Person of Mass Destruction: Difference between revisions

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[[Oh Crap|Uh oh]].
 
A [[Speculative Fiction]] trope dating at least to [[World War II]] and the bombing of Hiroshima (possibly even earlier), the Person of Mass Destruction is almost always a metaphor for real-world weapons -- eitherweapons—either subtly, [[Anvilicious|not subtly]] or somewhere in between. Often the result of trying to create a [[Super Soldier]]. Almost always comes with an [[Aesop]] about the dangers of letting the metaphorical genie out of the bottle or to convey a [[Science Is Bad]] message. Especially if [[MacGuffin Girl|female]], the Person of Mass Destruction is very likely to turn into [[The Woobie]] or suffer a [[Superpower Meltdown]] at some point.
 
You'd think their own side would take this into account and at least ''try'' to make things easier; on the logic that one would want to be on the good side of a weapon capable of saving or destroying them, but curiously this is not the case. No, people who resort to using a Person of Mass Destruction usually [[All of the Other Reindeer|treat them like crap]] and go [[Bullying a Dragon]]. It's possible that this indicates that they are shamed for having to resort to this, and are displacing this into abuse. [[There Are No Therapists|Or maybe it just never occurs to them that they would benefit from having good relations with the person that can either save them all or kill them all instantly.]] On the other hand, the prerequisite megalomania to build or exploit such a person, as well as the ego to assume that one can control it, tends to mean that the people controlling (or trying to control) the PMD are of the sort that isn't particularly concerned with their personal well being. Nice people tend not to have uses for tools of unimaginable destructive force, after all.
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If they're a main or recurring character, a common plotline for them will be trying to avoid [[Bad Powers, Bad People]], or coming to realize that they're better off leaving the planet; either by realizing [[A God Am I]] and turning into an [[Energy Beings|Energy Being]] or, more tragically, committing suicide. If they didn't start so overpowering, they may [[Status Quo Is God|give up their powers]] or lose them in some other fashion.
 
Likely overlaps with [[Weapon of Mass Destruction]] and [[Walking Wasteland]]. [[Omnicidal Maniac|Omnicidal Maniacs]]s themselves often have similar powers but tend to take a more... [[Earthshattering Kaboom|pro-active approach]] in using their abilities than normal examples of this trope. Compare and contrast [[One-Man Army]], where the character is usually not treated this way but nevertheless gains an impressive kill-count. One of these can also be a [[Tyke Bomb]], but a Person Of Mass Destruction can be made entirely by accident and still become a metaphor for dangerous weapons and bad science. For those that defy this trope, see [[I Am Not a Gun]].
 
Note, just having the ability to cause damage does not make someone an example of this trope. While a Person Of Mass Destruction is rarely below class 2 on the [[Super Weight]] Scale, lack of giant superpowers doesn't disqualify one from this trope so long as they are akin to dangerous weapons in the setting.
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* Hotaru Tomoe from ''[[Sailor Moon]]'', a.k.a. Sailor Saturn the senshi of destruction and rebirth is a perfect example. Able to destroy a planet at will, and just about anything by sacrificing herself in the process.
* In ''[[Bleach]]'', all the Captains and Vice-Captains of the shinigami have 80% of their energy sealed away when in the real world without special permission to release all of it. Guess why.
** During the Karakura Town Attack arc, Shinigami scientists had to find a way to teleport the whole town into another dimension, because otherwise it would be for sure destroyed by the power of captains and Espada fighting all over the place. And it almost failed, which would have been even worse, since Ichimaru Gin sliced the upper halves of buildings in a 13  km radius; not to mention what would have happened had Yamamoto's power {{spoiler|not been [[Power Nullifier|nullified]].}}
** Ulquiorra's {{spoiler|Segunda Resurrecion Etapa}} and {{spoiler|Hollow Ichigo's full power form}} in chapters 347 to 352, are probably the biggest (and most explosive) examples so far.
** Barragan {{spoiler|before his death}} in his Resurrection form counts as this. Starrk is most likely this, stating to be able to [[More Dakka|fire 1,000 ceros at once in his Resurrection form]].
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* In ''[[Sands of Destruction]]'', {{spoiler|Kyrie}} is definitely a Person of Mass...well ''World'' Destruction actually. He basically has the power to revert anything (even the entire planet) back to its elemental sand. He was created by the gods specifically for this purpose, and his power becomes active whenever someone comes along who sincerely wishes the world would end.
* One of the best-known examples is eponymous ''[[Akira]]'' and his fellow Numbers, complete with an opening scene of [[The Tokyo Fireball|a mushroom cloud destroying Tokyo]]. And that's just in the first thirty seconds. The ultimate example is probably Akira's successor, [[Mind Over Matter|Tetsuo]], proving that the Japanese government didn't learn a blessed thing the first time around.
