What Have I Become?

"What have I become? My sweetest friend ''Everyone I know goes away In the end."

- Nine Inch Nails, "Hurt"

This is the desperate cry of those who have looked in the mirror and see a broken mask. A case of post human panic at discovering they always were, or have been transformed into a creature that is less... and more, than human.

The inhuman bombshell can be of any nature, a hero can be transformed or resurrected against their will via mystical, cybernetic, or genetic means, or discover they've always been a monster... or rather: were never human.

Likely candidates for What Have I Become? are the Vampire Refugee, a genetically altered Half-Human Hybrid, and Cyborgs, though freakish Frankenstein's Monsters are also popular. This can be especially horrifying if the transformation also affects the characters mind, giving them animal instincts, removing their emotions, or giving them a thirst for blood. For extra pathos, the transformation will usually be into a creature that the character hates, usually because one killed a loved one of their's, their friends, and/or Love Interest. Now everyone can Wangst together!

If the above seems a bit glib it's because the revelation will cause a viewers reaction to oscillate between "That's harsh" and "So what?", since some settings are very helpful in providing avenues for the moral Friendly Neighborhood Vampires to thrive, while others are genuinely cruel to those so changed. That said, change is what you make of it, and most protagonists find life as a non-human... whatever doesn't have to be that bad or morally debased... unless you're already evil.

If they're Genre Savvy, they know they've gone down a notch in the Sorting Algorithm of Mortality thanks to What Measure Is a Non-Human?. Expect them to break mirrors in frustration.

Not related to My God, What Have I Done?, although the two tropes may overlap sometimes for the metaphorical value. Opposite to Transhuman Treachery. Usually precedes the Trial Balloon Question. Often followed by I Am a Monster. Well-adjusted victims may decide that I Am What I Am which, assuming that they're permanently transformed, is probably the best result. Occasionally happens after being a Sheep in Wolf's Clothing. Their friends may disagree with them, stating "But Your Wings Are Beautiful".

Anime and Manga

 * Blood+ has Saya, a Friendly Neighborhood Vampire by virtue of being raised among humans and "fed" blood intravenously. By season three, her rock solid relationship with her family is being consistently torpedoed by both friends and foes because she "isn't human" or "chiroptera and humans can not live together". When, for all intents and purposes, she, Riku and Kai are a happy family unit. Then again, outside pressure has been the end of a good many relationships.
 * By season three,  is turned into a Chevalier in extenuating circumstances by Saya. Other than the tragedy that he , everyone treats him like a ticking timebomb, and Saya thinks she was unjustified in saving him.
 * Vegeta from Dragonball Z combines this with What Have I Done after he thinks.
 * Embalming: The Another Tale of Frankenstein, by the guy who did Rurouni Kenshin and Busou Renkin. Four of the major characters in the series at large are Frankensteins Monsters. Two don't remember their human lives, and one of them doesn't even remember his original identity, but neither of them seem to care. Two do remember, but one was already unhinged before gaining freakish strength and revels in his new body. The fourth guy is the only one with What Have I Become?, and is determined to kill all Frankensteins—yet other than that, he might be the nicest of the four.
 * from Fullmetal Alchemist has a reaction like this after he uses  relaxed guard as an opening to kill him, as soon as he dies,  begins to have mental flashes back to his first life and his comrades and begins trembling uncontrollably. Admittedly, it's a little more like a What Have I Done moment.
 * The guy whose body was changed into the homunculus Greed for Greed 2 is still conscious and contributes to this process by shouting at him inside his head about right and wrong. He has a weird mind and does not feel any guilt for anything Greed does with his body, or apparently even a twinge of Body Horror.
 * from Utawarerumono goes through this
 * It's played down in the anime version of Umineko no Naku Koro ni, but Ange did have a version of this after Lambda let her know that . It's complicated. Bern met Ange and made her a deal that if she would come with Bern, she could try to save her brother from Rokkenjima. What Bern did then was, according to Lambda, . And then, thanks to Time Travel confusion, there's also the one in 1986 who is still six at the time. The point is that . So yeah.
 * Negi of Mahou Sensei Negima has a relatively minor one after his Black Magic-fueled Super-Powered Evil Side came within inches of intentionally killing an innocent bystander, and one of his students, at that. His student helps snap him out of it with "But you didn't, right?"
 * Despite people frequently changing into monsters called "Awakened Beings" in Claymore, this moment happens only once with the character Ophelia. While originally a Complete Monster with a lust for slaying said demons (Because one killed her family), Ophelia becomes obviously distraught when she discovers that she has become what she hates. She then surprisingly composes herself and pulls a Redemption Equals Death for Clare rather than give into her growing monstrous desires.
 * Puella Magi Madoka Magica: This is the driving force behind.

