Blue Haired Video Game Characters Blue Faux Fur
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A list of video games where you can find people with unnatural hair colors.
- Sly Cooper's Carmelita
- Sonic the Hedgehog's blue hair (or spines/quills, as it were), Amy Rose's pink hair, Big and Blaze the Cat's purple hair, Scourge's formerly blue, now GREEN hair and almost every single echidna having red hair in the Archie Comics, the list goes on.
- In Mega Man Battle Network, Chaud has two-toned white hair and black sides, Mayl has purple hair, and Dex has a fin on his head. Maddy has outrageous bright pink (with a giant poofy style, even), Shuuko has a pleasant shade of indigo, and Raika has light aqua-green hair.
- Battle Network's sequel series, Star Force, which is filled with insane hair styles. Sonia's hair is PURPLE! Pat's hair is green due to Theme Naming.
- Picking on Misora's relatively normal (color notwithstanding) hair when Twin-Drill Luna-iinchou is right over there?
- The third game gives us Eos and Queen, who have matching shades of actual blue hair, and Heartless, who sports a pink 'do.
- And Mega Man ZX is an even worse offender. Grey has...grey hair. Ashe has blue hair. Other main characters have strange hair colours and styles...The strangest of them all has to be Prometheus and Pandora. Prometheus' hair is blue, and Pandora's hair is green, and they look like capes until you notice the one scene in Advent where they don't have their helmets on. But Prometheus can kill people with his hair.
- Well, somewhat justified with Grey, Prometheus, and Pandora, as they're not humans.
- And Ashe is only part human, as everyone in ZX who isn't explicitly a reploid is a cyborg. Pure humans have apparently gone extinct by this point.
- Albert has two hair colors in a different way than other people. He has teal hair in his Sage Trinity body, but his "real body" has freaking magenta.
- ZX aside, the main universe is actually pretty sensible about this. The original Mega Man did have blue hair at one point, but he usually switches between black and brown. The Zero series doesn't even have one exception. In Legends, we have the purple haired Mega Man Juno, who is obviously inhuman, and the mysterious Yuna and Sera and their servants, synthetic lifeforms of indeterminate type whose humanoid forms resemble black women with light green hair.
- The X-series is a little more...varied. From Command Mission, we have Nana, who has pink hair with a single white bang, Scarface, who personifies this trope with light-blue spiky long hair, and the seafoam green-haired Marino. Dynamo from X5 and X6, who personifies this trope with an aqua blue hair. Lumine from X8, who has purple hair that is styled in a mix between whatever Tron from Legends has going on plus an emo hair fringe, and also from X8 is Layer with purple hair AND Pallete, who has blonde hair with pink stripes in an...unexplainable style. Axl from X7/X8/CM has pretty normal hair normally, but when he uses his "white mode" in X8, it turns purple (to reflect an implied connection to Lumine). And amongst other modes is any of Zero's other forms who have a lighter shade of blonde to them.
- Justified since they're all reploids.
- Battle Network's sequel series, Star Force, which is filled with insane hair styles. Sonia's hair is PURPLE! Pat's hair is green due to Theme Naming.
- Elemental War of Magic - the player can pick any colour for hair for their Sovereign.
- The works of Key Visual Arts would fall under "improbable", but there is always a small amount of characters with odd colours: Nayuki and Akiko (purple), Kano and Michiru (blue and magenta), Kotomi and the twins (blue and purple, respectively), etc.
- Advance Wars: Days of Ruin has, despite its generally more realistic tone, a blue-haired and several teal-haired characters. A redhead too, but at least that's a possible color in real life, if rare. Most characters stay in the realistic range, but it's still a third of the playable cast. All of these characters are "clones" of the same character, however that works. (We're talking multiple genders here, people.) Not that that really explains anything, but still...
- Fire Emblem has lots and lots of strange hair colours to the point that Leaf (the main character in Thracia 776) having brown hair is noteworthy, this is somewhat lampshaded in the Path of Radiance and Radiant Dawn, where Ike and Michiah are always identified by their hair colour (Blue and Silver respectively, Michiah even has the title "Silver Haired Maiden").
