Villains Never Lie

"A truth that's told with bad intent beats all the lies you can invent."

- William Blake

Would I lie?

When a villain declares that the hero is the Tomato in the Mirror, or that his mentor is using him, or that his girlfriend doesn't love him, or that his long-lost father is actually the villain himself, the hero often believes it, instead of just assuming that the villain is trying to screw with him. Even if the hero does assume that, the doubts in the back of his mind start to gnaw.

Also, the villain is usually telling the truth, or something that is "technically" true, for certain values of "true", anyway—there are only a few cases where the villain just makes something up for giggles. This is why the Hannibal Lecture works.

This can often leave you wondering why the hero is suddenly carrying the Idiot Ball and believing the villain rather than his trusted companion. Or even believing anything the villain would say without having 50 sworn trustworthy witnesses to back it up.

As an alternative, sometimes the statement is actually true, but only by failing to take into account the personalities and feelings of others. As an example, perhaps the hero is told in, an effort to convert him to the villain's side, that they are in fact the Tomato in the Mirror (which given the nature of the story is actually true), and that their girlfriend will never love them (which is not true, since the girlfriend in question has already found out about his status as a Tomato in the Mirror, and perhaps for any other person this would be true, but the girlfriend loves this about him ). Expect this character to be strung along for quite a few episodes before they find out this latter part.

When a hero believes the villain will keep his word and the villain does not, expect an exchange along the lines of "You Said You Would Let Them Go!" "I Lied". Frequently, they'll Trash Talk the hero over being such a Horrible Judge of Character as to actually believe their lies in the first place. Is a subtrope of Fiction Never Lies.

Media in General

 * The Fair Folk occasionally show up as (sort of) villains in a work, and are trusted to be telling the truth since they Can Not Tell a Lie. They can however tell creative truths and twist meanings of words to suit their purposes. See The Dresden Files, below. Djinn (genies) are like this except they twist the words of wishes so you always regret them.

