When a character's specialized weapon in one iteration of a story is noticeably different to another.
Since a character's weapon often indicates something about their personality or fighting style, this is usually a byproduct of an Adaptation Personality Change (or vice-versa). What was once a Boisterous Bruiser with an Awesome Ego showing off his moves with his kusari-gama is now a Fighting Clown cracking jokes as he subdues you with his Killer Yo-Yo. What was once a sai-wielder who wanted to end a fight quickly is now an Attention Whore out to dazzle you with their sick swordplay. What was once an honorable, katana-wielding Warrior Poet is now a total sicko, licking the blade of his butterfly knife before he shanks you with it.
Sometimes this is the result of a Genre Shift. Afterall, the gun-toting First-Person Shooter protagonist wouldn't last five minutes when thrown in a Stealth-Based Game, since all of the foes need to be taken out quietly lest they're overwhelmed and unceremoniously offed.
The odds of this change leaving the character better or worse off when asked to perform with these weapons is all rather subjective, since certain weapons and the kind of skills you can master with them tend to differ.
May be a form of Bowdlerization if their standard weapons were deemed too violent.
Sub-Trope to Adaptational Skill. Sister Trope to Adaptational Superpower Change.
Examples
- Doraemon: Nobita and the Haunts of Evil ends with a lengthy final battle where the future selves of Doraemon and gang travels to a few hours ago to help their past selves, with future!Doraemon leading their present selves into the statue of King Bauwanko while future!Nobita and friends takes on Daburanda's army. In the original manga, Nobita gets the Power Gloves granting him Super-Strength allowing him to pummel enemy mooks, while Shizuka gets the Shrink Light turning enemies into doll-sized versions of themselves. The 1982 anime and 2014 remake swaps their equipment around however, so Shizuka is the one punching enemy mooks while Nobita gets to shrink his attackers.
- Fist of the North Star: The Golan Major used a Razor Floss garotte in the manga, which was changed into a whip in the anime. This makes his death in the anime version significantly less gory: In both, Kenshiro hits pressure points to first paralyze him, then wraps his weapon around his neck, has him hold each end and pushes other pressure points to make him slowly spread his arms. In the manga this eventually slices his head clean off, while in the anime it merely strangles him, with possible Neck Snap.
- The Legend of Zelda (Akira Himekawa):
- The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (1999):
- Although Ganondorf still carries a short sword pre-Time Skip, his weapon afterwards is a longsword.
- While Nabooru is still brainwashed, she is not turned into an Iron Knuckle. As a result, she’s shown wielding a Sinister Scimitar instead of an axe.
- The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask (2001): The Gerudo pirates have straight-bladed spears instead of naginatas.
- The Legend of Zelda: Oracle Duology (2001): As opposed to his game counterpart, whose starting weapon is a wooden sword, Link inherits a metal sword from his grandfather. In addition, Ralph's sword is changed from a typical arming sword to a smallsword.
- Downplayed in The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess (2016). In the game, King Bulblin had a two-handed axe with a hammer head for a poll. The manga gives him a one-handed axe with only a blade. Halfway through the story, he gets his hands on his in-game weapon.
- The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (1999):
- Transformers Victory:
- Deathsaurus' toy is armed with a rifle with a nonfunctioning flail under the barrel, but the anime leaves out the rifle in favor of the flail and giving him a fiction-only sword. Even his later Living Metal Destroying Cannon is an entirely different design from the toy's gun. Tigerbreast's gun form is changed to a bow and arrow form, giving Deathsaurus an archery aspect the toy lacks.
- The Breastforce toys are armed with the gun forms of their Breast Animal partners, with their combined form Liokaiser getting a gun made up of Killbison's tank barrels and Jallguar's missiles. While they have these weapons in the anime, they primarily use fiction-only staffs that can change to sanjieguns, and Liokaiser's staff can launch spiked rings. Liokaiser's first battle has him use his staff for the entirety of the fight and only pull out his gun to try to deal the killing blow.
- The Dinoforce toys come with guns for their weapons, but the anime portrays them with melee weapons instead. Kakuryu is unique among the team in that he is given a tiny pistol (which is still different from his toy's gun) along with his fictional axe.
- Yu-Gi-Oh!:
- Some of the duelists in the Yu-Gi-Oh! GX manga used decks different from their anime counterparts.
- Chazz Princeton/Jun Manjoume uses a more general Dragon-Type deck instead of VWXYZ, Armed Dragons or Ojamas from the anime, though he specializes in DARK and LIGHT Attribute Dragons to complement Light and Darkness Dragon.
