Belligerent Sexual Tension
"Wonderful girl! Either I'm gonna kill her, or I'm beginning to like her!"—Han Solo, Star Wars: A New Hope, about Princess Leia after she lambasted their lack of strategy during a firefight.
This trope revolves around a couple, usually a sweet but quickly angered female paired with a secretly-kind jerk, who are not able to admit their feelings. At the top of their lungs.
Despite the conflict, there is an attraction. This is obvious to everyone around except the couple. Confront them with the obvious, and they'll deny deny deny. Sometimes they will progress to admitting their friendship, but insist they are Just Friends. If there is a Love Epiphany with one of these characters, expect it to change almost nothing, at least in the short term.
This might involve a Can't Live with Them, Can't Live Without Them situation, or even Domestic Abuse (but usually Played for Laughs). Such tension is also often a component of Screwball Comedy.
This trope is Older Than Steam, occurring as early as Much Ado About Nothing, and has varying degrees of popularity at different times. (Alternate Character Interpretation often makes it Older Than Dirt, by way of The Epic of Gilgamesh and other Mesopotamian Mythology.) In anime-centered fandoms, such a pairing is sometimes referred to as a "Takahashi Couple" for its prevalence in her works such as Ranma ½ (which is the current page image).
Note that "belligerent" need not necessarily mean "Hot-Blooded" — the trope is just as valid if one or both of the pair is a Deadpan Snarker who enjoys taking potshots at the other with their rapier wit, specifically to get a rise out of them.
Sometimes an effort to avoid a Shipping Bed Death, but might end up in the same place anyway. Compare with:
- Twice Shy, where the partners are hampered from admitting their feelings due to both sharing an entirely different personality type.
- It Meant Something to Me, where one side of a couple vehemently denies feeling anything for their partner.
- Strangled by the Red String.
May lead to Destructo-Nookie or Literally Falling in Love. Either Slap Slap Kiss or Kiss Kiss Slap tends to be involved at some point. If the Unresolved Sexual Tension is sustained over some time, expect a "Take That!" Kiss or "Shut Up" Kiss in one or both directions, too. If the two character don't stop fighting even after they become an actual couple, then they've joined The Masochism Tango.
Given how entertaining they are, expect this couple to be popular with the fandom.
Anime and Manga
- As mentioned above, this trope is quite prominent in Rumiko Takahashi's work:
- Urusei Yatsura. Male Lead: Ataru is a Casanova Wannabe, Unlucky Everydude, Jerk with a Heart of Gold. Female Lead: Whichever one you think counts doesn't matter, because both Lum and Shinobu are Tsundere. Will They or Won't They? goes on forever, and is never resolved—although this may be due to a crossfire of Ship Sinking and Executive Meddling, since the author and the fans disagreed about who should be the Official Couple. In the end, the Reset Button was hit, rather than let Ataru and Lum progress to "official" Official Couple.
- Maison Ikkoku. Male Lead: Godai, is an Unlucky Everydude, usually a nice guy, to the point where he doesn't fit the Jerk with a Heart of Gold stereotype so much as he's a lazy, cowardly, wishy-washy person who's rather immature and unable to say "no" to anybody, be it an unwanted girlfriend or a drunken flat-mate. (His progression from loser trying to get into college to responsible adult is one of the primary Character Development aspects of the work.) Much less of a jerk than other characters in Takahashi's work. Notably, his rival fits this mold a little better (as a conceited rich boy) and has similar character development. Female Lead: Kyoko is a repressed Tsundere. Changed into a Yamato Nadeshiko by the death of her first husband, her developing relationship with Godai brings the Tsundere back out. Will They or Won't They? is finally resolved after over 70 episodes. Ending on a definite note with Godai and Kyoko married. Their issues were more serious and realistic {Godai's wishy-washiness, Kyoko's inability to let go of her late husband} than Takahashi's usual stubborn Will Not Spit It Out.
- Ranma ½ in the image above. Ranma: Jerk with a Heart of Gold. Akane: Tsundere. Her type varies: the manga makes her more deredere, while the anime gives her more tsuntsun aspects than she had in the manga but she can still be considered deredere. Ranma seems to be locked in the The Masochism Tango with all his possible Love Interests.
- The Trope Codifiers: Many a fan-theory exists as to why they're so unable or unwilling to admit the obvious (a combination of Ranma's ultra-macho Raised by Wolves upbringing and Akane's Kuno-induced misandry being the most popular). Takahashi couldn't even bring herself to put them officially together in the manga's final issues. This may have also been due to the fact that no couple could really go anywhere without horribly dishonoring most of the rest of them. Plus, they are still in high school so perhaps a lack of progress is understandable. At least some (minor) hints of progress are scattered throughout the series: they hold hands a couple of times, and Ranma screams out that he loves Akane (though it's left purposefully vague as to whether he does this out loud or only in his head) when he thinks Akane has been killed in the second last story of the manga.
- Inuyasha. Inu-Yasha: Jerk with a Heart of Gold. Kagome Higurashi: deredere-type Tsundere. Inu-Yasha and Kagome are a variant: They clearly have come to an understanding as to their mutual feelings, so tend to have moments of Aw, Look -- They Really Do Love Each Other occasionally sprinkled into the denials, fighting, and plot-stretching bouts of Cannot Spit It Out. They actually do become an Official Couple towards the end of the manga (and appropriately enough, their romance then receives much less attention until the end). Not to mention, thanks to Character Development, Kagome warms up to Inu-Yasha quite faster than the standard Takahashi Tsundere, and Inu-Yasha is slightly less prone to verbal abuse than the standard Takahashi Jerk with a Heart of Gold.
- Let's not forget Sango and Miroku.
- Vegeta and Bulma...so freaking much. It's amazing in what little moments you see of them, how much they can display this trope.
- Keiko Yukimura and Yusuke Urameshi of Yu Yu Hakusho in that Yusuke is definitely a Jerk with a Heart of Gold while Keiko is working to keep him on the straight and narrow. They obviously love each other (and everyone knows it) but Yusuke's jerkitude tends to keep them apart until the end. There is a mild subversion in that Yusuke realizes early on that he loves Keiko, and there's never really any silliness with love rivals and what not.
- Hiei and Mukuro may also fit this trope, with The Masochism Tango that doesn't seem to dampen Hiei's interest (even Kurama notes it). Not quite the same since she's only introduced in the last arc, and their hinted attraction is too early to be a Will They or Won't They?. Hiei and Mukuro are pretty much canon. They respect each other, like each other, and he brings her her evil and abusive father trapped in a healing plant that Kurama specially got for such a purpose to torture for eternity as a present. Practically romantic for Hiei—or, for that matter, for Mukuro.
- Akito Hayama and Sana Kurata in Kodomo no Omocha.
- Aoba and Kō in Cross Game.
- Aoba spends the whole series fighting with him in an attempt to show everyone that she hates him as much as she says she does. No one seems to buy it though. In the end, she tells him that she's always hated him when, in reality, it sounds more like an "I love you".
- Although Kou is hardly a jerk, he does seem to enjoy riling up Aoba. Tsundere are just too much fun to pass up teasing them.
- The relationship between Temari and Shikamaru from Naruto is almost always described as such in Fanon. In canon, they seem to have a rather less belligerent relationship, though it hasn't actually gone anywhere romantic.
- Tsukimiya and Hinata in Bloody Cross. But with the antagonistic relationship they share it might not end well...
- Kyohei and Sunako in The Wallflower. In an eerily similar case to Inuyasha, they've had their moments, but they're not even a third of the way into the Romance Arc progression in the manga and the readers are already going, "Let them progress! End! End!" at all the plot-stretching.
- Kyon and Haruhi in Suzumiya Haruhi: They're an inverted couple, in that Kyon is closer to a Type A male Tsundere, while Haruhi is the Jerk with a Heart of Gold. Now, if only Haruhi would lose the strong belief that love is for lunatics *coughTheseuscough* and Kyon to stop proclaiming his crush on Mikuru and admit that he wants Haruhi, after the tons of evidence he drops in his monologue. Or just want both of them.
- Lelouch and C.C. from Code Geass could be considered to have this going, with the former being the Jerk with a Heart of Gold Type A Tsundere and the latter being a Deadpan Snarker Sugar and Ice Personality. Word of God from staff and C.C.'s voice actress tried to sink the ship by saying that their relationship was Like Mother and Son, but it continues to persist in part due to this.
- Though C. C. could alternate as the more belligerent one, given her apathetic moments.
- Louise and Saito from The Familiar of Zero take this to the extreme. She's a Tsundere who uses a horse whip, and he is a lecherous Baka and a bit of a Yuri Fanboy.
- Guiche and Montmorency seem to have a bit of this going on, too.
- Fullmetal Alchemist has Edward as the Jerk with a Heart of Gold and Winry as his Tsundere.