Comic Books
"Jinx: You could have been one of us. Cyborg: I could have been a lot of things."
 * Ben Grimm in the Ultimate Fantastic Four actually attempted suicide after his transformation, but his rock hard skin made it impossible. To date, all versions of The Thing have this to some degree... at best, they learn to live with it. The point even has a back and forth, since Reed Richards Is Useless will mean either Reed is deeply ashamed he can't find a cure, or that he hasn't devoted enough effort to do it. He is occasionally depicted as having mental blocks about being restored as well... that Reed does not see fit to reveal to him.
 * He didn't take it much better in the original comics, either. In fact, for the first few years, his transformation hadn't quite "set in", and he would randomly turn back into normal Ben Grimm for a few minutes at a time before changing back. This only added to his despair. Oh, and all his old friends abandoned him after he became the Thing.
 * Notably subverted in the origin story of Cassidy from Preacher: at first, he has no idea what he's become (a vampire), but once he's figured out the basic limitations and powers, decides it's actually really cool. When a friend later lends him a copy of Dracula, he realizes what he actually is... and figures it's even cooler. Also notable in that no one ever actually says "vampire" - neither in his origin story nor main storyline - although it's extremely obvious that's what he is.
 * It is played straight at first, though the only regret he seems to have is that he can't see his family again because of his change.
 * Teen Titans:
 * Victor Stone hated his father for saving his life by turning him into Cyborg, for many reasons, particularly because it destroyed his prospective athletic career. He'd really rather have died. He never really got over that resentment, and was suicidal for a long time, even after he joined the Titans, where his temperament made him a loose cannon and a poor team player.
 * The Teen Titans cartoon glosses over this by not discussing it at all, but Cyborg's bitterness at his... condition is occasionally hinted at, particularly in an episode where he infiltrates the HIVE Academy by posing as a human student, and begins to form friendships and a budding romance.


 * Beast Boy, in both the cartoon and the comics, has very little angst over his own transformation early in his life from blonde-hared, blue eyed Garfield Logan to green all over Garfield Logan. He even still got to be an actor, like he always wanted, even if his situation prevented him from getting any, um, "good" or "respectable" roles. Then again, his transformation happened when he was much younger than most superheroes and in his mind he has "always" been that way. He's best known for the role of the alien crewmember in a TV show which within the comic was a cheap Star Trek rip off.


