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** Also the Laughing Coffin guild in general seems to have been under this distinction. In a game where dying leads to a real death, these guys not only actively hunted down and killed players, they actually experimented in new ways to do so. For no reason other than for [[For the Evulz|lulz]].
** Also the Laughing Coffin guild in general seems to have been under this distinction. In a game where dying leads to a real death, these guys not only actively hunted down and killed players, they actually experimented in new ways to do so. For no reason other than for [[For the Evulz|lulz]].
*** Even worse, {{spoiler|Heathcliff}} a.k.a {{spoiler|Kayaba Akihiko. A genius programmer who traps 10,000 innocent people inside a game for '''TWO YEARS''', over which time 4000 of these people died, just to satisfy his game master fantasies. Even worse, he positions himself as the leader of the strongest guild in the game, earning the trust and admiration of many of the people he trapped, with the full intention of betraying them once they neared the end of the game. Kirito even thinks that the guy is a monster during their fight, after seeing how he felt nothing in spite of being responsible for thousands of deaths.}}
*** Even worse, {{spoiler|Heathcliff}} a.k.a {{spoiler|Kayaba Akihiko. A genius programmer who traps 10,000 innocent people inside a game for '''TWO YEARS''', over which time 4000 of these people died, just to satisfy his game master fantasies. Even worse, he positions himself as the leader of the strongest guild in the game, earning the trust and admiration of many of the people he trapped, with the full intention of betraying them once they neared the end of the game. Kirito even thinks that the guy is a monster during their fight, after seeing how he felt nothing in spite of being responsible for thousands of deaths.}}
**** {{spoiler|Kayaba is an odd example, as while his actions are portrayed as utterly monstrous and no excuse is made or given for them, the anime actually doesn't demonize the man himself. In Kirito's final discussion with him in his actual form, Kayaba comes off as a sad, lonely man who became the victim of literal psychosis. When Kirito asks him why he did it all, he says he can't even remember but couldn't really stop himself... in the end Kirito seems to almost pity him. There's also the fact that the lingering program impression of Kayaba actually returns briefly to help Kirito during his final fight with the much less ambiguously monstrous Oberon, ultimately allowing Kirito to save Asuna and all the other people Oberon had been experimenting on... [[Death Equals Redemption]]?}}
* [[Tear Jerker]]: Volume Seven. All of it.
* [[Tear Jerker]]: Volume Seven. All of it.