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Badass Longcoat

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Badass Longcoat (trope)

"Handcrafted fur and skin outer layer will keep you warm and remind wolves that they should keep their distance."
— Wolfskin coat description, The Long Dark

A Longcoat is the ideal action-hero garment, more practical than a cape but infinitely cooler than a sport coat or no coat. Also, a Longcoat of any level of "billowy-ness" makes an ideal cover for producing any number of weapons, tools, supplies, and whatnot. Certain styles of Longcoat are deliberately designed to distort the wearer's frame, making their wearer's access to Hammerspace almost believable to mundane eyes. This distortion of the wearer's real shape also makes it genuinely harder to land an accurate attack on them.

Like capes, longcoats capitalize on the dramatic effect of having something that flutters behind you. It's especially effective in animated or drawn material, where the coat can be shown billowing a lot more than it could in real life (and a lot more stylishly) — to the point that it really does look like a cape. A variant involves jackets and excessively long shirts, but having less material to billow in the gusts necessarily makes such people seem less badass. And of course, when the wearer of a Badass Longcoat takes the coat off, it's a sign that he's about to do some major damage — he just doesn't want to get your blood on his coat. Additionally, a longcoat in fiction is rarely worn closed, and many are cut in such a way that closing them is impossible, giving the illusion of a broader chest and more masculine figure.

The most common types of long coats are dusters, trench coats and frock coats.

Dusters are longer overall, usually reaching nearly to the ankles. Since they're designed for horseback riding, they have a long slit up the back as far as the waist, and optional leg straps so they don't billow too much in the wind or while riding. Dusters are also generally cut along fairly boxy lines.

A trench coat, on the other hand, is usually more shaped, reaches to the knees or slightly below and the back slit generally only reaches mid-thigh or hip-level. Trench coats also usually feature a belt and epaulets. It should be noted that one way to tell if a trench coat indicates a spy or private investigator or is a Badass Longcoat is by whether it's buttoned and belted or not. A Badass Trenchcoat is never closed (unless it's on Humphrey Bogart).

An older variant of the trenchcoat is the greatcoat, a predecessor of the trench coat but usually much heavier, and with either a wider collar that can be turned up to protect against the wind or a short shoulder cape. Later greatcoats lost the cape, becoming a longer, heavier, double-breasted overcoat, but retaining the name. Greatcoats were typically worn either buttoned, losing some of their badassitude for style, or simply draped over the shoulders without putting the arms into the sleeves, greatly increasing their badassitude. They're most often associated with 19th Century naval officers, Nazi SS officers, and Russian soldiers.

The Inverness cape is a lighter garment with a very similar appearance to the caped greatcoat. The cape, however, is longer, reaching slightly past the wrist rather than only to the elbow, and an Inverness cape has no sleeves at all.

Frock coats, in contrast to all of the above coats, are very exquisitely tailored coats usually made of wool, like a longer version of a sport coat, but much more formal. Variants also include, on occasion, materials such as leather and, depending on the time in which the piece takes place, even silk. As they are one of the most enduring and universal fashions in the history of men's clothing, they have many different variations in cut ranging from the square-cut military frock coats of the 1600s to the cutaway-style frocks of the mid-to-late 1700s, to the, again, square coats that every Victorian and Edwardian aristocrat can be seen wearing in all of your favorite period dramas. In all of these cases, the coat is not intended to be closed — most of the time they don't have buttonholes — although from the later 1790s through to around the 1870s, and later on in the 1920s, they could be worn either way. If you're watching a period piece from the 1600s to the start of World War II, chances are most, if not all, of your male characters are wearing some kind of frock coat.

Please note that they are not in any way overcoats.

Being that they are tailored, with pleated tails that reach down to around the knees and pleated vents that invariably end right at the waist (beneath two buttons sewn in for decoration), frock coats have a tendency to sway and billow as one walks or stands facing the wind, without the heaviness or general shapelessness of leather or canvas, which are the two materials that most trenchcoats, greatcoats, and dusters are made from.

Moby-Dick features the "long-togged Scaramouche" (an evangelical preacher who has gained moral ascendancy over his crewmates) and Oliver Twist has The Artful Dodger, making this at least Older Than Radio.