- Not to mention the Unresolved Sexual Tension moments between them—Edward subtly thinking Winry looks cute, Winry noticing that his shoulders look broader, Edward having to recite the periodic table after remembering the conversation between him and Hawkeye (where Riza suggested he loves Miss Rockbell), Winry wondering why she fell in love with "such a weirdo", and their reunion before the Promised Day, resulting in a flustered Ed and almost-topless Winry. Those are all no doubt proof of Belligerent Sexual Tension. All thanks to puberty, folks!
- The 2003 anime actually averts this. While their exact relationship isn't clear, Ed and Winry soon begin to stop fighting and they start acting Like Brother and Sister.
- Detective Conan (more specifically Magic Kaito, set in the same universe with overlapping characters) has Kaito as the Jerk with a Heart of Gold and Aoko as the Tsundere—to the point where fanart of Kaito drawn as Ranma and Aoko drawn as Akane has become fairly popular. In the series proper, Heiji and Kazuha also fit the mould. Shinichi and Ran approach it, but Shinichi isn't enough of a jerk and Ran isn't enough of a tsundere, and both come to realize their feelings early in the series, even if they don't act on them (for life-threatening reasons on Shinichi's part).
- One should take note of Kogoro and Eri—why were they separated but not officially divorced after all these ten years?
- An earlier (and, given that one of them is considered anime's prototype Tsundere, possibly the earliest) example: Sayaka Yumi and Koji Kabuto from Mazinger Z. He's a tactless Idiot Hero, she's his Tsundere partner in crime.
- Tetsuya and Jun from Great Mazinger provided another example.
- Duke and hikaru from UFO Robo Grendizer averted the trope, but Kouji and Maria kept it. Given that Sayaka was going to show up in the series but she was replaced with Maria due to Executive Meddling, that was to be expected.
- Mazinkaiser tones it down: Sayaka is tsuntsun for everyone but Kouji and deredere for him, and Kouji's asshattery is reduced to abusing Boss and making snarky comments every now and then.
- It's likely Values Dissonance, considering that a lot of Kouji's asshattery towards Sayaka used to be centered on very misogynistic beliefs. Japan is still quite the conservative society, but such stuff would still sound horrible if it was included in exactly the same way.
- It is likelier than the reason is Mazinkaiser follows the original manga and portrays the characters like they were originally. In the original manga Kouji was less tactless, loudmouthed and barely made some sexist comment, Sayaka was a Type B Tsundere and they got along way better than in the anime series. The anime series played up Kouji's IdiotHero tendences and Sayaka's tsuntsun up to eleven.
- One Stormy Night.
- Hiroshi and Kyoko from Hell Teacher Nube.
- In the Axis Powers Hetalia fandom, most America/England fanworks accurately portray the pairing as this. It helps that both characters have Jerk with a Heart of Gold and Tsundere qualities.
- This was even Lampshaded in the dub with France's remark, "When you two are done releasing sexual tensions, we have a meeting to finish."
- This is the most popular fandom take on Hungary/Prussia, with Elizabeta/Hungary as the Tsundere and Gilbert/Prussia as the Jerkass with a VERY well-hidden softer side.
- Now that Romania has appeared, the Hungary/Romania shippers have also taken this approach.
- Also for Denmark/Norway with Denmark as the thick-headed but ultimately good-hearted Boisterous Bruiser and Norway as a mostly stoic Deadpan Snarker who can get quite violent with his Armor Piercing Slaps when Denmark is being particularly tactless.
- And Turkey/Greece, too. As a contrast to Greece/Japan, it has Turkey as a grumpy Boisterous Bruiser and Greece as a violent mix of both Tsundere types (he's usually technically a Type B Tsundere who's pleasant to everyone except Turkey, but often comes across as Type A instead due to him being with Turkey almost all the time).
- The High School AU Gakuen Hetalia uses the formula too. While France and Seychelles aren't 100% a couple there, they play the Jerk with a Heart of Gold (France) and Tsundere (Seychelles) roles quite well.
- Also France and England. Probably most England ships except with Japan.
- Oddly enough, Russia/China gets this too; usually in a comedic situation, China will flat out reject Russia's advances in sometimes violent and hurtful ways while the other remains blissfully ignorant of the former's infuriation. The pair can be subjected to Alternate Character Interpretation, either between this and Birds of a Feather, Mind Game Ship or Happily Married.
- In regards to the other Asians, we have Taiwan and Hong Kong: she is fanonly portrayed as a Type B Tsundere with a Kawaiiko side (admittedly, her canon personality seems to be leaning towards this too) and Hong Kong as a Deadpan Snarker with a Sugar and Ice Personality. Taiwan and Korea also can qualify, though Korea tends to be shown as more oblivious and childish than a real jerk.
- Sousuke Sagara and Kaname Chidori from Full Metal Panic!. Although Sousuke is more of an oblivious Baka than intentional jerk- his obliviousness does tend to make him act like a Jerkass.
- Alto Saotome and Sheryl Nome in Macross Frontier, a rather interesting case in that they both alternate as to who's the Tsundere and who's the Jerk.
- Surprisingly, Laura Haruna's very Happily Married parents from Hamtaro started their relationship this way, with the dad as a snippy Jerk with a Heart of Gold and the mom as a textobook Type B Tsundere. They got over themselves by the time they got married and Laura was born, though.
- Lovely Complex has Atsushi Otani and Risa Koizumi starting out very much like this, although it's somewhat unusual in that it's entirely viewed from the Tsundere's perspective. Also, their feelings for each other develop at a more or less realistic pace.
- Yuuji Kagura and Kazuki Arisaka in Tona Gura. Subverted somewhat in that, while Yuuji will take his beatdown when he has it coming (and he often does, even past animanga standards), he will be vociferous in telling off Kazuki when she has it wrong (and she often does). Both can be jerks, and both can be tsunderes, though it more or less settles traditionally based on gender.
- Kamille Bidan and Fa Yuiri from Zeta Gundam. To the point that the Argama's crew calls their constant bickering their "hobby". They also lampshade it when Kamille kisses Fa after a rather tiring battle and tells her that they should reconsider their mutual interaction since he's getting tired of the fighting.
- Ayano and Kazuma from Kaze no Stigma, full stop.
- Every series of Yu-Gi-Oh!, especially since it was created by another Takahashi, Kazuki. Despite all the heavy hints, we never get so much as a kiss. That is, until 5D's Episode 58.
- The best example would be Jounouchi and Mai, who alternate between positions.
- Roger and Angel and Roger and Dorothy in The Big O. Of course it's difficult to determine which is the Tsundere and which is the Jerk with a Heart of Gold, since all three characters are a bit of both...
- Dancougar: Sara is stuck in Type A mode because her ex-boyfriend Shapiro pulled a Face Heel Turn; and Shinobu acts like a macho jerk to try and get her attention. These issues begin to resolve once Shapiro dies at the end of the TV series, and in the sequel OAV they finally start to move toward Official Couple status.
- Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann Describes well Kamina's and Yoko's relation untill the culmination, plays this for as much tragedy as it possibly can.
- Kotaro and Natsumi of Mahou Sensei Negima! are well on their way to becoming one of these.
- Even more so: Nagi and Princess Arika.
- Usagi, the bubbly and easily-angered heroine of Sailor Moon loves Mamoru, the cool and snarky hero. In a twist, they're reincarnated, destined lovers and the tension between them dies almost completely after the first season's reveal.
- Kei and Hayato from Project ARMS. Possibly best summed up when the group is crawling through a tunnel. Hayato coments on the lovely view (of Kei's rear) and Kei gives him a good kick in the face.
- Only a Ship Tease instead of an actual couple, but The Slayers TRY has Filia Ul Copt and Xellos. Filia is a Holier Than Thou Type B Tsundere, Xellos is an Affably Evil Token Evil Teammate Lovable Traitor and Magnificent Bastard. For extra 'spice', Filia is a Golden Dragon, a race that is ( or, rather, believes itself to be) Always Lawful Good, while Xellos is a Mazoku, which are Exclusively Evil... also, during the last war between their two races, Xellos single-handedly killed thousands of Golden Dragons.
- G Gundam has Domon Kasshu as a Jerk with a Heart of Gold who later evolves into a Type A Tsundere. His partner Rain Mikamura is a Type B Tsundere, being the perfect lady unless she's dealing with him.
- School Rumble's Harima & Eri.
- Chiara and Rodney from Element Hunters.
- Ayuzawa Misaki and Usui Takumi in Kaichou wa Maid-sama are a much milder example than most of the others listed, having progressed to being very nearly a confirmed couple in no more than about forty manga chapters, but they still deserve a mention for continuing to follow the general pattern. Even after kissing several times and going on a couple of actual dates, Misaki is still very Tsundere where Usui is concerned, and Usui still claims that he doesn't date because it's too much trouble.
- Nana to Kaoru are Tsundere and Jerk with a Heart of Gold, respectively.