- Bastion Misawa/Daichi Misawa plays a Yōkai deck in the manga, instead of his science-oriented elemental decks in the anime.
- The manga version of Alexis Rhodes/Asuka Tenjoin foregoes her Cyber Ballerinas in favor of an Ice-themed deck.
- The manga version of Atticus Rhodes/Fubuki Tenjoin plays a powerful Wind-themed deck, rather than a Red-Eyes Black Dragon deck used by Nightshroud, or his normal Warrior deck.
- Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's:
- In the anime, Jack uses a deck with various offense based monsters, with his Red Dragon Archfiend as his Signature Mon. In the manga, Jack uses a "King" monster archetype.
- In the anime, Aki uses a generic plant monster deck. In the manga, she uses a "Rose" archetype.
- Some of the duelists in the Yu-Gi-Oh! GX manga used decks different from their anime counterparts.
- Absolute Batman has a downplayed case in regards to Catwoman. Normally, Catwoman's main weapon is her iconic whip, but in this universe, Selina's weapon of choice is instead a submachine gun, with her "tail" serving as an ammunition belt. That said, it is shown on a few occasions that her "tail" can also be used similarly to a whip.
- Animorphs: The thugs in the comics' adaptation of Animorphs: The Predator don't have guns but various other weapons including a baseball bat. Some of their hand positions are still pretty gun-like, and the old man they'd been menacing hucks a rock at Marco and then in the next panel is clutching the bat in both hands with his arms at full extension in a way that looks a whole lot like he'd originally shot at Marco, as in the book, and aimed the gun at him. The change makes Marco fleeing the alley and forgetting his groceries a bit nonsensical.
- Sonic the Comic: Amy Rose's signature Piko Piko Hammer from the games is nowhere to be seen in this comic and she uses a crossbow instead. This is more due to Early Adaptation Weirdness: Amy's hammer didn't appear in the games until Sonic the Fighters, which was released three years after Sonic the Comic began.
- The Transformers (Marvel): The Decepticon Pretenders Bludgeon, Stranglehold, and Octopunch are shown wielding melee weapons based on their Pretender armor: a katana for the samurai-like Bludgeon, an Epic Flail for the gladiator-like Stranglehold, and a trident (which shot lightning for some reason) for Octopunch because his armor looked like an old-fashioned diving suit. All three of their action figures came with guns.
- Wonder Woman: In her original incarnation, Nubia used a magic sword. Her DC Rebirth portrayal has her using the Staff of Understanding which can transform into a bladed lasso.
- Hours 'Verse: Downplayed. After the Velvet Room siblings are forced out by Yaldabaoth's take-over, they all take up conventional weapons in addition to their normal skills. Elizabeth chooses battleaxes, Margaret chooses rapiers, and Theodore chooses swords and pistols.
- In Infinity Train: Blossoming Trail and Infinity Train: Voyage of Wisteria, Amelia's main weapon were the use of guns like shotguns, pistols and sniper-rifles. In Infinity Train: Seeker of Crocus, while she still has handguns, her main weapon is the Ice Wand.
- Likewise in Infinity Train: Knight of the Orange Lily, Gladion and Specter had shields while Tokio had a boomerang. In Crocus, those weapons are now in the hands of the Apex so London gives alternatives: Gladion gets a kusarigama — a small scythe with a chain — Specter gets a size-changing staff and Tokio gets a deck of card that acts both as projectiles and bombs.
- A Monster's Marriage: Instead of the nameless pistol and rings he has in canon, Watts's shown here using a pair of brass knuckles with a blade attached to the side as his main weapon.
- In The Numbershots, a few duelists' decks are quite different between this fanfic and the anime's canon, due to the fic having started while ZEXAL was on-going and certain characters hadn't revealed what their deck's archetype/specialization was at the time these stories were published, some being Outdated by Canon.
- Kotori is the most obvious example, due to her Adaptational Badass treatment. She uses a Winged-Beast deck throughout the series, which fits her name's bird motif, instead of the Fairy-type deck that she'd use later in canon and spin-off video games (her first dueling appearance in the fanfic predates her first duel in the anime).
- In the anime, V/Chris Arclight uses a space-themed deck that compliments his Signature Mon, Number 9: Dyson Sphere. Numbershot 38 shows that V uses a Lightray deck since Dyson Sphere doesn't exist as a Number in this continuity. The same story sees Tron/Byron Arclight using a Toon-monster card type deck like Maximillion Pegasus, albeit under a completely different archetype, instead of the Medallion/Heraldry deck in canon.
