The Most Dangerous Video Game: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
{{trope}}
[[File:StayAlivePoster_5902.jpg|link=Stay Alive (Film)|right]]
[[File:StayAlivePoster 5902.jpg|link=Stay Alive|frame]]


{{quote|''[[You Fool|You fools!]]'' Destroyer of Worlds ''will kill us all!''|Skips, ''[[Regular Show (Animation)|Regular Show]]''}}
{{quote|''[[You Fool!|You fools!]]'' Destroyer of Worlds ''will kill us all!''|Skips, ''[[Regular Show]]''}}


An evil video game, usually packing some paranormal baggage. Playing the game will cause you to [[Gone Mad From the Revelation|go mad]], suffer from horrible nightmares, and even [[Driven to Suicide|commit suicide]] in an effort to make the horrors stop. Sometimes, they are less destructive, casting a trance over the player and causing him or her to play constantly, at the expense of their health and relationships.
An evil video game, usually packing some paranormal baggage. Playing the game will cause you to [[Gone Mad From the Revelation|go mad]], suffer from horrible nightmares, and even [[Driven to Suicide|commit suicide]] in an effort to make the horrors stop. Sometimes, they are less destructive, casting a trance over the player and causing him or her to play constantly, at the expense of their health and relationships.
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Lurking in the realm of [[Urban Legends]] as well as that of out-and-out fiction, the most dangerous video game occasionally finds its way into [[Real Life]], in the form of outcries from concerned citizens and [[Moral Watchdogs]] who claim that real video games incite violence, antisocial behavior, and other ills on those who play them. Be that as it may, most of these theories are of the "fringe" variety.
Lurking in the realm of [[Urban Legends]] as well as that of out-and-out fiction, the most dangerous video game occasionally finds its way into [[Real Life]], in the form of outcries from concerned citizens and [[Moral Watchdogs]] who claim that real video games incite violence, antisocial behavior, and other ills on those who play them. Be that as it may, most of these theories are of the "fringe" variety.


[[I Thought It Meant|Not to be confused with]] ''[[The Most Dangerous Game]]'', or [[Hunting the Most Dangerous Game|the trope named after that story.]] Sub-Trope of [[Fictional Video Game]] and [[The Game Plays You]].


[[I Thought It Meant|Not to be confused with]] ''[[The Most Dangerous Game]]'', or [[Hunting the Most Dangerous Game|the trope named after that story.]] [[Sub-Trope]] of [[The Game Plays You]].
{{examples}}
{{examples}}

== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* The "Legendary Heroes" [[Filler Arc]] in ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh]]'' features an evil virtual-reality [[RPG]] created by the Big Five to trap Kaiba and keep him from firing them.
* The "Legendary Heroes" [[Filler Arc]] in ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!]]'' features an evil virtual-reality [[RPG]] created by the Big Five to trap Kaiba and keep him from firing them.
* The virtual-reality game ''Greed Island'' in ''[[Hunter X Hunter]]'' really ''physically transports players to a real gameworld'' (a small, uncharted island) and only lets the player leave at certain [[Save Point|Save Points]]... which means you can be trapped in the game if you can't get that [[Last Lousy Point]], and if you die you're really dead.
* The virtual-reality game ''Greed Island'' in ''[[Hunter X Hunter]]'' really ''physically transports players to a real gameworld'' (a small, uncharted island) and only lets the player leave at certain [[Save Point]]s... which means you can be trapped in the game if you can't get that [[Last Lousy Point]], and if you die you're really dead.
* The titular game in ''[[Angel Sanctuary]]'' allows an angel to steal the body of the player.
* The titular game in ''[[Angel Sanctuary]]'' allows an angel to steal the body of the player.
* The whole idea behind ''[[Sword Art Online]]''. The setting is a MMORPG that has been sabotaged by its villainous designer to become this.

* The VR game in ''[[Do You Love Your Mom and Her Two-Hit Multi-Target Attacks]]'' started out as a somewhat benevolent government project akin to family therapy. Kids who have issues with their parents are digitized into the game ''with'' their parents, and they are going to have to resolve those issues if they ever want to leave. Unfortunately, the parents get far more superior powers and items, and a lot of them are rotten enough to misuse them, some resorting to blatant use of illegal game modding that even the admins cannot get rid of. Fortunately, [[The Protagonist| one of the strongest parent players]] is on the heroes' side.


== [[Comics]] ==
== [[Comics]] ==
* The ''[[Hack Slash|Hack/Slash]]'' miniseries ''My First Maniac'' featured an old arcade game called ''Bludbus'', which urban legends state was banned due to causing things like suicidal and homicidal thoughts (undoubtedly inspired by the real-life urban legend of the Polybius cabinets). The slasher of the story, Grinface, was a normal boy who was either possessed by the game after his death, or was so obsessed with it he simply decided to adopt the identity of the [[Villain Protagonist]].
* The ''[[Hack Slash]]'' miniseries ''My First Maniac'' featured an old arcade game called ''Bludbus'', which urban legends state was banned due to causing things like suicidal and homicidal thoughts (undoubtedly inspired by the real-life urban legend of the Polybius cabinets). The slasher of the story, Grinface, was a normal boy who was either possessed by the game after his death, or was so obsessed with it he simply decided to adopt the identity of the [[Villain Protagonist]].