- In fact, Fire Emblem characters can often tell their own families by hair color. In The Sword of Seal, red-haired Roy and blue-haired Lilina inherited the hair colors of their respective fathers (Eliwood and Hector), Nils and Ninian from The Sword of Flame have the same pale green, and the main twins from The Sacred Stones both share a light teal with their father. Examples of characters sharing colors with their parents and siblings go on like this for a while. Makes you wonder why Tana from the The Sacred Stones doesn't have the washed-out grey of her father and brother.
- Obviously, she must take after her mother, who we never see.
- Truth be told, the Fire Emblem series tend to alternate between having a traditional blue-haired protagonist in one game and one with a different hair color in the next. Marth (from Shadow Dragon and Mystery of the Emblem), Sigurd and Celice (from Genealogy of Holy War), Hector (from The Sword of Flame), and Ike (from Path of Radiance) all have blue hair, while Alm and Celica (from Gaiden), Roy (from The Sword of Seal), Lyn and Eliwood (from The Sword of Flame), Erika and Ephraim (from The Sacred Stones), and Micaiah (from Radiant Dawn) are all exceptions.
- In fact, Fire Emblem characters can often tell their own families by hair color. In The Sword of Seal, red-haired Roy and blue-haired Lilina inherited the hair colors of their respective fathers (Eliwood and Hector), Nils and Ninian from The Sword of Flame have the same pale green, and the main twins from The Sacred Stones both share a light teal with their father. Examples of characters sharing colors with their parents and siblings go on like this for a while. Makes you wonder why Tana from the The Sacred Stones doesn't have the washed-out grey of her father and brother.
- Subverted with a deadpan kind of hilarity in Digital Devil Saga: the girl who fell from the sky is instantly recognizable and keeps the characters in a kind of awe with her bizarre black hair and brown eyes. Fluorescent-red-haired Heat, purple-haired Argilla, and green-haired Gale simply can't understand how a human could have such a strange hair colour.
- Tales of Symphonia looks to avert this for 2/3 of the first disk, with humans having only realistic hair shades and only Elfs (and Half-Elfs) having strange hair colors (such as teal), but then you go a parallel world and find people with lots of strange hair colors such as blue and pink.
- This may be a case of Fridge Brilliance when you consider the fact Tethe'alla is said to have a larger population of Elves and Half-Elves thanks to the presence of the elven city of Heimdall. With a much larger portion of the population being elves or half-elves, there's a higher chance for the occurrence of interracial relationships and offsprings (especially with the high rate of half-elves running around) - thus introducing odd hair colors more and more into the human gene pool as the generations go on as compared to Sylvarant.
- In Tales of Symphonia Dawn of the New World, there is a skit where Tenebrae is offended by Genis' comment on his age, and Tenbrae reminds him that he has a full head of white hair. Genis responds with: "It's SILVER !!!"
- Tales of games tend not to bother, really. Highlights of the series include Meredy's lavender (Eternia), several types of bright pink (Arche from Phantasia, Chelsea from Destiny, Presea from Symphonia, Hermana from Innocence), and a smattering of blues and greens for good measure.
- Hearts averts this (Mechanoids and aliens excluded), to the point where the Mysterious Waif and Big Bad are explicitly identified by hair color; myths describe an "emerald-haired princess" and a "devil of blood-red hair". Well, mostly. The Quirky Miniboss Squad has hot pink and teal.
- Even though the Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney series takes place in a fairly realistic universe, no one seems to feel the need to comment on the hair colors of Franziska, April, Redd, or Lisa Basil (metallic blue, pink, purple, and electric blue, respectively). While Redd and April arguably could've dyed theirs, and Lisa's could just be part of her gimmick, Franziska's hair really has no explanation. And that's not even getting into some hair styles that seem to completely defy the laws of physics... Vera Misham had blue hair both as a young child and an adult.
- A large majority of Disgaea characters, demon or not, have absurd hair colors ranging from blue to white to neon pink.
- While Link's hair has historically fluctuated between red, brown and blond in his various appearances, his hair was inexplicably pink in A Link to The Past.
- This was just the sprites, however. In the associated art for the game, Link's hair was a light brown.
- It also justifies why Link becomes a pink-furred rabbit in the Dark World.