Anime and Manga

 * The Butcher Serial Killer Barry the Chopper in Fullmetal Alchemist is one of the rare "making it up for the giggles" examples: He uses an entirely improvised Hannibal Lecture on Al, and Al falls for it in all three versions of the story. Justified in the first anime, where Alphonse is shown to be questioning his existence for several episodes beforehand, and Barry just happened to get lucky with the subject matter. In the manga, however, it is not foreshadowed, and it leads to an outright Out-of-Character Moment for Alphonse. He doesn't dwell on it for as long as his anime counterpart, however.
 * Actually, Barry isn't technically lying to Al. He isn't saying that Ed created Al from scratch, just bringing up the possibility, and is brushing aside all of Al's objections be insisting "How can you be sure?".
 * Played straight with Greed, who insists that his policy is to never tell a lie. Later, he utters his "first and last" lie.
 * Kimblee (in the manga, anyway). He wears many masks to conceal his psychopathy, but he never tells a direct untruth. For example, when he is talking to Winry, he tells her about finding her parents bodies, and says that he admired their efforts and would have liked to meet them when they were alive. Sure, he was trying to make sure that she would trust him, but every word he said to her was genuinely true.
 * It goes along with his Orange and Blue Morality. He has his own set of rules, and respects others who stick to their morals, whatever they are. It's why he respects Major Armstrong for, and.
 * Gilbert Durandal in Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny, where he says he has a plan to bring ultimate peace and unity to the universe, ridding of war.
 * Not quite. His endgame is.
 * Ohgi, for the record, implicitly trusting the word of the enemy commander and who commissioned the weapon that  and is aiming another at your flagship while he speaks to you and a woman who tried to kill you twice and makes no secret of her loyalty to the enemy is not the brightest move in the entire world.
 * Of course,
 * Actually,
 * Suzaku tried to warn Lelouch about that, so even that wasn't a complete lie. Of course, it's not certain whether Schneizel knew what Suzaku said...
 * Of course, Lelouch didn't believe what Suzaku was saying because of the sabotaged meeting between the two.
 * Actually, Schneizel did know what was said, since the conversation was saved onto the Lancelot's communications log, he even offers to let the Black Knights hear it, but nothing comes of it.
 * While Lelouch is skeptical of  claims of doing things that he believes is best for the world and Lelouch himself, he quickly starts to believe him, not even bringing up the thought of . Either way, Lelouch kills him.
 * Another example is Lelouch promise to Rolo. At this point, Lelouch states that he won't lie to him. Which is false reassurance for two reasons: first, Lelouch may love Rolo so much that he won't lie to him… except that the fact that he loves Rolo at all may be a lie. Second, Lelouch always lies to people he loves. Rolo, how could he forbid himself to lie to his fake brother when he lied so much to Nunnaly in R1? (yes, he states than he can't lie to Nunnally during the "new governor" phone call… but actually, in R1 he pretended that everything was fine at Euphemia's SAZ opening ceremony).
 * Hey Sasuke, guess what?
 * At least with that one he checks his facts when he could. Granted, this was about 75 chapters later and he'd gone under the assumption Tobi was telling the truth for all that time.
 * One of Madara's claims is later proven false-
 * Orochimaru actually inverts this trope. When he goes to Tsunade for help and she asks him about his arms, he openly admits to killing the Sandaime Hokage, even though it would hurt his chances of her helping him.
 * He also openly admits he wants to destroy the Leaf Village, but appears to decide to spare it when Tsunade asks him to as a condition for healing his arms. However, when Tsunade's treachery becomes apparent to him, he admits he was lying.
 * Played with in Kara no Kyoukai. When
 * Subverted in Bleach. Aizen makes a series of incredibly unlikely claims  and Ichigo immediately calls him on his bullshit.
 * Only partially subverted. Ichigo points out that Aizen said the exact opposite way back when they first met. Aizen's response?
 * Ubik always tells the truth. Unfortunately, the truth is always pretty damn depressing. That's why he does so well with his Hannibal Lecture.
 * This would be why Maka fell for Medusa's emotional blackmail in the Baba Yaga arc of Soul Eater when she hears that, apparently, the witch is a mother who would do anything to protect her child. She wouldn't have even needed to explicitly mention Spirit, but does so simply to drive the point home. It works like a charm, and isn't the first or last time Maka's caught out by something of the sort.
 * Kyubey, of Puella Magi Madoka Magica, rarely tells the whole truth, but never in the series actually says something that's untrue. It's very good at twisting what it says to get the desired result, though. For example, when asked if, it replies "Nobody has ever done it before." Well, this is true, because such a task is impossible.
 * Aren't its Exact Words "I wouldn't be surprised if you could do it"? Which deliberately leads on the girls to think it's feasible, when the statement is only true because Kyubey is incapable of emotions, including surprise.

Comic Books

 * Subverted in the Sleepwalker comics published by Marvel in the 1990s with Big Bad Cobweb and Rick Sheridan. Cobweb blatantly lies about Sleepwalker's true nature to Rick, as part of his Evil Plan to invade Earth and frame Sleepwalker as leader of the invasion. To his credit, Rick doesn't believe him until Cobweb "proves" his claims by showing how Sleepwalker supposedly killed him, distorting the truth of what really happened.
 * Averted with Black Beetle, who tells several different stories about who he is, before declaring himself to be Jaime's future self. And although he sticks to that story with much more force than his previous ones, by this point Jaime doesn't believe him.
 * Note that in a Bad Future where the Teen Titans were turned evil by Lux Luthor he came back to kill Jaime, because no matter what to the timeline he did he couldn't make him go bad.
 * The title character of Lucifer considers lying beneath him, but he's not above letting people hear what they want to hear. Being an Anti-Hero in his own comic, he's not exactly evil, just kind of a bastard.
 * Indeed, it's mentioned that his chief vice is pride, and he is far too proud to ever lie, break an oath, or leave a debt unpaid.
 * Many Marvel heroes and Villains have no problem believing what Loki says, even though he once called himself the God of Lies.
 * The Joker can be in the top of Complete Monster, but he never lies to get out of punishment—he'll lie to throw someone off balance, or as part of a Gambit Roulette, or just because he finds it's funny, but he never denies his crimes in court or when Batman confronts him with them.
 * In Marvel Star Wars, there's an arc after The Empire Strikes Back where Luke's targeting computer goes offline and he uses the Force to sight on and vape someone - only to find later that it was his wing guard and Love Interest Shira Brie. Shira was important enough to the Rebellion that he was immediately ostracized. While Luke was having a crisis of faith in the Force, Vader contacted him and told him that Shira was The Mole, operating at Vader's command. No one would believe Luke if he told his friends - the only one he could go to in all the galaxy, now, was Vader. Luke had found evidence that Shira had been making up her tragic past before, but he didn't believe Vader until he'd infiltrated a data storage facility and saw the evidence himself.
 * Inverted in the french comic book Les Légendaires, where the Evil Sorcerer Darkhell, after betraying his allie General Rasga, mockingly reveals to him that Ironically, Rasga is reluctant to believe it, when it turns out Darkhell is actually saying the truth
 * Discussed by Madrox in X Factor, who trusts villains more than his friends, because they're usually too arrogant to hide malicious intent.

