Female 2, The Boss had to fight their father's dogs for dinner.
      • And she also went to college.
  • Pimped-Out Car: You can customize every car in the second game, like putting on custom camouflage on a SWAT truck and giving it bling rims. that extend spikes to blow out tires of civilian cars or make running them over easier.
    • You can't customize the unique vehicles you earn. This isn't much of a problem as the unique vehicles are generally insanely fast, nigh impossible to wreck, or both.
  • Purple Is Powerful: The Saints main color, and boy are they powerful by the end of 2. They only get more powerful from there, too.
  • Rainbow Pimp Gear: Although it can be avoided if you can choose the color of any clothing you purchase. In the first game, choosing purple (the Saints' color) increases the amount of "Respect" you earn during activities if you're wearing it.
    • Also averted by the second game - bonuses are just for owning gear, not for wearing it, this time.
  • Really Gets Around: Shaundi. A running gag involves her getting near-constant info on rival gangs or Ultor from people she's had sex with.
    • Civilians will comment on it. Doctor NPCs you pass by will tell you to have Shaundi call them, because her blood test is probably more potent than HIV, cancer, and hydrochloric acid combined.
  • Red... er, Purpleshirt Army: You can recruit a party of up to three Saints off the street to help you out. They're useful for drawing enemy fire, but not much else.
    • In the second game at least, they are nigh indestructible - every time they "die", you could just "revive" them with a bottle of alcohol, making them passable comrades. Although, god forbid if one of them manages to lay his hands on a rocket launcher...
    • In The Third, you can upgrade their health and weapons, making them harder to kill and more useful in combat. You can also increase the time it takes for them to die for real when you have them as homies.
      • Also, they will pick up dropped weapons if they're better than what they're using. If they stay alive long enough, left to their own devices they can and will pick up rocket launchers...for better or worse.
  • Reference Overdosed
  • Refuge in Audacity: How else can you get away with half the content of this game? C'mon, they even called the fast food joint Freckle Bitch's!
    • In the second game, we have: Spraying septic sludge all over massive parts of the city, driving around in a flame suit on a flaming ATV lighting things on fire as you go, a "reality" show where you're encouraged to take a chainsaw to people while dressed as a cop, a restaurant called Phuc Mi Phuc Yu (which sells Sum Yung Gai), and the list keeps going.
      • One of the lines when buying food from Phuc Mi Phuc Yu is "PHUC YU!!"
    • And the Rim Jobs ad in the second game, for God's sake!
    • And then Freckle Bitch returning in the second game's commercials.
    • The Penetrator, an oversized dildo!
  • Refuge in Cool
  • Regenerating Health
  • Ring Inventory: Type 2, both for guns (selected with thumbstick) and healing items (selected with D-Pad)
  • Rule of Cool: Strictly speaking, half the stuff performed in the entire series wouldn't be possible if this rule wasn't in force. The first is rather tame, the second expands on it to insane levels and the third just goes balls to the walls and beyond.
  • Rule of Three: Each game has three different gangs to fight.
  • Scary Black Man: Julius, boss of the Saints (voiced by Keith David, to boot) and Benjamin King, boss of the Vice Kings (Michael Clarke Duncan).
    • We have a Scary... Something Man named Maero in the second game, voiced by Michael Dorn, and The General and Mister Sunshine.
      • Judging by his appearance and the source of his nickname, Maero is probably from an island in the Pacific such as Polynesia or New Zealand.
  • Sequel Escalation: In terms of how outrageous it can get.
  • Sexy Walk: In the second and third game, the lady models for the player avatar do this when walking the slowest speed.
  • Shout-Out: McManus sniper rifles, the entire look of Freckle Bitch's, motorcycles named Tetsuo and Kaneda, and more. There's also plenty of references to Volition's Red Faction series, especially in the Ultor Exposed DLC pack. The name of Ultor's "private army" - the Masako - is also a RF reference.
  • Sniping Mission: Each game has one.
  • Spiteful AI: The one thing you can expect a panicking civilian car to do is run over you if you're on foot or force you off the road if you're in a vehicle, regardless of where you are and what's in the way.