* Hayate of ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS]]'' demonstrates personal offensive magic on the scale of a small nuclear device, complete with evacuation warnings and authorisation requirements to release her [[Power Limiter|limiters]] for combat. Due to [[Upgrade Artifact|the way she received her magic]], "sub-nuclear explosion" is in fact the only way she can use it. Nanoha, Fate, Signum, and Vita qualify to a lesser extent, also requiring [[Power Limiter|Power Limiters]]s. They are all treated with enormous amounts of respect.
** When {{spoiler|Caro}} was discovered by her village to be an insanely powerful dragon-summoner, she was shunned. Even some members of the TSAB suggested she would only be useful as a weapon. Fortunately the above people thought this idea was stupid.
** And Nanoha herself is not called [[Fan Nickname|White Devil]] without reason. In doujinshi, especially, she ([[Artifact of Doom|or her device]]) is very prone to unleashing destruction anywhere, anytime.
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** In the manga, {{spoiler|she consciously and single-handedly kills everyone in the human race, save for Shuji.}}
* The Otome of ''[[Mai-Otome]]'' are thinly veiled analogs for WMDs, complete with a "SOLT" conference based on the real world "SALT" (Strategic Arms Limitations Talks) and issues similar to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The main Otome also have the added danger of being volatile young women in the middle of a twisted [[Love Triangle]], so you ''know'' there's going to be trouble. One of the girls involved in that triangle ({{spoiler|Nina}}) snaps and ''literally'' tries to destroy the world in the last few episodes.
* Mewtwo of the first ''[[Pokémon (anime)|Pokémon]]'' movie, despite not being human, is definitely a Person of Mass Destruction. This is made all the more apparent by the fact that in some translations his birthplace is listed as [[Does This Remind You of Anything?|Mile Island]]. His power is so great the he was able to create an unnaturally huge hurricane that would've eventually wiped out all life on the planet, aside from those on his island in the eye of the storm ''just by thinking about it'', then dissipated the storm just as easily after his [[Heel Face Turn]]. Note that he was in no way focusing his full power on the storm at any time, and in fact kept expanding it even while controlling hundreds of individual pokeballs, taking on his ancestor Mew in a psychic battle (in which Mewtwo had the upper hand), completely dominating the mind of at least one human, ''and'' psychically suppressing the abilities of every other Pokemon on the island. Afterwards, he then telekinetically lifted every single person and pokemon on the island -- easilyisland—easily over a hundred individuals weighing several tons in total, and again without any noticeable strain -- erasedstrain—erased their memories of the entire thing, and teleported them -- againthem—again, en masse -- tomasse—to a port several miles away. It's a good thing he wanted to "prove himself" before his purge -- hadpurge—had he been more efficient, he probably could have easily wiped out humanity in an afternoon at most.
** To further put this in perspective, a similar storm was generated in the second movie, but only after the three legendary birds had been fighting all-out for some time. Each of these three combatants, by the way, are implied to be so powerful that they are able to change the climate of wherever they are ''just by existing'' -- and—and Mewtwo equaled their combined power without even trying!
*** Said birds (Articuno, Zapdos and Moltres) and Lugia, who shut the storm in that movie down, all have weather control as explicit abilities. Mewtwo does not. He was duplicating it using telekinesis. Yes, that means he's better several [[Olympus Mons]] in their specialization while faking that ability with another ability entirely. Be very afraid.
** May be a coincidence, but his powers glow the exact same color as Cerenkov radiation.
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** The most straight-up example is Havoc, whose powers consisted of spontaneously generating vacuums for [[Explosive Decompression|explosive results]] and a [[Power At a Price|renumeration]] of [[Eats Babies|drinking the blood of children]]. There was pretty much no way she ''couldn't'' use her powers to murder tons of people.
* Victor of ''[[Busou Renkin]]'' is significantly smaller in radius than most Persons of Mass Destruction, but more deadly: thanks to his [[Power Incontinence|always-on energy absorption powers]], he would likely kill every human being within a kilometer or two if he stayed in one place for more than an hour. {{spoiler|Main character Kazuki is immune, but only because he's turning into a Victor-alike himself.}}
* Lina Inverse from ''[[Slayers]]'' routinely hurls spells that blow up cities. Her most powerful spell has the potential to unmake creation. In fact, In the first episode of the new series, ''Slayers Revolution'', {{spoiler|Lina is arrested "On suspicion of being Lina Inverse"}}. There is perhaps only one person in the world that she fears: her elder sister Luna, who is stated to have taken down a [[Our Dragons Are Different|Plasma Dragon]] with a mundane kitchen knife. And she possesses an [[Infinity+1 Sword]]. [[Word of God]] says Luna is equal in power to Xelloss, who is really freaking powerful.<ref>Now that Chaos Dragon and Hellmaster are dead, he's the fifth most powerful demon in the world.</ref>.
