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{{trope}}
[[File:
{{quote|'''Leo''': It's about those [[Alien|alien face-huggers]]. They clamp to your face and implant their babies into your stomach, right? [...] Wouldn't that mean they stick their, ''you know'', down your throat?
▲{{quote|'''Leo''': It's about those [[Alien|alien face-huggers]]. They clamp to your face and implant their babies into your stomach, right? [...] Wouldn't that mean they stick their, ''you know'', down your throat?<br />
'''Leo''': I tell ya. As if killing you isn't bad enough. You also get a [[Trope Namer|face full of alien wing-wong]].
▲'''Aeris''': OH MY GOD! They're raping your face! That's horrible! <br />
A creature reproduces by impregnating another species. This can be a very literal pregnancy or it could be the implantation of a parasitic egg or larva into the body of a host of either gender.
May very well lead to a [[Chest Burster]].
A [[Sub-Trope]] of [[Orifice Invasion]]. See [[Anal Probing]] and [[Boldly Coming]] for more alien on human action. See also [[Mars Needs Women]].
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{{examples}}
== Anime and Manga ==
* ''[[
* '''''Humanoid''''' Szayel Aporro Grantz does this in ''[[
* The diclonii from ''[[
** Oddly, when they infect human hosts, they stick their invisible 'vector' inside the ''head'' of their victim. They're supposed to be messing with the pineal gland, which actually had to do with sleep-cycle regulation, but which [[New Age]] types believed to be involved in psychic powers.
*** All Diclonii born from this mechanism are sterile "soldiers" who tend to have more and longer vectors, while the regressive-trait full-fledged ones like Lucy can still have children. But unless they have them with other full-bloded Diclonii, the children produced lack the powers of their parents.
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** The same manga also featured a character who had a colony of leeches living in his tongue (which looked like a turtle cloaca, for extra gross-out points). The leeches burrowed into the victim's wounds and laid their eggs in the ''bladder'', hatching a few days later and evacuating through the urethra. The pain is so agonizing it kills the victim.
* One breed of mushi in ''[[Mushishi]]'' has the ability to enter a soon-to-be-pregnant woman and take over the body of her unborn fetus. The "child" that's born months later resembles a slime-like creature that slips under the floorboards of the parent's house. It begins spawning humanlike offspring that the parents unwittingly take care of. These "copies" age much more quickly than a human child, and once enough of them have been born, they enter the next phase of their reproductive cycle, wherein they 'die' and scatter their seeds. (These mushi children also possess human intelligence, making them far more ''dangerous'' than other forms of mushi, as Ginko, the main character found out.)
* ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!]]'': Parasite Paracide could be considered to fit this in the anime, at least Joey's Panther Warrior has gotten infected with it, leading to some parasite wing wong coming out of its mouth.
* ''[[Rental Magica]]'' has a variety of Cordyceps (see [[Real Life]] section) which grows on humans in early stage of development. It's rare, so its cultivators contract suitable people as hosts {{spoiler|(and plant it on themselves for that matter)}}. However, its requirements as a parasite are negligible and it has no side effects worse than making host's hand look weird. It's more dangerous that it's a strong material component for [[Necromancer|necromancy]] ''and'' {{spoiler|on the last stage of a life cycle destroys magical barriers--including ones preventing its detection}}.
* {{spoiler|Saika}} from ''[[Durarara
* ''[[Franken Fran]]'' provides an example with a female creature, {{spoiler|"Azusa" the mutant mimic octopus}}, but the results are just as unpleasant for the human.
== Comic Books ==
* ''[[X-Men (Comic Book)|X-Men]]'' has an evil alien race called the Brood that fits this trope. They are basically very large insectoids whose queens lay their eggs in sentient beings. The Brood embryos not only transform their victims into Brood, but they also absorb their host's abilities. Thus, if a host has super-powers, that Brood will have them. The X-Men only avoided this fate by freeing the Acanti, a race of [[Space Whale
* A throwaway line in ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer
* ''Hell'' was this trope for Anton Arcane in ''[[Swamp Thing]]''.