- In Ocarina of Time, Link's childhood friend, Saria, has vibrant green hair. She's the forest sage as well, which may explain her unique hair colour in relation to the usually brown haired kokiri.
- The teenager who runs Bombchu Bowling Alley in Ocarina of Time and the Treasure Chest shop in Majora's Mask has neon blue hair and wears a hot pink shirt. Ironic in Ocarina of Time, where she runs a business based on big moving neon targets.
- Nayru's hair is blue, while Din's hair is fiery red, and the third Oracle, Farore, feature the same shade of green as Saria. Kafei's got purple hair, while Midna's hair is the colour of fire (no, not just red). Also, considering her age certainly bleached it quite a bit, Anjean seems to have had purple hair, like Kafei, at one point. Finally, the fairies in the first few games were always portrayed with pink hair in the artwork.
- These could be justified as the Zelda series takes place in a magical Fantasy Counterpart Culture and most of the above examples aren't really "human" anyway.
- Falling somewhere between all examples is Ritz from Final Fantasy Tactics Advance, a girl who has crimson hair, even in the "real" world. It's a dye-job, as her hair appears to be albino (pale lavender) despite the rest of her.
- In Elite Beat Agents, Agent Foxx has silver hair. Meanwhile, Cap White has pink hair...and she's a white blood cell. Also, Morris seems to have purple hair, Derek has red hair, and J's is orange. Don't get me started on J's hair style...
- Humans in the freeware (and soon to be WiiWare) game Cave Story tend to have dark green hair (of the few we see, anyway). Supposedly, this is because the game's creator found that black hair wouldn't stand out enough against the caves' dark backgrounds. There's also Misery, who has blue hair (or green, depending on whether you're looking at her in-game sprite or her character portrait...).
- The Servants in Fate/stay night don't count, but a couple of the humans have strange hair too — most obviously the Matou siblings, Sakura (purple), and Shinji (blue). You don't want to know how Sakura ended up that way...
- Sakura is actually a subversion, because purple is not her natural hair colour, and the reason behind this is a big part of the plot of the Heaven's Feel route of the game.
- Ciel in Tsukihime.
- Ciel has bluish black hair, predominantly black if you look carefully. In text, meaning according to the author, she has black hair. Dunno what color her dad had, but her hair color is probably evident because her mom was Asian.
- Persona 3's blue-haired Main Character, complete with Peek-a-Bangs.
- His look-a-like in Devil Survivor sports the same blue hair.
- Other Persona 3 characters with impossible hair colors include Fuuka, who has teal-green hair, and Jin, who also has blue hair.
- All of the major characters in the Japanese version of the original Persona had normal hair colors — Ayase was explicitly stated to dye hers and Brown is supposed to have brown hair, like he appears to everywhere but his in-game character portrait — but Maki (Mary) was given pink/primary-color-red hair in the US version because they thought it would make it seem less Japanese. Did we mention that Atlus USA's translators at the time were a load of brainless idiots? They were fired and badly beaten as a result. Several died from their injuries. Then, they were ground into a fine powder.
- Persona 2 averts this. We have a character with blue hair, Eikichi. He dyes his hair every. single. morning. before school, and then washes it out before he goes home. It's not natural, but it's still pretty improbable.
- Naoto and Kou from Persona 4 also have blue hair.
- There are lots of odd haircolors in the Lunar games, but an NPC in the first town in Silver Star Story calls Luna 'the pretty blue-haired lady', so, apparently, blue hair isn't that uncommon.
- Word of God states the unique colors of the main characters' hair was to make their sprites easy to tell apart.
- Phantasy Star.
- Super Robot Wars franchise original characters. There's a fair amount of brown or blond haired characters, but just point at random and 7 out of 10 times, it will be someone with an unnatural hair color.
- Optional for The Sims 3. You can now give your sim exotic colors, with exotic highlights. Give them a head full of rainbow if you like.
- Kingdom Hearts isn't immune to this. We have White Haired Pretty Boys (Riku, all of Xenahort's variations, and, while not relevant to the plot, Sephiroth). Zexion, Saix, and Aqua all have blue hair. And last but not least, Marluxia has pink hair!