- Choco Mimi has Spoiled Brat Mumu and Type B Tsundere Mimi.
- Kazuhara and Kirie from Girls Bravo.
- Oz and Alice from Pandora Hearts.
- Chrono and Rosette from Chrono Crusade. Although Chrono isn't exactly a jerk, he does often run out of patience with Rosette's antics, which leads to him being often sarcastic toward her and calling her an idiot. Rosette, on the other hand, is a Tsundere through and through, and often will behave violently toward him for doing that (or even sometimes when he's not). At one point he even ends up laying in a pool of his own blood! (But he has regenerative powers so it's always Played for Laughs.)
- Revy and Rock from Black Lagoon take this to new extremes, seeing as she's nearly blown his head off multiple times. (Not to mention, he's slowly but surely sliding into Magnificent Bastardry, which actually disturbs her).
- B Gata H Kei has Yamada and Kosuda. Notable in that the first plans to sleep with and then just dump the latter so she can then go on having 100 sex friends. The genuine feelings she develops for Kosuda will most probably foil this.
- Neon Genesis Evangelion: Asuka Langley Soryu and Shinji Ikari. Everyone Can See It. Even TOJI can see it: Asuka starts chewing out Shinji for not bringing their lunches, while he tries to get his side in. Toji tosses off a remark that they're arguing Like an Old Married Couple. Cue double Luminescent Blush (they HAD kissed not many days earlier), then simultaneous denial in perfect stereo. But due to their personality problems, neither can actually tell the other, leading to... well, The End of the World as We Know It. Luckily, many fanfiction authors go out of their way to fix these problems.
- Asuka/Toji shipping usually applies this trope liberally.
- Puppy Love version: Horio (Jerk) and Tomoka (Tsundere) from The Prince of Tennis. If we go to Fanon, there's Plucky Girl An and Blood Knight Kirihara.
- Ho Yay shippers apply the dynamics to many fanon match-ups, the most "famous" one being Momoshiro and Kaidoh.
- In Brain Powerd, we have Jerk with a Heart of Gold Yuu Isami... and his Tsundere Fiery Redhead girlfriend Hime Utsumiya.
- Ash and Misty in Pokémon, so much. (Misty definitely fits in the Type A Tsundere department but Ash isn't too much of a jerk...)
- During the Hoenn arc we have May and Drew, who fit the mold so much more perfectly than Ash and Misty. And with less ambiguity, too.
- Quarterback Hiruma Youichi and Manager Mamori Anezaki from Eyeshield 21 are hinted to be like this; by the end of the series a lot of their scenes together are more of the Aw, Look -- They Really Do Love Each Other kind though.
- Fakir and Ahiru from Princess Tutu, depending who you ask.
- The step-sibling pair of Minami and Otome in Cherry Juice often switch between flirtatious and BST moments, the latter at times involving Otome walking in on Minami while she's in a compromising position, and getting a Megaton Punch for his efforts.
- Toradora! is all about this trope.
- In Berserk, this is the usual dynamics between Guts and Casca, especially pre-Eclipse. But then again, what did you expect? Guts is an ultra-manly, aloof and cocksure Byronic Hero who has been Raised by Dudes. Casca is the sole female in a group of mercenaries and a type-A Tsundere Hot Amazon to boot. Not to mention that both enjoy fighting. Physically, of course.
- Genesis of Aquarion: Apollo and Silvia. Turns out mixing Reincarnation Romance with the usual setup causes some very odd results.
- Hellsing's own Alucard and Integra have this in spades, especially in the manga. The latter, of course, is a Tsundere.
- In the second drama CD of Tiger and Bunny, Karina tells Barnaby that she's fully aware that this trope tends to occur between people like them, and that she has every intention of making sure that doesn't happen, because there's no way she could possibly fall in love with such a Jerkass. No surprise to anyone, she then proceeds to fall in love... with Barnaby's partner, Kotetsu.
- Yoru and Ran and Sora and Sunao in Sukisho.
- In Steins;Gate this is the kind of relationship between Okabe and Kurisu.
- While Riku is a Nice Guy, his girlfriend in Wandering Son is a Jerkass Type A Tsundere. Their early days were full of Slap Slap Kiss.
- Lal and Colonello appear as sort of this in Katekyo Hitman Reborn.
- Nakaba and Caesar from Reimei no Arcana.
- Takano and Ritsu from Sekaiichi Hatsukoi with a mix of Slap Slap Kiss. Episode starts, they're fighting at work, later on in the episode, they're still fighting after work and then at the end, they slowly try to understand each other near the end of the episode. Rinse and repeat at the very end when Takano blows his chance every time Ritsu is close to admitting that he likes Takano.
- Sakura and Naruto are hinted at being this, though its not sure if Sakura has feelings for Naruto.
- It's played up a lot in fanworks between the two. Sasuke and Naruto is very popular in this respect in fanworks with both switching the roles of Jerk with a Heart of Gold and Tsundere around.
- Momo (Tsundere) and Kairi (Jerk with a Heart of Gold) in Peach Girl.
- Strawberry Panic: Much of the interaction between Tsubomi and Yaya hints at this.
- Riku (Tsundere) and Dark Mousy (Jerk with a Heart of Gold) via the Forceful Kiss Dark gives Riku in D.N.Angel and how they always argue and sometimes get along and Dark is hinted to like Riku.
- Kagura Sohma (an odd mixture of Tsundere and Yandere) and Kyou Sohma (Jerk with a Heart of Gold) in Fruits Basket. Note that it ultimately doesn't go anywhere because Kyou eventually falls in love with and marries Tohru instead.
- Tomoe and Nanami from Kamisama Kiss. Tomoe is a definite Jerk with a Heart of Gold while Nanami is very deredere. It is obvious to several other characters in the series that they like each other and Nanami doesn't bother to hid the fact she has feelings for Tomoe, but Tomoe has some real problems admitting his feelings about Nanami.
- Bakemonogatari: Hitagi and Koyomi.
- Black Bird: Kyo and Misao. So much.
- Bokura ga Ita: Nanami and Yano. Nanami frequently says "Shine, baka!" ("Die, you idiot!") to Yano, whom she loves, before the two of them start dating.
- Ai Ore Love Me: Akira and Mizuki.
Comic Books
- Yorick and 355 do this more or less throughout Y: The Last Man. Then 355 is killed.
- Subverted in Preacher (Comic Book)—a man deliberately tries to be the male half of this pair, and instead ends up... eaten by an alligator.
- Calvin and Susie in Calvin and Hobbes, to an extent. With Susie being more stable, Calvin plays much of the role of the avoidant—attracted Tsundere as well as all of the Jerk with a Heart of Gold one, leaving her mostly to just react as any reasonable person would. In one early comic, Calvin makes a hate valentine and dumpster dives for some dead flowers. Susie reacts as can be expected by pelting him with a snowball. As she's walking away and he's recovering, their thought bubbles reveal:
Susie: Flowers and a valentine! He likes me!!
Calvin: She noticed! She likes me!
- Batman and Catwoman definitely qualify - so much so that they have their own version of this trope.
- Sometimes happens between Batman and Talia Al Ghul, Depending on the Writer.
- Donald and Daisy Duck, depending on the writer. Donald Duck can be a Jerkass at times, even with his gold-hearted moments, but Daisy is definitely a Tsundere. Newer cartoons tend to reinterprete Daisy as a borderline Cloudcuckoolander instead. Kingdom Hearts, thankfully, does not.
- Scrooge McDuck and Glittering Goldie weren't originally envisioned like this by Carl Barks, but years later, Don Rosa's The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck came along, and, well, just see the page picture for Slap Slap Kiss... although Destructo-Nookie actually more accurately describes the end of The Prisoner of White Agony Creek.
- Garfield and Arlene. Yeah, he's an egotistical jerk, but she's able to strike back at him. They're still considered an Official Couple as far as merchandise is concerned.
- X-Men's Anole and Rockslide seem to have a Bromantic version of this trope.
Fan Works
- Asa and Yoko in Futari wa Pretty Cure Blue Moon fit this, although they're both Type B tsundere—they only tsun around each other. Even in the beginning of the series, when Asa is scared stiff of "Ice Queen Nakayama", they start bickering practically Once an Episode. Late in the series, though, they argue less and start to get along more.
- Averted in That Damn Mpreg. Jerkass Bruce Jameson (son of She-Hulk and John Jameson) believes his has this kind of relationship with Tsundere Rebecca Altman-Kaplan (daughter of Young Avengers Wiccan and Hulkling). In reality, she wants nothing to do with him and ends up with one of their Badass Normal teammates instead.
- In A Different Lesson, Tai Lung and Tigress take this trope and run with it for more than half the fic, which is, incidentally, one hell of a Doorstopper.
