Nothing is more satisfying than watching a Jerkass or a Card-Carrying Villain on the receiving end of Laser-Guided Karma. Most of the time, it's handed to them by The Hero, who did it with every intention of making the bad guy pay for his crimes and mistreatment of others.
But what if the All-Loving Hero doesn't mean to make the bad guy suffer? What if they're too much of a Nice Guy to understand true evil of the soul? What if the hero is actually trying to help or befriend the villain, but his attempts go awry and have the opposite effect, actually giving the bad guy his just desserts without really meaning to?
The Unintentionally Karmic is the type of Stupid Good or Innocently Insensitive character who attempts to befriend and please a character who acts mean out of the misguided belief that the bad guy has a Hidden Heart of Gold, and they can bring it out through The Power of Friendship. However, the actions of Unintentionally Karmic are just as misguided and naive as their beliefs, and it almost always ends in disaster for the bad guy, making the Unintentionally Karmic Lethally Stupid as well. So instead of being punished directly for their misdeeds and bad behavior, the jerk character ends up suffering consequences for an Accidental Hero dropping the Idiot Ball.
Basically, the Unintentionally Karmic is a living, walking, talking Karma Houdini Warranty, whose actions to please or reach out to a bad guy always backfires horribly on the very person they were trying to help, delivering misfortune that while maybe not directly connected to the villainous misdeeds of the bad guys, is still very much deserved. And no matter how many times they mess things up for their "friends" or how many times they are told they are not appreciated by the bad guys, they keep Comically Missing the Point and go right back to their accidental torment, because Status Quo Is God.
And since whatever the Unintentionally Karmic did was done with pure intentions, and because whatever bad luck they brought was well-deserved by the ones it struck, they themselves usually emerge unscathed from the fires they start, as their good deeds only go wrong on the bad guys and almost always end well for other good characters, so no one worthwhile is complaining.
Sometimes, their targets will try to dissuade the UK character from trying to get close to them, to get them to change their wicked ways, or even try to shatter their optimistic views on the world. But the UK typically has pure-heartedness that is invulnerable to any sort of negativity.
The Unintentionally Karmic comes in many different shapes and forms. They can be The Ditz, The Klutz, the Manchild, the Idiot Hero, the Loon with a Heart of Gold, the Kindhearted Simpleton, the Bumbling Sidekick, Captain Oblivious, the Cloudcuckoolander, The Pollyanna, and the Wide-Eyed Idealist, or, for a group, Gullible Lemmings.
The Unintentionally Karmic is the natural enemy of the Karmic Butt-Monkey and/or the Asshole Victim, who is almost always the main target of their ill-fated attempts at kindness and friendship. The villain can also be the resident Butt-Monkey if their karma is especially comedic.
This trope is an inversion of The Farmer and the Viper, where the kindness of the good one bites the good one, not the evil one, in the butt, while with the Unintentionally Karmic, it's the other way around. Compare Beware the Nice Ones and Beware the Silly Ones, when the nice and silly ones deliver karma when showing their bad sides, unlike when they are nice but still ruin things, or Karmic Trickster, where the good guys humiliated or frustrated the bad guys with the intention to do so. Compare Pay Evil unto Evil, where someone will give a bad person their just deserts in a very deliberate, dark and often poetic fashion.
Examples:
- Osomatsu-san: The Matsuno brothers will sometimes cause trouble for selfish con artist Iyami without even trying to.
- In The Boy Who Cried Idiot, Martin, who is the eponymous idiot, wants to be Chandler's friend, but inadvertently embarrasses him by dressing him as a horse. This serves as karma for Chandler embarrassing Lincoln with the same horse costume earlier.
- In the backstory of Coco, a backstage hand is distracted by the performance of Ernesto de la Cruz, and accidentally moves a lever that drops a giant bell on the latter, crushing him to death. This serves as karmic justice for murdering Hector, although the karmic justice for stealing Hector's credit and legacy is yet to come.