Fan Works

 * Lampshaded in Naruto Veangance Revelaitons, when Ronan says "I KEW HE WAST LYING BECAUSE HE WAS EVIL" in reference to Orochimaru saying he'll kill Ronan and his team. Subverted with the Council; Ronan asks them if is actually poison, and they test it on themselves to show that it isn't. Ronan administers the antidote, then finds out that.
 * In a fanfic which pitted Sailor Moon against Doctor Doom (yes, really), Doom reveals to Amy about how the other girls think about her. When Amy denies this and calls Doom a liar, Doom responds with this trope.

Film
"Leonardo: I've only got one thought - this guy knows where Splinter is! Shredder: Ah, the rat. So it has a name... it had a name. Leonardo: You lie! Shredder: (chuckles) Do I? Leonardo then attacks Shredder in rage over the knowledge that he may have killed his 'father'."
 * In Memento,  We don't know if Ted is a villain, or whether he says the truth or not, but this is the second-to-last scene (or is it the second scene?), so we tend to believe him.
 * It doesn't help that Leonard
 * Not to mention the whole
 * In The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, Frodo believes Gollum rather than Samwise when Gollum claims that Samwise ate their food and tried to kill him. That one was one of the few non-problematic examples because we know that The Ring was messing with Frodo's head, so it is Justified.
 * This is still a problem for anyone who's read the book, however—there was never any significant conflict between Sam and Frodo over Gollum, and both were quite well aware of his potential for treachery.
 * Not only does the fact the ring is messing with Frodo justify it, but the fact that it was the same piece of advice that saw him trying to separate from the fellowship, even Galadriel. As you can plainly see in Cirith Ungol, there actually was some real danger that Sam's offer to take the ring to help Frodo would end in Sam's corruption, this was even more emphasized in the book. He just told him the same thing he said on the boat, except more under the influence of the ring.
 * Except that in the book Galadriel explicitly refuses to give such an advice when Frodo requests it, telling that he must find his own answers. And Frodo shows his corruption in a different way in the book: he threatens Gollum with the Ring's power, making it clear that he considers himself now its rightful owner, not just a bearer. This in turn was omitted, since for some reason Jackson decided to cut Gollum's sympathetic depiction out halfway through.
 * No. I am your father. Again, actually true. Justified by the Force—Luke initially doesn't believe Vader leading Vader to say "You know it to be true," and Luke still remains skeptical enough to ask Yoda point-blank in the next movie to confirm it.
 * Count Dooku tells Obi-Wan that the Senate is controlled by a Sith Lord named Darth Sidious. Yoda and Mace Windu say they're reluctant to believe this. Then Windu is shocked to learn that Palpatine is the second Sith in Revenge of the Sith.
 * To their credit, Dooku did lie more than once in that same conversation.
 * This is explored further in the novelization of Revenge of the Sith, where the Jedi have realized Dooku was telling the truth, but underestimated the degree to which he was -They believed that Palpatine was being controlled by Sidious, who they suspected was one of his guards or advisers, rather than Palpatine himself being Sidious. They actually toy with the (completely correct) idea that "Hey, maybe Palpatine is the Sith Lord," but the idea is very quickly shot down because Palpatine "for all intents and purposes...rules the galaxy already."
 * And Palpatine himself is the absolute master of this trope. He tells a selective interpretation of the truth to everyone to manipulate them into doing what he wants while omitting other parts of the truth that would have revealed the events for what they truly are.
 * Wanted: Sloan tells the Fraternity that they've all been tapped to die. Even though it's been revealed he has been manipulating the Prophecy Machine for some time now, it's never even implied that he's lying about this. Sloan is certainly in a more trustworthy position, though.
 * In the movie of The Golden Compass, Mrs. Coulter is the one to tell Lyra who her parents are.
 * The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie contained this memorable exchange:


