Bad Guys Do the Dirty Work

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
This page needs visual enhancement.
You can help All The Tropes by finding a high-quality image or video to illustrate the topic of this page.


John: No...no I can't.
Scorpius: (sigh) I can. (grabs pistol in John's hand, and fires)

Farscape, "Prayer"

There's a problem, and the heroes can't solve it or make it go away. It boils down to a situation that requires a decidedly unheroic action to solve, whether it's hurting, killing, or something even less pleasant. The heroes can't very well do it and still be classic White Hats, but not doing anything would have grave consequences. Who can save the heroes now? Not the Big Damn Heroes, but the villains! Hey, they're evil already, doing an evil act to save the day is no problem. So make the Bad Guys Do the Dirty Work!

Different from a Heel Face Turn because the villain isn't actually being heroic; the villain may be entirely motivated out of self-interest, such as fighting a common threat or because a competitor is challenging his place as nemesis. It's possible for it to even be a complete coincidence.

Contrast Villainous Rescue, where a villain pulls a Big Damn Heroes without committing any villainous acts in the process, and Self-Disposing Villain, where a villain kills himself by accident so the heroes don't have to. If the villain saves the day by accident through doing something villainous, that's Nice Job Fixing It, Villain.

Also see Exit, Pursued by a Bear, Designated Evil, and Token Evil Teammate (the 'hero' inclined to play dirty pool in a team of good guys)

Examples of Bad Guys Do the Dirty Work include:

Anime and Manga

  • In Tsubasa Reservoir Chronicle, at the end of the Koryo arc, Syaoran talks Chunyan out of killing the ryanban, but he is conveniently taken care of by his own previously mind-controlled servant.
  • One wonders what the The Omniscient Council of Vagueness group of old ladies who rule Japan (First Division) would have done to the cast of My-HiME had Shizuru not gone crazy and killed them all after the cast kills their god. It's doubtful that they were resurrected along with the rest of the cast.
    • A scene with the Obsidian Lord indicates that he was planning to invoke You Have Outlived Your Usefulness on them, but Shizuru got to them first.
    • In Mai's fight with Shiho, she's unable to go on the offensive, realizing that as both of them consider Yuuichi their most important person, either of their Childs being destroyed will result in his death (Shiho, being overcome with jealous rage, fails to realize this). Yuuichi, not wanting them to fight, orders Mai to destroy Shiho's Child while fully knowing that he'll kick it, but she refuses. Then a brainwashed Mikoto jumps in, having been conditioned to attack Mai's enemy, and destroys Shiho's child. Yuuichi thanks Mikoto for this before he passes away.
  • In the 2003 anime version of Fullmetal Alchemist, the brothers need to create the Philosopher Stone. Problem: By episode 40, it became obvious that in order to do that, one needs to kill quite a lot of people. Solution: Scar did it. And died in the process.
  • Dragonball Z: Vegeta's entire purpose, story-wise, for being on Namek is to kill every single minor villain so the heroes (or at least Goku) don't have to. Cui, Dodoria, Zarbon, 4/5ths of the Ginyu Force (two while helpless!) and most of Freeza's mooks.
  • This trope shows up several times in the second season of Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, though very rarely played straight.
  • In Bleach, the Central 46 are Obstructive Bureaucrats of the worst kind. Good thing Aizen kills them all.
    • Of course, the person who killed them has been frequently acting in their names, manipulating, or outright impersonating them for a long time now (all the decisions relating to Rukia's sentence were carried out by Aizen and his accomplices impersonating them), so it's hard to tell just how obstructive they really were...
      • Well, you have to keep up appearances unless you want people to notice that something is off, like the 46 members of the central government being DEAD.
      • And despite that, they've apparently assembled a new Central 46 within half a year.
  • In one episode of the Pokémon anime, the heroes arrive at a festival dedicated to the Pokemon Wobbuffet, and several party-crashers come and start destroying things. The festival people explain that since Wobbuffet can't hurt the enemy except by reflecting attacks, in honor of that they will not attack the party crashers. Ash & co know the guys must be stopped, but are unwilling to break the rules of the festival. Team Rocket, on the other hand, have no such qualms. Ass kicking ensues.
  • At the very end of Pluto, Brau-1589, the first robot to kill a human being and spent most of the manga giving Hannibal Lectures to his visitors, breaks free and kills The Man Behind the Man/Big Bad.
  • Similar to the My-HiME example, in Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS, Due disposes of the TSAB High Council, which was responsible for having Scaglietti created, preventing any such mistakes in the future.
  • This is so common in Magical Girl shows I'm not even going to list them but an example most western fans would be aware of is the big bads of Sailor Moon kill off most of their own subordinates who fail them which keep Sailor Moon and company from having to get their hands dirty. This is not the case of the Darker and Edgier manga however where they regularly kill their adversaries.
    • This courtesy does not, of course, extend to the Big Bad themselves or often to their Dragon. As more often than not Sailor Moon will kill them personally.
  • In Fairy Tail, after the eponymous guild is satisfied with just letting Grimoire Heart, the worst villains they faced so far who are clearly still evil, off with a scolding due to their leader being the guild's former master, Grimoire Heart leaves. As they lament their failure, Zeref, who they spent the entire series trying to get their hands on, approaches them. When they attempt to instigate their plan, he brushes them off, lets them know why he hates their guts, and makes their leader the third person in the start of the series to be killed.
  • In Naruto, Sasuke played this role in killing Danzo, as there was no way for the good guys to get rid of him without a huge political mess because he was their acting leader at the time. His action enables Tsunade to resume leadership once she awakens from her coma without any complications such as a power struggle.
  • Shiva and Agora from Saint Seiya invoke the trope when they throw little Helen inside an active volcano. They even say that it's the best, since they had killed her grandfather and would've died anyway; in their words, after being offered as a 'sacrifice' of sorts, Helen's "pure and gentle" soul will become a benevolent spirit. Ikki obviously refuses to take this explanation and says they just went in full puppykicking mode. And uncommonly for this trope, Helen survives.
  • Discussed, but subverted in Rave Master. After defeating Hardner and learning about his sad past the heroes and their allies of the week are wondering what to do with him when Lucia comes out of nowhere and stabs him in the back, claiming they should be grateful that he solved the problem for them. Due to quick action, Hardner is instead saved and becomes the only Rave Master villain not to suffer from Redemption Equals Death.