- Instead of an ice-themed deck, Rio uses the Mermail archetype.
- Ryoga himself also gets this treatment, utilizing Sea Serpents alongside some of his fish-related cards.
- When Dr. Faker duels in Numbershot 99, he doesn't use a Garbage/Heart-eartH Deck, but rather the fanfic exclusive archetype, Baryon, which includes his own Galaxy-Eyes themed Number, Number 99: Galaxy-Eyes Baryon Dragon.
- In Once Upon a December Night, April's weapon of choice is a short katana, a noticeable difference to the tessen her canon counterpart used in the 2012 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series.
- Sagittarius:
- In Stargazer, Ikharos' choice melee weapon was a sword. In No stars in sight, he instead prefers using a glaive for close-quarters combat. His Lumina handcannon is also swapped out for a Forerunner sidearm.
- In the Inheritance Cycle book series, Cuaroc wielded a one-handed Rider sword and a shield. In No stars in sight, his weapon of choice is changed to a massive, two-handed claymore.
- True Potential: Instead of getting the Kubikiribōchō, Suigetsu inherits the Kabutowari after Jinin's death.
- The BIONICLE films mostly retained the tools of the toys, but with some alterations.
- Takanuva's tool is the Staff of Light. In, BIONICLE: Mask of Light the staff's blade is bent by 90° and is used as a ball-slinging sport tool rather than a normal staff.
- Onewa in BIONICLE 2: Legends of Metru Nui has one giant pickax-like tool rather than the double pitons his toy has. It also has a stiff handle rather than being attached to chains.
- Keetongu's toy has a rotating shield and a scythe-like climbing blade. In the film Web of Shadows, the two are seemingly combined: he lacks his climbing blade but uses his shield for climbing rather than for protection.
- Mata Nui's standard toy only has a shield but he prominently carries a shield and a sword in The Legend Reborn. His shield in the film is actually the transformed form of Team Pet Click, while the toy version is just a standard shield. The larger Toa Mata Nui set does include both tools, though they hardly resemble their movie versions.
- The LEGO Ninjago Movie swapped around some character's signature weapons. This was carried over to the show for about a season before reverting to normal.
- Lloyd and Nya lack a weapon specialization in the show, instead using the standard Katana, so Lloyd is given a dao blade (a single edged Chinese sword) and Nya is given a spear. These are the only weapon changes that stuck in the main show:
- Zane's specialization is swapped from shurikens to a bow and arrow.
- Cole's specialization is changed from scythes to hammers.
- Harley Quinn has a rather diverse arsenal, but among of her signature weapons in most iterations are comically oversized popguns to shoot large trick projectiles. In Birds of Prey, she instead uses a more pragmatic M79 grenade launcher, customized to fire similarly zany projectiles including glitter bombs and bean bags.
- Star-Lord in the comics uses a pair of blasters called Element Guns that fire exactly what the name implies. In Guardians of the Galaxy (2014) and it's sequels he instead wields a pair of guns called the Quad Blasters, which aside from looking cool don't do anything special on comparison to any other blaster.
- In the James Bond films, Bond's weapon of choice had always been a Walther PPK chambered in .32 or .380 ACP. However, in Octopussy, Bond (played here by Roger Moore) used a Walther P5 throughout the movie (it was brand new, Walther wanted to promote it), at one point lampshading to Q that he had "mislaid his PPK". In Tomorrow Never Dies, Bond (Pierce Brosnan) switches to a Walther P99 in the middle of the film and it stays for three more films as Bond's sidearm, even when the series underwent a Continuity Reboot with Daniel Craig as Bond in Casino Royale. However, Craig switched back to the PPK in his second film, Quantum of Solace, and the PKK stayed for the rest of his tenure as Bond (Skyfall, Spectre, and No Time to Die).
- Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers: The Movie: In the show, Kimberly and Billy's personal weapons are a bow and a double-bladed lance, respectively. In this movie, Kim uses a whip and Billy uses a Grappling-Hook Pistol.
- Mortal Kombat: Annihilation: In the games, Smoke has a Grappling-Hook Pistol built into his chest. The movie changes this to a missile launcher, making this version of Smoke a Composite Character of himself and Sektor.
- In The Shawshank Redemption, the prison gang leader Bogs carries a shiv as a weapon. In the original Different Seasons novella, he carried a pearl-handled straight razor.