 * Cliff Steele of the Doom Patrol after his brain was transplanted into a robot body by Niles Caulder, turning him into Robotman. At first, he couldn't feel any sensation at all, which nearly drove him mad. He tried to kill himself, but his body was too strong. He completely freaked out when it turned out Caulder was the one responsible for the accident that necessitated his brain transplant in the first place.
 * Every member of the Doom Patrol, really. Negative Man's body is so radioactive, it would kill anyone he came close to if he weren't covered with specially treated bandages, and his Hour of Power lasts for one minute... if he doesn't return to his body in time, he dies. Elasti-Girl's acting career was ruined when she gained her powers, as she was blacklisted as a freak, etc.
 * And yeah, Caulder's responsible for all of their Blessed with Suck (not really Blessed in any sense really) conditions too. He apparently.
 * Subverted in a 1990s Spider-Man comic after Spidey is knocked out in a fight with the Sinister Six and wakes up in a SHIELD hospital with what seems like a metallic arm in place of his normal one. He's horrified at the thought that he's become a cyborg, until the doctor who's treating his injuries comes in and explains that the metal "arm" is in fact just a highly advanced cybernetic cast that's healing the fractures of his flesh and blood arm while also protecting it from further injury. The cast is eventually destroyed in another battle with the Six, but when it falls to pieces Spider-Man's real arm is as good as new.
 * For a very, very negative version of this: Marvel Zombies..
 * In Tales of the Black Freighter, the in-universe comic book in Watchmen, a young mariner's vessel is wrecked by the Black Freighter (a literally hell-sent pirate ship) before it can return to his hometown and warn his wife and children. He ends up Marooned (also the name of that double-issue), and makes a raft out of his shipmate's gas-bloated corpses, which he had buried and then dug back up. The main character eventually gets to his hometown, only to find the Black Freighter had never come and terrorized his hometown, and that he had alienated himself from his family and friends in his (disturbing) efforts to save them from his own fabrication.
 * It's worse than that. When he first arrives,
 * Batman
 * Every fan knows the story of how Mr. Freeze is keeping his wife Nora cryogenically frozen until he can find a cure for her. When he finally succeeded and thawed Nora out by dipping her in a Lazarus Pit, she came back as a raving fire-spewing psychopath with the ability to raise the dead. Calling herself "Lazara", Nora Fries blamed her husband for what she'd become, and fled for parts unknown, Mr. Freeze in pursuit.
 * In many versions of The Joker's origin, such as The Killing Joke and the movie with Jack Nicholson, his transition into madness becomes complete after seeing his reflection.
 * In the old The Legend of Zelda comics, Link ends up taking the Triforce of Power and, with it, starts becoming corrupted by it. When Zelda finally confronts him over it, he tries to point out that he's finally gotten rid of Ganon with it. Instead, he's found out he never got rid of Ganon - he became Ganon. Link promptly freaks and tosses the Triforce of Power down a seemingly bottomless pit, the Triforce of Courage restoring him.

Film

 * Parodied in the Fantastic Four movie - Johnny attempts to incite this in Ben before he turns into a giant rock man. Afterwards, Ben does get rather close to suicide over being rejected by his fiancé. This leads to a Crowning Moment of Funny - as he mulls over his fate while sitting on a bridge, a would-be jumper comes up... and Ben talks him out of it with one sentence: "You think you got problems?"
 * Jerry Maguire: "What had I become? Just another shark in a suit?"
 * "What Have I Become?" is a theme that turns up now and then in Darkman. Not only is Darkman horribly mutilated, but the medical procedure that saved his life has the side effect of amplifying his emotions.
 * Batman: In Burton's 1989 film, the Trope is played with, when Jack first sees himself in the mirror - he moans and groans briefly, and then transforms into maniacal laughter.

Literature

 * Louis from Interview with the Vampire goes through this after Lestat turns him. Wangst City. He's is composed of this trope and distilled Wangst.
 * Alastair Reynolds - Revelation Space's
 * Derian from Jane Lindskold's Wolf Hunting. After he, he finds out that it changed him drastically.
 * In the Invasion block novels of Magic: The Gathering, the leader of the Shivan dragons, Darigaaz, becomes slowly corrupted by the other Primeval dragons, until he completely joins them in their destructive rampage. Another character eventually snaps him out of it, leading to this moment.
 * Michael doesn't take it well in the Knight and Rogue Series when he, something no intelligent human is supposed to have. His initial reaction to the discovery is quickly cast aside horror-he's in a burning building after all-but once the discovery has time to sink in he spends a few moments contemplating death over living the rest of his life as some horrid freak.
 * Lionblaze from Warrior Cats says this almost word for word in Eclipse after he . Who was also.

