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{{trope}}
[[File:angelofdeathbyevelyndemorgan 7190.jpg|link=The Grim Reaper|frame|''[https://web.archive.org/web/20131027163419/http://www.houseofazrael.com/azrael-gallery/images/angel_of_death-2.html Angel of Death]'' by Evelyn de Morgan]]
 
{{quote|'''Mercedes Colomar:''' You're not the nurse?
'''Manny Calavera:''' No.
'''Mercedes Colomar:''' You're not here to give me my medication?
'''Manny Calavera:''' No. But I am here to ease your pain.|''[[Grim Fandango]]''}}
|''[[Grim Fandango]]''}}
 
For centuries, humanity has feared death, and understandably so, all things considered. Therefore, when personifying it, the result was often pretty terrifying. However, there has also been a [[Dark Is Not Evil|very different attitude used at times]], with various writers and artists creating a personification of [[Death]] who is not only not scary, but friendly, compassionate and otherwise the sort of person you'd want to find waiting for you at a difficult time like that.
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See also [[Psychopomp]] and [[The Grim Reaper]]. Compare with [[Everybody Hates Hades]], when authors do almost the complete opposite with death-related deities. Distant cousin to [[The Devil Is a Loser]]. Compare [[Not Afraid to Die]] and [[We All Die Someday]], which is about not fearing death itself rather than its personification.
 
{{deathtrope}}
{{examples}}
== [[Advertising]] ==
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w3MFSnrZorw This] advert for Grolsch beer features the Grim Reaper taking a brief break from work. He appears to be quite fun guy to hang out with.
* Some Spectrum commercials [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMoyGHkn_cI (like this one)] portray the Reaper and many other monsters as [[Laughably Evil]].
 
== [[Anime]] &and [[Manga]] ==
 
== Anime & Manga ==
* ''[[Yu Yu Hakusho]]'' has Botan who plays death in the first few episodes. She wears a pink robe and is a [[Genki Girl]]. Yusuke even does [[Lampshade Hanging]].
* Meroko and Takuto from ''[[Full Moon o Sagashite]]''.
* ''[[Bleach]]'': This trope is in force for the most part. The shinigami are just like humans: they can be friendly, moody, supportive, scary, hostile depending on situation or individual personality type. However, shinigami aren't enemies of humanity even if their focus on the big picture can make them seem aloof at times. Their role is to guide the dead to Soul Society, cleanse hollows of post-death sin so they too can be guided to Soul Society and also to maintain the balance of souls across different worlds. In other words, shinigami are portrayed the same way humans are portrayed: as individuals with their own personalities, worries, fears, foibles, strengths and weaknesses.
* Shinigami-sama/Lord Death from [[Soul Eater]] willingly embraces this trope. Back in his day he used to look like a textbook skull-and-black-cloak (read: very intimidating) Grim Reaper, but when he founded the Shibusen Academy he took on a [https://web.archive.org/web/20130506152923/http://images2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20081007183645/souleater/images/e/e7/Vsmediossouleaterdeadgod.jpg more friendly appearance] and goofy speech patterns, so as to not frighten his students. His son Death the Kid is also hardly a threatening image of death, being a teenage boy with [[Super OCD]]. However, don't try to [[Berserk Button|do whatever you like with human lives]]. [[Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass|They don't like that one bit.]]
* The idea is alluded to in ''[[Cowboy Bebop]]'', where the [[Magical Native American]] says "Do not fear death. Death is always by our side. When we show fear it jumps at us faster than light, but if we do not show fear, it casts its eye upon us gently, and guides us into infinity."
* Momo in ''[[Ballad of a Shinigami]]'' is a sweet [[White-Haired Pretty Girl]] who not only makes your death painless, she helps the people you are leaving behind by comforting them.
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* Death in [[Gregory Horror Show]] is the only character shown to be completely friendly to the trapped guests, speaking kindly and offering to help where he can.
 
