Moral Event Horizon/Web Comics

": Uuggh! Hmph. Well, the good news is that I can now start killing and not feel in the least bit guilty. The bad news is I'm not going to feel the least bit guilty about the killing I'm about to do."
 * In Grim Tales from Down Below, Mandy . Hot damn.
 * It should also be noted that - despite the controversy - when Bleedman held a poll over whether or not to take down the page showing this crossing of the MEH, fans voted to keep it up.
 * It's been shown that
 * Though it should also be noted that Grim is The Grim Reaper and most likely is required to do such things, possibly putting his actions under Blue and Orange Morality.
 * It's debated on the forums, but Syphile from Drowtales started as a Jerkass with slight hints of Jerk with a Heart of Gold, but then she left Ariel in a room with her pet cat for a week with no provisions for the calls of nature, resulting in Fuzzy becoming very sick with Ariel unable to do anything about it. When Syphile came back and saw what had happened she blamed Ariel and took that cat away, and then when the cat bit her she slammed his head against the wall and killed him. To top it off, when Ariel was understandably upset about this Syphile beat her to make her stop crying. Earlier versions of the story had portrayed Syphile somewhat sympathetically (possibly unintentionally) but this act cemented her as a total bitch in many people's minds.
 * Quain'tana crossed it for many people at the realization that and then  on top of the many, many horrible things she's done to her other children, but those particular moments seemed particularly callous and cruel compared to the others.
 * And now we have this. Now we, as the audience, know that her paranoia and distrust of Mel is actually not unjustified since she's literally in bed with the enemy, but breaking your own daughter's arms? That's way too much. Even worse in that she originally wanted Lulianne, one of the few people Mel can call a friend, to do it, but later did the deed herself. At least attacked her with the express intent to kill, making her death more justifiable.
 * And of course the biggest and undisputed moment in the series happened in the backstory during the Nidraa'chal War, when orchestrated the entire war and the deaths and forceful demonification of hundreds if not thousands of people in order to . And while a case could be made for Well-Intentioned Extremist,  was sent even further beyond the horizon at the revelation that . It's not a matter of if it's going to catch up them as when since the plot is starting to fall down around them.
 * In Scary Go Round, former Designated Hero Rachel Dukakis-Monteforte's psychopathic jealousy of universally popular heroine Shelley Winters finally drives her to arrange Shelley's death via biker gang. The author confirms her crossing of the M.O.E. by having her sell her soul to the devil and skip town. When she returns a few years later, it's only to have a bridge dropped on her.
 * In User:Mr Death's now finished Something!, largely a retelling of Mega Man X 4 and Mega Man X 5, Double, who had been established as a villain, but had mainly been the butt of jokes, ended up crossing the line in the eyes of the comic's readership when it was revealed he was the one who sent Iris to her Plotline Death. The incident changed the outlook, in general, from "I can't wait to see the fight with him" to "Sonuvabitch needs to die."
 * Admiral Blake in Terinu. Supervising Terinu's arrest and detention in a biological research lab? Decidedly unpleasant. Arranging for his daughter Leeza to be fired from her job and forcing her into being the boy's guardian after she rescues him from said facility? Definitely not good.  The readers were howling for his blood.
 * Subverted, after a fashion, in Sluggy Freelance when Aylee has a Face Heel Turn, and attacks the Main Characters' Halloween party. She doesn't actually kill anyone, but she makes it perfectly clear that she could, taunts Riff at how helpless he was at protecting anyone, and threatens to do it for real if he meddles in her affairs again. The subversion comes when we find out
 * Played straight by Dr. Schlock when he in front of Oasis to try and get her to cooperate. And it can't be blamed on the Fate Spider either, as it is revealed by him that if  He basically went from an affable, Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain (or possibly Anti-Villain) who was always on the run to the Big Bad of the strip's Myth Arc.  just sealed the deal that he can never go back.