- Transformers (2007): Optimus Prime was primarily associated with an energy rifle (known as the Ion Blaster) and Energon Axe, an axe blade made of energy that he could replace his right hand with. In the film, he instead can retract his hands to replace them with a pair of guns or a pair of swords.
- In The Wolverine, Harada's main weapon is a bow instead of the katana he used as the Silver Samurai in the original comics. This is because it is actually Ichiro Yashida who is the real Silver Samurai.
- In Game of Thrones Nymeria Sand's weapon is a whip and a small knife while her book counterpart only wields a pair of knives. The same goes with her half-sister, Tyene, who is a non-combatant Master Poisoner in the books but in the show, she's wields two daggers which are coated with poison.
- In Hawkeye, Duquesne's personal weapon is a sabre instead of the straight-bladed sword used by his comic counterpart.
- Mortal Kombat: Conquest sees Shao Kahn trade the Wrath Hammer he had in the games for a sword.
- Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation:
- Mikey's weapons are changed from nunchucks to tonfas in this show due to nunchucks being outlawed in several places.
- In the show, Venus uses mystic orbs which have a number of effects from smoke bombs to glue puddles. The toys give her Combat Hand Fans in place of these.
- Rick Grimes from The Walking Dead has a Colt Python as his weapon of choice, rather than the typical semiautomatic pistol in the comics.
- BIONICLE (2015), All but two of the signature weapons of the toa in their original forms have been replaced, despite them being heavily based on their original Toa Mata forms from the original line, in addition to their alternate weapons. Even Tahu and Lewa, the only two to keep their old weapons (more or less), now dual wield, and their weapons now have bifurcated gimmickry.
- While Kopaka still has a shield, his sword has been replaced with a spear, likely to differentiate him from Tahu, who also wielded a sword. His Uniter form, however, does have a sword, but lacks a shield.
- Onua trades out his claws for a hammer that can transform into a pair of shovels.
- Gali lacks her hooks, with a trident in their stead.
- Pohatu no longer kicks rocks around with his foot attachments, instead opting for a pair of boomerangs. Like Kopaka, a stone like he had in his original set (down to using the exact same mold) is included in his Uniter form, albeit chained to a spear.
- Conker: Live & Reloaded. Played with. Conker initially uses the frying pan from the original game in the game's tutorial area, but when he uses it on the gargoyle, he doesn't fall off the bridge like he does in the original game. When Conker is confused about this, the gargoyle explains that the designers altered the tutorial area a little to trick players into thinking that the rest of the game will be different. Conker then hits the gargoyle with a baseball bat he also picked up, which causes the gargoyle to get knocked back and crushed by a falling boulder. Conker decides to use the baseball bat in place of the frying pan for the rest of the game.
- Downplayed in Compilation of Final Fantasy VII: Red XIII's weapon has always been a Stat Stick for him to slot materia onto (Red attacks with his claws and fangs), but in the original game, it was various hairclips and hair decs. Final Fantasy VII Remake and Final Fantasy VII: Ever Crisis would switch him to collars instead. The latter even switches his Lethal Joke Weapon from a decorative hairpin to a pair of headphones.
- Fire Emblem: The majority of games in the series have swords be their protagonist's main, if not only weapon. So for the sake of variety, when games like Heroes and Engage feature characters from older games summoned to the current game's setting, protagonists that use swords and another weapon type will almost always lean towards the other weapon type, even if it was secondary to their sword usage in their home game. For example, Lyn uses bows in most appearances despite her original game associating her with two legendary swords and zero legendary bows, as well as not even having bow access until she promotes.
- Halo: Master Chief is almost always depicted with an Assault Rifle by default as his weapon of choice. This is the case for many cutscenes throughout the games, the cover art of Combat Evolved, 3, 4 and Infinite, and he starts most missions equipped with one (including in Halo 5: Guardians, where the Assault Rifle is explicitly part of his starting mission loadout). The sole exception to this trend is Halo 2, which scrapped the Assault Rifle in favor of the SMG, and so the Chief instead prefers that weapon on the game's cover art instead, while he is often shown with the Battle Rifle in cutscenes.
- In Honor of Kings:
- Liu Bei is no longer using the dual swords that he used in history or any other media depicting his exploits, as opposed to his brothers that had their original polearm weapons. His weapon of choice takes advantage of how much more advanced the technology in the game is compared to his original timeline: a shotgun.
- Huang Zhong is usually known as the Master Archer of Shu's Five Tiger Generals. In this game, his weapon is changed into an Arm Cannon that can turn into a long range stationary artillery cannon.