Going back even further is a coat called a Justacorps (essentially the long coats of the 17th and 18th centuries; think Pirates of the Caribbean), though it has to be worn a certain way to pull off the badass look.

A less modern example would be the Badass Long Robe. Cool Shades are a nice accessory, as are tacking on some Signature Headgear and a Cool Mask to achieve the Coat, Hat, Mask Effect. If the mask in question is a gas mask, then it's Gas Mask, Longcoat. The Badass Longcoat is often combined with a pair of guns, either revolvers for a western or a pair of semiautomatic pistols or submachine guns in the modern-day and beyond, for extra effect. Some characters will pack enough weapons in their longcoats to outfit a small army.

Longcoat-wearing heroes probably started with Westerns (for dusters) or Film Noir (for the classic trenchcoat), but became especially common in the public mind after The Matrix.

The Badass Longcoat is closely associated with Those Wacky Nazis (since Germans in war have been associated with wearing leather longcoats), The Stoic, the Trenchcoat Brigade, and (thanks to the Columbine High School massacre) the Spree Killer. Compare Badass in a Nice Suit, and contrast Not-So-Badass Longcoat. Not related to Badass Longcat. Not to be confused with Conspicuous Trenchcoat, a specific type of coat that is also long, or Coat Cape, where a coat is worn over the shoulder like a cape for what is often a similar visual effect. This is also the exact article of clothing that's eschewed by someone who believes that Sleeves Are for Wimps.

(Please note that this trope is about the coat, not the person. Please include information about the coat when adding examples, rather than simply listing a character. The coat is important.)


Example subpages:

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    Audio Plays 

    Fan Works 
  • In Amazing Fantasy, the Prowler wears a longcoat compared to her comic counterpart's cape. It's emblazoned with the kanji for "risk" and danger" to emphasize her Thrill Seeker tendencies.
  • In The Butcher Bird, Yoshimura Kaneki eventually gets his hands on one of the Marine officer coats from the One Piece example above, and immediately replaces the 'Justice' (正義) insignia with 'Retribution' (冥罰). Part of his stated reason for doing this is to annoy the Marines who currently have to tolerate his presence.
  • The Redwall fanfiction "Chess" featured a pine marten in an embroidered black trench coat. Who cares that trench coats are a bit out of place in Redwall? IT'S AWESOME.
  • Child of the Storm has a couple, most notably Harry Dresden and his big black duster.
    • Wanda Maximoff has a long red trenchcoat. The Cloak of Levitation later takes this form in the sequel when she succeeds Doctor Strange.
    • Thor briefly wears a longcoat designed by Janet Van Dyne.
    • The Winter Soldier has a black three-quarter-length coat of his own.
    • Harry as the Dark Phoenix includes one as part of some more masculine alterations to the classic costume.
    • Gambit has a tatty brown trenchcoat which, it is noted, probably shouldn't work but somehow does.
  • The Sacred Order of Timekeepers from Chronomistress: Out of Time wears double-breasted coats, apparently color-coded to indicate rank.
  • DC Nation: The first thing Travis Grey did upon pickpocketing a Green Lantern ring was to create a costume for himself; black shirt, black leather pants, and one Badass Longcoat of black leather. The only green on him is his ring and Corps symbol. (This might be because Travis is blind). The second thing he did was start rounding up crack dealers and scaring the shit out of the local gangs.
  • Dial has Hawkeye wear one with his version of BRIDGE's standard-issue Armor Gear.
  • Pretty much the entire cast of Digital High. Noticeably, the author dresses Shadow in it, which is a trait usually used by a different Evil Counterpart. Sans also uses his sweatshirt as a Coat Cape.
  • Alim Surana in this Dragon Age fanfic has one. It's made of suede and leather and is dyed black. He didn't originally have it, but the Warden Commander decided that, since Alim is the most powerful out of all of them, he should have an appropriately badass attire. He seems to have made it a habit of generating his own Dramatic Wind whenever he's in the center of attention too.
  • J.Z. in Erin's Total Magical Adventure, wears a black leather duster which he bought for 200 bucks — some think he's a cowboy because he wears it.
  • By the same author as Digital High is Fallout New World Hope, which has all three protagonists use a different one. One wears a duster, one wears a trench coat, and one wears a lab coat. The third even switches it out for a leather jacket eventually. And he appears to be getting the old lab coat back post-Heroic Sacrifice.
  • Friendship Is Magical Girls:
    • Applejack has a knee-length duster as part of her mahoushoujo outfit.
    • Eskarrg wears a leather longcoat as part of his all-black outfit.
  • How To Drill Your Way Through Your Problems: Comes with the territory of being a Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann fanfic. Part of both Will/Lagann's, as well as Taylor/Owl's uniforms.
  • Invoked Trope in Jericho (MLP). Jericho himself wears a leather duster because cowboys wear them and cowboys are cool, thus wearing one should also make him cool. It doesn't make him cool. At all.
    "One always overcompensates for disabilities. I've been thinking of having my entire body surgically removed. But until the day that happens, I'll just stick to wearing awesome outfits; they make me feel cool."
  • Kyon's greatcoat in Kyon: Big Damn Hero, first in the prologue and gaining it about twenty chapters later.
  • During the third story of the My Hostage, Not Yours series, Zim starts wearing an Irken longcoat when he begins conquering Earth.
  • My Hero Playthrough: Kyoka's new hero costume includes a black leather duster with built-in armored speakers.
  • In My Huntsman Academia, The Admiral is a ranking officer in the White Fang who wears a tattered old Atlesian Navy uniform as a trophy from his past raids on Atlesian ships during the Faunus Rights Revolution.
  • Naru-Hina Chronicles:
    • Hinata buys Naruto one taking inspiration from the coat he earned in Sage training. Hiashi notes how suspiciously similar it is to the Fourth Hokage's coat of office, and also the strength of the family resemblance when he wears it.
    • Hanabi gains one as part of her mission gear. It goes surprisingly well with the crop-top and short shorts that comprises the rest of her mission gear.
  • In The Night Unfurls, the longcoat is a common feature of the Good Hunter and his band of apprentices' attire, all of whom form a Badass Crew who provide the bulk of the action in the original version by kicking tons of butt with trick weapons.
  • The Pieces Lie Where They Fell: Vix-Lei chooses a long black duster as part of her Fall Formal outfit.
  • In The Rainsverse, the Elements of Harmony provide their Bearers with very nice all-weather cloaks in colors matching the Elemental gems.
  • Big Boss wears one of these in Stray (Dahne), and another character comments on the garment's dramatic value.
  • Takeru Takaishi wears one of these in the Tamers Forever Series.
  • Unity (Finmonster): Violet wears one as part of her new Ultraviolet costume.
  • Voyages of the Wild Sea Horse: As a Captain in the World Government's Navy, Chaser Kiyoshi wears the standard impressive jacket with the kanji characters for "JUSTICE!" emblazoned on the back. But her version is different, in that it's also lined with interwoven metal plating that makes it double as a suit of armor and a training aid. This explains her fondness for dramatic coat-shedding when she gets into a fight.
  • The entirety of the Oogakari clan from Yet again, with a little extra help wear these, with only Shadow not having flames at the bottom.

    Films — Animation 

  • The Big Bad of Big Hero 6, Yokai, wears an ankle-length black coat with a prominent collar to help throw off attempts to identify him.
  • Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children: In addition to having Sephiroth reappear wearing his signature longcoat, the movie also introduces Yazoo who wears a longcoat that looks just like Sephiroth's. Cloud and Tifa's skirt-like things seem to echo the effect of his.
  • In The Great Mouse Detective, Basil wears an Inverness cloak much like Sherlock Holmes.
  • Lord Shen the peacock from Kung Fu Panda 2 manages to pull this off with his tail feathers.
  • In Osmosis Jones, Thrax has one that doubles as a glider.

