Special:Badtitle/NS90:Talk:Complete Monster/Yu-Gi-Oh/Examples that should remain here. (2)


 * Dark Marik - While he was born as a Split Personality made of the pain Marik Ishtar felt after getting his back carved, he took on a life of his own and through the shadow powers he became his own entity. He exists as a sort of alternate but equally real version of Marik Ishtar who does away with his inner pain by making others suffer for fun and wants to have the power to dominate the world just to take his malice and psychotic rage out on everyone. He shows no remorse for any of this and no empathy towards even his other self since he tries to erase him from existence. And he hits off the trope's criteria by being pure evil without any redeeming qualities, his villainy being truly heinous by the works' standards (with a rap sheet including homicide, torture, and Mind Rape galore) and taken far beyond his Freudian Excuse, and being feared and hated by other characters, meaning he certainly qualifies.


 * Dark Bakura/Zorc - While Thief King Bakura has a Freudian Excuse and some redeeming qualities to him, his moral agency has been completely overruled by Zorc's, meaning that the spirit of the Millennium Ring is an entity made from a merger of Bakura and Zorc's souls, but with Zorc holding dominance. As this being, he has no truly redeeming features, is sufficiently heinous in his deeds (particularly in Memory World where he attempts to bring about the destruction of the world and the human race), lacks an adequate Freudian Excuse, commits his crimes without remorse, and is depicted as truly evil and monstrous in the narrative of the series.


 * Dartz - Any redeeming qualities and good intentions he once had were cast aside in his fanatical devotion to the Great Leviathan, to the point where he'd kill even his own father and daughter out of his resentment for humanity, and he stayed villainous for so long that even his initial corruption by the darkness of Orichalchos cannot adequately excuse the monstrous actions he chooses to take. While he appears to have a last minute Heel Face Turn, that's his soul that has been cleansed of the darkness after death. In life he took no efforts towards redemption, lacked mitigating qualities, committed atrocities that were heinous by the works' standards, and was a self deluded, power-mad, deplorable individual ala Unalaq from The Legend of Korra.


 * Divine/Sayer - He did not take Aki in and help her with her psychic abilities out of any kindness in his heart, but because she could be of use to him. He admits upfront that if he cannot use someone, he'll show them no care, for they have no value and are disposable to him. With no true redeeming qualities and a rap sheet of truly despicable crimes, he passes by the trope's criteria.


 * Gishki Noelia - By the standards of All There in the Manual card game mythology, she qualifies for this trope by it's criteria as much as it's possible to.


 * Heishin - Similarly, he's to be judged by the standards of his type of video game and it's own secluded non-canon story. By those standards, he qualifies in the same manner as villains like Ganondorf from Ocarina of Time.