Comic Books

  • During The Sinestro Corps War, after the Green Lanterns' attempt to kill the Anti-Monitor via a Colony Drop proves insufficient, Superboy-Prime steps in to finish the job for them.
  • James Robinson's Starman series had a great example. Starman and the golden age Green Lantern are confronting Mad Bomber Dr. Pip and his giant exploding suicide exoskeleton when their powers short out due to a Crisis Crossover that they aren't aware of. But then all this happens.
    • On the fourth page, note that The Shade is in fact flipping him off.
  • In Grant Morrison's Earth 2, the Justice League are in a universe where the bad guys always win, and are losing to that universe's Brainiac. Their solution is to walk away, allowing the evil Ultraman to lobotomize Brainiac with his heat vision.
  • The former page image comes from the Superman Y2K storyline. With Superman incapacitated and the city of Metropolis in chaos due to the apocalyptic Brainiac 13 computer virus, who is ruthless enough to step forth and protect the citizenry by any means necessary? Freakin' Lex Luthor, that's who.
  • Final Crisis also has Lex and Dr. Sivana coming to save the day from Libra when they hack into the Justifier helmets and kill Libra. Later, they helped the heroes build the Miracle Machine that fixes everything.
    • To give an idea of how desperate this plan was, keep in mind that the last time Parallax possessed Hal, he destroyed the entire universe. (But this is comics, so they fixed it.)
  • Earlier in Blackest Night, a plan is concocted to kill the Black Lantern Anti-Monitor by having Dove encapsulated in a bullet composed Lantern energy and have Bedovian, a sniper who'd terrorized the Green Lantern Corps during the Sinestro Corps War aim it at the Anti-Monitor's head as Red Lanterns distract him.
  • Warren White/The Great White Shark in the DC limited series/graphic novel Arkham Asylum: Living Hell
  • The remnants of The Black Glove that tried to utterly destroy Batman (and utterly failed) in Batman RIP could have caused problems in the future. It's probably for the best that Joker as Oberon Sexton killed them all.
  • Averted in the American Sonic The Hedgehog comic. During the "Enerjak Reborn" arc, the Freedom Fighters are forced to fight Knuckles, who's been transformed into Enerjak and gone mad with power. Just when it starts to look like they might have to kill him, in comes Dr. Eggman, who captures Knuckles and intends to drain his life force to power his city. The aversion comes when Knuckles effortlessly breaks free and proceeds to level Eggman's whole city.
  • In the Hulk tie-in to Fear Itself, MODOK and cybernetic villainess Zero/One teamed up to defend Manhattan from Skadi's forces
  • Wayne Shelton exploits this trope: the Big Bad is killed by another villain. Shelton confesses that he hoped him to do this. And call this a bargain with his own conscience.
  • Depending on if you see him as a hero, anti-hero or an anti-villain, most everything John Constantine does could be seen as this: he certainly does what needs to be done when Swampy and others he interacts with hesitate to.
  • In an early Thunderbolts story (#14), the Thunderbolts have to kill an alien leader in order to get out of the dimension they're stuck in. Even though he understands the necessity of it, Abe (MACH-I) can't bring himself to, and Moonstone has to instead.
  • In Batman #47, Batman confronts Joe Chill, the man who killed his parents, and tells him his identity. In fear of his life Joe Chill seeks protection from other criminals, who proceed to kill him for having created their worst enemy, only realizing afterwards they should have asked who Batman was first. Since that story is Chill's first named appearance most appearances in other canons tend to use this trope to dispose of Chill.