- In the Tamers Forever Series this pretty much sums up Takato and Rika's relationship
- Actually a subversion in that Takato is a Dogged Nice Guy to Rika... usually
- Takato also initially believes Rika's hatred of Ryo is secretly this, but in reality she genuinely does dislike him. Ryo for his part, just enjoys getting under Rika's skin
- Peggy Sue Fanfic The Second Try actually averts (?) the trope. Living on their own had helped Shinji and Asuka grow past this point, but when they return to the past, they try enacting this trope to avoid arousing suspicion. The key word there is "try".
Films -- Animation
- Anya and Dimitri in Anastasia. Lampshaded by Vlad who calls it an unspoken attraction.
The Nostalgia Chick: Yes, animosity. It must be love.
- Hiccup and Astrid in Dreamworks's How to Train Your Dragon, mostly on Astrid's part, what with her being the Village's most headstrong Dragon Slayer.
- Doctor Doppler and Captain Amelia of Treasure Planet. In the beginning, they fight like cats and dogs, but by the end of the movie, they've developed a fondness for each other and bicker like an old married couple. Heck, they even have four kids together!
Films -- Live-Action
- Princess Leia and Han Solo from Star Wars.
- In the Star Wars Expanded Universe (specifically Fate of the Jedi), Luke's son Ben has a Dating Catwoman relationship with a Sith girl, and they're like this all the time. Taken Up to Eleven when in Ascension, Ben decides to break into her room...
- Lo and Jen from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, especially in the desert scenes. This trope has been translated for your convenience into martial arts action!
- Doug Dorsey and Kate Moseley from The Cutting Edge.
- Cary Grant, James Stewart, and Katharine Hepburn in The Philadelphia Story form a BST Love Triangle.
- This trope is also called a Tracy-Hepburn romance because of all the films where Spencer Tracy and Katie Hepburn behaved this way to each other.
- Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert in It Happened One Night.
- Ben Quick and Clara Varner in The Long Hot Summer. Snarky dialogue with a William Faulkner candy coating!
- Marion Ravenwood and Indiana Jones.
- Willie Scott and Indiana Jones.
- Thick enough to serve up with an ice cream scoop between Christopher Wilde and Jessica Olson in the Disney Channel original movie Starstruck
- In the second Pirates of the Caribbean film, everyone keeps giving Jack and Elizabeth crap about having the hots for each other. Do they admit it? No way in hell.
- The Prince of Persia the Sands of Time movie, so very much.
KateKat andPetruchioPatrick from 10 Things I Hate About You, what with the film being a High School AU of The Taming of the Shrew.- Philip Marlowe and Vivian Rutledge in The Big Sleep.
- Following in the footsteps of the Star Wars example above, Spaceballs naturally has Lone Star and Princess Vespa.
- Jake Gittes and Femme Fatale Lillian Bondine in The Two Jakes.
Jake: Honestly, I'm tryin' to be a gentleman about this. Now just, get down on your knees, stick your ass up in the air, and don't move 'til I tell ya.
- Alfred Kralic and Clara Novak in The Shop Around the Corner. To make matters worse, each has got a wonderful pen pal with whom they're falling passionately in love...
- Lucy and Jerry for most of The Awful Truth.
- Mia and Nicolas in The Princess Diaries 2.
Literature
- Jane Eyre is very subtle, but it's definitely present, especially in the tight, intelligent discussions between Jane and Mr. Rochester. Because it was the 1800s and written by a woman, odds are good that really obvious sexual tension would've been ever more frowned upon than the book having a female author in the first place. This example is more evident in the movies of the book, especially the 2011 one.
- Pretty much any Mills & Boone romance novel will feature a "feisty female" lead, while the leading male is always a Jerk with a Heart of Gold.
- Harry Potter has Ron and Hermione.
- Lily Evans and James Potter seem to have this in their school days, with Lily as the Type B Tsundere and James as the Jerk with a Heart of Gold before they get Happily Married. And die.
- The Lensman universe has Kim Kinnison, Lensman, and Clarissa MacDougall, Prime Base Hospital nurse. They annoy the hell out of each other as patient and caregiver, but in fact their psychological makeup has been carefully crafted to produce a good match - eventually. His rants in hospital (he wants rich food, but is still recovering from major surgery for multiple penetrating bullet wounds) later become a plot point when he has to surreptitiously let Clarissa know that she and the other captured Patrol nurses are in safe hands and shouldn't commit suicide to avoid sexual enslavement.
- Zohra and Khardan in Rose of the Prophet, slightly altered in that they have a forced marriage early in the first book. The bride is tied up and gagged to wed the falling-down-drunk groom, and the wedding night notably involves the bride stabbing her would-be husband. Will They or Won't They? is still a big plot point (they may be married, but consummation is not forthcoming), and basically will decide if their people survive or die.
- To be more precise, they are the eldest of the heads of two rival desert tribes who have had a very long history of hostility. Their god decided that for his people to survive, the two tribes had to be united by their marriage. The worst part is that they both do admire the other's strength, both are too quick to see what they think is hostility from the other.
- The Prydain Chronicles has Eilonwy and Taran.
- Simon R. Green's Blue Moon Rising has Prince Rupert (Jerk with a Heart of Gold) and Princess Julia (Type A Tsundere for most of the book, becomes type B towards the end though). They eventually get their act together at the end and by the time of the sequels are a real Battle Couple
- Claire Bell's The Book of the Named gives us Ratha, a type B Tsundere, and Bonechewer, a Jerk with a Heart of Gold. Due to an Enemy Mine situation, they do eventually end up together, only to fall out over the secret of the Named's sentience, and her people killing him when he raided their flocks.
- In the Night World series, Ash and Mary-Lynette are like this in the majority of Daughters of Darkness. He's a self-admitted jerk who toys with hearts, she's deredere but kicks him in the shins. A lot.
- Supposedly Howl and Sophie from the novel (but not the film) Howl's Moving Castle and its sequels, though this is probably due more to Word of God than any actual outstanding examples within the books.
- Howl and Sophie consistently and constantly have verbal sniping matches throughout the entire book, and that doesn't exactly change—though it's affectionate after their marriage. They even take the time to do so while rushing using life-endangering magic to the climax of the battle. And during their confessions of love.
- They get engaged at the end of the first book. That's not exactly an extended Will They or Won't They?.
- In the sequel, Castle in the Air, Abdullah asks Sophie to tell him about Howl, and the response Sophie gives him prompts him to say, "Strange that you should speak so proudly such a list of vices, most loving of ladies." Sophie's retort: "What do you mean, vices? I'm just describing Howl." The belligerence is just how they roll.
- Brienne and Jaime from A Song of Ice and Fire might count, though their relationship is mostly platonic with only a little sexual tension (fair enough, as Brienne is mourning Renly and focused on the quest Catelyn gave her, and Jaime was, until recently, faithful to another woman.)
- Pride and Prejudice actually contains considerably less of this trope between Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy than most of its adaptations and much of its fandom would have you believe. If you want a Jane Austen couple who really display this trope, check out Mr. Knightley and Emma.
- Erasmus and Ala from Anathem.
- In On the Edge, Rose and Declan bicker constantly, mainly because Declan insists on Rose marrying him and she is determined to maintain her independence. Despite herself, Rose finds herself wondering what such a marriage would be like...
- Annice and Pjerin in Tanya Huff's Sing the Four Quarters.
- Nathaniel and Kitty are this on the occasions when they meet going through The Bartimaeus Trilogy. They even fit the "jerk with a heart of gold" and "sweet but easily angered female" stereotypes. Well, then again maybe "sweet" isn't really the word for the girl, but the rest is true. Also helped along by the fact that they are on opposing sides of a politcal war.
- CS Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia: In The Horse and His Boy, Aravis and Cor spend most of the book vehemently disagreeing and voicing their annoyance with each other; eventually, though, they quarrel and make up so often that they get married "so as to go on doing it more conveniently."
- In The Guardians, Irena and Alejandro argue with each other constantly. It's lampshaded by the other characters.
Alejandro: "We're just friends."
Jake: "If you say so."
- Percy Jackson and The Olympians has the titular character and Annabeth, who bicker as much as they show affection for each other.
- It gets worse when Luke gives up his body to Kronos in the fourth book. Percy is convinced that Luke is a Complete Monster and cannot be redeemed, but Annabeth, who shares a long history with Luke, believes there's still hope. This disagreement causes a huge amount of bad feeling between them. It all works out in the end, though.
- Miss Alexia Tarrabotti and Lord Conall Maccon in Soulless.
- Mac and Barrons in the Fever Series.
- Ian Kabra and Amy Cahill in The 39 Clues series. Let's see, he "fakes" feelings for her and then leaves her and her brother for dead, she kicks him in the shin, he and his sister are always helping their mother Isabel try to kill them, etc., etc. And yet there's still tension there.
- In the Sequel Series, Amy has this with Jake.
