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    "Man, I wish I had swishy lines behind me when I did stuff."
    Narrator, A Cartoon Network Teen Titans spot

    In animated shows, characters moving at high speed often appear in front of a set of moving colored lines—usually blue background with yellow stripes, although depending on the impact, any color combination may be used. This is usually done because drawing a proper background moving behind the character would require drawing a large background from a camera angle which would only be seen for a split-second. The direction of the lines indicates the direction; if the lines seem to be coming from a central point, then it is because the character is moving toward or away from the screen.

    A variation of this is the Moving Punchout, where two characters are fighting and obviously moving (usually in the same direction, although sometimes towards each other), with speed stripes as the background.

    This is an effect from Manga, and is indicative of a stylistic difference between the west and Japan in the depiction of movement. While speed lines in the west are traditionally drawn on the character and leave the background in focus, the Japanese artist traditionally speed-lines the background, leaving the character in focus. In the western version, the observer is a stationary bystander being passed or approached by the character, but in the Japanese version the reader is moving with the character (incidentally, it's useful for reducing the budget by avoiding having to draw a background, so you can reuse the footage to your heart's content).

    Examples of Speed Stripes include:
    • Dragon Ball Z is infamous for this, with characters flying in every direction.
      • Super Mario Bros Z, being based on Dragon Ball Z, also uses this trope heavily when characters are launched and often when they are fighting in midair.
    • Yu-Gi-Oh!! occasionally uses speed lines when a major character is playing a card.
    • Even Hikaru no Go (an anime about, well, people playing Go) gets in the act. What Do You Mean It's Not Awesome??
    • A season 4 ReBoot episode makes fun of this, while the characters of Bob and Matrix play a game that combines DBZ and Pokémon. Matrix is held in an airborne kick for an extended shot, and it's revealed that he's on wires in front of a speed-striped rolling background.
    • The lawyers in Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney do this when making particularly forceful arguments.
      • It can become a Bigger Stick if the two lawyers pull these off back and forth in quick succession. One example:

    Edgeworth: *Speed Stripes* "Can you prove that? I THINK NOT!"
    Phoenix: *Speed Stripes* "Oh, yeah? I THINK I CAN! It's simple!"
    Edgeworth: *Speed Stripes* "WHAAAAAT!?"

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