Film

  • The Chronicles of Riddick saga is based on taking this trope and making a franchise out of it.
  • The climax scene of Let the Right One In goes...this way, kind of. As the kid's about to be drowned, the Eli shows up and saves the day. But since she's a vampire, he kills three people doing so.
  • In Red Sun, the villains are about to kill the heroes, only to be interrupted by an attack by murderous Comanches.
  • The Joker did this in his own twisted way in The Dark Knight, when a Wayne Enterprises accountant discovered Bruce's big secret and was about to reveal it to the world on live television. But leave it to the Joker to take something that would have been a favor to Batman, and to twist it to his own ends:

The Joker: I don't want Mr. Reese spoiling everything, but why should I have all the fun? Let's give someone else a chance. If Coleman Reese isn't dead in sixty minutes then I blow up a hospital.

    • Later on, the Joker strands two ferries in the middle of a river, one filled with civilians and the other with convicts, with each one (supposedly) having the detonator to the other ferry and ordered to either blow up one by a certain time or the Joker will blow up both. While the civilian passengers are heavily considering blowing up the convicts, in the convict boat, the warden (who is holding the detonator) is approached by a Scary Black Man convict...

Convict: You don't want to die, but you don't know how to take a life. Give it to me; these men would kill you, and take it anyway. Give it to me. You can tell 'em I took it by force. Give it to me, and I'll do what you shoulda did ten minutes ago.[The warden gives him the remote...and the convict throws it out the window]

  • In the first X-Men film, the Mutant Registration Act is defeated due to the Brotherhood killing the Act's main supporter and Mystique replacing him.
  • Simba from The Lion King is too moral to give Scar the killing blow. However, the hyenas who Scar tried to blame for everything when things started looking bad...they have no such morals. And they haven't eaten in a while...

Scar: Ah! My friends!
Shenzi: "Friends?" I thought he said we were the enemy.
Banzai: Yeah, that's what I heard.
Shenzi and Banzai: Ed?
Ed: Eh, heh heh heh, heh heh heh heh...

  • Similarly in The Princess and the Frog, the Friends on the Other Side pull this off after Tiana breaks Dr. Facilier's talisman, making it impossible for him to pay off his spiritual debt. They take him to the Other Side.
  • Chris Pine's character in Carriers where everyone is a Crazy Survivalist shoots the dog many times in order to spare his more innocent brother from doing it himself. It rubs off on his brother though, who later finally gets his hands dirty by killing Pine when he is infected...A poetic end I suppose.
  • Salim from Slumdog Millionaire spends most of the movie playing The Caretaker to Jamal, shooting and kicking the dog alternately allowing them both to survive, but allowing Jamal to remain relatively untarnished.
  • In Bad Lieutenant Port of Call New Orleans, the title character is being pursued by gangsters who want him to pay $50,000 for roughing up the son of a local real estate mogul. Rather than paying, he lures them to a place where he's meeting a drug kingpin that he's in business with. When the gangsters try to steal the kingpin's product in payment for what the protagonist owes, the kingpin and his men kill them all.
  • Both Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch has the morally grey protagonists being rescued from a jam by the Big Bad by having some more villainous characters kill them instead. Though in the Lock, Stock example this was completely unintentional on the count of the Stupid Crooks who did the killing.

