Video Game Cruelty Potential



""I know I'm supposed to be all 'the one', but I have too much fun killing everyone.""

- "Indiscriminate Murder Is Counter-productive" by Machinae Supremacy

This is the potential a video game has for the player to do awful, horrible things to enemies or even friendly and neutral NPCs.

It can be knee shots causing screaming, telekinesis to literally play catch with guards, punching out scientists, or many, many other things. Something Awful has dubbed two specific variations of video game cruelty as Asshole Physics and Asshole AI.

Some games specifically cater to this; these often skip out on a Karma Meter. This can also be the carrot along the path to The Dark Side for players in a game with a Karma Meter.

The severity of this trope varies. Some games only let you be cruel to your enemies and give harmless NPCs immunity. (Harmless enemies will still be fair game.) Other games let you torment random NPCs you meet along the way. Still other games give you absolute, unchecked control over your subjects.

This trope is often used for laughs. Remember, though: Just because a game lets you do something doesn't necessarily mean you should do it.

Contrast Video Game Caring Potential -- though sometimes helping your little drones means doing horrible things to their enemies... Contrast also Video Game Cruelty Punishment, where cruel acts in video games bring consequences.

For examples where someone takes joy in being a dick to other players, see Griefer.

See also What the Hell, Player? and Video Game Perversity Potential.

One of the Acceptable Breaks From Reality. You may laugh at video games, but if someone did this in Real Life? You probably wouldn't be laughing. And if you are, then you're a sick freak.

Sub-Tropes to Video Game Cruelty include:


 * Cruel Player Character God
 * Cruelty Is the Only Option
 * The Joys of Torturing Mooks

If an example fits in one of the subtropes, it doesn't need to be listed on this page.

Anime and Manga

 * Digimon Adventure 02 has a villain who takes this to the extreme; it's quite clearly implied that he treats Digimon absolutely horribly... however, we then learn that he was under the impression that the Digital World was a video game all along.
 * When confronted to the fact that it's real with no more possibility of escape or denial,.
 * This happened again in Digimon Xros Wars. This time,
 * This happened again in Digimon Xros Wars. This time,

Comic Books

 * Kid Paddle when he plays SimCity. He put barbed wire around the city so noone can leave it, and raised taxes to 100% to pay for the police he needs to oppress the population. Not surprisingly, when asked what the biggest problem is, 100% of the people say "The mayor!"

Film

 * In WarGames, David and Jennifer definitely get into the spirit of this trope when they start playing the "Global Thermonuclear War" and gleefully discuss which U.S. cities they should bomb first.

Literature

 * In Animorphs, the Ketrans had a god game called Alien Civilizations. The Capasins wiped the Ketrans out because they caught their transmissions and thought it was real.
 * In Ender's Game the battle school students are basically forced to use this to its furthest extent in order to beat the game on their electronic desks.
 * Hell, this is essentially how the plot is resolved: Turns out that's exactly the response they wanted.
 * It was also his only choice for victory when faced with overwhelming odds. "The enemy gate is down" indeed.
 * And this also comes into play even earlier with "The Fantasy Game", the recreational computer game that the students play. Ender not only  However, it's inverted in that final level.
 * In Daemon, Loki sees humans who are not part of the Darknet as NPCs. The Daemon does not allow him to outright kill them for no reason, but he can torment them in various ways (like destroying their bank accounts). When he is able to kill them (as part of a mission or in self-defense), he does so happily and in the most gruesome way available to him.
 * The mid-80s collection of computer articles Digital Deli includes the "Crunchy Computer" comics. When hippie Crunchy tries to steer his son away from violent video game fair by giving him the "Save the Whales" game, Crunchy Jr. finds it far more fun to shoot the whales.