* Ranma's final opponent in ''[[Ranma ½]]'' is the Phoenix Emperor Saffron. If his maturation ritual is completed successfully, he becomes a living "power plant" to Mt. Phoenix and all its people, constantly shedding light and heat without the slightest effort. If something goes awry, though, he loses control of his power, becoming psychotic, and releasing his energy as raw flame and beams capable of vaporizing mountains. As one character put it, he's like "a flamethrower without a safety valve."
* [[Naruto]] and his fellow jinchuuriki all have very nasty [[Sealed Evil in a Can|demons sealed inside]] of them. [[Super-Powered Evil Side|It is a bad idea]] to piss them off. But of course, they get the [[Bullying a Dragon]] treatment.
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* ''[[Dragonball Z]]'', in absolute ''spades''. Consider that planet-destruction was a normal occurrence by the Saiyan Saga (Piccolo with the moon, Vegeta with Planet Arlia), and that every heroic character becomes infinitely stronger after that... Even [[The Woobie|Krillin]] could probably destroy a planet with a click of his fingers by the end of the Namek Saga, and by comparison to Frieza he's so weak as to not even be a consideration. Perfect Cell claimed to be able to destroy the entire solar system in a single blast with his energy, before Gohan stopped him.
** Then we get to the Buu Saga, by which time not only has every heroic character become so much stronger, Goku almost shakes the planet in two merely by TRANSFORMING into a Super Saiyan 3, and Buu begins to tear holes in the fabric of reality merely by screaming.
* Almost any and all State Alchemists in ''[[Fullmetal Alchemist (manga)|Fullmetal Alchemist]]''. [[Colonel Badass|Roy Mustang]] [[Playing with Fire|burns down whole city blocks by snapping his fingers]]. [[Sociopathic Soldier|Solf J. Kimblee]] [[Having a Blast|blows up neighborhoods by clapping his hands]]. [[Large Ham|Alex Louis Armstrong]] [[Dishing Out Dirt|rearranges the earth's crust by punching it]]. [[Badass Moustache|Basque Grand]] [[Walking Armoury|transmutes entire buildings into weapons]]. [[Shell-Shocked Veteran|Isaac McDougal]] [[An Ice Person|nearly buried Central City in a glacial layer of ice]]. It's worth noting that the Ishvalan civil war--whichwar—which had been dragging on for seven years--endedyears—ended within months of Order #3066 going out. What was the order? To weaponize and send in the State Alchemists.
** One of the victims of that order, [[Serial Killer|Scar]], later went on to become another Person of Mass Destruction, gaining the ability to deconstruct matter with a touch. One could argue that many of the [[Artificial Human|Homunculi]] count, due to their regeneration powers, and ability to take down almost anyone, including State Alchemists. [[One-Man Army]] Wrath and Pride definitely count, as does their creator, [[A God Am I|Father]] and his [[Good Counterpart]], [[Big Good|Van Hohenheim]].
*** [[Big Bad|Father]] takes the trope up to the next level; he is so powerful that he is able to ''absorb God'', and create a sun in the palm of his hand.
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** Also used at the end of ''[[Kingdom Come]]'', when {{spoiler|Superman is one of the few survivors of an atomic bomb that takes out a good chunk of the DCU's superhero population. He then sets off towards the UN, fully aware that they're the ones who called in the strike. The UN's collective reaction: [[Oh Crap|"Oh, ''fuck''."]]}}
* Doctor Manhattan of ''[[Watchmen (comics)|Watchmen]]'' is one of the most blatant examples, having been turned from a career of watchmaking to study nuclear physics by his father and given [[A God Am I|God-like powers]] thanks to a nuclear accident.
* The original 1940s ''All-Star Comics'' had a story where the [[Justice Society of America]] started fighting in the war, logical issues aside. This was [[Retcon|retconnedretcon]]ned to be [[All Just a Dream|a hallucination]] to which they were subjected when captured by psychic supervillain Brain Wave. [[Green Lantern]] was shown horrified at the destruction he had caused in order to defeat the Japanese, uttering the line "I have become death, destroyer of worlds," a quote known for its use by Robert Oppenheimer (originally quoted, [[Beam Me Up, Scotty|incorrectly]], from the Bhagavad Gita) after the first deployment of the atom bomb.
** This was taken further in the [[Elseworld]] story ''The Golden Age'', in which [[Green Lantern]] witnesses the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and, realizing that his power is on par with the atom bomb, puts his ring away and retires in the belief that no human deserves to wield such power. His reluctant return at the end of the story to combat the archvillain is his [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|shining moment]], and one of the few times in or out of continuity we truly see how much Alan Scott means to [[The DCU]].