Literature

  • The Probability Broach: It would be wrong to attack the Hamiltonians before they import a nuclear weapon, so they're killed off by a previously mentioned side effect of closing a broach when something is halfway through it.
  • The Culture novel Matter has a Sealed Evil in a Can being released and in typical Banks fashion killing most of the main cast. While this is nearly all of the heroes, it also includes the Evil Chancellor who had usurped a throne and his minions. Thus, the Culture are able to set-up the surviving hero as the future prime minister, and unlike in other novels in the series, didn't actually have to act morally ambiguously and get rid of corrupt leaders themselves.
  • In Night Watch, Vimes frees prisoners from the Cable Street watch house. In the process, he has to subdue a torturer, who he leaves tied to a chair and forgets about until someone reminds him. Since he gets reminded after he started burning the place down, he has to run back in, all the while trying to decide whether to kill the mook, cut him free, or cut just enough rope that he can maybe escape before he burns to death. Luckily, Captain Swing shows up and kills the mook before Vimes has to make his choice.
    • Vetinari: In his own words “history needs its butchers as well as its shepherds” or, in plainer language “Magnificent Bastards do the dirty work.” note Swig also used the phrase.
    • “Stoneface” Vimes used more or less the same phrase, and executes the last king of ankh in person, without any form of trial. To be fair, the king deserved it, and some of the comments about the event indicate that he tried for a trial, but there wasn't anyone willing to be judge.
  • In Bernard Cornwell's book Agincourt, the main character, Nick Hook, has made a vow to a priest not to kill the murderous rapists who his family has been in a blood feud with for generations. His arch-enemy, father-in-law, and prisoner (it's complicated) made no such promise.
  • In Trickster's Queen by Tamora Pierce, the main character Aly's (god-ordered) objective is to put one of two sisters on the throne of a country undergoing a revolution. Among the people they will be usurping are the five-year-old king and the girls' own three-year-old half-brother, whom Aly has personally cared for. Aly has one or two brief scenes in which she feels bad that she'll probably have to kill them both off. Luckily for her, the king's sister and her husband—the boy king's regents and the last adults standing of the original royal family, and now thoroughly paranoid about being undermined—take care of that for her.
    • To be fair to Aly, she was trying to find a way out of killing the children, and considered binding them magically to oaths that they will not try to take the throne and exiling them together with the royal bodyguard as caretaker. Unfortunately, she mentioned to the trickster god that the children were in her way. The god got impatient with pacifist methods and persuaded the regents that they would be better off without the boys.
  • In A Song of Ice and Fire, this is how Tywin Lannister endeared himself to Robert Baratheon who had just secured the throne. Robert knew the old Targaryen line had to be extinguished for his throne to stay safe, but "he saw himself as a hero, and heroes do not kill children." Fortunately for Robert, Tywin (or rather his men) had no such delusions and happily murdered the two surviving Targaryen kids in the palace (committing a few other atrocities along the way).
    • To a degree Tywin's son Jaime also gets this treatment, since he killed Aerys, the Targaryen king, for Robert and company. In Jaime's case though any relief and/or gratitude is tempered by the perception that he has Chronic Backstabbing Disorder, since he was part of an elite group of bodyguards who are supposed to be willing to die in order to protect the Royal House.
  • In the Dale Brown novel Executive Intent, the Chinese assault on and takeover of Mogadishu is likened to this by one character, noting how China had solved the problem most of the world probably secretly wanted to deal with but could not bring themselves to handle.
  • Wormtongue killing Saruman near the end of The Lord of the Rings.