* A Future Shock in ''[[
** At least it was polite...
* The Grant Morrison comic ''[[The Filth]]'' plays with this trope through the character of a Pornomancer called "Tex Porneau". Porneau uses the black semen(!) of Dutch posthuman
* One story in an issue of the ''[[
== Film ==
* The eponymous Aliens from ''[[Alien (
** First victim: the male John Hurt. Later victims: everyone.
** The Facehugger itself resembles a [[Vagina Dentata|vulva with mandibles and an extensible clitoris]]
** The newborn chestburster resembles a fanged penis.
** The grown Alien's head is meant to look phallic. And never mind the second teeth.
** [[
** To [[Squick]] the subject even further, one article in a toy magazine clearly stated that the original line of Alien action figures was initially going to have actual penises on them (no, not the phallic heads, actual [[Gag Penis|torso-length genitals]]); similarly, ''Alien: Resurrection's'' "Newborn" alien was originally going to be hermaphroditic, with both sets of genitalia. Both times, [[Executive Meddling]] prevented these from passing into canon. Not surprisingly, these "alternate sexuality" theories have been embraced by [[Fetish Fuel|weird xenophiles everywhere]].
** The Predalien creature from ''[[Alien vs. Predator]]: Requiem'', which has traits of both a [[Predator]] and an Alien Queen, rips apart human males on sight, but upon finding a female, it will drive its phallic tongue into her mouth, and pump ''several'' Alien embryos down her throat and into her belly. It seems to prefer doing this to ''already pregnant''
*** Spoofed in ''[[
* Subverted in ''Gwoemul'', when {{spoiler|it really looks like the monster is laying eggs in people's skin or something,}} and the hero mentions that he feels something moving around in his skin. {{spoiler|It's just his imagination, it turns out.}}
* ''[[Feast]]'' had a scene which {{spoiler|took the trope's title 100% literally.}}
* ''[[Demon Seed]]'' featured a woman being impregnated by her obsessed ''computer-controlled house''.
* The hellhound creatures known as Sammael in the ''[[Hellboy (
{{quote|
* ''[[
* ''[[Breeders]]'' has this as it's whole premise. It skips the 'metaphor' part of 'rape metaphor'.
* ''Sev Trek: Puss in Boots'' (the Australian CGI spoof of ''[[Star Trek:
* The [[Creepy Child
* The comedy/horror movie ''[[Slither]]'' has slugs (really damn fast slugs) that jump into people's mouths to turn them into zombies. It also has a tiny seed thing that shoots a hick, turning him into an alien king that impregnates humans with two [[Naughty Tentacles]], turning those humans into [[Body Horror|giant swollen balls of sluggy nastiness]].
* As the lead said, the ''[[Species]]'' series has this. Mostly they are sexy female aliens who want to get themselves pregnant. The second movie has an [[The Virus|infected]] astronaut having sex with human females... [[Art Major Biology|who then go from conception to full term in minutes]].
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== Literature ==
* In [[Jo Clayton]]'s ''Irsud'', book 3 of ''Diadem from the Stars'', Aleytys was sold to a insect-like species to be used as the host for their next queen, which would consume her as time passed; Aleytys' abilities made her particularly good fodder.
* The ''[[
* The lubbocks in [[Diana Wynne Jones]]' ''[[
* In [[Stephen King]]'s ''[[
* [[
** Implied in ''[[
** In ''The Shadow Over Innsmouth'', the "Third Oath of Dagon" requires someone who swears it to {{spoiler|marry and have children with a Deep One fishman. The kids start out human, but slowly turn into fishmen themselves as they age.}} However, some citizens just swore the First and some the Second Oath. The Third Oath was reserved for the people who wanted most in return, and were resistant enough to [[Squick]]. Zadok Allen mentioned that he had taken the First and Second Oath, but wouldn't take the Third even if they killed him. Considering that he had already lived decades like that, it doesn't seem that the Third Oath was compulsory.
*** This story was adapted for the screen as the film "Dagon", which is the name of an entirely different Lovecraft work. (Interestingly enough, the "damned village" in the film is in Spain and renamed Imboca, which loosely translated means "In mouth", but I digress.)
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* ''Bloodchild'', a short story by Octavia Butler: Human hosts (almost always male) act as incubators for eggs of the female aliens, who look something like human-size centipedes. If the host is lucky, the mother gets to him in time to extract the newly hatched larvae before they eat their way out. This relationship is presented as symbiotic; the aliens cherish the human families from whom they select their hosts.