 * The best part? Shredder isn't lying; he ordered the Foot to kill Splinter as he left for this confrontation, and he didn't know someone else had saved Splinter in his absence.
 * In The 6th Day, the villain tells Adam Gibson, and Adam just laughs him off, until the villain gives his proof.
 * Seen in the 80's classic Back to School when Jerk Jock Chas tells Jason that his father bribed the coach to give him a spot on the diving team, Jason believes him right away and chews out his old man for it. His dad Thornton calls him out for that, but in all fairness, up to that point it did seem like something Thornton might do. He did, after all, cut the school a huge check to enroll in the first place and was using his hired staff to do his homework for him.
 * In Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl, Barbossa tells the truth, even when negotiating.
 * Sweeney Todd has this trope.
 * None of the machine characters in The Matrix ever lie, and it's somewhat implied that they can't. Even Smith's initial conversation with Neo is totally truthful, to the point that Smith admits to Neo that he is actually living two separate lives, with one "lived in computers".
 * Might not be lies, but the conclusions and extrapolations of many machine antagonists are, ah... questionable.
 * Jigsaw, the titular villain of the Saw franchise always told his victims clearly and specifically how they could escape death without using falsehood, distortion or even metaphor. If he told one of them to dig deep inside themselves to find the key that unlocked the deathtrap that would kill them, he actually meant that he surgically implanted the key inside their bodies and intended for them to painfully tear said key out.

Literature

 * This is one of John Taylor's favorite expressions: "The Devil always lies, except when the truth will hurt you more."
 * Sometimes justified in The Dresden Files, when dealing with either the denizens of Faerie or certain other supernaturals who have made promises. Faeries can't lie and most supernaturals invest a lot in their promises and will not break them lightly. Of course, that only binds them to the word of their agreements; a faerie who promises it will "protect you from danger to your life" may break your back and both your legs and dump you in a hospital to keep you from being in actual danger of death.
 * Dresden is quick to learn that the Order of the Blackened Denarius will always lie, and thus is extremely wary about trusting anything they say. Harry's experiences have actually made him pretty good at never taking what villains tell him at face value.
 * Unless the villain happens to be a vulnerable woman. That tends to skew his rationality, a flaw he fully acknowledges.
 * X Wing Series. The Director of Imperial Intelligence, Ysanne Isard, averts this.  falls into her clutches believing that Tycho was her agent and had betrayed him. Isard never actually tells her victim that this is so, but several times she seems to confirm his belief. Really Tycho was innocent, but   doesn't learn this until he finds out during his escape. Telling him that he'd gotten an innocent man put on trial for his own murder, and Tycho was quite likely to be declared guilty and executed, would have given   massive guilt, but Isard wanted to use his anger.
 * Lord Foul the Despiser, in the Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, never lies. He doesn't see it as necessary to achieve his goals, and he's been right so far.
 * In Twilight, Bella completely believes James when he tells her that he's holding her mom captive.
 * In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Harry assumes that the vision he has of Voldemort torturing Sirius (which is basically him seeing what Voldemort is seeing) is actually happening, despite the fact that he had been warned by Snape that Voldemort knew about their mental bond and might feed him fake images. . In Deathly Hallows, Pansy Parkinson is one of very few who actually believe Voldemort when he says that he won't hurt anyone if they hand over Harry. Fortunately, no one else listens to her and have her taken from the school grounds.
 * Harry does try to contact Sirius on the floor first, and is told by Kreacher (who was lying) that Sirius has gone to the Department of Mysteries.
 * This is a key element of deals with the devil. In Goethe's Faust, Mephistopheles surprises the doctor by telling him that hell has laws and that, therefore, he can be trusted to hold up his end of the bargain. The quintessential feature of such a deal is that the devil figure either twists the terms of the agreement to subvert their intended effect or brings about some change that renders the benefit he confers undesirable—not that he breaks the agreement outright. Without this trope—played straight, mind you—this effect couldn't be achieved.
 * In their confrontation at the end of Stephen King's The Gunslinger, the man in black makes the following proclamation to the eponymous hero: "Only enemies speak the truth; friends and lovers lie endlessly, caught in the web of duty."
 * Rimmer Dall, the Big Bad from The Heritage of Shannara series is a masterful user of this,
 * The Hunger Games: Katniss may see President Snow for the horrible power-hungry monster he is, but she does take him at his word when he says that he will never lie to her..