== [[Art]] ==
 
== Art ==
* Hugo Simberg, a Finnish symbolist painter, liked this theme. He made several iterations of [[wikipedia:File:Hugo Simberg Garden of Death.jpg|The Garden of Death]], possibly his most famous work. He even went so far as to [[Word of God|publicly explain his own interpretation of the scene]].
* ''la catrina from posada'', better explained at the mythology folder
 
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
* The classic modern example is the [[Perky Goth]] version of Death from ''[[The Sandman]]'', although she can actually appear more horrifying to those whose life was asking for a shocking exit.
** The French Comic ''Le Collège Invisible'' has a quite similar incarnation of Death, possibly inspired by her.
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* Although Cernunnos, the Elder God of Death from Joseph Michael Linsner's ''Dawn'' series can definitely take terrifying form if he so chooses (if, for example, he needs to curb-stomp a group of angels and demons who've decided to trespass on Earth with their bickering), the one time we see him welcoming a soul to the afterlife, he takes a much more attractive form and greets her...very warmly.
 
== [[Fan Works]] ==
* Invoked in one installment of ''[[No Tendo]]'', a [[Mega Crossover]] storyline originally written on the (currently defunct) [[Anime Add-Venture]] but [https://www.fanfiction.net/s/5849474/1/No-Tendo now available on Fanfiction.net] -- when members of [[Stargate SG-1|Stargate Command]] see a painting of [[Sailor Moon|Hotaru "Sailor Saturn" Tomoe]] in the midst of wreaking destruction yet somehow appearing gentle and beckoning, they name it "Don't Fear the Reaper".
* Judging by his comments near the end of the story, this appears to be the insight Harry gains from the Japanese death poem ("''Death poems/Are mere delusion --/Death is Death''") Pansy recites to him when helping him cope with Sirius' death in the early part of the ''[[Harry Potter]]'' fic ''[[White Knight, Grey Queen]]'' by Jeconais.
 
== [[Film]] ==
* ''[[Woody Allen|Love Andand Death]]'' parodies ''[[The Seventh Seal]]'' in its depiction of Death, who first visits a young Boris and then dances with an adult Boris at the end.
* In ''[[The Last Action Hero]]'', Death actually ''is'' the Death from ''[[The Seventh Seal]]'', and he seems as intimidating as he was there. However, when he realizes his mark is Slater - a fictional character - Death simply smirks and says, "I don't do fiction", turns around and leaves.
** Possibly a bit of [[Fridge Logic]] and [[Fridge Brilliance]], seeing as Death has some [[Medium Awareness]] here and knows characters in fiction only die when the script calls for it, and here, it doesn't.
* The movie ''[[Death Takes a Holiday]]'' (from 1934, starring Frederick March and Evelyn Venable), sees Death become progressively nicer during [[Death Takes a Holiday|his stint in human form]]. It was remade in 1971, and again in 1998 as ''[[Meet Joe Black]]''.
* In ''[[Bill and TedsTed Excellent Adventure(film)|Bill And Ted's Bogus Journey]]'', the Grim Reaper appears as someone with kind of a bad attitude - but turns out to become a [[Sour Supporter|useful ally]]. In fact, he later on joins the Wyld Stallyns. The [[Trope Namer]] is even quoted, when the [[Grim Reaper]] finally agrees to help Bill and Ted out.
{{quote|'''Bill:''' Hey Ted - don't fear the Reaper. ''*triumphant air guitaring* ''
'''Death:''' [annoyed] ''I heard that!'' }}
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* In ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JATr3vNOIYA& The Lady and the Reaper]'', Death is a [["No Respect" Guy]] [[Determinator]] willing to go well above and beyond the call of duty to deliver an old lady's soul to meet her husband in the afterlife.
 