* ''[[Flare]]'' stories, online since the fourth quarter of 2007, feature Marian Press, a literal "Blonde Bombshell".
* The ''[[Wildstorm]]'' universe actually uses the trope name as one of several [[Differently-Powered Individual|generic terms for superhumans]] -- and—and with ''[[The Authority]]'' around, who can blame them?
** The Authority is, after all, a team where one single member freezes a whole country (on a different world, mind you) in time for a second, effectively teleporting the entire landmass and everyone and everything on it into space. Then they go {{spoiler|kill the thing that accidentally put life on Earth in the first place, and is almost as big as the planet itself.}}
** Jack Hawksmoor even [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshades]] this at one point, telling the President of the United States something to the point of: "We don't have weapons of mass destruction. We ARE weapons of mass destruction. Don't fuck with us."
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** Monarch is effectively Captain Atom's [[Super-Powered Evil Side]], amped up by a factor of 50. When Superman-Prime ripped open his armor, it annihilated a ''universe''.
* In ''[[Supreme Power]]'', Marvel's [[Alternate Company Equivalent]] and [[Deconstruction]] of the [[Justice League of America]], when Mark Milton aka Hyperion (Superman-[[Expy]]) learns that his whole life has been controlled by the United States government, the head of the project discusses what an angry high-powered [[Flying Brick]] could do. To adequately describe the casualty rate that Mark can inflict from ''the attack alone'' (not factoring in all the deaths from various infrastructure failures that result from the attack and cut-off supply lines making aid impossible) one researcher uses the term "Mega-deaths". At one point, he is traced by the Richter Scale vibrations he causes with his attacks! They are very graphic in the images as well.
* Depending on the author, Jack of Hearts from the Marvel Universe has been considered this. His powers came from every cell of his body being infused with an experimental power substance called "Zero fluid." Without his suit, designed to channel and control the energy he generates, he would effectively turn into a small sun (he has been [[Retcon|retconnedretcon]]ned enough that this is probably no longer canon).
* Max, from ''[[Sam and Max]]'', has been called the most violent force in the universe by the Season 1 [[Big Bad]].
* ''[[X-Men]]'' favorite Gambit always seemed to have an okay power, nothing too special, then he met one of his alternate universe counterparts New Sun, and, well, let's just say that is a ''very'' apt name.
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* [[Solar Man of the Atom]] in both the [[Valiant Comics]] and [[Dark Horse Comics]] versions.
* [[A Distant Soil]] has Seren, Liana, and Jason.
* [[Invincible|Viltrumites]] are an army of conquering [[Flying Brick|Flying Bricks]]s.
* The scarab graphed onto Jaime Reyes's spine in ''[[Blue Beetle]]'' has an arsenal that includes everything from nukes to a BFG that has "potential theological implications." It's likely only by the virtue of Jaime being [[Incorruptible Pure Pureness]] that the world isn't already a burnt cinder.
** Unfortunately, the scarab is one of many, seeded throughout the universe to aid their masters, the Reach, in conquering or destroying planets -- andplanets—and on most of those worlds, they easily managed to overwhelm their hosts. Jaime managed to escape that fate because his scarab was malfunctioning, but it's still dangerous, even so.
* [[Justice League]] and [[Martian Manhunter]] villain Despero has become a walking engine of psychokinetic destruction following his various rebirths and power-ups. It takes the entire League to put him down, and he frequently levels entire city blocks in the process.
* [[Superman|Doomsday]]. All there in the name really. Is basically on a mission to wipe out literally every other living thing in universe with his bare hands and just about capable of pulling it off.
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* Shinji in ''[[Shinji and Warhammer40K|Shinji and Warhammer 40 K]]'', due in part to the [[Lensman Arms Race|ever-increasing scale of the battles with the Angels]], usually ends up destroying much of Tokyo-3 in his efforts to save it, to his considerable chagrin. After a leave of absence, the fact that surprise reinforcements cause so much devastation tips off the defenders that he's returned. There's also a time when whatever ability lets him sync with an Eva get flipped inside out, briefly giving him the power to "crack the planet in half," but he spends a whole story arc trying to fix it.
* ''[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/5165327/1/Deep_Sleep Deep Sleep]'', a ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]'' [[Dark Fic|fanfic]], has Peter and Sylar battle ([[Coconut Superpowers|fully utilizing their powers]]) and inadvertently [[Story-Breaker Power|shattering continents,]] leaving the west half of the Americas a smoking wasteland, [[A Million Is a Statistic|killing millions]], and bringing about a very [[Bad Future]].
