Disappears Into Light

Alas! Bob has been fatally wounded. As he lies dying, motes of light begin to rise off his body, slowly at first, but increasing in speed. Just before he fully disappears, he makes one last optimistic comment, and his body bursts into a thousand tiny pinpricks of light. This saves his friends the incovenience of burying him.

Sometimes happens to holy characters, or is used to show that they Ascended To A Higher Plane of Existence, or ghosts when they Go Into the Light. It's also popular for sentient computer programs to go this way after being 'deleted.' Such deaths tend to be followed up with celestial faces looking down, having Died Happily Ever After.

As the image shows, motes aren't the only way it works. Swarms of insects, flower petals/leaves, and the like are also commonly used.

Related to Everything Fades. The major difference is that Everything Fades is used by videogames so the console no longer has to track them, while this happens to characters in the 'real world.'

For a less dramatic way of disposing of the dead, see No Body Left Behind. For the version of this trope that implies a much worse fate, see Deadly Fireworks Display. Not to be confused with Suicide by Sunlight, where vampires end their unlives by walking into the dawn.

Anime And Manga

 * The Trope Namer is GaoGaiGar, where the Super Robot uses the Goldion Hammer to reduce the Monster of the Week into wisps of light with a cry of "Hikari ni Nare". The trope's name is just one of many possible translations.
 * In kind of an odd subversion of the trope, however, the use of the Goldion Hammer is almost always non-lethal: the "Hammer Hell and Heaven" maneuver that starts the attack rips the core containing the human host of the monster (or the cockpit containing the pilot of the enemy mecha, as the first episode of FINAL showed) out of its body so that they can be returned to normal safely (or arrested ).
 * In Suzumiya Haruhi,
 * Mai-HiME and Mai-Otome. The Festival shall occur, the maidens shall battle, and the rivers shall run green with sparklies.
 * Except in Mai-Otome,
 * Bleach. This happens to Bounts when they die, and Hollows (at least during the first season) when they are purified to go into Soul Society.
 * Happened in Saint Seiya to Gemini, Shura and Camus, as Hades claimed their bodies
 * The Ridiculously Human Programs of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha seem to die in this way, as shown with  and.
 * Also happened
 * Similarly, this happens to in Tenchi in Tokyo.
 * Digimon Adventure did this when Angemon and Devimon died. It's also used in Digimon Tamers, with the addition that Mons can absorb the motes to increase their power.
 * The general deletion effect, though, was a much-less-romantic bursting-into-particles effect.
 * Sailor Moon does this when people die in the later seasons (particularly heart breaking examples exist in Sailor Moon Stars). In the first season when people die they leave corpses behind—except Nephrite, whose death is probably the most heartwrenching moment of the first season.
 * In Last Exile, Maestro Delphine's ring will cause you to explode into light when you take it from her finger.
 * On Afro Samurai, After being fatally wounded by Kuma/Jinno, Ninja-Ninja does this. The only reason he does and no one else who dies does is because
 * In Hell Girl when  her body dissolves into sakura petals.
 * Happens to the dying grunty in the VR World of .hack//SIGN.
 * In Gash Bell, the demons whose books get burned get returned to the demon world in this manner. Moments of optimism vary depending on the manner in which they're sent off, and their personalities in general.
 * In Transformers Cybertron, Galvatron meets his end this way. death was similar, but the manner in which it happened makes it a bit more believable.
 * Happens to late in Code Geass. May be justified since the characters in question had been cheating death, and rather than outright dying, they were forcibly absorbed by the afterlife. Not to mention the whole thing actually takes place in a mystical realm.
 * in the third season of Yu-Gi-Oh! GX. The dub apparently changed this to 'going to the stars' or something.
 * In Vision of Escaflowne, Zaibach mecha usually melt and evaporate into blue flame after they've been destroyed. It's implied to be because of the liquid metal they use for their weaponry.
 * An interesting variety occurs in Kurau Phantom Memory: after she gets hit by the Rynax, Kurau dissolves into a swirling tornado of light—which shortly after reassembles into Kurau, now merged with the Rynax.
 * In Mahou Sensei Negima,.
 * from the Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Plus manga.
 * Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann,
 * Lordgenome
 * TBH, almost everyone in TTGL dies in a variation of this. Either because of the "pencil sketch being blown apart and fading to white" death animation, or, well, because they're likely to be inside an exploding Humongous Mecha at the moment of their death.
 * (Manga Only) This happened to Eureka in Eureka Seven upon the Scab Coral's demise. Its a rather unfair ending for Renton...
 * Naruto:
 * Elemental Gelade: This is  tragic fate just moments after her High Heel Face Turn and subsequent mortal injury.
 * How dies in Rave Master, which actually makes he death ambiguous enough that he may have been sent to the original world instead.

Comic Books

 * The corpse of Reality Warping mutant Absolom Mercator disappeared from its casket and apparently turned into butterflies.

Film

 * At the end of Corpse Bride, Emily is able to move on from being betrayed, and to let Victor be with Victoria instead of trying to take him from her. She fades into blue butterflies, which fly away.
 * Arthur Spiderwick makes a similar departure in The Spiderwick Chronicles, although it's dandelion-seed fluff that he's swept away as, and he's being carried off to a fairy realm rather than dying.
 * Daemons in The Golden Compass movie disappear in a shower of sparks when the human they belong to is killed.
 * At the end of Dragonheart, this happens to Draco's body.
 * All programs in Tron will light up or disappear into Tron Lines on the ground when they derez.
 * did this at the end of Advent Children. were also beginning to do this before they were defeated.
 * Happens at the end of Cube.

