ThunderCats (2011 series)/Tear Jerker


 * In "Omens Part 2"
 * Claudus' death. It was right after a moment of triumph and a Moment of Awesome. It was rather unexpected, especially because his voice actor voiced Lion-O in the original series and had been making his rounds on the internet, Comic-con, and Cartoon Network to promote the new series.
 * Made worse by the fact that.
 * Also, . The pure awesomeness and wisdom the character showed in only one episode is amazing. At least he died fighting. Those familiar with the character, however, are
 * In "Ramlak Rising"
 * Claudus's Viking Funeral
 * Old Captain Tunar may have had a bad case of The Hunter syndrome, along with a strong penchant for a Lack of Empathy for his crew. But Tunar seemed to be a genuinely decent guy while around Lion-O. When he it's still sad.
 * If he hadn't gone out the way he did and lived, it would have made his lifetime of hunting and isolation even emptier. As it was, the man was a Determinator to the end.
 * The entirety of "Song of the Petalars":
 * The adorable baby Petalar being welcomed into the world, the wizened elder dissolving into wind-blown leaves the next.
 * The baby could be Emrick. Wonder if that means the elder was Emrick's father or grandfather?
 * "Yes, my friend. Many adventures I hope." Lion-O had learned . He's got this bittersweet grin and sad realization in his voice that just...(sniff)
 * Emrick's Rousing Speech to the peaceful Petalars: "Let this day be sung about by our people for ages to come!" Remembering, of course, that And then  . And the Petalars' singing. And the kittens cry! And then they hit us with a Really Dead Montage as well.
 * That's nothing, Lion-O cries!
 * In "Journey to the Tower of Omens." To save Lion-O, Jaga's
 * In "Berbils" Ro-Bear Bill after he was attacked trying to save his family...Poor guy.
 * In "Into the Astral Plane"
 * Little Cheetara begging to join the Clerics after failing the test is heartbreaking. She makes it clear that she has no place to go and no family to turn to, so joining the Clerics was her chance to get out of poverty.
 * Cheetara showing patience by waiting outside the Cleric's building; Tygra giving her a flower and hoping that she'd notice him. While Cheetara's patience eventually paid off...Tygra's hasn't. Turns out he's not a Jerk With a Heart of Jerk, he's really a Jerk With a Heart of Gold, and this troper hopes that he's going to be wrong about Cheetara never 'seeing' him, whatever happens with shipping.
 * Kit out right refusing to believe  is this or heartwarming.
 * How absolutely heartbroken each of the others sounds while trying to convince her otherwise doesn't help matters.
 * The farewell between Tygra and his father.
 * Not to mention.
 * The whole of "Native Son", in fact, particularly the end where we learn that
 * "Survivial of the Fittest" was essentially a Breather Episode after the previous one, but even then we still got.
 * In the same episode, it shows their early days in the slums of Thundera, before they turned to thievery for survival. They tried to live honestly, begging for scraps and spare coins, only to be ignored by passers-by. And when someone drops his coin purse without noticing, they resist the temptation to take it, only to be accused of theft when they try to return it.
 * Pumyra's The Reason You Suck Speech to Lion-O is heartbreaking, and towards the end of it she almost cries herself. It's the first sign that under all of her anger there is something more. She honestly believed in Lion-O (not something many cats would claim) and was devastated when he never came.
 * The ending to "The Soul Sever". The Soul Sever loses the souls of his wife and children, despite dedicating most of his life to saving them, reducing him (mind you, he's a 'robot' at this point) to tears. By the very end of the episode he's left alone in his broken down base, holding the tiny broken down body of an insectoid robot. To make things worse, the way his family leaves is rather unceremonious too. They don't re-materialize to give their last goodbyes, or even say whether they really wanted to pass on at all, they just float up into the sky while The Soul Sever cries out in anguish after them.
 * The ending to "The Soul Sever". The Soul Sever loses the souls of his wife and children, despite dedicating most of his life to saving them, reducing him (mind you, he's a 'robot' at this point) to tears. By the very end of the episode he's left alone in his broken down base, holding the tiny broken down body of an insectoid robot. To make things worse, the way his family leaves is rather unceremonious too. They don't re-materialize to give their last goodbyes, or even say whether they really wanted to pass on at all, they just float up into the sky while The Soul Sever cries out in anguish after them.