* [[Heroic Sociopath|Mark Westion]] in ''[[Yukari Is Free]] [http://http://www.shimauu.net/azu/board.html\]'' (an ''[[Azumanga Daioh]]'' [[Mega Crossover]]) possesses the power to fire giant lasers. At one point in the story, he fires one so big it accidentally destroys a planet. His girlfriend then hits him in the face with a baseball bat.
* Justin in ''[[Kira Is Justice]]''.
* Yachiru and {{spoiler|Hitsugaya}} in ''[[Uninvited Guests]]''. Between the two of them, they {{spoiler|completely destroy Las Noches and defeat all espada in a couple of hours; though Hitsugaya was in berserk mode most of the time and Yachiru technically did it by accident. Or did she..?}}
* Paul in ''[[With Strings Attached]]'', who could (if he wanted to, which he doesn't) either systematically and tirelessly dismantle everything in his path, or periodically reduce circular chunks of it to molten glass.
** Probably the others as well. John rejected many of the things the Kansael told him he can do and implied that he's unbeatable in the ocean; George at the very least could wreak havoc as a dragon; and Ringo apparently has a huge amount of power behind him that he's never tapped into. Luckily, they're [[Actual Pacifist|Actual Pacifists]]s, and besides, their experiences on Earth taught them what the ''really'' important things in life are, so it's easy for them to reject the seductive call of power. Which really isn't that seductive, given how much [[Blessed with Suck|Suck]] it came with.
 
 
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* The villain Nuclear Man from ''[[Superman IV]]: The Quest for Peace'' was supposed to be an [[Anvilicious]] statement about nukes... until it was shown that he was actually ''solar'' powered, making him possibly the greenest supervillain in existence. [[Broken Aesop|Ouch.]]
** Well, what is the Sun but a giant hydrogen bomb ''that's too big to stop exploding''?
* Aurora/Marie Zorn in ''[[Babylon A.D.]]'' is believed to be a viral weapon at first. In the book "[[Babylon Babies]]" another woman is used in this fashion -- whenfashion—when she comes into proximity with the pheromones of her target, her body rapidly creates a virus that kills several hundred people in minutes, wiping out the upper echelons of the Neolite sect.
* Neo in ''[[The Matrix]]''. I assume that's not a spoiler.
* Paul Atreides, especially in the [[David Lynch]] version of ''[[Dune]]'', is capable of calling gigantic sandworms, using the voice and using sonic weapons without the weirding module. His name is a killing word.
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* In Stephen R. Donaldson's ''[[The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant]]'' series Covenant is one of these through his partial control of wild magic. {{spoiler|In the Second Chronicles the [[Big Bad]]'s aim is to force Covenant to surrender not by making him weaker but by making him so powerful he can't use his power without risking all of reality}}.
* The Freehold Black Ops in Mike Z. Williamson's ''The Weapon'' fit this trope because of their [[The Spartan Way|Spartan Way]] training. Instead of special powers, it's a matter of being ruthless, creative, and cross-trained to the point of being [[Crazy Prepared]].
* Some Adept-level mages in the ''[[Heralds of Valdemar]]'' books have power of this magnitude -- Vanyelmagnitude—Vanyel is said to be capable of destroying a fair-sized city, and indeed does go kaboom in a fairly spectacular manner in his final [[Heroic Sacrifice]]. Occasionally, even "ordinary" Heralds can get fairly destructive, especially Lavan Firestorm who essentially outdoes Vanyel's feat with [[Psychic Powers|mind-magic]] alone.
** In the ''Mage Wars'' prequels, the combined detonation of the accumulated magical power of two opposing Mage Lords set off the [[Earthshattering Kaboom|Cataclysm]] whose effects are still felt thousands of years later. (The large, almost perfectly circular inland sea on Valdemar's border? The equally circular, considerably larger grassland some kingdoms to the south? The two Lords' citadels were once located at their centers -- andcenters—and they're the ''least important'' effects of the conflict.)
* Flinx, of [[Alan Dean Foster]]'s ''[[Humanx Commonwealth]]'' series, is something of a walking [[Psychic Powers|psychic]] time bomb, as he has a tendency to erupt in massive, [[Power Incontinence|uncontrolled]] telekinetic [[Superpower Meltdown|detonations]] when severely provoked. These are invariably highly destructive to his immediate surroundings, albeit not quite at the city/planet level. Ironically, this ability may turn out to be {{spoiler|[[The Chosen One|the key to saving the universe]].}}
* The canonical example from the early ''[[Perry Rhodan]]'' universe would be Ivan Ivanovich Gorachin -- aGorachin—a Russian-born mutant best remembered for having two heads (with separate personalities) and the ability to cause nuclear explosions at will so long as he had targets containing carbon or calcium to work on. (Like, say, humans. Fortunately for the good guys his [[Heel Face Turn]] followed shortly after his introduction.)
