Aside from that, you've just got characters who were essentially created by Dan Slott to die. The only long-term member who has died and stayed dead is Dinah Soar Doorman died but came back as an angel of death, and Big Bertha and Flatman are still alive and kicking. Actually, they honestly haven't gotten it nearly as bad as one might think from the way their first Dan Slott mini parodied the kill-happy nature of major comics crossovers.Immortal (whose power is Exactly What It Says on the Tin he absolutely cannot be killed by any means, not even by completely obliterating his body) and Squirrel Girl (who's too popular to kill). Probably the only safe characters are Mr.The Great Lakes Avengers have a nasty habit of losing members, including Mr.The gravedigger has an heart attack seeing all these corpses. The doctor who diagnoses all deaths as viper beat (yes, even Ophelia's) dies beaten by a viper. The source material being what it is, it ends with all named characters death. All four of the actual members (The Chief, Rita Farr, Cliff Steele, Larry Trainor) were nuked saving a small fishing village. Doom Patrol pre-dated most of this by pulling a Total Party Kill in the Sixties.note Two members of the team-'Snake-Eye' Simpson and 'Mad Dog' Martin-are not shown as being on the mission so presumably survive. In the final two issues of Combat Kelly and his Deadly Dozen, almost all the members of the Dozen are killed when a mission goes disastrously wrong, with the only survivors being Kelly and Laurie (and Laurie is permanently crippled).To make matters worse, Claudio (the protagonist for much of the storyline followed SSTB) is supposed to destroy the entire solar system, and release the souls of the Keywork!!! (The Keywork is the fictitious Solar System thing).And that's just one of the chapters in the story! Secondary characters also die in a failed coup, by the truckload. Not only do Coheed and Cambria get tricked into brutally murdering their own children, they also die mostly because Cambria destroys a spaceship's engine in a fit of rage. Coheed and Cambria: The Amory Wars - The Second Stage Turbine Blade.In The Return of Bruce Wayne, Superman says that this is what would happen if Batman came back to the 21st century by himself.Jeremiah Arkham and, apparently, a female expert in the supernatural, killed off. The Elseworlds graphic novel Batman: Crimson Mist'' ends with every named character in the Batman world, except Dr.The only guaranteed survivors are Loop, Victor, and Will with Lono having a case of Never Found the Body, and Graves and Dizzy at the mercy of a Bolivian Army Ending. This is your last warning, only proceed if you really believe you can handle this list. Note: This is a Spoilered Rotten trope, that means that EVERY SINGLE EXAMPLE on this list is a spoiler by default and will be unmarked.
Destiny patrol kill any enemies movie#
Not to be confused with the 2012 martial-arts movie Kill 'Em All or Metallica's debut album. For Real Life examples, please see Would Be Rude to Say "Genocide" instead.
![destiny patrol kill any enemies destiny patrol kill any enemies](https://assets.vg247.com/current//2016/09/destiny_rise_of_iron_patrol_symbols_anomaly_scan.jpg)
See also Suicide Mission, Gotta Kill Em All, Final Solution, and Omnicidal Maniac (for whom "killing 'em all" is his goal). The wonders of perception.as some guy once allegedly said, "The death of one man is a tragedy the death of millions is a statistic." The funny thing about this particular trope, however, is that knowing that everyone dies is somehow much less spoiler-ish than knowing that, say, only your favorite one does. The Trope Namer is Yoshiyuki Tomino, the Gundam creator who was given the nickname "Kill 'Em All Tomino" because of his reputation for producing anime where he kills off a large number of characters, often due to bouts of depression in his own life. This was only attributed to him twenty years later as something he "reportedly" said. A short historical digression: the words "Caedite eos, novit enim Dominus qui sunt eius" ( Latin: "Kill them all, for God knows which are his," popularly rendered as "Kill 'em all, and let God sort 'em out.") are attributed to Abbot Arnold Amaury before the massacre of Béziers during the Albigensian Crusade - albeit not in any of the numerous contemporary accounts of it.