Evangelion Unit 01 wrote:Cliché 1: Prince: quiet guy who says nothing and kicks the other guy’s ass.
Cliché 4: Hot guy wins.
Stick with the series for a while. For every charactery you see who wins a match, you'll see that same person lose later down the line. That's like it's own cliche when it comes to sports anime - the good guys, no matter how superior they are as athletes, always have to lose enough matches to worry the viewer that they might not make it to regional/nationals/whatever-match they're aiming for.
Cliché 5: The main male character is Yaoi like.
No no no, you have the cliche wrong. It's supposed to be a "minor character who is clearly gay" and a "token girlfriend for the main character that he almost never spends time with since it's a sports anime with all-male teams". Ryoma's got Sakuno so he's the "token het" character, whether he knows what to do with her or not. PoT is so full of gay they needed a token het - and Ryoma got it. If it wasn't so gay, it would have a token gay, but that would be the Golden Pair. They touch way too much in public.
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I don't really get annoyed by anime cliches. I've come to expect them. It's like a recipe for success depending on the anime type.
Group anime character types
One Piece, Bleach, Naruto, YYH, DBZ, etc.
They all have the goodhearted (but not necessarily smart) main guy, the naive (but not necessarily strong) damsel or 'victim' character, the rivals (who really like each other no matter how often they beat on each other), the idiot extremist (often the main character or his best friend), the smart quiet one (who often doubles as the "victim" character), the cool killer (who's never as cold as he pretends to be), and on and on.
It's the plot that makes the difference, the combination of those "classic" character types to fit the world they're put into.
Sports anime
Prince of Tennis, Whistle, Eyeshield21, I'll/CKBC, etc.
They all have the token girl character (either a cheerleader, or the one worrying about how dangerous the sport is for the main guy), the strong older role model character (usually the captain, male or female), the rivals (what shounen anime doesn't have rivalry within the home team?), the buddy (who's friendly even with the antisocial ones), the animal idiot (a cat or a monkey or an ox, sports seems to equate the "clown" with some animal type), the voice of reason (if the team's big enough, this person seconds whatever the captain says), and then there's the rival team/s that have the same character types reproduced.
Magical girl groups
Red, blue, and green. If there's more than three of them, you'll get a few more colors, but there's always red blue and green - fire water earth.
Rayearth, Sailor Moon, Tokyo Mew Mew, Dangaizer3, etc.
They all have the token male character (usually a boyfriend who plays the victim to be rescued, the hero doing the rescuing, and the villain the girls don't want to fight against). The girls follow the same types as the guys in the "sports" and "boy groups" anime.
Harem anime
I don't consider "sports" anime in the same group as "harem". Harem anime always have a single main character surrounded by characters of the opposite sex, all of whom are in love with that perfect main character. Tenchi - all the "perfect" girls drown in their own drool for one clueless clumsy geek. Fushigi Yuugi - all the "perfect" guys fall over each other for one clueless garbage disposal. The token female in male sports anime is only there for show - none of the guys have time for her, including her supposed boyfriend.
I haven't seen enough girl sports anime to know if it works the same for them (probably not, girls are more likely to lose their games while they're fighting over the lone male character - that's an entirely different anime cliche).
It would be more fun to compare plot cliches to see how many anime follow the same storyline, since they all seem to feature the same characters.
Ex: They all spend forever building up to face the super villain, they're fighting equally, and then the super villain flips a switch and he's suddenly twice as strong - so the group goes either goes back to training, or the main character suddenly realizes he has a switch to flip, too, so he beats the supervillain like he was standing still. All the preparation for that showdown was a waste of time.