- The Gria race from Final Fantasy Tactics a 2 have four assortments of hair colors, depending on the class. For the allies, red for Ravagers, blue for Hunters, green for Raptors, and purple for Geomancers.
- Every. Single. Final. Fantasy. game. Sure, some of them aren't human--but then, others of them are, and plenty of the other nonhumans have perfectly normal hair colors.
- The graphics of the original game don't allow for much in the way of zaniness (with the exception of the Red Mage's white hair and, in early versions, the Thief's blue hair), but Amano's original artwork and FMVs in the later remakes of the game have the Warrior/Knight character with silver/white/grey hair.
- From Final Fantasy II, there's Firion, with white hair as a young man, Maria and her indigo hair, Leon and his blue hair, and Leila with either blue or violet hair.
- Luneth in the DS remake of Final Fantasy III has silver-gray hair despite being a teenager. Desch has blue hair in the same remake.
- Cecil and Edge from Final Fantasy IV have either white, silver, or purple hair, Depending on the Artist. Rydia has green hair.
- Ceodore in Final Fantasy IV the After Years, despite having parents whose hair is either white, silver, or purple (Cecil) and either very blonde or brown (Rosa).
- In Final Fantasy V, Lenna has pink hair and Faris has purple hair...at least, according to the sprites. Artwork depicts them both as blondes, although the artwork also depicts Bartz as having that classic silvery-white hair, so the game qualifies for this trope coming or going.
- Terra from Final Fantasy VI has either green or blonde hair, depending on whether you believe the sprites or artwork. Dissidia splits the difference by giving her blonde hair in the main costume and green hair in her alternate costume. Setzer's also got a headful of white/silver hair, due to (possibly) being albino. Lastly, although Amano draws him as a blond, Locke's game sprites and portraits have dull grey hair.
- On the topic of Terra and her green hair depiction, her overworld sprite also resembled Bulma from Dragon Ball because of the hair color.
- Final Fantasy VII has the iconic Sephiroth and his just-as-iconic long silvery hair.
- Ultimecia in Final Fantasy VIII also has that long white/silver hair.
- Final Fantasy IX gives us yet another long-silver-haired individual, Kuja, as well as the blue-haired Eiko. Trance Zidane also has pink hair. What little of Freya's hair we can see is also white, although since she is a anthropomorphic white rat...
- Then there is Seymour, one of the villains of Final Fantasy X , who has blue hair on account of being non-human. However, the perfectly-human Yunalesca also has...long silvery-white hair (are you noticing a trend here?)
- In Final Fantasy X 2, Paine has, yet again, silver hair.
- In Final Fantasy XII, all Viera are born with white hair, though, according to the manual, some of them dye it human colors. Inversion?
- Penelo's concept art shows that she was originally going to have pink hair rather than her current blond.
- In Final Fantasy XIII, Lightning and Serah both have pink hair. Vanille has super-bright red hair, but definitely not a natural shade. Hope has the ever popular silver hair, as does NPC Yaag Rosch, though his has more of a blue tint. Lastly, NPC Yuj/Yuge has blue hair of an alarming shade.
- Yuj at least has an excuse, since he mentions getting 'a whole new look' ( a reference to how the original demo used a generic NPC, since his design wasn't finished yet), it's likely dyed.
- Final Fantasy Tactics gives Marquis Elmdore some Sephiroth-hair, though his age (39) means that it might just be due to natural aging...well, if he's aging really, really badly. The final boss, Ultima, has silver hair, though, and so does her human vessel, Saint Ajora.
- Selkies, a race in the Crystal Chronicles series, have this as one of their defining features. The only "normal" hair colors among them are red and blonde.
- In Final Fantasy XI The Tarutaru, are the only playable race with the option of blue and green hair. The Mithra, Elvaan, Galka, and aforementioned Tarutaru have the option of white and grey hair. The Hume race only features natural hair colors. Outside of PC's there's Prishe, an Elvaan with lavender hair.
- While there are many characters in the Jak and Daxter universe with 'normal' hair colors such as brown, blond, and grey, many others sport shades far more exotic. Often overlaps with Multicolored Hair. Some examples: main character Jak's hair is green and yellow, Keira's is green and blue, and the sculptor's is purple.