Live-Action TV

  • Buffy episode "Wild At Heart": we don't kill werewolves, because they're human most of the time, but Oz's wolf side is amoral and thus free to kill Veruca.
    • Buffy can't kill the Anointed One, partly because she's prophecied not to but mostly because he's a kid. Luckily, Spike does it for her.
    • Buffy is dying after being shot by Big Bad wannabe Warren. Willow appears, heals her, and takes the bullet, which she uses to torture Warren with and become the new Big Bad.
  • Dexter, end of season two. Sgt Doakes can prove that Dexter is the Bay Harbor Butcher, so Dexter locks him up in a lonely cabin until he can decide what to do. Dexter won't kill Doakes because he's a good guy. Lila, who is as psychopathic as Dexter but with no such code, finds the cabin and blows it up.
  • Farscape: In the episode "Prayer", it's ambiguous whether or not John knew Scorpius was going to kill the merged Chiana-Aeryn when he brought him along to the alternate universe, but it's what had to be done. See page quote.
    • In an earlier episode, Moya is in orbit around a planet with notoriously sexist laws, and accepts a visit from a mechanic- accompanied by an armed security guard. Things go well, up until Chiana discovers that the mechanic is actually a woman, rebelling against the government by doing a Sweet Polly Oliver; just when it looks like they're becoming friends, the security guard shows up and, infuriated that he's had a woman under his nose all this time, holds both of them at gunpoint. Given that there's almost nobody else aboard the ship at the time, it looks as though the two of them are going to die...right up until Scorpius calmly drifts past and snap the man's neck. All the more impactful because Scorpius had been having a friendly chat with the guard before then.
  • In an episode of a The Flash live-action series where a baddie had discovered his Secret Identity and blackmailed him (with even a They Would Cut You Up threat). He ended up killed by other baddies, with a Car Starter Bomb.
  • This has happened tons of times in Smallville. Clark has to face people with dangerous superpowers, and while he can beat them readily enough, he can't very well run a super-jail or convince them to lead an honest life because, well, Kryptonite gives most people a god complex, and most krypto-freaks aren't stable/good to begin with. Having Clark kill or permanently disable them is far too squicky for a proto-Superman to do, so the preferred solution is to have them depowered or hoist by their own petard. The other solutions that pertain to this trope are to have them be killed by evil infighting among themselves, or having Lionel (and later Lex) deal with them.
  • In the third season of Heroes, a recently depowered Peter heads off with the Haitian to kill his father and destroy the Formula. However, once they get there they encounter problems when Peter can't pull the trigger as Arthur makes his saving throw to turn Peter to his side. The obvious solution? Sylar shows up, complete with recently stolen lie detection power, to ask Arthur if he's really a Petrelli. Naturally, Arthur lies, thus causing Sylar to allow the bullet he had grabbed in thin air to kill Arthur stone dead permanently.
    • Not the straightest example. While Sylar was the one who pushed the bullet into Arthur's skull, he was the one who stopped it in the first place. Had Sylar not been there, Peter would've been the one to kill Arthur, he just waited a while before he did it.
    • Sylar actually lampshades the fact that he prevents Peter from becoming a murderer. So actually he wasn't here to do the job, just to keep Peter from having remorses.
  • Battlestar Galactica: it's obvious midway through "Pegasus" that Admiral Cain is a dangerous psychopath who needs to be dealt with. Adama is too moral to go through with an assassination. Fortunately, Baltar has let a Cylon with a grudge against Cain loose.
    • Ironically just after Cain proved that she wasn't completely insane yet, having in turn just refused to assassinate Adama.
