A character being a hypocrite is both intentional and done well, so instead of being infuriating, it serves the story or is even genuinely funny
"The child who is not embraced by the village will burn it down to feel its warmth."
What is the most tragic celebrity death?
Vampires when they're depicted to be actually terrifying.
Common misconceptions about series that you hate(half in real life/half hated tropes)
Villains who claim to love their children, and may even genuinely believe it, but eventually show that even their children are tools to be used for their own goals - a good way of showing the character is beyond redemption
Characters known to the general public for saying things they never canonically said
The Almighty "Reason You Suck" Speech
Villainous and abusive character essentially tells their victim, "Why did you make me abuse you?", a common real-life manipulation tactic of abusive figures
An obnoxiously smug and overconfident villain who realizes, too late, that the opponent they're facing is actually strong enough to kill them (bonus points if they visibly start panicking more and more as it sinks in that they're actually losing).
(Loved Trope) Characters whose best weapon against supernatural or superhuman threats is their intelligence
[Hated trope] When a male victim of sexual assault is portrayed with much less seriousness, or even humour (inspired by u/ithinkther41am's suggestion on a previous post)
Actors who have played both a saint effectively and an evil monster as effectively too.
[Hated trope] Nice and/or meek character who is mercilessly bullied and mocked by the other characters, but it's okay because the writers think it's funny, so we're supposed to as well
Troy won last round! Most liked comment wins: What character is morally grey and lived by fans?
Watching a beaver eat reduces stress by 37%, scientifically proven.
Rereading gone/first time reading
When a character who’s usually completely unshakable is genuinely surprised/shocked by something
“YOU of all characters should not be talking.”
[S2 Spoilers] I think they're doing a great balancing act for her current arc at making her actions understandable, but still inherently wrong
Bowser is Bad person but a good parent, now who's a Bad person and a decent parent
What opinion are you defending like this?
Re-read the Gone series at 25 and I don't care for Astrid and Sam's relationship.
Thoughts on the remaster (PS5)
What actually happened with "Walkouts and Vomiting" at Terrifier 3 Screening