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Token Super

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Token Super (trope)
In terms of power, Dr. Manhattan tends to outshine the rest of the team's roster.
So you've got The Team Normal, which is the only member of a Super Team without any powers. But sometimes you have the inverted scenario, where you have a team full of Badass Normals and only one member possessing powers. This is the Token Super.

It doesn't matter what kind of powers they have, so long as they stand out as the only one who is beyond the realms of a normal human. Depending on the nature of their power, they may serve as The Ace or as a Story-Breaker Power. There's also no restriction on morality, where they can be a part of either a team of heroes or villains.

Super-Trope to Token Wizard. Sub-Trope of Token Minority. Inverse Trope to The Team Normal.


Examples:

    open/close all folders 

    Anime & Manga 
  • Eren Jaeger from Attack on Titan is the only human member of the Survey Corps who can turn into a Titan. This makes him the trump card off the military defending the town against Titan attacks.
  • Dragon Ball,
    • General Blue. He is the only member of the Red Ribbon Army who possesses any sort of powers, having Psychic Powers that enable paralysis and telekinesis.
    • Future Trunks is this for his Alternate Timeline where in the Bad Future all of the other Z-fighters have died, leaving Trunks as the one person still with powers left to take on the Androids and Goku Black. This is especially the case in Dragon Ball Super where Trunks is a member of the La Résistance formed to fight Goku Black, which is composed entirely of normal humans with the exception of him.
  • Light Yagami from Death Note is a deconstructed example. As a Death Note holder, he has the power over life and death. The kicker is that when he joins L's team, nobody is truly aware of his power and it remains a secret, even though L had his suspicions.
  • The Protagonist of almost every Yu-Gi-Oh! series, will be the sole member of their team to possess the particular unusual power of the series. (The only exception is Yusei Fudo in Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's, where his whole team shares his power).
  • In Sword Art Online:
    • During the Aincrad arc, Kirito is the only known player to possess the Dual Wielding skill set, which the game granted to the player with the fastest reaction time. As this skill cannot be attained through conventional methods, in this setting it counts as a power. With it, Kirito was easily The Ace of any guild he joined and was capable of taking on extremely difficult bosses. Later games allowed him to load an Old Save Bonus from his Aincrad avatar, which by his own admission was cheating due to it carrying over his insanely high stats that were unseen in said games.
    • If you don't count Kirito, Yui certainly qualifies. She's a Benevolent A.I. with administrator powers so she could instant kill any unbeatable boss in the game, along with being an Immortal Object that couldn't be destroyed conventionally. In fact, in the Aincrad arc she became a case of Too Powerful to Live and was almost deleted. She was only able to return after a depowering, but even so she was able to use her AI nature to see the code that underpinned monsters and NPCs enabling her to provide valuable information.
    • Heathcliff is this to the Knights of the Blood Oath. Much like Kirito, he possesses a Unique Skill, in his case the Holy Swordnote . He commands the top guild in the game as the Big Good and like Kirito is a candidate for the World's Best Warrior of SAO. And then it's revealed he's actually Kayaba, the creator and GM of SAO, meaning he has admin privileges and can give himself all sorts of broken abilities, including being an Immortal Object. Though he does agree to remove his unfair advantage to fight Kirito on a level playing field in a Final Battle.
  • One Piece:
    • Many small pirate crews will usually be composed of several normal crew members centered around a Captain who is the only one with Devil Fruit powers. Bartolomeo, Bellamy, Buggy (before Alvida joined), Foxy, and Wapol (who pretended to be a pirate early on) are all examples of this. This also applies to all of the Supernova/Worst Generation crews with the exception of the Straw Hats (after Chopper's recruitment).
    • Buggy was also the sole Devil Fruit user back during his time in the Roger Pirates (discounting the non-canon Douglas Bullet). Atypically, he was also the weakest member of what was otherwise a crew of Badass Normals.
    • The Pre-Timeskip Blackbeard Pirates only had one Devil Fruit user, Blackbeard himself. This was changed Post-Timeskip when it was revealed that several of his lieutenants such as Shilliew and Catarina Devon gained Devil Fruit abilities.
    • During the East Blue saga and for the first few arcs of the Alabasta saga. Luffy was the only Devil Fruit user of the Straw Hat Pirates, until Chopper was recruited at the end of the Drum Island arc.