  • Da Ren Wu is a Chinese TV series based on a classic kung-fu novel set in medieval China. The heroes, as usual in wuxia literature, are staunch Confucianists: morally opposed to unwarranted violence and who don't approve of killing under any circumstances. At one point, Sisi, the main heroine, is tricked by some crooks who steal everything she owns and give her to a Masqueraded School for whores. The boss and his cronies take great pleasure in tormenting defenseless girls, and kill those who don't respond well to the training. Three characters come to Sisi's rescue, one after another: 1) Yang Fan is the first. He can't find Sisi in the School (the boss locked her in a hidden room), so he leaves convinced he made a mistake. 2) Qin Ge, a famous kung-fu master, is the second. He can't find Sisi either. He suspects something, but can't prove anything. He leaves as well. 3) The hunchback is the third. He's a major bad guy. He needs Sisi for some nefarious plan. He waits till night, gets into the School, finds Sisi and takes her with him. He pummels the cronies, and when the crossdressing boss tries to stop him: the hunchback pulls a Fist of the North Star on him. After leaving the School with Sisi, the hunchback tracks the crooks who had tricked her. He finds them, makes them give back the stolen stuff and beg for mercy on their knees...and then kills them nevertheless, just because! They say the author was very surprised when the hunchback's popularity with the audience skyrocketed after this story arc.
  • In an episode of Taxi, Elaine visits a trendy hair stylist(played by Ted Danson) and comes away with an atrocious hairdo. She, Alex and Louie pay the stylist a visit to demand an apology and he rebuffs them. Elaine considers dumping a bowlful of hair dye on the stylist's head but decides not to, declaring "I'm better than you." Before they leave, Louie(in a combination Crowning Moment of Awesome/Funny) casually dumps the hair dye over the stylist and says, "She might be better than you, (Beat)...but I ain't!"
  • In the Doctor Who special The Five Doctors, the Master has been captured by the Cybermen and is initially being forced to do their bidding. He ends up turning the tables and wiping the whole lot of them out by skipping through a trap he's figured out the solution to, but conveniently forgets to tell his captors about.
    • Twenty-six years later, in "The End of Time," this same Master (well, different actor/regeneration) forces Rassilon back behind the time lock on the Time War, and won't let him take the Doctor with him, either.
    • Brutally subverted in "The Pandorica Opens." a good number of the Doctor's foes all band together to save the universe...from the Doctor, who they've been tricked into believing will destroy it, when in fact he's the only one who can stop the explosion that will destroy the universe.
  • Torchwood: The trope gets played with. Captain Jack Harkness fills the role of the trope, despite not actually being villainous. Torture, murder, kidnapping, or any other action that would normally fall under this trope and require a villain to perform it gets performed by Captain Jack at the protest of the other characters.
  • This is one of the main ideas of Leverage. Sometimes bad guys make the best good guys.
    • When Nate goes for revenge on the two men behind his father's murder, Elliot warns him that straight up murder carries a much higher moral cost than their usual method of destroying a bad guy's life. In the end, Nate plays the two against each other (getting each of them to point out why they should want the other dead) then leaves them to fight over a gun with a single bullet. They both fall off the nearby cliff while fighting over the weapon.
  • In Burn Notice Micheal doesn't have a problem with killing, he has a problem with being traced to killings and so avoids doing so directly when possible. In keeping with this, he is perfectly willing to trick bad guys into killing each other, often in such a rash manner the survivor will soon get picked up by the police.