== [[Literature]] ==
 
== Literature ==
* While Death from the ''[[Discworld]]'' series is still probably not the kind of person (or [[Anthropomorphic Personification]]) you'd like to meet in a dark alleyway, what with him still being the classic cowled skeleton and all, he's arguably the closest thing the Discworld has to a responsible, benevolent deity. (The actual gods tend to be self-interested jerks running on Greek Mythology rules.) He stated that he has to care in order to do his job, although it's an extremely lonely one - people are still rarely, except under certain unfortunate circumstances, pleased to see him. Interestingly, despite him being a skeleton, there have been a fair few fans (some imminently due to be "collected") who've written to [[Terry Pratchett]] saying that they hope that he wasn't too far off the mark. Pratchett also says that these letters usually cause him to spend some time staring at the wall. His family motto is "Non Timetis Messor" - Latin for "Don't fear the Reaper"- not to mention he's very fond of cats (it's suggested that cruelty to cats is one of the very few things that can make Death genuinely angry, and he also has adopted rather a large number of his own, which by all indications he takes quite good care of).
** There's an entire book in the series, ''[[Discworld/Reaper Man|Reaper Man]],'' devoted to Death discovering how vital kindness in his job is.
{{quote|{{smallcapssmall-caps|[[Crowning Moment of Heartwarming|Lord, what can the harvest hope for, if not for the care of the]] [[Title Drop|Reaper Man?]]}}}}
** Death has also been replaced temporarily by his apprentice Mort and Mort's daughter (Death's "granddaughter") Susan Sto Helit. One is a knobby-kneed adolescent male who gradually starts taking on Death's traits while the other is a young woman.
** Death and Susan are also two of the only things standing between humanity and [[Complete Monster|the auditors]]. And ''boy'' have they done a good job there... <!-- MOD: Nothing is certain but Death and Susan... -->
* The book ''[[The Book Thief]]'' is narrated by Death, who is amusing, non-linear and <s>rather</s> ''very'' compassionate towards humans (he specifically states he's haunted by them, especially "the ones who are left behind"), particularly the other main characters. Given that it's a book about World War II, the "amusing" part takes a sharp turn. The death camp scenes, unsurprisingly, are particularly [[Tear Jerker|bad]].
* Thanatos (aka Zane) from ''[[Incarnations of Immortality]]'' will take time to talk to his clients and give whatever comfort he can (if they need it). He's also managed to prevent a few deaths he thought unfair or unnecessary. At least one other character comments that he has an unusually caring approach to his Office.
* While [[Harry Potter (novel)|Harry Potter]] never encounters Death, according to the Deathly Hallows, Harry's ancestor - the one who received Death's invisibility cloak - befriended him, and when it was time for him to die, he sought Death out and they walked away together.
** Later on in ''[[Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (novel)|Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows]]'', {{spoiler|Harry dies briefly, and his guide into the afterlife, should he choose not to go back, is Dumbledore.}} Really, death gets a pretty good rap in this series.
*** [[Kill'Em All|It'd have to...]]
** It all has to do with the [[Author Tract]] about how to deal with death, stemming from the [[Creator Breakdown]] when [[Real Life Writes the Plot|Rowling's mother died]]. If one doesn't accept their own mortality ( {{spoiler|i.e. the first Peverell brother, Voldemort}}), or gain acceptance of their loved ones' passing ( {{spoiler|the second brother, Snape}}), then Death will be a grueling bastard. But if one accepts Death's visit as an inevitability ( {{spoiler|the third brother, Harry}}), then he will greet you like an old friend.
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* While Namo Mandos is the god of death in [[J. R. R. Tolkien|JRR Tolkien]]'s verse, he is benevolent and one of the local [[Council of Angels]]. ''[[The Silmarillion]]'' actually drops the [[Anvilicious]] [[Aesop]] that death is a fate that's intended by [[God]] for humans, it's all natural and you should not fear it.
* The Many-Faced God of Braavos in ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'' is a death god spoken of in very positive terms. One of his worshipers makes a comment (slightly paraphrased) that every person has a dark angel beside them, and when the suffering of life becomes too great, that angel will give them the "gift" of death.
* In "[https://web.archive.org/web/20111207232832/http://www.horrormasters.com/Text/a2747.pdf The Glass of Supreme Moments]", Death is portrayed as a beautiful woman—and the protagonist's [[True Love]].
* Obligatory ''[[The Dresden Files|Dresden Files]]'' example: in ''Ghost Story'', when {{spoiler|Father Forthill}}'s life is in jeopardy, Dresden has a conversation with an angel of death waiting nearby. Dresden assumes he'll need to battle the angel to prevent his friend's death, but the angel assures him that (a) she is there only to guard the soul, should it be released from the body, on its way to [[Fluffy Cloud Heaven|a final reward]], and (b) it was {{spoiler|Forthill's}} choice to enter the conflict, the angel had no part in it (indeed, they don't have free will as humans do). And (c) she would [[Curb Stomp Battle|utterly stomp Harry if he raised a finger against her]].
* In ''[[Cerberon]]'', Edu, the goddess of death, is described as loving and merciful in her duty to provide rest and comfort after death. She's in charge of keeping the dead from bothering the living, but doesn't seem very proactive in this regard, considering all the zombies, ghouls, vampires and ghosts hanging around, although she does promptly respond to her priests' calls to take them away.
* ''"[http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/english/melani/cs6/stop.html Because I could not stop for Death]"'' by [[Emily Dickinson]] is probably the [[Trope Codifier]].
 