    Comic Books 

    Fan Works 
  • In Empathy — a mass crossover with Big Hero 6, Inside Out and Home (2015) — Riley Anderson becomes the only legitimate super on the 'Big Hero 9' after Oh's tampering with Hiro's equipment causes Riley to acquire emotion-manipulating abilities; the rest of her team consists of five people using technology, an android, an alien, and a teen girl whose only 'skill' is her ability to use the modified car Oh created.
  • The Guides Series: Downplayed in that while Luke is Force-sensitive, he's completely untrained and currently refuses to explore the true extent of his powers, meaning that Vader is the only person on the Lady who is an active Force user. Subverted from Barfight onwards, however, with the reveal that Luke's status as a priest (and later implied Champion) of the Tatooine storm god Keshtra allows him to be privy to some unexpectedly unorthodox abilities as well.

    Films — Live-Action 
  • Subverted in All Superheroes Must Die, the team are all Brought Down to Normal at the beginning of the film, except for Charge who retains his Super Strength for some reason. It turns out that the reason the depowering serum didn't work on Charge is because he never had powers in the first place, his strength is from working out.
  • Captain America was part of the Howling Commandos in Captain America: The First Avenger, the only Super-Soldier in a team of normal military soldiers. Later on, Cap joins the Avengers. In Captain America: The Winter Soldier he works for the secret agency SHIELD and is the only superpowered individuum on the STRIKE-team.
  • DC Extended Universe:
    • Wonder Woman: Diana/Wonder Woman is the only one with superpowers (most prominently superhuman strength) in Steve Trevor's team in 1918.
    • Birds of Prey: Much like the comics, Black Canary is the only member of the team that has metahuman powers even if the line-up is a bit different than the comics. The members of the team on in the movie are Black Canary, Huntress, Cassandra Cain, Harley Quinn, and Renee Montoya.
  • Alice from Resident Evil (2002) became this for her La Résistance team after contracting the T-virus but with it instead granting her powers rather than the zombie degeneration.
  • Star Wars:
    • Luke Skywalker in the Original Trilogy. After Obi-Wan is killed in A New Hope, Luke is the only Force user left on the Millennium Falcon crew and the Rebel Alliance in general.
    • Subverted in the Sequel Trilogy, where Rey isn't the only one who uses the Force even after Luke's death. Leia manages to use it once and a bit after she dies, Finn does so too.
  • Doctor Manhattan from Watchmen. True to the source material, he is the only hero with actual powers, once again being depicted as a Physical God in an otherwise un-super world.
  • The Wolverine had a noticeable lack of mutants for an X-Men film, with Wolverine instead dealing with samurai mooks. Though on the bad guys' side, they still have Viper.

    Literature 
  • Mr Sorry in Armadillo Fists is the only characters with blatantly superhuman abilities (to be specific, he has Super-Speed). Their origin is never revealed, though his mother used to tell him that he had no soul, implying that he's some kind of demon in human form.
  • In the original Dracula, Mina is the only member of Van Helsing's Vampire Hunter crew who has supernatural powers, due to an, uh, close encounter with the title villain half-way through the book. These allow her to "tune in" into Dracula's head, letting Van Helsing track his movement.
  • Downplayed in The Lord of the Rings, where Gandalf is an angelic spirit in human form, traveling with the otherwise non-magical Fellowship. His exalted origins are largely unknown to the party and his displays of power are minimal, since his Valar masters require that the victory over Sauron be won by the people of Middle-Earth.
  • Magic is incredibly rare in A Song of Ice and Fire. Due to splitting up, most factions only have one person with magical ability on their side: The North, the Night's Watch, and Bran's companions each have someone who can control a direwolf; Stannis has Melisandre, who can create shadow beings and do other things with Blood Magic, and Daenerys possesses three dragons.