Video Games

  • In Advance Wars Dual Strike, the Big Bad is defeated and at the player's mercy. But the machine he hooked himself up to is still draining the planet, and he needs to be killed. Von Bolt taunts Jake, asking if he can really shoot a defenseless old man. The player is offered a choice of whether to shoot him or not, and if you don't, Hawke shows up and does it for you. The odd thing about this is that either way, the shooter just destroys Von Bolt's machine itself.
  • Reaver's job in Fable III is to do this. He stands in court to argue in favour of the evil option when making decisions as king. While these options are generally quite despicable and having an orphanage would be a fine and dandy in the long run, you could really do with the 1.25 million you'd make from opening a brothel right now to fight back the Eldritch Abomination that threatens to destroy Albion.
    • He also does this in the previous game. If the player does not kill Lucien in the middle of his Motive Rant, Reaver will take the chance to shoot him.
  • In Iji, if you're taking the pacifist path, two of the bosses get backstabbed by their underlings; conveniently meaning you don't have to kill them. This was actually added in, since earlier versions meant a completely innocent run was impossible.
  • In Fate/stay night, Ilya kills Shinji in Fate, saving Shirou from having to do it; Sakura does the same in Heaven's Feel. Sakura and Kotomine combined also kill off Zouken in the same route, who would probably have caused some moral quandaries since he's essentially defenseless on his own at that point even though his very existence is an abomination.
  • In Metroid Prime 3: Corruption, Dark Samus kills the corrupted Hunters after you defeat them. Samus probably couldn't bring herself to Shoot the Dog, making Dark Samus quite convenient in a twisted, twisted way.
  • A borderline example between this and Villainous Rescue occurs in Super Robot Wars 3. Anavel Gato's claim to fame in his show of origin is launching a stolen nuke at a peace conference. He reenacts this scene in the game, but this time the "peace conference" is between two villainous factions. What makes this a borderline example is the fact that the heroes congratulate him on this and gladly accept his Heel Face Turn application, suggesting that they may have done the same thing if they had a nuke lying around.
  • In Drakengard 2, it transpires that one of the pact knights that keeps the Goddess Seal intact is Ulrich, a party member and Nowe's Big Brother Mentor, and must be killed to break the seal. Despite wanting to destroy the seal, Nowe can't bring himself to do it. Fortunately, Caim happens to be in the area and is more than happy to oblige, even it means having to go through Nowe to do it. Especially if he has to go through Nowe to do it, really...
  • Done in Baten Kaitos Origins, frequently. Most notably in the Lava Caves; after the umbra knocks Sagi's party out with Mountainmaker, Valara shows up in her Humongous Mecha and blasts it to pieces with a Wave Motion Gun. Earlier in the game, another umbra saves the party from Valara's Humongous Mecha as well, but gets blasted apart by her mecha.
  • Valkyria Chronicles has most of its non-romance plot starting with this trope. Selvaria's going to crush the militia! What do we do? Have Faldio shoot Alicia and awaken her Valkyria powers so she doesn't have to accept responsibility for becoming one herself.
    • You also have Georgios Geld in a side chapter. A notorious war criminal who tortured and killed Eleanor Varrot's lover, he is nonetheless released in an If You Kill Him You Will Be Just Like Him moment. Naturally, someone this much of a Complete Monster can't be allowed to get off scot-free, so he flees back to the Imperial headquarters... only to be court marshalled and excecuted by his own side! Also doubles as Even Evil Has Standards.
  • In Uncharted 2: Among Thieves, after defeating the Final Boss Lazarevic in a blatant example of Get It Over With, Lazarevic dares the protagonist to shoot him and end it. True to character, Nathan is not the one that has to end it. The Guardians, originally mini-bosses, arrive to finish the job for you.
  • In Assassin's Creed: Revelations, Ezio promises Suleiman that he will spare the Templar Leader, Suleiman's uncle, Ahmet if he can. During the confrontation, Selim, Suleiman's father and Ahmet's brother, interrupts, strangles Ahmet, and throws him to a Disney Villain Death.
  • It pisses off Travis, but Henry kills the fifth ranked assassin in front of his face...and because of the rules of the fights, it counts as a rank up for Travis anyways.
  • In Mount & Blade raiding villages costs you honor and pisses off a good number of companions, but hurts the ability of the faction owning them to spit out troops. The solution to this is to have a subordinate with a low-honor personality around. You can even order him to do it oddly enough.

Web Comics

Western Animation

  • Doomsday's first appearance in Justice League Unlimited. In the comics, he killed Supes (He got better). However, Supes' evil universe counterpart, Justice Lord Superman, used his eye lasers to lobotomize Doomsday not five minutes into the fight (he got better too, and was mighty pissed, but that's another story).
  • In the Aladdin animated series, Aladdin threatens to turn a magic-eating monster loose on Mozenrath, who taunts him by pointing out that he's not ruthless enough to do that. "You're right...I'm not that ruthless." Then Aladdin points at Iago. "But he is!" And Iago proves it.
  • In Kong, Ramone De La Porta is the main villain and constantly causes trouble for Jason, Kong, and the gang when he is trying to unlock powers of the Primal Stones, while often making threats and trying to kill Kong, yet they often save him whenever he is in danger (and he only returns the favor once, just so they're even). In the final episode, Harpy sucks De La Porta's life force out as part of a ritual to awaken Chiros. De La Porta survives when his life force is returned to him later, but is left in a permanent state of shock.
  • In The Batman, Wrath and Scorn have figured out Batman and Robin's identity. Even though they are arrested, Batman really can't do anything to keep them from revealing this to everyone. Luckily, the Joker (much like in The Dark Knight) didn't want someone else causing the end of Batman and gassed them while they were in the police van.
  • Tom Slick once raced against a cheater who, after being defeated, was told by Marigold he'd get his commeupance. He said good guys like Tom Slick don't get even. Then he got his commeupance from another racer wronged by his cheating.