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
 
== Live-Action TV ==
* ''[[The Twilight Zone]]'' TOS episode [http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=_S-oxQedkZ0 "Nothing in the Dark"]. A woman frightened of dying allows a wounded police officer (played by a young Robert Redford) into her apartment. When she realizes that he's Death come to claim her, he tries to convince her that she shouldn't fear death.
** ''Mother, give me your hand... You see. No shock. No engulfment. No tearing asunder. What you feared would come like an explosion is like a whisper. What you thought was the end is the beginning.'' - Death, assuring the old woman that her journey has just begun.
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* After years of begging for Death, [[Married... with Children|Al Bundy]] gets his wish. Good news: Death offers Al a way out. Bad news: Death can assume any appearance, so naturally it chose Peggy.
* Weirdly enough, there is an NCIS episode that implicitly features the angel of death. She appears as a little girl, and mostly just appears to be dropping in to check on her next cases.
* A [[Rowan Atkinson]] sketch titled [https://web.archive.org/web/20141130002834/http://www.epicure.demon.co.uk/devilswelcome.html "The Devil's Welcome"] plays with this hilariously.
{{quote|'''The Devil:''' Now, you're all here for..... Eternity! Ooh, which I hardly need tell you is a heck of a long time, so you'll all get to know each other pretty well by the end.
But for now I'm going to have to split you up in groups.
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* Subverted in an episode of ''Mysterious Ways''. Declan starts worrying that his teaching assistant, a not at all scary looking young woman, is the Angel of Death and she has come for him. Throughout the course of the episode, and in dealing with his own potential illness, it is revealed that she is actually the Angel of Comfort (the same one who visited him when his dad died.)
 
== [[Music]] ==
 
== Music ==
* The Franz Schubert song ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKh4JsWvsPw Der Tod und das Mädchen]'' ''Death And The Maiden'' (1817), set to a poem by Matthias Claudius, has Death say to the maiden of the title, "Give me thy hand, thou young and tender form. I am a friend, and come not to punish. Be of good cheer! I am not savage. You will sleep softly in my arms." Yeah, it's [[Older Than Radio]].
** Another song on the same theme, ''Death on Hennepin'' by Boiled in Lead, takes a more stern tack but ultimately the Reaper in this song is also present to ease the deceased's passing, not harm her or frighten her.
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* The Angel of Death (who looks like the standard Grim Reaper, only with a halo, and no scythe in evidence) in [http://www.albinoblacksheep.com/flash/falling "I've Got Some Falling to Do"] by [[Lemon Demon]]. He's kind of a goof. He even does a dance!
* Pop Will Eat Itself have a song called Menofearthereaper about this.
* Pagan rock band Inkubus Sukkubus has "Death and the Virgin" as a bonus track on their album Strewwlpeter. You can listen to it here:[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=94GDQJc4zGk here].
* ''[[Ariya]]'' has [http://lyricstranslate.com/en/tam-visoko-%D1%82%D0%B0%D0%BC-%D0%B2%D1%8B%D1%81%D0%BE%D0%BA%D0%BE-there.html a song] about one. If you thought the humans are exasperating enough for the humans...
 