    Live-Action TV 
  • Doctor Who:
    • Most incarnations of Team TARDIS only have the Doctor as the Token Non-Human, and by extension all his Time Lord abilities. Though occasionally, one of his companions will end up gaining powers on one of their adventures.
    • Though he is best known for working alone, sometimes the Master also makes a team to take down the Doctor, in which he's the Token Super. Two of the most well known alliances he made are with Chang Lee and Lucy Saxon, who helped him in his evil plans.
  • Bizarre Alien Biology aside, most crew members of Star Trek are decidedly human in ability, with one or two exceptions who not only exceed human physicality but have a decidedly different emotional and or moral outlook
    • The Cage has Number One, who is said to exceptional, but aside from being coldly logical we're not sure how, at first. She's gradually fleshed out in Expanded Universe material until Strange New Worlds establishes that Number One is a genetically engineered organism designed to survive in Earth like conditions. She looks human, but is stronger, faster, tougher, is virtually immune to all known toxins(including being Unaffected by Spice) and radiation poisoning and has a powerful immune system that trivializes all known diseases.
    • The Original Series has Commander Spock, a Composite Character of Number One and the original Spock who is a Half-Human Hybrid with Super-Strength and Psychic Powers.
      • The Star Trek Animated Series adds the bipedal feline M'Ress and the three armed telepath Karex, but they aren't part of the main cast and don't stick with the crew.
    • Star Trek The Next Generation has Data, a Nigh-Invulnerable android who can process information much more quickly that most biological beings, and Deanna Troi, another half human hybrid who is The Empath, though her powers only prove useful once so you're forgiven for forgetting the fact. Later, another joins in commander Worf, a super strong Human Alien with a redundant nervous system that lets him fight through injuries that would paralyze a man.
      • Outside of the main cast, there is also Guinan, who the nigh omnipotent Q is frightened by and warns is "not what it appears" to be but is a lying imp. We're never shown any of Guinan's powers beyond Ripple-Effect-Proof Memory memory and being functionally ageless, however, and the ratio is even more skewed against super powers considering recurring characters outside of the main cast.
    • Deep Space Nine has Odo, a Voluntary Shape Shifter who can imitate the form of a fully grown human male but just as soon fit himself into a bucket. He's later joined by Commander Worf from The Next Generation.Doctor Brashir is secretly an illegally augmented human with increased stamina and hand-eye coordination
    • Star Trek Voyager averts this, as while super powered crew members are still the minority, there are never any less than four among the main cast at once.
    • Star Trek Enterprise has T'Pol, the fully alien version of what Spock is only half human of. She has all of the same powers with the downside of an enhanced sense of smell that makes living around her human charges intolerable.
    • Star Trek Discovery has Saru, a super fast, super strong humanoid alien Spike Shooter with a Spider-Sense, Super-Senses in all the human categories to the point of being able to see through holographic illusions and smell emotions.
    • Star Trek Lower Decks has D'Vana Tendi, who in fact has the powers associated with her species, much to her annoyance, but she does have one, a Compelling Voice, provided anyone is willing to listen to her. She's later joined by T'Lyn, who is the same species as T'Pol.
      • Outside of the main cast, ''Lower Decks is a Double Subversion, as Diane T'Ana, Migleemo, Peanut Harper and Olly all have inhuman abilities, but then Peanut Harper bails on the crew and proceeds to become a criminal who is exiled from Star Fleet, and Olly suffers from Power Incontinence that makes her less than useful, so it's really just cat person Diane and bird person Migleemo.
    • Star Trek Prodigy is another aversion, even more so than Voyager, as the crew are all untrained, inexperienced kids who would be dead without the myriad of super human abilities they have. Appropriately, it's up to Captain Janeway from Star Trek Voyager to find and save them
  • In Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., none of the original members of Team Coulson possess powers, except Daisy Johnson / Skye / Quake, who is an Inhuman capable of causing vibrations.
    • Season 3 adds three more Inhumans to Team Coulson; Lincoln Campbell who can generate and control electricity; Joey Gutierrez who can melt and shape metal; and Elena "Yo-Yo" Rodruigez who has super speed limited to the length of time of a heartbeat. By the end of the season Lincoln is dead and Joey has quit SHIELD, leaving Daisy and Elena as the only superpowered characters on the main cast.
  • Arrowverse:
  • The Boys: The titular team are all Badass Normals, with the exception of Kimiko Miyashiro / "The Female", who was given powers via Compound V, granting her Super-Strength and a Healing Factor. Notably, this a series where "Supes" are the enemy, so Kimiko being a Differently Powered Individual is also unusual in that respect.
  • In Merlin, the titular character was the only one of Arthur's allies to possess magic. Technically Morgana always had magic, but didn't know it until much later, by which she had betrayed Arthur to take the throne for herself. While Gaius performed magic in the past, but had given up these habits and only used it as a last resort, so overall Merlin is still the only one who actively uses magic to help Arthur.
  • In Penny Dreadful, Vanessa is the only member of Sir Malcolm's little vampire-hunting gang who has psychic powers. Subverted at the end of season one, however, when it is revealed that Ethan is actually a unwitting werewolf and he begins using his beast form against the bad guys.
  • Raven Baxter of That's So Raven is the main trio's resident psychic, getting flashes of future visions that can constantly help them out.
  • Stranger Things: Eleven is the only member of the party with psychic powers. The rest get by on geek knowledge, investigation skills and technological ingenuity.

