Black and Gray Morality: Difference between revisions

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== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* ''[[Akira]]''. You know something's screwed up when the members of a biker gang who take drugs, vandalise property and violently attack their enemies with no remorse are the main good guys. Still, this was a story about society, so Paladin types wouldn't really fit in very well.
* ''[[Ghost in the Shell (1995 film)|Ghost in the Shell]]'', following much the same vein as ''Akira''. It's more evident in the [[Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex|''Stand Alone Complex'']] verse, although ''Innocence'' also features Batou mercilessly shooting down what looks to be an entire group of Yakuza simply for getting in his way.
* ''[[Samurai Champloo]]'' to a certain degree. Or maybe it's just [[Heroic Sociopath|Mugen]].
** Jin. He was a ronin<ref>A samurai without a master</ref> {{spoiler|because Jin killed him in self-defense}}.
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** Though Hansel and Gretel are ''so'' broken from early childhood that they likely lack enough moral agency [[Character Alignment|to even be considered "evil"]].
* In ''[[Highschool of the Dead]]'', a couple of the protagonists have already crossed the [[Moral Event Horizon]] in their own respective personal opinions, and it's stated by the protagonists at several points that they're all already prepared to cross a moral point of no return in the event that it's the only way to kill the zombies.
 
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==