 * In Gunnerkrigg Court, we got an example that was more subtle than most, but still important, in the flashback to the Court's early history. Dogged Nice Guy/Stalker with a Crush Diego reacts to his vehement rejection by Jeanne by  Even after that, he still had groups of people who insisted it was just a misguided plan to play hero, that he really didn't mean it, or even that Jeanne deserved it,   After that, even the people who'd defended him wanted him dead.
 * Even after he'd pulled a heinous stunt like, Keith in Fans still had some Draco in Leather Pants status from the people who believed he was still just on his revenge kick for the mental torture Ally had put him through years ago. Then he   Any and all sympathy vanished, and the forum unanimously cheered for an asskicking at the least.
 * Said cheering grew all the louder when he followed it up by
 * "Housepets" has Pete, a recently freed griffin with supernatural powers, who recently gave a former member of PETA a Karmic Transformation into a dog. This was seen as an interesting twist, and King, as he's now called, has become a fan favorite for being complicated, adorable and pretty much the Grumpy Bear of the cast. Except that on the conclusion of the Chrismas ark, Pete informed King that  Horror ensued.
 * Xykon in The Order of the Stick zombified his grandmother and several other people, then had them kill his parents. After that, he was your basic sterotypical villain, doing evil things for no other reason than he can. He didn't really have a Moral Event Horizon, because he was a evil horror who thinks morals or even a reason for what you do is for pussies, ever since he was born. Oh, you want to know what he did at the top of the page, right? A group of paladins were standing aginst him, ready to fight to the death, and he threw a super bouncy ball with a Symbol of Insanity enscribed on it, causing them to go mad and slaughter each other. Only a few of them didn't go insane, on virtue of not seeing the ball, and the only one of them that survived was paralyzed by Xykon, so he would be forced to watch him zombify his dead friends. To give you the full quote of what Xykon said: "I tell you, Ugly, nothing's funnier than false hope. You really thought you had a chance there for a second. I mean, sure, I could've just blasted you all from above with fire and lightning and such... but I've always felt that when it's really important, it's worth it to go that extra mile. Don't you agree?"
 * Veithel of Juathuur thinks she is past that
 * Jack Noir of Homestuck has gone from Obstructive Bureaucrat right through One-Winged Angel and is currently tearing through Complete Monster territory. Listing all his atrocities would fill up a decent chunk of this page with spoiler text.
 * Fans debate quite a bit as to whether Vriska has crossed this or not. Some viewers believe that she gleefully swan-dived over the line back when  and has only gone deeper since then, and some viewers think that she can still be redeemed. Given that she's easily the most divisive character in the series, this argument is not surprising.
 * And given that the author has said outright that Vriska's status is intentional and he does it to mess with the fanbase, it's equally unsurprising that he pulled an even more confusing possible-example with her later when she : she does something awful, then immediately goes into full-on Pet the Dog mode.
 * Eridan has the distinction of crossing the Moral Event Horizon AND the Despair Event Horizon at the same moment.
 * While Doc Scratch does work for the comic's Bigger Bad, Lord English, he always acted more Affably Evil. Then we saw how he treated Aradia's ancestor, the Handmaid.  Yikes. And note that by the last point.
 * Fuzzy Knights rather plays with this a bit.  has been working on his plans for years, but thus far had remained at least a Technical Pacifist. He realizes that   will be crossing the line, and spends a strip getting completely drunk as he contemplates whether to do it or not, despite seeming completely confident when confronting his enemies later. The author's commentary included his thoughts that a lot of villains probably have times like that.
 * from Panthera when he . He was considered a Well-Intentioned Extremist, upset over the death of his wife, until then, but now....
 * In this Schlock Mercenary strip and the previous one, Petey discusses this trope with someone he prevented from crossing the line.
 * After taking a look via spy cams in Dr.Pau's facility evaluates the new information:
 * After taking a look via spy cams in Dr.Pau's facility evaluates the new information:


 * Debatably,  in Girl Genius had already crossed this by double-dealing and out-Eviling the Other, but after this it's not really a question of is she going to die, but whether death's enough.