* Jame from ''[[Chronicles of the Kencyrath]]'' is already this to a degree, although she tends to be more of the spark that lights the powder-keg. It looks, though, like she's destined to be Nemesis, the avatar of the Destruction aspect of her God, and that's quite some mass destruction indeed.
* Aside from the obligatory demons, vampires and such, the German horror/fantasy/SF pulp series ''Professor Zamorra'' features a recurring species of near-human aliens, the so-called 'Eternals'. (Who did, of course, try to invade Earth at least once before.) Aside from having the obligatory advanced technology, much of their personal power comes from magical crystals known as ''Dhyarras'', which come in distinct numbered power levels; social rank is determined largely by the ability to control the more powerful ones (with failure to do so generally resulting in insanity or death). Crystals of the highest (13th) order, only one of which is technically supposed to exist at a time because it doubles as the symbol of authority of the Dynasty's absolute leader, are explicitly stated to be powerful enough to destroy entire planets.
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* From ''[[The Stormlight Archive]]'', Szeth-son-son-Vallano, Truthless of Shinovar. Not only does he kill quite a few people, Szeth tends to destroy the environment he kills them in nicely. Dalinar also kills hundreds of enemies every battle scene in which he appears. Really, anybody with a [[Soul Cutting Blade|Shardblade]] and/or [[Powered Armor|Shardplate]] counts as this, at least potentially, Szeth is particularly dangerous because in addition to having a Shardblade he's also a [[Magic Knight]] with [[Gravity Master]] powers.
* The Sith [[The Emperor|Emperor]], as described in the ''[[Star Wars Expanded Universe]]'', is supposedly more powerful than Palpatine ever was. The only thing matching his power is his madness and obsession with immortality. To show off, his guards are never present during audiences, even with other powerful Sith lords (who are allowed to keep their weapons). Furthermore, he always sits facing ''away'' from the door. He has [[Black Eyes of Evil]] and [[Voice of the Legion]]. He attained immortality by absorbing the life-force of everything alive on his homeworld, including insects and plants. It was he who corrupted Revan and Malak, turning them to the Dark Side to use them as vanguard for his invasion of the [[The Federation|Republic]]. As powerful as he is, even Revan can't match the Emperor.
* In ''[[Shadow Ops]]'', anyone capable of using one of [[The Dark Arts|the rare prohibited forms of magic]] (Black magic, necromancy, gate magic, or sentient elemental creation) is automatically one of these - which is why they're illegal to begin with. Necromancy and sentient elemental creation allows for their user to essentially create an entire army instantly. Someone who can use gate magic can pretty much move anywhere they want instantly and has access to a weapon that [[Portal Cut|can effortlessly slice through any material]]. [[Black Magic]] is control of entropy, and the person who can use it can near-instantly decay ''anything'' -- living—living, dead, organic, mechanical, it doesn't matter. Scylla, the only user of this power, demonstrates it quite spectacularly when she uses it to literally destroy the entire defensive perimeter of a military base, killing hundreds of people, with about as much effort as crushing insects.
* Jesus Himself in the ''[[Left Behind]]'' book series, as [[The Bible|His Word alone]] can kill many people ''en masse''.
 
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*** That's nothing. It is possible to make a PL 4 (most starting characters are PL 10) character with an 8-point (out of 150 for the average starting character) power which ''[[Earthshattering Kaboom|completely destroys a planet]]''.
* While not as extreme as some of the others on this page, the mages in ''[[Mage: The Awakening]]'' essentially become one of these when they reach mastery of virtually any Arcanum. The archmasters are more direct examples, to the point where they essentially have a non-aggression pact to prevent themselves from destroying the world, and instead conduct their affairs through a series of proxies, a la the Cold War.
* ''In Dark Ages: Mage'' (a historical setting for ''[[Mage: The Ascension]]'')... to be honest, the time needed for this is exactly the amount of time one needs for standard character creation, if we count being able to be an orbital bomber enough for this.<ref>An Order of Hermes character investing in the elemental manipulation(/creation/anything) path of their magic can easily achieve the ability to 1) fly 2) manipulate air (meaning a personal pressurised air pocket around the mage) 3) manipulate forces like gravity (potentially meaning no g-forces) 4) ''burn'' (village/town wide if necessary), from great distances if necessary... and that's just level 3 of a very parabolic 1-5 scale. And by the default character creation rules level 3 is something you can just simply just pick for your character without gimping them in other aspects, or taking any flaws.</ref> So you can destroy towns with fire from the air needing only some simple item like a coin as a focus object (so not even clothes necessary) with a character out of creation. Oh, and the best part of this... that's all in medieval times. (Yes, orbital bombardment in a medieval setting.)<br /><br />Most ''[[Old World of Darkness]]'' games can make madly powerful characters compared to sane things in their setting -- usually ones that are one-trick wonders -- but in ''Mage'' it won't even be a one-trick wonder. Sure you're human, but then again you can be a human foreseeing the future, living several thousand years, avoiding all situations where being a "fragile human" could be a problem, just by knowing about them in advance and manipulating things like change, destiny, minds, natural forces and so on, to just achieve what you wished.
