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{{trope}}
{{cleanup|This trope is "Children '''Forced to''' Kill", ''not'' "Children '''Who''' Kill". The examples of children who are not forced to kill need to be moved to a more appropriate page, such as [[Ax Crazy]], [[Cute and Psycho]], [[Enfant Terrible]], or [[Yandere]].}}
Having to kill another human being is traumatic enough. But when a child has to do it, either in defense of themselves, in defense of another, or being forced at gunpoint or swordpoint themselves to do it, the effect can be all the more horrifying. The fact that even children are forced to hand out violence in a setting to defend themselves adds to the [[Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism|cynicism]] of a setting. Children having to kill on a regular basis is a red flag for a [[Crapsack World]].
The reasons for a child having to kill vary. They may have been attacked by someone and struck out in defence: they just happened to have the right thing on hand. Equally, they may manage to get the drop on someone who is trying to murder a parent or other carer. As mentioned before, they may be forced to do it, either as some form of [[Training
Can lead to an even more warped form of [[Blood-Splattered Innocents]]. Often the cause of a [[Dark and Troubled Past]]. [[Child Soldiers]] must do this as a matter of course. [[Kid Hero]] stories with a particularly dark tone may also have this as normality for the setting, especially if that setting is a [[Teenage Wasteland]]. [[Tyke Bomb
Of course, this goes along with [[Child Soldiers]].
Note: Children who kill when they don't have to aren't this: that's some form of [[Ax Crazy]], [[Cute and Psycho]], [[Enfant Terrible]], or [[Yandere]].
{{examples}}▼
▲{{examples}}
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* ''[[Black Lagoon]]'': The Vampire Twins started out as this when they were
* Happens in various ''[[Gundam]]'' franchises where the protagonists are young enough and the universe serious enough. Although combat is generally personified by mechas, the protagonists generally never forget that there is a person inside the war machine that is so easy to objectify, and spend time angsting over it.
** In Gundam 00 the protagonist was brainwashed as a young child into becoming a member of a terrorist organisation. Part of the initiation involved killing his own parents.
* ''[[Gunslinger Girl]]'' is all about this.{{verify|reason=The characters in this story are brainwashed to kill. Does that put them in the 'Children who kill when they don't have to aren't this' category?}}
* ''[[Madlax]]'' has this as part of the [[Backstory]]: {{spoiler|the entire plot basically stems from the fact that Margaret killed her own father (in self-defence) when she was 5 years old}}.
* Killua from ''[[Hunter X Hunter]]'' is an example. Being a member of a [[Big Screwed-Up Family]] of assassins, he's taught to kill from infancy, and forced into the life of an assassin without being given much of any choice in the matter. He was murdering people before he turned 6, and by the time he appears in the show - at an age of maybe 10 or 11 - he's already killed hundreds of people.
* In ''[[D
* ''[[Elfen Lied]]'': The Diclonius are all young girls. The iconic bloody first episode shows Lucy kill scores of men, and she's in her early teens. Several other Diclonii are forced to deal lethal attacks to each other throughout the series.
* ''[[Now and Then, Here
* ''Trigun'' has this as {{spoiler|Wolfwood's}} backstory. At a young age he kills {{spoiler|his abusive guardian who happens to be his uncle}} and soon gets adopted by an assassin, who teaches him the Bible, and how to kill.
== [[Comic Books]] ==
* Cassandra Cain, the third [[Batgirl]], was trained to be this when she was younger. Subverted in that, after her first kill, she panicked and ran off, vowing never to take another life.
* In ''[[The Walking Dead (
{{quote|
== [[
* In the ''[[
* Subverted by Taylor Hebert in the ''[[Worm]]/[[Harry Potter]]'' crossover ''[[A Wand for Skitter]]''. While she is in the body of a child, she is in all other ways an adult, and is a battle-hardened veteran ''and'' a former supervillain already responsible for an unspecified number of deaths before she was incarnated into a ''Harry Potter'' timeline. Her willingness to kill (and skill at doing so) contributes to the [[Troubling Unchildlike Behavior]] which she demonstrates and which disturbs many adults who know her.