== [[Oral Tradition]], [[Folklore]], Myths and Legends ==
== Mythology and Religion ==
* In Voodoo, there's Maman Brigitte, the Hatian goddess of love and death. To quote [http://www.godchecker.com/ God Checker:]
{{quote|"She is so chatty and full of jokes that it's fun when she escorts you to the Underworld."}}
** Furthermore, there is Baron Samedi, Papa Guede and the whole rest of the Guede family, which tends to be a bunch of people who really enjoy … for a lack of a better word, living. Papa Guede himself sits down and listens to you entire life story.
* In Mexico, the character of La Catrina its an important part of its folklore. She is nice, loves to sing, dance and get fun with the mortals, especially certain days like DiaDía De Losde Muertos. And if you are Mexican, she will appear at the day of your death.
* Death is also revered in Mexico in the form of Santa Muerte ("Saint Death"), who is worshiped as an unrecognized saint. While still taking the form of a grinning skull, she is revered as a patron of the downtrodden and those forsaken by society at large. She is also worshiped by criminals as the one saint who will never forsake them.
* Some scholars of ''[[The Bible]]'' take "Angel of Death" to be an allegory for [[The Messiah|Jesus]].
 
== [[Professional Wrestling]] ==
 
== Poetry ==
* ''"[http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/english/melani/cs6/stop.html Because I could not stop for Death]"'' by [[Emily Dickinson]] is probably the [[Trope Codifier]].
 
== Professional Wrestling ==
* [[The Undertaker]], at least since his 2004 return to his "undead" gimmick. He's still depicted as intensely scary and having supernatural powers, but he usually battles against villains - most famously at the 2007 Royal Rumble, when he arrived as the 30th entrant to save [[Shawn Michaels]], [[Edge]], [[Randy Orton]], and Montel Vontavious Porter from The Great Khali.
 
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
 
* Gods of death in many ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'' settings are evil. Not so in the ''[[Forgotten Realms]]'', where Kelemvor is the poster boy for this trope and canonically [[Lawful Neutral]]. He and his worshipers work to comfort the living and ensure that the dead rest in peace.
== Tabletop Games ==
* Gods of death in many [[Dungeons & Dragons]] settings are evil. Not so in the ''[[Forgotten Realms]]'', where Kelemvor is the poster boy for this trope and canonically [[Lawful Neutral]]. He and his worshipers work to comfort the living and ensure that the dead rest in peace.
** Also in this category is the Mulhorandi god Osiris, who is a god of the dead that is ''[[Lawful Good]]''.
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
 