Live Action TV
"Adam: You… What am I? Child: You? You're a monster. Adam: I thought so…"
 * Cybermen. Realising who they are and what they have become causes them to die of shock. Or explode.
 * In the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Thine Own Self", Data (afflicted with amnesia and believing himself to be one of the locals) reacts with shock when an injury reveals circuitry under his skin.
 * The amnesia thing was done previously in the The Six Million Dollar Man episode "Stranger in Broken Fork", friendly locals and all. But with the cruel twist that Steve freaks out for (almost) nothing—he thinks he's all robot when in fact he has just three (superpowered) prosthetic limbs and an eye.
 * Poor, poor Owen Harper from Torchwood..
 * Four of the Final Five Cylons were revealed at the end of Season 3 of Battlestar Galactica. All were ardent resistance members dead set on killing every damn toaster there is. You can imagine how discovering they are what they hate has made them react, knowing that if they reveal themselves to their human friends they'll be lucky to be put in a cell and par for the course to be shoved out an airlock.
 * One of the first and most heartbreaking instances in the series is Boomer, a Cylon saboteur with a Split Personality that
 * On Heroes, both Dr. Mohinder Suresh and Peter Petrelli are going through this in Season 3. Mohinder
 * As of season 3 episode 24, Sylar's new power of in combination with his  has worsened his identity crisis by starting to drive him insane.  To say Sylar's not happy about it is to put it mildly.
 * Stargate SG-1
 * In one episode, the heroes realizing halfway through that they are robots.
 * Daniel also has a moment like this after realizing what he's done at the end of Absolute Power. This being
 * In season 4 of Buffy the Vampire Slayer an eerie example of this occurs when Adam first wakes up. Much like the Frankenstein's Monster he resembles, he cannot remember anything about his previous life. After he kills his creator and escapes the facility where he was built, the first person he meets is a small child:

Music
"Desperate, I will crawl Waiting for so long No love, there is no love Die for anyone ''What have I become"
 * Breaking Benjamin's song 'Diary of Jane' has these lyrics:

"What have I become? My sweetest friend Everyone I know Goes away in the end"
 * Reign of Kindo's song The Moments in Between says it.
 * 'Hurt,' last song of the Nine Inch Nails album "The Downward Spiral."

"Save me from the nothing I've become"
 * The Evanescence song "Bring Me to Life" contains a bit of this.

"''Damn what I’m becoming / One of them now..."
 * Averted by Disturbed with the song "Monster". It's actually about "What I Will Not Become"
 * However, if the song "Serpentine" is to be considered a continuation of this theme, that same narrator (lead singer David Draiman) is implied to have failed at this.

Tabletop Games

 * Seeing as how a central theme of their games is 'Personal Horror', White Wolf has made this moment standard with nearly every The World of Darkness game line except Hunter and Mage games (where you remain human), and Promethean: The Created (where you don't start out human). Granted, even in those games, its still quite possible if the Storyteller spins it right.
 * This is required in the Werewolf: The Forsaken game line. One day, you're bitten by a werewolf and one gruesome (and painful) transformation sequence later you realize you always had werewolf blood in you, yearning to get out. Now all those bouts of extreme rage and murderous intent throughout your life is starting to make sense.
 * In Werewolf: The Apocalypse you can start in human or wolf form, but either way you start having bizarre rages and nightmares until one day a traumatic event (such as an attack by monsters or abusive parents) causes you to burst out in your hybrid form and rip somebody (sometimes someone innocent) to bloody bits. If your werewolf relatives find you, you find out that you weren't born human (or wolf) to begin with. If they don't find you, you'll just be confused and alone until you die. Only the Metis (born of two werewolf parents) know from birth more-or-less what they are.

Video Games

 * Both  from the Baten Kaitos games have a moment like this.
 * In the original God of War Kratos says 'By the gods, what have I become?'
 * He is answered in Ghost Of Sparta by with "Death. The Destroyer of Worlds". After killing.
 * In Prince of Persia: Two Thrones, the prince asks himself this very question after discovering the Shadow Prince within himself. He also doesn't want Farah to see his sand monster form. The Dark Prince sardonically asks if he's worried she'll prefer the new him, and he rather bitterly answers, "Charred skin, glowing eyes, a melted face... what's not to like?"
 * In Target Earth/Assault Suit Leynos, Rance Culzus is forced to become a cyborg after a severe defeat to the protagonist (and after explaining that his kind, who started the war against Earth, is actually ), and when they meet again, for the last time, Rance mentions that he.
 * One fan theory for why The Witch in Left 4 Dead is always crying.
 * In the Final Fantasy VII prequel Crisis Core, Genesis becomes a villain, Angeal a Death Seeker and Sephiroth enlightened with insanity because of this. The only thing that changes with their appearance is a single black or white wing on their back (Sephiroth's wing is seen chronologically much later in the series though) which allows them to fly, and before that they were insanely powerful warriors. The genetic tinkering behind this however also causes Genesis and possibly Angeal as well to slowly degenerate. Which still kinda manages to be Cursed with Awesome (seeing how there were possible cures), although there are more subtle explanations for why they are not exactly happy about the revelation; they aren't angsting about having wings, they're angsting about what the wings are a symptom of.
 * This is the implication for The Reveal in Knights of the Old Republic with Revan taking off his/her mask in the Sith ruins after suffering severe Motive Decay.
 * In King's Quest VI, the Lord of the Dead is reminded by Alexander of how he came from a human life to an eternally damned existence. And this fazes him just enough to make him shed a single tear.  Which is still good, considering he grants Alexander his wish to resurrect Cassima's parents.
 * The ending monologue of Alex Mercer consists of him trying to figure out just what exactly he is. His conclusion is that he ultimately doesn't know.
 * Deus Ex: Human Revolution: Adam Jensen never asked for this.
 * Several cases, most notably Argilla, suffer from this in Digital Devil Saga. Though, to be fair, having a cannibalistic demon inside you who will never shut up about its Horror Hunger and will never, ever go away, along with unexplained emotion surges, would ruin anyone's day.