- James Bond: Most games made after Tomorrow Never Dies have Bond use a P99 even after the then-current Bond had switched back to the PPK. Probably because the P99 is more modern than the iconic but outdated PPK and because in a game with a lot of shooting, a pistol with more ammo is better than one with less (the P99's 16 rounds vs. the PPK's 6 or 7 rounds).
- In LEGO Ninjago: Shadow of Ronin: Zane's preferred weapon is changed from shurikens to sai. This also applies to his Obsidian Weapon, which are based off the original Golden Weapons.
- Lunar: The Silver Star: In most versions, Luna can use a variety of weapons, such as daggers, bows, or staves. However, in Lunar Legend, a simplified Game Boy Advance version, she instead uses frying pans.
- Several changes between Mafia: Definitive Edition and the original Mafia: The City of Lost Heaven:
- In Definitive Edition's version of "Bon Appétit", Don Ennio Salieri uses a shotgun found under the bar counter of Pepe's restaurant to defend himself from Morello's goons. In the original game, Salieri used a revolver that he personally carried to fend those same goons off.
- In Definitive Edition, for the Assassination Attempt on Hank Turnbull, a politician vehemently opposed to the Salieri Crime Family's operations, the Sniper Rifle given by Vincenzo Ricci to Tommy Angelo is the more period-appropriate Springfield M1903A1 rifle, rather than the Mosin-Nagant M1891/30 from the original game.
- During Tommy's assassination in the ending of both the original and Definitive Edition, Joe Barbaro uses a lupara to do the deed. In Mafia II, however, he uses a full-sized Pump-Action Shotgun to kill him, complete with Dramatic Gun Cock before firing.
- Marvel Rivals:
- Downplayed in regards to Black Widow. While the Natasha of the comics is a skilled sniper and has used a sniper rifle on plenty of occasions, it's far from her signature weapon, with her usually preferring close-quarters combat with her wrist gauntlets. This game, meanwhile, has use a sniper rifle as her main weapon so as to allow her to fulfill the role of a sniper character for the game.
- Captain America is another downplayed case. He still wields his iconic vibranium shield, but this version of the shield has been upgraded with tech from 2099, making it capable of doing things the comics' version can't do like summoning Deflector Shields.
- Squirrel Girl in this case outright gains a weapon she doesn't have in the comics: A slingshot that fires explosive acorns. It's an invention of the game made to give her a proper ranged weapon as her primary fire, whereas in the comics she gets by through her enhanced attributes, tail, and her telepathic control over squirrels, and has no actual weapons or gadgets.
- Onigiri (2014): Ibaraki-Douji, one of the party members, wields a sword in-game that looks like a cat-paw on a stick. In the anime adaptation, she instead wields an axe. Yet, one piece of in-game artwork depicts her wielding dual swords.
- Pico: Three of the games made by Tom Fulp (Pico's School, Pico vs. Bear, and Resident Pico) had the title character wielding an M-16. The one game by Fulp where he didn't, Pico vs. Überkids, instead had him (as well as Nene and Darnell) use a revolver, as he was playing Russian Roulette. On the fangame side, Pico's Unloaded replaced his usual gun with twin Uzis among other weapons, but the guns ended up sticking around in other fangames and became his new weapons of choice.
- Sonic Boom: This reimagining of the characters are given a new item called the enerbeam, which allows them to latch onto other objects for combat, puzzle solving, or exploration purposes. It also shows up in the cartoon of the series a few times, mostly to allow combination attacks between two characters.
- Soul Calibur II: Guest Fighters Link and Spawn feature weapons outside of their usual arsenal.
- Link's alternate weapons are all sword and shield sets, several of which involve two-handed weapons from his home series, such as the Great Fairy Sword and Biggoron's Sword, and the sword and shield of an enemy Armos statue.
- Spawn, in lieu of firearms, transforms his cape into an axe called Agony and wields several other original axes as alternate weapons.
- Super Smash Bros.:
- Pit's Arrow of Light is replaced by twin blades that can be combined into a bow. Interestingly, this would later become his trademark weapon in Kid Icarus: Uprising.
- Zero Suit Samus' emergency pistol is replaced by a plasma whip that can also fire stunning blasts, much like the weapon it's based on.
- While he does always have a knack for picking up a whole lot of weaponry, Solid Snake is usually associated with handguns, with the most iconic probably being his SOCOM. But said guns are conspicuously absent from his Smash portrayal, which instead primarily focuses on the explosive parts of his arsenal. This was mainly done for gameplay purposes, as a regular, non-fantasy gun is perfect for tactical espionage action but hard to convert into fighting game moves.