* One of the "[[Scary Stories to Tell In The Dark]]" is of a girl with an inexplicable red spot on her face, that grows bigger and bigger... and explodes with spiders.
* [[Anne McCaffrey]] wrote a short story called "Horse From A Different Sea" for her collection ''Get Off the Unicorn''. The gist of the story is a small town doctor notices that a large number of his male patients are having odd symptoms like nausea, weight gain and unusual cravings. The men have nothing in common but visiting a "house of ill-repute". After running every test he could think of the doctor finds out the men are pregnant and that the "ladies" have vanished along with the house they were in. It was done with very little horror.....given the subject matter....
* Puppetteers from Niven's [[Known Space]] novels reproduce this way, although they only use a species of nonsentient (we hope!) herd animal from their own planet as hosts.
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== Live Action TV ==
* This is how the [[Names to Run Away From Really Fast|Magog]] reproduce on ''[[Andromeda]]''. Harper once got an intestine full of mini-Magog that required [[Applied Phlebotinum]] to remove. For a while he still had them, couldn't get rid of them safely, and so had to take a drug every day to keep them from growing that would not work forever (perhaps a protease inhibitor metaphor). They could be removed with surgery, but considering the process nearly killed a genetically enhanced [[Ubermensch]], the typical person probably wouldn't survive.
* ''[[
* Though they were demons, not aliens, the ''[[
{{quote|
** Ironic given that {{spoiler|giving birth to Jasmine caused her death.}}
* In ''[[Stargate SG-1]]'', the Jaffa have symbiote pouches that are used to incubate the larval form of the Goa'uld. They are dependent on their symbiotes to carry out the function of their immune system. In a season 1 episode, Daniel Jackson was raped by the Goa'uld queen Hathor to harvest DNA to make her larvae better adapted to incubation by humans from Earth. Jack O'Neill was given a symbiote pouch to accommodate one of these (though, as stated by Dr. Frasier, "nothing got in there"). Not to be confused with the implantation process, during which a ''mature'' symbiote [[Puppeteer Parasite|takes over the central nervous system]] of a host by entering the back of their head. The Tok'ra go in via the mouth, because they're only sharing the body and it's far more
** Also in the season 2 episode "Bane", Teal'c is infected by a mosquito-like alien and starts transforming into more mosquitoes. It takes both his symbiote and an antidote to cure him.
* Lampshaded in ''[[
* Happened to Merton on a stranger than usual episode of ''[[Big Wolf
* ''[[
** In the ''[[Star Trek:
** The ''[[Star Trek: Enterprise
*** [[
* In the ''[[
* The Adipose from the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' episode "Partners in Crime" might be the most adorable example ever. The villain of the episode used "diet" pills that converted human fat into newborn Adipose, the birth rate of which would be increased to fatal levels by converting organ and bone.
== Tabletop Games ==
* One of the creepier monsters of the Creatures section of the ''Urban Arcana'' setting for [[
* ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'':
** Mind Flayers
** It's interesting how only humans, not other "player character races", are suitable for making true illithids. Attempts to transform other humanoids or other creatures usually fails fatally, or the creature becomes something only sorta illitha-like.
*** This was [[
** The Slaad implant their eggs in unfortunate victims, killing them if they manage to hatch, driving them crazy beforehand.
** In ''[[Forgotten Realms]]'', ancient [http://forgottenrealms.wikia.com/wiki/Phaerimm Phaerimm], aka "thornbacks" aka "spell grubs". Spell-hurling, very resistant to magic (eating it, in fact), [[Brainwashed|mentally controlling]] everything they meet up to and including mindflayers, laying eggs into humanoid bodies. One even ''[[Let's Meet the Meat|complimented a prospective host]]'':
{{quote|
'''Aubric:''' I doubt it.
'''Phaerimm:''' Do not. I have a fondness for you brave ones. You hatch strong larvae. }}
{{quote|
▲** Xill ([[Older Than They Think|inspired by Ixtl]]) are four-armed quasi-humanoid extraplanar creatures with a special ability, Implant. The xill grapple and pin an opponent then paralyze them by biting. Then, they implant eggs. The larvae will [[Chest Burster|eat their way out]] if not removed. Surgically removing them will be nearly as traumatic.