- Zoe and Jason from "Addicted" 10,000%
- The Spy Five, a short series of virtually unknown books available through Scholastic's book fair order forms, gives us Usula and Julian. They run in the same circles as Ron and Hermione. She's bossy and intelligent, while he's "cool" and loves sports. Both have a Hair-Trigger Temper, triggered by the other.
- Mort and Ysabell. Largely because Ysabell knows she's supposed to marry Mort and resents this, and Mort is perennially clueless. As the book that introduces their daughter puts it "Between Mort and Ysabell there was an instant dislike, and everyone knows what that means in the long term".
- Lords and Ladies implies that Archchancellor Ridcully and Granny Weatherwax had this sort of relationship when they were younger. When they meet again decades later, it immediately starts up again. Ridcully regrets that nothing ever actually happened between them, while Granny takes a more pragmatic "it was for the best" approach (although it's revealed that she kept the love letters he sent all these years).
- Lampshaded in John C. Wright's Chronicles of Chaos: Amelia notes she once thought Vanity's squabbling with Colin was a sign of love, since that's the way it always happens in books. Vanity actually loves Quentin, and is very attentive and kind around him.
- David Eddings is almost as fond of this trope as Rumiko Takahashi. Half the couples in the Belgariad alone fall under it, most notably Garion/Ce'Nedra, Relg/Taiba, and Beldin/Vella in the Malloreon.
- From The Kingdoms of Evil, Freetrick and Bloodbyrn, sorry! I mean, Bloodbyrn and Freetrick.
- L. M. Montgomery's Anne of Green Gables gives us Anne and Gilbert, though the belligerance is much more on Anne's part than Gilbert's. It started with Gilbert making an ill-timed comment about her red hair, and getting his slate smashed over the top of his head. From there it spawned a legendary academic rivalry and Avonlea's most infamous love affair.
- Sisterhood series by Fern Michaels: Maggie Spritzer and Ted Robinson have this going on between them for a long time. They eventually got engaged to be married. However, Deja Vu has Maggie calling it off, because she ends up realizing that she's been unfair to both Ted and Abner Tookus.
- Mercy Thompson and Adam Hauptman don't stop even after they get married. Mercy states that she actually enjoys fighting with Adam.
- In PG Wodehouse's Jill the Reckless, Jill remembers how Wally Mason would put a worm down her back or bound out from behind a tree. Adult, he confesses to a mad love for her.
- Colin Kapp's Patterns of Chaos has this deliberately set up by the government between secret agent Bron and his handler Jaycee, whom he knows only as the sultry female voice verbally abusing him over a communications link built into his skull. Their personalities were carefully matched so the frustration of never being able to get together for Slap Slap Kiss would amplify the belligerence part of their sexual tension, and supposedly this somehow increases their effectiveness working together. It's indicated that if they ever meet in person, falling head over heels in love is practically certain.
- Locke and Sabetha in The Republic of Thieves.
Live-Action TV
- Cheers, Cheers, Cheers. Practically the television Trope Codifier; most television shows since have mimicked the hostile romance between Sam and Diane.
Sam: You are the nuttiest, the stupidest, the phoniest fruitcake I ever met!
Diane: You, Sam Malone. are the most arrogant, self-centered, son of a b...
Sam: SHUT UP! Shut your fat mouth!
Diane: Make me!
Sam: Make you....My God, I'm, I'm gonna, I'M GONNA BOUNCE YOU OFF EVERY WALL IN THIS OFFICE!!
Diane: Try it and you'll be walking funny tomorrow.... or should I say funnier.
Sam: You know, you know I always wanted to pop you one! Maybe this is my lucky day, huh?
Diane: You disgust me! I hate you!
Sam: Are you as turned on as I am?
Diane: More! (followed by The Big Damn Kiss)
- Xena. Ares. SO VERY much.
- It isn't canon, but depending on whether you can fight your way through all the Ho Yay or not, Merlin and Arthur's relationship either reads as this or as Vitriolic Best Buds
- The Mighty Boosh. Sweet, handsome Vince Noir and awkward Loner Howard Moon are made for each other. Everyone in the Boosh universe, naturally, can see it except them.
- Chuck Bass and Blair Waldorf of Gossip Girl seem poised to play Will They or Won't They? for the remainder of the series.
- As of season three, they are Happily Married... except without the actual marriage part.
- Tom Paris and B'Elanna Torres, the Official Couple on Star Trek: Voyager (sometimes it appeared they were the only couple on Voyager). Even after they got married.
- A subplot of one Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode involves Chief O'Brien being forced to work with a female Cardassian engineer. The two spend the entire episode bickering and sniping at each other. He interprets her apparent hostility as typical Cardassian disdain for humans. She interprets his apparent hostility as O'Brien coming onto her, since apparently Belligerent Sexual Tension forms the basis of Cardassian courtship. (The Garak/Bashir slashers proceeded to have a lot of fun with the implications of Garak arguing with Bashir over literature for three years.)
- Daniel Jackson and Vala Mal Doran of Stargate SG-1. With Vala the Jerk with a Heart of Gold able to annoy Daniel (in a way no one else quite could) into losing his cool. Also none of the other cast really expect them to get together, but Mitchell did sometimes tease Daniel about it.
- They actually took the Belligerent part of this trope quite literally in Vala's first episode with a spectacular fight sequence unlike anything ever seen in the show. Lampshaded right off the bat by Vala with; "You know, we could just have sex instead."
- Helen Magnus and Nikola Tesla of Sanctuary. Sure, they have different opinions about bringing vampires back. And yes they did have a few arguments about this (Nikola once said "Magnus has shot me more times than I can count"). But still, he is the only one who gets on her nerves that much and gets away with it. Not to mention that lately she seems to realize that she cares about him. And that grabbing his arms and pulling him closer to her during a little quarrel they had is completely acceptable...
- Taken to another level and possibly made canon with their Now or Never Kiss in the season 4 finale
- Bela Talbot had it with both Winchester boys in Supernatural. She shot Sam and he still had dirty dreams about her. The trope was almost invoked word for word when Bella offered Dean "angry sex".
- Dean's relationship with Cassie in the first season episode 'Route 666' seemed to fall under this.
- Whenever Meg and Castiel show up in the same episode, this is their default behavior toward each other. This includes insults, occasional physical violence, and wall-slamming kisses.
- John Crichton and Aeryn Sun in Farscape's first Season. Both seem to be jerks and Type A tsunderes in varying degrees.
- Mal and Inara (deredere) on Firefly, with the added wrenches of Inara being a Companion and Mal being terrible about long-term commitments.
- Further complicated by Inara telling Mal she supported Unification, which was essentially the event which destroyed Mal's faith in God and humanity. Also, she's a Buddhist and he's a misotheist.
- Kaylee and Simon occasionally fit this. Funnily, neither are particularly Tsundere or Jerkish on their own, but come off with shades of it when they try to make a stab at starting a relationship.
- Wash and Zoe's relationship started like this, before progressing into the mostly-amiable marriage shown on screen.
- There is, curiously, quite a bit of sexual tension between River and Jayne, and hoo boy is it belligerent, what with the chest slashings and ball-grabbing.
- Word of God has said that some tension is suggested between Simon and Jayne.
- House and Dr. Cuddy.
- Luke and Reid from As the World Turns. They are constantly snarking at eachother but everyone knows they will end up together.
- Kyle and Max in Living Single. At times, they took turns as to who was the Jerk and who was the Tsundere in various episodes.
- Alex Drake and Gene Hunt in Ashes to Ashes. Observe.
- Broken link. I think this demonstrates it ok though. Bearing in mind this is only one of three seasons and they didn't hook up until the very end.
- On Northern Exposure, Dr. Joel Fleischmann and Maggie O'Connell's long-simmering UST was severly impeded by a) his tendency to deal with his severe Fish Out of Water status with fits of jerk behavior, and b) her severe resistance to relationships after the deaths of several previous boyfriends (which she believed to be her curse).
- Chad and Sonny on Sonny With a Chance. Sonny is definitely Type B, with her tsuntsun side only triggered by Chad and occasionally Tawny. Come to think of it...
- As Chad was only introduced in the 2nd episode, Sonny and Tawni actually came first for this. As of the end of Season 1, it looks like some movement in the Chad/Sonny relationship is happening, a remarkably quick Relationship Upgrade for this type of couple (assuming they don't muck around for another season or 2 denying their obvious feelings for each other).
- Emerson and Simone from Pushing Daisies might qualify. You can almost picture that woman holding a tight leash around Emerson's neck.
- Moonlighting, anyone? As stated above, can lead to Shipping Bed Death.
- Nathan and Kelly in Misfits are many fans' apparent One True Pairing. What with him being a snarky and immature Jerkass Woobie and she an aggressive, telepathic Tsundere chav, the ensuing clash of issues and attitude problems is an unexpected joy to behold.