    Music 
  • In the Cake song "Short Skirt/Long Jacket", the narrator's dream girl wears one of these:
    I want a girl with the right allocations
    Who's fast, thorough, and sharp as a tack
    She's playing with her jewelry, she's putting up her hair
    She's touring the facilities and picking up slack
    I want a girl with a short skirt and a long jacket
  • Phil Collins appears to be invoking this trope in the very Blade Runner-esque music video for the Genesis song "Tonight, Tonight, Tonight".
  • Ian Anderson in The '70s.
  • Tom Waits wears one on the cover of Mule Variations.
  • Dennis Warner in the video of Churchill's song [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUuX4h9XgYk Change]
  • Carl McCoy, singer from the occult-cowboy-goth band Fields of the Nephilim, is frequently seen sporting a badass cowboy duster (usually accessorized with leather hat and badass shades).
  • The Bridgemen Drum & Bugle Corps of Bayonne, NJ wore yellow longcoats. And black floppy pimp hats. And they were still badass.
  • Bob Dylan's "The Man In The Long Black Coat" (also covered by Joan Osborne) is about one.
  • Maurice Gibb of The Bee Gees wore one during the group's One Night Only show in 1997, along with a nice hat.
  • Swiss singer Rachel Tarelli wears one in the music video for Ich han en Schatz am schöne Zürisee
  • Meghan Trainor wears a nice silver one in the music video for "No".
  • In Empire of the Sun's video for "Alive", Nick "Lord" Littlemore, gets to wear a very nice brown one with tons of zippers.
  • The members of Rammstein change outfits pretty much with every new tour. However, the one almost-perpetual constant over the band's 20+ years of touring is lead guitarist Richard Z. Kruspe's trademark black longcoat.

    Pinballs 

    Pro Wrestling 
  • Many wrestlers have adopted the longcoat to improve their image as badasses; among them are The Undertaker, Sting, Edge (one of the earliest adopters), and Christopher Daniels (who ups the badass quotient by wearing a sleeveless Badass Longcoat).
  • Matt Hardy started sporting a very nice Badass Longcoat, though he might be a subversion of the associated trope unless you find serving Adam Cole and participating on three/four on one beat downs on a woman to spite her husband "bad ass".
  • Nikki Storm has ring gear to simulate the effect as if you'd want to give the opponent more areas to grab but still winning matches with the handicap is "bad ass".
  • UK independent wrestlers Marty Scurll and Jimmy Havoc who work for companies such as PROGRESS Wrestling, IPW:UK, Defiant Wrestling and RPW for example.
  • WALTER uses a black one with the logo of his Power Stable, Ringkampf, on it, that looks like an old fashioned army jacket since Ringkampf debuted as a team in Progress.
  • Russo-German wrestler Ilja Dragunov wears one of these as part of his Soviet gimmick.

    Roleplay 
  • Survival of the Fittest:
    • Jacob Starr of v1 and Julie Mikan of v3 wear trenchcoats. Jacob started with a suit, but when the jacket was damaged in a gun battle he took the trenchcoat off of one of the people he killed.
    • In v4, Staffan Kronwall was actually assigned this as a weapon.
  • Umbra from Shadowhunter Peril wears a long, badass, black duster. Simple yet elegant, but it got destroyed in a fight with Lilith. However, he easily replaced it.