Web Comics
"Tedd: ...Oh dear lord, what have I become? Elliot: I dunno. Mature? Tedd: Blasphemy."
 * Played for Laughs in El Goonish Shive.


 * In this Penny Arcade, Gabe is horrified that he's become someone who would say "That's enough Minecraft for now. Go outside and play."
 * Amazing Super Powers has this. For double hilarity see Alt Text.
 * The Kingfisher: As a story about a man that becomes a vampire, this trope had to make an appearance. Jack's story is the most explicitly shown version, but Darren also expresses the sentiment in some scenes.

Web Original

 * Neopets played this for laughs in the Petpet Park plot. You come upon an adorable Cybunny with the options of: A) Become inexplicably hostile, B) Request an autograph, C) Ask, "If you were a tree, what kind of tree would you be?", or D) Bribe it with Neocash. Upon executing any of the options, the Cybunny would turn around to reveal itself to be half-robot. If you chose A, it gets a mirror out of nowhere and says, "ERROR: WHAT HAVE I BECOME?"

Western Animation
""Monster Patrick: Knock knock!" "Patrick: Huh? A Knock Knock Joke! Who's there?" "Monster Patrick: You!" Monster Patrick & Patrick: I don't get it. Monster Patrick: I`m you, and you`re me."
 * Satirized in an episode of SpongeBob SquarePants. In the episode Rule Of Dumb Patrick becomes king of Bikini Bottom after finding out he is descended from royalty. He later abuses his power. In one scene he looks in the mirror and sees that he's becoming a monster. The scene has this following exchange:


 * Silverbolt in Beast Machines utters this phrase upon being reformatted from a Vehicon. Technorganicness is hard to handle.
 * Generation 1 gets in on it when Spike has to be temporarily transferred from his human body to a robotic spare that was made up for this purpose. Did NOT help that Frankenstein was on the TV that day. Oh, and the robot body having issues with sanity.
 * In one Gargoyles episode, Genius Cripple Halcyon Renard can't bear with his condition any longer and financially supports a ruthless criminal so that he can steal a magical Golem for him. After Renard uses a ritual to transfer his soul into the Golem he quickly goes mad with power and the ability to walk and feel again. Goliath then asks Renard if he was really willing to trade away everything good about him—his honor and integrity—for a lump of clay. Renard then utters the trope verbatim, returns to his human body, and gives the Golem back to its owner. He thanks Goliath at the end, telling him that he had saved his soul if not his life.
 * Fluttershy in the My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic episode Putting Your Hoof Down.
 * Essentially, she wants to become less of a doormat so she takes lessons on assertiveness. It works all too well to the point where Fluttershy sees herself as a menace to her friends, prompting her to lock herself in her own home. This leads to extremely effective animation and a Darker and Edgier moment when Fluttershy looks in the mirror and sees herself with devil horns.
 * This is played for laughs in a third-season episode of the Netflix Carmen Sandiego series, the episode starting with Countess Cleo lamenting, "What have we become? How could we have turned so decadent?" Then the screen zooms out, showing that she and the other heads of V.I.L.E. are simply finishing the leftover Halloween candy.