== Video Games ==
* ''[[The Sims]]'' series has a light tune of the Grim Reaper, he listens to pleads for life, and he gives a chance for the Sims to win back their loved ones, and even if they failed at his little game, he might bring them back as zombies anyway. He also gives discounts on children's resurrections. He enjoys watching TVs and if he arrived at a party, he might party with the residents, even though he always spoils the mood with his arrival. Oh that silly Reaper.
** If a sim dies of old age at the end of a fulfilling life and is in Platinum Aspiration, the Reaper shows up in a flower lei, accompanied by hula girls, to send your sim on an eternal vacation to Tropical Paradise Heaven. Their tombstone after this is white marble with gold trim.
** One of the plot hooks in Strangetown is the product of an affair between the local [[A Worldwide Punomenon|black widow]] and the friendly guy who kept coming for her husbands...
* Mara, one of the gods from the [[Roguelike]] ''[httphttps://wwwweb.archive.org/web/20140102170133/http://incursion-roguelike.com/ Incursion]'', puts a big emphasis on fulfillment and resolution; she is surprisingly free with resurrections for her worshipers. Unusually for this trope, she is also the goddess of [[The Undead]] and doesn't view them as [[Exclusively Evil|abominations]].
* ''[[Maximo]]'' has Grim, the Grim Reaper, who is a all around pleasant guy and a wise-ass, plus one of the protagonist's allies. TheWhy? As he himself explains it, [[Brutal Honesty| "If there's no more dead, I'm out of a job!"]] Still, the second game shows that it's not just a job for him, he feels paternal to the souls he guards and hates to see them trapped or used for evil. In fact, in the second game he even directly helps Maximo this time by stepping into combat directly temporarily.
{{quote|'''Grim:''' "Aww, how can you not trust this face?"}}
* In ''[[Soul Nomad and The World Eaters]]'', the [[Grim Reaper|Master of Death]] of the protagonist's homeworld, Vigilance, was a just and compassionate being. Since [[Reincarnation]] only occurs while there is a Master of Death to keep the souls flowing into the afterlife, it also means his duty is simply an integral part in keeping the world alive. {{spoiler|His ''own'' reincarnation, [[Psycho for Hire|Gig]], is ''not'' an example of this trope.}}
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** Also of note during their final encounter John says, "Damn you!", to the mysterious man and he responds casually, "Many have.", before walking off. Death is something that many people do damn (hate) all their lives, or this could be a subtle reference to the man being God as many people take His name in vain (God damn).
* Manny Calavera of ''[[Grim Fandango]]'' and the page quote is a charming salesman; it just happens that he ''sells'' travel packages to carry dead souls safely through the afterlife. His job and that of his fellow Reapers is simply to ensure people get what they deserve. Most of them aren't scary at all. {{spoiler|In fact, when an earlier Reaper, Salvador, learned that good people were being denied their "sweet hereafters" and being forced to linger in the Land of the Dead, he quit his job, denying himself his 'benefits', and started a revolution.}}
* "The Mistress" in ''[[Vega Strike]]'' [[Welcome to Corneria|apparently]] is a part of the in-'[[Verse]] folklore. Looks great in [http://vegastrike.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/vegastrike/trunk/masters/sprites/died.png?view=log the gameover screen]{{Dead link}},<ref>DXT format</ref> anyway.
* Death in the ''[[Neverwinter Nights 2]]'' mod saga ''[[Dark Waters]]'' is portrayed as a long-suffering hard-working bureaucrat who decides he's just not going to process your character because he's busy, thus excusing your deaths in-game. This is played for laughs.
** On the other the hand, the actual Reaper of ''[[Neverwinter Nights|Hordes of the Underdark]]'' is benign as well, and merely opens many doors for you to take once you reach his realm, provided you have the means of paying him to be resurrected... {{spoiler|This is later used against you once it is revealed that his true name was discovered by the [[Big Bad]] Mephistopheles. Said archdevil used him until the perfect moment so that the hero would be trapped in Cania (read: Hell) and so that the Reaper would not be able to help them escape.}}
* Similarly to the ''[[Dark Waters]]'' example, Death in ''[[Adventure Quest]]'' always tells you he has filled his quota of souls for the day, and sends you back saying you owe him one. For whatever reason, he never calls in the favor. Again, played for laughs.
* In ''[[Manual Samuel]]'', Death is a pretty hip fellow (even if the [[Narrator]] thinks he's acting like a "douchebag") who offers the eponymous protagonist a deal: he'll let Samuel live if Samuel can survive a day where all of his bodily functions have to be triggered manually. Meaning Samuel (through the player) has to consciously make himself breathe, blink, and so on. While this at first seems sadistic, the Reaper sticks around to give Samuel advice and pointers, much like an [[Exposition Fairy]] would.
* In ''[[Deadpool]]'' video game, Marvel's female version of Death appears frequently to help and guide the anti-hero protagonist, which makes perfect sense if you're a fan of the comics, where Deadpool [[Did You Just Romance Cthulhu?| is madly in love with her.]]
* ''[[Conker's Bad Fur Day]]''; in this game, the Reaper (who's name is "Gregg", don't laugh) is a grouchy, grumpy fellow, but he's quick to ally himself with the protagonist, giving him a shotgun for killing cat-zombies and advice on how to use it; he hates undead and cats with a passion.
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
 