== [[Film]] ==
== [[Film]] ==
* The game in ''[[Spy Kids (Film)|Spy Kids]] 3D'' traps the player and keeps them playing.
* The game in ''[[Spy Kids]] 3D'' traps the player and keeps them playing.
* One of the three segments from the film ''Nightmares'' is about JJ Cooney, a video game whiz obsessed with beating an arcade game named ''The Bishop of Battle'' - a game so [[Nintendo Hard|unfairly difficult]], not even the best players could make it past the twelfth stage. When Cooney finally succeeds (after having snuck into the arcade in the middle of the night), he realizes that beating the game [[The Fourth Wall Will Not Protect You|causes the threats and enemies from within to come alive]].
* One of the three segments from the film ''Nightmares'' is about JJ Cooney, a video game whiz obsessed with beating an arcade game named ''The Bishop of Battle'' - a game so [[Nintendo Hard|unfairly difficult]], not even the best players could make it past the twelfth stage. When Cooney finally succeeds (after having snuck into the arcade in the middle of the night), he realizes that beating the game [[The Fourth Wall Will Not Protect You|causes the threats and enemies from within to come alive]].
* The eponymous game in ''[[Stay Alive (Film)|Stay Alive]]'' summons the spirit of the Blood Countess in its intro sequence. If your character in the game dies, she hunts you down and kills you in the same way.
* The eponymous game in ''[[Stay Alive]]'' summons the spirit of the Blood Countess in its intro sequence. If your character in the game dies, she hunts you down and kills you in the same way.
* This trope has been used often in terrible straight-to-rental movies, particularly in the 90's. Specific examples are difficult to pinpoint because they are all equally forgettable.
* This trope has been used often in terrible straight-to-rental movies, particularly in the 90's. Specific examples are difficult to pinpoint because they are all equally forgettable.
** ''Brainscan'' is probably one of the more memorable ones: It starts off as a surprisingly effective thriller about a kid buying a product that supposedly uses hypnosis to make the in-game experiences more realistic, before discovering that he may be affecting the real world by playing the game. Then, just as it looks like the movie could be a b-classic, it introduces an incredibly lame "video game demon", and quickly goes down-hill.
** ''Brainscan'' is probably one of the more memorable ones: It starts off as a surprisingly effective thriller about a kid buying a product that supposedly uses hypnosis to make the in-game experiences more realistic, before discovering that he may be affecting the real world by playing the game. Then, just as it looks like the movie could be a b-classic, it introduces an incredibly lame "video game demon", and quickly goes down-hill.
** Another was called ''Arcade''; about its only memorable feature was the villain played by John de Lancie, who also portrayed [[Sufficiently Advanced Alien|Q]] on ''[[Star Trek]]''.
** Another was called ''Arcade''; about its only memorable feature was the villain played by John de Lancie, who also portrayed [[Sufficiently Advanced Alien|Q]] on ''[[Star Trek]]''.
** De Lancie also played the scientist/creator in ''Evolver'', another mid-90's flick about a [[Robot Buddy]] that takes VR combat way too seriously.
** De Lancie also played the scientist/creator in ''Evolver'', another mid-90's flick about a [[Robot Buddy]] that takes VR combat way too seriously.
* ''How to Make a Monster'' had a video game coming to life after [[Lightning Can Do Anything|a lightning strike]]. It then starts killing its developers by animating an animatronic suit based off the game. It's only stopped when one junior developer dons a virtual reality suit of her own, which somehow allows her to destroy it in the real world too.
* ''How to Make a Monster'' had a video game coming to life after [[Lightning Can Do Anything|a lightning strike]]. It then starts killing its developers by animating an animatronic suit based off the game. It's only stopped when one junior developer dons a virtual reality suit of her own, which somehow allows her to destroy it in the real world too.
* The Bollywood film ''Ra-One'' has the titular video game villain (programmed to be "undefeatable") come to life because [[AI Is a Crapshoot]] and [[Applied Phlebotinum]] allowed it to have a solid body.
* The Bollywood film ''Ra-One'' has the titular video game villain (programmed to be "undefeatable") come to life because [[A.I. Is a Crapshoot]] and [[Applied Phlebotinum]] allowed it to have a solid body.
* In ''[[Maximum Overdrive (Film)|Maximum Overdrive]]'' a man is mesmerized by an arcade cabinet, which fatally electrocutes him when he touches it.
* In ''[[Maximum Overdrive]]'' a man is mesmerized by an arcade cabinet, which fatally electrocutes him when he touches it.
* In a sense, ''[[Tron (Film)|Tron]]'' was one of the earlier movies to pull this off. It wasn't the game itself sucking you in, but the MCP used several "game programs" (disc battles, the jai-alai looking arena, Space Paranoids, Light Cycles, the *tanks*) to help keep control over still-semi-free programs. Quinn simply got zapped into the computer world ''and'' stuck in the deadly games. ''[[Tron Legacy (Film)|Tron Legacy]]'' took it a step further, in that {{spoiler|CLU}} became just a dick that enjoyed making others fight to the death, program, user or otherwise.
* In a sense, ''[[Tron]]'' was one of the earlier movies to pull this off. It wasn't the game itself sucking you in, but the MCP used several "game programs" (disc battles, the jai-alai looking arena, Space Paranoids, Light Cycles, the *tanks*) to help keep control over still-semi-free programs. Quinn simply got zapped into the computer world ''and'' stuck in the deadly games. ''[[Tron: Legacy]]'' took it a step further, in that {{spoiler|CLU}} became just a dick that enjoyed making others fight to the death, program, user or otherwise.