Live-Action TV
"Oh, and by the way - I only have one kidney. Guess who has the other?"
 * Ben Linus from Lost is pretty much always lying, but the other characters pretty much always believe him, even if they say they know what he's up to. On several occasions he's admitted that past statements were "not entirely truthful".
 * Michael Emerson's excellent performance makes this much easier to suspend disbelief about.
 * Except Keamy, who called Ben's bluff about not actually caring about Alex. That one kinda backfired.
 * The Man in Black also used this tactic to try and get Richard to kill Jacob.
 * One episode of The X-Files has Mulder rather unbelievably instantly trusting someone he's never met before about some new information on the alien conspiracy. Scully even calls him on it: "What happened to 'trust no one?'" Mulder replies "I changed it to 'trust everyone.' Didn't I tell you?" This attempt at a Lampshade Hanging falls rather limp since it does nothing but make it even more explicit that Mulder is utterly out of character in the scene, and we don't even get any reason for it like mind control, as some other episodes do.
 * In the Italian fiction The Black Arrow, Designated Heroine and Faux Action Girl Giovanna constantly fell for this trope. Every single time. Needless to say, she became The Scrappy very quickly.
 * Demons in Supernatural often lie, but whenever they say something you really don't want to believe, they're telling the truth. Cue the following repeated conversation: "Was X true?" "Demons lie." (A sure sign that X actually is true.)
 * Lucifer states that "Contrary to popular belief, I don't lie. I don't need to."
 * In Who Wants to Be a Superhero?, one challenge centered around a note left by Dr. Dark, which implied that one of the heroes was actually a spy. The heroes all then began wondering who it was and discussing which amongst them was the most suspicious. Only Hygenia was smart enough to consider that Dr. Dark was just lying.
 * Not exactly a villain example: When Frasier is supposed to be on a date with a model, he winds up minding her daughter while she does a shoot. He eventually strikes up a conversation with the daughter, who tells him about how shallow and neglectful her mother is. When the woman returns and tries to resume the date, Frasier confronts the woman over her supposed behavior, which prompts her to ask if Frasier ever considered that the angry twelve year-old might have been lying.


 * Although it's only mentioned in an episode commentary, Holtz in Angel didn't lie, manipulative as he was. He considered himself to be on the side of right, after all.
 * Averted in the new Nikita series. Percy, the Big Bad, attempts to manipulate his way out of danger (for about the tenth time) by telling Nikita that Michael knew that her fiance was about to be killed by them, and telling Michael that something happened between Nikita and Owen that she's not telling him about - neither of which is actually true, as far as the viewer knows at least. They hesitate for about a second, doubting each other, and then flip right back into kill-the-psycho mode. His accusations have so far not been brought up by them again.
 * An interesting case is Morgause from Merlin, who convinces Prince Arthur to visit her home so that she can conjure up the spirit of his dead mother. On meeting the late Queen Igraine, Arthur learns the truth about the circumstances of his birth: that his father Uther made a deal with a sorceress to help them concieve, which resulted in Igraine's death thanks to the nature of the spell. This enrages Arthur so much that he races home to Camelot and almost kills his father, only for Merlin to talk him out of it by suggesting to him that Morgause had made the whole thing up and that the spirit of Igraine wasn't real. The twist is that although Morgause could have conjured up a fake Igraine (the show is never clear), the audience knows (thanks to conversations betwen Uther/Gaius) that everything Igraine told Arthur about his birth was in fact completely true.