- Since Fire Emblem protagonists rely heavily on Heroes Prefer Swords, there have been major complaints that the series representatives tend to have similar playstyles. As a result, Byleth goes from simply owning a Whip Sword (the Sword of the Creator) to wielding said sword alongside three more Hero Relics (the axe Aymr, the spear Areadbhar, and the bow Failnaught) borrowed from other characters from the original game in order to vary their moveset more heavily.
- Tomb Raider: Lara Croft primarily wielded dual pistols as her weapon of choice in most incarnations of the franchise. But in the "Survivor Timeline", which has taken things in a more Stealth Action Game direction, Lara's weapon of choice is a bow, which lends itself far more to this kind of gameplay than Guns Akimbo.
- Wild ARMs: Million Memories: In his home game, Wild ARMs 2, Tim uses a normal Magic Staff. Here, however, one of his cards
depicts him with a Humongous-Headed Hammer, to show him Dishing Out Dirt.
- Beast Wars: The Transmetal toys only feature melee weapons, but the animated series required the cast to have guns. As such, everyone's melee weapons either function like guns (Optimus Prime's mace handles being used as machine guns when mounted to his back, Megatron's tail whip stiffening and acting like a cannon, Tarantulus's buzzsaw acting as a gun), or other parts of their body being given the ability to fire something (Cheetor's hands firing energy blasts, Tarantulus' shoulder markings serving as missile pods, Megatron's tyrannosaurus arms acting as shoulder guns). Then there's Rattrap, who — unlike the toy — simply retains his original form's pistol (albeit Transmetalized) in addition to his tail/whip.
- Looney Tunes Cartoons initially swapped out Elmer Fudd's signature hunting shotgun with a scythe, with the creators specifically citing political correctness as the reason for the change. The deep unpopularity of this with fans (both for the expected reasons, and because using a scythe as a weapon seems much more violent and gruesome) led to Elmer getting his shotgun back after the first season of shorts.
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles:
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012): Karai typically uses a katana. In this show, she uses a wakizashi.
- In Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Leo, Raph, and Mikey start out wielding their iconic weapons from the rest of the franchise, which are destroyed at the beginning of the series and they're forced to replace their weaponry with new mystical ones.
- Raph is well known as the sai-wielder in almost every other iterations of the character, but ROTMNT Raph carries a pair of mystical tonfas, which generate mystic energy that manifests as solid energy constructs that take the shape of his body or appendages. He goes right back to sais in the finale once he gets a new weapon forged by Todd Capybara, following Shredder destroying his tonfas.
- Mikey has been versed in the use of nunchucks, grappling hooks and chain-scythes in most incarnations, but this version also wields a mystic fire-generating Kusari-Fundo, a chain-based weapon that he uses as a Killer Yo-Yo with a maniacally laughing weight and chain that can extend night-infinitely. Like Raph, he goes back to nunchucks in the finale after his mystical Kusari-Fundo is destroyed by Shredder.
- Leo is a milder variant where he exchanges his dual katanas with a single mystic Odachi, which doubles as a Dimensional Cutter that creates portals. He has trouble using it at first.
- Transformers: Animated: The original Ultra Magnus is armed with a rifle and (seldom-used) shoulder rockets. His depiction here lacks both of those weapons and instead has the giant Magnus Hammer, which has influenced later versions of the character.
- What If…? (2021):
- Heinz Kruger, the HYDRA agent responsible for Dr. Erskine's death and botched theft of the latter's Super Serum, uses a Luger P08 in "What If... Captain Carter Were The First Avenger?", rather than the Walther P38 his Sacred Timeline counterpart used in Captain America: The First Avenger.
- Johann Schmidt, aka the Red Skull, wields a Mauser C96 in "What If... Captain Carter Were The First Avenger?", rather than a Luger and later a HYDRA pistol. Justified, as he procures the tesseract at a much later date than his Sacred-Timeline counterpart, and thus without Arnim Zola to design his weapons, the purpose for the tesseract also changed.
- HYDRA as a whole are subject to this in "What If... Captain Carter Were The First Avenger?". Thanks to discovering the Tesseract much later in the war and it getting stolen not long after acquiring it (with Arnim Zola getting captured as well), none of Zola's Tesseract-powered weapons and vehicles are developed. As a result, HYDRA is still armed and equipped with the same uniforms, weapons, and vehicles as the rest of the German Army and SS, from MP40 submachine guns to Tiger I Heavy tanks.