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* One of [[Robert Rankin]]'s ''Brentford Trilogy'' books features a ''[[Space Invaders]]'' machine at the Flying Swan that causes its only player to become possessed by ''actual'' space invaders.
* One of [[Robert Rankin]]'s ''Brentford Trilogy'' books features a ''[[Space Invaders]]'' machine at the Flying Swan that causes its only player to become possessed by ''actual'' space invaders.
* What kicks off the story of ''[[Otherland]]''. A number of kids who access the future-Internet fall into comas.
* What kicks off the story of ''[[Otherland]]''. A number of kids who access the future-Internet fall into comas.
* Inversion in ''[[Only You Can Save Mankind]]'': you can't actually die in the game, but [[RPG Mechanics Verse|the mobs you're killing are real, sentient beings]], [[Humans Are Cthulhu|under siege by]] [[Omnicidal Maniac]] [[Ace Pilot|Ace Pilots]] [[Why Won't You Die?|who won't stay dead]].
* Inversion in ''[[Only You Can Save Mankind]]'': you can't actually die in the game, but [[RPG Mechanics Verse|the mobs you're killing are real, sentient beings]], [[Humans Are Cthulhu|under siege by]] [[Omnicidal Maniac]] [[Ace Pilot]]s [[Why Won't You Die?|who won't stay dead]].
** Comes with the implication that ''all'' games are like this; at one point they pass by the wreckage of a ''[[Space Invaders]]'' fleet.
** Comes with the implication that ''all'' games are like this; at one point they pass by the wreckage of a ''[[Space Invaders]]'' fleet.
* The ''Shivers'' novel ''The Animal Rebellion'' had a cursed (...or something, it's never really explained) computer game that caused all animals in the immediate vicinity to go violently insane. In order to reverse the effects of the game (which was purposely [[Unwinnable]], being the kind where you just have try and survive for as long as possible) the main characters had to wipe it from the hard drive and destroy the physical copy.
* The ''Shivers'' novel ''The Animal Rebellion'' had a cursed (...or something, it's never really explained) computer game that caused all animals in the immediate vicinity to go violently insane. In order to reverse the effects of the game (which was purposely [[Unwinnable]], being the kind where you just have try and survive for as long as possible) the main characters had to wipe it from the hard drive and destroy the physical copy.
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== [[Live Action Television]] ==
== [[Live Action Television]] ==
* The infamous ''[[Touched By an Angel]]'' episode "Virtual Reality" reveals that all violent video games are apparently tools of hatred and of [[Satan]] that make children evil bastards with little regard for human life.
* The infamous ''[[Touched By an Angel]]'' episode "Virtual Reality" reveals that all violent video games are apparently tools of hatred and of [[Satan]] that make children evil bastards with little regard for human life.
* The show ''[[Level Up (TV)|Level Up]]'' revolves around a group of teens working with the creator of an MMO to defeat monsters from the game that have escaped into reality. The monsters keep escaping even after they initially defeat the game's [[Big Bad]] in the 90-minute pilot.
* The show ''[[Level Up (TV series)|Level Up]]'' revolves around a group of teens working with the creator of an MMO to defeat monsters from the game that have escaped into reality. The monsters keep escaping even after they initially defeat the game's [[Big Bad]] in the 90-minute pilot.
* Though not deadly by itself, the titular virtual reality game in the ''Star Trek: The Next Generation'' episode ''The Game'' caused its users to become highly addicted, to the point of not wanting to do anything else, and also become extremely open to suggestion at the same time. It was planted by a woman seeking to gain control of the Enterprise by controlling her entire crew, and spread through the ship due to peer pressure and, eventually, crewmembers forcing it on the few individuals who refused to participate.
* Though not deadly by itself, the titular virtual reality game in the ''Star Trek: The Next Generation'' episode ''The Game'' caused its users to become highly addicted, to the point of not wanting to do anything else, and also become extremely open to suggestion at the same time. It was planted by a woman seeking to gain control of the Enterprise by controlling her entire crew, and spread through the ship due to peer pressure and, eventually, crewmembers forcing it on the few individuals who refused to participate.
* In the ''[[X Files]]'' episode "First Person Shooter," co-written by [[William Gibson]], a virtual reality game becomes haunted by an AI that kills players in real life. The episode gets virtually nothing right about programming or gaming.
* In the ''[[X Files]]'' episode "First Person Shooter," co-written by [[William Gibson]], a virtual reality game becomes haunted by an AI that kills players in real life. The episode gets virtually nothing right about programming or gaming.


== [[Real Life]] ==
* The first recorded death while playing a video game was with ''Berzerk'' - a man got a heart attack while playing it.
* There are many media accounts of gamers dying after playing for absurdly long periods without rest, especially in Asia. The deaths were mostly caused by the physical stress of such a long continuous session rather than any property of the games themselves. This goes back to 1981-82, when two teenagers died very shortly after posting high scores in the arcade game ''[[Berzerk]]''. Even more common are reports of health issues stemming from the same practices, which have prompted game companies and service providers to institute [[Anti Poop Socking]] changes.
* There have been cases of online game players fighting or killing each other in real life over virtual property, though the players themselves were usually as much to blame as the service providers.




== [[Urban Legends]] ==
== [[Urban Legends]] ==
* ''[[Polybius]]'', an (entirely fictional) arcade game of American youth and urban lore that's become ubiquitous thanks to the Internet. The game, so the story goes, is a ''[[Tempest]]'' knock-off that appeared in Portland arcades in 1981. The children who played it suffered from all three of the symptoms detailed above before [[Driven to Suicide|killing themselves]] in the middle of the night. The game disappeared shortly afterward, as suddenly as it had come - in some tellings, wheeled away by mysterious [[The Men in Black|men in black]]. Someone actually decided to make a [[Defictionalization|Polybius game]], purposely simulating elements found in the mythology (subliminal messages, supernatural things, and so on). Of course, they can be toggled on and off. [http://www.sinnesloschen.com/1.php See it here].
* ''[[Polybius]]'', an (entirely fictional) arcade game of American youth and urban lore that's become ubiquitous thanks to the Internet. The game, so the story goes, is a ''[[Tempest (video game)|Tempest]]'' knock-off that appeared in Portland arcades in 1981. The children who played it suffered from all three of the symptoms detailed above before [[Driven to Suicide|killing themselves]] in the middle of the night. The game disappeared shortly afterward, as suddenly as it had come - in some tellings, wheeled away by mysterious [[The Men in Black|men in black]]. Someone actually decided to make a [[Defictionalization|Polybius game]], purposely simulating elements found in the mythology (subliminal messages, supernatural things, and so on). Of course, they can be toggled on and off. [http://www.sinnesloschen.com/1.php See it here].
* ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sad_Satan Sad Satan]'' possibly the PC equivalent of ''Polybius''.