- A number of characters in the Pokémon games have oddly colored hair. Steven, for example, has white-silver hair, despite seemingly being in his early 20s. Brendan also appears to have black and white hair, though that's very much debatable.
- There's also Kris, Dawn, and Lucas, all of whom appear to have blueish hair (light blue for Kris, dark for Dawn and Lucas).
- N and Ghetsis have green hair. Ghetsis' seems to be going grey from age, too.
- The cast of the Touhou series of games can be handwaved as Improbable since most of them aren't human, but with a few exceptions:
- Sanae Kochiya, a human who, until recently, lived in the outside world, has green hair.
- Marisa Kirisame, despite being a full blood Japanese, has blonde hair (or red in the first game).
- Sakuya Izayoi has white/silver hair. Fujiwara no Mokou has this hair colour as well, as do Keine and Rinnosuke, though they are half-beasts.
- Suberverted in that Sanae is a descendant of a god, Sakuya might be a Lunarian, and Mokou is an Immortality.
- In Fallout 3, you can create your character to have vastly unnatural hair colours, and all the Raiders have unnatural hair colours. One character says that her daughter 'has dyed orange hair', so it's accepted as dye-jobs, but given the general lack of surviving pre-war supplies and blasted landscape, it's likely they aren't using local plant life or commercial dyes... which might explain the insanity and violence of raiders.
- Many characters have blue/green/pink hair in the later games in the Backyard Sports series.
- As a general rule, most examples of this in the Breath of Fire series fit as Plausible Examples--the one that does not would be that of Ryu 1/8192 in Dragon Quarter as he starts out as a normal, actually fairly low-caste human with dark blue hair. (And yes, Word of God explicitly states this Ryu was meant to be a normal human.)
- Mitadake High, being a game which gloriously bases itself on all manners of Anime stereotypes, lampshades this by having the aliases of most of the characters be their hair colour (such as "The Blue Haired Boy" or "The Long Pink Haired Girl"). In fact, the only two that aren't are "The Boy With Goggles" and "The Boy with Sunglasses" (which are other stereotypes anyway). The hair colours are: Blue, Red, Green, Orange, Purple, Brown, Black, Silver, Grey, White, and Blonde.
- Grandia provides a full palette: hero Justin has vibrant red hair, childhood friend Sue's is purple, Action Girl Feena sports green while her sister Leen's is blue, Quirky Miniboss Squad Nana, Saki, and Mio are purple, red, and green respectively, and ethereal White Mage Liete has purple.
- Yo-Jin-Bo has Muneshige, Bo, Kasumimaru, and one of the unnamed ninja with blue hair. Yo's aqua hair could also count.
- Princess Kaguya and the March Hare from A Witchs Tale both have green hair.
- In Baten Kaitos, Kalas and Sagi have blue hair, Lyude has fire-engine-red hair, and Savyna has purple hair (that's blue in the prequel for some reason). Some NPCs also have weird hair colors.
- Tomba's pink hair. It was part of the American ad campaign.
- A good portion of characters from Infinite Space have implausible hair colors; some characters (including The Hero) has white or gray hair, the main character's sister has green hair, and then a few others have blue hair. While this may be justified with the fact that human race had been modified by the Overlords long time ago, and Yuri and his sister are Artificial Humans, that still doesn't explain the rest with natural hair colors.
- It will be easier to list the characters from Lux-Pain who have natural hair colors.
- Dragon Quest is all over this trope, though the champion has to be Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker. The player character has wild, spiky gray hair and is antagonized by a blue-haired girl named Solitaire. In fact, blue hair is practically an Unusually Uninteresting Sight in the DQM:J world, since many female NPCs are sporting it. In Dragon Quest IX, since you can customize the appearance of your party members, blue and green just had to be among the hair color options.
- Kit Ballad of Blade Kitten has pink hair for no explicable reason.
- In Jet Force Gemini, one of the main trio, Vela, has blue hair. It's possible it's natural but it's never stated. Unlike her brother Juno, she doesn't wear an armoured helmet, probably just to show it off.
- In Children of Mana, Ferrik and Tamber have orange and green hair, respectively.
- In Telefang 2, the protagonist, Kyou, has blue hair.