- Baby's Day Out: A baby boy escapes the three bumbling criminals who kidnap him and lead them into a wild goose chase where he pursues adventure and innocently does things that result in Amusing Injuries.
- It is the core theme of The Dinner Game. Wealthy snobs are looking for clueless idiots so they can invite them to a dinner where they are made fun of without realizing what is happening. One of those snobs, Pierre Brochant, finds himself stuck at home with his guest, François Pignon, who then proceeds to methodically destroy his entire life while trying to help him.
- Dumb and Dumber:
- Harry and Lloyd innocently prank kidnapper Mental by putting chili peppers in his food, not knowing of his stomach ulcer. When the hot peppers trigger his ulcer, the duo mistakes the rat poison pills Mental planned to slip them for his medication and give them to him, accidentally killing him.
- In the prequel, the two, in high school, misinterpret a tape of their corrupt principal admitting he created a special needs class specifically to steal grant money for a Hawaiian vacation, and attempt to honor and thank him for starting the Special Needs class by making a float with a giant statue of him and playing the tape of him admitting his scam at the Thanksgiving Parade in front of their schoolmates, their families, and school board representatives.
- Good Burger: Roxanne tries to seduce Ed into revealing the secret sauce recipe to her; however, all her efforts fail because Ed doesn't realize she's flirting with him. He also accidentally subjects her to a series of Amusing Injuries.
- In What About Bob?, Dr. Leo Marvin is a smug psychologist who has achieved minor fame at the cost of a strained relationship with his family and neighbors. When Bob, a new patient with a host of mental issues, follows him home, he unwittingly brings out the absolute worst in Dr. Marvin and causes one disaster after another until the man is a catatonic wreck. However, every misfortune that befalls Dr. Marvin is the direct result of something he does, and in exquisite irony, Bob interprets it all as therapy and makes a miraculous recovery.
- Curtain: Hastings unwittingly causes a poisoning attempt to backfire on the perpetrator when he swings around a rotating bookcase-table, swapping the two coffee-cups on it, one being Mrs Franklin's and the other being a poisoned one she prepared for her husband, which results in her drinking her own poison and dying.
- Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Lovable dork Rowley often serves as this to his Toxic Friend Influence Greg by inadvertently embarrassing him with his childish interests and behaviors in public.
- More or less the 'hook' of Pollyanna. Through her determined optimism and tendency to see the best in everyone, she unknowingly shames the 'good' adults of the town, who use religion and morality to exclude others, ignore local suffering, or take advantage of their neighbors' generosity.
- To Kill a Mockingbird: Scout inadvertently does this when a lynch mob shows up at the prison where Tom Robinson, who's been falsely accused of raping a white woman, is being held. She notices Mr. Cunningham, a neighbor, in the crowd and innocently asks him how his entailment (an inheritance issue) is going; Cunningham is so ashamed of acting murderous in front of a child that he leads the group in going home. Scout herself is confused, as she doesn't understand why the mob was actually there and thinks that she must have done something wrong. Later, it's mentioned that Cunningham was the only holdout on the jury and needed to be pressured into finding Tom guilty, meaning that Scout's questions nearly averted disaster.
- In Death Inc, there are a couple. Most notably, when Milagros and Pilar fake a cancer scare to get their mother to sell the family company, Nieves decides that she'll quit to take care of them instead. They realise that not only did they not get her to sell, since she just names another CEO, but now that she'll be looking after them, she'll constantly interrupt and monitor their scheming.
- Look Outside: Philippe is a living mushroom whose objective is to trick people into being consumed by the Spore Mother in the basement by pretending to be a friendly moth guiding them in a mission to save a princess. However, after defeating him and the princess, you can have Sam stay in denial about Philippe being evil all along and instead be convinced that he was being controlled by the evil fungus and nurse his remains back to health, which allows him to return to life. While Sam is overjoyed to have his friend back, Philippe is now stuck as a party member of the group of survivors while having to stick to his cute moth act, since with his queen gone he has nowhere to go and knows Sam and his group could easily kill him if he breaks his facade.