- Buffy and Spike, Buffy the Vampire Slayer
- Buffy and Angel started that way, too, though they got over it right quick. Xander and Cordelia stayed that way even when they were dating.
- Lee Adama and Kara Thrace of Battlestar Galactica Reimagined could easily blow the ship to pieces with the force of their BST (which remains belligerent even after they've had sex, and he deals with her sudden marriage to someone else).
- Tony and Ziva in NCIS.
- Robin Hood and all three of his Love Interets: Isabella, Marian and Kate (in that order).
- Malcolm and Nicola in The Thick of It.
- Damon and Elena on The Vampire Diaries have enough BST to burn a house down. It is doubtful they'll ever get together as she's dating his brother and he...y'know, kills people.
- That's probably true, although that Damon snapped Elena's brother's neck right in front of her(though he did get better) and they still engage in the same behaviour after awhile suggests that, though it really should, that is probably not a deal breaker for them.
- Very unlikely, given that Elena and Stefan are the show's prime couple and the producers therefore have a vested interest in promoting and maintaining them. Given the notion that Elena and Stefan are True Soul Mates it would be detrimental to Elena's character were she to suddenly ditch Stefan for Damon. That's not to say that sometimes some almost wish it would happen as Stefan often seems fairly boring next to his brother.
- in "As I Lay Dying" Damon is dying of a werewolf bite, Elena kisses him thinking he was genuinely near death but Katherine cure him. Stefan is out of the picture as he recieved the cure from Klaus and he is Klaus' new wingman as payment. Damon and Elena now seem to be a good possibility if Elena sorts out her feelings.
- Puck and Quinn on Glee
- Or Rachel and Quinn.
- Wendy and Hodges on CSI. The common theory is that at some point Wendy will have to either kiss Hodges or punch him. Possibly both.
- The former, it turned out.
- Rick Castle and Kate Beckett from Castle scream this trope at the top of their lungs every episode. Oddly enough, each has acknowledged their attraction, if only to themselves, but circumstances conspired to keep them from doing anything about it.
- For the first season, anyways—it quickly switches to just plain Unresolved Sexual Tension soon after.
- They still trade plenty of banter, innuendo and snark, though.
- For the first season, anyways—it quickly switches to just plain Unresolved Sexual Tension soon after.
- Temp worker Misawa Katsuko and vice-president Igarashi Akeo from Haken no Oscar fit this trope perfectly.
- The Mentalist: Lisbon has yelled at Jane more times than there are episodes. Jane does some sort of Bunny Ears Lawyer trick that is likely to get both of their asses fired about as often. Doesn't mean they wouldn't kill and die for each other.
- Community- Britta: "Jeff and I don't have sexual tension. We just argue all the time."... And then they hook up.
- Anyone who saw the crossover between Power Rangers Time Force and Power Rangers Wild Force knows that Eric and Taylor fit into this trope pretty well, most noticeable in their first few interactions.
- Also Ziggy Grover and Dr. K from Power Rangers RPM. What makes it even funnier is that their actors (Milo Cawthorne and Olivia Tennet) have been dating in real life since the show ended.
- In the jiang hu TV series Chinese Paladin III, both leads are Type A tsunderes. It's particularly bad for the hero, since at the beginning the heroine knows more kung fu than him...
- Rory and Jess from Gilmore Girls started out as a mild form of this trope. They bickered over music, books and television before admitting that they really liked each other. And to a lesser extent, this was also how Rory and Logan initially got to know each other.
- Paris and Doyle's relationship is a more straightforward example.
- Lynda Day and Spike Thomson from Press Gang.
- Another Steven Moffat example: River Song and the Doctor from Doctor Who, who clearly care for each other very deeply but also spend a considerable amount of time snarking at and bickering with each other Like an Old Married Couple, which they may very well be (it's hinted at in a few episodes). Interestingly, the male half of the couple in question appears to be the Tsundere in the relationship.
- Also, the Doctor and Amy a fair bit, despite the fact that she's been either engaged or married most of the time he's known her, and a child most of the time she's known him. And he's 900-something and a Time Lord, though (both?) of those problems also apply to River Song.
- It gets better. River Song is a Time Lady, and Amy and Rory's daughter. She's kidnapped as a newborn baby in Season Six, and raised as a Laser Guided Tykebomb aimed at the Doctor. Whom she kills, and then sacrifices all her remaining regenerations to save.
- Also, the Doctor and Amy a fair bit, despite the fact that she's been either engaged or married most of the time he's known her, and a child most of the time she's known him. And he's 900-something and a Time Lord, though (both?) of those problems also apply to River Song.
- Alex and Ellen on Family Ties.
- Played with on iCarly with the Sam and Freddie relationship. They do nothing but bicker, whilst Sam routinely abuses him, punches him, bullies him and does things like hit him with tennis racquets and throw him out of tree houses. They share their First Kiss in season two but it's not a result of Slap Slap Kiss. In season 4 Sam suddenly kisses him in the middle of a speech he was giving about how she needs to put her feelings out there. Because he thought she liked another guy.
- The relationship is then explored in iDate Sam & Freddie, and they lose the "Sexual Tension" part of the equation and instead are constantly Belligerent with each other, annoying Carly who is the one they rope in to try and fix the fights, until she gets fed up at the end of the episode and delivers a Reason You Suck Speech to Sam and Freddie and the idea of them dating.
- Moist von Lipwig and Adora Belle Dearheart in the Film of the Book Going Postal. In the book ... it's a bit more complicated.
- Niles and CC in The Nanny.
- Avon and Servalan of Blakes Seven, and how. They spend most of the last two seasons either kissing or trying to kill each other; sometimes they don't even bother to separate the two.
- Sam has this with both Ainsley and Mallory on The West Wing, and Josh and Donna have their share of it as well.
- Clark and Lois of Smallville bicker constantly. That their Unresolved Sexual Tension will eventually become very much Resolved is a Foregone Conclusion from the moment she appears.
- Niles tries to instigate this intentionally in Frasier after he and Daphne have an argument that leaves him trembling with arousal. Daphne, being Oblivious to Love as usual, doesn't get it and winds up acting even more sweet and polite than usual, thinking that Niles keeps insulting her because he's depressed. Fail.
- Dr. Cox and Jordan of Scrubs. They were married and got divorced, but kept up this trope even after their relationship officially ended. They also kept sleeping together, had two kids, move back in together, and basically stayed married in every sense but the technical. And they love this trope so much that when Jordan insists they stop fighting for their son's benefit, the other characters treat it as if they have stopped having sex. Fighting is sex to these two.
- Ted and Zoey in season 6 of How I Met Your Mother, combined with a mild form of Dating Catwoman. Abated briefly when they got together, only to mutate into a full-blown Destructive Romance.
- Claire and Alex of McLeod's Daughters
- The Hardy Boys Nancy Drew Mysteries: Frank Hardy & Nancy Drew. Dear GODS, Frank & Nancy. The first time the Hardys & Nancy Drew met, Nancy throws Frank to the floor. All episodes featuring the trio inevitably have Nancy & Frank getting seriously on each others' nerves — until they finally share a kiss at the end of "Mystery of the Hollywood Phantom".
Nancy: ARGH!!! Frank Hardy is the most exasperating...annoying...frustrating...
Bess: ...cute.
Nancy: NO! (pause) Well, maybe a little...
- Pete and Kelly the vet in early Warehouse 13 season 2:
Myka: What is it with you two?
Pete: Man, I hate her!
Myka: Right...
- Michael Westen and Fiona Glenanne of Burn Notice. Starts out as Working with the Ex, goes through full-blown Destructo-Nookie, into Battle Couple, and ends Season 4 with Fi's non-fatal Heroic Sacrifice to keep Michael from becoming what he hates just to save her.
- Jon and Ygritte in Game of Thrones. Aside from the fact that he's on the Night's Watch and sworn to defend the rest of Westeros from Wildlings like her, he's also sworn a vow of celibacy - something she doesn't hesitate to needle him on constantly. They're also both fully aware of Jon's unspoken attraction to her, and Ygritte keeps baiting him endlessly.
Theater
- Older Than Steam: The classical Western theater example is Beatrice and Benedick from Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing. Don't pretend you didn't see that coming.
- Some productions of The Taming of the Shrew play Katherine and Petruchio this way.
- The musical Anne & Gilbert, inspired by Anne of Green Gables makes the title pair into this.
- Both Glinda/Fiyero and Elphaba/Fiyero in Wicked have elements of this, even though Fiyero is only a very light Jerk with a Heart of Gold.
- Even stronger with Elphaba and Glinda
- The song "What is This Feeling" is this trope.
- Even stronger with Elphaba and Glinda
- Betty/Rizzo and Kenickie from Grease (both musical and film), doubling as the Beta Couple to Sandy and Danny.
- Fred and Lilli in Kiss Me Kate. They're also playing Katharine and Petruchio in a musical The Taming of the Shrew.