    Tabletop Games 
  • Going by the artwork in the books, trenchcoats are Standard Issue among Dark Champions vigilantes.
  • Deadlands, being inspired by Westerns and requiring a good deal of Badassitude from at least some character classes, are a kind of natural habitat for Badass Longcoats too. Members of the Agency — the setting's The Men in Black organisation — are known by the nickname of Men In Black Dusters. The Agency's counterparts south of the border, the Texas Rangers, issue dusters to their recruits, presumably invoking this trope.
  • In Dogs in the Vineyard, a Badass Longcoat is standard issue to every player character. Depending on how the GM decides to run the game, they can even deflect bullets.
  • The Dungeon Master's Guide II for 3.5 has archetypes of player types. Under the "Supercoolness" heading is a half-orc in a long brown duster, two bloodstained broadswords, and a hat.
  • Eberron features a suit of armor that is essentially an armored duster.
  • Games Workshop games:
  • Particularly popular among PanOceania in Infinity, usually worn over Powered Armor.
  • Every faction from Warmachine and Hordes has someone wearing an incredibly badass longcoat.
  • The Imperial Trenchers in Mutant Chronicles universe are both specialized in trench warfare and wearing badass trenchcoats styled after the early 20th-century British military (which they're a Fantasy Counterpart to). Retired Badass Jake Kramer and The Stoic Cybertronic Overseer Cyril Dent also wear those.
  • Pathfinder:
    • The iconic inquisitor Imrijka could almost be a Distaff Counterpart to the DMG II half-orc. Her hat and duster, however, are bright crimson and considerably more ornate.
    • Not counting the "Gunman's Duster", a Wondrous Item also designed to give the wearer one of the Gunslinger's deeds, the Gunslinger's Dodge, which mechanically improves your defence against ranged attacks by moving you 5 feet, fluff wise, it helps you pull off backflips to dodge bullets, of course doing this still provokes attacks of opportunity, but should you want to try and backflip past people who are waving swords in your face, not even a Badass Longcoat can save you.
  • Quite a few of these are on the prowl in the Ravenloft setting, including were-hunter George Weathermay and some depictions of the darklord Malken. Even more common in the Ravenloft spinoff Gothic Earth, seeing as it's set in a spooky parallel Victorian-era Earth, so lots of people dress that way.
    • The Arthaus products made greatcoats standard outdoor garb for residents of Darkon, which gets chilly.
  • In Shadowrun, armored longcoats are readily available and popular with players because they provide a high level of protection (only suits of actual armor offer substantially better protection, and they're rather conspicious and also much harder to get on the black market), give a bonus for concealing weapons beneath them, and look cool. Given that the setting is a cyberpunk Seattle, they would also help keep off the obligatory rain.
  • Also very popular among players in The World of Darkness games, to the point that someone appearing in one, particularly if he uses a katana sword, is such an utter, utter cliché that almost nobody does it anymore.

    Theatre 
  • Ralph Fiennes brought new levels of whup-ass to a 1995 Broadway production of Hamlet with a long black leather greatcoat in the early scenes. This instantly elevated him from an emo kid to Darker and Edgier, right off the bat, which is unusual. Picture here.
  • Just like his film counterpart, J.D. in Heathers: The Musical wears a long, black trenchcoat. It's easily one of the most iconic parts of the character and a very thinly veiled reference to the Columbine shooters.
  • In any production of Les Misérables, Javert gets one from "The Robbery/Javert's Intervention" into "Stars", often worn unbuttoned during "Javert's Soliloquy" to show distress.
  • A production of Macbeth at the Guthrie Theater gave both Macbeth and Banquo long, black leather jackets in their first scene.
  • The titualar Phantom in The Phantom of the Opera is almost always shown with his iconic mask and long black cape.
  • Graf von Krolock has one in the final scene of certain productions of Tanz der Vampire.