- Cursed Princess Club: Lorena becomes this to Suzanna Winchester once they meet. Suzanna is a smug, haughty fencer who lords her undefeated status over others and is deeply attracted to Prince Lance, and is furious to hear that he has become engaged to Lorena. She tries to show Lorena up and steal Lance, but all her attempts fail. What's more, Lorena is under the impression that "Suzie" is her friend, and often embarrasses her with affection, and unwittingly flaunting Lance in Suzanna's face when she brings him to cheer her on.
- Amphibia: Marcy gets Sasha (alongside Anne) transported into Amphibia against her will, and while Marcy never meant any true harm, Sasha nonetheless deserved it. Sasha even realized how it felt to be betrayed by someone after being just as guilty of such herself.
- Beavis and Butt-Head: Beavis and Butt-Head's stupidity has often gotten other people punished or humiliated. Nevertheless, their victims sometimes end up deserving it due to being either as unpleasant as they are or too negligent to prevent the fiasco from happening themselves. Three episodes that come to mind are "Steamroller", "Prank Call", and "Drones".
- Camp Lazlo: The titular Bean Scout does double duty both to rude, cankerous abusive Scoutmaster Lumpus and to sadistic, egotistical bully and fellow camper, Edward.
- General Skarr's Karma Houdini Warranty from Evil Con Carne gets worse when he transfers to The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy. After retiring from villainy, he moves in next door to the extremely dimwitted and destructive Billy, who drives him up the wall with his antics, even moreso than Grim sometimes.
- The Ghost and Molly McGee: The ever-optimistic and extroverted Molly McGee cannot be scared away by slobby and gluttonous Scratch's attempts to frighten her out of the house, and in fact only irritates him with her never-ending positivity and misguided notion that they are friends.
- Jimmy Two-Shoes: Jimmy is literally the only cheerful person in the appropriately named Miseryville, much to the chagrin of the town's tyrannical dictator, Lucius, whose missions to spread misery always end in failure and humiliation thanks to Jimmy always befriending everyone and trying to have fun.
- Mr. Magoo (2019): Mr. Magoo is completely unaware of the evil hamster Fizz's existence, and anything he does to foil his schemes is done by complete accident.
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: In "Griffon the Brush Off", Pinkie Pie meets Rainbow Dash's childhood friend, Gilda, who pushes Pinkie away and acts completely hostile toward her. At first, Pinkie is very upset but tries to brush off Gilda's hostility as her being jealous. When she witnesses Gilda bullying Fluttershy though, Pinkie Pie takes action by throwing Gilda a party in hopes of softening her up and becoming actual friends with her. Instead, Gilda becomes hostile toward everyone at the party after falling into too many pranks set by Rainbow Dash that Pinkie unknowingly leads her into and reaching a Rage Breaking Point which results in Rainbow Dash breaking her friendship with Gilda. Subverted in Gilda's next appearance where Pinkie not only manages to befriend Gilda, but also helps her mend her friendship with Rainbow.
- Phineas and Ferb: The titular brothers build wild inventions in their backyard and Candace always tries to bust them for no other reason than to have vindication. However, Phineas and Ferb sometimes try to good-naturedly rope her into their fun, which occasionally directly ruins Candace's plans, upsetting her.
- Rocko's Modern Life: Rocko and his best friend and housemate Heffer often unintentionally annoy or cause problems for their Cranky Neighbor, Ed Bighead. Ed's wife, Bev, on the other hand, is quite fond of Rocko.
- Rugrats:
- Even though they don't like Angelica most of the time, the eponymous Rugrats rarely intend to get payback at her for her lying and manipulations of their innocent minds. This doesn't prevent their actions from causing comeuppance for her, anyway.
- This trope is played even straighter with later additions to the baby gang, Dil and Kimi. The former is a newborn baby while the latter is The Pollyanna. Both are extroverted and bubblier towards Angelica than she would like, as their innocence and eagerness to have fun often come at her own expense.