▲** Ekolids are '''literally''' the demonic incarnation of people's fears of infestation. They live up to it, too; they have six stingers which can implant ravenous larvae, and their mere presence drives people insane with hallucinations of biting insects.
▲** [[Ravenloft]], naturally, jumps on this trope's bandwagon, with red widows (shapeshifting giant spider/redheads who seduce human male egg-hosts), death's head trees (implanted seeds in lieu of eggs), and sea spawn (which combine this trope with [[Body Snatcher]]).
* The Genestealers from ''[[Warhammer
▲** ''[[Pathfinder]]'' gives us the [http://www.pathfinderwiki.com/wiki/Akata akata], which are a [[Shout-Out]] to [[Alien|Xenomorphs]]. The victim is bitten and implanted with eggs which slowly kill it, reanimate it as a [[Our Zombies Are Different|zombie]], and eventually burst out.
** See the above-mentioned short story titled "The Shadow Over Innsmouth" by a certain [[
▲* The Genestealers from ''[[Warhammer 40000 (Tabletop Game)|Warhammer 40000]]'' have a slightly more insidious method: They implant their ''DNA'' into the victim, in a manner similar to ''Species''. This doesn't result in the conventional hybrid offspring, instead acting more like [[The Corruption]]: the victim is compelled to love and adore the infecting Genestealer (also known as the Genestealer Patriarch or Broodlord)... and to spread the infection. This not only means luring new victims to the Genestealer for implantation, but also to seek out humans of the appropriate sex and breed with them. ''All'' of the children produced with at least one tainted parent are essentially Genestealer hybrids, which grow more human looking up to the 4th generation- which then produces pure Genestealers with anyone they breed with. This eventually leads to the formation of an entire cult of hybrids that seek to ensure that the planet they're on loses the upcoming [[Bug War]] they're inevitably going to call down on their heads. Making it even more insidious is that the cultists often know full well that they're next on the menu. Shades of ''[[Village of the Damned (Film)|Village of the Damned]]''. Especially because the psychic web of a Hybrid Cult means that each person truly loves and adores even the most bestial-looking of their "family".
* There's a ''[[
▲** See the above-mentioned short story titled "The Shadow Over Innsmouth" by a certain [[HP Lovecraft]] that this idea also seems to mimic. Since the details as it relates to this are unexplained above: essentially, an entire village in the Northeast United States is breeding with an ancient underwater Elder God (and spawning hybrid offspring) attempting to bring down who-knows-what kind of calamity upon the planet. (The 'hybrid offspring' thing is beyond our human comprehension to understand why or how it works.)
▲* There's a ''[[Magic the Gathering|Magic: The Gathering]]'' card for everything: [http://ww2.wizards.com/gatherer/CardDetails.aspx?&id=158687 Spawnwrithe].
** Corpsehatch, too. Again, is there any trope the Eldrazi don't fall under?
*** [[Ridiculously Cute Critter]].
* Nearly half of the various creature species in the ''[[GURPS]]'' sourcebook ''Creatures of the Night'' need humans as a component in their reproductive cycle in one way or another.
* ''[[
** This isn't normally done specifically for the purpose of procreation. On the other hand, unwanted pregnancies aren't unknown among humans either.
* The Broos, beastmen in ''[[
* Not to be outdone, the ''[[New World of Darkness]]'' gives us ''Cymothoa Sanguinaria'', cousin to the real world ''[[wikipedia:Cymothoa exigua|Cymothoa Exigua]]''. Congratulations! You have a parasite living in a hollowed-out pocket under your tongue. It will influence you to seek out other infected hosts so it can be fertilized (the phrase "during a kiss, the parasites will copulate" comes up). Then it will lay its eggs in your esophagus and encourage you to kill people and drain their blood to feed the eggs. And it all goes downhill from there.
{{quote|
''Everything else is just meat, singing to itself in the dark.'' }}
** The Thing From The Deeps in the ''[[Hunter: The Vigil]]'' supplement "Horror Recognition Guide" is a ''very'' unpleasant tentacle demon that kills people in order to reproduce. After it's killed, the hunter responsible finds himself being followed by creepy individuals who [[Half-Human Hybrid|don't seem fully human]] and keep glaring at him with eyes full of hate.