  • Sprint Meter: As you complete Tagging Activities, your Sprint Meter recovers faster. Complete all the tags, and you get infinite stamina.
    • In the second game, this is accomplished by completing a series of insurance fraud missions. In the third game, it's part of the respect bonuses.
  • Suicidal Overconfidence: Setting aside the usual issues with this trope, if you get your Notoriety level high enough, enemies will drive straight at you in their respective gang-vehicles at breakneck speeds. They will do this even if you're currently driving an Awesome Personnel Carrier which would shrug off the impact, which could potentially result in the driver of the enemy vehicle getting thrown through the windshield and killed.
  • Take Over the City
  • Take That: The K12 radio station, which plays Electronic Music. Its logo is a dead horse.
  • This Is for Emphasis, Bitch: "Saints Row, Bitches!" is the gang Catch Phrase.
  • Timed Mission: Every game has several.
  • Troperiffic: This series cranks up elements that GTA has been toning down.
  • True Companions: Though the protagonist is at best a hardened criminal, and at worst a total monster, the Boss will go to hell and back for any loyal Saint. And if you hurt them, then God have mercy, because the Boss won't]
  • Vice City: Stilwater. There is a stark contrast between the north side of the river and the south side.
    • Steelport. The Boss even comments that the city's mix of casinos and sex clubs make it a divorce lawyer's wet dream. Shaundi calls it "Bangkok's drunken, abusive step-father."
  • Villainous Breakdown: A few:
    • On the first game, the Lopez family (the leaders of Los Carnales) grows more aggressive and vengeful as the Saints kill them one by one, turning from directly attacking Saints Row, to outright trying to escape from the city.
    • Joseph Price, of the Rollerz, also seems to suffer one when the Protagonist screws up the Rollerz' plans for a shipment, when his Smug Uncle is killed, and after his car robbed by the Saints. It ends with him challenging the Playa to a showdown on the freeway.
    • In the second game, it's possible that the Ronin were also suffering one near the end of their arc, when the newspaper on one of the missions reads "RONIN BECOMING DESPERATE" after their failed assault against the Saints' hideout.
    • In the third game, Killbane beats the crap out of his own gang members in the ending cutscene for "Murderbrawl XXXI", regardless of whether you unmask him or not.
  • Villain Protagonist: In the first game, you're apparently destroying the other gangs to unite and clean up Stilwater. In the second though, during a confrontation with Julius, your character pretty much flat-out states they want nothing more than to be the undisputed Kingpin of the city, right before shooting Julius in the head.
    • Likewise, Troy is also a bit of a corrupt chief as when he acts as a homie, he tells Boss that Stilwater is his city occasionally. Apparently the Boss is fine with the arrangements of Troy running the legal side of things.
  • Virtual Paper Doll: Loads of clothing options in these games.
  • Wanted Meter: How much notoriety you have with a gang and the cops. Between one and two icons, they come after you if they're on screen; beyond that (up to five), they spawn randomly, trying to run you down/off the road. As cop notoriety increases, FBI vans spawn, SWAT vans block the roads, and a helicopter follows you. Also, the Respect meter allows you to do missions.
    • If you're in an Ultor controlled area they step it up a notch, with Ultor security doing what normal police do at one star rating higher. At 5 star rating (the maximum) they actually send SWAT APC's to hunt you down, where normal police would just have them block the roads.
      • This holds with the third game, except STAG throws firepower at you Ultor can only dream of. Before STAG arrives (and after the main game), the Steelport National Guard uses Ultor-level weapons, with the added joy of actual tanks in addition to the usual APCs.
  • Where the Hell Is Springfield?: Stilwater in the first game. We learn it's in Michigan, revealed in an interview. The city itself is based on cities like Chicago and Detroit.
    • The new city, Steelport, has some similarities to Pittsburgh.
  • You All Look Familiar: Each gang only has eight different generic members: male and female Caucasian, African, Hispanic, and Asian. This causes White Gang-Bangers.
    • Lampshaded in a drug activity in the second game, in which the drug dealer may say "Maybe I'm just high, but I swear to God you killed that asshole before."
  1. This continues even after his demise!