Live-Action TV

 * Spaced mentioned this in an episode where Tim is playing Tomb Raider. When Brian notes that Lara Croft is drowning and asks if that's the point, Tim replies that it "Depends what kind of mood you're in."
 * The Star Trek holodeck gives the characters to plenty of chances to do horrible things to their in-universe fictional worlds.
 * One Star Trek: Voyager episode features Tuvok strangling a hologram of Neelix to death.
 * In an episode of Deep Space Nine, Nog invites Jake Sisko to spend their day looting and pillaging a city in the holodeck.
 * Another episode centered around a Holodeck Malfunction with a James Bond theme. In order to buy time so they could rescue the crew, Bashir pushes the "submerge the world" button, drowning all but the highest mountaintops. Everyone is just shocked at this, including the villain who was planning on doing it.
 * In The Next Generation, after Data inexplicably experiences anger during a fight with a Borg drone, he creates a Holodeck program where he kills the drone repeatedly in an attempt to replicate the emotion.
 * In a very intentional case, Seska sabotaged the Holodeck into a death trap that reprogrammed itself to torture its occupants.
 * Community features an episode with Troy and Abed playing a war game that turns out to award points for killing innocent civilians, as they learn when they start playing with a guy who is unbeknownst to them an actual war criminal.
 * Another has a Legend of Zelda-esque shopping trip turn into the brutal murder of the shopkeep and his wife, the shop being burned down, and their daughter now forced to marry or live in the woods.

Music

 * The song "Indiscriminate Murder Is Counter-Productive" by Machinae Supremacy.

Tabletop Games

 * Related to this trope, Exalted has an inherent metaphysical bond between two player character types. While it was meant by the divinities who put it in place to be the stuff of eternal romances and battle-forged friendships, the nature of the bond between the Solar and the Lunar Exalted has the potential for great abuse, both within the world and with certain magical abilities the Solars possess that can subjugate their Lunar Mate even more. There is a reason, after all, one Solar charm was dubbed the Lunar-taming Leash.

Web Comics

 * Leo, of VG Cats, is a Cruel Player Character God, as seen here.
 * El Goonish Shive. Tedd can be quite cruel when playing Black and White, though apparently not to the extent suggested above.
 * He mostly seems to turn people into girls. So it's more or less like his usual behavior, but more.
 * If memory serves, it's Grace who goes overboard with this. 'That poor turtle..'
 * And now Gabe joins the fun with In Famous.
 * Brawl in the Family points out just how cruel standard gameplay is in its "Ode to Minions".
 * In Hearts of Iron, you can launch a nuclear attacks. Not only will the target country suffer industry and manpower destruction, it may well descend into civil war.
 * In a bonus comic for Gunnerkrigg Court, Kat introduces Annie to Grand Theft Auto. Annie, who apparently hasn't played computer games before, has trouble sleeping that night...
 * Homestuck's Sburb has a lot of potential for this. Case in point. The entire reason why that situation exists is because of their version of live action role-playing - Vriska (the girl he's talking to) used her powers as a Killer DM to force Tavros (the guy in the wheelchair) to jump off a cliff when he was indecisive about fighting two powerful enemies.
 * Darwin Carmichael Is Going to Hell has a strip where Skittles the manticore is upset when Patrick shows him how to play Grand Theft Auto.

Web Original

 * This Cracked article. Read it, and you will laugh and cry for the future of humanity simultaneously.
 * Let's Player GrayStillPlays became known for the series of videos he made starting around 2020 in which he inflicted "test to destruct" scenarios upon a common cast of characters in The Sims 4, to see who would be last to die.

Western Animation

 * In an episode of X-Men: Evolution, a teenage (but not evil) version of Arcade hacks into Cerebro and commands it to attack all the X-Men who show up in the Danger Room, believing it is simply an advanced computer game.
 * For some reason he doesn't recognize any of the "characters" as his schoolmates.
 * Well, obviously, he thinks everyone except Kurt created a "character" who looked just like them.
 * Averted in The Venture Brothers where 21 and 24 are discussing Tomb Raider and how Lara could drown, which a horrified 21 described as grisly.
 * In The Simpsons episode "The Regina Monologues", Bart and Milhouse are playing a video game called Hockey Dad, which, as the name implies, is a fighting game that involves two dads at their kids hockey match. Bart manages to win essentially by ignoring the child of his character pleading for him to stop, as he didn't want the dad to resort to murdering Milhouse's character (note that when the kid was begging him not to, the dad in question was literally stomping the snot out of his opponent's face [well, blood, but still], and his final blow involved strangling his opponent with the opponent's own tie). The winning screen has the winning dad doing a victorious pose and is implied to be arrested by the police, although whether this was supposed to be Video Game Cruelty Punishment was debatable, given the fact that there was a winner sign, the dad smiling while being carted away by the police, and the announcer saying "You're a big man! BIG MAN!!"