Religion

 * In The Bible:
 * The serpent (who may or may not be Satan) tells Eve that eating of the forbidden fruit won't lead to her death like God said it would, and she believes him, making this the Ur Example. It's also a Half Truth: It's true that the fruit gives humans the ability to decide for themselves what is good and evil (rather than relying on God), like the serpent says. Your Mileage May Vary on whether or not God's warning was a Half Truth because eating it did not kill them immediately (although, God never said when or how they would die) and God had to remove them from the garden so they could not eat from the one fruit that could apparently restore their immortality.
 * There is also a case of a heroic use of this alongside From a Certain Point of View: King David has Hushai spy on Absalom by becoming his adviser. He even says "As I have served in thy father's presence, so will I be in thy presence."

Videogames

 * This is Terumi's schtick in BlazBlue. What better way to Mind Rape somebody than reveal truths such as "their rightful place in the world was stolen away by someone who only exists because of causality-interference effects screwing with the time loops", or that "they're really just a failed version of an Eldritch Abomination" which in turn is a failed version of a Person of Mass Destruction"? He does conveniently forget to neglect certain details, however, but he never technically fibs and pretty much confesses without any provocation that he gave Ragna his Dark and Troubled Past For the Evulz.
 * There is one incident Terumi was forced to lie, however - if he was honest in any capacity, his plans could have been compromised. In Decision, he makes a move on Makoto, only to get subsequently parried by Jin, and when he states that his actions were for disciplinary purposes, (which, From a Certain Point of View still could be considered a truth from Hazama's perspective,) Jin refuses to buy it.
 * In Knights of the Old Republic, a dying Admiral Karath whispers the game's major plot twist to Carth in hopes of shaking him up a little. Carth, naturally, immediately turns to Bastila and yells, "You knew! You and the whole damned Jedi Council!" Bastila actually confirms it as soon as he says this, though, so he was actually right to be mistrustful - and the circumstances leading to said revelation already heavily foreshadowed this to the player. And depending on how you answer an inquiry a little further on, you can confirm the same truth as well.
 * In Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords, meanwhile, tells the PC all sorts of things. Some of them are true. Some of them are not. Have fun figuring out which is which.
 * Final Fantasy VII's legendary Mind Screw was initiated by one of these. Cloud actually does insist that Sephiroth is lying when he says Cloud isn't who he thinks he is, but since, the doubts eventually overcome him.
 * In the Street Fighter series, one of Bison's character traits is that he does not lie, ever - unless you count Cammy's ending in "Super Street Fighter II", which was a mistranslation on the part of Capcom.
 * The Affably Evil Ur-Quan Kzer-Za in Star Control 2 never lie about their intentions and always do what they say they will. They believe that lying is for the weak, ""
 * In Jade Empire, Grand Inquisitor Jia helpfully informs you that . God forbid the leader of the evil Secret Police force would let you get the wrong idea, after all.
 * In Fate Stay Night, Kirei Kotomine will never lie to you. Even when you have an Enemy Mine situation he tells you flatly that you can't trust him because as soon as they're done he's going to go back to trying to kill you again. He won't tell you anything past what you ask except to mess with the protagonist though, unless he needs you to do something.
 * The Black Knight in Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance told Ike the truth about his armor and how to penetrate it, and Ike believed him. Somewhat of an inversion, in that the Black Knight was actually telling the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth in that instance.
 * He does this because he likes to have interesting fights. Invincible armor takes the thrill away...
 * Averted in Batman: Arkham Asylum. The Oracle tells Batman that the Joker has claimed to have set up bombs in Gotham and will detonate them if anyone comes to Arkham. Batman immediately declares, "he's lying." Turns out he has planted something around Gotham, but instead of explosives it's.
 * . My God.
 * In order to get the party to trust her, from Skies of Arcadia spills a sob-story about losing her father in a previous war and growing up an orphan. Every word she tells them is completely true, she just fails to mention
 * In Silent Hill, a lot of the vital information concerning what the hell is going on is given to the player character by people who are less than inclined to be honest with you:
 * In Silent Hill 1 Harry gets played for an Unwitting Pawn by Dahlia the whole game, and he believes her until the point where Dahlia reveals that.
 * Silent Hill 3 gives us this terrible, awful question from Vincent: "Monsters? They look like monsters to you?" When Heather reacts with horror, he claims that he was kidding, but DAMN.
 * The Reveal in Silent Hill Homecoming -  was given through his father. Even on this very wiki, the debate continues.
 * In The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass, a strange-looking girl tells him that she and her sisters are all being held captive on the Ghost Ship and of course they don't know where Tetra is, but could he please rescue them all? Of course most players are probably suspicious of this all from the start, but gameplay insists.
 * The Dangerously Genre Savvy Emperor Doviculus from Brutal Legend abuses this trope by throwing accusations at the heroes that eventually cause them to chase away, who then becomes the penultimate boss. Doviculus' magnificency shines brightest when you realize that neither he, nor the heroes knew the truth at that point , yet he still managed to convince the heroes that one of them is a spy for the demons.
 * Legacy of Kain. Kain is a class V Anti-Hero / Villain Protagonist who never lies. Unfortunately, the people he doesn't lie to almost always assume he's lying, to disastrous results.
 * Army of Two. As The 40th Day draws to a close, Salem and Rios have Jonah cornered; Jonah promptly tells them he's sitting on a nuke that will wipe out half the city if it goes off, but, keeping with the social-experiment theme of his actions, he'll disarm it if Salem or Rios kills the other instead of him.
 * in Neverwinter Nights 2: Mask of the Betrayer when talking to . The main character can even lampshade it. The trope is subverted in your own case, however:
 * Some in the Mass Effect fandom have taken this approach where is concerned. After   claims that her mother was "tyrannical" and "a monster" and deserved to die, along with the statement that she'll never pose Shepard any threat, and for some reason, a few people have taken this and a few other of her lies at face value.
 * In the ending of Mass Effect 3, the . Also   Several Bioware tweets hint that it is lying about many things.
 * Umineko no Naku Koro ni features the red text. Anything said with it is always true. The red text can only be used by the witches, or anyone granted the power to speak the red truth. Naturally, the ones to use it are the witches trying to force Battler to surrender and accept them.
 * In Dark Souls Lautrec of Carim is a very shifty, amoral fellow with goals that don't quite match with yours, but he remains completely on the level with the player.
 * Umineko no Naku Koro ni features the red text. Anything said with it is always true. The red text can only be used by the witches, or anyone granted the power to speak the red truth. Naturally, the ones to use it are the witches trying to force Battler to surrender and accept them.
 * In Dark Souls Lautrec of Carim is a very shifty, amoral fellow with goals that don't quite match with yours, but he remains completely on the level with the player.