- In Golden Sun, hair color often indicates the elemental affinity of an Adept. Mars Adepts tend to be Fiery Redheads, and Mercury Adepts take the trope title literally (not even dark blue-- turquoise is about the darkest it gets). Venus Adepts tend to have natural hair colors, while Jupiter Adepts are all over the place, from blonde to purple to green.
- And then there are the people of Prox, who are all Mars Adepts but have an absolute rainbow of possible hair colors, justified since the Pointy Ears and scales make it pretty clear they're not entirely human. Beastfolk arguably fit the same terms.
- There's purple hair, blue/white hair, green hair, orange hair, and purple black hair in Canvas 2, but somehow, only Elis' blond hair is noteworthy.
- Milked for all it's worth in the first three entries of the Tokimeki Memorial series. Virtually all impossible hair colors are used but the white one, along with realistic ones.
- Becoming a growing trend in Harvest Moon games. The first game had only the pink-haired Nina (and the second, her Identical Granddaughter Popuri), and the latest installment features pink (Luna), magenta (Selena), teal (Phoebe, Harvest Goddess), lime-green (Barbara), blue (Candace, Luke in some lights), violet (Julius), AND White (Witch Princess).
- Substitute hair with fur in Star Fox; Krystal is a blue vixen and Falco Lombardi is a blue falcon. Arctic foxes have shades of bluish fur, but have a scant amount of it, and blue falcons don't exist.
- There are also Katt (take a wild guess), Lucy (a hare), and Amanda (a frog), all whom are pink.
- Falco is actually a pheasant, according to Shigeru Miyamoto.
- Lucca of Chrono Trigger has purple hair. Magus has blue hair in-game, although the official art has it closer to white.
- Also Schala has blue hair in Chrono Trigger (but not in the sequel Chrono Cross).
- Many of the people of Zeal have blue hair. However, it is suggested that this is because they dyed their hairs blue as a sign of their status, which would also explain why it would revert to white in Schala's game.
- The King of Fighters have several characters with blue hair, such as Leona and Elisabeth. There's also Kula, although her hair is blue only when she's fighting. Then some characters also have multi-colored hair, such as Goenitz, Alba Meira, and more.
- A male and plot related example from Wild Arms. Rudy, one of the main characters, has blue hair. The only other characters we see with odd colored hair are the interdimensional demons that are attacking the world. This is foreshadowing that Rudy is not human, and we eventually find out he is a robot made from metal the demons forged.
- Ys I and II has the goddesses Feena and Rea/Lair (the latter's hair was changed to purple in IV), and The Ark of Napishtim has Olha and Isha, of the nonhuman Rehda.
- Artix Entertainment games often have this trope, including Warlic, who has white hair, and Valencia, who has dark purple hair. In all of their games, including Mechquest and Adventure Quest Worlds, the player character can choose their hair color, which can lead to instances of this.
- In Adventure Quest, Lady Tomo's hair is purple, and Aelthai has a bright shock of purple hair.
- In Dragon Fable, Elysia and Nythera also have purple and blue hair, respectively.
- In Hero Smash, Demolicious' hair is purple. Word of God says that she actually has dark brown hair, and dyes said hair purple.
- In Sword of the Stars, some Human avatars show exotic hair colours such as pink and orange.
- Ruby from The Path dyed her hair black. It was previously green.
- In the Valis series, Yuko has blue hair, Reiko has purple hair, Valna has light blue hair, and either Lena or Amu has purple hair.
- In both the Baten Kaitos games, the protagonist has some shade of blue hair; Kalas' is bright, sky-blue, while Sagi's hair is closer to a shade of teal.
- In Golvellius, the hero Kelesis has green hair.
- In the Etrian Odyssey series, players select portraits representing their characters. While a few instances appeared in the first two games, such as a pink-pigtailed Troubadour, III opened the floodgates by introducing Palette Swaps to the mix. In IV, violet, green, and teal blue are particularly common alt-colors.
- Boyfriend from the Newgrounds game Friday Night Funkin' has blue hair, and it's actually his natural hair color.
Source: https://tropedia.fandom.com/wiki/You_Gotta_Have_Blue_Hair/Video_Games
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