    Theme Parks 

    Visual Novels 

    Web Animation 

    Webcomics 
  • Angel Moxie: Riley and Tristan get individual ones when powered up.
  • In Blood & Smoke (Paul Mitzkowski), Detective John Carson regularly wears a trench-coat.
  • In Captus Cinematic Universe, Malus wears a white longcoat as his villain attire of choice. In his debut comic, it waves behind him as he jumps off an exploding building.
  • In Charby the Vampirate, vampire hunters Vic and Blaine both wear long coats when they go out a-slaying. Nebbish boss Blaine wears a black, buckled coat over his office attire. Vic sported a plain grey coat for the longest time but recently had an upgrade to a dark grey long coat with red trim. Charby himself prefers long coats with lots of expressive tendrils of shredded cloth at the bottom.
  • Jerry Andrews of Coga Suro habitually wears the same dark grey coat throughout the comic's first run, even indoors, contrasting with the other cast members who usually wear t-shirts or similar. Slightly subverted in that he's the The Smart Guy rather than a consistent badass.
  • Komiyan from Darken in this scene where he shows Tarvin/Shard that evil is indeed a cut-throat business.
  • Gun-for-hire Black Monday Blues from Dead Winter has an eye for these, and chooses to keep it the whole way through the comic. The fact that he is the group's Hypercompetent Gunslinger, definitely makes him plenty badass.
  • Donovan Deegan of Dominic Deegan has a badass longcoat... made even more badass in that said long coat is pink.
  • Dreamkeepers: Namah Calah has a pretty nifty blue longcoat.
  • El Goonish Shive:
    • Abraham wears a fedora and trench coat created as "modern garb" when he sets out to kill Ellen. Dan himself says that this outfit is essentially the modern-day equivalent of a wizard's cloak.
    • Ellen also used to wear a longcoat. Dan comments in retrospect that he ought to bring it back, because "it's long and it's cool."
  • Shiva Crimson from E.V.I.L. (2016) is a literal Lightning Bruiser, and her standard attire includes a longcoat.
  • John Oliver in Fake News Rumble wears one, combined with a Scarf of Asskicking which sure looks familiar...
  • Fetch Quest: Saga of the Twelve Artifacts has Lionel "the Lucky" and his black jacket. It's especially apparent when it makes him more intimidating than he really is.
  • Kalita, Debbie, and Leyline from Furry Fight Chronicles wore long coats as a symbol of them being the founding members of the Roda Kira Gang.
  • Arguably, Morgan of Gender Swapped pulls this off, and with a lab coat no less. (You know those things that scientists wear? Or in this case brain surgeon.) Word of God states that during the far and upcoming story arc involving the TBO, a lot of badassery was supposed to take place, with Morgan leading the march.
  • Baron Klaus Wulfenbach, the Anti-Villain dictator of Europa in Girl Genius. His is a greatcoat that serves to make his already imposing figure more so. An early version is shown here. It's sufficiently Badass that it makes him look imposing even from the back, with a baby in a backpack.
  • Gunnerkrigg Court includes one in the traditional garb of defender of the Court.
    • Briefly used in Chapter 19 — Antimony is wearing a Gunnerkrigg uniform trenchcoat when she gets pulled into Zimmy's Black Bug Room. When Zimmy flips out and attacks her, Annie uses her Judo-ish skills to very quickly incapacitate her attacker.
  • Iron Crown has a few: most notably Commander Isandar of the titular mercenary Brigade who regularly faces off against demons in it, plus or minus a shotgun. Who says you can't look stylish in what amounts to an extended Escort Mission?
  • MAG-ISA: This garment seems to be standard fare among the bad guys in the comic. Eman is the exception, though, because he stopped being bad.
  • The Last Days of FOXHOUND has these, but it's not just Liquid who wears them. Also lampshaded and parodied.