== Web Comics ==
* ''[[Gashapon Shop]]'' has the Grim Reaper's angsty nephew, who, on his first day, goes for his target's nephew to to slightly similar names. He later cracks a few jokes and aids the heroes, but he doesn't show up often.
* ''[[Gunnerkrigg Court]]'' has many [[Psychopomp]]s, a lot of whom Antimony Carver has befriended during her childhood in a hospital - at first she didn't connect their visits with death f patients, but later helped a "stuck" spirit. {{spoiler|In fact, she counts too, after she acted as the reaper for her own mother - and the Realm of the Dead (under whose "jurisdiction" are spirits who don't move on yet, such as "haunting" ghosts like Mort) officially recognises her as a Guide.}}
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* In ''[[The Adventures of Dr. McNinja]]'', Death, while still retaining the black clothing (albeit a suit) and skeletal appearance, is a mostly-polite British waiter who guides you to your table in Purgatory, which is a restaurant.
* Death from ''[[Death and The Maiden]]'' is a generally genial guy with a crush on a human girl.
* Death from ''F@nboy$'' is...well, [https://web.archive.org/web/20110811115508/http://fanboys-online.com/index.php?comic=178 he's] [https://web.archive.org/web/20110810143456/http://fanboys-online.com/index.php?comic=204 something] [https://web.archive.org/web/20131112041359/http://fanboys-online.com/index.php?comic=237 else].
* Dee, from the Spanish webcomic [[CROWLEY]], usually looks like a cheerful little girl and is quite friendly and kind, and a friend of the main character. Unless you piss her off, then she can be downright terrifying.
* Death in [[Problem Sleuth]] is a nice enough guy, willing to let you drink tea and play games for your life. He's also pretty ineffectual at his job, as most of the characters who end up in the afterlife escape through the door.
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* The scrapyard robot in ''[[Freefall]]'' is pretty nice for a robot built to take apart other robots (and who carries a scythe). He even allows them to buy themselves as scrap so they don't need to be disassembled (not to mention exist without an owner).
* While the other "The Last Trick-or-Treaters" strips by R.K. Milholland of ''[[Something*Positive]]'' fame are frightening, [http://www.rhymes-with-witch.com/rww10242011a.shtml this one] starring the [[Grim Reaper]] and an unfortunate trick-or-treater is oddly touching.
* ''[[Eerie Cuties]]'' has a Reaper [httphttps://www.eeriecutiespixietrixcomix.com/stripseerie-eccuties/an_a2010-09-cup_please!22 student], who runs around with a scythe, but apparently objects against ''extinctions''.
** And itsIts spin-off ''Dangerously Chloe'' has as a recurring character [https://pixietrixcomix.com/dangerously-chloe/volume-1-page-167 Alchemy] — a well-meaning, but rather clueless (if not as much as some angels) "working" Reaper named Alchemy as a recurring character. And if you thought ''demonic'' physiology is weird and occasionally inconvenient...
 
== [[Web Original]] ==
* [[ChildrinrskaryChildrin R Skary|The Childrin may indeed be skary]], but Death, despite the skeleton-in-a-cloak-with-a-scythe look, is a kindly and benevolent figure (and a bit of a [[Woobie]] too):
** [https://web.archive.org/web/20120713051937/http://skary.com/blog/death-n-elsie/ Death 'n' Elsie].
** [https://web.archive.org/web/20120713052026/http://skary.com/blog/an-elephants-memory/ An Elephant's Memory].
** [https://web.archive.org/web/20120713051918/http://skary.com/blog/a-parting-gift/ A Parting Gift].
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
 
* Sure, ''[[The Grim Adventures of Billy and& Mandy]]'''s Grim can seem like a scary guy when he's actually REAPING someone, but every other time, he's not such a bad guy (and a total pushover for the show's true [[Sociopathic Hero]], Mandy).
== Western Animation ==
* Sure, ''[[The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy]]'''s Grim can seem like a scary guy when he's actually REAPING someone, but every other time, he's not such a bad guy (and a total pushover for the show's true [[Sociopathic Hero]], Mandy).
** Grim's an [[Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain]] a decent portion of the time.
* Death in ''[[Family Guy]]'' is portrayed as an average person, although still keeping the robed skeleton motif. Several episodes have revolved around Peter dealing with Death, and he's often a lot more down-to-earth than most people on the show.
* In ''[[Mary Shelley's Frankenhole]]'', the [[Grim Reaper]] is a bit of a goofball, but every mortal fears him for the obvious reasons. This annoys him when Frankenstein gives him no respect at all as he's immortal and has nothing to fear.
* Not sure about the book, but in the movie adaption of ''[[The Halloween Tree]]'', Mr. Moundshroud (heavily implied to be the manifestation of Death), while not the most friendly individual, he also bears no real malice to the children; it's just business to him.
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20160304024309/http://www.mortys-lefilm.com/fr/film.html The mother of Mortys here is pretty nice.] {{spoiler|Too bad that her son doesn't understand the importance of close and personal.}}
* Zigzagged in ''[[The Hollow]]''. Death - and his three allies [[The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse|War, Famine, and Pestilence]] - are reasonable types, and Death becomes rather friendly after they promise to heal his sick horse, even willing to share his cinnamon scones and mint iced tea. ''But'', he makes it quite clear he ''will'' kill them if they don't manage to ''keep'' that promise.
 
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