Outcast / Loner
He walks the road alone — and there's usually a good reason no one walks it with him.
The outcast hero is the man the village turned its back on, or the man who turned his back first — a witcher despised for the work the world demands, a half-blood no kingdom claims, a wanderer carrying a name nobody will say. Geralt, Aragorn in his Strider years, Locke Lamora before he found his crew: the archetype thrives on the cold distance between a hero and the people he protects, and the way that distance shapes him into the only one who can do what needs doing.
The appeal is the dignity of self-sufficiency cut with the ache of exile. Expect spare, watchful protagonists who keep their own counsel, hard-earned competence honed in solitude, and the rare relationships that finally crack the shell — and matter all the more for it. This is the archetype for readers who want a hero forged outside the firelight, more comfortable on the road than in the hall.
- Solitary, self-reliant protagonist
- Hard competence honed alone
- Rare bonds that hit harder
- Outsider view of the world he saves