== [[Video Games]] ==
== [[Video Games]] ==
* The titular nameless game in ''[[Nanashi no Game]]''.
* The titular nameless game in ''[[Nanashi no Game]]''.
* The ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh]]'' video game ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh the Falsebound Kingdom (Video Game)|Yu-Gi-Oh the Falsebound Kingdom]]'' is about a virtual-reality game that's actually a method of gathering souls for a sacrifice.
* The ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!]]'' video game ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh! The Falsebound Kingdom]]'' is about a virtual-reality game that's actually a method of gathering souls for a sacrifice.
* [[Parody|Parodied]] in the indie game ''[[Ben There Dan That]]''.
* [[Parody|Parodied]] in the indie game ''[[Ben There, Dan That!]]''.
* In the game ''[[Kid Chameleon]]'', the new Virtual Reality arcade game on the block turns deadly, and actively tries to kill the players. Kid Chameleon tries to beat the game at its own game, presumably to save the people the game has already beaten. [[Nintendo Hard|It won't be easy.]]
* In the game ''[[Kid Chameleon]]'', the new Virtual Reality arcade game on the block turns deadly, and actively tries to kill the players. Kid Chameleon tries to beat the game at its own game, presumably to save the people the game has already beaten. [[Nintendo Hard|It won't be easy.]]
* Also used as the [[Excuse Plot]] for the ''Wayne's World'' video game; it's not quite clear if Wayne and Garth were sucked into the game or if the baddies came out, but the levels are 90's platformer versions of a few places from the movie; Wayne must use his laser-shooting guitar to rescue Garth, who has been consumed by the purple gelatinous cube from that game in Noah's Arcade in the movie.
* Also used as the [[Excuse Plot]] for the ''Wayne's World'' video game; it's not quite clear if Wayne and Garth were sucked into the game or if the baddies came out, but the levels are 90's platformer versions of a few places from the movie; Wayne must use his laser-shooting guitar to rescue Garth, who has been consumed by the purple gelatinous cube from that game in Noah's Arcade in the movie.
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== [[Web Original]] ==
== [[Web Original]] ==
* [[Ben Drowned (Web Video)|Ben Drowned]] (sometimes called simply ''Majora''), an Internet meme / [[Alternate Reality Game]] about a blogger named "jadusable" who gradually loses his grip on reality as he is tormented by a haunted ''[[Majoras Mask|Majora's Mask]]'' cartridge. The whole thing can be found [http://www.youshouldnthavedonethat.net/ here].
* [[Ben Drowned]] (sometimes called simply ''Majora''), an Internet meme / [[Alternate Reality Game]] about a blogger named "jadusable" who gradually loses his grip on reality as he is tormented by a haunted ''[[Majoras Mask|Majora's Mask]]'' cartridge. The whole thing can be found [https://web.archive.org/web/20190516034700/http://youshouldnthavedonethat.net/ here].
** That site now redirects to the forum for the 3rd arc of the BEN Drowned ARG. Right now, you'll have to view that story [http://inuscreepystuff.blogspot.com/2010/09/majora.html here].
** That site now redirects to the forum for the 3rd arc of the BEN Drowned ARG. Right now, you'll have to view that story [http://inuscreepystuff.blogspot.com/2010/09/majora.html here].
* ''Lost Silver'', a memetic story about a hacked, possibly haunted ''[[Pokémon|Pokémon Silver]]'' cartridge. [[Defictionalization|It can be]] [http://www.64digits.com/download.php?name=lostsilver.zip&id=29478 downloaded].
* ''Lost Silver'', a memetic story about a hacked, possibly haunted ''[[Pokémon|Pokémon Silver]]'' cartridge. [[Defictionalization|It can be]] [https://web.archive.org/web/20141231144019/http://www.64digits.com/download.php?name=lostsilver.zip&id=29478 downloaded].
** There's also a story about a hacked ''[http://tinycartridge.com/post/866743831/super-creepy-pokemon-hack Pokemon Black]'' (not the official ''Pokemon Black'' version for DS, though).
** There's also a story about a hacked ''[http://tinycartridge.com/post/866743831/super-creepy-pokemon-hack Pokemon Black]'' (not the official ''Pokemon Black'' version for DS, though).
*** In both of these, the cause isn't explicitly supernatural. Indeed, both are simply about somebody finding what is most likely a morbid ROM hack on a bootleg cart. The games in question are hacked into chilling and even depressing stories about death. Pokemon Black {{spoiler|has you kill Pokemon and their trainers with Ghost until there's nobody left, then Ghost kills you}}. Lost Silver {{spoiler|has Gold [[Dying Dream|coming to terms with his own death]] at what could be years after the fact.}} One chill comes from just who would have the knowledge to do all this, then distribute them as bootleg carts instead of posting them on the internet. The [[Fridge Horror]] comes in when you realize that hacking games to the extent shown in the stories and writing them onto cartridges only became possible fairly recently, with the cartridges featured in the stories apparently being from the first gen years.
*** In both of these, the cause isn't explicitly supernatural. Indeed, both are simply about somebody finding what is most likely a morbid ROM hack on a bootleg cart. The games in question are hacked into chilling and even depressing stories about death. Pokemon Black {{spoiler|has you kill Pokemon and their trainers with Ghost until there's nobody left, then Ghost kills you}}. Lost Silver {{spoiler|has Gold [[Dying Dream|coming to terms with his own death]] at what could be years after the fact.}} One chill comes from just who would have the knowledge to do all this, then distribute them as bootleg carts instead of posting them on the internet. The [[Fridge Horror]] comes in when you realize that hacking games to the extent shown in the stories and writing them onto cartridges only became possible fairly recently, with the cartridges featured in the stories apparently being from the first gen years.
*** Note that in both these stories, the players aren't actually in any danger, so these might be considered extremely mild versions of this trope.
*** Note that in both these stories, the players aren't actually in any danger, so these might be considered extremely mild versions of this trope.
** There's also the [http://pastebin.com/f71e6728f Lavender Town Syndrome] story, which has plain old ''Pokemon Red and Green/Blue'' being a dangerous video game, and talking about how various things (Lavender Town's music, fake stuff supposedly from the tower and haunted video games) led to mass suicide. There are actually two stories tied to this one, one haunted and one having various in-game stuff causing illness and death.
** There's also the [http://pastebin.com/f71e6728f Lavender Town Syndrome] story, which has plain old ''Pokemon Red and Green/Blue'' being a dangerous video game, and talking about how various things (Lavender Town's music, fake stuff supposedly from the tower and haunted video games) led to mass suicide. There are actually two stories tied to this one, one haunted and one having various in-game stuff causing illness and death.
** Pokémon is a very frequent subject of these sorts of stories. Another example is [http://creepypasta.wikia.com/wiki/Tarnished_Silver Tarnished Silver] and its sequel [http://creepypasta.wikia.com/wiki/Audible Audible], which use [[Missing No]]., the Unown, and events from the protagonist's past to screw with his life and/or health.
** Pokémon is a very frequent subject of these sorts of stories. Another example is [https://web.archive.org/web/20121004220935/http://creepypasta.wikia.com/wiki/Tarnished_Silver Tarnished Silver] and its sequel [https://web.archive.org/web/20131105025146/http://creepypasta.wikia.com/wiki/Audible Audible], which use [[Missing No]]., the Unown, and events from the protagonist's past to screw with his life and/or health.
* Stories of haunted / evil video games are a fairly common type of Internet meme. Games from ''[[Super Mario 64 (Video Game)|Super Mario 64]]'' to ''[[Wolfenstein (Video Game)|Wolfenstein]]'' and ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog]]'' have gotten this treatment.
