Death Is Cheap: Difference between revisions

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** In season five, it's made a little less cheap: Though death isn't permanent, there is no guarantee that the reborn Mon will remember its prior life, in most cases being very unlikely. And ''then'' Kurata figures out how to make a Digimon [[Deader Than Dead]].
** Digimon's reliance on this trope causes a huge [[Player Punch]] when it's brutally subverted in Digimon Tamers. A Leomon dying became memetic after this instance. However, it soon becomes apparent that this particular Leomon won't be coming back at all.
* ''[[Bludgeoning Angel Dokuro-chan|Bludgeoning Angel Dokurochan]]'': Every time Dokuro violently kills Sakura, she resurrects him right on the spot a couple seconds later, none the worse for wear.
** It still ''hurts'' though.
** This only applies to Sakura. The classmate that Dokuro killed in order to get the seat next to Sakura remains dead throughout the series.
* In ''[[Kinnikuman]]'', Choujin who have died can come back by completing certain trials in the afterlife. Thus, it is entirely possible for a character to be graphically killed off then show up in the next story arc with no-one batting an eye. Note that this doesn't work for those who die of old age, though.
* The last third or so of the chapters in ''[[Shaman King]]''. Can we say [[Just for Pun|overkill]]?
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* [[Cory Doctorow]]'s ''Down And Out in the Magic Kingdom'' takes this trope to its logical conclusion by having everyone take resurrection for granted. Thus, the narrator (Julius) is killed early in the novel and spends the rest of the story fighting back against those he believes responsible for his murder. He theorizes that they timed his death carefully so that he'd be out of commission at the exact point when his enemies were putting a plan into effect, since obviously if they killed him too early he would be alive again at by that point.
** And in both that book and [[Ken MacLeod]]'s ''Newton's Wake'', resurrection is so automated that other medical skills have atrophied or been lost; it's easier to get a new body than to fix the one you have. Like consumer electronics today.
* In ''[[Discworld/The Light Fantastic|The Light Fantastic]]'', Death lampshades this when Rincewind and Twoflower escape from his house, saying, {{small-caps|That always annoys me. I might as well install a revolving door.}}
* In ''[[Dragaera]]'', it's a relatively simple process to become "revivified" after death. It's fairly expensive, however, and some circumstances can make it impossible. Assassinations among the Jhereg criminal organization often do not take. In the first novel, Vlad even claims that someone might be assassinated as a warning to back off, though this level of cheapness is not carried over into subsequent novels.
* The ''Takeshi Kovacs'' novels by Richard K. Morgan take place in a largely post-death world where a person's consciousness is housed in a chip in his brain, called a "stack." When his body dies, his chip is inserted into a new one. Bodies, now called "sleeves," are bought and traded like garments. In the first book of the series, a centuries-old magnate hires the hero to find out how his previous sleeve was murdered.
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Death Is Cheap{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Death Tropes]]
[[Category:Just for Pun]]
[[Category:Death Is Cheap]]
[[Category:Example as a Thesis]]
[[Category:Resurrection Tropes]]