 
* The whole point of ''[[Exalted]]'' is that you ''play as'' one of these. Exalted are very, ''very'' powerful -- but no more mentally stable than the average person. In fact, due to the Great Curse, they're quite prone to become unhinged and abuse their power. It's a game mechanic. When an experienced Exalt starts to look even a little bit angry, ''run''.
Most ''[[Old World of Darkness]]'' games can make madly powerful characters compared to sane things in their setting—usually ones that are one-trick wonders—but in ''Mage'' it won't even be a one-trick wonder. Sure you're human, but then again you can be a human foreseeing the future, living several thousand years, avoiding all situations where being a "fragile human" could be a problem, just by knowing about them in advance and manipulating things like change, destiny, minds, natural forces and so on, to just achieve what you wished.
* The whole point of ''[[Exalted]]'' is that you ''play as'' one of these. Exalted are very, ''very'' powerful -- butpowerful—but no more mentally stable than the average person. In fact, due to the Great Curse, they're quite prone to become unhinged and abuse their power. It's a game mechanic. When an experienced Exalt starts to look even a little bit angry, ''run''.
** Don't. You'll only die tired.
** This is also the case for a lot of major NPCs, such as the Deathlords, each of whom is, in their current state, entirely capable of taking on everything in the Underworld except the other Deathlords without backup.
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** SeeD in ''[[Final Fantasy VIII]]'' are implied to be an entire [[Badass Army]] of these. The field exam that Squall goes through at the beginning involves nine SeeD troops and twelve SeeD candidates taking on an entire Galbadian army and winning.
** In ''[[Final Fantasy XIII]]'' there is the L'cie. A group of six L'cie manage to be more than a match for the entire Cocoon military. In fact, a key portion of the plot revolves around the group becoming Persons of Mass Destruction.
* They [[Badass Normal|don't have any superpowers]] as such, and if you have them dead to rights are as easy to kill as any other human being -- butbeing—but the deliberate unleashing of a Silencer from the ''[[Crusader: No Remorse|Crusader]]'' games is viewed not unlike the use of a small tactical nuke. When ''one'' [[Turned Against Their Masters|goes rogue]], it doesn't take the bad guys long, once they figure out where he's gone, to imagine exactly how much trouble they're in.
* Galen "Starkiller" Marek, the main character of ''[[Star Wars]]: [[The Force Unleashed]]'' is trained to use the Force to its maximum potential, uncaring of supposed limits and truly embodying "size matters not". He can bring down a Star Destroyer by himself, as well as create what are practically Force Shockwaves. And then there's Luke. If he went Sith, he would've been a definite Person of Mass Destruction. As it is, he's just the Jedi's personal assassin.
* In addition to their horrendously powerful fighting abilities, such as ''deflecting tank shells'', the Valkyria in ''[[Valkyria Chronicles]]'' are capable of using the Valkyria's Flame, a devastating suicide attack that causes an explosion powerful enough to rival most nuclear bombs.
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** Actually, {{spoiler|Zero himself was designed to be one, by [[Mega Man (video game)|Dr. Wily]], who started all of those [[Robot War]] in the series, to eradicate civilization. Fortunately, there's [[Nice Job Fixing It, Villain|Sigma]]. But come to think of it, as [[One-Man Army|he chopped all the opposition along the way]], what he does now isn't much different...}}
* The Bhaalspawn in ''[[Baldur's Gate]] II'' (both the original and even more so the expansion) are sometimes treated like this, but in this case the characters who do so are somewhat lacking justification for it. A Bhaalspawn can certainly be a [[One-Man Army]] like any high-level character, and getting to high enough levels they can approach this kind of power. But many are just ordinary, unpowered (and un-murderous) people.