  • Luke Surl explains the dilemma.
  • Benjamin generally wears a police trenchcoat, though he also pulls off the rare badass labcoat, in A Miracle of Science.
  • Practically everyone in Problem Sleuth, the protagonists being private eyes and the antagonists being organized crime.
  • Lord English of Homestuck was for a long time solely identified by his, the enormous Cairo Overcoat, to the point that one of the biggest points of conjecture about his identity was that whoever he was had to fit inside the Overcoat. It's the only thing we see of him for a very long time.
  • In Miscellaneous Error, main character Jack is always seen wearing something akin to a leather duster.
  • ATLAS from MS Paint Masterpieces, a prototype combat robot created by the military, wears this as a disguise.
  • Julio Scoundrel of The Order of the Stick. He is a "Dashing Swordsman", but knowing how to work the flowing brown (or black, or crimson) longcoat is part of it.
  • Project Blackfire: The main character Dark Flame is almost always seen wearing his long, black trenchcoat (which likes to flare dramatically.)
  • Gunhild's trenchcoat in Realmwalker. Also,Loki's furby coat.
  • Riff from Sluggy Freelance is a classic example. Usually, he wears a brown trenchcoat, but he's been known to level up. His humanizing quirk is the tendency of his inventions to only mostly work, prompting his catchphrase: "Let me check my notes."
  • Gunslinger Emily from Spacetrawler is rarely seen without her duster. She even wears it over her spacesuit.
  • Most of the Bloody Flames in The Story of Anima. Overlapping a bit with Your Size May Vary, Rudy, Kit and Hayden's normally hip-length jackets can look much longer in certain shots, creating this effect.
  • Both of the Villain Protagonists of Suicide for Hire wear black trenchcoats.
  • In Supernormal Step, Henderson Security incorporates a duster in its uniforms. Hall Henderson in particular works the coat.
  • In Three Panel Soul, Ian wears one of these every so often with a matching fedora, sometimes to his detriment (once passing a striking resemblance to a neighborhood watch sign, another time filling a hip flask with tic tacs and 'drinking' whilst on his morning commute).
  • Towards the end of the first story arc of Vampire Cheerleaders. Leonard confronts the cheerleaders threatening to expose their existence while wearing one of these. Lori's attempts to control him are rebuffed because Leonard took several precautions to make himself vampire-proof. Meaning his blood is poisonous because he ate a ton of garlic and drank Listerene, and he is wearing mirror sunglasses so they can't use their hypnosis. When they ask why he is wearing a "The Matrix" style coat he says "Because it looks cool." In the end they resort to "Plan BC" (BC for booty-call), and that they end up having an orgy with him until he not only agrees to not expose them, but become their willing thrall as well.
  • In The Wretched Ones, Yayne is often seen wearing a long, grey greatcoat.
  • Alex Rayne of Wright as Rayne wears one, though it's purple. One of Power's men also sports one.
  • Axel from Yosh!. He may not have guns to pull from his coat, but the demons he summons make up the difference and then some. He's a master of demonic magic and known to be one of the strongest magic users in the entire series, wearing the title of The Vile and being almost on par with the Magi.
  • Charlie from The Zombie Hunters fights zombies while sporting a lab coat, but favors a dark grey trenchcoat (with matching hat) in Flashback. Team medic Sammie has a more elaborate badass bab/trenchcoat]] accented with black buckled belts on the collar and sleeves, that she's worn in the field and on civilian clinic duty. On one mission, young teammate Katie sports a vivid red trench with similar belt accents but has thus far only flipped the bird at her smartass medic while wearing it.