* ''[[Exalted]]'' gives us a few Yozis with powers like this. Kimbery represents motherhood in all its positive and negative aspects, and since she's lost the ability to sire children herself (due to the fact that her main form is an acidic ocean), she's got the ability to infect others with her own mutant youth and have them undergo the joys of childbirth. Metagaos, meanwhile, is a swamp that devours everything, including space, time, color, and health - which means that even if you survive a trip through his depths, you'll be bearing something that will make you wish you hadn't.
== Video Games ==
* ''[[Darkseed]]'' starts the game by implanting an alien embryo into your skull (seen [http://fromearth.net/LetsPlay/Darkseed/chapter1.html here]). You have 3 days in-game to get it fixed or it will hatch and herald the alien invasion. Fun.
* The [[Excuse Plot]] of the ''[[
** It's all a very, very obvious [[Shout-Out]] to ''Aliens''; episode 4 of the Plutonium Pack (or Platinum Edition) even features aliens that look like Xenomorphs. Also, there are aliens similar to facehuggers that will jump on the player character (thought they only drain his health, not infect him with a chestburster.)
** Taken to a literal point in ''[[
** [https://web.archive.org/web/20140530175432/http://www.fengzhudesign.com/blog/fzd_duke_26.jpg The concept art suggests otherwise, though.] (Be warned, this is even more NSFW than the game is.)
* Las Plagas in ''[[
** There's also the parasites that the mutated [[One-Winged Angel]] William Birkin implants into people (Ben in Leon's 1st scenario, and Chief Irons in Claire's 1st scenario), which burst out of their victim's chest Alien-style, then metamorphose into a creature that resembles a Xenomorph. It manages to infect a corrupt Umbrella worker in ''Resident Evil: Outbreak'', too.
** Then there's Saddler's favorite method of killing people: impaling them on a giant tentacle like appendage with a razor sharp stinger on the end... [[Gag Penis|that seems to come from a junction between his legs]].
** Plagas make a return in ''Resident Evil 5'', this time being an egg that other hosts literally shove down the throat of a victim, making it a more literal application of this trope.
* The only way the Chimera in ''[[Resistance]]'' can gain new numbers is to more or less gather up infected or dead humans and [[Body Horror|warp them into foot soldiers]].
* Look no further than the [[Halo (
* In ''[[Sid
* The plot of the first and third ''[[Silent Hill]]'' games revolve around this trope being implemented by an [[Eldritch Abomination]] instead of aliens, although it is no more pleasant to the host.
* In ''[[The Sims]] 2'', human sims can be impregnated by aliens if they use the telescope during the wee hours of the night. Even males can be impregnated. In fact, [[Mister Seahorse|ONLY males]] can be impregnated this way.
* The Zerg in ''[[
* Chryssalids in ''[[X-COM]]''. Very fast acting, too, as all it takes is one bite from them and then a few non-fiery shots to hatch. Even the 'zombies' that are unhatched Chryssalids can kill unarmored units with ease. Thankfully, they're a terrorist unit for the mid-game Snakemen, so they don't show up very often and you should have sufficient tech when you do meet them. Still doesn't prevent them from being a great source of [[Paranoia Fuel]], which becomes unleaded in a hurry during Snakemen terror missions where they can infect [[Innocent Bystander
** The rapid development is [[Hand Wave
** The Tentaculat replace the Chryssalids in ''X-Com: Terror from the Deep''. They're limited to underwater missions but that's where practically the entire game is. They're worse than the Chryssalids in that, since they can swim, they can come at you from any direction. There's one bright spot though, there are no underwater Terror Missions, so they'll never have any [[Innocent Bystander
** Slightly different are the Brainsuckers from ''X-Com: Apocalypse''. They're small and have a very short lifespan, but have the nasty habit of leaping at an unsuspecting agent's face and injecting them with alien microbes which take over the host's body.
* According to another wiki devoted to the ''[[
* While their isn't any evidence the [[Personal Space Invader|Headcrabs]] of the ''[[Half-Life (
** However, the new types of headcrabs introduced in ''[[
** A monster that got [[Dummied Out]] of the final [[Half Life]], nicknamed [[Names to Run Away From Really Fast|'Mr. Friendly']], was designed to '''rape the player to death''' as its final attack.