* Stories of haunted / evil video games are a fairly common type of Internet meme. Games from ''[[Super Mario 64]]'' to ''[[Wolfenstein (2009 video game)|Wolfenstein]]'' and ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog]]'' have gotten this treatment.
* Parodied, to great effect, by [[Jon Tron]] in his "review" of ''[[Final Fantasy XIII]]''.
* Parodied, to great effect, by [[JonTron]] in his "review" of ''[[Final Fantasy XIII]]''.
* ''[[Sonic R]]'' has the myth of Tails Doll. Tails Doll was an unlockable character with an appearance that many considered to be creepy (though some just find him [[Nightmare Retardant|cute]]). According to a number of [[Creepypasta|Creepypastas]], upon meeting certain conditions (usually tagging Super Sonic with Tails Doll on a specific track), Tails Doll would break into the real world and violently murder the player.
* ''[[Sonic R]]'' has the myth of Tails Doll. Tails Doll was an unlockable character with an appearance that many considered to be creepy (though some just find him [[Nightmare Retardant|cute]]). According to a number of [[Creepypasta]]s, upon meeting certain conditions (usually tagging Super Sonic with Tails Doll on a specific track), Tails Doll would break into the real world and violently murder the player.
** Although [http://www.tdworshippers.proboards.com some believers in the doll think he's good].
** Although [http://www.tdworshippers.proboards.com some believers in the doll think he's good].
* The [[NES Godzilla Creepypasta]] has the eponymous cartridge, which apparently houses other worlds, complete with ecosystems, and also [[Eldritch Abomination|the]] [[The Fourth Wall Will Not Protect You|Hell]][[Complete Monster|beast]]
* The [[NES Godzilla Creepypasta]] has the eponymous cartridge, which apparently houses other worlds, complete with ecosystems, and also [[Eldritch Abomination|the]] [[The Fourth Wall Will Not Protect You|Hell]][[Complete Monster|beast]]
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== [[Web Comics]] ==
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* ''[[Homestuck]]'' and '' '''how.''' '' We have Sburb, a game that brings about the apocalypse when played. It also uses [[Time Travel]] to [[Stable Time Loop|cause itself to come into being]] as well as force its players to play, meaning the destruction is predetermined and inevitable.
* ''[[Homestuck]]'' and '' '''how.''' '' We have Sburb, a game that brings about the apocalypse when played. It also uses [[Time Travel]] to [[Stable Time Loop|cause itself to come into being]] as well as force its players to play, meaning the destruction is predetermined and inevitable.
** It gets worse from there. {{spoiler|Sburb is necessary for the creation of other universes - meaning the players are forced to sacrifice their civilization to bring about a new universe. IF their game is not a "null session," meaning it is predetermined to fail, making the sacrifice completely senseless. And unfortunately, null sessions more numerous than the successful ones.}}
** It gets worse from there. {{spoiler|Sburb is necessary for the creation of other universes - meaning the players are forced to sacrifice their civilization to bring about a new universe. IF their game is not a "null session," meaning it is predetermined to fail, making the sacrifice completely senseless. And unfortunately, null sessions more numerous than the successful ones.}}
** Averted with a void session, which cannot cause an apocalypse.
** Averted with a void session, which cannot cause an apocalypse.
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== Western Animation ==
== Western Animation ==
* ''Destroyer of Worlds'' from ''[[Regular Show]]''. Plugging it in (you don't need to play) unleashes an enormous, pixelated devil face with intent to, [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin|as the name implies]], [[Omnicidal Maniac|destroy the world]].
* ''Destroyer of Worlds'' from ''[[Regular Show]]''. Plugging it in (you don't need to play) unleashes an enormous, pixelated devil face with intent to, [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|as the name implies]], [[Omnicidal Maniac|destroy the world]].
** [[Recycled Script|Similarly]], one episode featured the final boss of a video game ('The Hammer') [[Instant AI, Just Add Water|coming to life]] and attacking everyone after Mordecai and Rigby [[Lightning Can Do Anything|short circuit the TV]].
** [[Recycled Script|Similarly]], one episode featured the final boss of a video game ('The Hammer') [[Instant AI, Just Add Water|coming to life]] and attacking everyone after Mordecai and Rigby [[Lightning Can Do Anything|short circuit the TV]].
* ''[[Megas XLR]]'': Coop comes into possession of what appears to be an old video game cartridge, but it's actually an intergalactic ''prison'' housing many dangerous alien criminals. When Coop finally finds a game console that it fits into (or rather one that he can hit it hard enough to fit into), he accidentally releases them and spends the episode putting them back in.
* ''[[Megas XLR]]'': Coop comes into possession of what appears to be an old video game cartridge, but it's actually an intergalactic ''prison'' housing many dangerous alien criminals. When Coop finally finds a game console that it fits into (or rather one that he can hit it hard enough to fit into), he accidentally releases them and spends the episode putting them back in.
* ''SinisteRRR'' from ''[[We Are the Strange]]'' is an evil arcade game that (possibly) acts as {{spoiler|a watchdog and alarm for the [[Big Bad]]}} and later {{spoiler|transforms into a [[Humongous Mecha]] who proceeds to kill off all but 3 of the main cast}}.
* ''SinisteRRR'' from ''[[We Are the Strange]]'' is an evil arcade game that (possibly) acts as {{spoiler|a watchdog and alarm for the [[Big Bad]]}} and later {{spoiler|transforms into a [[Humongous Mecha]] who proceeds to kill off all but 3 of the main cast}}.
* In ''[[The Fairly Odd Parents]]'' episode "Power Mad," Timmy wishes for a VR game that he can't wish out of. Timmy, Chester, and AJ then have to finish the game without losing all three of their lives otherwise they'll be destroyed.
* In ''[[The Fairly OddParents]]'' episode "Power Mad," Timmy wishes for a VR game that he can't wish out of. Timmy, Chester, and AJ then have to finish the game without losing all three of their lives otherwise they'll be destroyed.
* In ''[[DC Super Friends]]'', the Joker turns Cyborg's room into one of these.
* In ''[[DC Super Friends]]'', the Joker turns Cyborg's room into one of these.
* ''[[Gravity Falls]]'' had ''three'' of them:
** ''Fight Fighters'' is a ''[[Street Fighter II]]'' parody that includes a magical variation of the [[Konami Code]]; using it will cause the hero character - Rumble McSkirmish - to come to life. Unfortunately, while Rumble means well, his view of the world borders on [[Black and White Insanity]], making him a dangerous [[Knight Templar]] outside his game.
** The pinball game ''Tumbleweed Terror'' is [[Haunted Technology|haunted by a spirit]] who does ''not'' like "tilters"; doing that makes him angry enough to trap players inside the game, which becomes a pinball-style [[Death Trap]]
** ''Romance Academy 7'' is, unlike the other two, [[Knight of Cerebus| truly malevolent.]] A Japanese [[Dating Sim]] with a haunted AI named GIFfany, she supposedly killed her programmers and becomes a [[Yandere]] to whoever plays the game too long. Ironically, Rumble tried to challenge her in the episode she appeared; [[Curb Stomp Battle| she proved deadlier than him.]]