Live Action TV
"So our goal was to fuse metal and pancake the car. Did we achieve that? ... What car?"
 * Astrid in the Doctor Who special "Voyage of the Damned''.
 * And Idris in The Doctor's Wife
 * And it's also pretty much with Time Lord regeneration looks like
 * Daniel Jackson.
 * Also, the entire population of Abydos.
 * Has happened to a few Power Rangers characters whose deaths needed to be censor friendly but more sensitively done than the usual Made of Explodium deaths that non-human characters tend to get.
 * And in its source material Super Sentai. In a specific example, in Kaizoku Sentai Gokaiger.
 * In Kamen Rider Dragon Knight, being 'vented' looks like this. It's taken from the effect seen in Kamen Rider Ryuki when someone or something dissolves in the mirror world. This effect is also used in Kamen Rider Double a few times (despite no mirror world thing. Fleeting Demographic Rule applies to special effects.)
 * In most any Toku show, any non-human character who doesn't explode goes out this way instead.
 * Not really light, but the Myth Busters obliterating that car with the rocket sled has a definite Hikari Ni Nare vibe to it.
 * As Jamie so eloquently puts it during the sum-up of that scene,


 * Eureka has.

Video Games

 * In Final Fantasy X and X-2, dead humans that receive the Sending ritual do this, as do defeated monsters and defeated Aeons. The lights themselves even have a name—pyreflies.
 * Interestingly, Cactuars also do this, even though they're not fiends in the traditional sense, and chocobos which aren't fiends at all! However, you're not really supposed to kill the latter.
 * In Wild Arms 3, Leehalt dies in this manner when  purges him.
 * In Wild Arms 4,  dies in this manner after   convinces him to let go and finally rest in peace.
 * Dark Samus dies like this at least twice during Metroid Prime 2. Of course, being blasted into specks of light is apparently only a momentary setback for her.
 * In Kingdom Hearts, Nobodies disintegrate into a cloud of black smoke.
 * In an extra cutscene in Kingdom Hearts 2,
 * "True" Heartless disappear in a puff of smoke too; "Emblemed" Heartless die with a sudden appearance of a heart floating up and disappearing. This is important in the second game.
 * Also, whose body disintegrates into light in the first game and simularly
 * In Birth By Sleep, 's body fades away when he died.
 * Master Xehanort too, after he.
 * The Dream Eaters in Kingdom Hearts 3D vanish in such a fashion. It's made slow and dramatic in the case of ally Dream Eaters, perhaps to emphasize that they're gone for good.
 * Credo in Devil May Cry 4
 * Mother 3: This is what happens to each of (though we don't see what happens to ).
 * This is what happens when you kill security programs in Tron 2.0, albeit very quickly. When you kill viruses, they either explode or explode violently. Hint: don't stand near dying viruses.
 * This happens to in Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time/Darkness.
 * in Vagrant Story. On the other hand, anyone else unlucky enough to die within Lea Monde's walls tends to Dissapear Into Darkness, their souls consumed and enslaved by the eldritch power of the city.
 * Creatures 3 and Docking Station have the bodies of dead norns disappearing this way, but only after they've been dead awhile. After all, you might want to determine cause of death first.
 * Replicas, including in Tales of the Abyss.  Justified in that they're entirely made from Seventh Fonons, rather than a normal human's mixture of fonons and matter (or something like that - the game makes an effort at describing the world's physics, but it's a little fuzzy in places), and so when they die those fonons dissipate.
 * This happens to a lot of characters across all the .hack games. Usually this means that the player behind the character is now comatose. The few cases of dissolving that do not result in comas include Aura and Mia in the original games, and Haseo (twice!) in the GU games.
 * Maxim and Selan at the end of Lufia 2: Return of the Sinestrals.
 * When the Servants from Fate/stay night are destroyed, they dissipate into a cloud of sparks. Only in extreme cases do they ever leave any physical residue behind. Their soul, now detached from any attachment to the world, are then as they burrow back to the Throne of Heroes that it originated from.
 * Death in battle in Fire Emblem tends to result in this.
 * At the end of the bonus game in Mystery Case Files: 13th Skull,
 * The sparks in Level 18 and the Vizier's magic spells do this to the Prince in the SNES version of Prince of Persia. If killed by other means, his body fades away without the light effects.
 * Ernst in Ys VI, and Tia in Ys VII.
 * If you use the Ion Cannon at the end of the GDI campaign of Command & Conquer, the ending cutscenes shows Kane standing before the ion beam with his hands outstretched, as though embracing it, as the light envelops him.
 * Played with in that a) the light is what kills him rather than a consequence of his death and b) he didn't stay dead.
 * The Legend of Zelda Skyward Sword: The old woman  dies in this way at the end. Her role was fulfilled after, and had lived for thousands of years already, justifying the trope.
 * How all the Demi-gods that rely on mantra in Asura's Wrath die.
 * How all the Demi-gods that rely on mantra in Asura's Wrath die.

Web Original

 * Subverted in Today I Die, where the Disappear signifies a return to life.

Western Animation

 * In the newest Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie, this happens to one of the supporting characters in the end.
 * Partially Played for Laughs when Michelangelo accidentally inhales some of the floating particles and starts coughing.
 * Happens in Kung Fu Panda with a But Now I Must Go moment, though said character disappeared into flower petals instead.
 * When dies in Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo this happens. Although this one can be justified in that magic was the only thing keeping him alive in the first place.
 * When reality breaks in the Justice League episode built around a comic book dream, the heroes are all absorbed by light, presumably to death. They smile and salute in their final moments.
 * In the fourth season of Winx Club
 * Bunny in The Powerpuff Girls.