From HarryPotter: ''Agreed. There's a rather obvious RedShirt in book 4, though (details omitted for obvious reasons) '' Would you mind putting the details on HarryPotterSpoilers?? I'm not sure who you mean. http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/spoiler_alert.png ---- Yes, I meant Cedric. There only to get killed. Yes, the author's too good to introduce him 5 minutes before the act, but still a RedShirt in my view, in that he had no other significant part in the story. Perhaps PlotToken would be a better term). It was obvious to me - I guessed Cedric was there to die - but on the other hand it was widely leaked that someone died in the book, so I was expecting something. Trying to compete in any way with HarryPotter is bad news for any character. They will suffer some misfortune shortly afterwards - Cedric's is just the worst. HarryPotter is a jinx. : ''Malfoy has survived 4 books so far without serious harm....'' OK, I'll give you Malfoy :-) : ''I won't. Malfoy gets seriously humiliated everytime, and I suspect that it is probably only a matter of time until something worse happens.'' Potter may be a jinx - look at the trouble the Neville (the kid with the toad) has had, and he's never ever competed; however, Malfoy has not suffered any more than Ron w/r/t humiliation. : Not to mention Voldemort... ''Ahem. Voldemort's "died" at least twice - as Professor Quirrell at the end of book 1, and as (the memory of) Tom Riddle at the end of book 2. I'd call that "serious harm"'' : ...who seems to get stronger with each book. ''Oh, come on. You expect the series to end with Voldemort's triumph?'' Not at all. Nor do I expect Harry Potter to die in the series. Software Development and Architecture are not the only endeavors to make use of patterns. If you remember that it's a work of fiction, it's rather silly to debate about whether the protagonist is a jinx or not. If nothing happened to anyone, the book would be rather boring. ''Well, of course it's silly. You were taking this seriously?'' I don't see Cedric as a RedShirt. He was developed into a character that the reader could actually care for. We even got to meet his parents. As for real RedShirt''''''s, I propose the Tom Riddles family gardener and the witch Bertha: both of these people die without much ado and I doubt many readers felt sad at their deaths. Cedric is probably not a redshirt, mostly because he is Harry's rival for Cho Chang, and Harry actually grieves about him in Book 5. The comment about him being a PlotToken is moot. Of course he is, it's a work of fiction, ''Everything'' is a plot token ...