== [[Film]] ==
* ''[[City of God]]'' has an infamous example in which a ganglord forces one small child to kill his even younger friend after they steal from him.
* Likewise in ''[[Sin Nombre]]'' a gang leader forces a boy to kill a rival gang member held prisoner to be accepted into their gang. Said dead rival is then cut into pieces and fed to dogs.
* ''[[The Quick and
* ''[[Full Metal Jacket]]''.
* ''[[Blood Diamond]]''.
== [[Literature]] ==
* ''[[Ender's Game]]'' is the epitome of
* Some beasts pulled into the fighting in the ''[[Redwall]]'' novels were quite young (as young as preteens - [[Improbable Age|or younger]]). Some of whose reactions were understandable, [[Creepy Child|while others]] [[Not a Game|were not]].
* H.H. Munro's ''The Easter Egg''
* Robert Muchamore's "Home" in which the protagonist is a very young guerilla soldier. After doing it he is nicknamed "Psycho".
** Another Muchamore series has the protagonist (This time a very young super spy) shoot someone and require counseling afterward.
* Basically the whole plot of ''[[The Hunger Games]]'' books.
* The entire premise of ''[[Battle Royale]]'' is that a group of 64-ish students are taken to an island and forced to kill each other until only one survives. Adding to the "forced" aspect is the fact that they're wearing explosive collars and if no one dies for twenty four hours, the guys in charge will kill everyone...
* ''[[The Tomorrow Series]]'': Ellie and her friends didn't set out originally to be guerrillas...
* In the ''[[Dragonlance|Dark Disciple Trilogy]]'' this is the most terrible facet of the Children of Chemosh. This otherwise [[Nigh Invulnerable]] version of [[The Undead]] created by Chemosh can only be destroyed if a child strikes them. The destruction of the creature is so horrifying that it also traumatizes the child and robs them of their youthful innocence forever.
* In ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'', nine-year old Arya Stark has to do this more than once when she's thrust into a wartorn countryside. She moves from simple self-defense to pre-meditated murder, and eventually {{spoiler|becomes the apprentice of a guild of assassins}}.
* Basically every one of the ''[[
== [[Live
* The ''[[
* On ''[[Lost]]'', Sayid got his start in murder by covering for his brother when forced to kill a chicken. Eko did the same thing, but with a person.
* In ''[[
** The guy in "Psychodrama" tried to force young boys to kill, or otherwise just attack, their mothers under threat of death.
* It turns out that a young
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* Example from, of all places, ''[[
== [[Web Original]] ==
* ''[[Survival of the Fittest]]'': Even if you don't count the teenagers (who are usually 15-19) being forced to kill each other, there have been a few younger characters on the show as well, such as 12-year olds who did fit this.
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* ''[[
** Aang, only 12 years old, absolutely hates this. He has nightmares about when his Avatar self went out-of-control, and is horrified at the thought of having to kill Fire Lord Ozai, as he believes all life is sacred.
*** Even Aang can be seen to kill at least inadvertently, if you pay attention. Do you think all those soldiers he buried in snow in "The Northern Air Temple" just dug themselves out and ran away? How about the Fire Nation sailors who were putting the Northern Water Tribe under siege? You can't blame all of their deaths on [[Fan Nickname|Koizilla]]. And then you have the buzzardwasp from "The Desert". Aang makes the thing fall out of the sky and hit the ground with an audible ''thud'', and it doesn't move again. Of course, that last one was teasing at a [[Moral Event Horizon]] that didn't come to pass.
* In ''[[
** He also briefly mentions being forced to kill a man using a house key at age ten. Played for pitch-black laughs.
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Youngsters]]
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