Webcomics
"S u c k e r s."
 * In Order of the Stick, during the "Soul Splice" story arc, Vaarsuvius makes a Deal with the Devil with a trio of archfiends, who offer V vast amounts of power in order to save his/her family from a vengeful dragon, in exchange for temporary custody of his/her soul, based on the amount of time he/she chooses to retain the power. The fiends in question are being completely fair and honest, even going so far as to point out that there is an alternative - although this would require V to admit that he/she had failed. Although the soul splice doesn't actually turn Varsuvius evil, black cloak and glowing eyes nonwithstanding, absolute power still corrupts...
 * Also played with in that same story arc. The fiends tell Vaarsuvius "You may be experiencing some slight feedback. You know, alignment-wise", and "Do not let them influence your actions! YOU are the one in control!" The last sentence of that is entirely true. The other three are half-true at best.
 * Also subverted in an unexpected way:
 * Doc Scratch from Homestuck never lies. Interestingly, as he is an omniscient being, he is also never wrong. Everything he says, when taken purely at face value, is completely factual. He chooses not to lie because he considers it beneath him. And you have to admit that, if you could tell your opponent what your moves will be and still win the game, you'd do it too.
 * However, he claims that "lying by omission" is a false concept (read:he does it all the time because he doesn't consider it lying) and is the undisputed master of Exact Words; he manages to con the heroes into believing . All without telling a single lie.