== [[Real Life]] ==
* The first recorded death while playing a video game was with ''Berzerk'' - a man got a heart attack while playing it.
* There are many media accounts of gamers dying after playing for absurdly long periods without rest, especially in Asia. The deaths were mostly caused by the physical stress of such a long continuous session rather than any property of the games themselves. This goes back to 1981-82, when two teenagers died very shortly after posting high scores in the arcade game ''[[Berzerk]]''. Even more common are reports of health issues stemming from the same practices, which have prompted game companies and service providers to institute [[Anti-Poopsocking]] changes.
* There have been cases of online game players fighting or killing each other in real life over virtual property, though the players themselves were usually as much to blame as the service providers.


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Latest revision as of 16:20, 6 July 2022

You fools! Destroyer of Worlds will kill us all!
—Skips, Regular Show

An evil video game, usually packing some paranormal baggage. Playing the game will cause you to go mad, suffer from horrible nightmares, and even commit suicide in an effort to make the horrors stop. Sometimes, they are less destructive, casting a trance over the player and causing him or her to play constantly, at the expense of their health and relationships.

This trope is often the result of old fogies (and thrill-seeking youth) concocting myths about the dangers of new, unfamiliar technology. However, it's become more and more popular for New Media found footage-style horror stories.

Lurking in the realm of Urban Legends as well as that of out-and-out fiction, the most dangerous video game occasionally finds its way into Real Life, in the form of outcries from concerned citizens and Moral Watchdogs who claim that real video games incite violence, antisocial behavior, and other ills on those who play them. Be that as it may, most of these theories are of the "fringe" variety.

Not to be confused with The Most Dangerous Game, or the trope named after that story. Sub-Trope of Fictional Video Game and The Game Plays You.

Examples of The Most Dangerous Video Game include:

Anime and Manga

  • The "Legendary Heroes" Filler Arc in Yu-Gi-Oh! features an evil virtual-reality RPG created by the Big Five to trap Kaiba and keep him from firing them.
  • The virtual-reality game Greed Island in Hunter X Hunter really physically transports players to a real gameworld (a small, uncharted island) and only lets the player leave at certain Save Points... which means you can be trapped in the game if you can't get that Last Lousy Point, and if you die you're really dead.
  • The titular game in Angel Sanctuary allows an angel to steal the body of the player.
  • The whole idea behind Sword Art Online. The setting is a MMORPG that has been sabotaged by its villainous designer to become this.
  • The VR game in Do You Love Your Mom and Her Two-Hit Multi-Target Attacks started out as a somewhat benevolent government project akin to family therapy. Kids who have issues with their parents are digitized into the game with their parents, and they are going to have to resolve those issues if they ever want to leave. Unfortunately, the parents get far more superior powers and items, and a lot of them are rotten enough to misuse them, some resorting to blatant use of illegal game modding that even the admins cannot get rid of. Fortunately, one of the strongest parent players is on the heroes' side.