* The playable characters in ''[[Alter AILA]]'' are treated like this. While their abilities (in most cases) are really more like [[One-Man Army|One Man Armies]], they're WMD analogues that both the Empire and Rebellion want to control or destroy, and victory in the war will go to whoever gets control of the most [[Super Soldier|Super Soldiers]]s. {{spoiler|Black}}, meanwhile, is the real deal, capable of [[Cutscene Power to the Max|one-shotting]] [[Humongous Mecha]]. {{spoiler|Jackals are the result of Imperial research into creating these, and the project led to the destruction of the city they were created in. And that's just the Alpha version; the [[Evil Genius]] has created a more powerful Jackal as his secret weapon.}} And finally, {{spoiler|Aila is an [[Artificial Human]] created from [[Lost Technology]], and is powerful beyond human comprehension. [[Not Hyperbole|This is not a metaphor]].}}
* Ryu in ''[[Breath of Fire]] III'' left a trail of charred corpses in his wake even as a young whelp, the reason the dragon clan never fought back against Myria was that they feared they would become this. In ''[[Breath of Fire]] IV'', when Kaiser is first unleashed it easily devestates an entire village.
* In ''[[Fire Emblem Akaneia]]'', Tiki, the daughter of [[Physical God|Naga]], is stated as having the potential to lay waste to the entire continent if she ever lost her mind; a fate many of her fellow dragons avoided by taking on human forms and becoming the Manakete race. She also became human, though her sheer power still posed a risk to her sanity despite this, and was thus put into a deep sleep by her mother before she passed away. She's eventually awakened some 1000 years later, but frequently forced to sleep until Shield of Seals is repaired, afterwhich she's finally able to live a normal life thanks to it properly containing her power.
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** John drilled a hole into the centre of a ''planet'' using his wind powers, so he could be pretty damn destructive if he wanted to. He also has [[Infinity+1 Sword|one awesome hammer]].
** While we're on the subject of God Tiers, {{spoiler|Vriska Serket}}, to the point where according to [[The Omniscient|Doc Scratch]], she actually had a decent chance against Jack.
** Not actually demonstrated as yet, but mentioned: {{spoiler|God-Tier Dave}} apparently won the [[Superpower Lottery]] in terms of class, as he's a heavy-combat role with an eminently abusable element. {{spoiler|Aradia could freeze Jack in place with her powers over time. Combine that with Dave's [[Badass|badasserybadass]]ery, habit of [[Me's a Crowd|having more than one of himself in the same place at the same time]], and an [[Infinity+1 Sword]], and you have a recipe for ''absolute destruction''}}.
* Radd, in ''[[Kid Radd]]'', can charge his attack to whatever is the maximum value on the system he's in. In the 8-bit game he's from it's 255. In 12-bit games he becomes a [[Game Breaker]]. {{spoiler|On modern 32-bit systems, his attack could potentially crash the whole Internet.}}
 
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It's more humane, in a way. Walking up to your enemy and pushing your finger through his heart and out the other side is much more ''costly'' than doing the same from fifty yards away with a gun, or from the other side of the river with a mortar, or from another hemisphere with an intercontinental ballistic missile. Psychologically, that is.
It makes you think. }}
* Being a pilot in ''[[Pilots]]'' requires a mindset that is more or less directly antithetical to militarism or aggression, and you can't coerce them because that breaks the mental state required to [[Teleporters and Transporters|switch]]. However, the [[Teleporters and Transporters|mechanics of]] [[Stuff Blowing Up|the power]] can be quite destructive -- theredestructive—there are several cases of accidental pushback or too-small switch spheres that cause many deaths -- anddeaths—and it gets even worse with the ADPs. X is discovered when he creates pushback that is initially mistaken for a major earthquake, [[Does Not Know His Own Strength|by accident]].
* The Knights of Grabacr from ''[[Lambda]]'' are each capable of singlehandedly wiping out entire armies. Their leader, [[Lady of War|Lady]] [[Bilingual Bonus|Weiss]][[Lyrical Nanoha|teufel]], does this on a ''regular basis''.
 
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* In the finale of ''[[Kim Possible]]'', the sidekick Ron Stoppable became one of these when he finally got control of his Mystical Monkey Powers. {{spoiler|He managed to defeat two powerful giant aliens and hurl them effortlessly into the sky and caused them to crash head on into their crashing spaceship. Needless to say, enemy and ally alike were impressed, shocked, and a little nervous}}.
** On a technicality, he was already one due to his [[Spanner in the Works|destructive]] [[The Klutz|clumsiness]]. The only difference now is he can voluntarily control the chaos he causes.
* [[Avatar: The Last Airbender|Aang]] (and any Avatar actually) when in his [[Physical God]] mode. In season one final he single-handly wiped out the Fire Nation fleet sent to destroy '''a whole nation'''. There were attempts to use this power as a [[Weapon of Mass Destruction]] -- all—all of which, as you can guess, [[Curb Stomp Battle|didn’t end well.]]
** And anyone in the Avatar State in general, in fact. Subverted, however, in that there is one critical weakness to this state, as Roku points out:
{{quote|'''Roku:''' In the Avatar State, you are at your most powerful, but you are also at your most vulnerable.
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