Western Animation

 * Kim Possible: In "Hidden Talent", after a "recover the stolen MacGuffin" mission, Kim wonders why Professor Dementor insisted that the device was his own invention. Ron just assumes that Dementor is lying.
 * In "Rappin' Drakken", Drakken's plan to Take Over the World with brainwashing shampoo failed because the label told people what the stuff did. Drakken may be a villain, but he's not a corporate shyster.
 * Avatar: The Last Airbender. For some reason, Zuko believed Azula when she offered him the chance to join her to take over Ba-Sing-Se. This is despite his trustworthy uncle berating him for this, and she having explicitly betrayed him on the first episode of the season.
 * AND despite his childhood litany to himself - "Azula always lies."
 * In Zuko's defense, said trustworthy uncle was trapped in crystal and he was surrounded by Azula and Dai Li agents. If he refused, they'd probably just kill him.
 * It's a subversion though because Azula isn't lying this time. She was completely serious about letting Zuko return to the Fire Nation and share the credit for conquering Ba-Sing-Se. Azula was manipulating Zuko, but for once she wasn't lying to him.
 * The subversion part is explained in the first episode of the third season. If in fact the Avatar survives Ba-Sing-Se she needed a fall guy, and may have had a subsequent 'fall guy' plan that was a crapshoot and she might need him for later. His father WAS pleased to see him; though it seems, judging by the flashback, only for his knowledge of Earth Kingdom customs and ethics.
 * Zuko actually hesitates when the offer is made, and Azula leaves him to think it over. It's only when Zuko sees that she actually does need his help that he joins in (and for her to have turned on him after that would have probably discredited her to the more valuable Dai Li). That, and having the first genuine opportunity to fulfill your obsession for the past three years can be kind of hard to turn down...
 * Princess Ursa's  relies on the assumption that Azula and Ozai were telling the truth about  . Keep in mind, Azula and Ozai are the only sources of what went on during that meeting, and both have been proven to be less than honest.
 * So little is known about the exactly what happened that night that it's hard to say whether Ursa counts, she could well have confronted Azulon about the issue directly after hearing of it. Zuko might count for believing Azula, but his belief is certainly influenced by his mother seeming to confirm it.
 * Captain Planet and the Planeteers. An often parodied weakness of the show is that the supporting cast always seem to fall for the villains' deceptions, despite their conspicuous names and menacing appearances.
 * Subverted in Buzz Lightyear of Star Command. In a climactic fight with Evil Emperor Zurg (complete with glowing metal rods, just to drive the parody home to the viewers), Zurg tells Buzz that he is Buzz's father, complete with Buzz's Big No response. Zurg then continues the fight after he reveals that the previous reveal was a sham to catch Buzz off guard.
 * This was a recycled gag from Toy Story 2, only the end result is different. There's the same Luke, I Am Your Father, the same Big No, but then the next scene shows them playing a nice father-son game of catch. Then again, they're supposed to be toys acting the part of their "namesake" characters. The cartoon series is a Defictionalization of the movies, so the toys might have taken the idea "from the cartoon" and ran with it.
 * In one episode of Justice League, Superman (or at least the Superman of an alternate universe) storms the White House to save the world from President Lex Luthor. Cornered and with nowhere to run, Luthor goes hysterical and points out that Superman could have stopped his evil plans—permanently—if he had had the guts to do it. He then declares that Superman's unwillingness to kill or maim effectively makes Superman his accomplice. And even though the audience knows better, Superman apparently is gullible enough to believe Lex and proceeds to fry him with his heat vision. Taking this "lesson" to heart he then goes off to give all of Earth's supervillains a similar treatment and turns the world into a superhero-run police state.
 * The death of that universe's Flash at Luthor's hands probably played a larger role in shifting Superman and the League's beliefs than Luthor's accusations. Superman mowed through the Secret Service already at that point in order to get at Luthor, he seemed to be planning on crossing the line when he showed up.
 * In a second-season episode of Harley Quinn's the Riddler takes over Gotham University and is forcing students (and eventually Harley, Ivy, and Clayface) to run on giant hamster wheels to power a generator that provides electricity to the college. Eventually Barbara Gordon shows up and helps them take the Riddler down. Harley and Ivy assure Babs that they'll drop Riddler off at Arkham (where he obviously belongs after pulling such a stunt), and she believes them. In truth, seeing as Harley and her gang have only slightly more of a moral code than Nygma does, they drag him to their own headquarters and  subject him to the same torture to give them power.  And he's actually upset they didn't keep their word...