* Many of the bad ends of the ''[[
* In ''[[Aliens vs. Predator]] 2'', a facehugger jumping on your face quite literally shows this. The entire screen become the alien's underside with a very phallic tube swinging around in front of your face, implied to be going in your mouth (which can't be seen, since it's an [[First-Person Shooter|FPS]]). It's instant-death, and after you see the "wing wong," the game cuts to your body laying on the floor, where you see your chest swell up, your body convulse, and an alien pops out.
* In ''[[Dragon Age|Dragon Age: Origins]]'', it's implied that the Broodmother in the Deep Roads was the result of {{spoiler|Darkspawn violating a member of Branka's exploratory group until it spread the taint into her, then force-feeding her their own flesh so she had enough mass to birth more Darkspawn.}}
* An eroge, ''[[Youju Senki AD 2048]]'', resolves around humans stuggling with mutant beasts called Yoju, species of [[Naughty Tentacles]] that impregnants females and turns males into drones. While the premise includes [[Body Horror]], it quickly turns into an [[Excuse Plot]] where the good guy's team are almost all females that charge into random places to rescue random girls from being violated, [[They Wasted a Perfectly Good Plot|considering how bad the plot and gameplay are handled.]]
== Web Comics ==
* In an early ''[[
** Later, another member of Aylee's species takes a humanoid form so as to impregnate human females with new drones (it's implied that it's consensual, though even Aylee's disgusted).
* In ''[[Fans]]'', Rumy is impregnated (along with a host of other artists) in a slightly more benign manner: The Energy Beings make her head swell up for a few hours before a floating, glowy fetus emerges.
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== Web Original ==
* The Alien in ''[[
* In the [[Dead Baby Comedy]] web cartoon ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20120311100430/http://www.atom.com/channel/channel_stickman_exodus/ Stickman Exodus]'' episode 'Sex Ed,' this trope comes into play with (sketchings of) giant flying sperm, appropriately enough, attacking one of the stick figure protagonists.
* [[
* [[Troperrific|Unsurprisingly]], the [[
* On the defunct adoptable pet website
* [http://www.cracked.com/article_17199_7-most-horrifying-parasites-on-planet.html Another] [[Cracked
* A [[Furry Fandom|Furry]] author unfortunately has created the C-Snake, a slimy, Pepto-Bismol-colored parasitic reptile/penis combo that switches between forms at its leisure and infects the host in a [[Naughty Tentacles]] manner, eating their insides to create more of itself until it's literally the [[The Worm That Walks|lifeless skin of the victim encasing a mass of C-Snakes]]... which goes on to infect other hosts through rape. Even creepier, the slime they produce has a simultaneous anesthetic/aphrodisiac effect on the host, effectively [[Brainwashed|forcing the victim to help it obtain a new host and breed]]. They also apparently leave small parts of the victim's brain intact so that they can use it to temporarily give them their consciousness back if the need arises along with gaining access to any of the memories the victim might have that might help them more effectively fool any new potential victims or gain access to restricted areas.
** The creator said he based them partially on [[The Thing (
== Western Animation ==
* Roger on ''[[
* ''[[Ben 10
** They're rather easily reverted back once the resident [[Gadgeteer Genius]] studies the Omnitrix's genetic repair function and makes instant-healing guns. A more bizarre version is when Ben's Big Chill transformation asexually reproduces and causes Ben to have black-outs and a huge appetite for metal whenever he turns into Big Chill. The
* Reversed in the ''[[
* In an episode of ''[[Jimmy Neutron Boy Genius]],'' Jimmy's friend Carl is impregnated (in the butt) by a flying alien [[Electric Jellyfish]]. It's "born" by static electric discharge from the behind, but is otherwise fairly harmless.
* ''[[The Simpsons (
{{quote|
'''Kang''': Look behind you. ''(She looks, and Kang uses a ray gun to impregnate her)'' Insemination complete.
'''Marge''': Really? That seemed awfully quick.
'''Kang''': What are you implying? }}
* The male Agent J from ''[[Men in Black (
== Real Life ==
* Some species of parasitoid wasp (e.g. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vMG-LWyNcAs Cotesia glomerata]) lay eggs inside their chosen host.
{{reflist}}
[[Category:
[[Category:
[[Category:Bizarre Alien Biology]]
[[Category:Evil Is Visceral]]
[[Category:Sex Tropes]]
[[Category:Speculative Fiction Tropes]]
[[Category:Transformation Causes]]
|