Comics

  • The Hack Slash miniseries My First Maniac featured an old arcade game called Bludbus, which urban legends state was banned due to causing things like suicidal and homicidal thoughts (undoubtedly inspired by the real-life urban legend of the Polybius cabinets). The slasher of the story, Grinface, was a normal boy who was either possessed by the game after his death, or was so obsessed with it he simply decided to adopt the identity of the Villain Protagonist.


Film

  • The game in Spy Kids 3D traps the player and keeps them playing.
  • One of the three segments from the film Nightmares is about JJ Cooney, a video game whiz obsessed with beating an arcade game named The Bishop of Battle - a game so unfairly difficult, not even the best players could make it past the twelfth stage. When Cooney finally succeeds (after having snuck into the arcade in the middle of the night), he realizes that beating the game causes the threats and enemies from within to come alive.
  • The eponymous game in Stay Alive summons the spirit of the Blood Countess in its intro sequence. If your character in the game dies, she hunts you down and kills you in the same way.
  • This trope has been used often in terrible straight-to-rental movies, particularly in the 90's. Specific examples are difficult to pinpoint because they are all equally forgettable.
    • Brainscan is probably one of the more memorable ones: It starts off as a surprisingly effective thriller about a kid buying a product that supposedly uses hypnosis to make the in-game experiences more realistic, before discovering that he may be affecting the real world by playing the game. Then, just as it looks like the movie could be a b-classic, it introduces an incredibly lame "video game demon", and quickly goes down-hill.
    • Another was called Arcade; about its only memorable feature was the villain played by John de Lancie, who also portrayed Q on Star Trek.
    • De Lancie also played the scientist/creator in Evolver, another mid-90's flick about a Robot Buddy that takes VR combat way too seriously.
  • How to Make a Monster had a video game coming to life after a lightning strike. It then starts killing its developers by animating an animatronic suit based off the game. It's only stopped when one junior developer dons a virtual reality suit of her own, which somehow allows her to destroy it in the real world too.
  • The Bollywood film Ra-One has the titular video game villain (programmed to be "undefeatable") come to life because A.I. Is a Crapshoot and Applied Phlebotinum allowed it to have a solid body.
  • In Maximum Overdrive a man is mesmerized by an arcade cabinet, which fatally electrocutes him when he touches it.
  • In a sense, Tron was one of the earlier movies to pull this off. It wasn't the game itself sucking you in, but the MCP used several "game programs" (disc battles, the jai-alai looking arena, Space Paranoids, Light Cycles, the *tanks*) to help keep control over still-semi-free programs. Quinn simply got zapped into the computer world and stuck in the deadly games. Tron: Legacy took it a step further, in that CLU became just a dick that enjoyed making others fight to the death, program, user or otherwise.


Literature

  • A Spanish children's book called La aventura de los chips biológicos (Adventure of the Biological Chips) is about an evil, addictive computer game that drains the life of the children that play it.
  • One of Robert Rankin's Brentford Trilogy books features a Space Invaders machine at the Flying Swan that causes its only player to become possessed by actual space invaders.
  • What kicks off the story of Otherland. A number of kids who access the future-Internet fall into comas.
  • Inversion in Only You Can Save Mankind: you can't actually die in the game, but the mobs you're killing are real, sentient beings, under siege by Omnicidal Maniac Ace Pilots who won't stay dead.
    • Comes with the implication that all games are like this; at one point they pass by the wreckage of a Space Invaders fleet.
  • The Shivers novel The Animal Rebellion had a cursed (...or something, it's never really explained) computer game that caused all animals in the immediate vicinity to go violently insane. In order to reverse the effects of the game (which was purposely Unwinnable, being the kind where you just have try and survive for as long as possible) the main characters had to wipe it from the hard drive and destroy the physical copy.
  • Gillian Rubinstein's Space Demons trilogy featured three of these (each one a sequel to the previous): the eponymous Space Demons, Skymaze and Shinkei.


Live Action Television

  • The infamous Touched By an Angel episode "Virtual Reality" reveals that all violent video games are apparently tools of hatred and of Satan that make children evil bastards with little regard for human life.
  • The show Level Up revolves around a group of teens working with the creator of an MMO to defeat monsters from the game that have escaped into reality. The monsters keep escaping even after they initially defeat the game's Big Bad in the 90-minute pilot.
  • Though not deadly by itself, the titular virtual reality game in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode The Game caused its users to become highly addicted, to the point of not wanting to do anything else, and also become extremely open to suggestion at the same time. It was planted by a woman seeking to gain control of the Enterprise by controlling her entire crew, and spread through the ship due to peer pressure and, eventually, crewmembers forcing it on the few individuals who refused to participate.
  • In the X Files episode "First Person Shooter," co-written by William Gibson, a virtual reality game becomes haunted by an AI that kills players in real life. The episode gets virtually nothing right about programming or gaming.


Urban Legends

  • Polybius, an (entirely fictional) arcade game of American youth and urban lore that's become ubiquitous thanks to the Internet. The game, so the story goes, is a Tempest knock-off that appeared in Portland arcades in 1981. The children who played it suffered from all three of the symptoms detailed above before killing themselves in the middle of the night. The game disappeared shortly afterward, as suddenly as it had come - in some tellings, wheeled away by mysterious men in black. Someone actually decided to make a Polybius game, purposely simulating elements found in the mythology (subliminal messages, supernatural things, and so on). Of course, they can be toggled on and off. See it here.
  • Sad Satan possibly the PC equivalent of Polybius.

Video Games

  • The titular nameless game in Nanashi no Game.
  • The Yu-Gi-Oh! video game Yu-Gi-Oh! The Falsebound Kingdom is about a virtual-reality game that's actually a method of gathering souls for a sacrifice.
  • Parodied in the indie game Ben There, Dan That!.
  • In the game Kid Chameleon, the new Virtual Reality arcade game on the block turns deadly, and actively tries to kill the players. Kid Chameleon tries to beat the game at its own game, presumably to save the people the game has already beaten. It won't be easy.
  • Also used as the Excuse Plot for the Wayne's World video game; it's not quite clear if Wayne and Garth were sucked into the game or if the baddies came out, but the levels are 90's platformer versions of a few places from the movie; Wayne must use his laser-shooting guitar to rescue Garth, who has been consumed by the purple gelatinous cube from that game in Noah's Arcade in the movie.