    Video Games 
  • In Life is Strange, thanks to her Time Master powers, the Player Character Max is the only person investigating the disappearance of Rachel Amber with powers. Technically only Chloe is officially on their "team", but they get a lot of help from other characters who they keep Locked Out of the Loop like Warren and Kate, and eventually other characters connected to Rachel start cooperating with them. More specifically; Frank can join their investigation (should you avoid killing him when asking him for info), and David catches up (having found Max and Chloe's notes) and pulls a Big Damn Heroes in the final episode.
  • In Plants vs Zombies: Garden Warfare 2, Super Brainz is the only character who explicitly has superpowers, being a costumed superheronote  in a game otherwise devoid of them. Despite this, he's evenly matched with the other characters thanks to them having abilities that aren't "super"note  but are pretty powerful regardless.
  • Team Fortress 2: The Spy is a variation of this compared to the rest of the playable mercenaries. All of the playable cast members have unique quirks and abilities, especially in conjunction with mechanics and gameplay (such as Soldier's ability to rocket jump or Medic's ability to regularly generate Nigh-Invulnerability), but the Spy has especially outlandish abilities like invisibility, flawless disguises, and other spy gadgets (including miniature ones hidden in his false teeth) that stand out by actually being canon. The official webcomic regularly demonstrates this gulf in power with the Spy being able to do many things many other characters on his team cannot realistically do without supernatural assistance.

    Visual Novels 

    Web Animation 

    Webcomics 

    Western Animation 
  • Ben Tennyson of the original Ben 10 series was this at first, as Gwen and Grandpa Max didn't have powers to start off with. Though it gets dropped once Gwen gets a spell book and starts practicing magic.
  • Danny Phantom is the only one in his family with ghost powers.
  • Artha from Dragon Booster. Most characters are Badass Normals who use technology, however Artha can transform into the Dragon Booster, possessing powerful armor and a bond with his dragon, Beau. Later on, Artha also becomes an Empowered Badass Normal even in his civilian form, when he learns to "release the human" and can perform mag-attacks.
  • Deconstructed in Shape Island. Circle can levitate herself and other things, inflate to giant size, and teleport objects to and from elsewhere. However, Triangle and Square never act impressed by her powers and take them in stride, and they frequently outdo her in "normal" activities (When Square decides to take up her longtime hobby of gardening, he surpasses her in only a day). When Triangle brings up her powers in "Circle Makes A Mistake" as a solution to the trio getting stranded note , she admits that her powers get weaker the farther she is from home, insinuating that she can't leave the island without being crippled (she has no legs and relies on her levitation to move), if not outright dying. All of this has given her an inferiority complex over being "different", with the episode "The Shooting Star" implying she is an alien who crashed onto the island via a meteor that she is still magically linked to.
  • In Sparkle Friends, features three normal kids, a pet gorilla, and Gun-gi. Gun-gi is a flying pink creature who spews reality warping vomit, which gives a variety of effects including giving the kids superpowers.
  • Star Wars: Clone Wars and Star Wars: The Clone Wars depict squads, corps, even battalions of brave and loyal Clone Troopers fighting fiercely against Separatist forces. The clones are led by a Jedi Knight, who is effectively a wizard with "the Force" as his magic. Ultimately it's a one Force wizard and his Redshirt Army versus cookie-cutter "clankers".
  • Dawn from Total Drama who has Psychic Powers. Her ability to read auras, understand animals, and being a Voice for the Voiceless for B has helped her team out on several occasions.
  • While Transformers: Animated has several human supervillains as side-antagonists, all of them are normal people who rely on high grade technology to fight the Autobots—except Prometheus Black/Meltdown whose condition turns his body into living acid. Notably, this actually fits into the Transformers setting, since his powers came from experimenting with Cybertronian bodily fluid. Fittingly enough, he's the only human villain that has seriously threatened the Autobots.
  • In Captain Planet and the Planeteers, the only regularly-occurring villain with superpowers of his own was radioactive mutant Duke Nukem.

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