- Amalia and Georg in She Loves Me—at least in person.
Video Games
- Gears of War: Baird and Sam, the two snarkiest Gears in the whole series, and if you play Gears of War III, that is one hell of an accomplishment. Taken to the logical extreme when they're falling off a collapsing bridge:
Baird: "I suppose you want me to say I always loved you. But I don't! I really, really don't!"
- At the end, it's implied they end up together.
- Croix and Prier of La Pucelle Tactics spend the last half of the game this way, with most of the rest of the party seeing it, and them denying it. They finally admit their feelings to each other at the climax of the game, and then promptly go back to denying it again in public.
- Adell and Rozalin from Disgaea 2: Cursed Memories. Lampshaded when Etna spots the trope and assures them that they aren't fooling anyone.
- Etna can't talk either, since in that very game she's acting like a Psycho Ex-Girlfriend towards Laharl.
- Some of the interactions between Laharl and Flonne can come off as this, especially throughout the first game. Interestingly, they are both tsunderes, with Laharl being tsuntsun and Flonne deredere.
- Serra and Erk from Fire Emblem 7, so much. To an extent, Hector and Lyn from the same game, as well as Dart and Farina. Also Lex and Ayra from the first half of the fourth game and Phee and Arthur from the second half, and Innes and L'Arachel from the eighth one... And doubly so with Ephraim and L'Arachel.
- Given the nature of the games in question, all of those are optional pairings. If the player prefers, they can be paired with other people, or even no one at all.
- The fifth game, however, did not have the option to pair units off as you will, and so as long as certain units survived, their endings would imply that they got together. Tanya and Othin appear to fit this trope quite nicely. The sixth game also doesn't have paired endings for anyone other than the main character despite the decidedly romantic nature of some of the A-level support conversations, and it, too, has a couple of pairings that bring this to mind (Clarine/Rutger and to a lesser extent Klein/Tate).
- Given the nature of the games in question, all of those are optional pairings. If the player prefers, they can be paired with other people, or even no one at all.
- Pia and Vico, and potentially the Princess and Vico, in A Dance With Rogues.
- Elika and the Prince in the 2008 Prince of Persia will spend more time snarking at each other than actually completing their quest, if the player lets them.
- The Prince and Farah also have this in the Sands of Time trilogy.
- Devil May Cry 3 introduced a Lady as a possible love interest for Dante. They didn't become an Official Couple, but that's how it's been in the first three games in the series. Each one introduced a possible love interest for the protagonist, yet no Official Couple was ever stated, and each fan has a different favourite.
- It's pertinent to note that almost every fanfiction that has Dante and Lady as a couple has the later acting as a full-on Tsundere. Complete with her shooting Dante in the head whenever he angers her as a Running Gag.
- Jessica and Kyle of Lunar 1 fit this trope very well, with Jessica being a Hot-Blooded, Cute Monster Girl dropout priestess and Kyle being a drunken, Loveable Rogue bandit running a sort of Monster Protection Racket.
- From the Sonic the Hedgehog series, we have Knuckles the Echidna and Rouge the Bat, who practically define the term "Sexual Tension".
- It depends on the player's interpretation of the characters, but Link from The Legend of Zelda Twilight Princess could be seen as having this sort of relationship with Midna, judging by the snarky comments she makes and the obvious increase of fondness between them despite her attitude. The same could be said of Link and Tetra in Wind Waker; she proves herself to have a strong affection for him eventually, but that doesn't stop her from talking down to him for his sentimentality upon leaving home or from catapulting him into a stone wall.
- That was an accident.
- Tales (series)
- Loni and Nanaly in Tales of Destiny 2. Oh. So. Much.
- This happens frequently in Tales games. In Tales of the Abyss, Luke and Tear have a relationship like this. But then again, everyone treats Luke like dirt.
- Luke and Tear only have this relationship for the first 1/3 of the game where Luke is a naive spoiled brat and Tear is a no nonsense soldier. After the Wham! Episode, their relationship becomes much less belligerent as Luke begins to mature (after an overlarge heaping of Break the Haughty) and Tear starts showing her more gentle and caring side.
- Another example can be found in Chester and Arche in Tales of Phantasia. And it's taken to insane levels in the sequel, Narikiri Dungeon (specifically, the PSP remake).
- This is the general consensus in the Touhou fandom as to Marisa and Alice's relationship, with Marisa being the kleptomaniacal, master spark-happy jerk and Alice being the haughty, dismissive tsundere.
- Squishy Wizard and Hot Librarian Patchouli Knowledge also has a similar relationship with Marisa. Marisa is a flippant jerk and Kleptomaniac Hero, who generally refers to Patchouli's attempts at Awesomeness By Analysis as "worthless", and prefers Cutting the Knot, while Patchouli is a Deadpan Snarker version of a Tsundere with far more "tsun" than "dere".
- Less common though still present is the portrayal of Kaguya and Mokou this way, with insults and snark substituted with repeatedly killing each other (don't worry, they're both immortal).
- Depending on how you play it, most Bioware RPGs have a pairing that runs this way.
- Nathyrra and the player in Neverwinter Nights Hordes of the Underdark
- Bishop and the (female) player in Neverwinter Nights 2, though it doesn't really go anywhere.
- Silk Fox and the player in Jade Empire, at least at the start
- Both mainstream pairings in Knights of the Old Republic.
- Shepard and Miranda's romance in Mass Effect 2 can play out this way, as seen here.
- Shepard can also joke that Joker has this sort of relationship with EDI.
- Shepard's interactions with Liara during Lair of the Shadow Broker, if the two were involved in the first game.
- This is more in the vein of Like an Old Married Couple.
- Garrus and Tali in the third game have shades of this as well. They didn't get along well at all in the first game, and in the second, one of them threatened the other with a shotgun. Third time around, they patch up their differences, and if neither of them are occupied with Shepard, they hook up.
- Nathaniel and Velanna's subtext in Dragon Age: Origins: Awakening.
- Dragon Age 2 features a companion system based on Friendship/Rivalry rather than Like/Dislike; it's been stated that you'll be able to have both genuinely romantic and Slap Slap Kiss relationships with your party members.
- The Smuggler and Risha in Star Wars: The Old Republic, likely homage to Han and Leia in the source material.
- Chie and Yosuke's relationship in Persona 4 could be said to be this. They constantly argue, and sometimes reach physical violence ("TRIAL OF THE DRAGOOON!") but they were practically a couple.
- Fan Fiction tends to portray Nick and Ellis of Left 4 Dead 2 as having this kind of relationship. That is, when Ellis hasn't been completely Wimpified or is being outright raped.
- On in-universe example, Ellis is Smitten with Zoey the moment he lays eyes on her. When he gets a chance to see her again, she may be rather belligerent and insult him. This does nothing to tarnish her "Angel" image in Ellis's eyes.
- The Nameless One and Annah in Planescape: Torment,. The intensity of it is left to how Jerkish the player wishes to be, which in turn determines how provoked Annah will be to hold up her Tsundere end.
- Brandon and Vera in Vera Blanc. But as they are both Deadpan Snarkers what can you expect.
- The relationship between Squall and Rinoa in Final Fantasy VIII initially has some elements of Belligerent Sexual Tension thanks to the conflict between Squall's stoic cynicism and Rinoa's enthusiastic idealism. The trope only really applies up until they reach Galbadia Garden in disc 1, however, after which point Rinoa is more interested in finding out what Squall is thinking than in challenging him over it.
- Fear Effect. Hana and Glas have something like this. They have a habit of pointing guns at each other and giving tough talk to each other. Glas is the one who gives her a hand and helps her up in various situations. Hana did give Glas a hand and help him up in the first game. Also, the one female of the Eight Immortals says to Glas about Hana being his friend, which he tries so very hard to deny. A Fear Effect Inferno trailer shows Glas putting a hand over Hana's hand. He awkwardly tells her that "I just want to say...be careful, you know?" A few seconds later, she smiles and puts her head against his back, surprising him. She responds "We've all got to be careful." Considering what happens later...well, see the Love Triangle entry.
- There is a solid fan belief that Tyrell and Karis from Golden Sun: Dark Dawn are poster children for this trope. To spite the fact that they are never made an official couple in the game, the bickering nature of these two made for an excellent Childhood Friend Romance.
- In Solatorobo, Red and Elh play with this trope. Normally they are quite capable of working together, but if Red should do something incredibly stupid (and he will), Elh is not shy about calling him an idiot and giving him an Armor-Piercing Slap or a good Megaton Punch or two, or just glaring and leaving the room.
Visual Novels
- Klavier Gavin seems to be coming on to Ema Skye in Ace Attorney: Apollo Justice during the very few times they actually talk to each other - though it mostly annoys her. She constantly - and not always behind his back - calls him a "Glimmerous Fop".