 * Kyle in Something*Positive, here. Bad enough that he's a misandrist jerk, worse that he's cheating on a member of the cast, but what completely pushes him over the line is that he's bragging to a reforming Jerkass who would move heaven and earth to have the woman Kyle's discarding. His comeuppance delighted the bulk of the comic's notoriously Unpleasable Fanbase.
 * While the protagonists of Suicide for Hire spend a lot of time on the far side of the Moral Event Horizon, many (if not most) of their clientele also cross that line...
 * Autumn, the Stalker with a Crush who, for example.
 * Or, in the "Ty and Rosaline" arc,
 * In General Protection Fault, Ki stood by her fiance Sam even as almost certainly true rumors of him cheating on her spread. When she . When he came to apologize, she told him that she would not be able to forgive him for that, and returned his engagement ring, breaking up with him in the process.
 * Nega-Nick is already an Evil Overlord who kills underlings for their failures, but the he is revealed asa Complete Monster when he
 * Dellyn Goblinslayer from Goblins is a horrible bastard who tortures so-called "monstrous races" to get a better understanding of their biology and kill them more efficiently (at least, that's what he says, but he's a horribly sadistic monster), so he's well past that point when we meet him. However, he becomes this in the eyes of Minmax (who doesn't know about the rest of his horrific actions) when he admits to healing his "pet" Yuan-Ti after beating and raping her into negative HP. He ponders over what Dellyn says for a moment, then chucks the bastard through a window.
 * Kore is so far past the Moral Event Horizon in his FIRST APPEARANCE. He slaughters an entire bar of completely innocent orcs and what not simply for the fact they're existing. Then kills a dwarf child, who was adopted by one of the orcs, simply because he was WITH the Orcs. That's nothing compared to what he does
 * From the audience's point of view, if a character in Goblins qualifies for Complete Monster status they'll have crossed the event horizon during or shortly after their first appearance. Kore by murdering the Dwarf child in cold blood, Dellyn by carving the word 'monster' in Fumbles' head with his knife during their first torture session.
 * In Captain SNES, Mother Brain crosses this when she shoves Duke into the Omega Gate, thereby introducing permanent death into a world that had extra lives, continues, and save points.
 * Penny and Aggie: Cyndi was already a vile piece of work before, but the moment she was cemented as a Complete Monster is when Jeez.
 * Karen has done a lot of bad things before (though not nearly as much as Cyndi), but she crossed the line when she
 * Marshall was seen as a Creator's Pet by many, but still had supporters. That went out of the window when he horribly rejects Aggie by bringing up her parents (more specifically, her dead mother). It's not surprising Aggie didn't want anything to do with him after that, and he disappeared from the strip when the "Popsicle War" arc ended.
 * Sakana features this trope from both sides of the comic's Big Bad Ensemble:
 * No one really confuses Nishimura for a nice guy, but he really crosses the line by forcing Genji into a Sadistic Choice and threatening to murder him if he doesn't comply.
 * His current appearances only cement his status as the most despised character in the series, both In-Universe and out.
 * One of the remarkable things about the writing in Errant Story is that many readers were still undecided about whether Ian's actions were evil when he started trying to genocide the entire Elven race, due to what they'd done to the Half-Elves. Others thought the genocide was definitely evil, but were sympathetic to his motives and wondered if he could be brought back to his senses. Ultimately it wasn't so much any one specific bad thing Ian did that showed he was beyond recovery, but this rant as his plans unraveled.
 * In story, many of the people who know Ian consider his attempted Suicide by Cop that destroyed an entire city his Moral Event Horizon.
 * from Khaos Komix crosses it when
 * Jack has a multitude of characters who've hurled themselves across the Moral Event Horizon.
 * Drip, embodiment of the Sin of Lust, likely hurled himself across it at some point in the backstory, as we know he was a murderer and rapist in life. Then he did...this. However, his first (chronologically speaking) crossing of the MEH would have to be when the Devil takes him back in time to murder his own parents. Not that he knows who they are, but given the sheer brutality in how he murders his father and handles his mother (WARNING, VERY NSFW), it almost doesn't matter.
 * The Vorshes stuck a living, conscious woman in an oven, cooked her, and ate her the first night they met.