Web Original

  • Ben Drowned (sometimes called simply Majora), an Internet meme / Alternate Reality Game about a blogger named "jadusable" who gradually loses his grip on reality as he is tormented by a haunted Majora's Mask cartridge. The whole thing can be found here.
    • That site now redirects to the forum for the 3rd arc of the BEN Drowned ARG. Right now, you'll have to view that story here.
  • Lost Silver, a memetic story about a hacked, possibly haunted Pokémon Silver cartridge. It can be downloaded.
    • There's also a story about a hacked Pokemon Black (not the official Pokemon Black version for DS, though).
      • In both of these, the cause isn't explicitly supernatural. Indeed, both are simply about somebody finding what is most likely a morbid ROM hack on a bootleg cart. The games in question are hacked into chilling and even depressing stories about death. Pokemon Black has you kill Pokemon and their trainers with Ghost until there's nobody left, then Ghost kills you. Lost Silver has Gold coming to terms with his own death at what could be years after the fact. One chill comes from just who would have the knowledge to do all this, then distribute them as bootleg carts instead of posting them on the internet. The Fridge Horror comes in when you realize that hacking games to the extent shown in the stories and writing them onto cartridges only became possible fairly recently, with the cartridges featured in the stories apparently being from the first gen years.
      • Note that in both these stories, the players aren't actually in any danger, so these might be considered extremely mild versions of this trope.
    • There's also the Lavender Town Syndrome story, which has plain old Pokemon Red and Green/Blue being a dangerous video game, and talking about how various things (Lavender Town's music, fake stuff supposedly from the tower and haunted video games) led to mass suicide. There are actually two stories tied to this one, one haunted and one having various in-game stuff causing illness and death.
    • Pokémon is a very frequent subject of these sorts of stories. Another example is Tarnished Silver and its sequel Audible, which use Missing No., the Unown, and events from the protagonist's past to screw with his life and/or health.
  • Stories of haunted / evil video games are a fairly common type of Internet meme. Games from Super Mario 64 to Wolfenstein and Sonic the Hedgehog have gotten this treatment.
  • Parodied, to great effect, by JonTron in his "review" of Final Fantasy XIII.
  • Sonic R has the myth of Tails Doll. Tails Doll was an unlockable character with an appearance that many considered to be creepy (though some just find him cute). According to a number of Creepypastas, upon meeting certain conditions (usually tagging Super Sonic with Tails Doll on a specific track), Tails Doll would break into the real world and violently murder the player.
  • The NES Godzilla Creepypasta has the eponymous cartridge, which apparently houses other worlds, complete with ecosystems, and also the Hellbeast


Web Comics

  • Homestuck and how. We have Sburb, a game that brings about the apocalypse when played. It also uses Time Travel to cause itself to come into being as well as force its players to play, meaning the destruction is predetermined and inevitable.
    • It gets worse from there. Sburb is necessary for the creation of other universes - meaning the players are forced to sacrifice their civilization to bring about a new universe. IF their game is not a "null session," meaning it is predetermined to fail, making the sacrifice completely senseless. And unfortunately, null sessions more numerous than the successful ones.
    • Averted with a void session, which cannot cause an apocalypse.


Western Animation

  • Destroyer of Worlds from Regular Show. Plugging it in (you don't need to play) unleashes an enormous, pixelated devil face with intent to, as the name implies, destroy the world.
  • Megas XLR: Coop comes into possession of what appears to be an old video game cartridge, but it's actually an intergalactic prison housing many dangerous alien criminals. When Coop finally finds a game console that it fits into (or rather one that he can hit it hard enough to fit into), he accidentally releases them and spends the episode putting them back in.
  • SinisteRRR from We Are the Strange is an evil arcade game that (possibly) acts as a watchdog and alarm for the Big Bad and later transforms into a Humongous Mecha who proceeds to kill off all but 3 of the main cast.
  • In The Fairly OddParents episode "Power Mad," Timmy wishes for a VR game that he can't wish out of. Timmy, Chester, and AJ then have to finish the game without losing all three of their lives otherwise they'll be destroyed.
  • In DC Super Friends, the Joker turns Cyborg's room into one of these.
  • Gravity Falls had three of them:
    • Fight Fighters is a Street Fighter II parody that includes a magical variation of the Konami Code; using it will cause the hero character - Rumble McSkirmish - to come to life. Unfortunately, while Rumble means well, his view of the world borders on Black and White Insanity, making him a dangerous Knight Templar outside his game.
    • The pinball game Tumbleweed Terror is haunted by a spirit who does not like "tilters"; doing that makes him angry enough to trap players inside the game, which becomes a pinball-style Death Trap
    • Romance Academy 7 is, unlike the other two, truly malevolent. A Japanese Dating Sim with a haunted AI named GIFfany, she supposedly killed her programmers and becomes a Yandere to whoever plays the game too long. Ironically, Rumble tried to challenge her in the episode she appeared; she proved deadlier than him.

Real Life

  • The first recorded death while playing a video game was with Berzerk - a man got a heart attack while playing it.
  • There are many media accounts of gamers dying after playing for absurdly long periods without rest, especially in Asia. The deaths were mostly caused by the physical stress of such a long continuous session rather than any property of the games themselves. This goes back to 1981-82, when two teenagers died very shortly after posting high scores in the arcade game Berzerk. Even more common are reports of health issues stemming from the same practices, which have prompted game companies and service providers to institute Anti-Poopsocking changes.
  • There have been cases of online game players fighting or killing each other in real life over virtual property, though the players themselves were usually as much to blame as the service providers.