- Many people on the fan-base think these two are a cute couple, and tons of fanart pics and fanfics are dedicated to them.
- Kyou and Tomoya's relationship more or less work's out like this in Clannad. In fact, it's implied Sunohara picked up on it even before the story begins, but it never becomes apparent to Tomoya until her route.
- The "Unlimited Blade Works" route of Fate/stay night focuses one of these. Shirou is socially awkward and something of a Deadpan Snarker and Rin is a grade-A Tsundere.
- Kyosuke and Mizuha from G Senjou no Maou have shades of this (at least until you enter her route).
- Battler and Beatrice in Umineko no Naku Koro ni, as part of their ongoing Mind Game Ship. Battler's hostility is entirely justified, as Beatrice claims to have killed him and his entire family, and she'll do it as often as it takes to make him believe her.
Webcomics
- In Arthur, King of Time and Space, which ports the Arthurian legends to various genres, this is usually how Guinevere and Lancelot start out. In the genre where they're based on McCoy and Spock, they form a belligerent nascent threesome with Arthur/Kirk.
- In Bittersweet Candy Bowl, Jerk with a Heart of Gold Paulo and Tsundere Type A Lucy are an example of this.
- And Mike and Lucy.
- Womanizer Sven and deconstructed Bottle Fairy Faye of Questionable Content. Yes, even after they kind-of sort-of get together.
- Brad and Page from Fur Will Fly, though Brad's more of a Dumb Ass than a Jerkass. (They are Happily Married in the sequel comic, Coming Up Violet.)
- Karkat and Terezi of Homestuck. To the extent that it has been commented upon in canon:
EB: anyway, i kind of got the impression that you and terezi were a thing.
CG: WHAT DO YOU MEAN A THING.
EB: Like, i dunno.
EB: Going on weird fight dates and beating the crap out of each other, and being in hate-love or love-hate.
EB: Isn't that how it works?
- In general, the troll concept of romance includes both romantic love and romantic hatred or rivalry. It's implied that it's not uncommon for couples to waver between the two kinds of relationship - Equius/Aradia and possibly Vriska/Tavros (depending on whether you believe that they've actually managed to form a romantic relationship) show signs of Belligerent Sexual Tension as well.
- Largo and Erika from Megatokyo.
- Definitely this for Keith and Natani in Twokinds
- Misfile: Invoked and subverted. Ash and Rumisiel seem to be dating despite her constant annoyance at him, but it's a fake relationship and she's really just angry at him for other reasons.
- A better example is the relationship between Ash and Emily. It's been established many times that they have feelings for each other, and Emily has struggled with the idea of being in a lesbian relationship with a former guy, they have yet to make a real statement on the nature of their relationship after over 1700 comic strips.
- Tipper and Charles from Namir Deiter, before they got married.
- Nasty variation occurs in Narbonic, where Helen is unable to admit her feelings for Dave because she values him too much as a test subject, and Dave is too shy and insecure.
- In Sluggy Freelance, Riff and Gwynn dating was a bit like this, she being very Tsundere and he an insensitive jerk towards women he dates. It didn't last, though. The relationship wasn't focused on, and while it went on, it didn't seem to have any redeeming features, but afterwards it was shown clearly enough that there had been some actual positive emotions involved.
- Yet the belligerence lives on...
- WTF Comics: Grouchy dragon warrior Straha and haughty elven summoner Maguna.
- Yehuda & Sister Sprocket in Yehuda Moon and The Kickstand Cyclery.
- Zap and Reona from Zap!, at least until Reona defrosted some.
- In Girl Genius Tarvek's cousin Violetta was first introduced, Violetta's rage at and contempt for Tarvek makes Moloch von Zinzer ask it they're married. Violetta makes a sick face ("Ewwww...") but many in the fandom have already shipped the two ("They deserve each other"). Of course, In-Universe aggressive inclinations of Sparks are known to cause this often enough that it isn't seen as unusual.
- Black Mage and White Mage in Eight Bit Theater would have this. Only BM lacks the heart of gold. Probably a heart at all. Oh and White Mage finds him completely and utterly repulsive in every single way possible. And some that aren't.
- Decounstructed in Magick Chicks/Eerie Cuties. Many AA & AA students are so warped they often come across as farther from humanity than the monsters (at least ones sane enough to try blending in), including this side. Things get out of hand when Ash meets Brooke.
Web Original
- The Legion of Extraordinary Dancers delivers a fun example, as always. In this case, the two characters (Ninjato and Katana express this through DANCE. However, Ninjato is captured and held at an enemy headquarter, and made to dance (it's more tasteful than it sounds—they used to be close friends, and Ninjato likes to dance). Katana sneaks in mid dance and they subsequently convey the epitome of Belligerent Sexual Tension through dance. The bad guys are so in awe of their performance that they don't even get up out of their seats until Katana spirits away Ninjato.
- Simon and Jeremy from Shadow of the Templar. They have sex often, but are extremely poor at admitting how important the other is to him, with Simon vigorously denying that Jeremy could even be his friend. Jeremy's love of treating Simon like an amusing playmate and infuriating him with his cool and unruffled demeanor doesn't help, though he does seem to be more conscious about his own feelings and makes the occasional barb about Simon's capacity for denial.
- Although ship-sunk with an embarrassing date, the Chick /Critic ship caught new fire with her Transformers-Bratz arc and Kickassia and now alternates between this at best and The Masochism Tango at worst.
- See also the Critic's review of Fern Gully.
- In Echo Chamber's Unresolved Sexual Tension episode, Dana's "I hate you" directed at Tom marks a moment of belligerent tension (if any), but The Stinger leaves things a bit more unresolved.
- Sasha and Daichi in Greek Ninja. They hate each other's guts, yet Eleonora points out that they are a match made in heaven. So she's onto them...
Western Animation
- Arnold and Helga from Hey Arnold!, at least on Helga's part.
- Grandpa Phil admitted to having a similar experience with a girl in his youth. The girl is Arnold's grandmother.
- Jimmy and Cindy of The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron, with Jimmy's jerk-ness coming from being an Insufferable Genius, and Cindy who tries to be at least smarter than Jimmy.
- Linka and Wheeler of Captain Planet and the Planeteers.
- Lampshaded in one episode where Wheeler has an All Just a Dream scenario where the whole team has grown into their 40's and he's married to Linka... Who is also carrying his child.
- Super Robot Monkey Team Hyperforce Go!, Sprx being the Jerk with a Heart of Gold and Nova as the Tsundere. Sprx flirting and getting punched by Nova is one of the series' biggest running gags.
- Jonesy and Nikki of 6teen.
- Courtney and Duncan of Total Drama Island.
- Now including Heather and Alejandro in "Total Drama World Tour". Both have met their manipulative match and sparks are flying.
- Fin and Reef of Stoked.
- Link and Zelda in the The Legend of Zelda animated series. This relationship was the Trope Namer for Well, Excuse Me, Princess!
- Gargoyles: According to Greg Weisman himself, Brooklyn and his mate Katana's relationship—at least early on—was discribed as a gargoyle version of Much Ado About Nothing's Beatrice and Benedick.
- He first described it as being like Sam and Diane's relationship. No one got it. So then he compared to Beatrice and Benedick, which everyone got. That should tell you something about the show's fans.
- KaBlam!: Henry and June.
- Donald Duck and Daisy Duck.
- The original G1 Transformers episode: The Girl who Loved Powerglide featured the aforementioned Autobot in one of these with a human named Astoria Carlton-Ritz.
- Cartman and Wendy in South Park are this, or at least were. Cartman’s early, season three crush may have already been diminished by the time she beat the shit out of him in season twelve.
- Kick and Kendall in Kick Buttowski .
- And Kick and Ronaldo.
- James and Sarah in Liberty's Kids
- Alvin and Brittany in Alvin and The Chipmunks.
- Maniac and Archer in Wing Commander Academy
- Word Girl: Becky and Tobey. Probably. (Though still unconfirmed.)
- In Young Justice, Artemis and Kid Flash have a lot of Belligerent Sexual Tension, due to Kid Flash resenting her for replacing Red Arrow/Speedy. Lampshaded in "Bereft" by Robin.
- Lisa and Milhouse from The Simpsons in later seasons.
- Matt and Inez from Cyberchase and very likely deliberately invoked by the creators...
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars provides Obi-Wan Kenobi with a "past" in the form of Duchess Satine. They play it out pretty much like Benedick and Beatrice In Space.
- Then there's the byplay between Kenobi and Asajj Ventress. One wonders what the two will do when trapped in an escape pod together.
- Xiaolin Showdown loves to use this with Raimundo and Kimiko. Constant friendly (or not so friendly) bickering, Kimiko's tendency to hit EVERYONE (especially Rai for picking on Omi), a random peck on the cheek or two...
- Though the only thing close to an Official Couple was Chase and Wuya. Who also fit this trope, albeit with more sneaking than hitting.