- Once or twice, they are unintentionally karmic even for others outside Angelica. In "Grandpa's Bad Bug", Grandpa Lou pretends to have caught a bug so that he'll be able to take a nap. The kids think there is an actual insect inside him. Their attempts to get rid of it (i.e. pinching his uvula with pliers) inconvenience Lou greatly, and when they put "good bugs" on his bed to drive out the bad one, he worries that karma's after him, so he finally admits to Didi and Stu that he lied.
- On at least a handful of occasions, the babies' antics unwittingly entangle with those of criminals working in the same area, foiling their schemes via what is usually just an innocent adventure. For instance, Tommy and Chuckie causing havoc in a bank while searching for candy unintentionally sets off alarms and foils two crooks' attempted heist. Or their wandering in a bowling alley accidentally busting Grandpa's rival as a cheat.
- The Simpsons: In "Homer Badman", while Homer is endlessly hounded by the media for alleged sexual harassment after grabbing a piece of candy that was stuck to the babysitter's butt, it can also be seen as Laser-Guided Karma; the candy wouldn't have been stuck there if Homer hadn't stolen it in the first place.
- South Park: Butters tends to unintentionally screw over Cartman with his naivety, usually when the latter is trying his hardest to screw him over. Probably the best example is in "Awesome-O" when Cartman pretends to be a robot to get shameful secrets to humilliate Butters, only to find out that Butters has a humilliating recording of Cartman pretending to be Britney Spears that he plans to use. Cartman spends the rest of the episode being dragged through absolute hell while staying in character to try to get the tape.
- SpongeBob SquarePants:
- The titular dimwitted yellow sponge and his even more dimwitted pink starfish friend were this in the beginning to their grouchy Narcissist neighbor, Squidward Tentacles, whose suffering at the hands of their stupidity and backlash at their attempts to help or have fun were supposed to be cosmic retribution for his overblown ego and Irrational Hatred of his town and everyone in it. But as the series progressed and Flanderization kicked in, SpongeBob and Patrick's antics and idiocy became overblown to the point where Squidward went from Karmic Butt-Monkey to Jerkass Woobie.
- Squidward himself becomes this to SpongeBob in "Breath of Fresh Squidward" when he gets a personality change from being electrocuted and gives SpongeBob A Taste of His Own Medicine by infuriating him with the same clingy treatment and upstaging him.
- In "Whale of a Birthday", Mr. Krabs gives SpongeBob his credit card and tells him to follow Pearl around in the mall and get her something she wants for her birthday. SpongeBob obeys him by hiring a boy band to perform at her party and buying a huge pile of presents with Mr. Krabs’ money (and it was said that hiring the boy band alone cost more than a million dollars). This is a fitting punishment for Krabs, since he had tried to spend as little money as possible on his daughter on her birthday (and every one of her past birthdays).
- In Total Drama Island's Final Three, in the episode "I Triple Dog Dare You!", Heather gets a lot of much-owed comeuppance from the eliminated contestants she bullied and manipulated, as they were asked to describe the worst dares one could be forced to do as part of the big challenge. Of course, none of them knew that Heather would get the full brunt of it as Gwen and Owen teamed up to avoid most dares. The creame de la creame is the final dare that gets Heather eliminated — it comes from Lindsey, Heather’s former Beta Bitch who Heather used and manipulated throughout the season and who Heather threw under the bus to save herself from elimination. Her dare is to let Chef shave their head. Heather kicks the electric razor away at the last minute, rejecting the dare, only for the razor to fall on her head and shave her hair off anyway, meaning she is now bald and eliminated.
- Unikitty!: Princess Unikitty gets on Master Frown's nerves even when she's trying to be nice to him and help cheer him up.
- Wander Over Yonder: Wander is so pure and believing in people that he thinks that even the Big Bad planet-enslaving Lord Hater can become good with some help. Sadly, all his attempts to befriend Lord Hater and help him open up and have fun only serve to annoy him and indirectly foil all his evil plans.