    Web Originals 
  • Coloring Medium: Helena, one of the best fighters of the entire tournament, wears a red longcoat that only strengthens her tough aura. She even gets the nickname of "The Red Coat Lady" due to how noticeable it is and how associated it becomes with her. Whilst she loses her coat during her fourth fight, she's given a golden-colored one in Marty's ending to make up for it.

    Web Videos 
  • Critical Role
    • Percy de Rolo from Campaign 1 of is always depicted with a dark blue longcoat in an aristocratic style.
    • Campaign 2 has several: Caleb Widogast's outfits always include a long, billowing coat, whether he's absolutely caked in filth or not; Mollymauk Tealeaf has a long, red coat completely covered in intricate embroidery that he rarely ever takes off, and Kingsley Tealeaf takes after his "brother" Molly by wearing a long, asymmetrical red captain's coat that is cropped to waist-length on one side and reaches down past his knee on the other.
  • Parodied by Travis Boles in Three in the Afternoon — he wears a bathrobe. Which, according to one of his foes, "smells".

    Western Animation 
  • Adventures of the Gummi Bears, "For a Few Sovereigns More": Igthorn hires Flint "Stoneface" Shrubwood, the best Bounty Hunter in the land, to capture a Gummi Bear. Intimidating and capable, he wears a kickass long coat and a hat, uses Precision Guided Boomerangs to frightening effect, and effortlessly catches Cubbi. With a more reliable sponsor than Igthorn, this man would become a Hero Killer.
  • Arcane: Sometimes Silco dons a high-collared black-and-red coat to look more intimidating.
  • The Batman sees Solomon Grundy's design incorporate a duster rather than a jacket. The tie-in comic reuses this design for the real Grundy even though in the episode Grundy appeared in, he turned out to be Clayface in disguise.
  • In the 2006 revival of Biker Mice from Mars, General Carbine wears a long red coat and, as she did in the original 1993 series, helps her fellow Martian mice fight back against their planet's invaders.
  • In Buzz Lightyear of Star Command, if not known for his ability to split into multiple copies of himself, Torque is known to wear a brown outlaw styled duster jacket to fit his role as a Monster of the Week.
  • Carmen Sandiego had that awesome red one!
    • In the Netflix Carmen Sandiego series, the eponymous character justifies wearing her red coat everywhere including, conspicuously, a jungle said to feel 110 degrees, because that's where she keeps a wide assortment of tools. (She has, after a narrow dodge, actually suffered a Cape Snag.)
  • Timmy Turner from The Fairly OddParents! parodies the coat from the Matrix in the Wishology trilogy. Believe it or not, he does look cool.
  • The episode "Reincarnation" of Futurama: both Hermes and the Professor's anime forms have very badass longcoats.
  • Gargoyles:
    • Macbeth. It came in handy when he fought Goliath, as he was able to quickly slip out of it and escape the gargoyle's clutches.
    • Broadway tries to employ this trope when he's playing trenchcoat-detective. This ironically tends to backfire, when it comes to looking badass — he's more intimidating when he doesn't hide his gargoylish build — although it does help him blend in a bit.
  • "Bipper" sports a nice black one in Gravity Falls during the third act of "Sock Opera." It's part of his reverends' outfit.
    • Ford emerges from the portal at the end of "Not What He Seems" wearing a black one. As of "A Tale of Two Stans", he now wears a tan longcoat over a red turtleneck.
  • Hazbin Hotel: Alastor wears a long red overcoat, which he is incredibly displeased if anyone damages, despite the fact that it's tattered at the bottom already.
  • Dante from Huntik: Secrets & Seekers wears his trench coat almost all the time.
  • Part of Inspector Gadget's usual attire.
  • Dib from Invader Zim, despite being about eleven years old.
  • The Misfits from Jem are often shown wearing long coats. Part of it is due to them being a fashionable rock band in the 80s but it also signifies them as the cool, trouble making enemies of the protagonists. Stormer's long coat is pretty much always orange.
  • From The Legend of Korra:
    • Mako wears a pretty cool longcoat, complete with Scarf of Asskicking. He trades the coat in for a bodyguard's uniform in Book Four.
    • Amon's might be a bit shorter than most but it doesn't make him look any less badass, or any less terrifying.
  • The Legend of Vox Machina: Percy usually dons a long, blue greatcoat over a blue suit.
  • Lampshaded in Roswell Conspiracies: Aliens, Myths and Legends, when the un-badass Fritz is overjoyed at the opportunity to borrow the Hero's "cool coat".
  • Smiling Friends: Shrimp tries wearing a longcoat along with death metal-themed clothing to win his ex-girlfriend back. Instead of looking cool, he ends up looking like a mass shooter.
Charlie: You look like you're about to tell your friend not to come to school tomorrow, man.

    Real Life 
  • George Early, an American Gentleman Adventurer in the Balkans during World War II, considered himself a super-spy and wore a trenchcoat everywhere, presumably to announce himself to the Germans. The OSS was so exasperated that it simply yanked his clearance and used him for the rest of the war as no more than a decoy. Oddly enough, he occasionally showed some insight, once picking up a rumor about the atomic bomb.
  • The statue of Sir Robert Borden at the Parliament of Canada depicts him wearing an overcoat which, combined with his awesome moustache and its location at the edge of a hill overlooking Wellington Street, makes for one badass statue.
  • Napoléon Bonaparte, when he was on the battlefield in his iconic redingote grise (grey overcoat).
  • Andrew Jackson liked wearing long trenchcoats, especially when duelling.
  • Eddie Izzard often wears one with a red silk interior.
  • This was a standard part of the military uniform in most colder countries throughout the 20th century, and still persists in many of them. They aren't called trenchcoats for nothing.
  • A modern variation worn by the American military is the All-Weather Coat, though it is a bit cumbersome and you are unlikely to see it actually being worn, especially since lighter camouflage wet and cold weather gear is available for the battlefield uniforms.
  • Erwin Rommel is well-documented to have worn one in North Africa of all placesnote 
  • A rather chilling example were the black leather double-breasted trenchcoats worn by SS officers.
    • Before that, agents of the Cheka, the first Communist secret police, wore distinctive leather overcoats.
  • Statues of Vladimir Lenin (and there were thousands of them) often depicted him with a long flowing coat.
  • Prussian soldiers wore longcoats in The Napoleonic Wars, with even an added Commissar Cap to boot. In an inversion of typical associations of this trope, though, they tended to be worn by members of the Landwehr, hastily-raised militiamen with little to no training.
  • Ancient Median and Persian nobles wore a riding coat both at court and in battle called the kandys that hung almost to the ankles. It was normally worn as a Coat Cape, though for more complicated reasons than just looking badass.

Alternative Title(s): Badass Labcoat

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Naruto's Sage mode entrance

Naruto arrives on Konoha along side his toads to put an end to Pain's invasion.

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